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THE PONTIAC PRESS
ONE OOUHl
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Edition
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PONTIAC,, MICHIGAN. WEDNK8DAY, MAllCll U, ll)«2 18 PACJKS
ADflOCIAti:i) PIIRMH
I INTlCRNAI'IONAti
Pontiac Motor Turns Out GM's 75 Millionth Car
2-Year-Old Boy Helps'Launch' Historic Auto
Another Round Signals Easing
Threat to Hospital Made by a 'Moron'
ot Old Tension
'We're Proud to Build Symbolic vehicle Here,' Says E. M. Estes
It nearly was John Glenn all over again In an atmosphere ofj bright camera lights and sea of smiling e?^ecutives a 2-year-old boy clad in s blue space suit this morning “piloted” General Motors’ 75-mlllionth car off a Pontiac Motor Division plant assembly line.
ItllZ jHckNIIII, Nidi of » (ilVI oin-
|iIoyi>, ni-nrly nIoI<> tin- Nhow from liearMvory Poiitiai-
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (Jl—Repcatcd bomb throats to Binghamton General Hospital were made by a moron, police said today as they continued checking the poisoning of 30 babies at the hospital. Six of them died.
The anonymous telephone calls to the hosi)ital began Tuesday after an earlier threat to the hospital's medical dlreictor was made public.
Police said the publicity probably led to four subsequent calls, between 5 and 8 -p'.m.
•dvr (’npl, Michael F. O'Neil said all the calls appnr-cnlly were from the same man.

ASTKO NOMICAI, — That's what C.M irhlcf.s called the 7.')-	the CM vice president in charge of car and truck gioup, Edward
million-car figure achieved today by CM plants. And so they got	N. Cole; .James M.. Roche, vice president of distribution staff;
‘-’-year-old ''astronaut'' Buz .Jackson to launch the Pontiac Bonne-	E. M. Estes, GM vice president and Pontiac general manager,
ville symholic of all the other cars. Buz i:i the son ol GM De-	and Anthony G. De Lorenzo, GM vice president in charge of
troit Central Office employe Harold .Jachson, Bi'hlnd Buz arc	public relations staff.
Biiiiiievllle «-oiivertlble ot all the <iM Nlliee I90K.
Buz's dad. Harold Jackson of <141.5 Seminole Drive, Royal Oak, yelled to his son;
"Wave, Buzzy, wave!"
Buzzy hour.
Despite the mixup and spreading alarm, pregnant women haye continued going to the city-owrted hospital for delivery of their babies since the hospital disclosed the deaths, which began last Friday.
iirly an
Kennedy to Try
Collegiates Sweep Toward Lauderdale
Batten Down the Hatches!
Young Ted Up Against Kin of House Speaker John McCc^mack
'^ ‘’BOS'FON (AP) -Edwards M. (Ted) ,<ennedy stepped into the battle today with State Atty. Gen. Edward J. McCormack Jr. for the Democratic nomination for the Senate seat once held by his brother, President John F. Kennedy.
Kennedy made his expected announcement at a news conference in his home.
The conference was in the second-floor living - room from which all furniture had hpcii removed. His blonde wife Juaii stood at his side.
By BEN FUNK
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. 14’) — They're coming again. Down the roads from East. Midwest and South, college students are coming in a, steady stream, like lemmings, to the beach at Lauderdale.
They're on spring vacation. They're ted up to here with ice and snow and campus rules and regulations.
They're coming to rough it on the beach at Lauderdale, under the romantic palms, the hot sun and the cool moon, far from the watchful eyes of parents and professor.
I cation cards from their campuses were giVen plastic tags. These tugs will admit them to a huge recreation area to be opened Friday. In this area, there will l)e dancing every night. Students may build bon-fires, sing and have barbecues.
Athletic, talent and beauty contests have been arranged for the college Joes and Janes. More events \Vill be offered later.-‘‘We'll just lilay it by ear gt the start,” Bininger says.
The iiiiniml invasion l»cgan Monday, when the first wave of 300 hit the Iwaeb. Soon their iiiimhers will- reach 40,000 or
Kennedy is facing a double test with McCormack, a nephew of U.S. House Speaker John W. McCormack. Kennedy said he will go to the parly covenlion in June and also enter the primary, in September as McCorihack has indicated he plans to do.
President Kennedy and the White House had no comment on younger Kennedy’s candidacy.
