The Weather /• • ■ WwikW >««•■ firiml VOL. 116 JJO. 60 THE PONTIAC PRESS Horns Edition poimAc; Michigan, Tuesday, apkjl is, 1901—20 pages Brightest Stars Shine for Camera READY TO ENLIST — An overflow crowd ■ spokesman at the center said 500 to 600 were .of anti-Castro Cubans shows up at a small un- * signed up and given physical examinations Mon-official recru|ting- center in Miami to enlist. A . day. Air Ra as Extremely Heavy Planes Uncounted Reach Threats From Nikita JFK Mum on Talk About Cuba 1 Invading £pbel forces in |Cuba's Las Villas Province “under extremely WASHINGTON (AP)-President Kennedy discussed the Cuban counterrevolution with Democrat- text of the communication, adding nothing essential to the earlier report, was deJUvered to him shortly ie leaden from the Capitol today, after his weekly breakfast session but withheld immediate public comment on Soviet Premier Khrushchev's appeal to him atop die invasion of the island. Early in (he day Kennedy read news dispatches reporting the giat of Khrushchev's s message. with the Congress members. Emerging from that meeting, the party leaders woakl say only that the Caban situation was discussed, leaving say statement te taihed some bellicose sounding language, such as a promise to give the Fidel Castro government' all ski necessary to repulse the armed attacks, for which the U.S. government has denied responsibility. The Khrushchev message con- The Soviet leader also stressed his claimed interest in relaxing international tension and said 'but if others aggravate it, we shall reply in full measure. Communist Bloc Demands Halt to Fighting in Cuba House Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas said Kennedy “brought us up to now on what the real situation te." . M7.510,000 toward' the gist million estimated cost of the UJL Conge operatise lor the first It opening of another tense round of debate on Monday’s invasion of Cuba by anti-Castro forces. The public gallery was only partly filled because of the strict screening of visitors. ed an offensive in the United Nations for guide action to halt - the fighting in Chiba. Highest Weekly Auto Production hr 1961 Reached Czechoslovakia demanded that the U N. Political Committee issue an immediate call for a cessation of the fighting and a halt of all aid to the invading anti-Castro forces. Jiri Nosek, Czechoslovak delegate, delivered a sharp attack an the United. States for Its alleged role, in the invasion. He spoke after -Soviet delegate Valerias A. Zorin had laid before the committee a warning that the Soviet Union it prepared to support the regime of Fidel Castro with “all the necessary assistance.” The Czechoslovak delegate charged that “the United States is morally . and materially responsible” for the anti-Castro military operation. Zorin read to the political committee) the hill texts of a declaration and letter sent to President ’ Kennedy by Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev. The wanting of possible aid to Castro was in both the letter and the statement. ' Chief delegate Adlai E. Stevenson told the committee he hoped to read Kennedy's reply later in the day. The exchange took place at ttwf I think it is a serious situation down there," Rayburn said, don't know whether jt will work out or not. I hope so.” ‘MUST BLOCK HLM’ Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, R-NY, told the Senate that if Khrushchev intervenes in Cuba, the United States must “stand ready to f him by any appropriate and effective means.” DETROIT (UPI)—The Automobile Manufacturers Association said today motor vehicle production to the VS. last week totaled 137,889 units—the highest output of 1961. The AMA said production included 114,276 passenger cars and 23, 613 trucks and motor coaches. Ii the previous week, the industry built 92,967 cars and 23,657 trucks and motor coaches for a combined output of 116,644 units. For the year through last week, output stood at 1,706,848 cars, trucks ,'and buses compared with assembly of 2,745,418 care, trucks and buses in the same period of I960. * Predicts Kennedy's Wage Bill to Pass WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana today predicted quick passage of the Kennedy administration’s maximum wage proposals. Mansfield, said after a meeting of Democratic congressional leaden with President Kennedy that wage legislation should clear the Senate today — or tomorrow at the latest U. 8. official* were tadiaed to rate the matter as a promise of a propaganda showdown rather than a military threat heavy attack” by Communist-built MiG jet aircraft, a top exile source said today at midday. The spokesman said the liberation troops reporting to tKeir secret general headquarters outside Cuba could not say how many aircraft were Involved In the attacks. However, a steady stream of jets was coming in over their positions on bombing and strafing attacks, he raid. * Keating said If the Soviets should enter the Caribbean area, the United States aad the Organisation of American States (OA8) could not stand Idly by. That, he said, would present a dew* obligation to blockade the islahd to prevent entry of outside forces. Keating said it is ironic that Khrushchev, whose “only interest is In enslaving people” should talk of assisting file Cubans. The White House silence contin-ued through the morning briefing for newsmen by Pierre Salinger, presidential press secretary. He said there was no statement at that time, and referred report-to what Kennedy said during his news conference last week. The Chief Executive said then that no Americans would take part any military action aimed at Cuba. ftdel Using Russ Tanks? NEW ORLEANS, U. (II—A Rolan Catholic priest claimed early today that Castro forces were using Soviet tanks to battle insurrection forces near Colon, some 90 miles southeast of Havana. The RFv. Teodoro de la Torre said he was informed of the use of 'Stalin tanka” by a report from Cuban underground sources via Mexico. of Con Castro has long been reported to have been equipped with tanks from the Soviet bloc. Underground sources said they include fii ton Stalin type. „ LED THE PARADE — The four top Oscar winners pose with emcee Bob Hope after Monday night's Academy Awards show at Santa Monica, Calif. From left are Peter Ustinov, best supporting AP Phetotei ae|or; Shirley Jones, best supporting actress; Hope; Elizabeth Taylor, best actress; and Burt Lancaster, best actor. Dump Colbert, Liz Steals Oscar Newberg Asks Lancaster Best Actor The combined attacks by* cir and ground forces apparently constituted an all-out attempt to throw file invading troops back into the sea. Colbert Reveals Factory j Shipments Fell 57 Pet. in 1st Quarter 1961 These reports came after Soviet. . - , . . . .. . Premier Khrushchev, appealed tol^*- who w** fif* {**■>*«• President Kennedy to halt tteteJflttftt fitt By JAMES BACON AP Movte-TV Writer I SANTA MONICA, Caltl.-" weak .but wonderful," Liz Taylor DETROIT (P—William C. New-)***1* h*PPfiy winning her Jchiyslef Corp. president urged Chrysler - shareholders-' to _____j first Oscar Monday night—a few I months after recovering from Khrushchev called the attack -menace to wfirid peace and prom-teed “all necessary assistance” to Castro. a and board ehairmati. FIDEL TAKES CHARGE Prime Minister Castro took* per->nal charge of the attempt to hurl back the invaders, and He"claimed the automobile firm lost $20 million in thefirst quarter of this yeajv Newberg" made his plea' statement prepared on his behalf for the shareholders' annual meet- MOSCOW (CPI)—The Cuban ambassador to MoseW told a television audience tonight .that five rebel bpmbers, including one American plane, have been shot down over Cuba. Cuban broadcast said counterrevolutionaries had marked him for assassination. . A spokesman tor the attacking forces claimed wholesale desertions by forces nominally loyal to Castro, including. many of the miUtlamen Castro had forcefully recruited from all ranks of Cuban Me. Those are nans the people who may spell success so failure for the attempt to topple Rebel leaders in the United (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) May Face Disaster; Castro, Aides Gone? Fear Cuba Rebels Acted Too Soon MIAMI, Fla. — There te growing apprehension among informed persons in Miami today that the rebel strike against Fidel Castro's Cuban regime may have been premature f«ar that . operations mayexpoae the Cuban underground before' It ““ effectively. ' Cuba were In commando strength and not in force. Rebel sources themselves say their most important dbntingents have not landed anywhere iff Cuba. At the same tkne, however, there to exalted speculation about the whereabouts of Fidel himself aad the big brass of Us regime. Nona of the top leaders has been heard from to person since Sunday, and statements attributed to daw have been read in their names by faceless Havana pAio apnouncen. The lack of violent personal statements from Castro, his brother Raul who gonunsnfis the (Cuban aimed fortsey, Ernesto (Che) Guevara, the pro-Communist power behind the states, and the figurehead president, Osvaldo Dorttcoe, Is strange tor a group of leaders normally given to loud boasting attack from the air, perhaps In an effort to get Fidel out of the wax quickly—perhapa even, to capture Mm. But it was difficult to read meaning into this silence, and just as difficult to scat out fact from rumor. - — It is so difficult, to tact, teat it off prematurely, permitting the Havana regime to move against an underground whlcfg would show Its hand too soon. Already Havana Radio has announced the arrest of 27 for plotting Castro’s assassination. There are tew tndlcattoas ea the surface of massive troop or militia movements hy the regime htohto Cuba, although It would he difficult to ascertain this became of the Island's news blackouts. brush with death. The beautiful star, best’ actress award for ho*. role as the girl-about-town in “Butterfield 8," nearly fainted twice during the 90-minute Academy Awards show. Liz, nominated f o u r straight years for file movies' big award, stole the 33rd annual Oscar show from the other winners—Burt Lancaster, best actor; Shirley Jones, best supporting actress, and Peter Ustinov, best supporting actor. Apartment" won five awards, including best picture and best direction (by Billy Wild-a*). | All the winners posed back-stage for photographers'but LU got weak la the knees and had to cut her posing short. Accompanied by her husband' Eddie Earlier, on her arrival, she had » Arest li minutes before entering the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. The show, telecast over ABC-TV, was well under way before she was able to Make it to her seat. Colbert,. In his prepared re-■parks, was not specific on Chrysler'* first-quarter earning* other than to say that a 57 per cent decline In factory shipments had "adversely affected the financial results which will be announced April 27.” He also made no direct' mention of Newberg or of any of the many lawsuits now pending involving Chrysler. But be said Chrysler had been plagued by a "campaign Harassment against your management which we believe equal to the ’ reeent history of American business. The adverse effects qf this harassment campaign mi your company and its sales have been real and substantial.” ' Two weeks after the annual meeting a year ago. Newberg was elected Chrysler president. He was fired after 64 days on the grounds of a conflict of interest concerning two companies which supplied parts to Chrysler. He denied any conflict of interest. Newburg said he would like to ‘tell the real story of the cir; cumstances of my leaving Chrysler” but said he could not because 'My attorneys say this is not the place nor the time for such an accounting-'’ He then emphasized that “I have no desire to return to Chrysler. Pick Fund Raising Body, Site for Hospital Branch In Today's Press Holy Loch Two major steps forward have been taken since announcement was made three months ago that Detroit’s Crittenton General Hospital plans to build a 200-bed branch hospital just south of the Rochester village limits. A site.has been selected in the center of the two-county area to be served; Dr. Eugene Sibery, administrator of the parent institu-tion announced last nigh^. It is just north of Auburn and Rochester roads. "We have a firm commitment 7 a large enough parcel to build the hospital, expandable to 450 beds by 1970, and to provide plenty of parking space too," said Sibery, He also announced that American City Bureau, Inc., of Chicago, a protoaelonal food raising council, has been hired. • .The firm te slated to make a report today to the Crittenton Board of Trustees on the potential of the area to support the project and what the timing of the build-ting program -would be. : If the report, is favorable, the ; proposed hospital may | year closer to reality than, waa ! first estimated three months ago, Sibery said. OF Man Sun to Warm Us Up on Wednesday Spring sunshine vyill warm the area Wednesday with temperatures climbing to a high qf 54, the weatherman says. Tonight wilt ,be fair and coal, the low about M degrees. Partly cloudy and mlfd is predicted tor Thursday. Morning northwesterly winds at 5 miles per hour will becoipe 10 to 30 m.p.h. late this afternoon, and light variable tonight. The next .step, following acceptance of the fund raisers' report, win be to select an architect who will have schematic drawings ready in about 60 days. Thirty-five was the lowest recording in downtown Pontiac" preceding 8 dim. The reading was 2 p.m. was 45. Fisher and her .doctor, - she swayed shakily toward An open door. The fresh air revived her quickly and she was all smiles again. HER LONGE8T WALK 'That's the longest I've walked since my illness,” die told a reporter, “My knees got all shaky, like they were made of water." Her beautiful green Dior gown covered a leg still bandaged from antibiotic shots given her two months, ago during her nearly -fatal battle with pneumonia. When her name was called for the Oscar, she .put her hands over her face in surprise, kissed her husband and then walked slowly, with his help, to the podium. “I don’t really know how to ex'-press my great gratitude,” she said with emotion. “I guess I will just have to thank you with all my heart.” Lancaster, the hell-firing revivalist of “Elmer Gantry,” told a cheering audience: “I warn to thank all the members of the Academy who voted for me. And am so happy that I also wqht to thank all the members who jdMn’t vote for me.” For Lancaster, 47, the award :■ climaxed a career, that had taken " him from the New York shims jthrough circus acrobatics to movie stardom. Miss Jones clutched her Oscar |and thanked another Oscar—the late Oscar Hammerstein. SWITCH FOR 8HIRLEY It was Hammerstein and- Richard Rodgers who picked the 27-year-old brewer's daughter from Smithton. Pa., to play the- ingenue lead in “Oklahoma” and "Caren- But it was her switch to the hardboiled tart of "Elmer Gan-t" that won her the Oocac.., 7 guess it pay* to be bad on the screen," Hie said. The bearded Ustiauv, w ho waa aa Oscar tor hts portrayal at a gladiator srhaol operator la . “Spartecqs,” flew In from Rome Ha attend toe ceremonies. 'I’m glad I made the trip,” for said. Then he added: “I attended English, schools so long I was taught how to lose gracefully. I’ve been preparing myself all afternoon. Now that I’ve woo l don’t knpw what to aay.M Special Oscars were fivert to-Gary Cooper And Stan Laurel t TWO » THg PONTIAC PRfiSS, TUESDAY. APRII. 18, 1961 SupmiMH RM Firm’a Split Proper Share of Insurance A study committee repotted to the board of supervisors yesterday that it found “proper" the amount of county insurance held by the H. W. Huttenlocher Agency of Pontiac, agent of record for many years. srd has Men doing a very good Job hr the ronaty ' Oak Supervisor Cm** Potter, who shared with Hortaa la »rg-togteesMy. He was named chairman. which is distributed to other agents igh him (Huttenlocher) the amount wtjich he rotaias is w - ,, , . ^ nr worn isouifru umhiwh. nc ^j^ omsidered around *lwtt b John Carey of Springfield Township poUdet, bad led Rovai Ooh »qyr:)and F Webber, of Addison . visor Harry W. Horton to demand Township acy to eotablbb a safety program la ronjnaitloa with the naaty to help eat down Continue to Pick Lassiter Jurors 23 of a Prospective 75 Challenged Monday; Tears in Nelle's Eyes DETROIT «B-The murder trial of Mrs. Nefle Lassiter, 38, and Gordon Watson, 45. for the 1858 slaying of Mrs. Lassiter's husband, Parvin, went into foe second day of picking a 14-member jury to--dajh----- Twenty-three of the 75 prospective jurors who filled the coart-room of Circuit Court Judgo Joseph G. Rashid Monday were challenged. The pipeecution challenged five and the defense 10. Judge Rashid excused eight, who admitted prejudice. hi afiewed SI i defense ( Blonde Mrs. Lassiter of Beverly Road. Beverly Hills and the dapper Watson were separated byone seat In the courtroom. ..They did not speak to each other. Than appeared In Mrs. Lassiter's eyes as the formal charges of first-degree murder and conspiracy to murder were read. it it ' A . Laedter. a Royal Oak auto dealer, was ’ found beaten, shot and robbed near Detroit’s Willow Ron Airport on April 6, 1959. Three Tennessee men pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in February of I960 for the claying. - The state hascharged'Mrs. Lassiter and Watson, a former manager of Lasstter'^used car lot, .with first-degree murder and conspiracy to murder. h * ♦ ’ The prosecution contends Mrs. Lassiter and Watson were having an illicit love affair. Takes Command of W. Bloomfield Police Force WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — A former state police-with 35 years of service has t oat pf retirement to -take, over the duties of police chief Warm Weather Returns to Most of the Nation By The Associated Pram There were wet spots in the Northeast today, remnants of the wild spring storm that hit the Midwest WTO the weekend, but dry weather prevafiedT in most other sections of file nation. A warming trend was reported in most of the country. Winds diminished and wet snow Melvin Will, 54. of 2440 Hoover Road, Union Lake, has been appointed to head the 4-member township police department. He succeeds William Van Meter, who ill remain on the force as a patrolman. W1H, who was commander of the, Pontiac state Police Pool for u years, retired as a sergeant In June IMS. He joined the state police In IMS. As a member of the state police he served at posts in* East Lansing, Paw Paw and South Ha-He commanded the White Pigeon Post for two years until 1944 when he was promoted to sergeant and assigned to the Kee-go Harbor State Police Post, which later became the Pontiac Post! * * * Will has spent the years since his retirement ag a cabinet male-continuing a - woodworking hobby he had during his years with the state police. Horton wasn’t completely fled with the findings of file committee. which was aided by ths advice of a Detroit insurance -company official. ’, Despite his saying it was "a fine report and a very tine study.’ Horton continued his criticism of the board of auditors .for not revealing figures on the program ho often hod requested. * * * After some parliamentary red-tape. the board approved Horton’s request that fire auditor* make available the naroeo, addresses, and dollar amounts of all subagents under Huttenlocher. ■"As. it Is a matter ef public record, I believe tele Information sbsuld be given to all dafiy and i IV‘ 11 Trial for Burglary Set After Plea Is Switched About to be sentenced for burglarizing a city gas station; Andy Guyton, 25, of 73 Florida St., changed his guilty plea to one of innocent yesterday before Circuit Judge Frederick C. Zlem. The judge accepted the change! and ordered Guyton's case ready trial. He is accused of tweaking into Oman's Service Statibn, 180 Orchard Lake Ave., on March Northeast area as the storm cento: drifted northeastward into Lake Erie. The wet belt covered the extreme southern and lower Great Lakes region, most .of the Ohio Valley to the Appalachians and into west and northwest New York and moat of Maine. The Midwest storm, which left up to 20 inches of snow in northern Minnesota and record depos-125. He pleaded guilty April 4. its for file date in many areas, He was returned to the county was blamed for at least 28 deathsJjail. Mhrhib Fall II, 8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly cloudy with a few sprla-kite today, Mgh w. Fair and cool tonight, low M. Wednesday mortly sunny aad warmer, Mgh M. Winds northwest 1* to to | light variable tenlgbt. i. Hlchent tempers Weather—Fair Bus rtaea Wednesday st l:_ fjssa tsts Tuetday It 13:55 li-s.- hri set Ltwaat TiowntWi Thu Hats la to Tsars h ___________ s m •aSaj , Tewpsratarr Chart tt to Mutants . re U IT MestphU < k 54 35 Miami Beach U . rills W 53 Mpvaakst «L S3 41 31 Minneapolis 35 *34 40 31 Naw Orleans “ 11 Itl 40 to HUhC»t t '. NATIONAL WEATHER —. Continued unseasonably cool wealfier will continue tonight on the Atbuitic seaboard. In the Ohio valley and the Great Lakes area andto.the Pacific northwest and’ the northern and central ftodoes Scattered ymow flurries and nto Shown* are expected from the centra) Appalachians into ■ Mew England and In fi* northern aaji centra/Rockies. Hie board accepted the committee’s report, with Huntington Woods Supervisor Fred ll Yockey urging that more of the insurance policies be sold on a bid every three or four year*. All possible policies are sold on a bid basis, Potter replied. He said many policies cannot, be told this way. HITTENLOCHER BACKED Pontiac delegation of super-lined up aolidty behind Huttenlocher, who was in the audience to hear the report, when Horton tried to add his request at a listing of secondary agents to fi* committee's report. This later was ruled oat of order. h it it "Is it then your summary that the county's insurance is flirty and equally spread?" inquired-William A. Ewart, one of the city’s seven ! members'of'the board. "My answer is yes," Potter replied. His committee alto-turned thumbs down oa the possibility • raked by Hortoa — teat tee county operate Its own arif-imor-aaee program. "We found that it would not be feasible to adopt such a program because the risks are too great and the amount of premiums now paid by the county would not warrant consideration of county self-insur-nce,’’ the report stated. * it it One of the recommendations was that money be set aside for more frequent appraisals of county properties. Along with tee suggested safety program, l(waa urged The Dfiy in Birmingham United Nations Chapter to Hear M$UO Doctor BIRMINGHAM-Dr. Edward J. Houbel of the Michigan State University Oakland department of political science will be the guest speaker Thursday at-. .fi, public meeting of the Oakland County Chapter of the American Association for the United Nations. At meeting tMH ha fatM at the Oomtnunlty House at I p.m. The program Is one la a series describing tea WOtk if the tfeU- SCENE OF BLAST — Two sides of a recently-constructed power plant at Parkedkle, Parke, Davit Co. * vaccine production center in Avon Township, wen blown out yesterday when a bqiler undergoing tests exploded. There were no injuries. The cause of the explosion has not been determined* nor waa there any Immediate estimate of damage. The new power plant, buUt to house three baiters, two of which had not been Installed, was to have supplied the entire 000-acre facility with power. To Kick Off Big Drive for YMCA Expansion The General Division of the Pontiac YMCA expansion program campaign will begin solicitations h with a kickoff meeting planned for 1:30 p.m. at the "Y” building. k Mrs. William G. Wright, division chairman, has enlisted an organization of more than 300 women who will carry the appeal for 9850,000 to improve and expand "Y" facilities to 1,000 prospects in thq, Pontiac area. Tafia by Robert M. Crttch naan, aad Frederick J. Poole, program which will be followed by dtutributioa of assignments. Refreshments will be served. Arrangements have been made gets started. JabiUty Insurance pn members of the health department, the medical care facility and the tuberculosis sanatorium should be increased to 8200,000/8500,000 „ be consistent with other policies for general liability insurance carried by flie county." A 1 'A 1t "We also urge a complete survey of present insurance, coverage for false arrest in the sheriff’s department," the report said. Site, Fund Raisers Picked lor Hospital (Continued From Page One) Council and Hill-Burton, a federal grant agency. APPLIED FOR. GRANT Crlttenton has applied tor a sizeable grant from Hill-Burton, but what federal funds will be available has not yet been determined. Other revisions of the Initial announcement concern both estimated cost of the whole project, now pared from $5 million to $4.5 mil Boo, and the cost per bed. It first was indicated that the per-bed cost would be 825,000. -That figure now is $21,000 to $23,000 per bed, according to Sibery. The administrator reiterated that tee whole arm to be served mast Indicate Interest' to the project aad that haH the mot of tee aew hospital will have to be met by teeae communities. Hie municipalities to be served are Rochester, Utica and Troy, plus Oakland, Avon, Shelby and Sterling -----■’ Sibery also indicated that the Crittenton Hospital Board will be expanded to include representation from the Western Macomb -Eastern. Oakland County area. One member already is from Rochester. He is Howard L. McGregor Jr. Hie announcement of the pro-poaed location of a Crittenton branch hospital near Rochester climaiKd mate than three years of effort by a. group of Roches-rea business and profee signal people trying to get a community hospital for the area. The tie-in .of the . Rochester group, known as Bertha Van Hoo-Inc., with the Detroit hospital; followed a aeries of meetings be-ween the two boards foot' * Mrs. Wright has enlisted at group leaders to assist her: Mrs. Neil Wasserberger, Mrs. William Anderson, Mrs. Thomas Hollis, Mrs. Charles Coppersmith, and Mrs. Walter Bamingham. These group leaders have ea-fisted the following as team captains: Mrs. Frederick J. Poole, Mrs. M. A. Benson, Mrs. Daniel Murphy Jr., Mrs. Robert Is-grigg, Mrs. A1 Watson, Mrs. Sidney Olson. Mrs. G. W. Caches, Mrs. Thomas Baltic, Mrs. Raymond Ellsworth, and Mra. Eugene Holslngtoa. Others am Mrs. Robert Shorey, Mrs. Robert Lazelle, Mrs. El wood M. Bigler, Mrs. Harold MacDonald, Mrs. Duane Miller, Mrs. Newton skiliman, Mrs. C. J. Odell, Mrs. DonaM PorritC and Mrs. Donald MacMillan. Also working as team captains will be Mrs. James Mortseey, Mrs. Dorothy Brooks, Mrs. James E. Graybiel, Mrs. Keith Qauser, Mrs. Duane M. Lemauz, Mrs. Fred Fqekart, Mrs. Garth Sayers, Mrs. William Fox, and’ Mrs. James Nye. Halt Cuban Invasion, K Tells Kennedy . (Continued From Page One) States asserted the invaders who landed in Southwest Las Villas Province Monday had struck hallway across the narrow island to Colon. CHARGE VA FINANCING The Communists charged the invasion was financed by the United States and supported by UJL ■hips and planes from Florida and Central America. The United States has denied supplying the invaders but has expressed sympathy for the forces fighting to overthrow Castro, Khrushchev said to a message to Keanedy'teat the Soviet Union wants to decrease world tension "but If other* aggravate It, wo shall reply in foil measure." A statement by the Soviet government went a step farther end warned that the Cuban fighting is "capable of jeopardizing the peaceful life of the U.8.A itself.” Khrushchev did not mention rockets he once symbolically promised to bring to Castro’s aid. Hie middhy report, if confirmed, would mark the first appearance in Cuban skies of MIG*. The Russian-type jets have been reported shipped to Castro in recent months from Czechoslovakia. E. C. HITHWA1TE Elected to Head YM Directors W. E. C. Huthwaite in Post for Year Following Berkeley E.'Vots At the annual meeting of. the Pontiac YMCA yesterday, W. E C. Huthwaite, 527 W. Iroquois Rd. waf elected president of the board of directors for a one-year terifi. - , * A. ’* He succeeds Berkeley E. Voss, 4805 Keithdaie Lane, Bloomfield Township. Other officers, sll elected for one year, are: Earl A. Maxwell, 5*0S Lasher . Bd., Bloom field Township, vice president; Milo J, Cram, Wl N. Ham- Fire Hall Bids to Open Today Last • Minute Deluge Is Expected; Total Cost Put at $400,000 18 MKte e 4 airfields. The invasion inspired anti-American demonstrations from Moscow to Strain America. Pro-Castro groups picketed outside the United Nations in New York. Several Ike IML Embassy la Moscow with a barrage of reeks. ■ The embassy estimated the crowds et from 3,000 to 5,000. The crowds seemed somewhat smaller > reporters. Communists and -other leftists throughout Latin America were rising to supfrrf the Castro regime, white: moderates waited to find out Rhaif fiaa going bn bi field Township, treasurer; Thomas Horwits, MS. James K Blvd., secretary: and Edward Barrett, 4311 Pine Tree Trait Bloom field Township, trust officer. Elected to the board of directors for three-year terms were Richard Fisher, Thomas Horwttz, James Jenkins, Earl A. Maxwell, Cordon McLeod, Berkeley Vow, Mac T. Whitfield and Walter K. woman. The' following were elected to serve three-year terms on committee of management of the Roqhester branch of the Pontiac "Y. Donald Baldwin, Robert Jerau, Dr. Richard G. Brooks, Herman Mix, Willis Plasaey and John Wurgea. A trampoline exhibition followed the business meeting. Participants were John LaMotte, Gary Collins, Barbara McClure, Micki King and Nils Lindman. * . was served by the Ex*Laos Premier Talks With Nikita, Gromyko MOSCOW (DPI) - Former Ntetta Khrushchev had Foreign Minister Andrrt'- Gromyko at the Bteek Re* resort toWa at Sochi, tee Turn News Agency reported. • felt that vestoa of Otoe by rmtatiaqary forces could eompfieato-a settle-. 1 ef tees. ■' v C City Hall officials were set to open construction bids for the Civic Center fire hall today, but didn’t plan to moke any detailed report at the City Commission meeting tonight. No bids had been submitted at S a.m., five hours before the dead-' line. But the customary last-minute deluge by contractors was expected as the deadline approached. In approving final plans March *8 by O’Dell, Hewlett and Lack-enbsch, Birmingham architects, for a two-story structure estimated at 1357,SOS, commissioners authorised a week for tabulating the combinations expected la the bidding. Architects' fees are expected .to push the cost to $375,080 and another $25,000 has been budgeted for furnishings^ putting file total; estimated cost at $400,000. Commissioners are scheduled to complete moves allowing Chief Pontiac Federal Credit Union to tew headquarters east side of Joslyn Avenue between Raskob and Market Streets. A ★ ★ An alleyway is to be vacated by the credit union and the property is to be rezoned to commercial. It is expected that agreement will be made to let the credit union use the vacated alleyway as part of a parking lot. There are hearings on three pro-poeed recapping projects. t active la iatoraatteoal affairs. Dr. Heubel'a address is entitled "Our Relation* In Latin America and the Work of the Organisation of American States." He bee. first-hand knowledge of the Latin American countries and their political backgrounds. Dr. Hsubel studied at the National University of I Mexico City in 195$ and was fi visiting Fulbright lecturer «t file University of Bueno* Ain* in 1957 aubjects dealing with North American government and it* ink litical system. He recently transferred to MSUO from the faculty of Wayne State University, having received doctor’s degree at the University at Minnesota in 1955. The Altar Society of Our.Lady Queen of Martyrs Church, 32400 fierce St., will hold its annual Spring ndlmage sale Friday in the church social hall from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Anthony's and St. Gerard’s guilds are cosponsors of the sale. Thomas W. Davison Service for Thomas W. Davi->n, 80, of 732 Larchlea Drive, will be 1 p.m. Thursday at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. BuHal will be in Acacia Parte Cemetery. Mr. Davison died yesterday in Wayne County General Hospital from injuries sustained April 10 an automobile accident Wayne County.*-He was a commercial artist in Detroit and had hie office in the Scarab Club; a member of the Reorganized Church of the Latter Day Saints, Royal Oak, and president of fiie Men’s Club at the church. He was oh the board of directors of the Scarab Club, and a member of Kilwinning Lodge €4, FOAM, London, Ont., the Scottish Rite of Detroit and the Moslem Shrine, Detroit. Surviving are his wife Stella; four daughters, Mrs. Paul Kelley of Clawson, Mrs. Harold Kelley of Royal Oak, Mrs. Alfred B. Worde of Kalamazoo and Mrs. George Ku of Berkley; a son, Daniel W. of Birmingham; two sisters and 10 grandchildren. Philip J. Kent Service fob Philip J. Kent, 70, of 445 Arlington Road, will be 10 a.m. children. Tristate Meeting of Police'Branch in City This Week A tristate conference of the Associated Police Communication Officers, Inc., (APQO) will be held Waldron Hold Thursday and Friday. More than 100 communications specialists from law enforcement agencies in Michigan, Indiana and Ohio will attend. Medford Plttmaa ef the Pontiac Police Department is sergeant-at-arms of tee Michigan chapter. Speakers at the two-day conclave will include R. J. Evans, national president of APCO, a radio engineer at Michigan State Police headquarters; A. P. Miller, regional director of the Office of CIvU Defense Mobilization; and E. C. Den-staedt, superintendent of municipal communications for Detroit. i1 * * it A banquet Friday evening will feature a talk by Nicholas (Red) tomorrow at It. Jamas Episcopal Churth. Burial will be In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Mr. Kant (fisd Sunday to Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, following a'loag Hints*. Ha was chief sngtnasr of the Eleotrtoal Division of Chrysler Oorp- until his retirement to I860. He bald that port 10 years. Since his rrtiremsnt, be has —read as a consulting angtoaer tor the Stew-art-Warner Cprp. . A Birmingham resident 35 years, he was a member of . a number of national and international professional electrical, and automotive He represented the aqdety/' of Automotive Engineers in the Army tret operation "Task Force iVig-id" conducted to Fairbanks, Alaska to 1MT, ; ' Mr. Kant also was a member of the Greater Detroit Board of Cbm-merce, Economic CMb of Detroit, Detroit Athletic,Club, Orchard Lake Country Chib, Tim Kappa Ep*Uon, Detroit Consistory and file Moslem Temple . Surviving are his wile {Catherine E.; a daughter, Mrs. Marcae Power; two sons, William R. and Richard E.; and a brother Frank Bernard V. Cole A Requiem Mass for Bernard V. Cole, 4B. of 406 Wlahbore Une, Bloomfield Hills, Will be said 10 tomorrow at St. Hugo of the Hills Church. Mr. Cote died Saturday to William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. He was the owner of the. Detroit agency of Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York. Surviving are his wife Mary; five daughters, .Mary, Margaret, Martha, Nancy and Julie; and three sons, Pad, Mark and Thom- K - His body is &t fife Ted C. Sullivan Funeral Home, 15000 FenkeU Road, Detroit. Leslie M. Schafbuch Service for Leslie M. Schafbuch, 57. of 23011W. 13-Mile Road, Bii«-ham Farms, will be l p.m. Friday the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Schafbuch, a substation operator for the Detroit Edison Co., died today after a long illness at the Detroit Osteopathic Hospital, Highland Park. He was a member of the Multi-Lakes Conservation Association, Detroit Edison Rifle Club and the Knights of Pythias, Marengo (Iowa) Lodge No. 30. Surviving besides his wife Marie are a son, Robert of Madison Heights; a daughter, Mr*. Richard Lappin of Detroit; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grover Schafbuch of Morenga, Iowa; and six grand- James Gardner to Head Tax Allocation Board Former Commerce Towtuhjp Supervisor James L. Gardner was elected yesterday chairman of the 1961 Oakland County Tax Allocation Board. UK six-member board, which each year must split up the 15-mill property tax limitation between the county, schools and townships, also set hearing .dates on 1962 budgets/ Preliminary hearings on township budgets wifi be held M*y 10. For schools, the hearings will be May 11 and tor the county and Preliminary rates will be May 15, according to Julia Mad-dock, secretary to the board. Final hearing! will be May 23, I and 34, with the final order of tax rates being issued'May 30. The board of supervisors approved by a vote of 70-4 yesterday sending to the allocation board, a Jones, retired major league$14,775,941 county budget requiring umpire. *- - ——- -- ^ 5.48 mills of the limitation. Several of tee opponents objected to its she - 81,175,20* mom than tee INI county operating pluses from past badgete. Final approval comes in the fan. Gardner, 75, of 810 Sleeth Road, didn’t attend Monday’s half-hour organization meeting. He reportedly was in California. He succeeds Philip E. Rowston, Pontiac mayor and former member of the tax board. * * * Besides Gardner, member* of the board ai^ Will J. Oliver, Southfield school board member; William H. Taylor Jr., a Pontiac city commissioner; Robert Y. Moore, chair-man of the board of auditors; Charles A. Sparks, county treasurer; and William J. Emerson, superintendent of county public schools. Gardner has served on the boanl since 1959. He retired from the board of supervisors in 1957 after serving 23 years. You Waal to Join? Auxiliary Police GetCoing Applications are now being accepted for membership in the newly-created Auxiliary Police Division of the Pontiac Police Department, a proposed HXknan force which will augment the City’s regular policemen on a volunteer basis. . it Police Chief Joseph Koren said that all former police reservists must submit new applications to 'osbm eligible for fills new group WwsenlsU have been isactlvr ■tore tee eafly part of llfi* when they became embroiled lu ■ (fie. pole with George D. The nete. auxiliary poboe unit will fie used aa civilian defense personnel in the event of war or natural disaster as well at taking on- police duties at large public Si0Krings and during rarit periods audi as the Christmas season, Kor-m said. Three-hour, once a week training sessions are planned, with auxiliaries Mated to take three basic Koren said. Evening will be scheduled and, if sufficient interest is shown, mom-tog Certificates will be Issued to recruits in the auxiliary upon completion of‘training courses. ORDERS FOR TRAINING During training, applicants will nit be permitted to carry weapons, except on the Pontiac police Ptetol range, and* auxiliaries win not participate to any special duty during training periods unless at their request. Upsn .reqtdred; I ri she bsw required to perform U boors ■Pedal doty or to service trata-tog yearly. Auxiliaries will be responsible tor obtaining designated uniforms, but win be issued certain equipment by the Police Department. A it * Applicants must reside within a Fmile radius of Huron and Sag-' inaw streets aad hove resided to Oakland County at toast a year. A A A Applicants must he between 35 and SO year* of age. The department wffi accept thorn between 21 . and 35 who ails draft exempt Per-sons between the ages of to and 55 win be accepted on an individual basis. A A , A Application blanks and further , tafermation may be obtained from Polloe LL Raymond E. Meggitt, •toff bureau oomtoandtr. at his to the Public Safety Bttfid- taf. THE PQNTfA€ PRESS, TUKSHAV.APRII, ill. mu THBBR* U4y wishing interesting i •r full Upe pleasant work studio. Aft < Hsnhsy Will Speak KENDALE'S 14 8. Safinaw LANSING' l*—Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, Selective Service System director, has been scheduled to •peak at a two-day conference of Michigan Draft Board peraonnel Thursday And Friday in Lansing. 27 Oakland County Folks Lose Driving Permits Livonia Auto Crash Kills Farmington Man Drivers licenses of 27 Oakland County residents have been either revoked or suspended, according to the secretary of state's office at Luting. . » A 61-year-old Farmington man was killed last night iq an auto- The ,i ‘tim was Louis Charron of 17310 Eight Mile Road. Witnesses told police that Charronstopped at the -intersection, then drove his car . into the ’path bf orte driven by Mrs. Sarah 9. McKenna, 34, of Redfond Township. i slightly In- irov* financial re-apomlbility after Incurring ear or moire drunken driving comic Satutyiino V. Rodriguez, 51 Murky 8t.; William J. Williams, 185 Branch St; DohaldE. Col Us, 1575 LeRtV :~SL7' Ferndale; - Stephen Merglewski, 2706' Ormand Road. Davisburg; and Joseph W. Ratow-ski, 656 Purdy St., Birmingham. Spencer St., Femdale; and Robert Davis, 3107 Margaret St., Auburn Heights. Thomas Duncan, 1102 S. Washington St.,. Royal Oak; Benjamin S. Hollingsworth, 52650 Dequjndre Koatf. Avon Township; Joseph C. Munday, 1385- W. Saratoga St., Femdale; Harry ‘Serori, 24370 Parklawn St., Oak Park; and Richard L. Wark, 518 E: Troy St., Fern-dale. Walter Batchelor Jr., 411 Luther t.; James Edwards, 439 Barnett St,; Robert D. Ledsinger, 217 W. Soujji BJvd., Pontiac; Joseph V. Antosh, 469 Manatee St., Hazel Park; Charles D.- Beeman, 1631 Hardware Mutuals Expands Sales Force In Pontiac.. Area Licenses of the following were revoked lor unsatisfactory driving records and failing to appear for reexamination: SIMMS SELLS for LESS Bourn It Costs SIMMS LESS to SELL! SimmaYoliey &f Saving You Money •Henry-HopkkurJr;, 441 E. Hamlin Road, Avon Township; Wesley ~ McAllister, 335 Goulson St., Hazel Park; Larry W. McDonald. 