White House press secretary Pierrd Salinger said this was because Ted Kennedy had asked that the President not become involved.
What will they bring? More beer and .sex riotsTlke tnose that shook Lauderdale last year?
Not if a committee headed by Dr. Clem Bininger, First Presbyterian church pastor, can prevent it.
WORKS A TEAR This committee was born in the riots of last spring. It has worked hard for a year. Its goal is to prevent riots and make an artistic, as well as commercial success of the annual student invasions.
The cofh'gluiiN saw the first ■ideiice of tljls work today.
However, another brother. Aity. | Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, said he was' "very pleased."
At three places along the heac'h^ "H 11 o” hospitality booths ap|)eared. Here, students who could offer Wentlfl-
Snow's Just a Bluff; Spring's On Its Way
Blustery snow slorni.«j blowing in with a fury may look like winter is here again but don't be fooled. iSleadily climbing timperaturcs causing the snow to- melt almost before it hits the ground.
The plastic identification tags not only will admit the students to entertainments, but will screen out toughs who in-\ad«sl the ar(<a last spring.'
They |H>sed as slildeuls and were largely responsible for inciting the riots. Many of the 300 jailed were thrill seekers who never saw the inside of a
In a way. Bininger’s committee is Laudei'dale’s conscience.
Many believe the riots grew out of the city’s failure to live up to its responsibilities to the oWer burMonda^wn^ ^ young visitors.
A MILUON DOLLARS
Although many op (he collegians come on ar shoestring, and have to live on hamburgers and sleep in their cars to get by, the student army spends a million dollars in a few days.
Last spring, the students were 50,000 strong. No enteilainmcnt
was provided for them. There were 10 boys to one girl. Out of the shortage of feminine company grt'w boredom, excessive drinking and finally Ihreo days
of r
Many bi'iieve tlie collegians drank, carousixl mid finally rioted simply because they had nothing better (o occupy them.
(o are tremendously proud,' Pontiac General Manager E. M K.sles said, "and honored to have tills historic event occur in our plant.. Of course, this car is only symbolic of many Jiuilt in other plants across the nation."
Estes handed the keys to the 75 millionth car to Edward N. Colo, GM vice president in charge of the car and truck group. THANKH PUBLIC Cole, sjjeaking tor GM Chaii-lan Frederic G. Donner and President John F. Gordon, congratulated "all the people who had anything to do with the production, our shareholders and especially the public who have made this achievement possible."
The weatherman said tempera-ires will average near the normal high of 44 and normal low of 27 for the next few days,
The weekend will be somewhat
.Snow flurries are forecast for Saturday and rain Monday with precipilalion totaling less than .2 of an inch.
Thii1y-fivc~was the lowest temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The thermometer reading at 2 p.m, was 35.
Another infant lemaincd in criti-ral condition today and one in ‘I'ious condition. Eight others ere ill. Tile remainder had no apparent effects, the hospital said, A funeral director said the hospital had mixed up the bodies of
n d' Gordon had
earlier Issued a joint statement hailing ‘‘this milestone” as having ‘‘a much broader significance than this production achieve-
WASN’T POLSONEI)
A hospital spokesman said it was determined Tuesday that a seventh child had died of earlier complications and had not suffered salt poisoning.
The bond) threats began before dawn Tuesda,v.
To the consumer, it has meant more than half a century of ex-u'cising his own purchase choice.” They said, "In this sense, it is a record.
_"Ju.st seven years ago, GM celebrated the assembly of its 50 millionth car. The intervening seven years ha.s meant a period of ac-elerated progress for General Motors, our employes, our su|i-pliers and stockholders and our public generally."
production achievement unmatched anywhere in the industry, GM's 75 millionth car represents 54 years of auto making, interrupted only by World War IL The total includes U.S. production of Chevrolets, Pontiacs, Olds-mobiles, Buicks, Cadillacs and (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3>
caller phoned Dr. Jason K. Moyer, the hospital’s medical director, at his home anc( told him he would be bombed and poisoned.
Late in the afternoon, a man made the first of four calls to the hospital, threatening a bombing, the possibility that the parents of Hospital authorities ruled out any of the babies were involved the 'bomb threats.
Jackie Honors Gandhi
In Today's Press
Big Challenge
Administration faces c'hal-lenge of providing jobs for fast-growing work force — PAGE 41.
• But Cuba won’t import still-available U. S.'^ foods — PAGE 26.
Kpf Quite
"Wealthy but not
up to early expectations — PAGE 40.
Quiz Test
Check YES or NO on list of study ifuestlons — PAGE
12.
Area News	34
Astrology .....
Comics . . . . .	«
Editorials	«
Markets ........... . . 40
Obituaries	**
Sports .......... —
Theaters	.
TV and Radio Programs 47 miMMk. Karl	**..47
es.....'..-IS-M
McNamara Aide Boosts JFK's Trade Program
WASHINGTON (flV-The Defense Departmenf called 4oday for ap proval of President Kennedy’s y'oridjt rade^program to 4iei p com -plefe an alliance to begin with the military aspects of the North Atlantic Treafy Organization.
Deputy .Secretary Roswell ; Uilpatfic, substituting for Sec
tary Robert McNamara, told the House Ways and Means Committee; »
signed to provide the cement of . the free world alliance in which .framework of st^i.”
He said freer trade with Western Europe, as Kennedy- advocates, would have direct practical effects in terms of defense.
|200 Die on State Roads
EAST LANSING (AP) -Traffic I accidents hpve killed ^ persons [in Michigan so far this year, provisional figures compiled by state police showed' today. The toll at this dJttes-last year was 246.
.JUVSlftotit.
Ctrpttf Ckll GeorSa Ti-
BOUQUET OF ROSES —^Mrs. John F. Kennedy places a' bouquet of whjte robes on the memorial to Mohandas K. Gandhi in New Delhi, India. Behind her is U. S. Ambassador fo^ India
, AP FhatoUi
John K. Galbraith. Mrs. Kennedy wore sandals in place of her ,a|wes to visit the shrine of Jhe Hindu leader. A’guard stands at' the left. (Story on page 2.) . ^ J
An for the liuliy ileathN, O’Neil said iMtllee nIIII were looking tor any fiONNlhle malletoiiN Intent. All algiiN In dale point to iiiIn-taken line of Nall for Niigar in the infaniN’ formula at the hoH-plial, police oald.
The under^kes,'Joseph Grasko-vic, said another funeral „|u^e had received the body of a boy that was to have been delivered to him and the body bore the same name as that on a girl he had received.
There was no immediate comment from hospital spokesmen.
Try to Block Tax Proposals
Rusk, Gromyko and 15 Others Hope to Agree on Some Restrictions GEl^EVA (/Pi — For the first time in almost two years Russia and the West-rn Allies began a new 0 u n d of disarmament negotiations today.
There was some hope of restricting- but much less hope of stop'ping the nuclear arms race.
The 17-nation U.N. Disarmament Committee met at the Palace of Nations In late afternoon for a ceremonial session. The last big d 1 s a r ma m e n t conference broke dowh In I960.
The delegates, including U.S. .Secretary ot .Stale Dean Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Iromyko, heard the resumption Of negotiations hailed ai| signaling In itself an easing of East-West ten-
Aineriean NoureeN said just before the seNslon 0|>ened that the WcNterii |Hiw(>rN and RiMsbi ■night lie able to negotiate an agreement to blw;k the spread «f nuclear weapons and thus begin
control.
Supervisors Seeking to Amend Detroit Levy on Oakland Residents
Two committees of the Oakland County Bool'd of Supervisors yesterday took action to keep county residents who arc employed in Detroit and elsewhere In Wayne County from paying an income tax where they work.
Western officials saw little pro|-pecl of agreements' in earning monthsj however, which woukl halt the manufacture of nuclear weapons.
The outlook is, dim, too, for stopping nuclear weapons testing. In , both cases, officials said, the apparently insuperable barrier is Russia’s unwillingness to open ifp its territory to international T|l-. spection.
The ministers made no conJ-menl as they entered the palace for the crucial discussions, which were set up under a resolution of the United Nation.s.
They agreed to seek an amendment to the tax plan proposed by Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh when it is introduced in the state legislature.
To Examine Flint Man in City Holdup]n!.
A Flint man being^Jield today I the kidnaping and $9,.500 armed robbery of the owner of two Pontiac supermarkets last month will he examined' next Wednesday in Municipal Court.
Charle.s R. Thomas,' 2G, ''lle-nianded ' examination yesterday afternoon before Municipal Judge Maurice E. Finnegan, Thomas is being held jn lieu of $50,000 bond.
The decision to amend such a bill so that it would permit a coun-Jy to tax only its own residents was reached unanimously during a joint session of the Ways and Means Committee and the Legislative Committee of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors,
The committees authorized lA^gislative Committee Chairman John G. Semann to take the amendment Immediately to Lans-Ing.