2157 Martin Road, Femdale;-and Robert E. Mihelich, 1321 E. Ten-Mile Road, Royal Oak. Ordered to- show financial responsibility following unsatisfied judgments were: - Now at Your Service Pontiac CHARLES F. HATTER 220 Draper FE 5-6091 P. F. KARNER Id. —Ft 2-MIS to bring you the highest quality protection at the lowest possible prick. Why net phone now for friendly, skillful usiftance?-No obligation, of course. INSURANCE FOR YOUR AUTO—HOME—BUSINESS—HEALTH—LIFE Hardware Mutuals o Sentry Life Gliber’s Distilled London Dry Gin. 90 Proof. 100% Groin Neutral Spirits. W. 4 A. Gilbey, Ltd., CinciMUti, 0. Distributed by Nstionol Distillers Products Company. Edward W. Johnson, 1261 E. Dallas Road, Madison Heights; Alexander R. Mackenzie, .1607 Amelia St., Royal Oak; and John and Lawrence D. Murray, 10461 Corning St., Oak Park. Rose Moosman, 512 Hannah St. Birmingham, had her license suspended indefinitely physical masons. Also having their licenses suspended indefinitely, after fail, ing to pass drivers tests, ’were Charles Metro, 46151 Dequindre Road, Avon Township, and Olive B. Weaver, 429 N. Saginaw Holly. Docker School Studaypfr Will Entertain Parents MRS. DAVID D. TAGG Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kuwalsky of 3115 Hummer Lake Road, Ortonville, announce the marriage of .their daughter Dora Wynona to Machinists Matt? 3.C. David D. Tagg, son of Mrs. ClirK ton Loree of Morley, April'11 in Howard City. The young couple have left for a few days at Niagara Falls before going on to Norfolk, Va., where they wUl reside. 4 Here at Simms, YOU .come in to the store, m. • , browse among thousands of DJ.SCOU NT ITEMS — moke your selection, pay 0051? and take.the item home with you, it's yours f,ree‘ ' anti clear. v . or use Simms Free Layaway at' no extra cost — you pay only the price the -item is marked or advertised at. \ And the reason fpr SIMMS LOW DISCOUNT , • PRICES is simple — WE DON'T HAVE. COSTLY OVERHEAD , . . no fooiy building, no fancy fixtures, .ho swivel chair executives (even the Simms Boys wait on tfade), nothing that will make the cost of any item over-priced. Asjk your. Mother and Father-about prices in town before Simms came here in Thieves Enter Hardy Home, Take Jewelry Sheriff's detectives today were; investigating a $1,700> burglary of a home in Pontiae -Township^.______ Four hours after the Roy Hardys returned to their home at 1525 Opdyke Road yesterday afternoon they discovered Mrs. Hardy's diamond ring, valued at $1,200. .was missing from behind a spice 'jar in the Kitchen where she had hid-1 1934 —*we were Pontiac's Original DISCOUNTER and we're still at it, giving Ponjtiac folks GOOD GOODS at DISCOUNT PRICE5. . Come into Simms every time you're downtown, you'll see new DISCOUNT. ITEMS on every floor -— sometimes just being unpacked, sometimes not enough to advertise,1 sometimes plenty of an item —- and we'll advertise it... but always LOW DISCOUNT cash prices through the apt ire store. For More Proof-Shof SIMMS Tof These One-Day ’EXTRA’ Discoints WALLED LAKE - Fourth, fifth and sixth grade music students at the Decker Elementary School will There was no sign of a break-in af the house which had been from 0 a.m. until 2 p.m. p.m. meeting of the Parent-Teacher Association. Donald Parrish will direct tip fourth grade Tonettes an Above itemi include ulsd, vegetables, petatost, brood and butter) Many Other Items at Try 0or Noonday Loach, Reasonable Prices Starting at 75c ■ in k flisslsr ■ WrOOtse ImWn n Mhi luws. Roosevelt Hotel Dining Room l. Smith. Prep. I2S N. PERRY ST.. FI 5-8126 tat ion course. County Chairman James M. Gtea aad Mrs. Harriett Phillips, vice chairman of the state party Irani Huntington Woods, headed a hoot of county party workers who hade,, her farewell at a party in Pondae Wednesday night. She treasures the godd-luck telegram she received from £ov. John B. Swainson. RADIO AMONG GIFTS I “I'm all sgt to go," Mrs. Burns said. Her going-away presents included a short-wave transistor radio. a steam iron, traveling iron and brief case. Ohio Delco Workers Won't Demand Hike DAYTON.. Ohio — Members of Local 753. International Union of Electrical Workers here indicated] Monday that they will not demand a pay increase when new contract j negotiations start about July L I ; The union represents 4,000 work-] era at the Deko division plant of General Motors Corp here. Freighters on the Move SAULT STE. MARIE. Ont ID-Great Lakes freighters began mov-_ again Monday in the St. Marys River after being stopped for more than 2i hour, by ice jams. - si MICHIGAN IS AGRICULTURE Michigan is rich in food stuffs. In fact, no state is richer and this is another reason Michigan ranks high in industrial opportunities. Where foods are produced, foods are processed. Michigan has many food processing industries and offers opportunities for many more. By the variety and volume of its agricultural production, Michigan Alls the family table end the pantry shelves more completely than any ..other state. Michigan is among the first 10 states in 80 agricultural commodities, and of course stands first in several of these. A state which is builton such a sturdy and steady* agricultural foundation is a good place In Which t to live end work and do business. That’s Michigan. Michigan is a rapidly advancing leader in food research—an ideal loration for the research laboratories of nearly all food processors. .Help carry Michigan’s message to the nation. Clip, this sd and mail it to someone in another, state with your own comment Let's talk up Michigan and its advantages for industry. Together, we can assure a greater future for all of us. MICIIUH IS EVEIYTNINB FOR IMISTIY flUt erf h oot of e wrfM pMtM 01 • pMit service Ay eeWipopee J* csspereMse wet Mo MitUpoo horn Aimhthn aerf tin AficAJpoo lesossrfc Obra>MO»oaf. Poporhooof. m m The Pontiac Press v’a; rfsfsy PUNS NOW TO BE HERE EARLY! Heart CONDITION Cancer —Dk o k boms e* "UNINSURABLE" ★ CONTINENTAL'S * fmMw.. . Second Fleet v • i • /.vL .c# Signs Bill on Procedures for Con-Con Selections i, LANSING one Yuri A. Gagarin, who, after his astronaut doings, was compelled to go through the ordeal of being kissed by Nikita Khrushchev, and whose remarks, when properly trans-slat*!. lead us to believe that hto first name should be spelled “Yuli,” and pronounced as two words. a mystery. Just why bother Khrushchev Is i for at will he can deprive the Soviet people of the benefits af a higher standard of living by roarmtrattag the are of their hard-earned funds on anything from a Sputnik is a nuclear device. Only your own physician can give you ductless gland treatment (hormones) If lt Is Indicated. It would be worse than useless to take anything of the Mad without medical stipend- Improve my memory. • “Why, I may be Introduced to people at a party and within two minutes I can’t recall their (4) Cross index the new name by making many associations with It. Speak tt. Write it down when He doesn't hesitate to spend the mbney of the people of the Soviet Union on a "very new amLgadgety swimming pool" which Lippmann mentioned as one of the sights he saw at the Khrushchev headquarters on the shore of the Black Sea. Still another phase of the grass fire •-nuisance la presented by Blanchard Frenadorf of Drayton Plains, who writes - that It ' overheated all the fire sirens. The Soviet premier loat no oppor- Thc Country Parson Verbal Orchids to- “We always thought .America stood for the principle of nelfnie- Mrs. Ida Geel of 3263 Baldwin Road; 83rd birthday. . Jackson Hataubt of Birmingham; 82nd birthday. Mrs. tv* Deloy of Waterford; 80th birthday. . Mr. and Mn,jl*y HL Haber of Flint; formerly of Romeo; golden wedding. ■ , I ' .. I . Mrs. May Sage ; ofVaasar; Mth birthday. ' Mr. and Mrs. Charles Armstrong of fOjiom: 55th wedding anniversary. I do suggest that you take vitamin B. Vitamin E promotes fertility in animals, and probably has the same effect in human beings. Vitamin E is wheat germ oil. The best source of it is wheat germ. Wheat germ begins to turn rancid within a day or two after the wheat is ground. Rancidity/ even before .if becomes evident to taste, destroys vitamin E So tt fa necessary, if tou want to be sure to get thq/full benefit ttt vitamin E, to consume the wheat germ aritran a few days after the whqal is ground. Wheat germ more'than a few days old is« scarcely worth using. In some communities it is possible tp get reality. B xinppiy. of wheat germ at the mill the day the wheat Is ground. in yotm^ompanions will train you you have the chance, so you can to become a social detective, ferreting out virtues and linking them with the appropriate names and face*. And link related ideas to “It fa t h u s very humiliating to have to ask SwtW “•««* present them toother folks at the Party/ "Is It old age or do I need pome special system to petit up S*0*1, 'my memory?” - A QUIT BEING DOCTORS “Howdy, Gril(9pa, how ’do you feel today?” fa the usual query sf friends and relatives of the aged. Quit it! Leave that type of question for your physician, You lay-•men should extrovert your old folks , by turning their attention to the weather, or the crop* or politics, or grandmother's new quttt, (2) Get a clear original impres- U there’s aa such place fa ym FACTS ABOUT MEMORY Don’t alibi unduly about old age, for you can have a keen memory at the age of 75 or 90, IF. And that Mg «UT means IT you follow the simple rales ef psychology outlined as follows: (1) Stay In contact with external i As. we. gn\ older, moat of us cut off many el the snrtal bonds that used to keep in active touch with the world around us/ A good memory Is like photog- it, ea by associating Orien Filer's raphy. You caiTt' produce a dear name with being a fits player or 8e ask to Have the stranger repeat hts ahme. Visualise It. Aad in adfar to add mare to- ll secret contest w “filer.” That’s how the! stage memory expert! develop their phenomenal memories. Send for the booklet "How to Improve Memory and Study More Efficiently,” enclosing a stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cento. It offers many more hints. ' - recalls toe most same* from the party, goto 16 cents or a quarter O. * 5. K™ " *“• esuus* mat, I tjplns mm) printing coata *W»ou Mnd JoTa* payebolottesl statu ata psm- So keep up your membership in * Sunday school dees and your ■ lodge.' ' e , V" A}. cakes, gems or whatnot.. You’ll find' recipes for there “Eight > eykaders give a car power mI,v because they work together — I wish some of Mr roeimlttees could realize that.” plain-wt^at products fat the free pamphlet Wheat'to, Eat, for which send the a stamped, self-addressed envelope'. ■, ", V v■ It fa certain, isays Bicknell and PfeaoMt, “(The VRamlna. in Medicine^” the oil (wheat germ dl) creaky joints. Rementoer, Moreover, Bret when you gtve to to sH still. •if these joints tend to “freese,” so It wtll not be fang Hit ye* are chalr-Cast or bedtort. 1 + ', And quit foacusafag on your "16 nards.” Don't \indutge to a daily ''Intention” to remember fa thus jot as vital as paying "attention,” tor you can notice the names e able to recite them to order. But If you aertoudy Intend to t remember them,-you can probably 9 do' so with not over 2?-repetitions! -<3) Use the new name et once. (Ospyrtght mi) . Don’t stop by say Is*, Tm glad j to inset yen.” Instead, get tost tosw.ls aatltlad j"f, *• *» rapubll- Mtl dtanntrKw. " ^ ^m uertSHtaTatTUS!! I. Mltoher ittr * THft PONTIAC PREgS. TUESDAY. APRIL 18, 1961 SEV&N____^ Wixom PTA Slates School Fair'May 6 , WIXOM—The Wixom Elementary School Parent-Teacher Association will vohaor a fair Kay 6 at the school from 2 to 7 pm. The city's new fin truck will be on display and its equipment will be demonstrated by volunteer firemen. • - Other features of file fair .include a snack bar, pony i games, a .country store! a \ elephant sale and movies. Mrs. John Dockey and Mrs. Orlando §mith are cochairmen of the Mid-Term Opening April 24 Day* Half-Day, and Evening Sessions Gragg Shorthand ' Speedwriting Shorthand Typewriting Junior Accounting Higher Accounting Business Administration Comptometer Special Subjects Are Available VETERAN APPROVED Pontiac Business 'Institute, Inc. 7 W. Lawrence St. Phone FE 3-7028 "Training for Business Careen Since 18M” Private School to Observe Its Eighth Year* ADDISON TOWNSHIP - Kings-bury School -hem will obaorve Its eighth anniversary Sunday with an open house from 2 to 5 p.m Richard H. Delano, jUrector, announced today, The private school at 2980 Hos-ner Road was founded in 1963 and had ah'enrollment then ot 13 stu- through the eighth grade. > Since then a ninth grade has been added and enrollment has increased to 80 pupils. Kingsbury currently draws within the triangle formed by (Xarkatoa-Rocbeater-Lapeer aad the latermedtate communities ol Oxford, Dryden, Almont. Romeo, Washington, Lake Orton Mrs. Isabelle Palms Buckley, whose education plan Is followed at the school, will be a guest at the open house tea.-Mrs. Buckley, a native Detroiter, will travel here from Lo# Angeles. A school bus is operated from Rochester serving Washington and Romeo and another from Clarkston I serving Ortonville, Lake Orion and 'Oxford. ' OUR24th ANNIVERSARY SALE i im: furniture PRICED CLOSER TO FACTORY COST • Convenient Terms • Careful Free Delivery • Open Friday Evenings FURNITURE 144 OAKLAND AYE. More Dates Set for School Art at Rochester Increase Not Urge Rochester School Board to Ask Vote on Six Mitts ROCHESTER - The Rochester Community Schools’ series pf elementary^ art* shows and » which began wltfi an hibition at North Hill School March 23 will .continue into May, it was announced today. mm eveate have become OSCAR FERRELL Licensed Master Plumber - 24 HOUR SERVICE [All Work Guaranteed , SALKS—SKRVICt—REPAIR ROCHESTER — The Rochester Board of Education last night decided to ask voters to approve six-mill operational tax for three •ars in the regular school election June 12. The millage request, which represents a four-mill increase over the present operational levy, will be needed to staff and maintain 20 newly constructed classrooms, according to board members. Ike other two mills laeladed la the June millage pup soot were part of tblo year’e total operational levy ef 11.17 mills. The two mills west off the Volts With tha last tax spread. In order to lower the total tax rate for property owners in the school district, the board plans to reduce the debt service levy from 10 to S mills. ONLY TWO MILL* e increase in the over-all school taxes then will be only two mflDl, a school board representative said today. Besides the ixtra costs resulting tun opening new classrooms, the school board said more operational funds were needed in order to pay a higher salary schedule approved for teachers in the system last PRESCRIPTIONS RESCMPTKMfS ROFESSIONAUY HtfECT ROPERIY MCID P PERRY DRUGS partment, aad this will mark the Another recommends.ion su|>- | “» * *** j mitted to the board last night [ Every child in each school is may result in higher salaries for [represented and the work shown! “superior teachers” in the dlv [includes any area of curriculnij be visuilly presented. A special committee representing fiiie school board, administration and teachers recommended FE 8-2800-FE 5-7501 Mrs. Whipple said that she and er art consultants, Sue Preston and Julius Kusey, cooperate with the classroom teachers in daily work and on these special events. merit pay plan which would give "superior” teachers with master's degrees and 12 years experience annual increases of 2300. Other teachers included in the merit pay system who are below the maximum ranking on-the salary schedule would receive pay boosts of $200 yearly if their work was deemed superior. In the 1961-62 budget proposed by the school board last night, the largest expenditure was $1,463,193 j for^instruction roots. , Expect 200 Woman Will POUa strike this Summer? The schools and dates for forthcoming art shows and open houses are Avon—Brooklands, tomorrow; Meadow Brook, April 25; Hamlin, April 27; Harrison—Central, May 4; Woodward', May 8; and Baldwin, May 10. The total anticipated'budget of I £023,293 will be submitted for! KALAMAZOO (UPII—About 200 nal approval to the Oakland Michigan mothers are expected to! County Tax Allocation Board. attend the annual state, conven-Operational costs were set atjtion here of the Mothers of World Vmm in theYteniative budget. War II. Jt starts Wednesday. The third highest figure expected for the next school year was $114,-800 for transportation. Henry Purdy, current president of the board, said last night , he would seek re-election to his third [ term in the June election. Dr. Sarah Van Hoosen Jones,; who holds the other position which will be open in the election,’ announced she will retire after serving 35 years on the bdard. There is a very good chance that POLIO wUf strike this Summer. Art you ready for it? An your children? Babies, if then an any at home? The date to prepare is now and the way to do it is to image for your POLK) shots. Call yotif local physician or local health department for information. This is particularly important for young par*_ cats and babies! Make arrangements today and be on the.safe tide. Remember, no one is too young or too old to get POLIO. Be safe and freo from worry. It Only takes minutetef your time. bos’t tsks a ehsncs-tsks year polls shots U1 L Blvd. FE 2-0259 W. Bloomfield PTA .to Install Officers WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Recently elected officers, of the West Bloomfield High School Parent-Teacher Association will be installed Thursday at the 8 p.m. meeting of the organization. *' WANT A DREAM KITCHEN? ...WELL FINANCE IT! You can start on improvement qr repair project at your house right away I You can borrow up to $3,500 with three years in which to pay it back. Low bank min, liberal terms, plus life insurance at no extra cost. The officers being installed include Mrs. Robert Hollister, president; Mrs! Wayne Smith, mother [vice president; William Schenck, [father vice president; and David Vivian, teacher vice president. Others taking office are Mrs. James Dunn, recording secretary; Nila . Cookingham, corresponding [Secretary; and John Buchanan, treasurer. j A _ "showcase" of curriculum [achievements .will be pesented at the meeting by seventh through 12th grade students. [Commerce Methodists [Plan Saturday Dinner COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — The j women of Comtnerce Methodist Church, under the direction of the [Women’s Society of Christian Service, will hold a smorgasbord dinner Saturday from 5:30 to 8! p.m. Proceed* from the dinner will go toward furnishing the dining m at the church. The church 'is pt Hit W. Commerce Road. Mrs. Robert Lind, president of the WSCS, is chairman of the program. Tickets can be obtained from Mrs. Wilbert Horton of 1720 S. Commerce Road. Ask a contractor or building supply dealer * hr on estimate, then see Pontiac State Bonk: You don’t hove to be a customer. You don't have to have your home paid hr, • No down payment. WE HNANCE ALL OTIS OF HOME IMPROVEMENTS MONTHLY PAYMENTS <00 It*? AN ON 7SO 23.9* 34.42 *<79 MOO 31.94 UTS 2000 43M ^ tijy 173.44 MOO 110.92 IS972 30*. tt iggg! f'k PONTIAC DOWAGIAC footormgJJffTlME WARRANTY * ECONOMY * COMFORT * EFFICIENCY Call at new hr ee atrtmete Hoofing and Shoot Mhtol Contractor STATE BAN K . gKjL.'flftu. In' r ■to*M.Va-U-u M wit. tw— »■-*- . MU*n. M*»b»r f P.I.C. ♦ W,4 forvic*.« fo»* lo*r»*c* 35! N. Paddock Strati FE 5-1573 Get for Spoco Hooting - is New. AveteWe CALL IW INFORMATION y Oowngloc STEEL FURNACE uadsji ,mjXiBhfl[jldt llSil $, * v- it M " ' •’ ■ Vy...............-______________J EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 10(11 Open Door to Past at All Saints CAad in calico prints two young women from yesteryear tend an old-fashioned cradle in an early American setting. Mary Shadier of Ottawa Drive ' (left) and Mary Jo Whitfield,* Oak• wood Street, presented this quaint scene for area residents who auended today's opening 'of the ninth annual antique show and sale at All Saints Episcopal Church. Eighteen outstanding dealers from throughout ' the state have contributed for the show's many exhibits. Steer Gear of Faulty Appraisal All Mates Don't Pipe Same Tune DEAR ABBY: Wril. St. Vah be'"doesn’t drink, chase or ... entines Day came and went curse. He work’s hard and and ao did Easter with not so is a good church-going family much as a “boo” from my ' man. But do you think l am husband. I’ve been married 14 asking too much to want n ... years and he - sriHrarap token of his affection to show haa never ■ my friends now and then? given me 9 WAITING AND„HOPING even a 10-cent ■ card lor ffly fl DEAR WAITING: A man birthday or H 1' shows his "affection" to his ' any other or- ™ \3kJw wife by'being a good family - canton. I re- Hr/ man 365 days of the. year. member h i in Mk 1, Don't confuse his lack of on all occa- 1 L sentimentality with lack o' ■ions and he I tow. Some men are no* the s e e m s 1 . “remembering” k i n d.. b u: pleased. ' W ' their love is deep and con ni admit ABBY staid. / (AdvtrUMBcnt) • (UiirtmiMiill DEAR ABBY: I recently had a date with a gentleman —at least I thought he was. 1 am in my middle 40g and he is in his early 50s. (It was a date arranged... .by mutual fnum fwt yyitt Jeanette Cockle of Miami Road joined women of the All Saints parish in donning old fashioned finery for the opening of the ninth annual antique show and sale today. Homemade goodies and meals, ‘cooked and ■ served by the church women, are available at the tea rodm overlooking the event, as well as in the dining room. Doors are open at 11 a. m. daily. bringingupbaby; “■ i hints COLLECTED BY MRS. DAN GERBER. MOTHER OF • When we got to the restaurant, I didn’t wait for him to open the car door for me. I tust opened tt myself and hopped out.' He said, “A LADY always gives her escort the opportunity to be a gentle- Now this than fs from Virginia and he did a(lot of talking about his .line Southern background. Then he threw in some cracks about how re-, fined and feminine the Southern ladies were. I was born in Brooklyn and am proud of it. Should I have, said, "Drop dead, you-all?-' How would you have handled it? - FROM BROOKLYN PTAs in Action : Six months sees a • lot of exciting | changes in a baby. | Hand skills begin > come to the fore. Achievements in fitting, moving and cooing appear'by the score. Gentle encouragement on your part now. will help speed baby's progress by providing incentive. Point to remember: try not to urge baby beyond his .capabilities. . Physical activity increases rapidly stage and so does the need for energy. Gerber Baby Cereals are rich in energy - giving calorics, plus blotfd - building . (6 table spoons give your I darting more than 100%. of the Recommended Daily Dietary Allowance for iron.) In addition, Gerber Cereals are enriched with important R-vitamins. and calcium. As for eating enjoyment Gerber Cereals have bland but distinc-. five flavors aod a dreamy, creamy texture when mixed with formula or milk. For you: they stir to smooth perfection in seconds. Your choice of Rice Cereal. Barley, Oatmeal, Mixed Cereal and High Protein Cereal. DEAR FROM BROOKLYN: You should have said nothing, and thanked him for a lovely evening—and a' short one. At the 6-menth stage, your baby’s day to day appetite may wane a bit. This appetite lag may be caused by too nluch ex- . citement. teething or just plain lack or hunger. Favorite. foods are in order now and plenty of variety in color and kinds of food. Babfbs , do respond to a change of taste from meal to meal. Appetites usually rise *n shine when you spark baby's menus with Gerber Baby Foods. Over 100 strained and junior varto--ties so you can pick and choose to your heart's Content and baby's continued delight. Gerber delec-tables: the new. Ham High Meat Dinner, Garden Vegetables, ..Chicken, 'Applesauce and Apricots. Gerber Baby Foods, Fremont, Michigan. . * Happy Day ‘501’ Nylon $095 White’s Village Square DEAR ABBY: t am only 15 but I would like to speak from knowledge and experience. I think the advice you gave “In Love in Korea"—to wait until he got back to the states before marrying the girl he fell in love "with over there—was the best advice that could be given to anyone. I know someone who was sent overseas for Unde Sam. He met a girl there jmd married her a few weeks later. Now they have a family. But there is no love in the family because the parents do not get along. They ean’t separate for religious reasons. You may say, “How do you know so much about the family?” WeB, I. will tell you how. The fhmijy is mine. The “girl'' is my mother, and the “boy*' is my father. I don't say that all overseas marriages doeft work, but ours is an example of one that didn’t, and I am living in a~ family without love, or the knowledge of what a real family should be like. Thank you, Abby, for warning others. You could have done no better. ONE WHO KNOWS Yes, Abby wiU answer your letter personally if you write to ABBY, Box 3385, Beverly Hills, Calif., and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Malkim School s Parent-Tcacher Association will meet •t 6 p.m. Thursday in the 'chool multipurpose room. A “Birthday Party for All” will be featured at the Fathers' Night cooperative dinner under chairmanship of Mrs. Daniel Piotamo. Lester Pitts, father vice president, is chairman for the program. The film “Monza Italian Car Races’.' will be shown following the dinner. A talk by George Caron is Horn the P o n t i a c Youth Assistance Office on juvenile ^protection also is on the program. Homeroom mothers from the , sixth grade classes will -serve refreshments. The meeting begins at 7:30 p.m. in the multipurpose room. WEVEK The city's centennial film “The Pontiac Story of Progress and Promise’’ will be shown at Thursday’s Wever PTA meeting at 7:30 p.m. Members will gather Jn the. school4 gymnasium. Refreshments will be served by the mothers from Mrs. Robert Peterson's fourth grade -class. Mothers from the rooms of Mrs. Edward Booth. Mrs. Ronald Gilmore and Mayme My-vatt will serve. They are Mrs. Donald Houle, Mrs. John Lake, Mrs. Anthony Stadler, Mrs. ‘ James Thomas, Mrs. Manley Boyd and Mrs. Edsel Malkim. Mrs. Rudy Pfeiffer, Mrs. Ack Bridger, Mrs. Clarence Ball, Mrs.. William Huston, Mrs. Albert Chapdelaine and Mrs. Edmond Watkins also will serve. Birthday centerpieces - have been made by fourth graders. CROFOOT . Highlighting Thursday’s Cro-foot School PTA meeting will be a progress report of the five-state Airborne Education-■ al Television Program being financed by •the Ford. Foundation with the cooperation of Purdue University and West-bighouse Corporation. John Barson, area coordinator of the program for the ...pilot schools and a professor atjlVayne State University, will be the speaker. A spokesman for the PTA reports that it is anticipated some thirty million pupils. Including Pontiac * Pearisburg, Va. children,' will be reached by Mr. Davis, the project. The bride-elect is the daugb- *•'■■■ A ter of Mrs. Ann Cantrell of installation of officers will Holly and Louie A. Cantrell of be conducted at the meeting St. Louis, Mo. OWEN---------------- ■ ,■ Owen PTA has slxted a 2:30 p.m. meeting Wednesday at the school. Mrs. Amos Hoolihan has announced that a film, produced by the Michigan Education Association concerning curricu-1 u m s in the elementary schools, will follow a brief business session. The film, “Rockin’, Readin' and 'Rithmetic'’ was filmed in Pontiac's Webster School. New PTA officers gre Mrs. Richard Butler, president; Mrs. Ralph Bowers, first vice president; Mrs. Charles Chamberlain, second vice president; John Newman, father vt ie e president;' Mrs. James Scott, teacher vice president; Mrs., Martin LaBrle, -secretary; and' Mrs. Rodger King, treasurer. Mrs. Hoolihan is historian. Alma Cantrell / to Wed in Junes June vows are planned by Alma Mae Cantrell of Baldwin Avenue and Earl B. Davis,' ■on of Mrs. Albert Davis" of , and the late 828 N. Maini St-, Rochester Open Friday-'til 9:00 . OL 1-8166 Mh’a £alett the style, center of Pontiac Showing the Captivating - “Petite Bob” the style all Paris Is raring about SPECIAL PERMANENT OFFER • Style Cat • Conditioning Shampoo • Deluxe Cold Wave • Glamour Rinse • Fashion Set $750 COMPLETE ETRAORDINARY. SPECIAL ^25.00 Permanent - Now $]£50 Outstanding Stuff of Experts to Serge You No ApDomaneatoNtqM Opsa Friday 'til • TM. I t Wasn't the Proper Place ' By the Emily Pori Institute .Q: I went to > matinee the other afternoon with a friend of mine end seated in trait of US was a group of women who passed a box of candy back pad forth to each other throughout the play and sat munching on candy all during the performance. Wasn’t this a display* of hrif manners? A: The passing of candy hack and forth and the rattling of candy papers can be very annoying to others, and for this reason it is neither good form nor good manners to pats candy dining a performance. It may guile, property be passed during intermission. An antique gun'collection is of special interest to men'and boys joining the admiring crowds-at All Saints Episcopal Church. Bruce MeixseU.of'Seneca Street set up this popular display for the show which ' continues to 10 this evening, Wednesday and Thursday. ' '-P .''lE-X v ;4-c: Xi Beta Beta Picks Officers, Has Program Goldten Age Club Plans Big Evening Xi Beta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority elected officers at the April business meeting at Hotel Waldron. Mrs. John Whitehead is Incoming president; Mrs, William Long, vice president; Mrs. Clarence Bail, recording secretary;' Mrs. Walter Hiller, corresponding secretary; Mrs. a Fred Rigotti, treasurer, and Mrs* E. I* Sturdy, 'lfl| delegate. The Golden Age Club of Waterford will meet at 6:30 Friday at the Community Center for’a cooperative dinner. ' Travel movies in color will be shown and the evening will close with card games and dancing. Those who attend should bring table service and a dish Q: I have been asked to take part to two weddings. Hie first will be as a bridesmaid at a fairly large wfcddtng; the second; which is taking place about a month later, will be a small wedding at which I shall be the only attendant. May I wear my bridesmaid's dram at the second wedding? Some of the same guests will be at both weddings, in case that makes any difference. A: The only person to whom tt makes a difference is the bride. If the bride has no objection, then there is none. •You could possibly change yaw appearance by wearing a different hat—or. headdress— and carrying different colored to f council Calvary Baptist Missionary Unit Meeting Tonight They will be installed at the Fouhders' Day Banquet at Edgewodd Country dub April Following the “enjoyment of art” theme for the month, Mrs. Long spoke on "1110 Various Man'* and Mrs. Tom Ogden ’ discussed enjoyment of nature. Mrs. H. G. Richardson showed color slides of Norwegian and Swedish landscapes. . The' W o m e n’s Fellowship Missionary Group of the Cal-• vary Baptist Church, Waterford Township, will meet at 7:30 this evening at the church. Q: I have recently become engaged and my parents would like very much to invite my fiance's parents to dinner. My fiance has two sisters and a brother living at home, and I would Uke to know'If it is necessary that they be included in the invitation. Our apartment is small and we we rather cramped for space. 'A: It will not be necessary to invite the sist.ers ~er the - brother, but do have your fiance explain to them your reason far not being able to include them. The group will support a scholarship for a college student this year. A hair dryer has been ordered for the women patients at Pontiac State Hospital Mrs. George Kennedy of the First Baptist Church, recently returned'from the Congo, will show slides of mission work. The special project for April jviU be assisting the Rev. and Mrs. Donald Herweyer, now serving in Guatemala, with language studies. Square Set Club to Dance April 29 Mrs. Jerry Hayward and Mrs. Herbert Smith will serve refreshments. The last regular dance Sat-, irday for the Square Set Dance dub will .open with a workshop at 8:30 p.m. conducted by Jim Thompson at Herrington School. A dinner dance is set for April 29 at 6:45 p.m. at Roosevelt Temple on State Street. Met Contralto at Symphony Here Tonight The appearance of daramae Turner, colorful Metropolitan Opera contralto, will close the eighth season for Pontiac Symphony Orchestra at 8:30 this evening in Pontiac Northern High School. The program will conclude Symphony Week which has been proclaimed by Mayor Philip E. Rowston. In addition to three favorite 'arias from the opera "Carmen,” Miss Turner will sing' “Howsoever They May Revile Me," from Handel's “Berenice;" "Songs My Mother „Taught Me.” Dvorak; and Schubert s "Der Erl Konig.” Schubert’s "Unfinished Symphony’' and conductor Francesco DiBlasi's arrangement of Chopin’s "Prehide in E Minor” will be among the symphony’s selections for the program. Student tickets, and individual concert admissions may be purchased at the door. Bearity Salon fe 541257* 11 N. SAGINAW Between Lawrence amJ Pike St. (Acre* from strand Theater) -r Metropolitan Opera contralto Claramae Turner,, guest artist for this evening’s concert by the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra, is pictured at rehearsal Monday evening in Pontiac Northern High School. Miss Turner’s selections will include, three arias from Biset’s “Carmen.” ' Election Tonight by Study Group The Wever pre-achool study group will elect officers to the school library at 7 this eve- W REUPHOLSTERING SI From 'ELLIOTT'S ™ 1 Mrs. Morris Hail h nominated as chairnu Ronald Bunker, cock and Mis. Bruce Richai rotary-treasurer. Mrs. Rexford Hagoot er, will talk with the t parent! and Answer q Parents -of pre-set WndergArten age chtt invited. Nunery sen be available to the kl When your furniture arrives at Elliott's, expert workmen strip it m to the bare wood. Then with all the skin that years of experience ^ can provide, your new furniture is created. You can be assured B of quality when dealing with. Elliott’s. _ V Open |Aon. ^ * and Fri. Til 9 PvM. m wLJum FLY FREE TO LAS VEGAS! *201 :nHS: i* hmsms mesrw .■RKWlatoa MS ' w. Noose , FI Man m THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 18. 1961 NINE Taiwan’* crop* are now second only to thoee of Japan in the Far East. M ■ Beautv Digest YOUR NEW COD' T h i» u car-tain l y a time of exalting « • I f f u r e *. Never tie* .......x> so much concern tv«r t h a shape, the wava, th* curl, the- length and the goner* •I outline of hairdo*, With th* dlvartity Of styling, It i* difficult to imagine any woman who cannot find a hairdo that vylll do something for her. Th* idea is to have a special coif adapted for you alone. Why not give your new coif th* advantage of .a good permanent. That* it on* designed specifically for your hair. Make arrangements now. Betty LeCornu Hair Fashions _ 5799 Olid* Highway Waterford, OR 4*1922 1082 W, Huron Street Pontiac, FEderal 2-5211 Complete TRAVEL BUREAU Service Scant* far aB Air lines NO EXTRA COST TO TOC Abo Headquarters for : • Foreign Documents and Road Guides • Auto Shipments, rentals and purchase • Guided and Independent Foreign Tours and Cruises 76 Williams Street FE 5=4151 uKitchen Fresh** Ross’ Candy Candy for Gift* of for Yourself i FUND RAISING CONSULTANTS Cafl FB 2-2509 or drop In 4642 Elizabeth Lake Rd. AMBRALON YARN for Spring Knitting THE KNITTING NEEDLE 452 W. Huron FE 5-1330 Officers Are Elected at Annual Meeting This girl is definitely in shape for the swim suit season. Let Josephine Lowman help you with your figure. Better to Be Diet Wise You can lose up to 10 pounds on her Nine-Day Diet. Don’t Be Pound Foolish It'* so easy to Idd ouraehm*! I gave up swimming and I have It is difficult to face Up to facta gone dancing only two times la when doing so would call for self- Ha ve you ever honestly admitted to yourself how much and in how many different ways overweight affects your life? Sometimes we do tm even realize that we have been kidding ourselves until after we have lost weight. A letter before me says: | "This la sort ot a confession. I had a men figure until about three yean age. Daring that time 1 gained M pounds. I always liked people aad I laved to swim aad dance. However, 'Looking bade I know now I gave up theee activities because of my overweight. I was self-conscious about it.„ I even kidded myself into believing that the reason was a headache or because I as too tired. "Thie was especially bad because my husband it a gregarious person and he also loves dancing and swimming. I am glad that I got "hep”) to myself before* it was too late.”' Even 10 , excess > pounds can Couple Repeats Vows in Orchard Lake Rites Dr. and Mrs. Stanley ,J. Poniatowski of Orchard Lain were hosts at a wedding breakfast for 350 guests at Gin Oaks Country Club following the marriage of their daughter Adelaide to Thomas A. Phelps of Union Lake Saturday in Our Lady of Refuge Church, Or chaid Lake. Th* Rev. Giles Bartol celebrated the nuptial high Mass at 12 o'clock. Hers of rose points pattern white Chantilly lace over satin extended from file- bride’s basque bodice into a full skirt and circular cathedral train. Four layers of silk tulle with face veil fell from a crystal crown; a replica of Princess Margaret's headpiece. A white orchid centered the hand-cascade bouquet of stephanotis. A A.. A Gloria Krolicki of Dearborn was maid of honor. Suzanne and Card Ann Poniatowski attended their sister as bridesmaid and Junior attendant, along with the bridegroom’s sister Kathleen, and Margaret Green of Detroit, cousin of file bride. Matching picture hats and colonial bouquets of orchid-tinted white roses complemented fioar-length dresses of white and orchid net with lace inserts for the maids. The honor attendant's gown was of white and purple net. William Phelps stood as best man for his brother. They are file sons pf Mr. and Mrs. Frank Phelps of Union Lake. Norman make a woman feel this jway. Have you weighted the impact of extra pounds on your life against short period of calorie counting? *' If not, why not? And, you do not have to count calories. Just follow my diet. As most of my readers know, tomorrow is the last day of my Nine-Day Reducing Diet. Here .are the menus for tomorrow. MENUS FOR TOMORROW BREAKFAST One poached egg. One thin slice whole wheat toast Black coffee. LUNCHEON Salad made of shredded lettuce and one medium tomato. (Lemon for dressing) Two tablespoons cottage cheese. One glass skimmed milk. One-half grapefruit. DINNER Broiled liver.' One portion spinach. One portion beets. * One glass skimmed milk. One orange. If you would like to lose from Qve to 10 pounds in nine days, you may want my Nine-Pay Diet booklet If so, send 10 cents and self-addressed velope vtffth your request for it. MRS. THOMAS A. PHELPS Thompson, Marvin Horton and Bruce Pickard all of Union Lake were ushers. After an evening open house at the home of the bride’s parents, the couple left on an eastern honeymoon. Purple Alencon lace over lavender taffeta, with matching whims ie hat and lavender shoes and gloves was Mrs. Pofiiatowskt’s selection for her daughter’s wedding. Her corsage was a deep purple orchid. Brown cymbklium orchids accented Mrs. Phelps’ sheath dress of beige silk shantung with lace bodice. Moll: House of Fabrics Offers the newest and widest selection in Drapery, Slipcover and Upholstery fabrics. • ' Have you been to Molls? Over 20,000 yards on displayl We invite you to see us for all your fabric needs—by the yard or custom made. Famous for 2d years in custom draperies, slipcovers, upholstering and carpeting. Experienced Decorators To Advise Yop Prices Range From 61.00 to $20 yard Molls 1666 S. Telegraph FE 4-0516 Quality; Drapery ap4 Ceryete Since 1941 Park BiOt fit the Front Door Open Friday and Monday ETMioga Before Bleaching Wait until .your clothes have been 1n~the Wash cycle at least 5 minutes before adding chlorine bleach. This gives the fluorescent dye* in the: detergent time to do their work. Chlorine prevents them The Women’s Society of Bethany Bapttst Church observed its annual meeting and eleefion. of officers Thursday, at the, dhurch. Dr. ErnlLKoniz. new pastor, presented fiw devotional message and the litany 5f installation. . Mrs. Martin Wolfe, soprano, sang two solos "Great Peace, Have Bsy’* and *mte Time to Be Holy," accompanied by Elda Sutter. Percy M. W alley offered the prayet of dedication. Mrs, Orville Manns was installed as president of the group. Others] assuming duties were Mrs. Hayden Henley, first vice president and. program chairman: Mrs. Clarence Myers, house party chairman; and Sirs. William Dorris, Chairman ot literature. A , A A Mrs. Harry Berry became second vice president. Others installed were Mrs. M. A. Baldwin, vice president of missions; Mrs. Edward Lewis, vice president, of Ghris-serviee; and chairmen Mrs. Ai Coles, special interest missionaries; Mrs. Oarer Lewis, interpreter; and Mrs. Baldwin, home and overseas. The list continue* with chairmen Mrs. Lewis, love gift; Mrs. W. C. Dennis, white cross; Agnes Hllton, social relations; Mrs. Grace Sleeves, leadership training and vies president ot Christian training; Mrs. Walter Willson, family life; aim Mrs. ] Jennie Richmond, spiritual life. Mrs. Lenore Cornell was installed as the association’s vice president Business and Professional Women. Completing the list of officers were Mrs. George Lang, secretary; Mrs. Alene Kneale, treasurer; Mrs. Helene Lewis, parliamentarian; Mrs. Faye’Sandberg, auditor; and Mrs. Etta Hibbler, historian. AAA Group leaders were named at the meeting. They were Mrs. Wil- liam Cook, Deborah; Mrs. rows Taylor, Dorcas; Mrs. Will-son. Esther; Mrs. Florence Miller ia: Mrs. William Dorris, MaF Mrs. Etta HibWer, Naomi: Mrs. W. C, Dennis, Rebekah; and Mr*. James Mercer,‘Ruth. Luncheon was served by the Dorcas Group. PERMANENTS ft i Complete with Haircut aad Set A 71 1 Mon. IT* Appointment ffacassory Ft 5-8000 L through . LOUIS “ST 1 ^ FgL 10 West Harce—Sad Floor Next to Baekacr Finance Standish Group Hears Minister The Rev. Howard Clegg spoke on the “Importance of Small Things in Life" before the Standish Group ot First Congregational Church at file April meeting in the home of Mrs. Frank Van Horn of Mechanic Street. Mrs. Osri MalMm assisted the hostess with the salad teaebron. Mrs. Ray Meiser led devotions, reading "Beauty of the Earth, Onr^Hotne.” Guests for the afternoon, Eth-lynn Peterson and Mrs. William Address Josephine ^Lawman injEustis Joined the group in sewing cancer dressings. care of The Pontiac Press. A (i"Natural ^Approach ^Lightweight SUITS Th* feel, the comfort of finely tailored lightweight clothing designed to give you that "Natural" look. J65 rr OF PONT FAC HURON -at TELEGRAPH, I Thun., Fri., 10 Stops Constipation Due to “Aging Colon” Nsv laxative discovery re-creates 3 essentials for normal regularity ; Fr** bl*>etM-W. Mnt Anywhere! u«mu.iWv >| UP TO 42 SQ. FT. OF TORCH SPACE ■ 1 CONCRETE STEP COMPANY 2 6497 Highland ltd. (M-59) OK 3-7715 £j At you grotv older, the internet n ties of your colon wall also age, low th( strength that propels waste from (he body. Stagnant bowel contents become so dry and shrunken that they fail to stimulate the urge to purge. Relief, doctors say, lies in a aew laxative principle. Oid-«tyic built* and moisteners may create gas, take 3 or 4 days for relief. Old-style Hits and drugs cramp.and gripe tbs entire system. Of ail laxatives, only new Colonaid gives you its special 3-way relief that works only on the lower coloo (ana of const i pation) I) Colon at O moisturizes dry, hardened waste for stay passage without pain or strain. (9 Colonaid’s unequalled retail king action helps retone flabby colon muscles. (3) And Colonaid acts gently, oo the nerve reflexes that stimulate the vital “mass movement” of your lower colon. Colonaid relieves even chronic constipation overnight: is so geotls k was hospital proved safe even for expectant mothers. And Colonaid won't interfere with absorption of vitamins or other food nutrients. Get Colonaid today! OTtODUCTOKY SIZE 48* entries last night and othera said their entries would be liaod up soon, repotted Mrs. Series. Chapters of the Brother* of the Brush and Centennial Belles are also Invited to sponsor candidates. A high light last alght was the geld velvet cape with ermine Series’ subchairman for prizes for the eourt to Mrs. Forrest Wood. Mrs. J. A. Rammes is sub-hairman for arrangements. The .30-member contest cot tee plans to line up prizes abd ready the distribution of tickets between now and May 15. when sponsors and candidates will Esther for the kickqtf. Draws 2 Years Probation for Knifing in Pontiac Waddell Paiyne, 38, 'of 450 Wyoming Ave., was given probation for two years and assessed $100 court costs for the Christmas Eve knifing of another man in the city. Payne, who pleaded self-defense nd guilty April 5 to felonious i sault in the attack on Ottie Williams with a boy scout knife, was sentenced by Circuit Judge Frederick C. Zilem- yHOOVER ^ Bectnc, Haar Washer PLERTY OF FREE PARKING WETS the floor ctesn water mi detergent SCRUBS it thoroughly ... gets it reai|y clean. VACUUH DRYS R instantly —really dry, too. Sm a demonstration Oily < if tots modem way to mb floors—without CfVAaQC I ret red hinds. Do *59" I R.B. MUNRO ELECTRIC COMPANY 1 1040 W. Huron PI 5-8431 j nrum • American OriMaptdic • R. I. Monro Electric • China City Restaurant | • Jones Typewriter bj • Gerow Jewelers weight Camp mesh' garments breath coolness . . . help you lotto better, fed better all day long. The Unmoved Witte mesh dacron and cotton fabric to sturdier, stronger, longer wearing. Why not stop today for a private fitting? By Prescription Only We lap* All I Artificial Lite AMERICAN ORTHOPEDIC SERVICE I ________________ I 1068 W. Huron FE 5 7523 TWO BLOCKS WEST OF „ TELEGRAPH MME i PRIDE ( - (jenu'i We Invite Your Comparison . . . Our Diamonds Demand It ... | With Each Purchase © O © No Society—gem or otherwise—governs the quality of a jewelers purcha.se his pride is your- guarantee! 