With no Board of Supervisors (eetuig-schedutedi^there was no time (o' recommend its action, Board Chairman Delos Hamlin explained.
EXPECT.S AGREEMENT He felt certain that the board would be of the same opinion as the members of both committees on this matter, he said.
Two other .„ni.en w e r e ’ being questioned in the robbery today by Pontiac police. Tjiey are Robert E. Murphy, 2Sr 4S1 S. Telegraph Road, and Jack V. Young. 31, formerly of Auburn Heights and Keego Harbor.
Young and Thontas A|ere picked up by state police lasl*Friday in a trailer they shared at Grand Blanc. A pistol sini|ilar to the one used in the superpiarket robbery was found in the trailer-
' Mayor'Cavanagh’s tax plan, as explained by Oakland County corpofattoh rounsei Norman R. Barnard, would enable both Detroit and Wayne County ea<ih to levy a 1 |»er cent income ta;^ on both residents and nonresidents working either In D<*troit or Wayne, County.
(>mhr Loiitfl ot the United Arab Republic, a U. N, under-si'cretary, formally opened tkn
resentative of Acting Secretary General U Thant.
Conveying Thant’s wishes that the conference be a success, LoUt-fi said ‘‘no one can fail to recognize 4he complexity of your task and the difficulties which yoii must 'overcome. Positive and hopeful elements, hpwever, eixist."
Among the hopeful factors, he-said, were the inclusion of ei^t neutral nations to bring to the conference the "views of the different regions of the world.” ;
"The resumption of general dfe- , armament negotiations after a iji-atus of almost .two years," he added, "can in itself provide .a valuable step towards the relaxation of international tentiions, as well as loit'Ord a solution of the formidable taSk of how to achieve general and complete disarmament under effective international cxmtiol."	<
Vi

IDENTIFIED^Y VICTIM
Thomas was identified in a lineup Monday at the FlihKPolice Station by Joseph 0. Gagne, 40, owner of the P^'ople’s Food Market, 263 Aubuni Ave., and
Food-O-Mat, 465T:. Pike ST Gagne. 4975 W. Utica Road, Shelby Township, told police Thomas was the man who took him from his home at giinpoint Feb. 26 and forced him & haqd over the^.. money from safes in the two markets.
A second bandit held Gagne’s wife Guida and her two young sons captive while the market owner *was being taken to the stores. The gunmen escaped in Gagne’s car.
The Maeopib County Board of Su- j pervisors has submitted a counter j bill to the state legislature which would prevent Detroit from taxing gll nonresidents of the city.
Hamlin saw a weakness in Macomb’s action, since it would prevent Detroit from drawing taxes ifrom Wayne County as well as Tfom' other counties. "	~
. . The state is bound to recognize Detroit’s problem," he said, “gnd is hbt going to let the city go Ibroke.”.
‘Wayne CountiL^artaihly has a
mn
Each weekday during, Lent a prominent Ameri--can invites you to join, i with him in Kis iamrtte' ^ prayer. Today, join with:*
responsibijity tq Detroit," Hamlin 4	.
added, but explained that he wants -the line drawn at Oakland County.
‘We’re here to protect Oakland County taxpayers," Hamlin told t|ie comtnittees.A
Police believe a third ma^ drove the two bandits'to the Gg^e hoiAe that night. .
CUFFORD P. CASE , Senator from New Jersey "Ixird, make me an Instrument of your pence;, where there is hatr^, let* me sow love; where there is injury, pardon; where; there is doubt, faith; sriieie.
is despair, hXTpe;^
PREDIOrs MOVES .	- "
‘Wafeb the people flock out here from Detroit if that would save them from paying an income tax there,” declared Avon Township Tvlsor Cyril Miller, member of the Legislative Committee.
^‘If ah Income tax ever Is need-jed herev Oakland County should collect it,” said Springfield Township "SaperviMr John .Carey, a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 35) ,
-mdhess, joy.	i
“O Diviae Master, fMHt^ that I may aot so mndh aeefc' to be coBSfded', as to oen-sole; to be aaderstoai ah to understand; to bn Ibna* as to love; tor it Is la string that we receive; It h hi'
I it la ia that we are bom tb a life.' Amea.’*
T,’

■
TWO
Plains Digging Ouf iCIwgis Probe Alter Heavy Snows
iy IJiiHwl ri**" liHenwtloiial Inowpknvs chunMH] through m^tuinoua drifts todM'. cuttlne ^hs to lowps l«ft wiowiHWPd by « ^ndytW March storm acroaa th» Unat Plaint.