1064 I West Huron CjetPUf J JEWELER) Pontiac's Most Luxurious Restaurant A Welcome Change from the Ordinary Typewriters are our business! rw't MateVMiJ-" a« . *-K. . i Dont "second-guess” on a typewriter ! -*®e ui for the advice you ll need. | We have the training—the experi-i*nce-and the facilities to assure I you of complete aatiafactieal I Choose from oar arid* range of j Models for, home school-or ef-I Ape nee. BoT | chines. Typ xypewmer reniais, 100. I jEasy payment terma. 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Hot Water Heater, and Blown-In » I 2I» Voo** Rd„ FoaHpc, Hkkig* THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. APRIL 18. 1961 ELEVEN Supervisor Ctou*g Up ‘Rmmira* Civil Defense Rift Moves Into the Open County Board ADAM AMES By Lou Fine Speaker Gets P.A. Razzberry UMMM...MCW 1KHOW WHAT ITS LIKE TO DANCE WITH A CLOUD. . ,HE>C MISS aoupw MDU ^ An undercurrent rift over <^nty Civil defense accomplishments come to outface-yootenloy with dentate from two menbere of the Oakland County Board of Si vians that they were trying to a over the department. 'eteran Oak Park Supervisor trie* E. Canton, chairman of the\£oard‘i civil defense commit-laid there were "vicious slan-n rumors" circulating that he and Marshall Taylor, a member of his committee from Wailed Lake, were engaged In "a conspiracy” to take over the administration of the department. REFUSED TO QUIT Saying.the board had appointed him and,the board would hpve to relieve him, Jarrendt said he told that to Cardon In refusing to step e that | h ‘ “He told no able to sell civil detease to the people of Oakland Cmwtf* lar-rendt aaid altar the nteetiag. He dtstrtbated the dmual report and left before Cardon presented his Hard-luck'Charles E. Cardon of the board of supervisors got an electrical ranberry when he stopped to the microphone to make a report on civil defense yesterday. ■■ * • * j * . A malfunction in the public address system-caused an ear-splitting hiim which .sent Cardon scurrying to- a center aisle microphone. . trot center contained In the department’s annual report submitted Monday. * The pair promised a minority report. 'HI regret to state ttiat the county has not received the Job could have received,” Canton aaid. He moved and received permission to table the department's report. I've got my hands full in Walled Lake," Taylor said in denying he desired dumping Raymond E. Harrington, assistant director and foe-newspaperman. Saying Cardon'* request for his retirement, which he asked be submitted April 1, "came out of the dear blue sky,’’ Jarrendt said, failure ao far to get the fund* to finance the Vp,W center for the Cbunty Service Goiter was a "bone of contention" which probably led to disagreement. •Id that tha^five, or 10-minute warning?" inquired Delos Hamlin, chairman of the board. Previous attempts by Cardon, chairman of the beard’s dvtl defense committee, to get board approval for funds for a .civil def« ter. have been fra Cordon's criticism of ’the work of the department, one that bad been frustrated lately in seeking approval of the canter, was taken by Lewis C. Jarrendt, department director for 10 years, as a criticism of him, although his 'name was not mentioned before the board of supervisors. rely on volanteers, h ‘certainly advanced although las been a pretty rough Job.*’ He was asked would he resign because of the controversy? at the proper time I will get on the retirement list," Ije said. "If I'm henpecked or browbeaten the time will be short. The 67-year-old former Birmingham real estate salesman said that by "putting two and two together" it was his "observation’ that Cardon and Taylor wanted to become director and assistant-director, respectively, since Canton Lakeland Optimists Hold Contest Tonight D. L MANNING Coach Engineer ires at GMC Beginning at 7:30 tonight, lakeland Optimist Club of Waterford Township will have its annual oratorical contest for high school students. The winner wlll represent the club in the district contest. Donald L. Manning of Orchard lake Is Given . W. P. Strong's Post The appointment of Donald L. Manning of 3130 W. Long Lake Road, Orchard Lake, as. coach engineer of GMC Truck A Coach Division was announced today by Chief Engineer C. V. Crockett. Manning succeeds William P. Strong, of 2900 Rosewood Drive, Waterford Township, who is retiring after serving 25 years with the division. The dub members also will elect officers for the yew, and three members will receive their two-year perfect attendance pins. They ere President Frederick Pankey, Robert Forster and Robert Coats. Anyone wishing to join the group may by attending tonight’s dinner meeting. A native of Sidney, Ohio, Man niag brings If years ef motor roach engineering and manufacturing experience to bis new poet. He was assistant roach engineer at the time of his pro- Strong started as a draftsman with GMC in 1935 and served in various new design and drafting capacities before being named coach engineer in 1957. During his long tenure with the division, he helped develop the famous PD4104 intercity coach, the Greyhound Soenicndser and GMCs current line of luxurious city, suburban and intercity coaches. Cost of Living Study Is Being Conducted Here The present economic picture in Pontiac probably will affect the next U. S. cost of living index, to be published in June. The~U. S. Bureau of Statistics is conducting a survey in the city at this time, as well as in other cities across the country, for the next revirion of the Consumer Price Index, more commonly referred to as the cost of Itving. index. Questions being asked concern family income and expenditures. The resultant figures win be con-pared with those of previous, months to determine whether the qpst of living on a national basis has gone up or down. McCarius, ShueEler Elected by Rotarians The Waterfard-Drayton Rotary Qub has elected Richard Mc- Carius as Us new president, Robert Statelier, vice preri president. William Amain frill be secretary And Harold Richardson, treasurer. The group meets for lunch every WedMMtay at the Qumumity Center on Williams Lake-Road, and to presently making plana for bficltgnn Week, May 21-27, Batista Follows Itevolt Portugal (I f'blgencto. 1 today he to-following the Cuban lyrtring with -keen interest but will TWELVE THE POOTIAC PRESS,v TUESDAY, APRIL to Face^erry for 2nd Time Scheffing Fears Layoff Will Hurt, Tribe Wins Three of Four Hawks Celebrate 1st Cup Since '38; Adams Blaited a player draft to break the monopoly of better players held by more Powerful NHL dubs. Your Host, one of racing’s .out-.* standing thoroughbred rtaltione, was destroyed at Meadowview Farms In Moorestown, K.J., Monday because of a knee injury! Your Hort, who sired Kelso, I960 Horse . of theJfoar, was the sire oj. Tiers qf over $2 million. Bony Brawn o^Ann Arbor was named yesterday to' the. North ‘America high school football game. Urn game will be played May 19 at Vert Laaderdale, Via. Brawn Is aa end. 1 Football League have signed quarterback Bob Lusky of Detroit and Clayton Willman of Michigan Tech as free agents. Reggie Harding of Detroit Eastern was selected to the JS-member sixth aanaal Scholastic MagasIae All-America high school basketball squad Monday. Harding and Hartell Ttson of Geneva, HL, are the taOeat players on the edncottmal weekly’s honor team at S feet 11 inches. AT restates ONE DOWN — Gary Geiger, Boston Red Sox outfielder, is forced at 2nd base as Los Angeles shortstop Frits Brickell leaps dear after his throw to 1st to double Vic Wertz In the 1st inning. Play started when Wertz hit to pitcher Ken McBride. Geiger’s homer won for Boston, 3-2. John Papa, 20-yearold right-handed pitcher from Stratford, Conn., was optioned Monday by the Baltimore Orioles to Rochester ' - the International League. Center John Kerr has changed his mind about retiring from professional basketball. Kerr has ■signed tor Ms eighth season with the Syracuse Nationals of the NBA. RedSoxCenterfielder Gets Share of Publicity rssr Washington It's not true that the Boston Red Sox outfield consists of just two glamour boy*—rookie phenom Carl Yastrzemski in left field and the returning All-America boy Jadde Jensen in right field. They’ve got a pretty fair center fielder, too. In Gary Geiger even if he to a virtual unknown by comparison with his two flank- Igtt (Ml torn. Xterrar M) or SfiVOnilLT'cPw- Loa yAngclM Brian jflfcs _ _________ WaaWtagton V*QUcago. poatgoned. uw CltT (Kunkal M or Rako_ ,/^raxr MUOIIIU at Baatm. s pm. . Washington at Chicago, 1:M W baa Angeles at SwTot Ul pjn. NATIONAL LXAGCE ~ ■ iSt tot Bel * t * ★ Throughoutgyipring training the trumpets from the Red Sax camp in Soottadato, Arts., blared away with the exploits of Yastrzemski, tile $100,000 bonus boy, and Jensen, who grabbed off $80,000 of New York Yankee bonus money a dozen years ago. Very little was heard about Geiger, whom the Red Sox got as a “gift” in a 1958 winter trade with Cleveland that brought'Vic Wertz for Jimmy PtorsalL . The Red Sox brass wasn’t even lie Geiger could play at all. The 24-year-old native of Sand It was Geiger’s' third hit in nine times at bat in this infant season, his second for extra bases.' The homer came in the seventh inning off reliever Tom Morgan to offset what would have been Los Angeles’ tying rim in the ninth. In the sixth, Geiger scored the first of two Boston runs, coming in on a single by Jensen, off loser Ken McBride. A bases loaded walk to Pumpsie Green forced home the other run. Two Basketball Teams Leave Tuesday on Tour rt-w :::;i l 2 WASHINGTON II) — The State Department said Monday two US. basketball teams will leave New York Tuesday for a three-week tour in the Soviet Union. The UJS. Amateur Athletic Union organized both the man’s and a woman’s “ofim mHSjSS! “ ******* team for the visit. WEDNESDAY'S (___________ note* at PtillgSrttog, IS p.m. •go at PltUburgtl. 4:19 pan Mg at Log Asgcloi. u pj The American squads will be in Moscow April 19-23; Kiev, April 24-27; Tbilisi, April 28-May 3; Leningrad, May 3-7. The group returns to Moscow May 8 and flies hack to New York the following day. Lodge, 111., had been sidelined since last July 28 with collapsed lung. But the lanky left-handed hitter gave ample proof Monday he’s healthy again by smashing a 400-foot home run to spark the Red Sax to au3-3 victory over the Los Angeles Angels. CHICAGO * — “I don't know whether we’ll win again next year, but we’ll be building to try.” This was the comment today by owner Jim Nerrie after his Stanley Cop obsmplsa Chicago Black Hawks held a champagne-flowing victory party following their National Hockey Leagae championship triumph over the DetlUtt Red Bings. The Hawks Sunday night whipped the Red Wings, W, at Detroit to aew up the final series, 4 to 2, and capture their first cup in 23 years. Hie party had all Hawk players and just about everybody who had faintest connection with the club whooping it up in the lobby of theater owned by Arthur M. Wirtz, Norris' partner in various business ventures. Wirtz and Norris own the Chicago Stadium, home of the Black Hawks. This first Black Hawk Stanley Cup triumph since 1938 had everybody to a gleeful mood, with players dancing to the organ music of A1 Melgard who plays during regular Hawk games. But Norris, who quit big timo Norris snorted at a comment by Red Wing general manager Jack Adams that the Hawk Cup triumph resulted from a donation of capable players from every other team in the league. -Norris, in 1954, pushed through Mickey Mantle and Whitey Ford of the Yankees were the whole works as the American League’ defending champions riiut oil Kansas City 341. Mantle, hitless first two games, drove in all the runs with a home run and ■ingle. He had a perfect day at the plats with another single and a walk. Fort, who lnst.pn opening day, _ emitted only three rf^gi—, walked four and struck out eight Only 1,947 fans, smallest Yankee Stadium turnout since Sept. 21, saw the Yankee* get all their runs off Jerry Walker, the young ‘right-hander acquired recently by Kansas City tram Baltimore. other American League were idle and there was only one game in the National. In that one, St Louis downed the Los Angeles Dodgers 9-5 to climb a first place tie with San Francisco. Big Bear Says: HOME IMPROVEMENT PROJECT! Doa’t Need Cash Taka 5 Years to Pay on FHA—No Money Down No Payments 'til July—Quality Work of Low, Low PHcos ATTIC ROOM NSW BATHROOM ADD-A-ROOM OARAGES MODRRN JOTCKNS - BASEMENT ROOM CALL TODAY FOR FE 3-7833 OUR FREE ESTIMATE Big Bear Const. Co. ~~ „ Quiet Is Broken in ABCJourney Booster Division DETROIT toa ISlSrtil Pr.H tq. ssa rris>Ms.T» TOKYO- Kaauo Takayama. lUVfc. japan. ttopptd Sanaa slum■mts. out, Japan. 4. Pontiac keglers turned te a fair showing bowling te the annual Elks National Tournament at Rochester, jN.Y., over tee past weekend. Top performances by John Harbaugh and George Argyros paced the local men. Harbaugh rolled 693 and Argyros 676 to gate berths among the high 20 scorers at the neet. Locally, Pontiac Oeatral wea the On* Oakland Coaaty Ugh School keg meet at West Ride Rrecreation sparked by tourney Individual standout Art Kakuk. v B & B Sewer Cleaners led the 13 Pontiac teams gunning for national. honors with 2968. Cleco Air Tools followed at 2906. Making up the.B A B team were captain Jim Jackson, Cleiri Berden, Howard Crawford, Faustin Dobski and Russ Hester. ' *' * it". Bill Condon and John Kevorkian were the best performers in doubles at 1287. Paul Tabor and . Dalton hit 1240, Jack Doyle-Ralph Ware 1224, Argyroe-Marlow Hopp 1217, Charles McLaughite-Jim Anderson 1206 and Dick Elliott-John Korak 1202. Beware 2nd Finn in AAUMarathon BOSTON (ft—OIavi. Manninen is a 32-year old Finnish fanner who has percentage going for him te the 65th Boston AA marathon Wednesday. ■ “Beware the second Finn” has become tl\e watchword since the men of Soumi began double-teaming this 26-mile, 385 yard Patriot’s Day classic in 1954. Manninen fits the description this time. Previous winners Elno Ok nan-en (INS), Manninen's countryman, and Johnny Kelley (1967). along with Manninen, teat year's ranaerup Gordon McKenzie of the U.R. Olympic team and England’s Fred Norris top Jhe field. Another 224 assorted athletes who have running shoes and a competitive zest have entered the pavement pounding grind which starts at high noon in suburban Hopkin-ton. Destination: Boston's Back Bay. Every Film but .one who made a second trip to the BAA run has won it. As the first of his nation to enter, Velkktf Karvonen was .1953 runner-ip. A year later tie won. Oksanen placed third en his first venture In' ISM, winning three years later. Paave.Kotila’s opening bid produced a fourth In ISM, hte - second spelled victory a year ago, Manninen ran fourth to Kelley’s 2:20:05 course .record In 1957. Wednesday marks Ms second BAA start ...*....* * r Finland’s amazing scocecard reads: Entered — 14, won — 4, seconds - 3, fourths — 3, fifth place — L Kelley Is the lone Individual to consistontly stand'against this mark. Only American to win the race in the past if years, the. Groton, Conn., schoolteacher bad three second places to go with hte triumph in n stretch broken Inst year when blisters and leg, cramps forced him eat. The Finns have a major training edge on Kelley. For the pgst month they have run 20 miles in the morning aiid 20 in the afternoon te the seclusion of Footer, R.I., farm-i. An interpreter calls the terrain "much like that of Finland.’' Still America’s premier marathoner who proved it by winning thf nationals and outlegging the entire Finnish delegation at the Rome Olympics te ’60, Kelley must! squeeze his practice sessions around a heavy Reaching schedule. $3,000 Event This Year State PGA Purse Expanded Sharmkn Named to Head American League Quintet ittenal Basketball nfraet. LOS /ANGELES (AP) — BUI Sharman, former University of Southern California star and for 12 years backcourt man for the Boston Celtics, is the general manager-coach of the new Los Angeles Jets. The Jets, who will represent Los Angeles in the American Basketball League when U begins opera tion'next fall, aaid Sharman has signed a three-year contract, S ary ternis were not disclosed. The Celtics had announced they would let Sharman go to assume the role of coach, but would not agree to Ms playing for the Jets because of an option clause te his There were several good si ogles efforts turned In besides those of Harbaugh and Argyros as a total of 17 men made MS or bettor,, ■ '• . - -——I Jim Walsh ranked third at 658 L. Swanson hit 655, Walt Forbes 653, Ray Hoover 645, Elflbtt 637, Hopp 633, Nelson Fields and ~ ' Bunyari 630, Frank Shepard tra, Paul Miller 622, Russ Dickmari 618, Vic Coleman 615, Pete Evanoff 608, Doyle 607 and G. Scharf 60&. Argyros had high game at 276. Harbaugh Mt 256. Kakak’s meet high series of Ml was featured te n S7M turned te by HK. Jack Cambers contributed Ml, Daa Taylor 628, Bob Goff SIS aad Gary Greeae MS to the victory cause. Chambers’ 591 was the second Association I best series. Gary Barger was next at 579. Vikings Acquire W00 Pounds on 4 Signatures ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS «■ The Minnesota Vikings of the Ns tional Football League signed more than 1.000 pounds and 309 inches of fine material Monday. And aU this spread over only four rookies signed as free agents —one center and three tackles. One of the biggest hulks of material is Stuart Johnson, 6-foot-9, 265-pound tackle, who played with the University of Minnesota Duluth. Bid Johnson is dwarfed by 6-foot-9, 295-pouncJ 'center Jim Gribbski, a Phoenixville, Pa., native who played po college, foot baH. - * Other rookies signed Include Luther Jerald, Sfoot-1, pounder, an all-conference tackle from North Carolina College, and Wally Sparks, 6-ioot-L‘24B, an all-conference tackle at Louis A Clark College to Oregon. Succeeds Rickey Jr. PITTSBURGH (AP)-Robert C. Clements of Santa Barbara. Calif, yesterday was named director of the Pittsburgh Pirates’ minor league dubs, succeeding the late Branch Rickey Jr. FREE Automatic Transmission , " Specialists for ^ AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSIONS ONLY AA About Our 18 Meath pr lAOOO MUa Guarantee LLOYD BERRY, Owner Formerly with routine Motor ■is»rimsatsl Engineering PONTIAC TRANSMISSION v; SERVICE . tha M. 4 doors west air MFs Inn '*’ FE 4-9646 "If things work out, I may try to test the NBA option rule by operation as a player and coach,” said Sharman by long distance telephone from the East, of several players te the NBA who are interested te the new league. The NBA will battle tb protect its players, naturally, so a test case in court may be necessary to dear up the sitation.” ft * A Sharmanr said there is no doubt te his mind that the new, league will be able to obtain top player personnel. There are enough players for two leagues,” said Sharman. “I know that the fans like to see established name stars, but, actually, there is only a thin line between this relatively small group and the next players. Ndmes are magnified all out of proportion." Abe Saperstein, commissioner of . the American Basketball League, pointed out that the NBA drafted 240 college players last year and only 10 made the league. 'Where is this obvious talent to ?" asked Saperstein. GRAND RAPIDS. Mich, (ft -Michigan’s Professional Golf Association Championship, a 36-hole event, this year becomes a late-blooming event with a purse expanded to 33,000. M Stt yesterday for Oct. 1 flair JUyer- Country Club. Tournament committee chairman Gene Bone of Warwick 'Hills said it formerly was a 31,500 Also announced were the dates of Aug. 18-20 tor the Michigan Open golf tournament to be held at Farmington Country Club. Tournament dates were among the order of business at the annual business meeting of the Pro-America, Michigan Section. The meeting drew more 'than 100 delegates to Grand Rapids. The section presented a plaque citing the outstanding services of post president Joe Belfore, professional at the Country Club of Detroit. It also accepted four new members in its Class A ranks. Theyl * * are: GregorytL. Matthews, Elks! Kukuk also had the best game of!Country*Club, Kalamazoo; M L. 247, followed by Goff at 224. Cham-! (Casey) Partridge, Fox Hills Coun- bers and Barger each had 210. —----------------*-------------; Central got a team trophy and . n m i m _ each member won a medal. Kukuk 1934 ROSO Bowl Player also was awarded two individual for Columbia Is Dead trophies. "STAMFORD, Conn. UV-OFuneral service will be held Wednesday for Stephen Dzamba, who played a key role in Columbia University's football victory te the Rose Bowl 27 years ago. Dzamba, 47, died Sunday night. Cause of death was not given. Dzamba played the full 60 minutes as a guard in the 1934 Rose Bowl«game that saw Columbia down favored Stanford 74. try Club, Detroit; John W. Can-Verona Hills Golf Chib, Bad Axe, and Lowell V. LeClair, Duck Lake Country Club, Albion. Jhe day-long session at the Panttind Hotel concluded with a teaching clinic conducted by tion vice president JohnYtomum of Blythefield Country Club at Grand Rapids. Barbara Mclntire Wins 1st Round Tourney Match PINEHURST, N. C, W—Barbara Mclntire opened defense of her woman's . North end South Amateur Golf Championship with a first-round romp Mbnday, but three of hpr. chief challengers in the field of 32 lost. Min Mclntire, 26-year-old reigning British Amateur champion and 1959 U.S. titlist from Lake Park, Fla., won six of the last seven holes to trounce Mrs. Warn G. Boggs of Pittsburgh, 7 and 6. Mrs. Philip Y?udone, 1958 champion; Jean Ashley, ..y, S, Amateur runner-up last year, and Mrs. Barbapi Fitton were the upset 1 victims. Thatcher. Patterson. &Wernet INSURANCE nSUuRCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE FE 2-9244 TIRE DISCOUNTS Why Bay a Baaapt Sml Nw 670x15 rT 770x14 r‘:,:k $ 7.99 $10.99 IM Tint >1 Mt Mmuto NO MONIY DOWN United Tire Service Open Deity 14-CM Sunday mi Baldwin Avt. VI D-S417 MIDAS MUFFLERS w ARE GUARANTEED FOR AS LONG AS YOU OWN YOUR CAR MIDAS Mlifter if in*nll«d on your ctr, last muftcr you will e»tr puy for if loaf owa (hat car. Thai's what the MIDAS New Leader in WIBC FORT WAYNE" Ind.„ (ft -Mary Pashoff of St. Louis is the new eider in tip Women's International Bowling Congress Tournament at 637. Last night she took the lead away from Georgette DeRosa of Chicago, who had held it 24 hours at 614. Prep Schedules WKDNISDAY'S^nUEF SCHEDULE Oxford, mutation at Inlay City Dearborn St. Alphomua at OL 8 Mary „ „ Watrrforc Btoonfteli Parimngti at Pontiac Central t Pontiac Northern t RO Dondero Cranbrook at Itamtramek Gets Three Days Off PITTSBURGH (AP)-The National League has suspended fiiuti baseman Don Hoak of the Pittsburgh Pirates for three days because of his second quarrel this season with Umpire Ken Burkhart. BOWL "BUILT BY A BOWLER FOR BOWLERS" TEAM SPOTS NOW AVAILABLE MEN: Wednesday—Thursday-'friday WOMEN: Monday — Tuesday — Thursday SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN to LEAGUE ORGANIZATION for GROUPS Schools • 'Churches • Country Clubs Employe Org. e Fraternal Orders * • Subdivision Ass'ns LET US ARRANGE A BOWLINS PROGRAM TO FIT YOUft WMET AND YOUR TINE Homing — Afternoon - Evening — Mid-ISit? Leagues CALL FE 8-8792 You Are Wakama to Visit Oar Office at100 1 Cass lake rd. V viURTEKN TfaE PONTIAC PRESS. TCESPAY, APRIL I&1M1 Mon Stands Mute in Ear-Biting Case Arraigned yesterday before Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem for biting part of another man's ear. Donald D. Marteil stood mute and a idea of innocent was entered for him b/ the jpdgf ,Marteil. 35, of 5T1 Desota Place, I Job Cleaetflcetiona EwUbliahcd OK Waterford Pay Hikes Old Soybeans Find ^Selling Pressure bond after his plea to i T^m.rZT-Qening rressure attack on Grant H Sutton' 32. of .■ • iwertig sales of locally grown! 530* Lynsue Lane. Waterford Town-! CHICAGO «U *" wholesale pactage lota. Building parking lot after the weak today in initial transactions iOwHItiorM are furnished by the {Market Slips ip Heavy Trade In a diacusslon that lasted until midnight, the Waterford Townteilp Board last night approved township employe job * classifications and pay hikes ranging from $8* to $300 annually. Beta* Wat night, there was job classification system to determine salaries tor some salaries, range from $3,000 to $4 Jfo for the six persons Cl,00 annually. counting clerks have been put two separate categories each. The reported ' a traffic accident police. »I Monday. It t M is. ■ April M. IMl ■ (£tyram > Or. mill No YAS1A1 in be me »• nUk me *t ' ward Ardmore Service Station Woodward tram. Frrndat* MIc! that- address being where the v l« atoned and mar be Imported Detroit Produce public sals At *41 e.Bi bb tortl *1. ISfL » '**• Pontiac « Sdn -TOR. atrial number! oi lSOProu MU be eold »t pubhr «>« hv Sms Woodward Avenue. Perm lean that addrae* talni wit* hlcle I* stored pod nja| be the board of trade 'crop soybeans again unde j selling pressure. ii During the first several minutes. 'IMay and July soybeans skidded as, ruvm i: much as * cents a bushel before Ureft- 525u5SL>ft. ; meeting a little rallying support.>Apple. Nertmpaay- ra, (Dealers said the pressure sppar-1*JJ|^ ““ifna.m lently included some stop loss., selling following the extreme setback 10 cents a bushel on thos- l^nota, bu liverie* on Monday * trad- Grain Prices gJJSt; “ 5S; Fortier, root, betu. CRICAOO GRAIN Parulpe. dot packs CHICAOO April IS lAPt—Open Praia ;eolam». W-lk m«^ Old'Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of! NEW YORK tAP* “-Tile stock market declined moderately heavy trading early this afternoon. Losses' -of key stocks ran from fractions to about a point generally. . .. \ elec- VtorTABLES J tronlcs. aircraft missile*, chcm : leal* and drags were among the J leaera. galls held Arm. To baceos and selected oils Were . 17* Si>. Rhubarb, Holhouse dos. 23500 Woodward Areoo» 'P*vod»le Mid Igan. that address being where the w hlcle l* stared and mar be inspects Rhubarb. Hothouse. *-lb Poultry and Eggs STATE OP lacmOAN—lb bait Court tor tr- ---- -* Juvenile Dirtsloo. t ap dim i 1 T? Harwood Mtltdo. lother DCTBOtT POfLTHT DETROIT. April II hurt—Prices pound delivered tor No. 1 «ualltj Court aUoglat that tl vtolatedh law •! the State and U child should be ptoead under th diction of this Court. - -___ i name of f Ulcklgan $Tt . . Annex 11 eTrantla wot be baht t Beer Dealers *1 Plan Building j Heavy type item *«-** Matt trim heo* U-H: heavy trpe roasters rveri 6 lbs 77-75: brollbrs and fryers S-S lbs. : white 11-70. Barred Reck 71-77 The market was mixed at the i w'atart, tfien lost ground irregularly iJglamkl spurts of heavy trading-, sc* j ft j com panied by lateticker tapes. }g While Soviet Premier Nikita 'SiKhrushchev's message to Presi-VM dent Kennedy about the Cuban ) conflict caused hesitation among investors, the decline was laid by j i brokers to some adverse corpora-peri ate reports and to profit taking., ' i. added (JA.-8evM Cuba, the aircraft- || Foundry Soeiety to Confer Award on Pontiac Man The American Foundrymen's Society, International technical ciety of the metal castings industry, will confer one-of three awards of Scientific Merit on Theodore R. Schroeder, foundry superintendent, Pontiac Motor Division A wage plait for the building and jaeaaor departments was discussed. However, no action was taken on dasstflcaHon or salary. Another, meeting on . these departments lit planned-In other business, the board accepted the low bids of the Amt Arbor Construction CO. for black-topping Orchid Street for $17,Ml; Seedum Glen for' $7,581;. and Cbeeaeman Street for $8,979, THEODORE R. SCHROEDER* TV award will be given at the annual business meeting of the society May 10 in San Francisco as part of the 85th APS Congress. The awards are to ’deaerving industrial leaders as a technical efts tion to recognize outstanding papers, meritorious technical services. development of a process, method or engineering advance-.ment. MPPwM i# appear p*rtonally at tail “tHed Vat am on a site onlwji' i, Jadfv of Mid court In ll 17th of Pontiac la aaid County dag of April. AD IMl ratal I DONALD E ADAMS, i l£ t«- «•»> I»-I*t of ProbataI BfH'OINE Hast a DIt: Metes and Powers Tell of $75,000 Warehouse, Office on West Side DITBOIT EGOS 1 DFTROT April IS. *APt—Sag paid per damn by flrat resaw limed to Detroit ' 'Nfwte^Qrtd* * S large M S lar«# A Powcrs lne-r-ip plan-j^rj Pontiac's far West Side. The aircrafts showed a string of fractional losses, as did most electronics. Texas Instruments dorpped about J. Some of the Cuban-related •locks which rose. Monday on news of the anti-Castro invasion dstboit livestock i did little today. Cuban-American Detroit, April u akl Powers. The rottl- jM-®®'u 7W A^l-->%7.1l!l-L,tUu°L- j P*"> *" at S75 Franklin lgan. that address beint where the ve-l Road, hlcle la (fared and may be inspected 1 , •_______-___________Aprii is. ts. in11 General contractor is H'ckson-j • public bale Costigan. Inc. Financing " ',ngh b*L!8U&Jg jf^^jy-JJgtlpaHiac State Bank. ussssi s*nn „,w.|h»s ordered glass from Pitts-S^SghtT^u.lTw^lbmgh Plate Glass. The latter »3»* “"“•(eased fractionally 'from Monday' ^m^dy:BSJ.hw*'S£K'44*po,m jump' • SH lbs. Mit: NO. I bPd_S! .* W * I7.75-Ib.15i. 7 and I WMDJi _______7.D, No i. s tad ssoMN V-S. oleel, which is launching a IIUs^iiVum! tabrt uoiiiik^ i $300 million debenture issue, iSkTii;'«ta^Sd*tasd5"SV5ta*‘dropped a i»int. Chrysler - buUding, with 1JN square | “1^1^77 mnm.m , cun and uiutty ii.»| down more "than a point igbttr iamb* j annual shareholders meeting ] battens to AF8 and the (sundry 1 Industry la the development of | a revolutionary process for the j production of cores, and new concepts of automated molding Ahoad of Ktnnady WAIH1NOTON (It — gra eph 8. dark, D-Pa., fa create a department el lAM attain and houaing — a step . President Reedy was expect 'ad to' propooe la a message. - * Seven jah rlaaalflcatMHM wan la the water, sewer each employe will receive pay Increases of from M M 88 mats A hearing data for estabitehing _ special assessment district tor Seedum Glen was set for May 8. The board authorised Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson to prepare a special assessment roil on the other two.streets. A hearing date for these will be set at next Monday's meeting, New Trustee lam Anderson won appointed to fill a vacaacy on the recreatloa department heard. The poet waa left vacant by former Tniotoe Lewis Roefie. Tour bids on two half-ton pickup trucks were opened and referred [to Clerk James Seeterlin for rec-i ommendations. The low bidder was [Matthews-Hargreaves with a total of $1,628 for each track. The board approved a request install a street light on ONCE Dl i LIFETIME lifetime? Would you^wlffing to devote the time to an. opportunity that could provtin an Individual or previa. _ eellent additional income to an eatabliahed business? We aifi sri international company with over 8M offices fur-niihuig -------- nteKlng temporary office, industrial snd technical workers (a all kinds of business**. This ,is not a "Oet - Rich -Qtflck scheme but a long rang* program. Your promotional efforts In Fanilac are backed up to national advertising, sward winning direct mail, sates leads from all offloes. national accounts uad publicity la national magazines. We aup-plv completeknow-how, Home Qrfleo training. inlna. mCPth^y I jJily^nvestlgated Will be accepted. Personal inspection of any of our offices will to arranged. Write: R. “G. Krauthoefer, V.P. Manpower, loe. lit N. Pknklntan Ave. Milwaukee J. Wisconsin Prosecutor to Ask Why Associated with the cast metals • u Jn* laii.c ’ [ industry since 1933, Schroeder „ ____________ Clinic Had Right to Free i Started his career as ah appren- corner 'of Cooley Lake Road and jtice, joining Pontiac Motor in 1955. j Williams Lake Road, with that He k well known for his presen-[township paying for the light's tations before many groups on the] maintenance, subjects of cast metals and foun-J May 1 was set as the date for dry engineering- opening bids for sale of sewer He is a direetoe xif the Detroit Ibonds for 1,300 feet on N. Tiidenj Snipor From Ionia jin investigation into the part-time release of Oakland County sniper Gary A. Taylor from the Lafayette Clinic in Detroit will be sought today, Oakland County Prosecutor George F. Taylor said. NEXT 90 DAYS CAN CHANGE YOUR LIFE chapter of AFS. i.Street, The prosecutor 'said he would ask 'Atty. Gen. Paul L. Adams to probe the circumstances under which jhe 24-year-old Southfield man was permitted to leave the clinic at night to attend trade i- school classes. Louis Schimmel Honored by School Associates A Warning from The WaN Street Journal. Stocks of Area Intor J From Local Brokers New York Stocks rtfurt »fter decimal point* are (til Members of the Pontiac B It wan while he was away j from the clinic on one of* then*-nights Inst week tkat Tayter ! went beeerk and slashed two I Detroit women. Itrict gathered last night to honor!Johnson supervised the Charged with attempted armed former board member I-o»iW H. Pearlina Butler and Charles Ha- | You art living in n period of rapid changes. The next 90 days will be filled with opportunities and dangers. Fortune will smile on some j men. Disaster will dog the foot-; stops of others. | Because report* in The Wall >| - Street Journal come to you ] DAILY, you get fastest pos-The dinner was prepared by the siWe warning of any new trend Education and administrators from I cafeteria staff of McCarroli School, throughout,the Pontiac School Dis-[Marietta Spring and Margaret 1 Wpr. •(ter decimal point* »r* elfhtK Woodward Ardmore Service Station. 27500 Woodward Avenue. Pervdele. Mlch-‘— **— ■-*'—1 taint wtoiw the ass L*.f?\, hofnrette Street. Among the installations will be > iupected ! *wo 10,000-gallon fuel storage tanks 1*. ut in*{for the company's radio-controlled fleet of 16 route trucks and two diesel tractors and trailers. The building Itself will be of steel _ _____ id concrete block, said Powers. U>iin "idttiiieeon ~~c>tem 1 Office spaces will be air con-! {ffiffi,, Cb'.............. ditioned and the site contains 650: Tdedo^a JbmS l 0 they will Mich . .31.1 3* ! Borman Peed Stwroo. OUrtiM-Wrtfht Corp..........|- Derldeon Bro*............... St *•* Pederol llo«ul-Bower Be»rtn(l 3.3 3.5 Orest Ltkee Chemkel ........ 3.3 3.5 Hoerer Boll a Boortnt 77 7 23 7 Leonard Refining l 4M OAKLAND COUNTY BOARD OP AUDITORS Purchasing Division , . ... uVER THE-COUNTSR *TOCE» feet of railroad aiding. ! The foiiowini quotations do oot no- ' ctgnlrly represent tctual irsnatctloi j Metes St Power*. Inc s bej ' 5"a. gump. Oakland County distributor for Mil-11. U, Ml*"- Life Beer, Carling^s Black { SA15.310-* ___notice op public bale -Notice Is hereiry given by the undersigned that on April JO, tMl. at 1:00 Ofjtak p.m„ at 77 E...Huron. Pontlgc ! Mlehlgen public sale of a i(51 Pord. iadnn teartni serial number USPQ2UTN *111 be held, for desk to the biabest bidder inspection thereof mojr bo mods ot fT I. Huron. Pontiac. Mich., tbg plane of storage. The Undertlfned reserves tF ''Wted April I INI. ASSOCIATES DISCOUNT CORP Label Beer and Carlinggs Red Cap April it « Whal’s the -FINANCIAL HEALTH of your stocks • Strange question? It's one every investor should nsk him-self periodically because stock values can and *0 change. New developments in companies ... industries . .. the economic outlook can make one or„roore of your stocks ten desirable in terms of your particular objectives. It is important that you reappraise your portfolio to determine bow your holdings may be affected by current—-and future trends. Watiing, Lerchen & Co. will be glad to review your present holdings at your request. There's no cost or obligation. Watiing, Lerchen A Co. New VorA StorA Xadkmwe .402 Powtwc State Beak Hid*. , Michigan or phone. Ft? 2-P27* SERVING MICHIGAN SINCE 19U News in Brief PHRmhi?.............. Electronics International . McLouth steel On.... Michigan Seamirgs Tube €0,. SSSSSL-- ■HWwwF diaaa corp . 24«. 2d 4 Tartar - TMaa. Theft of SS2 from a ■ at the Pontiac City Library. 60 E. Pike St., was reported to Pontiac police, yesterday by Miss Phyllis Pope- head -librarian. A break-in at the home of tye late Louis Westphal, 69 E. Walton _____Oaa Pipe Line......... Varner Otaigar Ala......... Wteklemaas .. ............. JVolterlne Shoe... ........ Wyandotte chemical......... MUTUAL FUNDI Affiliated Fund Chmlcal Fund. Keystone ‘Income K-l Keyetooe Orowth K-2.. Maas laraatorji Orowth uorted to Pontiac P®- tSonSU °S5?ooi, 17 »f» IMS H 94 1* 33 1* 32 *l,“ i-rdav bv a neighbor who dtL . ad j Kresge. 8S VO j Labile- SJ {^b“a^ H* Lorlllard" ljj, Lnargcu wiuv auniijncu bmi)ku ivuum uun to free any peraon. certi-l fied as insane, for any period of I ****** w*l> 8u**t* °» "°"-time without A court order, J #rv * * * I Mrs- Lola King, who spent many ] ft*' When former Circuit Judge lyearii on the board, wm chief| “i Frank L. Doty refused to issue speaker, recalling many situations] ’ such an order a year ago at the which occurred during her asso-»m! request of Ionia. Tayter was §, transferred to Lafayette Clinic by ui! Ionia officials "because of crowd-l“*ed conditions.” Vem Duffy, assisted by John Silvonen, was to charge of the Hawaiian Islands decoration. Mrs. Mary Killian was reservations chairman and Dr. Edith Roach Snyder accompanied group singing. An informal reception followed dinner. . Ml Business Notes Cera Pd Curtis Pub 1 with Schimmel on the Judge to Sentence Check Passer May 1 Harry H. Simanek of 2844 Green-meadow Circles, Farmington, has w [ been named assistant vice presi- „ , ' . . . , , „___ dent of The Parker Corp., Boston Several other administrators.|investment manager and distribu-principals and board members ^ incorporated Income Fund also expressed their appreciation of his “untiring leadership and School System.’^ Schimmel resigned la February teeauae of outside business “» had been a board 24 years. and Incorporated Investors, third, oldest of the nation’s mutual funds. Simanek will be wholesale representative for the two funds to Michigan, Indiana and Kentucky. affecting your buainess and personal income. You get facts in time to protect your interests or seize a profit. If you think The Journal to just for millionaires, you are.' WRONG! It is a wonderful aft! to salaried men making $7,500 liwovered the va-ant home had I hern ransacked . -It was not known j rMtington Fund toleti Cjfcuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem j get sentencing for May 1 for John 1 | p. Wolf, 21-year-old Pontiac man - introduced to the gathering „ who has admitted passing seven were Mr. and Mrs. James Jen-. ijjjJchecks totaling $558, police said, kins.' Jenkins is the new board . in' * member appointed to fill the va- af1 W’olfc. who threatened to leapjcanoy created by Schimmel’* i *1 from a downtown building las' j ignation, m q summer, pleaded guilty vesterday j a'special musical program v It can to of priceless benefit to ambitious young men who want to earn more money. Read it for 90 days and see what it can do , for YOU. f" .The Wall Street Journal is the complete- business DAILY. Has largest staff of writers on business and finance. The dnly business paper served bp all three big press associations. It Coats $24 a year, but you cat) get a Trial Subscription for three months for $7. Just tear out thia ad and attach check for $7 and mail. Or tMl os to MU you. Published daily right to the Midwest to bring yon vital business and Washington newa immediately. Addraast The Wall Strait Journal, 711. W. Monro* 8t, Chicago 8, 111. • , ■; l PPM 4 -18 ■ *iTempest Coupe Thievs-w stole Site worth of shoos during a break-ta at the Tur-ay, ■ * _ , pin Hall Shoe .store. 1540 Union If QCtOTV PllCe Lake Road, in' Commerce Town- . ___ ship, the owner Raymond Turpin IfiDOUt $2,000 told sheriffs deputies yesterday. •] i Pontiac Motor Division nounced today that its new Tern- Theft of (Itk worth of balMteg [materials from a shed at the Wake [Pratt Construction 0». property at (Old Perch and Avon Roads in Avon Tow nship was reported to the sheriff's depart ment„yesterday by part-owner, Henry Pratt. pest sports coupe 11011/10 production will carry a factory list price of $1,925, which is $50 leu than tM standard four-door sedan. A total of |tt la change waa pilfered from vending machines in a break-in at Pop’s and Mom’s Drive-In restaurant, 2391 Haggerty Road, |n Commerce Township, the iowner. Euclid Coutu reported to sheriffs deputies yesterday. Rummage Sale April tl-22. Central Methodist Church. Fri. 8-8. Set. 8-3. Household, clothing, furniture. -—A4v, The new' Tempest 1 *u a llt-lnch wheel blue chassis sad has Its 4mn 4 distinctive a petty body styling. . A custom version of the sports XIpe has luxury interior appointments along with front bucket •eats, full floor carpeting and deluxe steering wheel as standard equipment. 5i J 8td Oil c«l Ml 814 oil ted H ? Std Oil NJ S1 Stud-Pact .. , •* gVirt a co tfj Texaco " it 7 Ta* O . A pressure of from eight to 15 pounds is required to break normal egg. It takes M per cant more pressure to break an egg on [the small md. DR. HENRY A .MILLER Optometrist ■ ! 7 North Soginow Street phone.FE 4-6842 rectangular rear window. It will carry a list price of $2,085. . Factory list prices do not include federal, state or local taxes, destination and dealer delivery and handling charges. jjwhen he was arraigned before j presented by the "Caribbean*.'' «*sj judge Ziem on a charge of ut- male chorus from Poptiac Central MJ tertng and oubiishing. High School, directed by Jerry' 24;J| * * ♦ Libby, vocal music instructor, arid maJ The judge refused a defense accomitenied by Karen Bronoel. motion to change his MOO bond [The Pontiac, Central senior girls to a personal bond so he could be ensemble assisted with "I Am a released from the county jail, 'Little Girl from Trinidad." LAZELLE AGENCY, Inc. All Forips Murder Charges Dropped for Trio chases —11 > today A “I g’ ________P JSl aits iS to** . iSi t First-degree murder charge* j create a situation which set motion were - dismissed this mornings chain of events” resulting in against three Madison Heights!Burghy's death, youths charged in the death of - . ‘ * they did not MU. - 1 of murder under the law yea ve get to have a murder, set a killing or a homicide, but a tow- 13S.4 126 3 >46.1 tat.i 101.4 iMi 130.6 1176 644.6 112 2 ma m* IIM Bell Telephone Tells of'32-Hour Week •OW-JtNta I r.M. AVEBAOCA 16 utth; 1: I atoaki tawa* on mi . volume1 p.ai a.uo.aoo ^.?r.y7 Auto-Theft Sentence ;fo Be Pronounced May 1 A- drop to the .growth rate of the. Michigan Bell Telephone Co. to Sentence wttl be passed May I ! Pontiac resulted to the firm's lay-[on Robert Martin. IS. of Coming of! two telephone installers with jmwvP Township, who. pleaded gull-teas than two years service, and Uy yesterday to car theft in the placing 42 others on | 32-hour workjc|ty April 9. week yesterday. q >. i tfartin. of 1557 Lone Pine Raid, District Manager ftay H. Storm b accused of, having participated said the return to a full work vheek[with two buys, one if and and rehfrtog -would depend upon U, to six auto lhef|B- He waw rathe firm's growth rate In tin naarltanaej on bond to await sentenc-future. . ting. of Insurance (AdaarUan NOW IS TNI TIMI TO TAXI A 8PRINO TONIC. IP TON AM BIS-COURAAID, MSAPPOWm. DOWNHIARTID OI JUST PLAIN MSOUSflO WITN MIOICINIS CONTAINING HARMFUL DRUGS. DOM. ALCOHOL, SALTS OR PAIN KILLIRS, THIN TRY TNI NATIONS NUMSIR ONI AU HIM TONIC, O-JIB-WA CAN HELP YOU INJOY IITTH HEALTH! Circuit Judge Frederick Ziem granted motkms of defense attorneys to drop the murder charges against Glen Foster; SO, of 12 E. Katherine St., Fred Mills, IS, of 530 11-Mile Road, and Ernest Cameron, 10. of 21330 Wolverine St. Jtatge Ziem rated than waa so murder bat only Justifiable homicMB to tike fatal Fob. "Here we have not a murder but a justifiable killing." he said. "TMs fellow Harlin acted late-fully and had just as much right to fire upon the robber (Burghy) ' the American forces had the I right to return the'fire of the Jap-1 Mutating Of Rutsell t. Bursty «“ lnv-der* •* Harbor." Jr., a 18-yoar-oM eoeapae from Bajv Vocational School, whoa the four attempted to hold up 1*4 Oak Farit ep>rttag goods Burghy was shot by William - -un Harlin. 55. owner of the Hart! Sports Stop. J236 W. Nine Mite THEY WENT ALONG ; But because they allegedly < long in the plot, the three yo were chargefi with radnter under ‘a law which spys -while trying-to perpetrate a /robbery "tRepr did O-JIS-WA BITTIRS CONTAINS IS PURI PRISH NIRBS (MOTHIR NATURFS PINISTI SO WHIN YOU AIR FOR O-JIB-WA BITTMS, YOU KNOW YOU ARI GETTING TNI BIST REMEDY AN* TONIC AVAIiARLI ANYWNIRL Assault with intent to rob while 1 pending against I the three. Judge Ziem refused to I dtepton that charge against Mills, f No trial Mate was set. ’ Husbands! Wires! Git Pip, Vim; Feel Younger **—--*• ip wfidtoMh —-- — | Ttavaaad* w anplaa'-eta ml, saw —4, ] ntatttad Sia* tonun body lack* iron F« I pm a* d«M \ m nmayuan, d tea. of Uvar or IS Ita. •< taadT I (Mav "(gtaraqqaiatqd” tin «e*ta UUa. Or ■ I -awTnmwy Jta. dam 61ST All drugauta. | iHnRnHamMmBK FOR INVESTMENT SECURITIES and ACCURATE QUOTATIONS CALL C. J. NEPHLER CO. FE 2-9H7' 8)8 Community. Nationol Bank Bldg; U COAST TO COAST 11 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUKSDAV, APRIL 18,1961 FIFTEEN clIssifications INDEX ANNOUNCEMENTS Rm33 I .. Cemetery LoU EMPLOYMENT HtM Wanted Melt ...... Help Wanked Female ... Help Wanted .......... Employment Agencies .. Instructions ......... W OJ k W an ted Male ...... Work, Wanted Female ... SERVICES OFFERED CamieryLeta R oriel Fare Sacrifice ; Business 8ervlce ....... BoOskeeptng a Taxea Dressmaking a Tailoring . Oardeo Flowing .......... Income Tax Service ...... Laubdty Service ......... Mm^* gn^YjK*tor'■ Palatine g Decorating ... Television Service ...... 2X1 Wtd. Mucellaneoua ...... Money Wanted............ Wanted to Rent ........ snare Living Quarters . Wtd. Transportation . Wtd.-Contracts, Mtea. RENTALS OFFERED Wtd. Apt*. Furnished . Rent Aptq, Qnturnlahed . Rant Houses Furnished Rent Houses Unfurnished Rent Lake Cottages .... For Rent Roosne ......... Rooms With Board ........ Convalescent Homes Hotel Rooms ......-..... Rent Stores ............. Rent Office Space ...... For Rent Miscellaneous . REAL ESTATE FOR SALE For bile Houses ............ Income Property ............. Por Sals List Property For Sale Resort Property .... suburban Property .......... For. Sale Lots For sale Acreage .......... For Me Farms ....... Real Farm Property Rale Business Property Rent-Lease Business Property For Sale or Exchange ..... Sale Land Contracts Mosey la Lean.... Credit Advisors ..... Mortgage Loans .... MERCHANDISE Swaps ...1..... ..... For Sale Clothing Sale Household tioods Mount Park C I fcm. flf t Tbs PomtiM Preen FOR WANT ADS DIAL TE, 2-8181 From S am. to I p.m. All errors should be M-ported immedlatoiyi The preaa assumes no responsibility for, errors ooier then to cancel me ohbreaa lor Out portion of the Martian of Mat wWch I_____ I_______ dored valueless tbrough the error- When - ssnosuatlsns ere mode be sure. to get your “kill number." No. adjustments will bo given Closing Urns lor advertisements containing typo algal lilior lliss idW»r...agate type is 13 o'clock torn Ibo any previous to pubUcntpie. • deadline far ci CASH WANT AD HATES Ltaoa 1-Day J-Days e-Days s si.n »j.m imi s ea , i n EM IMS i additional < Pontiac Frees k Help Wanted Male 6 SALESMAN Dartre to change into n top notch organisation? Write your own chock. Apply In person.- as ty. Huron St. Mr. Oray, from 10 STILL LOOKING? Thors o proposition tor a man Interested lp making barter than lust an overage Income. He mint have plenty of go power needed to eon this Income, but I will fUMHah everything In the line at TRAINEE WILL ACCEPTS LIO I -ble Eprean Vgt log on the Job training In dry cleaning, dive USED CAE SALESMAN. OO0d OF-portuntty. High rate. See our ad under Used care. W- J. Smith Motor Sales, 1726 Williams Lake Rd. MM. _______ ' wanTEd Work Wanted Mate It By Kate Ossim \\ gip hr. FE 8-4602. MARRIED. MAN r3 badly. FT 5-»S»8. MARRIED ^MAN, ^23^ D18IRBS LAWN ANb SHRUBBERY WORK . Of apy kind. FB 2-0867-ODD JOBS OF ALL KINDS UL %-mi. __________r WANTS WORK OF anf kind- FE 8-3620. . YOUtfO MAN DESIRE* WORK iv of any kind. FE HM4. YouHo'“Vrnuuif. awV * type work- F* 2-7926, rt 5H290. YOUNO MAN. i. Must kavs o k rafaSi WorkWanted Female 12 d 46 If you qualify WANTED EOO BUYER WANTED J MEN FOR 8ANI-VAC Department^Opportunlty^ to ad - ■blUOlU. Aft pa barrier. AddIy Wl 8>gin>i EXPERIENCED BABY SITTER -Love children. Live out; mm 4-4*64 HOUSEWORK i DAYS > MIMEOORAPHINO. TYPINO. 8EC-rctarial service. EM 3-2*42 STATVnCAL TYPIST, IS YEARS ’ exp. Exc. references. Work home. Help Waatad FspirIe 7 j Itomaf wants_mume,s aide I WAITRESSES WANTED FOR,! WASHINOS AND IRONINOS. PICK truck stop restaurant. Nights. ME up and Dal. FE 4-3114 Rent Apts. Fanrishtd 37 S ROOktt, CLEAN. UTILITIES IflRIVbPiHlLIIICI AMD tlearn. FE 6-2464.4* Edison SL I 1 ROOMS. KITCHENETTE. CHILD | welcome. *31. H. Perry. FE 2-5170. ROOM APARTMENT. _________... privet. „ a week. Child welcomi 443 Orchard 1 Anim. _____. Howard Street. HOLLYWOOD APT. Rant Apts, Fantlshed 37 *16.00 WEEKLY. I ROOKS- PR1-vate bath and onwonca, hast ana utilities. Apply sod St. Clair Street. APARTMENT. NEAR BUS STA- TEiSy«r — varjriJuHa I OR COMPLETELY II BRIAN REALTY. I IICE 1 ROOMS, TILED BATH, utilities (urn: Near TaLHUrqn. Paul Jones. 331 W. Huron, y NEED AN APAKTMENtT* SLATER APTS. Rsat Apti UufsrnWdiN - AIR OONDITIOMEO ■ >** ORCHARD CT. AFTS*. ‘Rent now greatly redwood S BEDROOM.APARTMENT Modem la Evefy Detail ADULTS OMl FE 8-6918 Manager, IS Salmer SI.. Apt. # ' pen Dally > Sun , 10 a m. to I p.m. ALBERTA APAlftMENTS Living room, bedroom, knohon, bathroom, effletonoles. US op. IN M Paddock FE 4NN Auburn, Comer of Edith S rooms newly decorated, corner terrace, gas htot and garage,, STS per month Also, other terraces 160 mo South Edith mar , Auburn. Inquire US S Edtth or AND 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH I *nd entrance. FB MISS _ FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED i ‘ I ROOMS AND BATH. NICE AND _ 43 N PARKE nT. clean. prtVate Yml'ance. aduiu. • FB 4-3540 , T ! north end. FE 14*61. i AFTER 5 AND 'SUNDAYS. SEE I . S ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE i CARROLL. . 1 and bath. umUH'tOfK..- I block! A47 N. PAREE 8T. _ j i,i^SyHPRATED °£SH±R?riJ'r£lS- ' , ulmaQurntahmi. 1*1 Machanlc. I {»*& KSyWlBSsa 'III KITCHENETTE ON LAKE. ' 1470 Pontiac Lake Bond. OR 3-MSS • WARM AND PLEASANT. 1 OR 1 people. Lakelront. no drinkers. IT 2-41M WEIST APARTMENTS i 160 AUBURN Bedroom apartment- stove, re-*■ - ...furnished. Hetp Wanted Male - 6 AVOID TRAFFIC_________,a teaaant general office work avail- i _ ible In the Btrmtnghem-Bloom- a laid area. A permanent position Building Service “I bet poets wouldn't rave so much about spring ’if they | 13 J had to do spring house cleaning!" ... PE 3-8466. 3 ROOMS. NICELY FURNISHED mkrT,k°&»w,,t “dt iRcnt Apti. Unfurnished 38 * entSnea'. ^Utltrftimlahad^sn 11- AND S-BEDHOOM — PARITY ills, FI 6-6336__11 turn, lakelront opts OR mg. BEDROOM APARTMENT. BEL- air* Manor. Mull ------ FE4-IM0. L children ------B ___..ire for chUdren If works. 101 B. Paddock. s-BEDROOM. CHILDREN Landscaping 21 l KINDS OF CEMENT WORE. . sea. Jensen. 013-3440_] COMPLETE LAWN WqRK OAR- ^ggttg^pi-isisafc arrirf soil o D DELIVERING TOP A PART TIME JOB Needed at mice S men (or eve-nine work, Cell Mr. Pruett. OR LOOM, 4 p.m - I p.m._____________ 1-1 SMALL ENGINE MECHANIC with sales experience on garden power equipment Reference re-1 qutred. Phone OR 3-7*34, MA I the ages of SS and —-------— — .....—----------- psblr in general office procedures , Specialises In nnd is a pleasant work com pan- houses. Ouar. t loo. Congenial surroundings, va- f Pree estimates cation plan and hospiullsetl— 1 -- " --------■- — ■—t n mw of t At REMODELING OF ALL KINDS. ! LANDSCAPING, BULLDOZING. ---- - ---------■ t sodtog And seeding. IQt yUit 1 hulfd. 1 LANDSCAPING. BULLDOZING PE'TiYm --- | soolne and seeding. EM S-S4I8 ---------;--------------- MIELKE S PERENNIAL ntsnxXs. iwn building and tree plant* it of Mlddlebelt. 1 b TV h Radios AnUqu HI-FI. .. Water Buftenera For 8ola Miscellaneous Christmas Trots........... ACCOUNTANT FOR CORRES?ON-dtnee. coat work and general office work. Engineering Interests helpful Write Box fs Pontiac Pret* givtns air work Bod nor APPLICATIONS ARE BEINO AC ceptod by Holly Police Deportment for 1 full time police offl-cor. Inquire 404'i f. Maple. ! Holly Police Department between | S a m. to « p.m: Holly, Michigan | BAR MAID — AOE S3 TO 34. days a week. Must be steady and hove references. Apply hi person, no phone cells. Dell's Inn. • toil Elisabeth Lake Rd._; Baker— Prep Cook A-l ALTERATIONS AND* MODKfUL--i—fsettoir Resldeiinirand cemmer-cltl Dale Cook Construction Co. ,4 OR 3-W33___________________ i BRICK. BLOCK AND CE M E N FE 1-1333 PEAT HUMUS. 6 YARDS. SIS. Shredded SIS. Top soil mixed with ______ _______.IPWPVL. -. peat humus, SIS. ELgln 4-0447 alto repairs. Ctrprntry. new and ; WE»T CITY LAHDBCAPINO SOD^ reptlra OR _________________j ding and needing. Lawn rolling BARGAIN ; ■ V maintenance. FE M372.---- Oarage. 44S4, recreation room, IS X 15, S340. ------- -----L — HiOH' DOLLAR FOR FURNITURE rSTFEC”ts{i^Fairarorrur* i Moving snd Trucking 22 BLOCK. «ntoad — ______. ... -________ vsuing, experience or Investment fira-s curtty you need. Phone OR 34M COMBINATION BOOT KAN. MUST be A-l and furnish references. Inquire Max R. Warren, Jerome Motor Balsa. CAREER OPPORTUNITY IN LIFE Ins. Sales. Ouar. salary full training. no collecting. Minimum high school grad. Age SMS. Cal! FE rtg-1443. mornings IMS. Sale Store Equipment Sale Sporting Good! Hunting Accommodations Bait, Minnows, Etc....... Sand. Orsvtl h Dirt ...... Wood, Coal ii Fuel ...... Plante. Trees. Shrubs Por Bole Pets ..... Doga Trained. B'rded Hunting Dogs .......... FARM MERCHANDISE Hoy. Drain g Feed For Sals Livestock Wanted Livestock........ Por Bate Poultry - : Salt Perm Produce ....... Sale Farm Equipment Auction salsa ,.... AUTOMOTIVE Fnr Bala Houaetrallara Rent Trailer ^pci For 8ale Urea ........ Auto ServtoO '-»—..... Bala Hater Scooters . ~ " Motorcycle* , COLLECTOR Neat In appearance and able to converse Intelligently. Transportation furnished. $90 A WEEK SALARY ELECTRIC HEAT, INSULATION and wiring. Raglln Electric. EM Ted'a baa on Immediate opening 3-W34 or MU MS23. for SB qxporteoeed Bake/-Prep yxcAVATING AND THENCHINO cook. Apply ln person only. |or lcptlc unks. drain fields, foot- TED S toga* and light ddzlng. UL W* WOODWARD AT SQUARE LE RD. FREE ESTIMATEk OH ALL WIR- **&***”S!P . I Efctrtf ““ finance, R. B Munre AppTy^iir ~-p«raon I Etaeirta Qo„ 1061 W. Huron, root. Mil Joalyn. OUTTERB. FLABHINOS, FREE E8- I tlmates. EM 3-f>43>. _________ I T R E S S. ! HOUSE RAiSINO, HOUSE MOY- hrtWr “ ' Ing, UCfhl ' -----”— estimates modern!- , ---- ----- -E MISS- A-l MOVING SERVICE IEMENT AND CARPEN- Reasonable Rato* FE t-NM j *----FE MOM. I A FIRST CLASS MOVE CALL Wanted MiBcellBneoua 301 - ___3. ROOM8 WITH PRIVATE BATH OFriCE FURNITURE AND BUSI- | gL^ggSg.'. .y.r test equipment. Forbes Printing , I-1, 173 “*‘aw,n Ave I tnd Office supply, MI S-3011. snd clean-up. FE S-6303. HAULINO AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any time. FE A-nnos HAULINO AND RUBBISH. I, anytime FE «dBM. . Apply In person M j •quipped. Free LIGHT HAULINQ ANYWHERE m. anytime UL 2-23>8.________ LIGHT HAULINb AND ODD JOBS. __________FES-0015_________ CURB mT /iisMt c-InTWW-r* .nl LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING. waitresses i BWggmegaLfeJF^.*ga g MimiiWtWiBwnfca Sr sklfu. Apply In parson i or'too small Work guaran- i — Phono oss-iots.__ j O DELL CARTAGE CANVASSER POR PHOTOORAPH-er. Ho aelllnx. OR 0-11S7. CAB DRIVERX STEADY AND EXPERIENCED^ REA L^ ESTATE Saw. {n YomS.^JMS wr Huron J TED’S Woodward at Square Lake ltd GENERAL HOUSEWORK —it bookr—6 >,Vft ROOF REPAIRS eBtE*M Painting & Decorating 23 > you A-l Job..... .... work. Lay out Jobs. Pour _________________ I .ootlng and Boor. Special 18T CLASS PAINTING AND DECHAPPY FAMILY NEEDS HOUSE-1 price to bufidar. Call FE 44351. orating. Cash or terms. UL 3-3040 - ” ’ ftS2re^„~* ! SPECIALIZED. MODERNIZATION. 1ST CLASS PAINTINO. DBCORAT- uwn room. a,---------------- i 'ng, Reas Don Beck, OL 1-3141. Wtd. Children to Board 28; CARS, LICENSED CHRIS- i Wtd. Houaeisold Poods 29 |. PIECE OR HOUSEFUL ROOMS BACHELOR APART- IT-; Prtvort n and entrance. Blue B __________ everything furn-1 4-0634 i Phone FE 6-7S04, 1 BIO ROOMS. NEWLY DECORAT-1 -Ad___Private fntranee and bath. 3 Blks. from Sears. SU par week. utUIUea furnished. Call after 4:00 P.M. FE 3-3813. AND 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH and entrance, newly decorated, stove, refrig. utIL turn. 385 Whlttemore. ___________________ ROOM8 VERY CUtitN Bride Flat—HeatOd - AVAILABLE APRIL 11 IttraetlVf four family building 1004 Auburn Ava.. Auburn Hts. nv, both a garage. Raferaoeoa required. $78 per mouth. EMM. FE 3-7101 or TK 5-600*. ROOMS AND BATH __________ locations, too- kane-Liberty area. S bedrooms. 080 mo. North side • Whitfield St . 3 bedroom upper — S bedroom upper — 3 bedroom lower. FE 4-3431 or PE 0-1173 after » p.m. UPPER ON UNION COURT APARTMENTS aeon attraettoo-^Cbol jh^ sum- _____ 300 month. .j, 16001. -- r , ______________ ’ 11 ROOMS WITH NEW STOVE AND i WEST SIDE i | refrigerator. Tiled bath, Ipqulr- ■rttoi "■* * I Apt. 4 at 47 Charlotte No pcti newly redecorated. lJMB FE 3-1414 n WfT , , S — OAS BEAT. bath FE 4-7328: ■ ROOMS. BATH. UTILITIES BATH. FIRST ! 3 ROOMS AND BATH. 1*4 13 ROOM. NEWLY DECORATED. I (rlgerator, heat 4 BEDROOM HOME ON CAM Lake, adults only, Ph 603-1680 as—jg I 3 ROOM HOUSE IN CITY. MOD-' . water «rn Near bus line. EM 34371. u Fslm j 3 ROOM HOUSE, ALL Auhnrn IdlMl PE 3-MM WANTED: USED PIANO AND OR-1 3. ROOM. PRIVATE ENTRANCE for mlaatenarloi in New MeiL rtH OB 4-0367 ROOMS AND BATH. NEWLY I decorated, private entrance. Christian couple preferred — I you drink don't apply. 004 Ml Clemens. PE 3-4515. Money Wanted 31 3 ROOMS. VERY NICE. / PI negro: ro6mi i, H. J. Benner. )OM8 AND BATH. NEWLY decorated, private entrance, lake privileges, $17.10 par peak. MY 4 ROOM LOWER. PRIVATE BATH . and entrance. Nicely turn. ”* 1 pets. 20 Norton. I ROOMS AND BATH, UPPER. »oa bant, East side. PE 44043 I ROOMS ANb bath, upper, newly decorated. IPS Baldwin l ROOMS AND BATH. UPPER. Refrtg., stove and utilities fur-nlshed. Private FE 4-5406 4 ROOMS AND BATH. _________UL 3-3471 l-ROOM LAKEPRONT COTTAOB MAS 3 EEPmOOM HOME full bsmt t block E. of Tel Huron teo mo. Cell EM 3-3303 COLORED. NICE jK&ia BEDROOM > responsible Oil FE 4-3001 HOMS tte, hi It. Bei option. all FE 3 BEDROOM HOME. WIRED FAR electric range, basemer* ------ ilble to St. Benedict', — — 610 AND BATH, DOWN- EMERSON NEAR MT. CLEMENS, town of Lk. Orion. OA t bedroom, largo living room, , woy, attached gang*. Largo RA- yard, oil boat. Require —— l. Phoae UL S-1306. 1 Estate. Must be able to I d distinctly, f— .Building Supplies, 14 For a Boats B Accessories Flberglas ....... For tale Airplanes Transportation Offered . Wanted Used Cora ...... Used Auto Porta ....... commercial TraHorg Pale Used TrtMfeO ..... Used Track Parts ...... ‘ i Insurance f IN- EXPERIENCED PRES8ER. COL-11ns Cleaners, 040 Woodward, Rochester. OL 3-7711. Death Notices KINO. APRIL 17. IMI. SANDRA, S3 Nortoo: beloved infant daughter of Jack and Myrna Kins: dear slater of Fatrlcla, Jack Jr., Donald and Lonnie Kins: dear granddaughter of Sirs. Pearl Tear and Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie King Funeral service win be held Thursday. April 28, at 1:30 p.m. from the Huntoon Funeral Rome. Intermfnt In Perry Mt Park Cemetery. Sandra will lie In state I 73: dear fathar of Merwti d Ronald Hints and Mrs. Bett; liter: dear brother of Ra; - ages 34 snd ‘ e Pontiac Preaa Box 10. tLIO H T HOUSEKEEPING. ONE I ' child, live In. private room and . bath, heavy household duties per-1 formed by other help- exc. sal- r, — MI l-C"" • I INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR. opportunity which Ii I NURSES AIDES WITH OR WI+H-] out exiprtence. Wa train 'Steady | emptbyn--- i executive experience. aMerablt ■ ty la the right men. „ .. H_________interested In earn- ing from 04.000 to $*,000 a year to start, depending upon your qualifications, Phono FE 3-7041 Mon. through Sat. to arrange an accounting, sad general offl I fimfly? GEAR ENGINEER Ws manufacture |Mrs, M*pur, bevel. an for eniglnaerli Id esttmatlnx of: trly salary deslrei Will bL at S ys.. ______ ___ BSMgBN Reid Funeral Home. Oxford. — Rev. Fred dark officiating. Interment in Metamore Cemetery. Mr. Kbit! wtll Ha In state at the Bosaardet * Raid Funeral Home. experience,.yearly salary . Hus Is an opportunity l.. „ managerial position. Writ* P. O. Box 00, Ferndale, Michigan NEW CAR SALESMAN. Ramblers and Pontiacs. Must be experienced. See Russ Johnson, Lake Orion, MT 2-2371. FOtJfl MEN OR WOMEN WITH cart to fill taomrie*. Full or pari time. Opportunity to Mrs pood income. 150 N. Ferry, • 30 to Apt & »• 1,0 Phon* Cl Onto Lake Rest H»ven. Alden Dr. North Bide Preen Li RECEPTIONIST BOOKKEEPER Permanent position Avali-•hi. to mediately. Repute-■ Be Law Firm. TYP- 134 week. YOUNO LADIES _ • women to do pleasant phon* work fa our new Pontiac office. Choose your own hours. Wo train all our own personnel, for the job. Salary of ill. per week from the time you ora hired. Call Mr. Martin. Mon. or Tuea. between 3-—a ^^sraalr. PH 8-3034- ____ C08METIC8. Dept. A-3L Olendxle. Call fornix Routs will pay up to 33-40 per hour. WOMAN FOR OEISRAL HOUSE- 11c Lin. Ft. 3fe TD base , All Casfi and Carry Waterford Lumber Co. 33*3 Airport Ed. PAINTING PAPERING, REMOV *1. Washing. FE 3-3313. PAINTINO AND DECORATING. Interior and exterior. Won •>••>>-lug. 14 yrs. exp. MA 3-1333. Business Service 15 Television Service 24' CHIMNEY WORK _. __________ Upholrtering 25 k pointing. Installation. Flues —: ----—------------------- id chimneys, boskets made to ! DINETTE KITCHEN CHAIRS RE-haA'" ■ *'' " covered. Vinyl or naugahyde. Free estimates, pick up and delivery. MA 6-1873. Also dean, repair, ftre- __.j. Discount prices » cal registered Co. FE 3-7701, ELECTRIC MOTOR 8ERVICE RE-palrlng and rewinding. 31$ E. Pike. Phone .FE 4-3381. i HEATING, FURNACES CLEANED LAWN MOWER REPAIR. 8MIT-. ty’i Air Cooled Engines. 436 Ambotwood. FE 4-3iir Saws, Hand Lawnmowers Machine sharpened Manley Leach_______10 Begley 8t SEPTIC TANKS CLIaNED SLIP COVERS. CUSTOM MADE. Free estimates. 3^djur service. Lost and Found 26 FE 0-3303. Reward. L08T: 1 PAIR OF ALUMINUM etlita. Reward OR I-Mll .LOST: gAEI BRITTANY. 3% TYBICK. APRIL 16. 13S1. MAT-thew Scott, 48S4 Jamm Road; beloved Infant ion of Fetor r—* June Tyrtek; dear brother Peter. Vicki. Tarrl, Mike l™ Mark Tyaick; dear grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Tyslck and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin OUlendai ras held yeeter-i-Orlffln Chapel BOX REPLIES At M UL Todny then were ropttes it Tbs Press office in tbs following boxest !, 3, It, 36, M. 71, 81, 88, N, 117. Card of Thanks l rotative* and thought stow fa Homo. WUUnm Bowles. Funeral Directors 4 Voprhees-Siple .FUNBRAL HOME ----‘MjSSL— COATS natAV^ra^S^ 3-77*7 Donelson-Johns funeral bohi. . »-saa8«r5fflh„. SI.STJ _ slave waaklv part ____________Ml financial Ula. caU na. OB MO*. * pjn. - S mm. : salesmen for p rences. Reply Pontlad Press Box ■ ..Jll •___home OfflaO. filter- ing work with better cloax famines, easterner refers! program osanroa *0 to Nil d w salsa. Married rn«--* Many company SINGLE. MIDDLE-AGED &oi WHAT TO DO WITH TJVO? Dial V^ant Ads -FE 2-8181 , ,. The Pontiae Press n mediately more'. No'aso^lmlt. No experience necessary. $1,000 worth of samples furnished free. W* are a National Co. Writ* today to Northwestern, Ins., 603 Nicollet ------- Minneapolis. Minn. TOP COMMISSION FOR TWO XX-irr**"*** Real Estate people. Can Mr, Pace. OR 44QS. WANTED DIXIELAND PIANO . Huron. Phon* Dressmaking, Tailoring 17 ALTERATIONS AND REPADUNO. on all garmaota, Beatrice stopita. 61 Cherry Oonrt. FE 443*4. TAILORINO—ALTERATIONS Dross Making—Fur Repairs EDRA WARNER FE 34*30 TAILORINO, ALTERATIONS' —aperies. MY 3-3*36 Notices and Personals 27 ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDINO a friendly adviser, phone FE 34113. After $ p.m. er If no answer call FE 34734. Confidsn- AEROTREDS KNAPP SHOES PBKD HERMAN____OR 3-13*3 i. E. Neville, EM,3-3330. t opportunity - o . Ft 3-0330, Bah Garden Plowing 18 | AL'S COMPLETE LANDSCAPING Plowlaf. grading, discing, mowing . I Manure, black dirt, top soil PE 4-4228 or OR 34185 ■» I _ WARNER'S ROTO-TILLINO Lawn* nnd sardena. FE *W4*. Empioym—> Ajtodw 9 DOCTOR’S ASSISTANT assisting the Dr., answering the BlMOM and doing light typing $ day weak. Midwest Imployment. fit Pontiac State Bldg.. Ft EVELYN EDWARDS "VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE" 4H aartlSto Mto * Phone FEderai 4-0584 Instructions—Schools 10 Work Wanted Mala 11 AjrWXGrWASHINO BY MACH Rugs, upholstery. PE 04430 i-A WALL WABH1NO. CARPET, cotaa merhtne eleaned. Wl 4-IOT1 CABINET MAKER AND CARPKN-*tar. Kitchen* n specialty PE Larpkntkr wbftk os' Any kind. Raasonable. Cal) after. * ---. PE 0443*. PLOMlNO, DI8KINO. VjlBD cap' “ Income Tax Service 19 S N, Perry FE 2-3171 INCOME TAX and Accounting Service __' Open Dally f to 3 LEE'S ACCOUNTINO SERVICE 0tT7. HURON VW 4-4431 (Ample Free Parking In Rear) A-l LANDBCAPntO. SEEDIHO. eefldlps aad maintenance. Plaano-lng arranged. MA 3-1134 or FE 34133 •____________ S" to MARION PLUE 80D YOU [. 33*1 Ureoka Rd. pickup: deliv laid. RototHlb: UL SJjgQ: . Seeding, .tedding. Maw dm Top aeiL tr*4 trimming aid removal / Cemeat work, patios and fencing — FE 4-4333 or OR 14104 all types Landscaping lawn ARE YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTS? CONSOUDATC ALL YOUR BILLS AND LET Vm GIVE YOU ONE PLAdfe TO PAY BUDGET SERVICE Ii W. HURON PE 44i01 ARE DEBTS WORRYING • YOU ? * catwsffo? -Emplbyer -PtretcMs ______ -No charge' for budget analysis write er phone, for Ire* booklet. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS get assist Member: —kilehigi Credit 'COLD WAVE gPECTAL.'to Complete. Dorothy * FE 3-1344 DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES, 738 ME-nomtoee, FE 4-7304. DON’T LET TOUR' BILLS OET you down — get professional financial management right now: Homex Services, 103 8. Broad-• way. Lake Orion, or 0 National Bank Building. RoobartefT OL Wtd. Children to Board 28 C FOR CHILDREN. children, references. jr. j. (Dick) valuet i mmmMm Realtor FE 4-3531 4mIBM™ Snare Living Quarters 33 2-Wuy Radios my home^8|lvai Building. Modernization RESIDENTIAL . COMMERCIAL' . Quaff SHARE HOME WITH COUPLE OR ! ^ Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. 35' Custom Asphalt Paving —-----------------...... i Free Estimates — Financing — I 3 $ ACTION $ $. IF YOU HAVE I JHiM:------------------- sold your property on a land contract and would lik* to cash out. CaU Mr. Hayden. Cash buyers watting. J. C. HAYDEN. Realtor ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST A ABILITY contract, equity or mortgage at lowest possible discount caU Ted McCullough, Ph. 832-1320, Small mortgages avaUable. BUYERS POR CONTRACTS CLARK REAL E8TATE 3101 W. HURON FE 4-44 FE 3-7080_________ I Darrels. EM. 3-2411 IMMEDIATE ACTION >n any good land contracts. New or seasoned. Your cash upon sat* Isfactory inspection of property and title. Ask for,Ken Templeton. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 830 Orchard Lake Road FE 4-4563 Plants, Trees and Shrubs silver Maples, 15 to 30 ft high. 3 inch Caliper. $14.04. Smaller sices. 62.40 up Bordtoe’s Nursery. Rochester Rd.. 1 mil* N. of Auburn Rd.. Rochester. ■ Plastering Service A-l PLA8TKRINO AND REPAIBS Reas. Pat Lee. FE 2-7022. RUO AND FURNITURE) PLASTERING FREE ESTIMATES | ADDITIONS. SIDING. AWNTNQS. PoMlac Homo Service. FE 4-1887. Carpet Cleaners , RUO AND F U R N I Cleaners, call FE 4-7110. Automobile Repairs 1000 VOLK8WAOEN REBUILT EN-slne, complete. Exchange, $106.06. Rebuilt transmission, complete with roar axlo, exchange 3*0.6*. New mufflers for VoUcawagen. 6608 Complete line of repair -porta at vary low prices. ANDY CSIKt OARAGE 773 BALDWIN AVE. DALTON CARPET CLEANERS INSTALLED FREE Auto springs, mufflem, tall plpea, generators starters shock absorbers whan bought at regular prices at HOLLERBACK'S AUTO PARTS 873 Baldwin_______FE 3-047; Top Soli WE NEED ONE — SMALL LAND ------ “ xonable discount. H. Brown Real- Wanted Real EsUta 36 BUILDER NEEDS 1 OR MORE Vacant Lota, City of Pontiae ay area. Fast Action by buy*: CALL, FE 04070. 13 to I __8.B.8. BUILDING CO. 6-3203 SPECIALIZED ‘kEALTY SERVICE .Louis Borat. Realtor. FE 3-3*42. WREN IS THE BEST TIME TO SELL* You think when the trees and flowers are la bloom would be the best time to sell your home, but _______ery price range. DALE BRIAN has some excellent prospects waiting to see your homo. Won't you glTO us a call? DALE BRIAN REALTY OO. OR 3-1364 — DIXIE HIOHWAY , Boats NEW 1961 A luma Graft aluminum and nbe'r^las Nnodrli Open Eves, and Sundays ■DUNHAM'S 2264 Union Lk. Rd EM 3-4103 LEAD THE FLEET! (WITH LARSON AND WAOEMAKER BOATS' ALUMINUM AND WOOD DOCKS MATERIALS FOR DO-IT-YOURSELF DOCKS YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER Harrington Boat Works 1333 a. Telegraph Rd. FE 34033 Dressmaking, Tailoring Dry Wall Eavestroughing A-l FLOOR BANDING—WITT THE FLOOR SANDER—PE 847! FABULON • WATERLOX - BRUC1 Plumbing ouid Heating LUCAS PLUMBING AND BEAT-INO Parts sad Service. New work enjk alteration*. UL 2-3130 or OU Roofing and Siding BOAT NUMBERS ..-..—- $» 60 1 Inch — Par set I* place* > MADE-ID-ORDER STENCILS V Pontiac Stomp a 8tencli Co , 04 8. Cass a PE *4338. Saw and Mower Service j SAW * LAWN MOWER SERVICE' MU 8-2001 -------sx—v-ff. . RAY'S "! MOWEU 3871 8. Milferd Rd Television, Radio and Hi-Fi Service Furniture Refinishing FURNITURE FINISHINO AN-, reflolahlo. Touch-up work Free I JOHNSON -RADIO & TV climates Merjltt fc Sen, *74.1170. | ■> Houri la A M , Pm Insurance BOAT INSURANCE Frank a. anderson agency PINTER'S N. OPDYEE RD. FE 4 Landscaping ESTIMATES AVAILABLE NOW. OgmplaM^'—---- -------- ________FE 24867. ________ White’s Nursery DEFENDABLE TRUSTWORTHY Walton Blvd. FE 8-4500 ■ LYNN'S. TV SERVICE. WE OIVE' ------------Stomps. Antennas Holden'* 2-03IS. Tree Trimming Service EXPERT TREE SERVICE. PREEt satlmatoa. PE 4-00*3 or OR 3-30*0.. TREE nUMlOHO AND BEMOVAL----------------a. FE 34030. . Rent Apts. Furnished 37 tly fun aid*. 1 ROOM EFFICIENCY W kitchen and bath, *4$ fun ALBERTA APARTHEID 3*0 N. Paddock OR 8 ADULTS. 330 ROBINWOOD. PE 34013. Abo apt fif Orion. 34 N. Share. MT 34S1S._________ 1ST. I1X)OR. l fc.OOMS AND 1 LAROE ROOM NEAR BUS STA-tion. Ra dnukarw Ctoa-pleasant. 134 N. Parry. I LAROE ROOMS PRIVITY EN-trance, ttl* bath. MOO Sylvan SPRING SPECIALS *' Aluminum Prams ... . til 10' Aluminum Prams.....'1*6 17’ Flberglas canoes.. 3176 Square stern (Iberilas canoes 1166 New flberglas run-abouts from 4465 ** ~ompteto nod outfit* priced to il; Fine'selection of guaranteed ed motor* from 3 to 30 HP. PAUL A. YOUNG OPEN 7 days • I to (Mon. thru got 10 TO * SUNDAY 4030 Dixie Hw^r. . (fit Loon Lak* NEW 1961 STAR CRAFT Fantastic new . aluminum lap-streak and flberglas models now on display. Trade your old boat. Long easy terms. Open Eves, and Sundays DUNHAM'S Brick UdU Building Modernization nldg. Co oa 34101. . lie **. 3x4 Kiln Dry Fir 3x44 Economy Stud* 4x3* P*f Board.... .... ,,.n 4x3* V-Grove Mahogany _ 34 56 4x8x>, Hardboard .. 31.36 an. PONTIAC LUMBER CX). CASK AND CARRY Oakland Ava. FE *4(13 Truck R—tal . ! Trucks to Rent; 14-Ton Pickups 114-Tan Stake*. TRUCKS — TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Truck*—Tami-Trsllers * /Pontiac Farm and * Industrial Tractor Co. • 73* a. WOODWARD « Upholstering THOMAS UPHOLSTERING Plywood , *5M5LS2£5-2t J&tSSS&nu I eaele's custom uriioLStElt-. L_ THICKNSSSKB^ AND BPBCIBB j Cooley Lake Bind. CM, Painters & Decorators Wm. C, MeJUth . IO. WALL WASHING Water Softener Service ‘ •Water, Softener. Service * ' d»rompt Service on All Mak**. Schick . OT. M7B or Ft 44SSB WINDOW CLEANINO. aad store storm wladaws, out up •croans. Janitor Service. Discount prices new. Call FE 3-7701. PAINTINO-PAPKRINO-WALL 3as stag. OE 3-7001 Tapper - WALL PAPERINO—PAINTINO . WtO Washing - Paper Remor-' Satblattlim Guaranteed . FE 3- Wrecking Service -ssp^£.°»: FUR FAST ACTION rnr tour m SIXTEEN ft—i HiBBsaTBiBiBiniJ? MODERN * ROOMS AND PORCH. lakt fraeug* IU a waft., 0*J itn«. ttwm«« wppawr'mutt. 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX! Automatic toast — Full* baaemant; ■ VOL DECORATE 1 ' $75 PER MONTH ! FE 4-7833 m tttol ■vd. N. at Valencia t Rent houses Uihnu 40 THft PONTIAC PB TUESDAY, APRIL18, 1981 __Jfct-MaHm—a --49 t .j gQMl» AWD^BATH M> MONTH u For Sil> H pim M QNLY3 LEFT jlta*3M»*! Royal Odk. Lincoln MIQa SV OWNER 4 BEDROOM. FULL basement, m .baths. 3 fireplace*. , carpeted - iKinc room; Dnjloa Plains OR 1*1311 After 4 p^m I Beautiful a’E t ting i-rsd- | Suburban Living At Its Best Your future home la lb* (CONVERTIBLE 24) 3 A 4 bedrooms. Ilk baths W. VV. ROSS HOMES OR 3-8021______ IMMACULATE DUPLEX 0B 8 Francis St. Five rooms each anartmant. * bed rooms and screen*. Auto oil heal Largo lot. 111.710 with terms. PICTURES OF HOMES IN > trading. Call FE MM3 LAWRENCE W GAYLORD 1382 W. Huron St. FE 8-9693 For S*4« Homes 49 GOLDEN pun MOTTO" at* WTao'ffl: tad. Off "RULE a pUR MOTTO" MM DOWN Nic« dtalni Newly daac.-.-—__ _ Rd. Only S8.8M. Hurry aa* aae EAST WALTQM BLVD. -I Nr. Joa-lya. lovaly ranch bom* with 1W ear gatMO. In aaaaliant .road-pa If*. IMTO lot. Only Itit,800. Golden Real- Estate SLffg*" VSmjLPTsi BATEMAN REALTY MULTIFLB listing service LET S TRADE WATKINS LAKE FRONT -* bedroom eolantal. It* baths. I fireplaces and dtatag roam. New knotty birch paamd family room with built-in fahMrro. Oar- pat. drapes throughout - porch *■ lakaalda Al For Sale Hot* DORRIS OTgti&Sf rsfjn5S..*sass-tSS gttJBS,a..J3-SS aSTah a roaStfuTaaawar St ^“aaroS^MroUred wJlk oak -Oaaw., rordwa mJM .a wonderful hatament. |1MM. aEDROOM moc'Mu warn. • '^ondarSI*' kftPh* DANDY aUNOALOW., yiMM^aaay terms, v#ry »ub»tantlAl nelgnbor- . lot. good bA*«m«nt. oil hemt, I CAr fATAfA. a «x»i“»A,aL^1'T0M Shim* PE 4-1857 49 ■ ■ For Sdk Home* 49 ^ 1LUM X (MlNUlit BIDED lA -NOALOW-A^TOd^ GIs |8. 8fL lot that room bungalow. Waat sukur- ia.:”L»rsh«fiS"a ••lling far IM.M0. Ray O’NelL Realtor * S. Telegraph Open M p.m. 217 ft COLORED Tjt»»ua.r, ! "When I came here, Mr. Higgins, you said I’d have every j opportunity, but so tar I’ve taken dictation from only one j unmarried executive! ” , For Sale Homes 49 j For Sale Houses 49 MULTIPLE listing SERVICE IRWIN - KENT Established la ISM LET’S TRADE 5-BEDROOM COLONIAL... built la IMS. LoU of eitra* Including but watte HddL Irita-rock fireplace. Welk-outb— ment. * ear garage. *Me ramie tlla baths plua stool ~~ (bower In hatament, Large W# x t«0 foot lot with .lake privileges on * lake* In edge of Clarkston. This 1* one you like and a price you LIKE. LET'S TRADE !a good buy... OB tkla almost now > bed brisk With lull basement i garage. Aran o< all MW h with lake privileges, -fan living roam, plasterao w*u*. n»ru-wood floors, full baaumtM with front aad back. Yard fenced. All yours with no rod Up* and vary law dawn payment. ImmedUte possession. —OKERS ■ FE 8-88*3 ANNETT Sd. Baaemant, OAS bast. - 2 car mMEWjgjllllM at sac*. U.0O0, Mil dn. , Webster School Afea Shaded front pofah, spacious Uvlnt rm.. (Ml ala* dining rid., handy kitflbsh, aad paneled gift rm. on lower 1 SB 1 badrmt. and bath up. Rasamawt. OAS bast. * ear garni*- tio.ooo. terms Seminole Hills 1 Near all acbools. stores and PM. sltuatad on tra* lined winding MM. i badrm ftmlly home. CarpaUd liv- ltd Franklin I NORTHERN 1 plenty of cupboards. Full ement and 2 beautifully laad-ped UU With double ear ga-1 a. Raaaonabla down paymsnt. E THU LAKE FRONT - Ear* I a dandy place far epaadlag i •k ends and vacations. You > have Immediate possession _1UC k Located north of PonUac on 11M h . fNER MUST *1 LET'S TRADE story. First its. Imagine STOUTS Best Buys Today I M-8.O.O. AREA — Brick rancher. , 1 1 bedrooms, full basement. r~ attsched garage. Fireplace. Bloomfield Brick Ranch Nahr Kill in the Hills, land, scaped ear* lot. Drop pile carpeting coven spacious picture window Uvlng rm , draoea included, atep dn. panelad family rm. with cornar brick fireplace, kitchen aad nook with many ROCHESTER. fireplace. «M ' ft| built-in with a aqs.7 cant 1116 Otter, off Cas ROCHESTER Brick rancher. } bedrooms, »■* baths, carpeted living rm.. Inrge kitchen,.big recreation rr blc garage, paved drive, partly covered, outside grill, to 4% per. —’ —-*“=- * below *-*“ SMALL * ROOM MODERN HOUSE 1 It mortgage Priced Clarence Ridgeway . vmwmrmm , •» pe AT681 e». Walton blvd W ALLED LAKE 3 blocks _ VEBSTER SCHOOL AREA 8 Room Colonial. Featuring 3 bedrooms, nursery, fireplace. Carpeted living and Choice location. II to DOWN Pleasant Lab* Privileges. 3 bedroom reach home lit ear garage 1ST t UV let. Vacant, call tor an appointment. » ATTENTION: PONTIAC MOTOR EMPLOYEES i home, featuring tarn-lining room, large bay aw. kitchen has cup- la, la spare Basement, ar garage. Lge. fenced , lnowers and shrubs SMITH-WIDEMAN 412 WEST HURON ST. FE 4-4526- ; orated. Owner tearing city. Will consider down payment to Qualified buyer A good deal. I CUSTOM i Ideal tor small family or retired I couple In mw condition with ' ledgeroek flrsplnce In llvtog room. Me* dining room Mid birch f cupboards la atodara kitchen. Also , has garage with pavad drive. | Price td.lSS. Let's Ua a look. OEOROE R IRWIN. REALTOR 288 W. Walton FE 3-1(11 WRIGHT COLORED BARGAIN i s. room bungalow all on 1 BIO LAKE — Han la a li front home that is priced rif M R. frontage. 2* ft. living ■ stone ftreplsa*. Attached (ara Ail twtlabad gad la atfianaM •_____ dlUon. Raw at 811.880. Term*. LOTS OF ROOM - No cram up leattng ban. In suburban b near Silvar Lake. Largo II' room, large kHcheo and u bedrms. l'j baths, full bi with recreation rm Owraga, ■ - compirfa. Walls ready for pSat. Finish and tsv*. dollnre. 1 sera near Clarkston. 88,888- Total price. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2206'’Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph PE 3-6132' - OMa Evas and Sun ' Free Parking only » sad o multiple Lianno wivks ARRO 6 ACRES — 4 room home, let** glass porch. 