IV imowa dwindled to flurHoa In flw Pmliie and Mldwrat Btates. But acoroa of towna wore itlU wallfd off. hundreds of Nchoola were rloaed, and the ihwat of thnw.triggered floods njpdnted.
The |»lo«N (iiiened the way lor hundreds ul travelers who were cnuKhi by the storm and had to lake refuK<- In nmdHide tillages and farm houses.
lion of Texas, Corona, N,M. measured a half fool of snov iix loot drlfla, There wai Inches of new arrow Socorro. N.M,
—Anwmi the freed storm refugeet^ was a 27-member tourlnR Iheftef li-oupe headed by nclirsHes Faye IJmerson and Fva Le tiallienc. The ar tors were maixamed for two days In the quiet hamlet of Mountain Lake. Minn. They got out texlay when the plows broke through the head-high, drifts rounding U>e town.
As skies cleared over the prairies, another snow storm blew up In ftie .Southw^est.
Up to two Indies of snow—«1-most unheard of this late in the yeai—spivad neioss the midsec-
A Mai of It deatha were
!• the weak.
bf the Weal t* Kaaiern Heabuard There were six In Mlehlgan. four In Iowa, and one each In NehraHka and Vermont.
Tlie heavy and is'i-KlsIenl snowa •arried the Ihioai of disastrous spring fksHls, Rivers were already their banks In the ea Midwest.
orn 15 to 20 families had to It'ftve ihelr homes in Grand Rapids. Ohio, when an ice jam pu.sh«‘d the Maumeo River ovei floofl iitage.
tlwHl waters from Iho Rhla-wassee River forced removal of 16 patients fnnn a nursing homq at Owoaao, MIeh.
An estimated 50, families had been driven from their homes along (he Qhio River In the Metropolis, III., region. In the Fast, flo^ waters blocked 100 seeondar roads tind one primary route in northern and central Virginia.
Strom Thurmond Soyi Muzxiing Invoitigation Limitttd by Sonatort
WASHINGTON tfK..Sen, Strom Thurmond. D45.0.. charged toilay tmmeone is trying to stifle the ^nnte investigation of hia charges that nntl-OommunisI military muzzled.
"I don’t like a lot of things that have been going on here." he told fellow members cif the si>ec Senali'- sub<-onimllli'e eondueilng the inquiry.
"If V
ibal’s one thing." Thurmond said In protest against llinllailons he
I try.
Iiig to plaee on a witness In the hearings, i M. ('ol, WHIIain K. Mayer.
"If we want to defend the Stale Departmeni, that’s .another.
"If we want the truth, let's ge the truth,"	*
INTERRUPTS TESTIMONY The outburst Interrupted lestl-inony by Mayer, an Army psychia trisi, in which he had set out tc back up his allcgnilons In a mem orandum filed with the subcommittee in November that the anti-
Supervisors Trying to Halt Tax Plans
AP Phslafss
TRUCKS IN TROUBLE — This was the scene east of Grand Island. Neb . as Ice on the highways hailed traffic of big transports headed east during the storm that swept the Midwest this week. The scene is on Highway .iO, one of the main east-west roads across Nebraska.
First Flight Made by Terrier Missile
iCuban Exiles Say iThey Want Arms, !Not U.S. Relief
Communist indoctrination of troops has been "more often than not a failure."
Mayi'i' was the first of two nesses tabbed for testimony authorities on Indoctrination programs.
Retired Brig. Gen. S. L. A. Marshall, a writer on military affairs for the Detroit News, was to be heard later.
(Continued From Page One) member of the Ways and Means
Th<? Day in Birmingham
Membership Hits Tops tor YMCA Campaign
in the Btimlniham YMCA has been hrmight up to the btuheit figure in th* hlitoiy of th# local Oiganization M a y«aUU Ol tho recent drive.
Campaign chairman Robert F. Sail on announced today that a 20 per cent Increase In memberships enrolled during the five-week cam-pnign brought the total to 4,275.
He said that 150 '	*......