2 car gara**, chicken soap, young orchard, raspberries and strawberries. A atesl at only 16 930. terms. IMMEDIATE possession - 1 bedroom ranch, wan to won car-netlng. brecMwaw. attached terse well-landscaped yard. MS, t€--------------- 11 ROCHESTER: Lacatad ■ — ■ peaceful arcs on city a North side. Carpattng In Uvum room, masalas bricT flroplMe^ l both I garage. Otter features. Sld.tM. ^ CRESCENT LAKE. 8wImmint ( sting- r- IbMU i privtl _.ih r host with the purchase of this HM — This solid brick baa car- r____ Bring room, 1 bedroom*. ceramic tUed bath, eating spec* kitchen, llvlnf ana, sun porch. HENDERSON STREET Ideal for the loro* family with room galore. Giant riled living room, formal dining area, * bedrooms, tb both and remodeled kitchen For Rent Rooms aa N. PADDOCK -»EY MdOmr. ’’ C-——-r— FRED PIERCE, INC. in t-Idl* 4*6 N. Wyodwafd Y OWNER — 3 BEDROOM. ALU-minim aiding, attached garage, bsmt. rea*. down payment Take ---*—J L 1% 6 i Urine r t — You 1-ROOM TRAILER MODERN. AT private home, $40 per month. FE 2-75*6 or FE 3-72*1 ^_______ BUS STOPPIMO-AT DOOR. LARGE Irani attractive rm. FE 3-7333 CLEAN ROOMS. NEW BEDS. TV Pvt EM. FE 3-dJO, PE 8-ddTl | CLEAN ROOM. HANDY, LOCA- j tlon, 86- Call 234-6124. CUSTOM BUILDER. BUILT BY I your Mans or sun*. Medal open *722 Amy Drive, l milt north of Clarkston off MM. Clebert Moore. MA 3-1232. DO-IT-YOURSELF c« ind vtt*r heftier. Near Dub-1 i School. II.M0 1500 1 X '64 FM-nsm at Jefferson. PhSrE 4-4422 | >4lt* REAR DRIVE-IN DOOR , 2611 Dixie Hwy ,_____OR 1-1311 « ado. HEAT LIOXT6 FUR - FOR COLORED 3-Bedrm. brick homes In new and better nelghberboods. eery low dawu^a^ments. Middleton. Brok- FOR BALi 4-BEDROOM HOME. 3 . | baths FE 4-6464 ?OUR BEDROOM RANCH ^ i______STARTER HOME With 2 bftthn. Built bn your lot, 15.500 with bo down piyflMMit! W« Doh McDonald INCENSED BUILDER • . ' OR 3-2837 . K |f}OODnj. hlOHLANO EK1ATE8 Rent Office Space 47 INCOME PROPERTY . Panda* ’ TORRENT < ' 1-1336 _ For Rent Miscellaneous 48 i CLEAN OARAGE. VICINITY COT- I tage aad Parke. FE 2-4805. • j Wallpaper Steamer Floor sandsr,. pattsher*. b a a d j senders furnace vseaum clean-1 era. Oakland Fuel A FalM. 438 Orchard taka Ave. FE MU8 | For Sale Houscb 3 BEDROOMS WILLIAMS LAKE privileges $1300 down. 885 per month, OB 3-3081 1 BEDROOM MODERN HOME Puwiihad. Must eoU FK S-ddM-3 BEDROOM HOME. 4« WEST Hopkins 83M down. 888 per mo. lawEEsa faxes rod mauromef. j 3 BEDROOMS. NO BASEMENT' *4*8 dawn OR 3-8478. after t p m. | 1 BEDROOM 8 T^EMtOLD AT- j WRIGHT LAKEFRONT i'erem'lc 10* Mttia 2 ear rani* — ^beautifully land- Paym’ts/Less Than Rent] Oai heat, carpeted living room 1 • Many other features Model Open 1 :J0 to 6 271 8 - r*”" J Just West I Westown Realty COLONIAL HOME. Living room | ultra aod&ra kitchen — thro* { bedroom* on first level —Family | room with fireplace — two bedrooms and utility on lake level — Anderson Tbsrmopane windows — ceramic tile batbs — HAMMOND LAKE — 888.800. LIST WITH Humphries | I 83 N. Telegraph O | FE 2-9236 OFF OAKLAND CUSTOM BRICK RANCH 81.800 down. Land contract on balance Built in 1007, 3 large bed-I rooms. Dining ell. Uvlng room and hall fully Carpeted. Full basement. Attached 2MhC*r garage. Califor-I nla type patio Lot 160x130. West suburban.- Close la. A very lovely ..home — Call new! 234 8. TELEORAPH FE 2-OOOQ ^ FE 2-0000 MULTIPLE L18TINO BEK VICE Huron St and Sunday FE 8-0466 West Suburban Vacant — naat and clean 4-room horn*, across the street from school. 2 bedrooms, tils bath. auto, heat, unfinished attic. Lot 80x137, 0030 down. East Side 8-room modern, atone to Public or Parochial schools, tarpatod Bring! roam. 1 bedroom*, ga* beat, garage. 00.000. Terms. ‘ WILLIS M. BREWER JOSEPH F. REISZ, SALES MOR. 04-00 E. Huron St. PE 4-8101 Alter 0:20 FE HH3- IX -4-4730 BROWN SELL OR TRADE — Wert side. Large 5 bedroom modern borne at a bargain price *f only 26.45*. WILL TRADE for ear, house-trailer or land contract Ask for lb. Brown Eva. Call OB 8-2618 110.888 PULL FRICE-Owntr leaving state. A lovely modern borne only 8 yrs. old, Ctoee to Oxbow Lake witt Privileges. Basement. FatnUv rm. One car gar. All large rooms and very cute bom* wttt large 1*0 a 186 ft. lot Per- NEAR ROCHESTER — 3 acre with 6 rm. modern Bungalow. E* cellent condition. Lots of fruit barrier etc Some small oul Bldgs Oas turn. Alum, storms Basement. 23 ft. living room Priced at only 813.236. Term,. LAKE FRONT — Easy Modern two bedroom k with enclosed sunroom. SMITH CLARKSTON Unfurnished J-beuroom brick ar frame with full baaemant. c large lot overlooking Park Lak Only 8406 down, balance 180 P< month. Call today!) NORTHERN HIOH Newlyweds, hare is that hone1 moon cottng* y HAMMOND LAKE FRONT: Urn Price la what' will < you aw this bom* — 828.1 I With 88.660 down. RRic ! RANCHER — three — l‘ii bathe — firing I_ _ I - fireplace — anetoaed porch — id I Thermopane windows, carpdttng n and nuby extras — attached, - e. | gang*. Shawn by appointment. CUSTOM BUILT HOMES TOPS IN QUALITY / SATISFACTION GUARANTEED j only n block inns and . FULL Mock away, alum Rolfc H. Smith, Realtor 244 8. TELEORAPH FE 3-7t*» ______MA 6-643I JOHN K. IRWIN a sons Realtors Since 1633 . 213 West Huron Street Fhonu FE 1-6446 EVE, EE 2-6862 —Architectural Service avaUabl* —J" Financing Arranged / will sail your old home o jhrB * j WRIGHT - 346 oakload Ave Open ’til 6 30 ■ FE 5-9441 Fl 5-7561 lenced rose yard. Asets* to Union tA. beach Real Talus. 814.360. 6161 mo HAROLD R FRANKS, Realtor. 2663 Union lit.' R* Elf I LAROE FAMILY BOME. 3 BED- '■ar-as-ssr-wte; IM htftl. mu plief $15 -jm ftttti mol ftown oil riSi { MODEL HOME! OPEN DAILY ! * TO * PJI. 8223 Saadtson 3«65 DOWN edroom borne. OK bent. Full I re. 87.666 No morifact cost I It duplicate oo your Tot, 81.808. money dawn. ' O'NEIL MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE YOUNG-BILT Hi-Fi. mter-ccm^^carpattn^^a An exceptional bom*, open I SCHRAM Three Bedrooms Laage carpeted firing room and -toll, . wardrobe emets, gas - forced air heat, aa 50x130-foot tot la Am LeBaran School area Only 8188 to move In. 2411 Elisabeth Lakt Road dBWB,"~y» 8-4*38. . 1 BEDROOM BRICK FULL BA8E- - ment. ■ n ■ No mortgage c To Itodeh: Oaten Lk Rd. • St. Prirtcks Church. Watch for apart sign* J C. HAYDEN. REALTOR M E. Walton____ , FE >8*661 iBEDROOM . FULL BASEMENT 1 Lak* pjtv. Minimum *2.666 dn. FE 6-I086. _________. | 2 BEDROOM kBICX. 1>4 BATHS, corner tot, carpeting. ' drones, storms and screens, beautifully landscaped, 613,500. Owner. PC “ — -------1 4-3710. 1 4. IMMEDIATE 4 ROOMS, BATH. ANO UTILITY, perfect for retired couple. 335 mo. I Want 31.0M for my equity, balance 65.700. 74 E. EteffisM olf Baldwin. OE MM*- . . iyi% MORTGAGE J • 3-bedroom Prick to Earring- < ton Hills, off Fealaarataoe Road, 'pan be had at *H par cent marigage with equity or caa h* refinanced with low down payment. Nicely jBSTBUg’sgfe Gwt Mol ^Vicely^flnlttwd i ii Merger Co 334 W. Huron, aft for Don. FE MS. n6 money doW^i TRM.EVXL STARTER On your lot.!, pi-level ar Ranch. Your plans or^ours ftsvc model H O. Flattl-y. jtullder EM 3-0422. PRIVATE dxfNER - 'NEW 3-RED roam name Attached 2-ear ga-;rogt- Bfrma. OR 3-3276. ■ REACH CASH CUSTOMERS' through Classified Ads. Call FE 2-81*1 r nr»7. tarhrd 8 ear garage. A ■oanklng brand new home tor 821,890. Will trad*. HEART TO HEART, to that couple who have eaarcbed tea really Mg t story bungalow, go* with a piano alto living room, a dining roam mad, tor tour lovely dining room furniture and a Maatar-Jndrm. that is lined with closets I Yet. Indeed this Williams Lak* dwelling will "fili tte bill.” Youji need approximataly 81.208 to flaarvce ttta shining hom*. OFF. g. SHONE NEAR WATKINS LAKE Witt privileges ideally far a couple who Wleh a ceespart home that ha* everything. Full baaemant. double garage, fireplace and earl na ad porch nr* soma at the features you'll enjoy. Perhaps b„t of eU la tta fin* netghbor-boad and banriMW setting (the let is gdrganusl. Owner leering the »sundry and wtfi cenaider vary law dawn payment. WILIAMS LAKE AREA. 1 bedroom home with tat* of foam tor “aammatoo" lovely «ao*ed lot. * anr^ftraga, -Fourth Street Plan on this brand new thro* bedroom, with spacious walk in Closets ..'Full basement wttt rac-rcjittou roam, brick front, shi-minum siding. 614* down, model available. $100 Down.' Really a Big Mouse, throe bedroom, with "watt In c hurts. gleamhHt oak itadts. spacious Uvlng room. vahi« galore. Iim-“vd amount at 816.366 Sylvan Manor Subdivision Lovely d-bedroam brick borne. 8.5x18.4 kitchen and dinette. 3-piece b*tt Wttt shower Master bedna. 12x15. gas beat, m bat i water beater, storms aad drive- {, bedroom JK?' *?ti ■&“*'iS*ffa& Loeatodcfl Joslyn *yTeriu7u 1 IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 TRI-LEVELS ■* RANCHERS 4-BEDROOM HOMES FROM $10,000 to- $50,000 KAMPSEN Realty & Building; Co. MULTIPLE LI8TINO SERVICE FE 4-0921 • H4 i Arleoe Si Shtnftic o* i. PnU bin month. north end NICHQLIE - HARGER 834 W. HURON FE 5-8183 MULTIFLE LMTINO SERVICE ELL BUY TRADE THRU MILLER H ON A HILLTOP Overlooking teeday Lake. Nearly aa aero wadaMgad. I roams and --------------------- firing I YEARS OF SERVICE CRESCENT LAKE AREA You’ll realty bo tsaprasead v y*u teq, this 3 bedroam cm built homa. Lars* family i kitchen. F1* - '**«*» Wall to w ss as Ray O'Neil, Realtor " \ 1 °^VrA&REAirr r. i 8*ri— roam, sporaimg kitchen, ment. ail heat, enetoean oreese-way to » 8 Car garage. Her* la beauty beyond belief. Maka an _______________k-i appointment. to .Inspect ylf<|8 JOHNSON] r“ ^ ^ i. Built-In ki tehee. 1 COUNTRY UVIRO ____ . bedroom hom*. 11 ft. Ktlchen. Csrpeted througbout^ljM , Tarr Very IotsIt landscaped tot**Ch?nj Altar I pm. can goost Johnson. Oil MW. A. JOHNSON k SONS REAL ESTATE - INSURANCE 1764 g TELBORAFR FE 4-2533L PRtVlLBOEg drape*. ________■ rira windows, 30 wo roam, complete, Extra large fenced, Jot-1 2 car -garaf*. good sebaate. Lady of Ebe^akA parish. 614.600 with I. I. TERMS, CITY NORTH SIDE 8 ana matt, neat as a pin from too to bottom. Oak flaars. plastered walla, mmm dining room, hnaomawL 14 Mf garage, ate. 17.800 itdl price. 8406 w«l move you hi. BTOROOMS etty north aid*. A ■aad tam* far * torn* family. 1 room* with separate tatty atog William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 888 WEST HURON OPEN -8 TO 6 ■ Him® WEST SUB. t bodraam* and hath. Mam breetoway, altaahad 14 car tng room aad dtolag L. Baaemant. M^lUmNrvm id* n 4*8 ft. toL^jde Ihla. ady 88JM. Terms, -8 roams, aad (tatt. close In. with - »*tofted garege. this aae will *n*d a baodv mam ***** with v .W*t| dawn.' 4 : t WE BUILD 6. Nad 3 bedroom boas**, ready far patot. on yoar ft.rCt. pafTSi beat. Large nicely la- Foil prica only 81UM. FOR COLORED Near Central High. Lovely 3 — - dowm. rratarlii*; ntoriatwd ~ oak floor*. «U FA forced Full baiement. Better hurry oo this *ael NO MONET DOmt-OI On this lovely 3 bed row tow featuring: ylastart,.. oak ftonra, gaa tank full baafc ment. 2 ear garagO- wttt landscaped tot. Fill prise only 611.236, WILLIAMS REAL KgTATE-IWgURANCH 1483 Baldwin nCu*48*7 ank 8 AJC. to 8 TM. TRIPP OtUftzIMve English Style 4-badroom home •COLORED^ i Ss"&». 1 TRY TO MATCH THIS 3 i ■ .......... .___i* WRhr L«k< Property SI 8 BEDROOM — -frOAR OARAOE r~Lgfi: * BiajkbdM hqUe. « MONTHS OLD HOUSE. INCLUD- BkAUTli^L phf ON HAMMOND SB PLACE A “LOST" AD. Call FE 2-8181 for an ad t^ recover a loss. Dial FE 2-8181 for ah ad writer. THE PONTIAC PRESS, .TUESDAY, APRIL. 18, 1961 Par S«l> Uto Propgrtygi ARRO LAKEFRONTS - UIHWWT — Baa wilful | M-reemraneh, fireplace. oak (toon, fUltim want, fou ba»emmt, rproh, wn to t em ret. «fi» — aluminum storme and ten rjwwMsfcffi bantneat- gla*j*d-ln porch, b«au- Wit BUgS? — Cm year lot or ww. MNttdnlkti win- 1 ^JStiasgatefes PHONE 682-211 wit SEVENTEEN l. CHAPIN, Utc. 1 Michigan Realtor' MO 4-lW LAKE PROPERTY GALOREL -AIM with laka frontage. Lovely j bedroom jrr. round with fireplace. btoomoal. a car garage, Only 417.444. *a»T teme. lot*. Sandy beach. Can be y round. Only *21.MO - term.. OXBOW LAKE - Exclusive ai wltk private road. Iritoiy 0 b room brick with 214 baths. } 0 pScesTTull dining room. , / extra large lot. 104 x 400 / real buy at $30,184 toms. / T. A. TAYLOR / REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 1111- Highland Road (Kip) OPEN DAILY t-g SUNDAY 104 OR 4-0306 ________ Let Your Family bn joy life In tbia 4 room home on a private lake. M miles from town. Full basement, new forced,air o furnace, a ear attached garage breeaeway. 30 foot portable dock - Plenty of room for addition. Among the Trees .ssFWiffflsim.? terlor. partially nnlahad Alao rage.' MB ttgtotowRoad, maw to new Chrysler HIghw $0,440. $940 dawa. Payments suit. CaU Pontiac FE 4-4504. C ^Detroit, ti n-mfc ; ; : For Ssls Farms 1 56 ALM ELWOOD REALTY FRUITTARk It acre* la flnt-clam condition. Fenced, groom farmhouse, at* ■-* l-car garage, email barn.-“ Drayton Mar MIS. g mile* fr Rig Lake. Pair buildings. maleSWL Partly cleared Res ht jNce rolling woods Only MS underwood real estate $ ACRES WITH HOUSE TtND large bard. 100 miles from Pontiac at Careenvllle. g acme, of wheat win trade. Smith Moving frontage, 3 n ACRES ffi r with MSS A- id road 3-bedroom home. barn. — *v. v*v.“~ cast*' * ' 40 ACRES wooded rolling land near Chrysler Expressway, 11.300 down. C. rANGuS, Realtor ORTONVILLE S South Street NA '7-3414 T Business Opportunist 59 tavern on Norway au. NORTH — Grossing $43,400, 44 000 SOWS. Terms. MBOMT ~ fl AH II MflMTHS TAVERN — Located In Thumb area.'Wealthy farming oesnmun- STt7^I*0OT^5fTTf.LW«t “bar; down. Low price, high po- STATEWIDE Boal Estate service of Pontiac . B. D. CHARLES, REALTOR mt E Telasrasb n *mt Sale Land Contyrti 60 LAND CONTRACTS TO BUT OR MB. Mart Oarrels, EM 3-1411 WANTED? MlOOOT F*“ l“TkAR CENTUR! FINANCE COMPANY JiS South Broadway taka Orion my 3-1522 iOANt M4 TQ 4400 BAXTER R JJYIN08TONE 4 w.-Labraesce st. PE 4-1434 PAY SHIFT By Frank Adams 6 BEDROOMS id and substantial farm bouse b gracious lines. Could be rede fed Into deluxe estate S3 ". rolling, wooded tad with "" id ^frontage. $374 per Realtor. 77 N. Saginaw St. E 44 l«S. Signature -Up to 34 menlba to repay PH. FE 2-9206 OAKLAND Loan Company 33 Pontiac State Bank Bldg._ LOANS $25 TO $500 - On your signature or other security 34 months to repay. Oar service la Taat, Irtoudit ud_btlf>ful. Visit ottr office or phone FE 4-8131 HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. Perry at.. Corner E. Pike 'ill FT » 230e payment. See It today. CRAWFORD AGENCY 254 W. WALTON 403 E. rUNT WALLED LAKE-33 minute* frol room brick. IS. garage. 3 years old, lake I Begs on Commerce Lak*. WEBSTER" Sale Business Property 571 BUCKNER U—. FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN GIRL'S GRAY WOOL SPRING ^ , BORROW UP TO $500 new bowl-1 OFFICE81N one beige, one brown, sites 13-14 id shopping Pontiac - Drayton Plains — Utica excellent condition, 43 each. OR '< would be Walled Lk„ Birmingham, Plymouth I 34443. ■ Need $25 to $500? See Seaboard Phone FE 3-7017 1185 N: Perry St., PARKING NO PROBLEM Seaboard Finance Co. “The-white oorputdes are busy gobbling up the red cot ! puscles . . . one of them looks a little like our tax assessor.” Sale Household Goods 65 BEAUTIFUL HINDER SEWINO machine cabinet model with gig-tag for dorigna, etc. Fun balance 334.30 or take on payment of |M0 month. Universal Co. For Sale Clothing 6 FORMAL Yellow taut formal with full length lace coat. Just right for the Spring , Concert. Worn 3 or 3 times. M59 FRONTAGE f or ftupormarket - i USE 10-12. *j Package Liquor wlnt„ also complete In-' lelfent 4a«A^Build|MdfoMMforiMM C^rWEBSTER, Realtor OA $4133 ______MY 34331 Suite R—ort Property 52 ACRES - .MODERN J4 _X_M | Humphries! LOANS. koSr^Badxrtn area, MY 3-3333. 4 IDEAL' DEER HUNTING. 4-ROOM house. 7 lots.------ |AM — aaoetriem ____. ‘ Highway 33 ____ ___ainl Need RESTAURANT DRIVE-IN ON OAK I ■—- 44.000 do. on property. Pontiac Press Box 58. 1 TO SMS - IN - a_ COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 10 E. LAWRECE____PE 4-001 j WORKING CAPITAL LOANS _______________SMS. Living rm., $14. Bedrm. 41$. Bovorol Urge Irrort cheap. Maple dresser gig. piece dinette $34.' Desks, dress-% chests, TV’s and radios verytnlng la used furniture at rgala prices. Also new bedrms.. FREEZERS $149 44 while they last. - —‘srs please. Michigan 3$3 Orchard Laka lying i) bank bade, dinettes, mattresses Factory about H price. E-Z Rent, L’se Bus. Prop. 57A BUY-SELL-TRADE BaigUln House 103 N. Cess I Lafaratto FE8 toil. ■ Mich __443-37_____ LAKE. LOTS. . $30 DN.. 430/ trt€ parking, block W. r* g> Plenty i _____.... .luron. Mi i Telegraph PE 4-7443 1 AND MORTGAGE COMPANY WHEN YOU NEED i $25 TO $500 - REJECTS. BEAUT I-i room suites. Low as 47$. rk. Bangaln House, 103 N. E 2-6842. _________ OBriuM!^MDAn^®*l**'?!B**, Opportunities AN ESTABLISHED PERSONNEL ? glad t help | I. Bargain Home. FE 3 STATE FINANCE CO. j 308 Pantiae State Bank Bldg. | FE 4-1574 Suburban Property §8 BEAUTIFUL BRICK RANCH ‘ ROME on private lake near On-ford Has 3 ’Imcstone fireplaces, plastered walla, carpeting, drapes, beautiful kitchen, walk out bsmt.. litmg“Jliii^rwe^wS I TEAGUE FINANCfe co. 5i_§g^us» wSSSi«r|202 S. MAIN I ^ lisrfe^a Fa.rmtpgton, Mid_______ OOOD OOINO BARBBtt AND beauty shop. A 6 room hou»e. and It car parking lot. $5 000 down Balance In unall monthly payments. 18627 John R Phone Tu 3-2851. _________________ —HADLITY .ARCA-j \ u!TchedrlC Mrs“« h*3 JOHN g BARBEH SHOP FOR BALE oaved Rd 82*317- - Retlrtng - good location, lake Slim dn area 7009 Highland Rd. lE 4440* condition. 214 E. ST. CLAIR ) 6 I ■ ROCH ESTER ROMEO 1152S“ LOANS 43S TO $444 J bles. lamps, bedroom suite, mat- springs. vanity lamps. inebr. All Ur 1345. Parly 43 $5 n week. Pear- ____Orchard Lake Av e 3 PIECE LIVINO ROOM SUITE. AUTOS. LIVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODS OL 4-4711 OL — . PI. 2-3118 FL 3-3410 1 Highland Road, "FHIEHDLY SERVICE" — FLOOR MODELS — RCA Whirlpool Washer ...... GAS 8TOVE. $34; REFRIOERA-tor, $33; It1* TV. good condition, $40; electric stove. $45; washer, til; 7-piece chrome set. $43: elec-trtc dryer. 34$. Harris, PE 4-3T44. IRONRITE. PROVE TO TOUR- romplete details. .. FE 4-3173 for KENMORK Auto, washer . Hi-Fi, TV and Radio 66 PORTABLE ADMIRAL STEREOPHONIC record player, with throe speeds iidjutomaUc neero changer. Pour speakers combined IB two SOpertMe speaker ckbloeta. The speakers mar be attached together for convenience m carrying. Life time diamond noedie. The set Is a‘ little nett a year CM. Bolling to • got a console model. Priced reaaeoMHe, 3134. Call after % MiTFS. 4-2*18. ' of Joslyn __ ____________ y> OHobai from. PeerX Appliance, gilt For Sal* Mlacdhuieouf 67 Walton coym Vs. MANY mower, electric 3 OIL STOVES AND TANK FBM33S METAL CROtaJrf KTTCbEN cabinets, cabinet sink unit, OE stove, doors, g cassment windows, etc. SS3-4713. 4-INCH BOIL PIPE, i FT. 3 inch Soil Pipe ..... .UMBINO BUPPLi imp Pumps SAVE FLU31 3 8. SAOOIAt ,Y For Sale Miscellaneous 67 LAWN mowers^ SHARPENED. s-uu Sale Sportlnf (joodi 74 FOR SALE- BEAUTIFUL NEW MOWERS MODELS OF RIDERS. ELS or REELS. 11-------- OP ROTARIES. I MODELS OF TIUM. EVANS EQUIPMENT, 0507 DIXIE HWT.. MA 5-7478, OB 3-7834, ' • ■ MERCURY MARK 3$ OUTBOARD ~ --- 3M. stesdno hoist 34 . FH • ■ GUNS. AI MUST SELL. SINGER ZIO-ZAO in lovely sewing eoaowo. Just dial for doeorsavo designs, bat-tonholes or 'to sow on buttons. guns — Menley Loach. H Begley •MATCHED 185$ SFAI^INa GOLF -'-'■■bs. Four woods, sight Irons :. condition, FE 4-374$. ANti USED GOLF CLUB* sale. Wo take trade-ins. Carl's ' Driving Range. MigE fEiniSl LAWN MOWER grinder. Like now: mg Allstate mcdoraosslor. C melody ptftf1*"* $ mm Gormen luger —ta-‘-I ft. glass sbowess — FE 4-4H2 PLYWOOD BARGAINS jk In.-masonite, 4x4 . t,. $l.»» ik In. pegboard. 4x4. . ., .43.44 H in. 038 Chipboard, 4x1. ... 44.44 *« In. 038 birch. 4x8, .. 413.95 PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO. I4M Baldwin Age - PEX-3443 LE. ea. . RANDOM TIlI "EUTLO" TILE, 103 8. SAODfAW 4 " BOIL PIPE. 4 TALBOT LUMBER Full line of lumber, doors, windows, bardwaro, pa.int. dnmMnm and electrical supplies Open t a.m. 'tn s:Jo si 1024 Oakland A THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE erytntog to meet your see " ig. Furniture, Appltanci 1 east LAWRENCE PLASTIC TILE, on_;.. Mt. . ------------- J&1Sl>- tm£S ^5*?n±? L.S4 EA. i other stses up to $4 x44 I FIRE BRICK » FIRE CLAY I White cement plain or waterproof Drainage grates and manhole covers 4x4 AND « XI HEARTH TILE ■ O. A BLAYLOCK b CO. - i PAINT—BUILDINO SUPPLIES 41 Orchard Lake Ave PE 3-lltl Mo model, : ----------------Call OL - - Will sacrifice, leaving country Cameras, Equip., Serv. 70 CROWN GRAPHIC 4"X5". FED- ’apw'jfwsa’Es end loader. PE 4-3403. iarrows - Ail sizes; MUM to - go. Terms avaUable. Davis “ “ NA mOMK INTERNATIONAL PARMALL $440 *— “■ —‘ Oood rob- . Sand, flravel and Dirt 76 -1 RICH BLACK FARM SOIL. _____J 0Mb. Morrie Wahl. NOTICE WOFHOTOD^^^AlSffl^^B " TgB. ABDJOO^W rb POWER MQWntS PRICED AS . LOW AS til ROTANTTlLLHr* -------------- rt 75348. Mi -1 BLACK DIRT, TOP SOIL. SAND JftfiSf I BLACK DOIT AND FILL DIRT FM 3S—1' A-l TOP 801L, CRUSHED STONE. & SLACK DIRT, FILL AND ORAVEL BLACK DIRT. 4 YARDS FOR 17. deliver. F» 33384._________________ black, dir! Fill, sand and DOW MANURE, BOlff WEfX-ROT- Sale Farm EquIpnMut« Saehabow. MA k t-IIili. Mchy Fh NA 7 ft $4$. NEW WALKING ,«? AT *# reR CENT D1____ CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE KING BROST^ PONTIAC ROAD AT OFD' ffva?: I1U - TRACTORS BOLEN-WHELL HORSE. SEVER-AL USED -TEAFTP*ST AND MOWERS EVANS EQUIFr MENT. 4417 DDUB HWY MA 4-7g7g. OB 3-7W4. - / 88 AuctteuSalss BdB __ AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY ...... 7 F.M.’ EVERY SATURDAY .... 7 P.M. EWW WlBir ....... 3 F.M. OPEN 7 DAYS WEEK Sf, BU • SELL - RETAIL DAILY Door Prises Every JflUISBm Lunch R<— ---— am Open Every At DIXIE HIOHWA7 M A N U R E. DRIVEWAY Wf WOODEN OARAGE DOOR. -5?®^.— less than a year o'J - ---- - CRUSHED STONE, SAND, OIUV-el, Earl Howard, EM 3-4431 FREE It YARDS OF FILL OtRT. 1. FE feeB. Sale Musical Goods 71 oood black dirt top s6il. 33x31 DOUBLE STAINLESS STEEL 1 ------------------------ n11 **n<1'. *^***:___ •Inks. $24-95. 33x31 double cast 2 CLARINETS. OOOD CONDITION. LOADING, BLACK DIRT. 4144 Hon sink. $3( 94. Green coat Excellent for etudont. OR 3-4073 ' Cooley Loko Nrod, OR 3 lilt. Iron bethtukr S«0. 53-gal. tt-year ATTENTION MUSICIANS iPBBFaSCd top' DORR) glass-lined water heater. 444.45 AMPLIFIERS from ... $3100 black dirt, top soli. bnUdoxtng, each and carry. O. A. Thompson. GUITARS from . 414.45 OR 3-7SM or FE 4-4744. .------------------------- SjLRmgSi01,5" »• I PONTIAC _LAKE'ftUTLOBRS SUF- f CORONETS TRUMPETS from Ulto morl«n4 tn«ktog "St gg \ ^ ™ J l-OAL ELEC HEATER. 44444. 34- Rontol Lavawoy' Payment Plan I JWL^JOli- gal. auto, gas heaUr $4g.U Cab- Complete line supplies and parts Ids, $10 dal. FE 40»g. tost sinks and fittings, I54.M up. I EDWARD'S 11 E. SAGINAW SHEEP OR COW MANrifcfc, rays ns_ faucets, 431.44 Cash and carry. I Save plumbino 173 8. Saginaw________FE 5-2100 rRAC^j r I for large 3-ynrd toad delivered. FMU-slse 35-pedal organ for the CaU evenings, OA »-3»3« price o* a spinet. Used Wurllt- (TOP SOIL, MUST MOVE. 113 ter. 3 lull gl note manuals plus i load dtllvira' speaker cabinet and percussion I and. flu. UL_________H I TOP got. BLACK DIRT. MA-B. Telegraph Across from niirt. Reel mro»« msm* aAomJ the J»T-Huron Shopping Cen-| ei, fill dirt ALLIS-CHALMER8 3 PLOW TRAC *— “*i—“^rii oTf Tumice. $225.’ \F\ , 1 YARD OIUPCWO, TOF 0QIL. #6LLT vfiii. ° Accordion tanned tree to begin- ANTIQUES. COINS AND STAMPS | BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR -Bee us nt Antique show, Tues. f By factory expert. Wed. Than. Oforsinnns Shop. I CALBI MU8IC CO. ___lie xi aantwawr w u« 43 83, Lumps $1.83, oleum Rug S«.$3. rubber buck $18.44. machine 448 44. 3 — t 13 Rug Walled LakrB&epert-ment more 744 Pontiac Trail at Maple, open $-$ Sunday 10-3. portable WurUtser electric piano, hied, In A-l condition, afoo — Graces any borne, Voee A Sons Baby Orand piano, completely rebuilt and roflnlahed inquire* lit- Oulbranien used spinet, oak, *440. Morris Marie. Telegraph across fror“ **■------ Shopping * Wood, CweI «nd F$iel 77 CANNEL COAL. THE IDEAL fireplace fuel. Seasoned flrep'— and furnace wood, Oakland. J and Faint, Phone FE Miss. SLAB WOOD 03 FIREPLACE wood. 3 cord, $20. del. Alberto Lumber-Mills. FE 8-0131. BUD & SONS AUCTION 7:30 FRI. AND SAT. Open dolly. We buy-**U-trade 3174 Auburn Rd. All klnds of 89 Sale House Trailers M WIDE. 1488 MARLETTE. 44 X 1 bedroom. 330 gtl. on isti. exc. -condition. Rent, prised. Square Lake Trader Park, Lot ... ALL NEW IN PONTflg PORTA CAMPER CAMP TRAILER COMPLETE WRH KITCHEN CRUISE-OUT BOAT BALES S3 E. Walton. ' PE 3-4402 Travel Trailer. Since 1433. Guaranteed for itfe. toe them sod get n demonstration at Warner Troll- -or Soloa, tgggw. Eoran. iPtan tn loin ooo of Wady Byam's exciting BEAUTIFUL NURSERY GROWN evergreens. Cultivated, sheared, sprayed. State Inspected. IS or more, $1.40 eg. Less ten IS S3 each. You dig 13 ml. North of Pontiac on ITS. It. Cedar Lane Evergreen farm. 4974 Dixie Hwy. (U.8. 141 MA 5-1833.________________ Plants, Trees, Shrubs 78 limed ■Sri; ____________________the Tel- ALUMINUM CAMPER FOR PICK-1 «»«» ■»•«*>, Cmtter. PE K H& Ur equipped. 4471 | HKUUolia QRoaN. LUljb BATHROOM Fnri^RBS, OlL AND H^imond Solovox, good cond. 1135 f88 funiBeei. Hot weter and q r.OlVMIfl T *C 1 wool wrtfte. % pnee. Mv steam boiler. Autometlc Witerj — V*\ljNANJueLoLeij lynfb aAt.fe r heater. Hardware, elec. eappUet. | n 0. Saginaw • PE 3-71M | pm^ fieedlines. Austrian scotch crock and pipe end fiUlngj. Lowe 1 m t w’t it ri’ I beet vartettes. Write - Omi* Brothe*s^ Point, Super Kemtonc 1 Sc^idt PE 24217._________ | brechfi, Weet CyveTlUch. STRAWBERRY ICSS5S Jacobson Trailer Sales and Rentals All new_ models la travel troll-ere, 13 ft. for compact cars sad up... ftoaorvo yen traUcr for vu-cations 8*0 U» foe hitches, unite end sendee 5414 WUlUms take Road. Drayton Plaint. OR 3-4SM NOW IS THE TIME . FOR US TO FICKUF AND SELL iuvBTainSRt> WAmNOd ______CALL US TODAY! HOLLY MARINE A COACH BALES 15210 Holly Rd. HOLLY. ME 4-4771. Norge dr jet- . Bendfx washer btond ............. -ith chest, maple . HEIOHT SUPPLY 2844 Lapeer Rd._____FE 4-4431 BEEF AND FORK - HALF AND -----M ObAyke Mkt. FE 4-7441 PIANO BARGAINS Used Spinet piano(with organ at tachment Originally si 41.400. now $414 Tori dally. Royce Long, t piano, returned (rom rent. . Spinet piano, like new ____________________GALLAGHER’S ■■■■■■ CIRCLE FLUORESCENT UOHTS. 14 E Huron FE 4-0444! Stud dogs Jamor'-. ___ _f®r_krtchenj {12X5 j___EASY TERMS IAEC' 7W PO(yui~hllf i'PO For Sale P«U ; AKC DACHSHUNDS, $10 DOWN, M Stud rioDR Janor’a. PIS £.2131 r comb $50 L>Re. i | LESTER BETSY ROC icAdbotrd . .$40 I' COLORED BAKED ENAMEL ______ROBS 8PINET. _______jt condition. MM LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. Parkhurst Trailer Sales -FINEST IN MOBILE UYIMO-Featurlng New Moon-Owosso-Yenturo - Buddy QuaUty Mobil. mud, eompleta bath wl Built-Ins. For. only Ins (town. Don't pom this one up. R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 344 OAKLAND AVENUE Open 4-4 •■ - NEAR LAKE fflUON — J# rm. nice, l acre of land, paved Rd. Move right in 415.044 with $3,000 TP. HOLMES, INC. 2431 8. Lapeer Rd FE 5-2953 |DRV CLEANING AND R U 6 upTuiion0 voiume°Bear 5300.000 in large City over 100.404 population 434X44 down, liberal term* > CaU Zot*. La Noble Realty. 1514 ; E. Michigan, Lansing. Mich. IV 3-1631. Eve* IV 4-M74. ROCHESTER Brick ranch. J bedroom, colored tiled both, gas heat, storma and acreent. awning*, close to school* and shopping, taw down payment, Ot Mtge.. priced to tell. Beautiful ilk acre*, trout stream alto close to Rochester. Just off paved rtod. owner. OL 1-4123. Hagstrom 1 GAS STATION h Roscommon County — Also- tn-1. For Sdfc Lota. 54 1 elude* garage and 4 rm home.; Doing good great Excellent hunt- 3, ACRE. JUD80N PARK. ROBE-vlew Drive. CaU after 6. TUlaa, 3-4038. 4 LOTS. FULL OR PART. OVER-looking Otter and Sylvan Irik*. FE S-4SU. ing and flailing axe*. 119,440 dn. | SUPER MARKET Grocery and meat. In suburban lake area. DM over 4144.480 lari year. $1,500 do. plus stock. A rail good deal. PIECE BEDROOM BET 514 Washeu—Ma^tojs. Spent Queens. 415. Westlngbouse jlryer Credit Advisors 61A i. ARE YOU IN DEBT? :] Z2g ■ —(21 Avoid Garnishments and j repossessions 131 Debt protection Insurance Come In Now, or Colt For A HOME APPOINTMENT I City Adjustment Service Pearson's Furniture. FE 5-9281..I A«e w: vm. ________________ 733 W. HURON. PONTIAC. SUCH. * ,15?" CSIBS OPPOSITE MAIN POST OFFICE j J*5 95 up. Peareons Furniture, 42 BUDGET YOUR DEBTS walnut hue earn, chair. 13 95.^ Loads i furniture prices. than used 3 .9x10 RUGS CONSOLIDATE BILLS-NO LOANS ! MICA GENUINE *- ! CEILING TILE "BUYLO" TILE. Oakland County, after S. 71 x 203'. CLOSE TO store, church. Olng«U».».. —. wart Construction Co, rE 4-380 BLOOMFIELD WEST, ONE-THIRD to acre lots, paved winding streets parochial, public school buses at door. 41.400. $34do. W4 mo. Dote! . Brian -Carp. Coll Pontiac FE i ■ 4-4404 ■ can Detroit LI 3-T7U. | gEAPTIFUL 318' FBOrt AOE U1 , acre on Cedar Island Lake. Will] . Your Best_____ to Gct_ out of Debt, See Financial Advisers, Inc. H 8. SAGINAW ' FE 3-TSM Mortgage Loans 62 j 12 n “STS tec eq. ft. 8AOINAW 7'k FOAM BACKED , RUOa. alto tw-cds and Axmln-Rug pads |4 95. Pearsons REALTOR PONTIAC cm 4-0358 J FE 4-7485 after s pm. Voss & Buckner, Inc OROClStT. BEER ASdUto barisin*prtceM For JSSTmCl A Mortgage Problem? call PE 3-4311. “LET’S TALK BUSINESS’’ Plumbing - Heating Completr shop for air conditioning and all sheet metal Three trucks and good Inventory, Priced lor fast ac- . Dinette U1.S4; Studio couch, $31.34; Refrigerator and ranges. $2455. Everything for the home. Ft 5-$oo2. Globe Furniture, 141 W. Walton. ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES --Nice large 45 X 150 It. tat for only $400 cash. L. H. Brown. RaiBnr Fh. FK 3-4414 JVILLAOE Hilltop building sites on paved roads with approved r~ Low at $1754 with I LADD'S WC. _ ■ Shop it for two «r . Infcer irUf t MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION JOHN A. LANDMKEBER, BROKER 573 TELEGRAPH ROAD. FE 44541 Open 'til S ■ Eves, _____PHILCO TV. RADIO AND 3-speed record player. Mahogany finish. E«. condition. PH. 642-1033 after 5 pm. All day Bat. -~Renrodeito> I 21 INCH PHILCO LOWBOY. LIKE US coStrocton^Car-^ron8-, ..new,, FE ,4-8403., Globe furniture, iolidate debts. Prompt service. 11 CHEFF MORTGAGE A,REALTY COMPANY ' . Ml 3~-6333 _ _ | +_____ " CASH AYAILABiE T , 34471 after I P-ta. . To Improve yoitf home and pay ! ADMIRAL DUAL TEMP REFRIO- MIRACLE MILE CENTER ATTENTION We carry a large selection of r Bob Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales 4341 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plain! 4 Mi. N. of Pontiac mt 3-1301 Open 7 dOyi s Weck LARGE DEEP FREEZE. 1125. RE-trlgerator with top Jreeaor, $54. 21" TV . good cond.. $40. electric range, 445 Harris. FE 4-3744 LARGE OB DEEP FREEZE, 1 ALUMINUM STORM SASH I OPPOSITE B’HAM THEATER 3-5144. - OB P TABLE. « rnalrs. $34. . electric stove, MAHOGANY DINING ROOM SET Aariane mjtaagubtaiL 44IS Twi-MAPLE CHEST AND bed coif-plete. PE 3-414$ after S;30, MOVING —^BLOND^WOOD 4j rather upholstery, matching china r $100 1 4-4731, M^T SELL AT ONCE! Two Maple Baby Beds (Completer Like (lew— $14 ■-* n i-iw PARAKEET C ■ FE 4-03 S AND ELECTRIC PART OR FULL TIME Repeat business: P4 hours dally returns $420 monthly. Must have transportation. $745 cash required. Beeured. Write P—a------ w. Bird, Realtor munity IfoS'L Borit BMg 1 ' EVES. PE 5-1183 WATERFORD HILLS ESTATES. A low torn, chotc# lot* ton ~l Mill For Sele AcfWge 58 HIOH AND DRY, mt $30* down. *«» * mmril ■ rts-nii. I Lakeville Rood. This * — —’SSL rw ftirtheT taiormstloir eall Mr. Child*. Child* Real Estate. MY , 3-4331, Laka OgtaU. BROWN CITT AREA 44 ACRES - AU OIlaMe. 3 bod-room$v all. modorn, booomont with 373 ,ACRES — * **t* *t building*. 43 AdSTw' 1 set gf bulldln mode™‘ PONTIAC • W- MILES — Pjom Bontlac. I ceres, S-room homo, all mode $ AOflBf — Sroem. all mode Terms can be^WriWISd_.OU e H. YEAR OLD WATER SOFTENER — condition. $45. MA 5T141 APPLIANCES. OTHER ~ “ «wy fi ... ____ ______ and TVs. All i guaranteed at least 30 days wrtttat 4tl 8S and up. We ti trade-ins. TVs or otnor artte APPLIANCE SPECIALS • IIW.00 • 415$ $0 Jw# SINGER $4 PER MONTH WILL handle, like new to modern console. Equipped with earns to make designs, buttonholes and rig-sag work. Pull Pries only 433.40. FE 5-0447. Capitol tewing Center.' TRADE'OAS RANOE FOR ELEC, trie range B. B. Munro Electric Co.. 1484 W. Huron I ■ Used Trade-In Dept. Occasional chair ----- .. *9.95 Davenport and chair ... $34.44 a piece breakfast set... 438.85 piece sectional ..... 438.85 434 44 444.44 blond, mahogany ... .... 458.14 THOMAS ECONOMY 3SI 8. Saginaw______ FE 1-4181 EXERCYCLE LIKE NEW. COST _ _ M*A_tiyd*J0r JOOd garden trac-1 131 N. Saginaw FE 5-6144 AUTOMATIC WASHER AND MAY-tag electric dryer, balance .43 per weak on both. auto, deluxe ironer. balance 12 per week, tola model electric rang*. 445, Schick *. MY l Condition SWAF ANYTHING ON TRANS-portatlon ears. W* finance. W. J. Smith Mote Sales, lnt Williams Lake Rd., at M3S, OR 3-0S14T 'St PORD bUMF. SHARPEN LAWN .MO W ER! BRIDAL VEIL Shoulder tarotb bridal vafl. . about a year aid, worn ooo*. Crown to a tiara qf Isce .Only asking 414 Call after 8 p.m. 1% 4BM FoRSitALS ; 7. WHITE TRIMMED IE NET STRAPLESS I, ' ALL v WHITE. NET. .Eft IN A ' v , m* m k L LS( •L E a OIY ■ AND- __ I, ON L Y ONCE, SIS EACH-SEE At 43SS WATERFORD . HILL' TERllACE. WATER- 7 A-l VALUES i Adjustable bed frames 44 45 . Hollywood headboards 44 45 Ionsrsprin* mattress or bon sprint _ . Repossessed* sofa f«l. Bedroom Outfitting C*.. 47S3 Dixie Drajtao Plains OE 3-4734 Attention, Apartment AND OOTTAOE OWNERS Admlrsl. FMtao. Frlgldalre, Norge and OE Rotrigorotors _ Rebuilt by our Service Exports Tour Chrio* . - ggg.oo WKC 10$ North gaglnsw St A OOOD SELECTION Of RE-CON-dHloned TV's. IT ontennss. kits, parts. and accessories. Johnson Radio end TV. 4g E. Walton Bled. Wt TEE HOME , _ POUND AT L * S BALMS. A little out ef too way MB a tat less to pay. Furattur* and tppll- Wt buy. tall or. trad*. Omi* out and look IT»ani. 3 acres 1 free parking Phone FE 5-1241. OPEN MON. • SAT. • TO g " FRL t TO g M MONTHS TO FAY 4 mttec E. of Foottae or 1 mile E. of Atern Heights on Auburn. A BEAUTIFUL SINOER SEWING machine ta cabinet and with slg-tayger Like new. onto i oug at $44.74 or gt.SI a month. Waite's ANOTHER LOAD OF BRAND new bedroodt suites, I piece dou-blfe dresser 'landscaped.. mirror.. I bqriuaee bod. chest of drawers, 2 vsalty lamps BUvar. grty or goldsn mahogany AU for HASP . Faymenta till weakly.. MBipn: Furniture,. 42 Orchard1 Ave. ; . USED TV’S, $11.44 AND DP. WA ter beaters, new. 30 gallon gas. $49 45 Sweet's Radio and Appl. Huron, FE 4-IU3. USED AUVtofATtC WASHERS, mos. guarantee R. B. M Electric Co.. MSB W. Huron! 5-4431. WOOL _____ with pad. rss AND NfLON CARPET REBUILT VACUUMS, $12.84 DP 742 W, Huron Barnes 4 Hargraves REFRIGERATOR-CLOTHES DRY-er. water heater - all bottle gas for . $124 Kenmorv auto washer 434 rE 48371, S^ECtAL $kt3 RUOS. $34 44. Mc-Lood Carpet. Woodward at ■( Lk. Just below Ted’s. PE » SEWINO MACHINES. WHOIX8ALE Over IS .................. Prices start Stager portable*. 414.40. rig oag equipment. Ourt'l Alliances. SOM Hatchery Rtf. OR WYMAN’S DSED TRADE-IN DEPT Ouay. elec refrix......l. 44145 Amt ------ water ........ $34.44 MA 114.45 414.44 M-H 114.41 Portable .Elec. Ircoer .. 414.44 IS W. Pike rE 4-1133 EZ TERMS WASHER DRYER COMBINATION. Ouar. ip$. m_________ 2 pc. Llv. rm. MAi! Elect 01 Maple < electric a windowT SILL UBNOTH drapes. approx. 37 yard*. ITS. Junior fetoud oak dial* room furniture 3 studio coaches, not. MA Hi-Fi, TV and Radio 66 ir* portable tv Floor Model _ *89 (5 FRETTERE APPLIANCES miracle kflLK Center 21" TELEVISION in oood WORK-Ing order. A.' ISO Venice Ct., off Cues LAko RdTtbOoe SS3-SS34 STEREO T A P~E RECORDER?’ i match 111 speaker,, Hl-Pl turr tftoh M* W 4-0438. ~ AKC REGISTERED MINIATURE poodles. . B1 a c w —hl- i priced Dixie Pol flwy., Waterford. ALuffiNUMnCDTNOta" AWKIROS I W WITH PI«- BLACTi'-AND TAN HOUffD^DOd g%t« No Money down *4 mo. and up i JJj!*1®"' Prlesd^loj pup,, mU „ trod*. MA 4-3417 SHORTS MOBILE HOMES SALES AND SERVICE SPECIAL 14 ft Qem. $995. it ft. o * n 41.245 Atae hav* used traUcr Complete line of part* and butt: Call JOE VALLBLY Now "The Old Reliable Pioneer” FE 4-4445 OL 1-4423 CEMENT STEPS. READY HAOC. . PE Y BETTERLY MUSIC CO. CASH WAY STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS 4X1 H Masonite ...... 41.44 4X4 lk Pegboard .... $3.44 4x4 H Ply score **.. $4.44 14x44- 33-ft. Rock Loth ... $ OF 4x3 Plasterboard . 31.34 Burmeister ■ LUMBER COMPANY 1340 Cooley Lake Rd. EM 3-4171 Open 4 a.m. to 4 pm. daily Sunday 10 a.m. t- * * — OP^Pp5sn~E B!‘hW.“'tTLEATER V j rpetT'sto>p. _ LOWERY HOLIDAY ORGAN AND ! poODLEPUPg MINIATURE POODLES AKC. year old, best otter. FE 3-3431. PIGEONS, T U N I N O AND REPAIRING, 34-hour service. aU r ‘ ' bp factory trained calbi Mono CO. H| “ BAOIHAW Fl ______________ _ AND UP. STUD service Professional trimming EM 3-3344. . Canaries, cages mid sup-1, Crane’s ftlrd Hatchery, 244$ WILL PAY used plana. __________ LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. DO IT NOW! Stool Oothes Post .. |4.44 spr. Field Tile ... ,11s e*. Coder Post 44c and up ‘‘St* Uu for Your Building Needs" SURPLUS LUMBER & MATERIAL BALES COMPANY 5344 H d Rd. 1M58I OR 3-7092 ___1 WELL JET PUMP WITH ill attachment*, ineluding Jet and dtqp pipe. Otto- King. 4817 { Jamm Rd. Off Brown Rd. Poo- DO YOU matching fabric selection. Berry j - ---------------------- from. Interior or t ■ will paper and Ung fatorte ■*“" ___ Jrtled Mafic OAKLAND FUEL • __I Orchard Latt Aft, trm win j • FORMICA. PLUMBING, P A I N T. I . glass, wiring- Open 7 days, PE I 4-4712. Montcalm Supply, 1M w . Montcalm. in FREE STANDINO TOILETS 114 45 i Double Bowl H& ftM I Wf copper, 30 ft. lengths tie ft. %" copper, 80 ft. lengths .. 37* ft. copper, SB ft. coll . Sj ft. | 3 pc. bath sets with trim .. 145.95 I White or colored tods SAVE PLUMBINO SUPPLY 173 8. Saginaw FE MM WIN FREE UPRIGHT PIANO . WEIGAND MUSIC- Spring Fever Sale CLEARANCE OF ALL TRADE-INS . Thomas 2 Manual Organs 1595 Gulhransen Model B * Walnut-Organs $1,395 PARAKEETS GUARANTEED TO talk, 44.45. Walker's Bird House, i 394 1st 81, Rochester OL 1-4372. 3173 W . Huron VAGABOND. ZIMMER, GREAT LAKES, GENERAL STUART, and YELLOWSTONE See two story sad Expando—4 and 19' wide. All site* and prices. Many good used right or ten fw wtde. Priced to son. Term* to -yourt you. 40 to ptak from. Oxford Trailer Sales nil* S. ef Lake Orion on M34 ______MY 3-4731 LIVINO UP 4CL. INOCULATIONS. ALSO -LIVESTOCK GUARANTEE! I Poodles $10 Down JfUNrS PET BHOP. FE Mill i w‘ ...- , ■ ■ 11 u_ arminntf i«r wm« REGISTERED MALE BOXER 4 years, wonderful companion for children. $34. FE 4-437t. > PEDIGREED BOSTON BULL PUP- pies. 223 Russell St, ____ SPRING REQUIREMENTS Tte-Out chains and stakes. Vitamins, minerals land repellents "ernes dt Hargrave pet Shop W. Huron____________PE 2-6035 BE SUES TO SEE SPAN-O-WIDE BEDROOM 13* WIDE now lnn f*jdtag.Bay green | Il'CREE, SELF CONTAINED broken, utopjms. Cril MU «3S7 , Brand new '4L eompleta with usee. 5 and d p m. license. Only S3.Mi! "HERE TODAY—HERB fO BT*Y' — go NEW AND USED OFFICE MA-chlnes, typewriters, sitiiliig machines, comptometers, duplicators, photocopy- machine end dictating tlac. PE 3X134. NEW NATIONAL CASH REG Utters from tltl up New National adding machines tram 444 up The only factory authorised branch office* ir Oakland and Macomb Onriy where you can tow MW or factory rebuilt oath registers. The National Sift Register Colds W. Huron. Pontiac >E 2-4244 El S. Orottot. Mt. Clemen*. HOw- T W 6 waLnut u, mad coo riomad. SU'ei USED OFFICE DESKS. CHAIRS, tamos, dial moke, drafting machine*. drafting tablet, -mimeo- fithPoff«tfCpro*I', typewriter™U» For Sole Tkoo , t» « OOOD USED WHITEWALLS, to* A 15. cheep, to 8, Anderaoa a-T-'used nUI. siia VFT'lfft- bu V MIL Aloto 1aroe. ."JSr1 HH^bvoihauled. l\- eighteen , Rr Tim '. W T^O. TOO x H5, 6 fiT truce ■ TfMM. Sack Ml cMM atop, n Hood Phone FI MW. ___' I AND! , nine Volksdag*" ~ Sale Motor Scooters 94! ». SPRING SPECIALS . UM Cushman Kftflr. «M. IMS l9«tt Cult BU5. IMO Cush — uio, $26 dn 1041 Haris V ^ Volar MU UN MM For Sdt Motorcycles 95 JIH HARLET-DAV1DSON SPORT . Met, csceiMM condition . Call . ftjya PC MM. Alter t pa New ctnd Used -GARDEN TOOLS #1/ - , vm- , at t Bargain Prices \in Todays • 'Pontiac Press WANT AD SECTION Check Classification No. .67 To Buy or Sell USE Low-Cost Want ADSl Dial FE 2-8181. i Marjua. H ahu>. In ston PoallfacUoa. parlacl I ■Mr mtloafe. all Mi • K. Walton Blvd. For Ute Cora m I I ROTAL LANCER, 1 HU CHEVROLET. RADIO AND mrttiB________ down, fan prlca on, i payments of III a month fiK. WHITE. CttStDTt Man-Ann, FE MW. J-T-- ai a. mqimsw rash Beaded itut ua« on pay- MM MW MM Ui I. Mpaiw menu of 61 16 per month. MM DODGE STATION WAOON CALL MR. WHITE. CREDIT HR. Mt UNt ___________________ •MANAGER. 0------- Kin* Auto Bkfea UR 8. jRlaW IBM CHKTROUT SPOOR. RADIO 1 ...._____... AMD n*TCR. AUTOMATIC W Pj** If**. N «**S RNN TRANSMISSION ABSOLUTELY I P»F My MB mo. due May 31 NO MONEY DOWN Amu me pay ! m^AWU^ Mr JMt tt t-m3t i MONET DOWN. L menu at B33.6B par mo. v a 11: Credit M«r Mr. Park* at MT| 4-1600. Ha. old Turner. Ford MB CHEVROLET B CONVERT!-! •ST. PORD CUSTOM sear, V-B. standard tranaa radio, hektar. whitewall tlraa. eary clean. Hd White two-tone paint Caaae Is and/drive It at k Aar-* ~ TOPM SaLeST 1 Tom. Whitewall terms- NORTH mmSxjiteS. IBM R. WOODWARD ATE. BIR- MINGHAM Ml ffl» 1B58 CHEVROLET IMPALA J-DOOR hardtop V-l eagtne. powergUde. power steering and brakes, radio, heeler, whitewall liras White with ' red trim Stock No JIM Only 11 TSt Easy terms NORTH CHEV ROLETCQ. IBM • WOOOWMT AVE BIKM1NOHAM Ml 4-TUB. « CHEV. TI I STICK. T rfe 4-7311 TAKE OVER REPOSSESSION ■•a M prlca. ho cash nrrdn y in a mo due May *1960 FQRD I-DOOR RADia HEATER AND whtUWaU tlraa. $1585 IBM FORD S DOOR. RADIO AND HEATER. FORDOMATIC ABSOLUTELY MO MONET DOWN *- auaaa payments af BB.B8 per mo. Call CredttMtr Mr Parks at MI 4-7866. Harold Tatwer, Pord. IOO D TRANSPORTATION Boats and Accessories 97 Foreign and Spt^Cars 105 F1BEROLA8 - FISHER ’ IB IBM CORVETTE DUAL « BAR- boat. M in beam. Meal rel carburetor. * --I ----- top. Regular UN 16 Sale ] ston, hydraulic IM East Blvd- at Auburn CHEVROLET CLUB COUPE. TO MM3 Harry Riggins jr cHius cRarr imt model i . Hercules #4 01-1444 J7 FT. CREBTLINER BOAT WITH! avertible top a JOHNSON MOTORS 1PM CORVETTE. DUAL - _ , ,__ ____ --- . .«d traiumU- -M CHEVROLET a DOOR. NICE. Whiu finish FE 3-7543, Harry Rlxklns. urm. NORTH '“fFwH? CL**N " TATUj* ffianry,IK | ' b.p. Johnson Motor. PINTER'S i yrm__________ I* CHRIS CRAFT CAFUI. . __ ____. Talar B^m, M buJn pit uti N Opdrk* Rtf FE ♦*••24 IMe Onoo ^MILE^Or BLUE tKY THE A MODEL, 14' FOOT FIBER ; 8EA-POWER --- — j|gj Inboard-Outboard l^etur after! M 1»«0 MO ROADSTER CONVERTI-1 ble white, tike gew' 7,000 miles ! ,23 miles gkllen fl,6te. OR 3-B363 1640 KARMANN-GHIA. LOW MILE- ru Beachwood brown finish. Only I IMS Easy--------- ----VROLJET __________1 co. IM* a mod WARD AVE. B1KMINOHAM. MI 4-3735.___________ iltrwall tires I UM FORD CONVERTIBLE. RA-i die aad heater. Vg. la a spar |.j klinf green finish with t wmt mIm. i top.’new condition, full price II.