Jackie Changes Outfit 5 Times
PAST MILESTONE — When General Motors' 50 millionth car (a 1955 Chevrolet) rolled off the assembly line in 19,54, Harlow H. Curtice (hand on fond('r) was president of the company. Other CM offlrinls then were (from left) Cadil-
lac’s Don Ahrens, CMC Truck’b Philip J. Monaghan, Pontiac's Robert M,..^ Crilehfleld, Buick’s Ivan L. 'Wiles, Oldsmoblle’s Jack F. Wolfram and Chevrolet’s Thomas H. Keating,
Nixon Book Out This Month
He Was *Told* to Resign
NEW DELHI (UPI) - Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy, obviously having the Htni* <>* whirled today through a schedule that ranged from (ending a baby elephant to deliberating over buying pantalooned "Punjabi pajamas" at a fashion show.
The First Lady was so full of energy she wt
NEW YORK (APl-Rich«rd M. Nixon say.s he wns advised just before he. went on nationwide television in much-debated he wasn’t wanted us Gen, Dwight Ki.senhowcr’s running male ini that year’s - presidential campaign.
mont, is on. a fishing (rip ip (he
Baja California region of Mexico and won’t be back before next
take the situation to the American
1952 lo defe^ his weekend, his secrelnro at Pglm hp addH, Elsenhower --------------------------
piilitieal fund iliiiT'Springs, CaliTT'TTiIlS'.	amf stud: "Good luck and keep
"How could you justify i
He-says he was told that Eisenhower and his lop advisers wanted him to announce on the Air his resignation as the Republican vice president iar candidate The two-lime vice president adds that a subsequent mi.'Hinder-■ounly standing with Eisenhowi
Nixon said the political fund was "set up by my supporters in California to pay expenses , for iiMvel, printing and mailing of s(K»eches, and extra clerical help
your chin up."
TALKED WITH PAT Nixon wrote that when some newspapers editorially urged liim lo submit his resignation vice presidential aspirant, he got diiTcl expression
lax here?" Semann asked, him so angry that he actually die-1h''wer ^1 <-o,uid.Ted resi^^ ^ latcd a telegram of resignation lo 1’*’* point. But lu s.iui liis «ifi.
But, said Nixon, "barely- an hour before I was scheduled lo leave for the TV studio a call (from Dewey) came through lo my suite. From .the lone of his voice, I could sense immediately that Dewey did not have hts heart what ho hud to tell me.
possibly going lo need it sometime in the future," Carey replied.
"You could cut real estate taxes and collect a local tax instead," said Hamlin.
"That’s a darn poor argument." Miller retorted, "You never saw one tax relieve another
POINTARGUELLO, Calif. (UPI)
. MIAMI, Fla. (yi — Some jmpa-The first flight test of a new so dL^^^ Cuban exiles .Say they want propellant combination Terner-AspI	S,a,eg _
IV missile cariTing, piggyback-! „ot relief checks—to try to fore fa.shion, a communkalions-payload	Castro out of Cuba.
—was made today by the Navy, j	★	*
*	*	*	j crowd of more than 2,500
The 27-foot long rocket was pj,eered speakers clamoring for action Tuesday night. Applause was
launched from this Pacific missile range base at 10:42 a m, EST.
Navy officers said the missile soared about 170 nautical miles 'High and impacted some 100 miles west of here in the Pacific Ocean after a Khminutc flight.
Plan Gains Popularity
heavy when rally spokesmen offered to return U. S. relief checks if this country would arm Cuban exiles againist the man who rules their homeland.
'CHICAGO (UPD - The number of local governments using I h c council-manager plan has doubled in the past 12 years according >oio;;^eri7 conduct, the International City Managers Association
Its "1961 Directory of Council-■ Manager Cities" lists 1,756 cities, towns, towmships, counties and other local governments, including 59 Canadian (Cities.
The rally qt Bayfront Park Amphitheater was orderly in contrast io the breakup of a sitdown strike Tuesday morning. Police lugged 1.52 men and women to paddy wagons and locked them up . for dis-
The sitdown began as a hunger strike four days earlier to dramatize some Cubans’ sentiments for prompt military action against Castro,
The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report . PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy with occasional light snow or rain today ending tonight. IThursday partly .cloudy. Little change in temperature. High today 38, low tonight 30. High Thursday 40. West to northwest winds IStoiSmiles.
If Wa.vne County’s proposal from Mayor Cavanagh were to pass through the slate legislature, committee members said they could foresee some Oakland County residents filling out forms and paying Income faxes as much as six times a year.