-MW Lloyd Motors. Llncoln-Mrr-cury-Comet, in 8. Saginaw. PE 2-8131.___________________ „ Drire condition. $1475 j lgtd CHEVIE i 'IBM CHRIS CRAFT lB-PT CA™-'OAKLAND MAI ■ tier. IBS horar power, eactllent HI S Saglnaw- MARINE EXCHANOE uTWMMkFOWER. ^CHWQUPT ■JK¥?J“wr “* -AJL PM-CRAFT SHELL ,L A , jjLASS. Freeland. •Poo-Todto la , XmBwaa Aluminum, and c , U K Walton___ WE CAN’ Your boet-mo— .— OAKLAND MARINE EXCHANOE. New Authorised Dealer VOLKSWAGEN SALES AND SERVICE WARD-McELROY, INC. 4445 W HURON iMlBi OR 4-84M Automettc. itSi.v • full prtet. No < 00 roBD cum BIRMINGHAM- Full Power. »nd Far gd» C** »4| tdt^aVffiNO^Aa??- MARMADUKE By AoJbraon A Lwirinf and healer. Furdomatlc trans- mission, shield wi Pbone FE BOMB. lj PORD VICTORIA a Door Hardtop with Auto, trans-i mlaitan, radio and heatrr Like newthratuboot! bbBb weekly. ART MULLEfTS SAROAlNUMtp USKD CARS 154 B 8AOINAW ST. PE L8818 IBBB FORD B COUPE ’ 1 DOOR. New MtS loh. UM. MA MM1 1M7 FORD 3 DOOR V4. RADIO ANp hIcaTER. yYIRIXMATIC ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY Mr Perks M MI 4-TBM, Harold Turner, F»wl. UM HIUJIAN STATION WAOON. HEATER. TURN810NALS AR»P-LUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. As-• sums payments at SISJSpot mo Coll Credit Mgr Mr. HtQ «t, in e-ISM- Hamid Turner. Ford IT 1BS7 LINCOLN PREMIER. 1-DOOR' WHIHLj Executive’s cor today. It's t beauty. ILIM. Lloyd 1 Motors Llncbln - Mercury - Comet na a sAontAw, ne Mui 4-18 SSJb' 1 • OK! I give op dgareties and you gW* “P perasanents. st’s HE gonna give ' _________* I AND M LINCOLNS nd Premiers I DOOR FULL PRICE------- ----- BOB FROST. INC. BlHMINOHAM*8 Llncoln-Mercury-Comet Deolrr ■SMS. HUHTKN K»]Ha. ...... H MERCURY, HARDTOP RA-tto. hosier, tutomotic transmls- Ssvo ^ A K^DE^MOTORS1” iTu / For Sate Cmh 106 'wax. mt*u?8 j SALES. 171 8 SAOINAW_ •Bl PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR REPOSSESSION tass Full price, no cosh nee 106 - For Sale Cars Buy Here — Pay H«re Trsnsportxtlon Cars bud(;et priced Trade lp anvthlne * SMITH •55 MERCURY CONVERTIBLE No motor. SIB- Other bargains. Economy Cars — — HSt4: AUTO. Mr. Bon. FE B-BBJB j ! 108 East Blvd.. At Aubqfn ! 1952 PLYMOUTH SEDAN. BBB lull price. LAKESIDE MOTORS, i I . Huron at EUonbeth Lake Rd. FE ; l ii 152 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR. 6 C inder attek shift, no money d< Lucky Auto Sales. Ill 8. I I DR. is MERCUlW , .d6oh-1tand: I SffSKSg ! V a Poo- ^ROUOHC [QUTf 1 Sell I»ported Cun ______________FK Mil Transportat n Offered 100 trim. Stock N Easy term l»ET Cb -. JOHN* J. SMITH -^-IMFIVM * * WE SELL AND SERVICE Wriuiude Motors and Lawn Mows • - DART SPORTMES CENTER sThabuis Suppltos *iSporUnx Egulp ,4 ENOINE AIRLINER ION AN-,401 N Bkglnaw. Holly. ME i-SBll ,,in aaO Francisco. Son Diego ~—Tu, NEW IN PONTIAC . j M0 Hawaii IM extra. Now York PORTA CAMPER CAMP TRAILER; US Ferry Service tot OB 3-125* “DUPLETE WITH 1UTCHEN 'LEAYIBO FOR CALIFORNIA IM-modMto*. w^ryort to rimr. BURKS’1 WHY NOT TRY SU1 URBAN-OLDS. 5BJ 8 Woodwar Blrmutsham. Ml 4-44B5_____ Souk-out boat s LEAVING FOR CAUFORNIA IM-medlolaly. warn Mora in there xponaet OA AM1B rent - tUtADY WHITE^ LAFSTRARE , f 'ZamtOUtit*VENUS CRUISERS SHANE EKFENSE8 TO SOUTH- WEST BEND MOTORS --------- ** —Mb " *•“* _ Porta-Cam per Camp Trailer tfbod. Alum . Fiberglas. S ft -34 SCOTT MOTORS AND SERV1_ ^«ufitJ0UT boat MLU^ Wanted Used Cars ’4* BUtCK EXCELLENT TIRES i SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Good . transportalion. B«0. Pta. : 17 Dodge 4-door hardtop SS2-U2S- ..— . , .:m Kid Coawttblw . een •53 BU1CK. GOOD ENOINE AND' 2!d* ** — • ’ ’ Dynaflow. MS. MA A2U_4__________| £ ^dton BUICK SPECIAL 4-DOOR ;M Studebaker Club Coupe CORVAIR "IM” 4-DOOR BE-»’ light blue with Hatching NORTH°CHEVJRO- ! »II 8 SAOWAW Motors. Lincoln-Mereury-Cornel. , 132 ■" Saginaw. EH ■ • MONET DOWN. Assume nayi of $24.7* nor month Con e -4dwr -MTT-Park* at ■Hl-«HB.Tiir. . old Turner. Fowl. __ 51 PLVMOl/rH STATION WAO-22M Eeoley Ct •55 PONTIAC 4-DOOR REPOSSESSION SIM Pull price, no .cash needed | TpTVBirfnnriBO. due May » ! «ra^™tB^R/toio PLYMOUTH SEDAN. RA- ___AND HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY _______ , NO MONEY DOWN. Assume pay- ff S5“eSS: I Harold,. Turner, Ford. I aisic AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION^ ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Assume payments of .222.32 per Call Credit Mgr.. Mf, Parka at MI 4-7500 Harold Timer. Pord. hardtop. I . 1B3 8. IB Ford Fatrlane VB W Mercury. Nice car « Olds. U Hardtop white finish. Stock No. 2118_______ BSM Easy terms. NORTH CHEV-“TOO. 1SM * ——- I. PE 4-72*0 I BUICK SUPER HARDTOP, j •« Packard, like new *406 he new, fUU power, dynaflow NO MONEY DOWN NECESSARY »dH. heour. TTnuepe.. .-i Superoir Auto Sales j FISCHER BUICK in* <*&* av.,;___rmjjm _______m___ A. WOODWARD AVE. HnUmtOHAM. MI 44T3S. M»a. Falcon sa 1 door, standard 21*41 After p m. MI 4-6345 SPRING SPECIAL 1857 Ford Fulriaae BM hardtop. V-B. automatic •- • ARKANSAS TRAVELER BOATS 1 Thompson Clinker Built Boats . VI JOHNSON MOTORS GASOW^ < —SPORTS CENTER— •3175 Chm Lake Rd PE 2-BSMi KEEQP HARBOR. MICH A GOOD DEAL-JUNK8-WRECKS up to 1244 Cara sod trucks FE *-3144 ROTAL AUTO PARTS, JUNK CARS USF.D BUICKS 12 MONTHS WARRANTY, i 724 s. Woodward B’ha ________MI 4MB ROAD TEST THESE BEAUTIES •M FORD STICK. B155. SAVE Do You Need Money? ! .... ..... WE RAVE IT!___________________| BOAT" INSURANCE—3 FEB CKNT F°R p5m-.CAKS ! • at valut. Hansen Agency. FE TOP DOLLAR PAID • >7483 ! Glenn s Motor Salle? m W. RUBOR ST FE 4-7371 | Shep's Assume payments of 87 per week. ART MULLEN’S BAROAINLAND USED CARS * ’ ’5*. CHEV * ftaglnaw ^Bt FE 4-MIS j ’If BUICK FORD 3 dr. Sharp ATTENTION. GIRLS y : 1247 Pud Convertible, VI. automatic transmission, radio and j i heater, power steering, whitewall : BOAT DOCKAGE . ON BEAUTIFUL UNION LAKE .OPEN EVES. A SUNDAY EM 1-41B5 . DUNHAM'S. MARINE ! 195* CHEVROLET. 4-DOOR BEL •54 OLDS S3 CHEV. i . Shep’ B. ioglnat now. FE 4-3314. ■it models AVERILL’S I CHRYSLER 4 DOOR I,. Transmission, radio and : * -’ey and light e payments of 1 : FI WBN •Gator and ■Little Dude' • trailers FE 3_______ ! KELLY’S HARDWARE always top dollar T T7im auAurr rd. I 5QPER SDR Ml PL 2-24H .... OB 3-135* Only t , Ml 4-7B40 DOOR rilb AMO. transmission, radio o boater, Like-new condition! ART MULLEN’S BAROAINLAND USED CARS IM S. Sagtnew St. PE 4-MU RADIO AND hooter, in perfect J“" Balance (due ^ MB4.88. 1153 MERCURY 3-DOOR HARD- top. radio aad heater, ne-“ down, full price BBS. payments of B5.1B per of' 114 33 per month, CALL MR WHITE/ CREDIT MANAGER. FE 44442 Etna Auto Sales 114 8- 8n«hinw 1447 PLYMOUTH CUSTOM WAO- R&R MOTORS 124 OAKLAND ATE. FE 4-3434 50 PLYMOUTH. '4# NASH QOOD CALL MR. WRITE: CREDIT MANAOMt. FE ,4-4441. _ j 72B OAKLAND ATE. FE 4-3434 .....% W * ■— I »iA mi VMflllTW ’M •57 PONTIAC 3 door, very clean Chieftain, Radio. beater. Automatic. Excellent white walls A vary peppy cor. Come in and drive II. -At a bar- *"fpkn AUTO SALE ^ 44 OaMand TE 3-3351 2 DOOR HARDTOP. TAYLOR'S IBM MERCURY COMMUTER _ door Station Wagon. B-pnaaoncer. fully equipped See this low mileage — 1 owner beauty, today., ■ . u*r>M «.MOj Like BOW. Pun price B2.BN. Lloyd I 1(M PLYMOUTH 2 DOOR. RADIO Ta.- wow.var1 a POOR *UPER-"sag1 I ^m.rhLTdtS., All^iar wh^ OK USED CARS CHEVROLET, OLD6MOBILE 4Og^Ev«^..M uk. MERCURY hardtop ft MONTCLAIR. * ower — I— 4-34BB TIRES. ABSOLUTELY HO MONEY DOWN. Assume «i 217 .M par mo. Call Ellaabeth Late ’Nil IMS NASH. NEW TIRES. WILL-, trade. EM 3-BBB1, Stuart Conway J 1156 NASH’ RAMBLER. 2£vr:w: Today’s Special I960 PLYMOUTH Valiant «-Door. V20A Heater, automatic transmleatOn. whitewall tires, window washers, 7r [ rdtop. All power, white ts. hydrnmnttc. leather inn. OR 24274.____ CLEAN Birmingham Trades WILSON 1 HARD TO FIND” - H J. TAN WELT -[4444 Dixie Hwy F | | FOR TOP DOLLAR ■ model cars. See M & M Motor Sales; JEROME-FERGUSON ROCHESTER FORD DEALER FE 4-9111 Mgr I DOOR. RADIO AND >?* ■»’ o«I»»T^” ABSOLUTELY NO DOWN. Assume pay- .113 per mo. Can Credit I .... ___________ Porks at MI 4-7500 7957 AMBASSADOR NASH WITH FINE SELECTION ‘IPS AND *1 BEATTIE —cVROLKT. 3 . Powerglide. *7 imu series. r condition,1 •55 CHRYSLER HARDTOP REPOSSESSION IS full price, no cash neede Rerold Turner, Ford. d^brekes* 3-23M. * nlm«oii®aeaALS™ JUNE. ’49 TO U FORD B O* DAWSONS SALMI Mete. A Extra'bash good mtr radiator. ON MBBL____________ HIGH B FOR LATE MODEL ; FINANCE COMPANY . REPOSSESSION : 18' SWIFT TOP DOLLAR FOR CARS AND ( A3BM, CHEVROLET or. Radio. Rente _____ lltes. Putt price BIBB. $50 4 irronty °° BIRMINOHAM-R A"M- 1 vq, Woodward couth of is Mile I minutes from Pontiac. MI j te Auto Mr Bell. PE B-4B3B! 199 East Blvd.. et Auburn ; 57 DeSOTO HARDTOP _______________J TRY. 8UBUR- BAN - OLDS. BB2 8. Woodward. Birmingham. MI 4-4495 WATERFORD FORD DEALER At the. atOjMfhMta Waterford 1947 PLYMOUTH S DOOR SEDAN. Radio and heater. TuU price 4444-No money down. 30 mos on balance. BIRMINOHAM-RAMBLER. *”~odw»rd aouth of IS Milt Rd.. jtoSSTfSa Pnottoc. MI 808*0 PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. lf«5a white with black Rawer trim Block NO, VST0oly~M8*. Rasy P&NnACBt WHY NOT Tkr SUB-URBANGLD8, 412 8. Woodward. Ilrmlnxbam. MI «-44»» 18*8 RJirmtc' idRWWSi. *m: Ron wagon. giBnllOPt condition RydrompUc, Powtr atoortng and . • Brawl 82.844. *42-3482.___ , 1167 PONTIAC. 4-DOOR HARDTOP. minoham. Si 15m. SPECIAL IL4M.2R BMMifi^WA0,848.84*par RAND C RAMBLER 1848 METROPOLITAN HARDTOP. •XCiUoot con-n miles, onm OR 3-3330 FREE COPPER AMD DONUTS. .Ask about wutHtak a 848 hood with a ride and drive In a !41 RAMBLER BILL BPENCTB RAM BLER. 32 8, Main BL, CUrkato" 1888 NASH RAMBLER. RADIO and heater, beautiful black and white finish. Balance due ■‘SE _ CREDIT MANAOER. I King Auto Bkleo 11* S. Saglnew SB RAMBLER WAOONiPIRBT BJ75 acriptlon. FE 3-BBB7 f IMS RAMBLER NATION wagon. heater, whitewall tires, tow mileage extra sharp, assume, payment . of 13359 per month. down or'oJd trade. Lloyd Motors, .tncoln - Merjury - Comet. |22 S. IBM RAMBLER STATION WAO-on B cylinder. aUck |hllt. radlo. heater at^ek IB*, wtfr Qplk B1--095 Easy terms. NORTH WIV-ROLKT CO 1000 8 WOODWARD AVE ■BIRMINGHAM. Ml 0-2734 1*5* CUSTOM RAMBLER. REBEL fleering aj >i eon te bought (or a traeuon of _ that price LAKESIDE MOTORS, HUTOWt 1 reasonable Call 443-3115 aft- YOLKSWAOBM !*•* klCRO-Bbs. _y_yyi2LJ54-!2!Ls=«=™— ii.400 Private. U 5-7777 or MA 4-3704. . 194* 4 WHEEL DRIVE J FE 3-3444 buying ‘ OR SELLING ' SEE US BEFOMC YOU DEAL HOUGHTEN & SON 434 N. Main. Rochester OL 1-07*1 They Must Go Woodward BIRMINGHAM 43 Plymouth Hardtop 43 Pontiac ........ S3 Dodxe . 104 Others BBS to I MI 0-1B3B Economy Cori . ■■ "CRUISER". ■_________________L TRUCK, PONTIAC WASTE, PE 3-02BB WANTED JUNE AND CHEAP L CHEVIE 2 DOOR. Heater Automatic Iran **2)7*5________ r RADIO, i PE A453B '40 H P. SCOTT MOTOR TRAILER * Special deal for cash or • take over payment* : SEE THIS TODAY Used Ante Parts 102 M OLDS MOTOR. JUST^OVER- WANTED VOLVO ENOINE 103 ! Sale Used Trucks Oakland Marine Exch. |-- - FW a <101 1B51 DO DOE s TON PICKUP. n 2B.SIB mtlea. No oil. PE 4-0011 TOHJBODOK PICKUP. CHEAP 13-DOOR. OVER “ ttfuHtSht -blur ___________ _ new white top The. very I 17.008 eoay miles assures you many future years af motor pleasure. You’ll miss o wood ful opportunity If. you don’t c ~~k WIT tmmodtotoly 100 test Blvd . Crissman Chevrolet _______12 DOOR. _________ HEATER. ARSO- LUTELY NO MONEY DOWN As* sue payment* of B17.08 per oo. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Parke t MI 4-7500. Harold Turner. Pord, antaSHHjgl BIRMINGHAM BLER. Woodward tooth of Ml|e H TRADES: OLD8MOBJLE SUPER SI steering, radio ! Irnnamteato parkltng red nod white beauty rom the South. BI.7B4. Lloyd Moors. Llncoln-MercuryGomel. 222 I. Snxlnow PE 2-BU1 I a ’59 CHEVROLET j IMPALA "CONVERTIBLE " V-B engine. powergUde transmission. 1 oil white finish with red Interior 105* FOPD RANCH WAGON. RADIO AND HEATER. AUTOMATIC ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY _ DOWN. ------- ------■- 124 75 per ----------------Jn?TSw«t*L Mr Parte at Ml 4-T5B0, Harold Turner. Ford, ! SAOINAW. Oakland Marine Exchange •Ml a, Senlnow ” ■' JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS. Starcraft Boats Gator Trail era Everything for the boot OWEN'S MARINE SUPPLIES IBB Orchard Late A VO. FE 3-B028 •JOHNSON MOTORS SEA-RAY • boats. Arroocraft canoes and flsh- • log boats Marino Supplies and •53 F-750 TRACTOR Hydraulic Good ru----- Doyle s Welding. Keego Harbor. < 1957 CHEVROLET I heater, automatic fhitcwall Urea. H95 Immoculate" «mdltioc ! ‘^.^^Y^Or" X-F™1*' rubber. B42S. .7 PORD 3-DOOR REPOSSESSION B4 full price, ne cash needed iy only B3- a no duo MnySI he Auto. Mr. Bell. PE B-452B 1**7 B-TON ^*^OL*TTOUCR. JaBSOLTO?LY I i. Body to ^jood ^thape.^Mmor ■*re TUsi°" * 3 MONEY DOWN. Mgr.. Mr. Parks ■ Harold Turner, Pord, mo. Call Credit cnsli I 8. Saginaw 11H0 Rambler Super 2 door o OLDS. EXCELLENT CONDI- Automatic. Whites I — IMS Rn Uon. MA H181. HASKINS SHARP j Trade-Ins l Rambler 4 door eedon. I and tenter . 81 I door aedan I 1844 Pnottoc 4-door sedan. Hydra-matlc. power steering, power brakea. radio, heater. Beautiful 3-tone green finish. Like new 1000 Pootlae 4-door sedan Hydro-matte, power- steering, power brakes., tenter. Beautiful 3-ton* blue finish. Show-room new. UM Rambler 3 door a Birmingham-Rambler Woodward south of u Mila Rd-“MI 8-288E________- •online Convertible. Hydropower steering, power! . radio, beater. Like new i V FIBHINO'BOATS 1 mYTuTTORD PICKUP. STYLE j K SPECIAL 'll ARKANSAS TRAVELER 1* F .^il. WINNER CRUISERS-— * p.m. Mtat eell —t- •47 FORD l T6N VANE11I. *160. i FE *-274*. FE M8M. <• j, _______i. Onlr *4*5 laey t NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 8 WOODWARD AVE BIRlflNO-HAM Ml 4-3735 ji CHEVROLET PARK WOOD wagott. VI, *uto. - ---- •— • . SALE ON THESE .’«* LONE STAR BOATS t 14-ft. and 1 18-ft. left. I. FE 5-5*51 ; 1855 CHEVROLET BEL AIR. MERCURY MOTORS UR 4-1848. 4324 ( __________ DOOR.. STA- KOLET CO. 1008 8. WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM MI 4-373* DRIVE A MILE SAVE A PILE! •bpen 1*318 HOLLY RD , HOLLY, MICH Vfw '81 STAR -CRAFT BATtBA-* pud*. U* alum, laiwtrxfce O'—I must sell FE t-1718. ■ *81 D0HPHY “ 5 HP 1 _ INLAND lake ?rcx*n t 8ALE1 m FIBEROLAE !• electric Evinru< rr.fl.2M. IS ft• I m TRUCKS ii J NR*-, rr l m «r|. 7 i-Ton Telephone Go. I - New Dodge Dart $1946.65 ... ... $1295 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 1955 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL run "rower, radio and “tinted (lata. $AVE BRIGHT SPOT 65 Mt. Clemens AND Corner : Cass and .Pike Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 OLIVER FE 4-6010. 8888 M-5P. •With the newest •BOAT SAVER HOIST • Lftex design lor tobonrdc or out- • btttrds. Keep your boat safe from SmT* *“ter- SMALL TOWN * .OW OVERHEAD ------ QUARANTEE 2?,^Sd*'2i5te'petil1 b0-‘*'l RAMMLEft-DALLAS * a 1081 N. MatR ROCHESTER Chevies, Fords. Dodges J, dqdoe • cerweer - trucrm JOHNSON Offers FE 3-7954 [ , Buick Spring Values! -5* * ** IM Pontiac Catalina sports aedan. Hydrai— White 1 Perfect for electricians, plumb- ] r. Whitewall. 2 ta YOUH CHOICE / $395 ^ 8 Orchard Lake A SEE SCOTTY FOR A SCOTT 3 HJP to n.HP. Trade your old 'motor •*’“-------r SCOTT by NORTH CHEVROLET MI 4-2735 ’40 BUICK ■4* OLDS .... •4* CHEVY ... •54 OLDS -- '55 PLYMOUTH . 88 | Twfific Discount on W I960 Evimude motors and boat-*t experience^ * TONY’S MARINE 1st orchard Lk. Rd sylvan Lake! ffj \ Phene 111 ISM / , . ! Auto Insurance 104 $20 FOR 6 MONTHS Russ Johnson Motor Sales ‘ LAKE ORION MY 2-2871 i"MY 2-2381 ^/Whatever it is, you’ll j .fdC ess ' __ .... .4 fhss WantlAda. I. Including M . i bratfit ■ Jotve mare success m find-i ^ ang it in The Pdtitiac pmjrT. atoerbon aobicy lets I 3536 71 ____________ |nSr l*ivJSRi MW or FErM*» Trahsportation Specials .• ' you wAht ’bm_ i WJC OOT EM - HER* ' SPECIALS NOT . , Mote Then Mt Pull Price . ART MULLEN'S BAROAINLAND USED CARS IM ■. SAOINAW ST. PE 4-MI* Sivralet Itapnto 4 dr. bard-PowergUde, Radio, heater, ■walls Power brakea. White. *te beauty! oattac 3 dr hardtop Hydra-i. Radio. Heater. TTbltewaUi. i. fumjii e '•jr°A gem for l»57 Bulck 2 dr. hardtop. Dyne Radio. Heater. Whitewall*. 2 rou must ana this — | lOdTponUac Star Chief let MU. ___tenter,-—_ la. Bljto with blue merraeMe HAUPT PONTIAC, CLA HESTON i mile aorth of MApto MM MiSvee. UMl I Hardtop $ 695 !56 Buick Sedan ...$ 695 ’58 Rambler Sedan $ 995. '58 Buick Convert. $1995 ’56 Olds 98 Sedan . .$ 695 '59 Opel Wagon ... .41195 'ST Buick Sedan .. .$ 995 '58 Rambler 2-Door $ 795 ’57 Volkswagen .’. .*995 *58 Ford Sedan ....$,995 '59 Buick Hahltou $1895 ’59 Olds-Holiday ...$2395 ’59 Rambler ......$1395 ’59 Plymouth Sedan $1195 ’55 Buick Sedan ...$ 595 ’57 Buick’Hardtop $ 995 ’52 Buick Hirdtop $ '95 OLIVER Motor Sales 216 Orchard « PE 2-8181 . [U , SSS1 JEEP HASKINS CHEVROLET HOMER HIGHT 24 HOUR SPECIALS Prices Good Until 6 P.M. Wednesday Only '59 CHEyY I m pa la Sport Sedan BeaieUral tu-tone brlge aad gol Small Town Trades: ’87 Che vie. | deer. 8 cylinder. Aide.. $1729 I_____1 dr. hardtop. timematta tnaimlajlm Radio aa beater. Power tomitos SPECIAL:' ‘82 Chevto 2 dr. gedii AatomoUr Chevrolet -Pontiac-^ . Buick Dealer '59 CHEVY Biscayne 2-Door - i. You’ll like this $1289 '57 CHEVY 2-Door 6-cyllnder engine aad stands traaamUaten. Radio, heater * $729 Matthews- Hargreaves "Chevy-Land" GARLAND COUNTY’S LaratxB Volnme Chevy Dealer 841 OAKLAND AT CASS PE 4-4547 AH SPRING! Ipring is in the air and it’s the time when everyone Is thinking of a reconditioned late model car from Shejtofts. Drive over to Rochester and see what wonderful values we are offering. 1961 TEMPEST $2495 18.’ Beautiful Corona- 1958 MERCURY $1295 Montclair Adoor hardtop. Po»-nr sterling, powtr brake*. Merc-o-Mailc. radio, heater whitewalls. Oold finish with leather trim. 1957 PONTIAC $ 995 racon with Hydramatlc. radio, -eater, beautiful red finish. Swing and watona go together. 1955 PONTIAC $ 395 •W 4-door sedan. Power alter- Ing. potty l‘ Ivory 1957 BUICK ..$ 995 rial 3-door hardtop with ra-heater and Dyttoflow. Beau- , hronse ftolsb. Extra nlc* 1957 FORD . hardtop .. V-B eagiar whitewalls. 1956 PONTIAC $695 Star Chief Sdoor hardtop with power steering and brakes, So. tenter am* Beautiful 2-tone leather trim. white wells. .$ 195 1955 DODGE . H-ton pickup. Double axie, can New tlraa. giodeoglne. tadif 1958 CADILLAC $2395 DeVUI ower ! ,*.X’ Coup* DeVUlt with rower gtoer- —< I— 1959 PONTIAC $1895 2-doer with Hrdramatjc. radio, heater. Spare never need. Guaranteed 13.001} actual miles. .. .$ 195 aedan. With a would be a 1959 PONTIAC $1995 3-deer haidtop with power steer-” Hjdl— 1957 CHEVY ...$1095 1960 CHEVY .. .$2295 impala 3-door hardtop. Powers glide. V-l engine, gtdlo, beater, whltewalli. Gray ami Ivory with 1958 PONTIAC $1495 1958 FORD...........$775 4-door aedan. This ~ ’ -— used----------- |B*8e i 1956 BUICK . Century Moor ban steerlnj! and brakn right. 1958 RAMBLER 8995 Super Moor sedan. Standard transmission, 4-cyITnder engine, radio sad tenter. Powder bine iy a little level. 1959 PORD.............$1395 3-doer sedan. Pord-O-Matlc. V-t engine, radio, heater and white-walls. Solid blue finish aad n* 1958 DESOTO $1395 Fi re flit* Moer. with power £3sr ^ 1957 CHEVY ...$895 ti-ton pickup. Thl* track-1* la A-l condition end toady to (O to work ter yon today, 1959 BUICK ... .$1895 Moor sedan with rower <- tod, Md brake*. Mur E__ seat, Dyaaftev.OfWMMmMW nntah. Oo first dug, go Buick. 1961 MERCURY $2695 1956 BUICK ,, Special Moor soda ' steering aad brakes, , heater. Buy this ear ..$ 495 'radio0 and as la e nd 1954 PONTIAC $ 95 W «*M. a Meal SHELTON PONTIAC - BUICK ROClf ESTER 1 ' OL 1-8133 Across from New Crt Saks OPEN T1L 9-P.M. OR UTER .. Closed Wednesday and Saturday Rt 6'p.m. < W: ■Todays Television Programs- !■ — ■■■ •- • • - - - -_ .... . ,__Bywn>mimay.;'.. NEW YORK (UPl)—The wafts of cinema is an Oscar.’ Is there anything to be made at ’ THE gOyTIAC PEESS. TUESDAY. APRIL 18,1961 NINETEEN •:M (2) Movie (Cbot) (7) News. Weather (!) Popes* (SB) General Chemistry ft» (f) Believe * «r Not etu (7) News e:*s (4) Weather “ ftp (3) Hewn (4) News - (7) Rescue 8 (9) Quick Draw McGraw f:P (2) News Analysis (9 Sports •iff (2) News (9 News (56) Philosophy of Man T:9 (21 Divorce Court (4) Lock Up V (7) Expedition! (9) Tugboat Annie 7:P (2) Divorce Court (Coot.) (4) I^rmmie (T) Bugs Bunny (9) Movie. ''Whistling in the Dark.” (1*41). CuWsts try to influence a man "to perform a murder for them. Red Shelton, Gon-r:*~r, «d Veldt 8:00 (2) Father Kbowe Beat (4) Laramie (CbnL) (7) Rifleman (9) Movie. (Cont) (98) Red Myth i:P (2) Dobie GUlls (4) Alfred Hitchcock (7) Wyatt Earp \ (9) Movie (Cont.) (98) American History 9:P (2) Tom Ewell (4) Thriller (7) Stagecoach West ^ -(9) Front Page Challenge 9:30 (2) Red Shelton (4) Thriller (Cont) (7) Stagecoach West (COnt.) (9) G. M. Presents 10:0* (2) Garry Moore (2) Cry Vengeance! , (7) Close-Up (9) G. M. Presents (CBM.) 10: so (2) Gerry Moore (Cop.) (4) Cry Vengeance! (did.) , (7) Mike Hamer ® (9) Newe 1 10:45 (9) Golf Tip p:p (9) Sparta —________; 11:00 (2) Newt (4) News (7) Mr. and Mrs. fertk (9) News 11:15 (2) Weather (4) Weather (9) Telescope UAW 11: P (2) qporta. pin naming (4) Sports—Don Kramer 11:25 (2) Movie. "Man of the Moment.” (English. 1959) Clerk In British try sent to tip Geneva . conference, Norman Wisdom, Lafla Morrow, Belinda Lee, Jpy Dee-monde. (9) Weather . Gregson, Dora. UP (4) Funny World . l:es (4) News It* (7) Newe, Weather 1:P (2) News, Weather ' WEDNESDAY MORNING Ute ‘(4) Continental Classroom e:p (2) Meditations S:I0 (2) On the Farm Front •HE (21 TV College (4) Dave Garroway ‘ Sears Invites Area to a Party Festivity to Celebrate the Diamond Jubilee Will Start Thursday A mammoth birthday party will get under way in Pontiac starting Thursday. The guest Hat is so large that it indudes everybody in the Pontiac area and the celebration will be extended over several days. Haets for the affair will be Sears, ltoeboekA Co., tha nation’s largest handlstm Arm, which this pgr is celebrating. Jubilee. . Filmed reports on Cuba’s steady drift into the Communist camp. CRY VENGEANCE! IS p.m. (4)j One-hour drama by Robert Crean stare Ben Gazzara as Davidde, Sicilian bandit with a “Robin Hood” reputation. Sal Mineo, ad Andrea, is Davidde’s devoted aide —until his wedding plans are thwarted by the bandit leader’s brand of justice. Peter Falk and Cal Bellini also star. JACK PAAR, 11:30 pja, (4). Jack’s guests are Dody Goodman, comedian Jack E. Leonard, Cliffe Arquette, (color). Having TROUBLE With Your BILLS? PROTECT YOUR JOB—SAVE YOUR CREDIT (A void Garnishment—No Filing Fee) CONSOLIDATED BUDGET, Inc. “OH Ml «t Mt ttt Mtei w»r—wiu «M iwtmIibI *Im* to pejV' HOME AND OrriCE APPOINTMENTS . 406 PmHsc State Bmlt BMf. FE 3-7156 WIEGAND MUSIC SPRING FEVER SALE Cloaranco of All Trado-ins ORGANS and PIANOS Thomas 2 Manual ORGAN with wErinus ■“* bMstttanr »red tor. •to $595.00 MUEANSM MOO* 0 <»r $1,395.00 LOWREr or GAN tow $359.00 WIN FREE UPRIGHT PIANOS We wqre to lazy to i«)l thi» one so we will give this beautiful upright piano free ... All you have to do is . . . Guess how many feet of piano wire the piano has that is on display In our window. Register your figure with us. Deadline April 22, 196!. WIEGAND MUSIC CENTER Mhaele MHe hi Raster Ares PI 2-4924 Shopping Center Open DaMy 10 A.M. 'HI ,9 PAL A OOHVUSn STOCK OP AU. MODELS » OCLBKANSKN 0SCANS AND riANEM IN DEBT! Now it th« time to consolldati all your bills and lot ut giva you on# placa to pay with a payment you can afford! 'Not a Loan Company*' TWENTY THE POXTIAC PRESS, ttmsDAV.APftlEAB,lgBl DBtnonstratdrg » Minority, Scots Themselves Say Most Residents Glad to Have US. Base at Holy Loch Cause sitting incongruously in the midcDe of the.loch is a large trey w a r s h i p—a warship that often hplds enough nuclear force .to blow much of Scotland to smithereens. aadear-npalr station, ml anile tn- ' ; DUNOON, Scotland (UPl) - If yin) miss the ferry from Gourock to punoon, it's an hour and a half 7* ~T wait tor the next one. ' a pleasant' wait, though ! **»»*«» * «•* mother ship fcourock is on the industrial east Ayg (soon to be Ml nuclear, side of the Firth of Clyde; Across U.S. Submarine Squadron, or 'Suhron 14.” fhe Clyde to one of Scotland's top resort areas. You sure headed for. Holy. Loch, ’ where the principal ■Mtty is tourism. , _ - i ‘ Mobility is the heart of this Holy Lock Is IS miles, a* the^polar'i s system/* said Capt. ----------------1 tty It. (ran The Protdus is a movable base. ItlfnKililtl inn tka kaa it tkia How do the people, of Dunoon feel about this load of " sitting death” (as opponents have called " dr doorsteps? It doesn’t bother them at aO. To -the trary, they deem happy the ship ia here. The uproar reported train the area whim the dsciaisa waa announced last Nov. S to station the Proteos In Holy Loch U from the My Loch is the famed Clyde-side MfrhuBittag area where the giant liners —the Qneew Mary and Qneen Ettsa-heth ween hnllt Twewty-eix ly, the next ferry is ready, la3Wminutes, you’ve landed in Dunoon. The resort atmosphere system/* said "Capt. Norveil G. Ward, commander of Subron 14. “We don't call the Hedy Loch a base—it's only an anchorage? It's the essence of this base that it can pick up and leave in less than an hour.” The Holy Lech is ast large, bet it is immediately apparent why it was chosen as home for the Navy's drat levtag, aaderaea deterrents. It Is deep, bet enly shows as you drive north out of, ^ a mu« wide. Its mouth, late town. Sailboat* drift breezily ^ Clyde, to narrow. It Is ea around the Holy Loch entrance, j rJmnj by Msilyr defensible IT B BEAUTDTX ! Mk - Your first sight of it stops you. “It’s a nice .anchorage." smiled jt..tobeuuliful.Tiiflttl-lhrquiet. Ward. worth visiting. Kit you stop be-| It can leave anytime, but the Proteus undoubtedly will linger a while. Between ISO and 300 Navy families are to he-brought to Holy Loch in mkfeubuner. “That was exaggerated,” • Dunoon shopkeeper. “It’i people from the south whole ing the mdse. We like the •we.” ‘ * . • *’■ A grocer in loch just even philosophized 'about they bring over thei families to get Why.^we like tl just .doin' their jobs,*' Several people Cram II Cuts Ball Bearing Prices With Employes' Help * MUSKEGON UP — Kavdon Engineering Corp. Monday cut prices bp to 34 per cent on^aome ball bearing products in a move following employe efforts to help the .firm stay competitive, f tt * * Frank J. Donovan; president, announced price reductions on all "off the shelf' thin section ball bearings. * * * * It results from a March 21 agreement between Kaydon and Lodge €70,' International Association of Machinists,. Donovan explained. * * * He aaid without reducing take-home pay, the employes volunteered to increaae-production and *«*pt tower incentive rates, thus reducing the cost* of many operations. Waterford High Invites Parents j Displays Wednesday Will Show Work ofj Students Deathless String Broken SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont <*_ Sault Ste. Marie Sunday night recorded its first traffic fatality in 923 days when Edward Stonard. 16. was killed as he walked along an expressway. Displays and demonstrations of student achievements will high-4 light the annual open house at 7:30 p m. Wednesday sponsored by | the Waterford High School Parent-Teacher Student Association, a a a After a short business meeting directed by President George Underwood, a preview of the production “Showboat” will be presented vocal director Richard Meier. lastrameatal number* featar-lag a section of the Mgh school bond will be directed by Donald Perrin, and speech department debaters win preseat their win- BAKER and HANSEN Iiraruct Company INSURANCE -ALL FORMS- HOME OWNERS PACKAGE POLICY A SPECIALTY Pfcrae FE 4-1568 J14 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLOC. PONTIAC Parents . then may browse I through the various school departments and observe displays and demonstrations produced by highj school students during the past year. Accomplishments will be din- j played in art, shop, home economics, the creative arts, English, history, math, sciences, languages • and social studies. The physical education department wilt present a tumbling act and movies taken [ of the schools sports events. [papers and charts / The home economics department I , ill serve samples of culinary skills, and there will be a profusion of theme papers, charts and pictures in all of the classrooms. The Greek play Oedipus Rex will be presented in one of the rooms. Patty Looman, speech director, will have charge of this project. Stadeat Council member* will serve aa guides and aa “on the Parents of next year's 9th' and 10th graders who will attend either Waterford or Kettering high school next fall have been' issued special invitations. - James Fry, with .will be principal of the new high school, and Pail O’Neill, taking over duties at [the present high school, will be| i hand to extend a welcome, j The evening will close with aj coffee hour in the school cafeteria, I according to program chairman. Mrs. Robert Sickels. IDUupYOU Ottilia HOME cough, polio and tetanus arejuon. DREWRYS Now at your favorite store or tavern Swing into Spring at your Big D Spring Round-Up Headquarters! Now’s a great time to get acquainted with the wonderfully satisfying flavor of Big Dm.Drewrys Beer. Look for the bright and gay Big D Spring Round-Up displays at your favorite store or tavern. They point the way to perfect beer refreshment. While some beers are too heavy... others too light... Big D is always just right. Drewrys exclusive brewing process keeps all the refreshing flavor in... sweetness out. So you can enjoy glass after glass with no full feeling after. Get Big D, today. More Flavor* Less Filling, More Fun! You get all three only from Big D! (Duxi£ttif. ■ ■ 7^foca£ — ASK FOB DETAILS Capitol Savings & Loan Assn. Ettabluhed 1890 75 W. Huron St., Pontiac FE 4-0561 CUSTOMEI PAIRING IN ICil OF BUILDING A little thrift on your part, plus our financing plan, can equal home ownership ..free and dear. I— - ________J THE PONTIAC PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 18, Brightest Stars Shine for "Camera The Weather ■ w—w— f—T- T -fripil. VOL. 119 NO. 00 Halt Cuban Rebels, K Asks Kennedy U»T« PARADE — The lour top Oscar winners pose with ar nm(lt Xl A?*fBy A_W*TU,hoW * lctor: *■«•. best supporting actress; Hope; Elizabeth Sairta Motto, OaHf. From left arc Peter Ustinov, best supporting Taylor, best actress; and Burt Uncarter, best actor. Promises All Necessary Aid to Castroites w* Dump Colbert, Liz Steals Oscar Show; Newberg Asks Lancaster Best Actor Firm Lost $20 Million in the First Quarter, He Tells Shareholders DETROIT *—William C. Newberg, who was fired last year as Chrysler Corp. president, today urged Chrysler shareholders to dump L. L. Colbert as president and board chairman. He claimed the automobile firm lost $30 million in the first quarter of this year. Newberg made his plea in DETiOR (UPI) — Chrysler Corp. has ssnsnntied Ha pa urn gar car sales during the first It days of April gave the esm-pany the highest market pane* t ration lap any IMay period •alee si Chrysler Corp. ears daring the parted accounted for 15.7 per «*»t of tee domestic market, according to E. C. Quinn, vice president of the Mae Di- statement prepared on his behalf lor file shareholders' annual meeting. Two weeks after the annual Aweting a year ago, Newberg______ elected Chrysler president. He was Ured after 64 days on the grounds of a conflict of interest concerning two companies which supplied parts to Chrysler. He de&ied any conflict of Interest. Newburg said be would like to "tell die real story of the circumstances of my leaving Chrysler" but said he could not because “My attorneys say this is not the place nor the time ter such an By JAMES BACON AP Movto-TV Writer SANTA MONICA, CaW.-“I feel weak but wo nderfuL" Liz Taylor sighed happily after winning her first Oncar Monday night—a few months after recovering from a brush with death. The beautiful star, who won the best actress award lor/ her role as the gtrl-aboutriawn in ^Butterfield 8," nearly fainted twice (for-fng the 90-minute Awards show. {iz, nominated four straight yean for the movies’ big award, stole the 33rd annual Oecar show from . file other winners—Burt Lancaster, best actor; Jones, best supporting actress, and Peter Ustinov, best supporting actor. XXX “The Apartment" won five awards, including best picture and best direction (by Billy Wilder). All the winners posed hack-stage tor photographers bat Us get weak la the knees and had to cat her psriag short Accompanied by her hash sail Eddie fisher aad her doctor, rite •wayed shakily toward aa open door. The fresh air sauteed her qateUy and me was all smUes agate. Earlier, on her aittivaL she bad to rent IS minutes before entering the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. The show,' telecast over ABC-TV, was well under way before she was able to make it to ‘ n seat EB LONGEST WALK “That’s the longest I’ve walked since my illness,*' she told porter, “My knees got all shaky, like they were made of water. Her beautiful green Dior gown covered a leg still bandaged from antibiotic abets given her two months ago during her nearly fatal battle with pneumonia. When her name was called_________ the Oscar,'she put her hands over her tarn io surprise, kissed her husband and then walked slowly, with Ms help, to the podium. “I don’t really knew how to ex-pntos my gnat gratitude,” ohe t yen with all He then emphasized that "I have no desire to return to Chrysler. I have found new rewarding challenges in management consultation work Out permits whatever initiative and imagination a person is capable of." He said he made his re _______ dations as a Chrysler shareholder "intensely interested in the pany’s future." . Pick Fund Raising Body, Site for Hospital Brandi Two major steps forward have been taken since announcement was made three months ago that Detroit’s Crittenton General Hospital plans to build a 200-bed branch hospital just south of the Rochester village limits. A site has been selected in the center of the two-county area to be served, Dr. Eugene Sibery, administrator of the parent institu-* ' -:-~ tion announced last night. s\U _ L......... OI Man Sun to Warm Us Up on Wednesday Just have to my heart." Lancaster, the hell-firing revivalist of “Elmer Gantiy," told a cheering audieace: "I want to thank all the members of the Academy who voted for me. And I am so happy that J also to thank all the members who didn't vote for me." X * W For Lancaster, 47, the award climaxed a career that had taken him from the New York slums through circus acrobatics to movie stardom. Miss Jones clutched her Oscar and thanked another Oscar—the late Oscar Hammerstein. SWITCH FOB SH1BLEY It was Hammerstein and Richard Rodgers who picked the 27-year-old brewer’s daughter from Smithton, Pa., to pi ay the ingenue •«ad in “Oklahoma" and “Quote In Today's Press Holy Loth Scottish residents overwhelmingly approve American submarine base at Holy Loch, segue of protest marches — PAGE 20. Man In Spoco Fun park-type chairs which test human reactions may help America’s astronaut remain oriented should be land upside down. — FACE It is just north of Auburn and Rochester roads. “We have a f __________________ ol a large enough parcel to build the hospital, expandable to 450 beds by 1910, and to provide plenty of parking space too.” sale Sibery. ■e else announced that American City Bureau, Inc., ri CM-cagot a professional fond raising council, has bean hired. Hie firm Is slated b make a report today to the Crittenton Board of Trustees on the potential of the area to support the project and what the tinting Of the building program would be. If tiie report la favorable, the proposed hospital may be year douer to reality than tRJI first estimated throe months ago, Sibery saM. 'X * The next step. foOowtof acceptance of the fund ratoers’ report, will be to select aa architect who will have schematic drawings randy in about 10 days. An aptlripnted limn schedule to six te right mantes tor the n year to dnvetop ’• plans and a year la build aad equip the facility. A further announcement made by Sibery to members of the Avon Business and Frofeational Women’s Chib was that the hospital the suDDort of Blue Cross - Blue £83* the Greater Detroit Ana Hoepital (Continued on Papa 2, Col. 3^ Spring sunshine will warm the area Wednesday with temperatures climbing to a high of 54, the weatherman sgys. he Hair aad coal, the tow absat so degrees. Partly ctoudy aad mid te prodteted tor Thursday. Morning northwesterly winds at 5 miles per hour will become 10 to 30 m.p.h. late this afternoon, apd light variable tonight. it it X Thirty-five was file lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding I a.m. The reading at 1 p.m. was 40. • p Rebels Claim Fidel's Forces Are Deserting; Press Toward Havana From Our News Wires Soviet Premier Khrushchev appealed to President Kennedy today to halt the invasion of Cuba by forces seeking to overthrow Khrushchev’s old friend Fidel Castro. Khrushchev called the attack a menace to world peace and promised “all necessary assistance” to Castro. More than 24 hours after the landings in Cuba, the rebels were reported moving inland in an area 90 miles east of Havana. Prime Minister Castro took personal charge of the attempt to back the invaders, and a Cuban broadcast said counterre-volutionaries had marked him for assassination. Reads Threats From Nikita BEADY TO ENLIST — Aa overflow crowd spokesman at the center said 500 to 600 were of anti-Castro Cubans shews up at a small un- signed up and given physical examinations Mon- official recruiting center in Miami to enlist. A day. JFK Mum on Talk About Cuba The Cuban radio immediately hailed the Khrushchev message, dedaring in a nationwide broadcast: "The Soviet Union will not abandon the Cuban people in its mis- BV United 1 Invading Cuban revolutionary fames have seized aa air strip •ad am bow flying planes In aad out of the beachhead area In Oochlaoo Bay where the major landing was made, high exile WASHINGTON (AP)-President Kennedy discussed the Cuban counterrevolution with Democratic leaders from ihe Capitol today but withheld immediate public comment on Soviet Premier Khrushchev’s appeal to him to stop the invasion of the island. it it it Early in the day Kennedy read tws dispatches reporting the gist f Khrushchev's message, text of the communication, adding nothing essential to the earlier report, was delivered to him shortly after his weekly breaklast session with the Congress members. Emerging from that meeting, the party lender* would my only that the Cteban situation was dts- But it wag her switch to the hardboiled tart of "Elmer Gantry" that won her the Oscar. "I guess it pays to be bad on the Screen," she said. The bearded Ustinov, who won aa Oscar tor Ms portrayal of a gladiator school operator in “Sportacus,” flew la from B to attend the ceremonies. "I’m glad I made the trip. •aid. Then he added: “I attended English schools so long I was taught how to lose gracefully. been preparing myself 1 afternoon. Now that I’ve won don't know what to say." the attacking femes claimed wholesale desertions by forces nominally loyal to Castro, including many of the militiamen Castro had forcefully recruited from nil ranks of Gabon life. Thooe are new the people who may spell success or faltsre for the attempt to topple Castro. Rebel leaders in the United States asserted the invaders who landed in Southwest Las Villas Province Monday had struck halfway across the narrow island to CHARGE U'.S. FINANCING The Communists charged the invasion was financed by the United States and supported by U.S. war-1 and planes froth Florida and Central America. The United States has denied supplying the invaders but has expressed sympathy for the forces fighting to overthrow Castro. cussed, leaving any statement to the President. The Khnuhchev message contained some bellicose sounding language, such as a promise to give the Fidel Castro government all aid necessary to repulse the armed attacks, for which the U.S. government has denied responsibility. * 4r it The Soviet leader also stressed his claimed interest in relaxing international tension and said “but if others aggravate it, we slmll reply in full measure.’’ i Nevertheless U. 8. officials | were inclined to rate the matter as a promise of a propaganda ★ A showdown rather than a military threat. House Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas said Kennedy "brought us up to now on what the real situation is.” “I think it is a serious situation down there," Rayburn said. “I don’t know whether it will work out or not. I hope so." Officials here kept silent on whatever solid information they may have on the course of the anti-Castro invasion. U.N. Awaiting Proof of Anti-US. Charges Special Oscars were given to «ry Cooper and Sian Laurel among others. Neither was well enough to attend the ceremonies. James Stewart accepted Coo-er’s Oscar with an emotion-filied speech. Fighting back tears and swallowing hard, he «eid “We’re very proud of you. Coop! all of us are tremendously proud.' News Flashes DETROIT (UPI) - la the U'.S. last week totaled 121,MS milts — the Nfefc Mt oatpst sf INI. Fidel Using Russ Tanks? NEW ORLEANS. La. IP—A Roman Chtholic priest claimed early today that Castro forces were using Soviet tanka to battle inaur-roction forces near Colon, some 10 miles southeast of Havana. The “ loro de la Torre said he was ^formed of the use of the "Stalin tanks" by a report from Cuban underground sources via Mexico. WASHINGTON (AP) * Department officials said t With tee United States were etf off qarir'Mlaiar alter InteHap ,hf arit-Csstro rebels. ; ' ' Castro. Nabs 'Plotters1 . Fla. ip — Arrest „ 27 persons accused of plotth* to ■M Minister fldel Castro was announced today hy Cuban government radio ta p broadcast, heard h^re. Among thoee held, the broadcast said, was Mai. Humberto Sort Marin, Castors first minister of agriculture. te Kennedy that the 8oviet Union wants te decrease world tension “bet if others aggravate It, we shall reply to fall measure." A statement by the Soviet government went a step farther and warned that the Cuban fighting is “capable of jeopardizing the peaceful life of the U.S.A. itself." Khrushchev did not mention the rockets he once symbolically promised to bring to Castro’s aid. * * * The invasion inspired anti-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPI) — U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson indicated today that President Kennedy would reply before-the day is out to Soviet Premier Khrushchev’s appeal to put an end to the invasion of Cuba. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (UPI) —Shocked U.N. diplomats were waiting today for Premier Fidel Castro's spokesman here to offer some proof of his charge that U.S. forces from the naval base at Guantanamo are aiding the invasion of Cuba. Foreign Minister Raul Roa made the charge at Monday night’s meeting of the general assembly’s main political committee. It was denied both by U.S. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson and by senior officers at Guantanamo. Stevenson also deniWJ aa earlier Boa charge that the Invasion was touched la part from Florida, hot added that the United States has no obligation to protect Castro “from the conse-quaere of his treason.” ment of the situation virtually ★ ★ * • A ★ Even Reds Want to Run Him Out N (The U.S. ambassador assailed Russia for pouring arms and mill, tary advisers into Castroite Cuba. ‘OVER 20,000 TONS’ “Well over 30.000 tons of Soviet equipment has arrived (in Cuba] the last few months," Stevenson said. “This Includes at least IS Soviet 50-ton tanks, 10 Soviet assault gum, 15 Soviet 25-ton teaks, IS Soviet 70-miUimeter field gum, lour Soviet 122-milHmeter field gum and over 100 Soviet heavy machineguns. “Over 200 Soviet and Czechoslovak military advisers are in CUba, and over 150 Cuban military personnel have been sent to the (Soviet) bloc for training." Stevenson also read a long list of former Castro supporters who have fled Cuba. Roa offered no proof of his charges. After Stevenson’s dental, he said angrily that the American diplomat “did not rebut any of my statements.” Then he and his aides walked quickly out of the room as the committee turned to debate on the African development program proposed by the United States. ★ ★ ★ 4 The only news of the fighting came in the form of sharply conflicting claims issued by both sides. A X ★ The Pentagon refused to answer any questions about the Cuba situation, apparently seeking to avoid giving the Castro regime any possible basis for charges of U.S. military aggression. Congo Otiicers Agree on Control of Rebel Troops BRUSSELS. Belgium (AP) — The Belgian radio reported Monday night that Congolese army officers have reached an agreement placing the rebel troops at Antoine Gizenga under the authority of the central government in Leopoldville. ★ X X— The Congolese radio in Leopoldville reported the agreement was reached at Akte, a Small town in northern Oriental Province. X X X The agreement included a general cease fire in the smouldering civil war between the central government forces commanded by Maj. Gen. Joaeph Mobutu and the Lumumbist forces under Gen. Victor Lundula, The latter’s forces recognized Mobutu as their supreme commander. A X X There was no indication whether Mobutu and Lundula personally took part in the Akte meet- Fidel Seems Near End of Trail By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press News Analyst MIAMI, Da. - Fidel Castro'i days seem numbered as the ruler of Cuba, regardless of the success or failure of invading rebel forces. If the invasion achieves one of its major objectives — perhaps the most important of all—it will spark a wave of desertions from Castro’s forces., This could mean that Cuba might be spared |a long fratricidal civil war. Cuban sources In Miami admit success may hang on factor more than any other. For bt this respect, the invasii has been a calculated gamble. sspporters be- for less Hum the rebels anticipate, the Isvaston could (mil. But this would not necessarily save Fidel himself. He is rapidly becoming a liability to the [Communists who now dominate the island, and it is far from improbable that the Communists themselves would feel It expedient to devise some means of getting rid of him. HE’S BLUNDERED Castro’s loud blundering, which in two years has helped bring the .island’s economy to confused wreckage, has gotten In tbe way of the Communists. If the Communists are noted for anything, it is for their knack of organizing the power of a country and nailing it down. For the Conmuutists, It is Important that Cuba get economically organised sn that it can present n Better (ace te (he rest ef Latin America ns a revolt But technicians from the Communist Woe who have been trying to whip the economy into some sort of sanity have been reported recently giving ghost, unable to cope with the whims and caprices of the "maximum leader." A Cuba under Communist control might be much easier for Moscow to handle should Fidel disappear from the scene. Tbe Communists are expert at removing those who have become unnecessary without themselves taking the (dame. Even if the Invasion succeeds, the Russians may find themselves able to live with it. A counter-revolution In Cnba would give them an Issue with which to belabor the United States for a long time to come. It could also provide sparks for ‘harassing violence against other Latin American governments. The tone of Moscow's reactions to the invasion news hardly indicated an eagerness to risk World War III to save Fidel. X X # But the invasion would ha vs a tough time succeeding without the defections upon which the rebels lag. so heavily. They expect these desertions (ran the ranks of career men in the armjy, navy and air force. Yet it will require more than that. Much depends upon how solid Is Fidel’s hold upon the militia. That is made up of ordinary people, dragooned info long hpurt of marching, drilling and training on their own time. Man^r resented it,' and many may be of a mind to defect. put the militia also has a large number of fanatical young men and women who enjoy playing with guna and shaking their fists at the Yankees. TWO S39VdiflA0 OVH * THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 11,1961 S^trtinw IM Finn’s Split Proper Share of Insurance A Study committee the board of eupervii day that It found amount of comity by the H. W. Huttenloct of Pontiac, agent at many yean. The share, considered per cent of the county's poiktes, had lei Royal Oal visor Harry W. Horton to general the present ageat of vee- which it distributed to other agents (Huttenlocheri and which he retains Is Osk Supervisor Ourtfs Potter, who Shared with Horton la arj-lag the study. He was named chairman. He ms assisted by Supervisor John L. Carey of Springfield Township and Frank F. Webber, of Addison ’Your committee further found that the percentage of insurance Continue to Pick Lassiter Jurors 23 of a Prospective 75 ChaNongod Monday; Tears in Node's Eyes DETROIT 10—Hie murder trial of Mrs. NeOe Lassiter. 38, and Gordon Watson. 45, for the 1959 slaying of Mrs. Lassiter's husband, Parvtn, went into the second day of picking a 14-member jury today. Twenty-three of the 75 prospective Jurors who filled the courtroom of Circuit Court Judge Joseph G. Rashid Monday wen challenged. The prosecution challenged five and the defenee 10. Judge Rashid excused eight who admitted prejudice. challenges and the defense 40. Blonde Mrs. Lassiter of 19690 Beverly Road, Beverfy Hills and the dapper Watson were separated by one seat in the courtroom. TThey did not speak to each other. Than appeared in Mrs. Lassiter's eyes as the formal charges of first-degree murder and conspiracy to murder were read. * * * Lassiter, a RfQnd Oak auto dealer, sms found beaten, shot and robbed near Detroit's Wilkm Ron Airport on April 6. USB. Three Tennessee men pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in February of 1960 for the slaying. The state has charged Mrs. Lassiter and Watson, a former manager of Lassiter’s used ear let, with first-degree murder and conspiracy to murder. ♦ * * The prosecution contends Mrs. Lassiter and Watson were having an illicit love affair. Takes Command of W. Bloomfield Police Force WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — A former state policeman with 25 years of service has come out of retirement to take over the duties of police chief Warm Weather Returns to Most of the Nation By Ike Associated Preaa There were wet spots in the Northeast today, remnants of the wild spring storm that hit the Midwest over the weekend, but dry weather prevailed in moat other sections of the nation. A warming trend was reported in most ri the country. and snow showers dampened the Northeast area aa the storm center drifted northeastward into Lake Erie. The wet belt covered the extreme southern and lower Great Lakes region, moat of the Ohio Valley to the Appalachians and into west and northwest New York and moat of Maine. The Midwest storm, which left up to 20 ineben at snow in northern Minnesota and record deposits for the date in many anas, was Mamed for at least 26 deaths. Melvin Will, 54, ri 2440 Hoover Road, Union Lake, has been ap-to head the 4-member township police department. He succeeds William Van Meter, who will remain on the force as a patrolman. MU, who was commander of » Pontiac State Police Pwt r U years, retired as a ser- wMh the county to help eut dawn « liability laaaraaea easts. Horton wusat completely satisfied with the findings of the committee, which was aided by tile advice Of a Detroit insurance company official. Despite his saying it was “a fine report and a very fine study. Horton continued hie criticism of the board of auditors for not revealing figures on the program as he often bad requested. * * * After some parliamentary red-tape, the board approved Horton’s request that the auditors make available the names, addresses, and dollar amounts of all sub-agents under HatteMocher. “As M la a matter ef public record, I believe this tafomsutioa should ha given to ul dally and weekly aewspupen la fits area," Horton said. The board accepted the committee'* report, with Huntington Woods Supervisor Fred L. Yockey urging that more of the insurance policies be sold on a TV every three or four yean. All possible policies are sold on a bid basis. Potter replied. He said many policies cannot be sold this way. ■UTTENLOCHER BACKED The Pontiac delegation of supervisors lined up solidly behind Hut-teniocher, who was in the audience to hear the report, when Horton tried to add his request of a listing of secondary agents to the committee’s report. This later was ruled out of oxter. w * * “Is It then your summary that the county’s insurance is falriynnd squally spread?” Inquired William A. Ewart, one of the city's seven members of the board. “My answer is yes,” Potter replied. As a member of the state police he served at posts in East Lansing, Paw Paw and South Haven. He commanded the White Pigeon Post for two years until 1944 When he was promoted to sergeant and assigned to the Keo-go Harbor State Police Post, which later became the Pontiac Post i A A Will has spent the years since his retirement as a cabinet mak-continuing a woodworking hobby he had during his years with the state police. Dems Hope for OK on Wage Bill Tonight WASHINGTON IAP) - Senate Democratic leaders hope to passage of President Kennedy’s minimum wage bill by tonight But Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois says he's not so mire about the timetable for final action. Administration forces were mobilized to fight off all major amendments to the bill — a on Kennedy's legislative list. The Weather Fag U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly cloudy with a few sprinkles today, high 46. Fair aad cool tonight, low M. Wednesday mostly sunny and wanner. Mgh M. Winds northwest 10 to to p.h. foil tcmperati At • a m * Wind velocity » m - Direction: Northwest. Son sets Tuesday at 1:11 MM. Bum rites Wednesday at t 4ft a m. Moot eeta Tuesday at 10:M p.m. Moon rises Wednesday at Writ a m. TMa Bata In 8» Years « Baltimore a Bismarck Mendav to Posliae HIM temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature . Weather—4 inches 41 31 Minneapolis 2 40 ll Mew Orleans 1 4# 39 New York I 43 30 Pells ton < 41 M Phoenix I the county's torludtag a request for "• great -effort” ea the pert ef the But- To Kick Off Big Drive for YMCA Expansion The General Division of the Pontiac YMCA expansion program campaign will begin solicitations tomorrow, with a kickoff meeting Manned for 1:30 p.m. at the “I building. Mrs. William ,G. Wright, division chairman, has enlisted an organization of more than 200 women who will carry the appeal for $650,000 to improve and expand ”Y” facilities to 1,000 prospects in the Pontiac area. Tats by Robert M. Critch- by Horton — that the county operate Ha ewn self-insurance program. "We found that it would not be feasible to adopt such a program because the risks are too great and the amount of premiums now paid by the county would not warrant consideration of county self-insurance,’’ the report stated. A A A One of the recommendations was that money be set aside for more frequent appraisals of county properties. Alaug with the suggested safety H «s urged that the yean Instead of me ts further continuance of the program once It gets started. Liability Insurance on those members of the health department, the medical care facility and the tuberculosis sanatorium should be Increased to $200.000/1500,000 “to be consistent with other policies for general liability insurance carried by the county.” A A A 'We also urge a complete survey of present insurance coverage for false arrest in the sheriff’s department,’’ the report said. Site, Fund Raisers Picked for Hospital (Continued From Page One) Council and Hill-Burton, a federa grant agency. applied for grant Crittentoo has applied for a sizeable grant from Hill-Burton, but what federal funds will be available has not yet been determined. Other revisions of the initial announcement concern both estimated cost of the whole project, now pared from J5 million to $4 5 mil Hon, and the cost per bed. It first was indicated that the per-bed cost would be $25,000. That figure-now is $21,000 to $23,000 per bed, according to Sibery. The admhdstntsr reiterated »t the whole area to he served n*t Indicate interest la the H a'rrsncuco « s "*■*" ■■••pltal will have la he ts It Itenus M itl "*•* ,$V communities, it it TMe.Ctt* 41 a _ The municipalities to be served are Rochester, Utica and Troy, plus Oakland, Avon, Shelby and Sterling townships. ♦ A A Sibery also Indicated that tbs Crittenton Hospital Board will he expanded to indude repraeenttttoh from the Western Macomb -Eastern Oakland County area. One member already Is from Rochas ter. He is Howard L. McGregor Jr. The announcement of the pro-. Had location of a Crittenton branch hospital near Rochester tt n*M* NATIONAL WEATHER — Continued unseasonably cool weather wifi continue tonight on the Atlantic seaboard, in the Ohio valley and the Great Lakes area and In 0k Pacific nortbwest and the and central Rockies. "Sqpdtered snow flurries and rate showers are expected from the central Appalachians kite Mew England and to the northern and central Rockies. of effort by a group of Racboe people trying to get a community hospital for file ana. The tie-in ef die i _roup, known as Berthe Van Hoo-aen Inc., with the Detroit hospital, followed a series ef meetings bfo tween the two beards last fu. Tlie Day to Birmingham United Nations Chapter to Hear MSUO Doctor BIRMINGHAM—Dr. Edward J. Heubel ef the Michigan State University Oakland department of politics! science will bn the guest speaker Thursday at a pubHc meeting of the Oakland County Chapter ef the American Association for the United Nations. The meeting will be held at the Oommuntty House at $ p.m. The program he ewe ta a aeries iisnrtlteg the work of the IJHM- SCENE OF BLAST — T\vo sides of a recently-constructed power plant at Parkedate, Puke, Davis Cb.'s vaccine production center in Avon Township, were blown out yesterday when a boiler undergoing tests exploded. Then were no injuries. The cause of the explosion has net been determined nor was than any estimate at damage. The new power plant, built to house three bolters, two of which had not been installed, was to have supplied the entire 006-acre facility with power. Also working as team captains will be Mrs. James Moriseey, Mrs. Dorothy Brooks, Mrs. James E. GrayfaW, Mrs. KSith Clauser, Mrs. Duane M. Lemaus, Mrs. Fred Feekart, Mrs. Garth Sayers, Mrs. William Fox, and Mrs. James Nye. man, and Frederick J. Paste, be followed by distribution of assignments. Refreshments will be served. Arrangements have been made :o provide nursery facilities for children of the volunteer workers. Mrs. Wright has enlisted as group leaders to assist her: Mrs. Neil Wamerberger, Mrs. William Anderson, Mrs. Thomas Hollis, Charles Coppersmith, and Mrs. Walter Bamingham. These group leaders have talas: Mrs. Frederick J, Foote, Mrs. m. A. Benson, Mrs. Daniel Murphy Jr., Mrs. Robert Is-griff, Mrs. Al Watson, Mrs. Sidney Olson, Mn, G. W. Caches, Mrs. Thomas Barilo, Mrs. Raymsnd Mrs. Eogoae 1 Others are Mrs. Robert Shorey, Mrs. Robert Lazelle, Mrs. Elwood M. Bigler, Mrs. Harold MacDonald, Mrs. Duane Miller, Mrs. New-Skillm&n, Mrs. C. J. Odell, Mrs. Donald Porritt, and Mrs. Donald MacMillan. Halt Cuban Invasion, K Tells Kennedy (Continued From Page (tee) American demonstrations from Moscow to South America. Pro-Castro groups picketed outside the United Nations in New York. eft Qtoal" smashed windows at the IIA Embassy la Moscow with a barrage of racks. The embassy estimated the crowds at from 3,000 to 5,000. The crowds seemed somewhat smaller to reporters. Communists and other leftists throughout In tin America wen rising to support the Castro regime, white moderates waited to find out what wu going on before taking a stand. VIOLENCE Of • NATIONS Outbreaks of violence — riots or bombings — wen reported in five of Latin America’s 20 countries, and in Chile the leftist-dominated CUT Union Federation ordered a 24-hour general strike Wednesday. At least 20 persons were injured in the Castrotte outbreaks. la New Yerit, a mob ef 466 pro-Castro demonstrators charged against two paMcsmen In Times Square Monday right an they were arresting twn ri the mart W. E. C. Hl'THWAITE Elected to Head YM Directors W. E. C. Huthwaite in Post for Year Following Berkeley E. Voss The policeman, slightly injured, managed to gat their prisoners into a radio car. The 400 demonstrators were the remnants of a crowd of about 1,000 who had picketed earlier outside the United Nations. With Cuba itself blacked out for 11 newsman swept those of the Communist Woe, news «f the fighting was confined to sketchy claims by the Cuban radio and by anti-Castro spokesmen abroad. Castro tesued a terns commurfl-|ue at 12:56 a.m. “The revolutionary (Castro) troops continue to fight hsratenl-ty In sentkwest Las Villas Prove Observers in Miami considered it significant that the usually boaatful Paints Crimes by Eichmann Prosecutor Trembles os He Spells Out Actions Worse Than Murder By RELMAN MORIN JERUSALEM Iff - Israel's Attorney General Gideon Hausner, using the map of Europe as his canvas, completed the vast picture today of the terrible World War II ordeal of the Jews and made Adolph Eichmann the central figure in the blood-red painting. Hausner did not ask the death penalty for Eichmann as he ended Ids opening statement. But the law under which the former Gestapo officer is being tried provides it automatically for conviction on seven of the 15 counts in the Indictment against him. "Adolf Eichmann’s guilt lies ta At the annual meeting of the Pontiac YMCA yesterday, W. E, C. Huthwaite, 527 W. Iroquois Rd. elected president of the board of directors for a one-year term. A A A He succeeds Berkeley E. Voss, 4806 Keithdale Lane, Bloomfield Township. Other officers, all elected for ana year, are: Ear! A. Maxwell, 5*05 Lasher Ed., Bloom- Cross, IMS N. Hammond Lake Dr., West Bloem-field Township, treasurer: Thomas Hsrwtta, Mi James K Blvd., secretary; aad Edward Barrett, 4M1 Ptae Tree Trail, Bloom field Township, trust officer. Elected to the board of directors lor three-year terms were Richard Flahar, Thomas HorwltZ, James Jenkins, Earl A. Maxwell, Gordon McLeod, Berkeley Vom, Mac T. Whitfield and Writer K. Willman. * * * The following were elected serve three-year terms on the committee of management of the Rochester branch ef the Pontiac Donald Baldwin, Robert Jeran, Dr. Richard G. Brooks, Herman Kllx, Willis Plasaey and John Wurges. A trampoline exhibition followed the business meeting. Participants John LaMotte, Gary Collins, Barbara McClure, fifickl King and Nlte Lindman. * * * Luncheon eras served by the Ex-Loos Premier Toljtt With Nikita, Gromyko vufon at Ctiba by revslatteeary forces eerii complicate a settlement of Lass. tion aad exeoatisn of tee crimes as charged ta the Indictment," 1 ta a voice trem- We shall prove that his deeds were crimes against the Jewish people, crimes against humanity, and war crimes.” Etehmann, as before, sat utterly HI, unblinking, showing no expression whatever. County by county, city by city, from death camp to death camp, Hausner traced the fearful chain of events that ted to the annihilation of six million Jews during World War H at the hands of the Nazis. He spelled it out in detail even more horrifying than in the first two-thirds of his statement Monday. Tristate Meeting of Police Branch in City This Week A tristate conference of the Associated Police Communication Officers, Inc., (APCO) will be held at the Waldron Hotel Thursday and Friday. More than 100 communications specialists from law enforcement agencies in Michigan, Indiana and Ohio wifi attend. Pittman of the Paatlae Police Department is sergeant-at-arms ef the Michigan chapter. Speakers at the two-day conclave rill indude R. J. Evans, national president of APCO, a radio engineer at Michigan State Police headquarters; A. P. Milter, regional director of the Office of Civil Defense Mobilization; and E. C. Dan-staedt, superintendent of municipal communications for Detroit A banquet Friday evening will feature a talk by Nicholas (Rad) Jones, retired major league terns active In I national el Dr. Hariri's address is entitled "Our Relations in Latin America and the Work of the Organization of American States.'' He has first hand knowledge of the Latin American countries and their political backgrounds. Dr. Heubel studied at the National University of Mexico In Mexico City in 1966 and sms a visiting Fuibright lecturer at the University of Buenos Airea in 1987 on mhjects dealing with North American government and its political system. He recently transferred to MSUO from the faculty at Wayne State University, haring received his doctor’s degree at the University of Minnesota in 1965. The Alter Society of Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Church, 32460 Pierce SL, will hold Its annual Spring rummage sale Friday in tee church social hall from 9 a.m. to 4 p m. St. Anthony’s and St Gerard's guilds are cosponsors of the sate. Thom a* W. Davison Service far Thomas W. Davila, 90, of 73$ Larchtea Drive, will be 1 p.m. Thursday at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in Acacia Park Cemetery. Mr. Davison died yesterday in Wayne County General Hospital from injuries sustained April 10 in an automobile accident Wayne County. He wu a commercial artist in Detroit and had his office Scarab Club. i a member of the Reorganized Church of the Latter Day Saints, Royal Oak, and president of the Men's Club at the nirch. He wu on the board of directors of tiie Scarab Club and a member of Kilwinning Lodge 64. F&AM, London, Oftt, tee Scottish Rite of Detroit and the Moslem Shrine, Detroit. Surviving are his wife Stella; four daughters, Mn. Pari Kelley of Clawson, Mrs. Harold Kelley of Royal Oak, Mrs. Alfred B. Worde ri Kalamazoo and Bin. George Ku ri Berkley; a son, Daniel W. of im; two sisters and 10 grandchildren. PUIp J.Kent Service for Philip J. Kent, 70, ri 445 Arlington Road, will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at it. James Episcopal Churls. Burial will be to White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Kent died Sunday in Henry Ford Hospital Detroit, Mowing a long illness. He wu chief engineer of the Electrical Division ri Chrysler Cbrp. until his retirement to 1956. He held that post 30 yqars. Since his retirement, he hu served u a consulting englnser for ths Stew-art-Wamer Carp. A Birmingham resident 35 years, he was • member ef a number ri national and international professional electrical and automotive He represented tfre society of Automotive Engineers to the Army teat operation “Task Force Frigid” conducted to Fairbanks, Alaska in 1917. Mr. Kent also wu a member ol the Greater Detroit Board ri Oom-Bconomlc Club of Detroit. Detroit Athletic drit, Orchard Lake Country Club, Thu Kappa Epsilon, Detroit Consistory and the Moslem Temple . Surviving are Ms wife Kather- to XL} a daughter, Mrs. Marcae Power; two eons, William R. end Richard E.; and a brother Frank D. His body is at the Bril Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Cole Requiem Mass tor Bernard V. Cole, 46, ri 486 Wishbone Lane. Bloomfield Hills, will be said 10 a.m. tomorrow at SL Hugo ri the Hills Church. Mr. Ode died Saturday in William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. He wu the owner ri the Detroit agency of Mutual Life Iuurance Co. of New York. Surviving are his wife Mary; five daughters, Mary, Margaret. Martha, Nancy and Julie; and three sons, Paul, Mark and Thom- 1, His body is at the Ted C. Sullivan Funeral Home, 15800 Fenkell Rend, Detroit. Lesle M. Sohafbuoh Service tor Leslie M. Schafbuch, 57, ri 23011W. 13-MUe Road, Bingham Farms, will be 1 p.m. Friday tee Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Scvfaafboch, a substation operator for the Detroit Edison Cb., died today after a long illness at the Detroit Osteopathic Hospital, Highland Park. He wu a member ri the Multi-Lakes Conservation Association, Detroit Edison Rifle Club and the Knights of ^»ythiss, Marengo (Iowa) Lodge No. 30. Surviving besides his wife Marie sue a am, Robert ri Madison Heights; a daughter, Mrs. Richard Lappin ri Detroit; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grover Schafbuch of Morenga, Iowa; and six grandchildren. James Gardner to Head Tax Allocation Board Former Commerce Township Supervisor James L. Gardner wu elected yesterday chairman of the 1961 Oakland County Tax Allocation Board. The six-member board, which each year must split up the 15-miH property tax limitation between the county, schools and townships, also set hearing dates on 1962 budgets. ■Up budgets «U be hsM May IS. May U aad for the county aad the county board ef education’s special education terry. It will bo May 18. Preliminary rates will be sel May 15, according to Julia Mad-dock, secretary to the board. Final hearings will be May 22, 23 and 31. with the final enter of tax rates bring issued May 26. The board of supervisors approved by a vote of 70-4 yesterday sending to the allocation board, a $14,775,941 county budget requiring 5.48 mills ri the limitation. Several ri the opponents objected to Its else - fl,175,200 more thaa'the 1981 county operating budget — sad accumulated sur- Final approval cornu in the fall. Gardner, 75, ri 810 Sleeth Road, didn't attend Monday’s half-hour organization meeting. He reportedly wu In California. He succeeds Philip E. Rowston, Pontiac mayor and former member ri the tax brnrd. * * * Besides Gardner, members of the board are Win J. Oliver, Southfield school board member; Wiliam H. Taylor Jr„ a Pontiac city commissioner; Robert Y. Moore, chair-of the board ri auditors; Charles A. Sparks, county treasurer; and William J. Emerson, superintendent ri county public shoots. Gardner hu served on the board since 195$. He retired from the board of supervisors to 1967 after serving 22 years. Yon Want to Join? Auxiliary Police Get Going Applications are now being ac- such as tee Christmas season, Kor-cepted for membership in the new-Ipcruted Auxiliary Police Dtvi-rion ri the Pontiac Police Depart-\ a propound 100-man force It urfll augment the city’s rag* ular policemen on Police Chief Joseph Korea said that all former police reservists must submit new applications to become eligible for (Ms new group. Three-hour, once a week training seesione are planned, with auxiliaries dated to take three bade Koran said. Evening clames will be scheduled and, tf sufficient interest to dwwn, tog dames, Certificates will be issued to recruits in the auxiliary von com* pletion ri training courses. special duly or ta-serrtCO train-teg yearly. Auxiliaries wifi be responsible for obtaining designated uniforms, but will be Issued certain equipment by tti Polioe Department During training, applicants will not be permitted to carry weap- pistol range, and auxiliaries will not participate in any geekl duty The new auxiliary police will be wad ee civilian defenee personnel in the event of ttor natural disaster as wdl as taking ‘ police < duties ‘' " tastes anaa hweftos Bst wM he it reside within a 10-mile radius ri Huron and Saginaw streets and have resided to Oakland County at teast a year. AAA Applicants must he between 35 knd SO years ri age- The depart- sona between the ages of 50 and M will be accepted on an individ- Application blanks and further information war be obtains il from Police U- Raymond XL Meggitt, office in the Public Safety Building. Full panel . . hardwood DOUBLE DROP SIDE 7-YEAR CRIB This smart crib has double drop sides, plastic teething rails and decol trim. Wax birch. National^tckitd Innerspring Mattress Reg. 12.95 *10” Buy Your Baby's Flexible CCC Charge Tropical Weight Sleoptrs, 1-4 » $177 Soft Cotton Roc. Blankets '•*’ 2'“’1 Fluffy Cotton Crib Blankets is 2f~*3 Why PCTCR PAH HONEYCOMB' is the perfect bra for you... Soft one-piece stretch terry 'TAKE BABY HOME" SUIT Reg. 2.98 Here's tha ideal little euit to take baby home from tha hospital in, and to wear for months afterward! I n pretty pastels, sites 6 mo. to t year. $J99 INFANTS' DEFT. . . . SECOND FLOOR Famous Notional Brand RECLINING STROLLER Reg. 14.98 famous brand stroller has adjustable fringed canopy,, itrest and safety strap and net in flay plaids. Back r Nursery Choir is *2" Sturdy birch chair with chamber. Decal trim. Corduroy Crawlers is 2<-*3 Snap crot in plaids Sites S, M, L. Cotton Fitted Crib Sheets 111 Rftf Values OO Smooth Sanforised cotton. Fits 7-year crib. In white. Infonts' Bassinettes IS by 30''. Folds for 11 o r a,g e. Bassinette pad 2.98 1. Elasto-netT" rim of cup . EXPANDS AND CONTRACT! le conform with every move you make) 2. Elasto-net "give" ENDS DISCOMFORT" end irritation from fabric preeeurael heaps straps, band, cupe in piece! S. Elasto-net stretch ADAPTS TO PERIODIC CHANGES in bust measurement!. 4. Elasto-net SORT smootn, ttiten-tree HIDDEN TREASURE* cupt-the Ideal sweeter bra! 3.95 ■e My new fire truck Will be on display and its equipment will ha demonstrated by volunteer Other features of the fair include o snack bar, pony rides, games, a country .store, a white elephant gale and movies. .* * * Mrs. John Dockey and Mrs. Orlando Smith are cochatrmea of the event / Mid-Term Opening April 24 Day, Half-Day, and Evening Sessions Gregg Shorthand Spendwriting Shorthand Typewriting r Junior Accounting ■ Higher Accounting Businott Administration Comptometer 0 Speciol Subjects Art Available - VETERAN APPROVED Pontiac Business Institute, Inc. T W. Lawtence St. Phone PE 3-7028 -Training far Business Careers Since ISM" Private School; to Observe Its EigiithYear ADDISON TOWNSHIP — Kingsbury School hen will observe ft* eighth anniversary Sunday with an open bouse from 2 to 5 p.m., Richard H. Delano, director, Sh-nounced today. Thg private school at 29W Hos-ner Road was founded in 1953 and bad an enrollment then of IS students In classes from UaReigcrtcn through the eighth grade, ' * Since then a ninth pdle has been added and enrolment - has increased to SO pupils. Kingsbury currently Craws Its student body tram the area within the triangle tanned by Clnihatan-Reeheeter-Lnpeer and the IntcrnuMlate communities at Oxford, Dryden, Almost, * # • * Mrs. Isabelle Palms Buckley, whose education plan is followed at the school, will be a guest at the open house tea. Mrs. Buckley, a native Detroiter, will travel here from Los Angeles. Romeo, Washington, Lake Orion Rochester School Board to Ask Vote on Six Mills ROCHESTER — The Rochester Board of Education last night decided to ask voters to approve a six-mill operational tax for three years fat the regular school election June 12, Hie mlllage request, which represents a four-mill Increase over the present operational levy, will be needed to staff and maintain 20 newly constructed classrooms,: acoonfing to board members. A school bus is operated from Rochester serving Washington and Romeo and another from Oarkston ring Ortonville, Lake Orion and seryini Oxford OUR 24th ANNIVERSARY SALE FINE FURNITURE PRICED CLOSER TO FACTORY COST • Convenient Terms • Careful Free Delivery • Open Friday Evening* _ FURNITURE 144 OAKLAND AVE. More Dates for School at Rochester Increase Not Large This other two nr la the June mills were pari v** this year's operational levy of tt.1T rattle. The two mills went off the rolls with the last tax spread. In order to tourer the total tpx rate for property owners in die school district, the board plane reduce the debt service levy from 10 to 8 mills. ONLY TWO MILLS The Increase in the over-all school taxes then will be only two mills, a school board representative said today. Besides the extra costa resulting from opening new classrooms, the school board said more operational funds were needed in order to pay a higher salary schedule approved for teachers in the system last PRESCRIPTIONS P RESCRtmONS ROFESSIONALLY INFECT ROPERLY PERRY DRUGS hit L RM. 1251 RoMwia •t Parry at TpaMaati FE 2-0254 FE 24354 mltted t» the board last night may result in higher salaries far "superior teachers” la die district. , A special committee representing the bchopi board; administration, and teachers recommended a j merit pay plan which would give 'superior" teachers with master's degrees and 12 years experience annual increases of $300. Other teachers included in -the merit pay system who ate below the mambnum ranking on the salary schedule would receive pay boosts of $200 yearly If their work was deemed superior. In the 1961-62 budget proposed by the school board last night, the largest expenditure was $1,163,193 for instruction costs. The total anticipated budget of $2,023,293 will be submitted for final approval to the * Oakland County Tax Allocation Board. Operational costs were set at 123,000 In the tentative budget. The third highest figure expected for the next school year was $114,-900 for transportation. Henry Purdy, current president of the board, said last night he would seek re-election to his third term to the June election. Dr. Sarah Van Hoosen Jones, who holds the other position which will be open in the election, announced she will retire after serving 35 years on the board. ♦ * >' Mrs. Whipple said that she and •r art consultants, Sue Preston and Julius Kusey, cooperate with the classroom teachers in daily work and on these special events. * * .0 The schools and dates for forthcoming art Shows and open houses are Avon—Brooklands, tomorrow; Meadow Brook, April 25; Hamlin, April 27; Harrison—Central, May 4; Goodward, May 8; and Baldwin, May 10. Expact 200 Women KALAMAZOO —A^out 200 Michigan mothers are expected to attend the annual state conven-'i It ion here of the Mothers of World' War II. It starts Wednesday. There is a very good chance that POLIO will strike this Summer. Afe you ready for It? Are your children? Babies, if there ere say at home? The time to prepare to now and the way to do it to to arrange for your POLIO shots. Cell your local physician or local health department for information. This to particularly important for young parents and babies! Make arrangements today and be on the safe si da Remember, no one to too young or too old to gat POLIO. Be safe and (no from worry. It only takes minutes of your tints. h * '.* Don't tsks a ohsnes-tsks year polls shott The Pontiac Press WANT A DREAM KITCHEN? ...WELL FINANCE IT! You con start an improvement or repair; pro/ect at your house right away! You con borrow up to $3,500 with three years in ' which Id pay it back, low bank rates, liberal terms, plus life insurance of ho extra cost. Ask a contractor or building supply dealer for on estimote, then see Pontiac State Bank. You don't have to be a customer. You don't have to have your home paid for. No down Davment. W. Bloomfield PIA to Install Officers WEST BLOOMFIELp TOWNSHIP — Recently elected officers of th£ West Bloomfield High | School Parent-Teacher Associa-will be installed Thursday at the 8 p.m. meeting of the organization. The officers bring installed include Mrs. Robert Hollister, president; Mrs. Wayne Smith, mother | vice president; William Schenck, j father vice president; and David Vivian, teacher vice president. Others taking office are Mrs. James Dunn, recording secretory; Nila Cooking ham. corresponding ^secretary; and John Buchanan, j treasurer. . j A "showcase" of curriculum ; achievements will be pesented at the meeting by seventh through i 12th grade students. j Commerce Methodists Plan Saturday Dinner COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - The women of Commerce Methodist Church, under the direction of the Women’s Society of Christian Service, will hold a smorgasbord dinner Saturday from 5:30 to 8 I p.m. go toward faralshlag the dining room at the church. The church Is at HIS W. Commerce Road. Mrs. Robert Lind, president of j the WSCS, to chairman of the program. Tickets can fie obtained from Mrs. Wilbert Horton of 1720 S. Commerce Road. Building ' Mrer Remodeling? DOWAGIAC hatvring LIFETIME WARRANTY * ICONOMY * COMPORT * EFFICIENCY BOYS’ JEANS IN SUM REGULAR ’N HUSKY SIZES Hefty 13%-ounce cotton denims in proportion - fit sizes. Western styled with plenty of action-free comfort. Reinforced at points of strain. Fully Sanforized®! 9 :M THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1961 it Wasn't the Proper Place An antique gun collection is of'special interest to men and boys joining the admiring crowds at All Saints Episcopal Chords. Bruce Meixsett of Seneca Street set up this popular display for the show which continues to 10 this evening, Wednesday and Tkurs-i day. Golden Age Club Plans Big Evening The Golden Age Club of Waterford will meet at 6:30 Friday at the Community Center for a cooperative dinner. Travel mpviea in color will be shown and the evening will cloae with card games and dancing- Those who attend should bring table service and a dish to pass. Xi Beta Beta Picks Officers, Has Program 3Q Beta flfte Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi '"'Sorority' elected officers at the. April business meeting at Hotel Waldron. for area residents who attended today's opening of the ninth annual antique show and sale at All Saints Episcopal Church. Eighteen outstanding dealers from throughout the state have contributed for the show's many exhibits. Clad in calico prints tsvo young women from yesteryear tend an old-fashioned cradle in an early American setting. Mary Shadier of Ottawa Drive (left) and Mary Jo Whitfield, Oak-wood Street, presented this quaint scene Q: I have recently become engaged and my parents would like very much to invite my fiance's parents to dinner. My fiance has two sisters and a brother living at home, and I would like to know U it is necessary that they be included in the invitation. Our apart- Steer dear of Faulty Appraisal Jeanette Cockle of Miami Road joined women of the All Saints parish in donning old fashioned finery for the opening of the ninth annual antique show and sale today. Homemade goodies and meals, cooked and served by the church women, Ore available at the tea room overlooking the event, afwell as in the dining room. Doors are open at 11 a. m. daily. Mrs. John Whitehead is incoming president; Mrs. William Long, vice president; Mrs. Clarence Ball, recording secretary; Mrs. Walter Hiller, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Fred Rigotti, treasurer, and Mrs. E. L. Sturdy, council delegate. * * .it * They will be installed at the Founders’ Day Banquet at Edgewood Country Club April 36- Following the "enjoyment of art” theme for the month, Mrs., Long spoke on “The Various Man” and Mrs. Tom Ogden discussed enjoyment of nature. Mrs. H. G. Richardson showed color slides of Norwegian and Swedish landscapes. All Mates Don't Pipe Same Tune Calvary Baptist Missionary Unit Meeting Tonight The Women’s Fellowship Missionary Group of die Calvary Baptist Church, Waterford Township, will meet at 7:30 this evening at the church. DEAR ABBY: ! recently had a date with a gentleman —at least I thought he was. I am in my middle 40* and he is in his early 50s. (It was a date arranged by mutual Mends.) _ When we got to the .restaurant, I didn’t wait for 'him to open the car door for me. I just opened it myself arid hopped out. He said, “A LADY always gives her escort the opportunity to . be a gentle- DEAR ABBY. Wed. St Valentine’s Day came and went and so did Easter with not so he doesn’t drink, chase or curse. He work's . hard and is' a good church-going family man. But do you think 1 am asking too much to want a token of his affection to show my friends now and then? WAITING AND HOPING DEAR WAITING: A man shows his “affection” to his wife by being a good family man 365 days of the year. Dcn’t' confuse his lack of sentimentality with lack of love. Some men are not the “remembering" kind, but their love is deep and constant. rather cramped for space. A: It will not be necessary to invite the sisters or the brother, but do have your fiance explain to them your reason for not being able to include them. PTAs.in Action to which the public has been invited. Homeroom mothers from the sixth grade classes will serve refreshments. The meeting begins at 7:30 p.m. in the multipurpose room. WEVEX l The city’s centennial film “The Pontiac Story of Progress and Promise” will be shown at Thursday’s Wever PTA meeting at 7:30 p.m. Members will gather in tee school gymnasium. Refreshments will be served by the mothers from Mrs. Robert Peterson’s fourth grade class. OWEN Oden PTA has slated a 2:30 p.m. meeting Wednesday at the school. Mrs. Amos Hoolihan has announced that a film, produced by the Michigan Education Association concerning curricu-1 u m s in the elementary schools, will follow a brief business session. The film, "Rockin', Reactin' and 'Rithmetic” was filmed fas Pontiac's Webster School. Mrs. George Kennedy of the First Baptist Church, recently returned from the Congo, will show slides of mission work. The spec&l project for April will be assisting the, Rev^ and Mrs. Donald Herweyer, now serving in Guatemala, with language studies. * W * Mrs. 'Jerry Hayward and Mrs. Herbert Smith will -serve Malkim School’s Parent-Teacher Association will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday in the school multipurpose room. A "Birthday Party for All” will be featured at the Fathers’ Night cooperative dinner under chairmanship of Mrs. Daniel Pinfamo. Lester Pitts, father vice president, is chairman for the program. The film "Monsa Italian Car Races” will be shown following {he dinner. A talk by George Caronis from tiie Pontiac Youth Assistance Office on juvenile protection also is on the program. Square Set Club to Dance April 29 The last regular dance Saturday for the Square Set Dance Club will open with a workshop at S:30 p.m. conducted by Jim Thompson at Herrington School. A dinner dance is set for Anril 29 at 6:45 p.m. at Roose-velt Temple on State Street Now this man is from Virginia and be did a lot of talk-• ing about his fine Southern background. Then he threw in' some cracks about jpw refined and feminine the Southern ladies were. I was bom in Brooklyn and am proud of it. Should I have said, "Drop dead, you-all?” How ' would you have handled it? FROM BROOKLYN DEAR" FROM BROOKLYN: You should have satil nothing, and thanked him for a lovely evening—and a short one. scholarship for a college student this year. A hair dryer has been ordered for the women patients at' Pontiac State Hospital Met Contralto at Symphony Here Tonight . The appearance of Garamae Times, colorful Metropolitan Opera contralto, will close the eighth season for Pontiac Symphony Orchestra at 9:30 this evening in Pontiac Northern High School. The program will conclude Symphony Week udiich has been proclaimed by Mayor Philip E. Rowston. Your choice of Rice Cereal, Barley, Oatmeal, Mixed Cereal tod High Protein Cereal. Jni5wt • lot of exciting1 tBfogjnPi' changes in a baby, f Hand skills begin to come to the fore. Achievements in sitting, moving apd cooing appear by tee | score. Gentle encouragement on your part now, will kelp speed baby’s progress by providing incentive. Point to remember: try not to urge baby beyoad his capabilities. . Physical activity increases rapidly at the 6-month stage and so does the need for ea-ergy. Gerber Baby aypH| Cereals are rich 1 in energy • giving Iwu i calories, plus IdBlmv blood• building j iron. (6 table-u jV spoons give your 3 darling more than 100% of the Recommended Daily Dietary Allowance for iron.) In addition, Gerber Cereals are enriched with important B-vttamint and calcium. Attend monthstaga,yourbaby’t day to thy appetite may wane a bit. This appetite lag may be caused by too much ex- I , . 1 citement. teething 1 • • 1 or just plain lack or hunger. Favor- he foods are in K- —-^3 order now and plenty of variety ^ fas color and kinds of food. Babies do respond to s change of taste from meal to meal. DEAR ABBY: I am only 15 but I would like to apeak from knowledge and experience. I think the advice you. gave-"In Love In Korea"—to wait until he got back to the states before marrying the girl he fell in love with over there—was the best advice that could be given to anyone. I know someone who was sent'oversew for Unde Sam. He met a ghi there and married her a few weeks later. Now they have a family. But there is no love in the family because the parents do not get along. They can't separate for religious reasons. You may say, “How do you. know so much about the family?" Well, 1 will tell you how. The family is mine. The "ftrl" is my mother, and the “hoy” it my father. I don’t’ any that all overseas marriages don't work, but ours is an example of one that didn't, and I am living ip a family without love, or the knowledge of what a real family should be like. Thank you, Abby, for warning others. You could have done no better. ONE WHO KNOWS Yes, Abby will answer your letter personally if you write to ABBY, Box 3365, Beverly Hills, Calif., and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Mothers from the rooms of Mra. Edward Booth. Mrs. Ronald Gilmore and Mayme My-att will serve. They are Mrs. Donald Houle. Mrs. John Lake, Mrs. Anthony Stadler, Mrs. James Thomas, Mrs. Stanley Boyd and Mr*. Edsel Malkim. Mrs. Rudy Pfeiffer, Mrs. Ack Bridger, Mrs. Clarence Ball, Mra. William Huston, Mrs. Albert Giapdelaine and Mrs. Edmond Watkins also will serve. Birthday centerpieces have been made by fourth graders. cRoroor Highlighting Thursday's Cro-foot School PTA meetingwill be a progress report of the five-state Airborne Educational Television Program bring financed by the Ford Foundation with the cooperation of Purdue University and West-inghouse Corporation. John Barson, area coordinator of the program for the pilot schools and a professor at Wayne State University, will be tiie speaker. A spokesman for the PTA reposts that it la anticipated some thirty million pupils, including Pontiac children, will be reached by the project. * In addition to three favorite arias from the opera “Carmen,’’ Mias Turner will sing “Howsoever They May Revile Me," from Handal’a “Berenice;’' “Songs My - Mother Taught Me," Dvorak; and Schubert's "Der Erl Konig.” Schubert’s "Unfinished Symphony” and conductor Francesco DiBlasi's arrangement of Chopin’s “Prelude in E Minor” wil) be among the symphony’s selections for the program. Student tickets and Individ- New PTA officer* are Mra. Richard Butler, president; Mrs. Ralph Bowers, first vice president; Mrs. Charles Chamberlain, second vice president; John Newman, father vi c a president; Mrs. James Scott, teacher vice • president; Mrs. Martin LaBrie, secretary; and Mrs. Rodger King, treasurer. Mrs. Hoolihan. is historian. Appetites usually rise 'a shine when you sphrk baby’s menus with Gerber Baby Foods. Over 100 strained and junior varieties so you can pick sad choose IS^pl to your heart’s KahU content and baby's continued delight Among tiie TjIk*T Gerber deice- QHJ tablet: the new Ham High Meat mUB Dinner. Garden ‘ Vegetables, Chicken, Applesauce and Apricots. Gerber Baby Foods, Fremont, Michigan. As far eating enjoyment Gerber Cereals have bland but distinctive flavors aad s dreamy, creamy texture when mixed with formula or milk. For you: they stir to smooth perfection in seconds. Alma Cantrell to Wed in June by Alma Mae Cantrell of Baldwin Avenue and Earl B. Davit, son at Mrs. Albert Davis of Pearisburg, Va., and the late Mr. Davis. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mrs. Ann Cantrell of Holly and LorigiA. Cantrell of St. Louis. Mo. Election Tonight by Study Group The Wever pre-school study, group will elect officers in the school library at 7 this evening. Rn. Morris Hall has been nominated as chairman, Mra. ! Ronald Bunker, cochairman; and Mrs. Bract Richards, secretary-treasurer. lire. Rektord Hagood, teacher, will talk with the pre school Metropolitan Opera contralto Claramae Turner, guest artist farJjhis pvening's corlcert by the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra, is pictured at rehearsal Monday evening in Portia): Northern High School. Miss Turners selections will include three arias from Biset's "Carmen."' . Installation of officers will be conducted at the, meeting the style center of Pontiac Showing the Captivating 5 REUPHOLSTERING S I . From ELLIOTTS J SPECIAL PERMANENT OFFER 828 N. Main St., Rochester • Open Friday 'til 9:00 OL 1-8166 W e Fashion Set COMPLETE ETRAORDINARY SPECIAL *25.00 Permanent Now $12*0 Outstanding Staff of Experts to Serve You Ne Appointment Naadsd Opee Friday 18 g pjg. Beauty Salon fe 5-9257 Whan your furniture arrives at Elliott's, expert workmen Strip It to the .bare .wood. Then with ail the skill that year* of experience can provide, your new furniture is created, tow can be assured of quality when dealing with EIHotfs. It N. SAGINAW/ Between Lawrence aad Pike St. FLY FREE TO LAS VEGAS! fill / . I SumR - J iTHE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1961 I If roost Americans are showing! little interest in Kennedy's proposals — because, under No. 2 above, they are comfortable and feel no urgency—then this is a complacency which has been a constant American condition for some time. A good example is the American reaction to the Soviet achievements in apace. This country was shocked in 1967 when the Soviet Union Credits when the Soviet Union fired its first Sputn^c into whit. Briefly, there was intensive soul-searching on why this country hadn’t been first. Then the nation relaxed again. Two years later it seemed hardly disturbed when the Russians hit the moon. Now again there has been some hand-wringing in Congress because the Soviets put die first man into space last week. But there’s not much excitement. There is one good explanation] i why ’Kennedy hasn’t done .more Presidential Role Put Professional DECORATOR Folds In Plain Draperies CALL K 4-3365 •Wo guarantee no shrinkage • Uniformly spaced — richly styled People Note JFK More as a Person BUDMAN’S 1, Kennedy is Increasingly pop- not the kind that stir up enthusi-asm''or controversy. Kennedy's programs, except for medical care, are not even tinged with newness but are either routine, like his budget message, or extensions of programs long In existence, .like raising minimum pay ^ or extending unemployment pay. ^ 1. Kennedy, after his early grim Even without radio fireside )n. and urgent warnings, has shoveled chats, President Franklin D. /a. out his programs with far too lit- Roosevelt’s early New Deal pro-tie explanation to the people—say grams would have aroused both in a TV talk—to get broad public enthusiasm ahd controversy for - support two of the three reasons which •P 2. Or; most Americans, except don't seem to be applying in Ken-Jithe unemployed, don’t fed much nedy’s case. -g urgency themselves because they The country in those days was ■jare not hurting' for matey or com-: in desperate need, with everyone ■ forts. Their inclination, without I affected by the president’s pro-. ■ White House prodding, is to rqck grams. The programs themselves, 5 along. although conservative by Euro- 'S S. Or, his programs, except for pesn standards, were new and al-5 medical care for the aged, arelmost revolutionary for America. * MAIN CLEANERS * UNIT STEP ALSO C::*'-’’ CUSTOM RAILING WHY WAIT! Enjoy it now at fantastic factory savings! At BudmanY you deal DIRECT—- No Dealers .. , No Middlemen ... No Wholesalers to add to your costs, YOU SAVE THE DIFFERENCE? Plus sensational Budman Credit Terms. Fey Nothing at AH . . . 'til Nsxt Winter! • sure on Congress). He has been an extremely busy president. I He has been firing proposals at] Congress in a steady stream. Each requires a lot of his time for consultation, examination andj preparation: In addition, he has! ‘had to spend a big part of efforts on foreign affairs. The President, after 14 years in Congress, knows the ropes. He has Ibeen pulling all the traditional! tones — phoning individual mem-j hers of Congress in behalf of his programs, talking with senators and representatives at the White House, sending his aides to die Canitol to put on heat. But Congress has been in no rush to comply with his wishesj While he may get much in prin-| dole of what he asked, the individual programs he urged may come out only a-shadow of whatl he proposed. For a Step in Beauty CHECK THESE FEATURES: • Ons-Piece Construction Stops Constipation Due to “Aging Colon” New laxative discovery re-creates 3 essentials for normal regularity As you srow older, the imcmil otut- (I) Colon aid moisturizes dry, des of your cokm wall also age, lost hardened waste for easy passage with-»he strength that propels waste from out pain or strain. (2) Colon aids the body. Stagnant bowel contents be- unequalled rebulking action helps re-•ome so dry and shruakau that (hey lone flabby colon muscles. (3) And fail to stimulate the urge to purge. Colonaid acts gently, on the nerve Relief, doctors say, lies in a new reflexes that stimulate the vital “mass laxative principle. Old-style bulks and movement*’ of your lower colon, moistened may create gas, take 1 or Colonaid relieves even chronic 4 day* for relief. Oldwtyle salts and constipation overnight; is so gentle it drugs cramp and gripe the entire was hospital proved safe even for ex-system. Of all laxatives, only new pecum mothers. And Colonaid won’t Colonaid gives you Its special 3-way interfere with absorption pf vitamins relief that works only on the lower or other food nutrients. Get Colonaid colon (area of constipation) today) introductory sue IK n n« vravgr Miywiwri! Safety Tread Reduces Slipping UP TO 42 SQ. FT. OF PORCH SPACE CONCRETE STEP COMPANY •pawn* r e/ectne. Hoar WoshiN • American Orthopedic i • R. B. Monro Electric • China City Bestaorant • Jones Typewriter • Gerow Jewelers Furnaces, Boilers and Conversion Beiaert. Itts BudmanV-a reliable old firm. "Try ’. g months free trial of gas horn equip-Uetely satisfied, ve’U remove it at Wo Oodl GASCO Conversion Burner 56R88 Don’t let sum mu. heat get you down! The new.lightweight Comp mesh garments breath coolness . . . help you look better, feel better all day long- The improved watte mesh dacron ana oottoa fabric is -sturdier. stronger, longer swearing. Why fiat stop to-■ day for tt prirate fitting? By Prescription Only JETS the floor dean water and detergent SCRUBS H thoroughly ... Pontiac’s Completely Installed of ft# factory Price ELECTRIC COMPANY 1060 W. Hare* FI 5-A431 Sizes to 48 united inches. All new. 1961 Perma-Seal model. Homeowners special. Minimum 6 windows. Price includes complete installation by Bud-man expert. Cadillac aluminum windows $14.88 (to 48 united inches) plus installation. Luxurious PRIDE. Restaurant integrity SB!1***“ Combination Aluminum Storm & Screen Doors We Invite Your Comparison . . . A Welcome Change from the Ordinary Make it a point to visit soon Our newly redecorated, luxuriously comfortable dining room. Treot the entire family to something excitingly different in eating pleasures . . , it's o treat you'll always remember whenever you think of really good food. fork chow : of CHINESE P1HT OF 1 package No .Society—fem or otherwise—governs the quality of a jewelers purchase — his pride is your guarantee. on installation costs ALUMINUM JP AWNINGS ^ New 1961 model choice of colors. Wa Feature the Finest in Vyith Purchase Out — Vft r*f cww CHINESE-CANTONESE and AMERICAN FOODS ORIENTAL HOSTESSES TO GREET YOU FREE GIFTS. Typewriter? are our business! ont ’’aecond-gue**” on a typewriter . Mu ua for the advice you jf need. iBa^ Erty payment terms. Seeussoonl ‘authorized dealer far *w» ntCIMM TYKVBIUs'^M^BKF JONES Typewriter Saits I Sareiea 1058 West Huron FE 2-2201 Open Daily: Sunday—Noon to 10 P.M. PARTIES—Please Call NiW NUMBER, FE 3-7073 . for Reservotions Two Blocks West Of Telegraph Road, Pontiac 'FREE PARKING AT OUR DOOR' NEW, IMPROVED 1961 MODEL ALUAAINUM § STORM and SCREEN fl| WINDOWSJ THE PONTIAC PRKSS. TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1961 ELEVEN Man In Syce Fun-Park Rides May Help Astronauts %amoi( wilson SAN ANTONIO, fit. -~ Three chairs which would be Mg hits to an siwnienunt pat may help America's lint apace pilot sake sure be isn't so dtaorieOed be lands upside down. The chairs move in various reactions of their occupants. One chair, a til tint and rotating device, makes some ill from mo- said Hr. Hebert Cramer, tt, psychologist In charge of the vestibular laborsiory at the I’-S. Air Am aerospace modi t soothing.” be ex- Dr Cramer, a crew-cut civil service srianttrt, hopes research with the chairs will make wane travel safer. * "We are studyiag the effects of movement on the body." he When vision and gravity no longer orient a person, the brain gets the wrong signals.' He compared the soarce of angular and linear i. to a tOt nr on a pin ball machine. "It lets yon know when yon Dr. Cramer said. "The vestibular organs of the inner ear do comedy to high-speed travel and cause accidents.' D. L. MANNING Coach Engineer Retires at GMC Donald i. Manning of Orchard Lake Is Given W. P. Strong's Post The appointment of Donald L. Manning of 3130 W. Long Lake Road. Orchard Lake, as coach engineer of GMC Truck it Coach Division was announced today by Chief Engineer C. V. Crockett. Manning succeeds William P. Strong, of 2300 Rosewood Drive. Waterford Township, who is retiring after serving 23 years with the division. taring experience Restaurant Bias Ruling Overturned WASHINGTON - Voting €-3. the Supreme Cburi has ruled that a restaurant leasing its space from a city parking authority must give service to Negroes. It thus overturned Monday a Delaware Supreme Court decision that Negroes could be refused service at the restaurant without violating their constitutional rights. Justice Tom C. Clark, writing the majority opinion, upheld contentions made In an appeal by William H. Baton, a Negro city councilman of Wilmington. Del. State Legislature Meets, Adjourns —Lacks Work LANSING —Former Michigan Congressman Alvin M. Bentley of Owosao has been named chairman of the Olivet College Development Council. Pitots call the Whirling sensation and diaorientatioo "vertigo.” Dr. Cramer udd tt In the third leading cauap of aircraft aed-deals. Ha said a solution to the vertigo prahlam would be "the real payoff of our work.” Dr. Cramer and a half dosen ve been experimenting on disorientation lor IS months, and are a bit closer to knowing why pilots sometimes don't know which is up and which is dawn. "Ws esa already tell whether It to sale tor n man to fly by giving kin a half haw ride to He said there was “a tremendous difference'' in the responses to changes in position between pilots and riders who don’t fly. So far about 200 '‘passengers" have ridden in the whiriygig, with Airman 3.C. Don Helms, 23, of Bethlehem, Pa., the leading volunteer. Helms rode in the chair some 00 times and described his reactions in great detail. At first his inner ear signals were strong but inaccurate. They told Helms he was tumbling head over heels instead of rotating , at a tilted angle. With training, Helms could tell what was happening to ‘HUMAN TURNTABLE’ Capt. Edwin W. Moore. 00. an experimental psychologist, dechair in the lab. It is cushioned with foam rubber to keep a rider’s sense at touch from, giving away the angle of the chair. Occupants are blindfolded and tilted up to GO degrees to learn how Inner ear organs react to the various positions. The third chair, dubbed the gtoeer at the time ef bis maHoa. Strong started as a draftsman with GMC in 1933 and served inj various new design and drafting capacities before being named coach engineer in 1937. During his long tenure with the division, he helped develop the famous PD41M intercity coach, the Greyhound Scenicruiser and GMCs' current line of luxurious city, suburban and intercity Cost of Living Study Is Being Conducted Here The present economic picture in Pontiac probably will affect the next U. S. cost of living index, to be published in June. The U. S. Bureau of Statistics is conducting a survey in the city at this time, as well as in other cities across the country, for the next revision of the Consumer Price Index, more commonly re-fond to as the cost of living index. Questions being asked concern family income and expenditures. The resultant figures will be compared with those of previous months to determine whether the cost at living on a national 1 has gone up or down. Cites Jobless Record IRQNWOOD (UPIl—Turin Van-10. manager at the local Michigan Employment Security Commission office, said Monday toe number at idle workers in Iron County and Waterameet Township of Gogebic County has climbed to a record SO. Vanzo said the num-bar of johieas is about 20 per cent and ■ plea of innocent wu entered for him by the judge. Martel!, 35, ot 9T1 Deaota place, wu rsl*M*d on a $100 perianal hind liter his plea t» asaault with Mini to malm. He ii charged with the March 30 attack on Grant H. Sutton, 33, at 5301 Lynfue Lane,- Waterford Town-nip, in a Pontiac Public Safety Building parking lot after the two ported Atraffic accident ' CtuvraMt l Or* wcffm VU1AHIU). ^JIhI toHn*!». muouu At itai a40, n am it. mi. i UM • tUlE * HK mBT nafir 1MMNII. wtu IM MU at MkU* MW iTfpwirjwatn amw* sutte*. )»M WoodwtrS Avmui. renaSal*. Mleh-t«a«. uiat aMraai Mak whan iaa v»- eUBLIC SALS ■ i mi. n mil. Mat. a taae - v aaaaaa S4a oa.. atrial lumbar UM pFan it emu ■*)• raaamM ipiw atmat station. ___WooiwtrS Ami* ParnSate. Uleb- lasa. that sesra** katas whan m vi- statsof MKHIIOAM—b tte Wl kata Owrtte Ma OMatf U ottiaai Jarentt* OtataWa. to tha natter of tha aatitlsa aaaaan ins Od«ll Maltea. aalfeor Cauaa » Ta Harwaad Maltaa. fathar af aal aatnor child. Pttitlaa hartaa haw Iliad, In thu Caart aDtatac Wat tha P/MaWnttMl akauli at tha (athar of aah ebtld art unknom aad aald al rhtld abatdd ha alaaad oaMar tha )art»- seffsnT ga-'^iruui aarrtaa Caatar. Caurt Ha iaaw Waat fird , la tha C la tha (araaaaa. aal (M an MnS rniBandad ta appear pafiaaalty at Ml xSStisp nSr1 “ ***** m tlaa ahall ha aarrad ky fahiteaUra a Adaaa. Mea M aald Oaort. ha tha City ir‘®& ~Vm El Aranaa. Panidala THE POXTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1961 Job Classifications Established OK Waterford Pay Hikes Ahead of Kennedy WASHINGTON If* — sm. Joe eph 8. Clark, D-Pm., today to- Groin bico str^F- }$* % Beer Dealers Plan Building Mott* and Powers Toll Of $75,000 Warehouse, Office on West Side The following nie top prices covering ask* of locally grown produce by growers and told by then in Wheiesalc package lota. I g* Quotations are fumlahed by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, a* of Monday. Detroit Product ratm applai. Korthara Spy, hu . «.»» mmfit » iift Metes A Power*, Inc., Is plan- stag sew headquarters ea a ette on Pontine's far West JUe. # * * Hie SUIMIOO move will Include tattoo warehouse and office nttdtnt. according to-Howard O. Powers, president of the Pontiac beer dlstribvtorsNp. ComptetlM of a IMee • sqm WWMVq »aa. Ut he ha. .. laaradlah. to.... __ki. 4n. hah*..... Oalanl, dry, M Iba. ... «K aau, M iba. ... Ptrala;, not, haha. .... a SadUhaa, Wa«h, W to. iiftsSaa, KBawa. da*, m*.... Ihatort’. hSmSS*. Mb tool . kralp*. tapeeS, ku. ...-.. Poultry and Eggs ■srooiT Ntinr DSTWOIT. April H I ATI—Frier* P«r pakadTaltoatoi la* Ha. i «ututy baa *MM aad Iryaia h iba. GdMrol contractor is Hlckson-Costigan. Inc. Financing k through Pontine State Bonk. * * Among the installations will be two 10.000-galloa fuel storage tanks for the company's radio-controlled fleet of M route trucks and two| " diesel tractor* and traflere. *. dr > The building itself wtu be of Meal and concrete Mock, said Powers. Office gnu wttl be air conditioned and the she contains M0 Mat of railroad aiding. ft * * Mete* Jk Powers, Inc.. __________ Oakland County distributor l»r MB- *totlra'"TOr" •V**®. _ wSftart" Art»*S» *aa^ fljL**|Ier *Atfi Uk Boer, carting** Black jgijplwtoSeard Aftoit*. NMuftSS UM Beer tad Carting'S Red Cay iltiffVKnug News in We' MARKETS (Recent Gainers Hit By Losses NEW YORK tit — Stock market price* thowed a mixed pattern in heavy trading early today* " rable profit taking was apparent hi losses of selected issues which have advanced recently. Minor changes were the rule for most key stacks and the general tendency seemed to be toward the Sperry Rand, which gained 3 points Monday as the moat active stock, eased % to 9% on a big enraonr. amu it »r git Ik*. gto. anjiaw mthtiiiijii wop *BBi ^ tpjtoTiamHb el Saw.. aaS ^cuttor* U.toll to. atn lgr_________________________ *a iuwtr; M miUti taw tan inaatB ya. i7.gar.Ti; n«. i. a aas a mm 1S&1 ~ga3^iaia 1toatoa*$jg5!aa? mmimM&Mi gat- tenSr i 1 palta d cholc* a discussion that lasted until midnight, tha Waterford Township Board last night approved township employe job classifications and pay hikes ranging from $83 to $300 annually. Before last night, there gas no Job classification system to determine salaries for some workers. Now secretaries, clerics and accounting clerks have been put into 'two. separate categories each. Tha range from $3,000 to $4,800, and increases for the aix persona Involved total 81,630 annually. tower trend. Batto were steady. Kerr - McGee Oil, a big gainer lately, stumbled about 3 point* to downside. Texaco spurted 2. National Theatei % tw OVk on an opener of 17,900 glares. Chrysler dropped about a point as Its annual meeting was about Avne! Electronic* eonttaned to spurt, adding more than a point. Corn product* made a afanMar gain. Losses of around a point ware taken by American Telephone, Keimeeott and Du Pont, the latter after a report of lower earnings. Ah’ Reduction and.Meitk we around a point higher. The ticker tape lagged in early trading. Opening blocks included: General Motor* off H St 45% on 6,900 ■hares; Standard OU (New Jersey) up % at 49V* on 5,000; International Telephone up % at 60% on 3,000; and United Air Unes up % at 47% on 3,500. New York Stocks near* anar OaatoMl point* nr* tog) Air naose Ill John* Mss ... THEODORE 8. SCHBOEDER Foundry Society to Confer Award on Pontiac Man Hie American Foundrymen'a Society, international technical society of the metal castings industry. will confer one of three awards of scientific Merit on Theodore R. Schroeder, foundry superintendent, Pontiac Motor Division. The award will be given at the annual business meeting of the society May 10 in San Francisco as part of the 65th AFS Congress. The awards are to deserving industrial leaders as a technical citation to recognize outstanding paper*, meritorious technical services, development of a process, method or engineering advance- Bell Telephone Tells of 32-Hour Week A drop in the growth rate of the Michigan Bell .Telephone Co. in Pontiac resulted In the firm's laying off two................ tern than two yean service, and placing 42 others on a 32-hour work District Manager Ray H. Storm said the return to a full work week and rehiring would depend upon the firm’s growth rate in the near future. . Schroeder, it*0 SllveraMo Road, Waterferd Township, la being cited “tor notable contrite AFS a crania a daparimant d urbhn eac% employe wttl receive pay increases of from II te 80 cent* an boar, depending on the job. A wage plan tor the building and assessor department* was discussed. Hov^ver, no action was taken on classification or salary. Another meeting on these departments is planned. In other business, the board accepted the low bid* of the Anri Arbor Construction Co. for blacktopping Orchid Street for $17,881; Seedum Glen for $7,59; ant Cheeseman Street for $8.99. ♦ A Sr A hearing gate for. establishing a special assessment district for Seedum Glen was set for May 8. The board authorized Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson to prepare special assessment roll or the other two streets. A besting date for will be set at next Mon-day's meeting. New Trustee Loren Anderson was appointed to till a vacancy on the recreation department board. The poet was left vacant by tenner Trustee Lewis Roelle. Four bids on two half-ton pickup littlMiy in ttta development of jtrurkg ^ opened and referred **** "r the to Clerk James Seeteriln tor rec- e cast metals 13. Schroeder i an appren- since 1 started his career bee, joining Pontiac Motor in 1059. He is well known for his presentations before many groups on the subjects of cast metals and foundry engineering. He is a director of the Detroit chapter of AFS. ommendations. The low bidder was Matthews-Hargreaves with a total of $1,628 for each truck. The board approved a request i install a street light on comer of Cooley Lake Road and Williams Lake Road, with the township paying for the light' maintenance. May 1 wap set as the date fort opening bids for sale of sewer bonds for 1,300 feet on N. Tildenj Street! ONCE IN A LIFETIME Are you looking lor aif opportunity that conus one* in a lifetime? Would you be wtuiag to devote the time to an opportunity that oould provide a wonderful future for you aa an individual or provide excellent additional Income to an established business? We are an International company with over 900 of fleet furnishing temporary dfflee, industrial and technical workers to all kinds of business**. This is not a "Get - Rich -Quick” scheme but a long range program. Your promotional efforts in Pontiac are backed up by national advertiainf, award winning direct mail, sale* leads from all office*, national accounts and publicity !h national magazine*. We supply complete foMto-how. Home Office training, monthly direction and field supervT-slon. Growth guaranteed thru repeat business. We are a publicly owned company. largest in our industry and have excellent reputation. Only qualified people thoroughly investigated will be accepted. Personal inspection of any of our offices villi be arranged. Write: R. G. Krauthoefer, V.P. Manpower, Inc. *21 N. Plan kin ton Ave. Milwaukee S, Wisconsin i Advertisement! 200 Attend Kickoff Dinner Centennial Queen Search On Stocks of Aroa Intort I j*» From Local Brokors S fggW St EmwMM 13.« LJ3 t UbMeN A L 13 « {&***£ ' tail Ml st westward Ardawrt ■*nte*lbauttuT -'»«• woede.rd Avenue. re™e*l. Mlr£ jgu. tast sddree* Mag where taTv*. jtTwjjWVtg tea tZw_ AMI X. un. St which tlaa tl fcSeliMSw Theft of in tram a desk drawer at the Pontiac CHy* Library, go E. Pike fit., was reported to jfontiac police yesterday by Mias Phyllis Pope, head librarian. EnyjsE** now* a. ow. AMI tf, IS. Mi A break-la at tea home of tee tote Louis Westphal. II E. Walton . was reported to Pontiac police yesterday by a neighbor who »^*5- discovered the vacant tome had been ransacked. R was not known what was stolen. What’s the FINANCIAL HEALTH O of your stocks* Strutt question? It's ggo every investor should uk himself periodically because stock value* can and do change. Non develops* iota to com- iarc-Wrtti** at._________ aijteite bwrp. . ...... ..m HI j Asians** Lsumans o*a Oa. (1.4 jjl Thieve* stole SIM north of____ shoes during a break-in at the Turpin Hall Shoe Store, 1548 Union Lake Road. In Commerce Township, the owner Raymond Turpin told sheriffs deputies yestmday. Theft of |1U worth el bnUdl materials from a shed at the Wake Pratt Construction On. property at Old Perch and Avan Roads in Atm on* or more of yam stocks Ism definite ta tom of yam particular okjectivae. It h important that you reapprshe your portfolio to liliraiisi bow your holdings may ha affected fiv current—and future trends. Wading, LerchM A Co. wttl be glad to review your present holdings At your request. There’s no dost or oM|riiea. WitNif, Lirebn I C». AMVM»Mg**eiwv *4- MS PswtlM Otal* Bask MS*. 8MVINO MICHIGAN UNCI tft» iff * department yesterday by part- sraar, Henry Pratt, A total of 888 ta change am pilfered from vending machines in e break-in at Pop7* and Mom’s Drive-In restaurant, 2261 Haggerty Road, in Commerce Township, the owner, Euclid Coutil reported to sheriffs deputies yesterday. Business Notes Tempest Coupe Factory Price About $2AOO Pontiac Motor Division ol aounced today that its new Tern- Harry H. Simanek of 3844 Croon-meadow Circle, Farmington, has been named assistant vice president of The Parifir Gecp., Heston investment manager and distributor of Incorporated Income Fund and Incorporated Investors, third shiest of the nation'e mutual funds. Simanek will he wholesale representative for the two fund* to Michigan, Indiana and Kentucky. cany a factory list price of 81,925, which is $50 leae than the sedan. S Auto-Thttft Stnftonca to Ba Pronouncttd May 1 Sentence will be passed May 1 i Rohm Martin, 18, ot Commerce Ttownahip, who pleaded guilty yesterday to car theft In tha city April V. Martin, of 1557 Lone Pine Read, is accused of having participated with two boys, one 17 aad one 12, in six auto thefts. Ho was released on bond to await DR. HENRY A. MILLER Optometrist 7 North Soginow Strtet Phong FE 4-6842 “Batter Things in Sight” Contact Lauds Open Friday Evenings — Closed Wed. Afternoons Rajmw• rnwMt .... row) Miiifiiww Bsitnag* jj s.a Orsat UkM Chsmtcsl. . •« -* as3%£&••...............- „ OUo Uathlttra Chtaitesl... «*.« «5 * rmte aastowfl _____ Tgatojwte1 us,-.,. . .^>.gj. g.t rurSj U>w g'----------------- prMtmst* Mafias r>B*v »f Amtrlcsn OlsrisMa Ot. OttrsIMr Mobil* H*a*t . Beet real W Capital..;. . ■lectronlct Interna tlonsl—J? 34 mt* co. ............. 3« 11 Wtolttll St«*l Co.......at 4*4 tsMMsaa Soamlow Tube Co. 11.4 13.4. “mer Ftnsnei ............».« »* [Merproof Ols*. Corp.M.4 34.4 ■ »J M.« mutual 'nmpa' iryf um Upwards of 360 persons tost night witnessed the launching of the widest search (or a festival queen in Pontiac area history. Preliminaries of the “Miss Centennial" contest got under way at Elks Temple. The audience included representatives of scores of Pontiac area groups and bust- p.i nesses anxious to sponsor candi-dates in the con-teet The contest itself will begin May 15, coinciding with the first sale of tickets to the Centennial spectacle In Wiener Stadium during the last six nights of the June 17-24 celebration, announced Mrs. S. V. Sekles. contest chairman. Details of the contest, spelled out for the first time, indicated it is wide open. The only age Htnitatioa Is that candidates be at toast 16 year* ot age. "Even grandmothers are wel-come," said Leo Spaeth, manager of Centennial headquarters, another speaker tost nitfit. Stuart E. Whitfield, genera] chairman of the Centennial, waa the third speaker. their entries would be lined up soon, reported Mrs. Sekles. Chapters of the Brothers of the Brush and Centennial Belles are also invited to sponsor candidates. j The queen win win a new Tempest as the grand prize, and the first runner-up will receive a $300 gift certificate, 'said Mrs. Sekles. Hie 10 runners-up will be named s in Miss Centennial ! feurt A custom version of the sports rape has luxury interior appointments along with front bucket ■sets, full' Boor carpeting and deluxe steering wheel as standard Exterior styling changes include A shorter roof line and a smaller at tom window, ft “ carry a list price of 12,085. fhetory list pises do not in- desttoption sod dealer delivery and handling charges. Qrsstei hi heavy meelto wl to opened tee daw rite** te a aatghbar's home to (ton Check Passer May 1 Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ztem set sentencing lor May 1 for John K 21-year-old Pontiac man i admitted passing seven checks totaling $588, police said. . : ;> * * Wolfe, Whs threatened to leap m ^fhttrg last guilty yesterday itraigned before Judgr Ztem eg a charge of uttering and publishing. i t , .* - "t ' # _ The judge refused a defense motion to change his $500 bond to a personal bond an M could be ' from the county jail. parents both were at work. Candidates may be either married or single. Geographically, they can live anywhere in the greater Pontiac aea. The contest will not be of the bathing beauty variety. The public will have a hand in the voting through purchase of spectacle tick- Before Canton could go on. Supervisor John L. Carey, board humorist from Spriqgfield Township, suggested “that a gang of Russian scientists be brought in” Some 30 organizations announced I to fix the buzzing microphone. A JJ ’ entries last night and others said I maintenance man did the trick. County Board Speaker Gets P.A. Razzberry Hard-luck Charles E. Canton of the board of supervisors got an electrical razzberry when he stepped to the microphone to make a report on civil defense yesterday. A malfunction in the public address system caused an ear-splitting hum which sent Canton scurrying to a eerier aisle microphone. "Is that the five, or 10-minute warning?" inquired Delos Hamlin, chairman of the board. Previous attempts by Car don, chairman of the board's civil defense committee, to get board approval for foods for a civil defease control renter hove been frustrated more than once. A highlight last light was the first public showing of the golden costume the queen will wear to presiding over the Centennial. A gold velvet cope with ermine sparkling Mara crown Mrs. Sekles’ subchairman for prizes for the' court is Mrs. Forrest Wood. Mrs. J. A. Rammes is subchairman for arrangements. Hie 38-member contest committee plans to line up prizes and ready the distribution of tickets between now and May 15, when sponsors and candidates wUl Rath for the kickoff. Draws 2 Years Probation for Knifing in Pontiac Waddell Payne. 36, of 450 Wyoming Ave.. was given probation for two years and assessed 900 court costs for the Christmas Eve knifing of another man in the city. Payne, who pleaded self-defense and guilty April 5 to felonious assault in the attack on Ottie Williams with a boy scout knife, was sentenced by Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem. NEXT 90 DAYS CAN CHANGE YOUR LIFE A Warning from The Wall Street Journal You are living in 4 period of rapid changes. The next 90 (toys will be filled with opportunities and dangers. Fortune will smile on some men. Disaster will dog the footsteps of others. Because reports to The Wall Street Journal come to you DAILY, you get fastest possible warning oif any new trend affecting your buaineaa and personal income. You get facto in time to protect your interests or seize a profit. If you think The Journal to . just for millionaires, yob are -WRONG l it is a wonderful aid ~ to salaried men making $7,500 to $25,000 a year. It is valuable to owner* of small businesses. It can be of priceless benefit to ambitious young men who want to earn more money. Bead it for 90 days and see what it can do for YOU. The Wall Street Journal to the complete business DAILY. Hu largest staff of writers on business and finance. Tnq only business paper served by all three big preu associations. It costs $24 a year, but you can get a Trial Subscription for three months for $7. Just tear out this ad and attach check for $7 and matt. Or tell us to bill you. Published daily right to the Midwest to bring you vital business and Washington news immediately. Address: Ths Wall Street Journal, 711 W. Monroe St, Chicago 6, 111. Orgaatoatiee candidate will he asked te eett j tickets, acquiring votes ter their U A M. AVERAGES II Utlll tttWJptJS M Stock* UOJSSff *.» VshunTifli i s i.tss.M* $1,000 Home Blaze Blamed on Smoking Careless smoking was blamed for a 9,000 fire which struck the John C. Gunther Jr. home at 750 Lounabwy st, tost night. The family was away when the fire broke out to a living room oMch. The blaze wu discovered by, the Gunther’s 19-yearold eon Richard when he returned at 5:50 Murder Charges Dropped for Trio First-degree murder charges were dismissed this morning against three Madison Heights youths charged in the death of a Mend they did not kill. Circuit Judge Frederick Ztem granted motions of attorneys to drop the murder charges against Glen Foster. 20, of 1$ E. Katherine 8L, Fred MIUs, 19, of 530 11-Mile Road, and Ernest Cameron, 20, of 26339 Wolverine ft. tea total Feb. 8 sheeting e» Ruteell E. Burghy Jr., a M-year eM escapee from ■eye Veeatteaal School, when to 38 minutes. Assistant Chief Jdhn Morrissey estimated the damage approximately 9,000 to tf building and contents combined. filmeone had toft a cigarette Mpoldering in the cushions of the aai. Oak Pari: spsittog goads don. Burghy vras shot by William Hariih, 55, owner ot the Haritn Sports Shop, 8236 W. Nine Mile Road. THEY WENT ALONG Bat because they allegedly wept along in the plot, the throe youth* were charged with murder under create a situation which set motion resulting to "Before you can have a charge of marder under the law you’ve get to have a murder, not a killing or a homicide, but a murder." Judge Ziem said. "Here we have not a murder but a justifiable kiljtog,” he said. "This follow Harito acted tow-folly and had just as. much right to fire upon the robber (Burghy) as the American forces had the right to return the fire of the Japanese invaders at Pearl Harbor. Assault with intent to rob while rmed still to ponding against the three. Judge Ziem refused to dismiss that charge against Mills, | No trial date was set. coach, he aald. The Gunther's Aas the last one to the-heme. Htojn law which says while trying perpetrate a robbery "they did Husbands! Wives! G«t Pep, Vim; Feel Younger tlouuh ot nukl in weak, waru iwl, ' lifted m becauM body lack* iron. Far ywinter -frrling after 40. try Often a TubTrtv Contain KM for pep; Samir un \ itarnin St. 1* a atefurjlay, ■ ansa Sri aa sum iron aa It doate LAZEUE AGENCY, Inc. All Forms ol Insurance 504 FeatUc Stele Beak Bldg. • 75 5-1172 iAdvrrtlsrmenti CjWMUJ CJ*TONIC I Advcrtlnment) NOW IS THI TIMS TO TAKI A SPRING TONIC. IP TOII AM MS* COURAGE D, DISAPPOINTED, DOWNHEARTED OR JUST PLAIN DISOUSTRD WITH MIMCINIS CONTAINING HARMPUl DRUGS. ______________ DOPE, ALCOHOL, SALS! OR PAIN RILLRRS, THIN TRY THI NATIONS NUMIIR ONI AU. HIRR TONIC. 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