An,Oakland County resident working in Detroit at some time in the future conceivably could be paying an income tax lo the county and city in which he lives, the county and city where he tv'Srlti^ and to the state, in addition to the federal government, they saief. DOUBTS STATE TAX
You’re not going to see any state income tax this year," said Semann, who is legislative committee chairman and keeps a close ear to events in Lansing.
“What we need «s not more tuxes. but a cutback In civil aervlce," declared Harry Horton, supervisor from Royal Oak and a member of Ways and Means.
"There's no need for an income lax here, because we have our [eet on the ground,” he said.
He blamed' Michigan financial woes on a "weal-kneed’* legislature swayed by pressure groups into "setting up new empires that oontiQue to grow- but are not needed nor wanted by the majority of taxpayers.”
the Republiciin
Thj* telegram was by an aide, he says, Eisenhower, sought
I of i
Hiked him Nixon said (hat former New York Gov, Thomas E. Dew'oy and his own advisers suggested he
GM's 75 Millionth Produced by Pontiac
Tsasjr In PnnUoc	On« Year A(o In
LrOWftt t«mperXture preceding B s.m. Highest umperature ______
35.	Lowest temperature .....
A» • A.m.: Wind velocity B m.p.h.'Meah temperature ....
Fontlae ■
Chart
.36	32	Kansa---,	-
3S	30	Los Angeles	05	4)
39	24	Miami Beaph	84	"
------------ 36	30	New Orleans	60	.,
..36iTrav. City 36	33	New York	55	37
34iAJbuquergue 34 24 Omaha	"
36 26 B. Franclaco (
14 Beattie 35 Tampa
- ihlngton 53 40
(Continued From Page One) GMC Truck and Coach Division vehicles, as well as the limited nurtibero-of other GM vehicles longer produced,
EXPRESSES PRIDE Estes added:
“We kt Pontiac take great pride in the role we havt played through the years in helping the automobile industry grow and prosper. We look forward to the challengeB of tomorrow with the expectation of even greater changes and more opportunities of every kind.”
The first 25 million vehicles were produced by GM in 32 years (.1908-1940). The pace^ qUicteied and . GM celebrated its 50th millionth vehicle -in November 1945.
Important to the hands which produced the carols. »■ Increase In GM’s payroll from $2.6 billion
The 75 millionth car is scheduled for di^lay for a week at the GM Main Office' Building in Detroit starting tonloraw. Then, it will Be exhibited at the Steel Pier in Atlantic City for a month.
said Esti 3 it aroubd f<
y	AP'PhPlorwX
■i tj,-;	NATIONAL WEATHER — It will( be cooler tonight in the
’ AUaotic Coast States, the Plains States and in the. Southern Plateau- Meat ef Nwthern Plains and Northern Plateau vwill biVA anirmer weather. Snow is expected in Wisconsin and * Itortbem Mtchigan with showers forecast on the North Pacific . CoMf aad^ln Rurts of die Gulf States. / '»	■
- L

After that.’ think we’ll keep play purposes”
He said it wouldn't be sold. Even as he was speaking two other assembly lines in Pontiac’s Plant 16 were steadily tui'ning colorful procession of Pontlacs '4dready passing the TS.miUkin qjark.
NASA Delighted by Observatory
Russians Warn of Extra Airline Flights Tonight
New Satellite Giving Scientists Data Never Before Attainable
WASHINGTON (ff - Delighted space officials say the orbiting solar observatory is sending back information scientists have ways sought about the sun’s and wave lengths. The data could provide clues about the origin of the universe.
And,, they say, the spacecraft called OSO I is transmitting the best radio signals yei receded from a satellite.
Ofifclals of the National nautics aad Space Administration 'i^eporled at a news conference 'toesday on the satellite, launched from Cape Canaveral. Fla., March 7.
By noon Tuesday it had completed 90 orbits at %.13 minutes per orbit on the most circular path yet achieved by a U.S. spacecraft, ranging from 343(2 to ,570 miles above the earth.
John C. Lindsay, O-SO projecl director at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, likened the satellite’s performance in pointing toward the center of the sun to aiming at,a pie plate from a half mile distance.
The Berlin Air Safely Outer was reported notified that Soviet warplanes, which have pursued harassing tactics off and on for six weks, woal<| fly In that northernmost of (he free lanes linking West Berlin and West Germany from 8 to !» p.m.
Previous liHras.sing fligjrts by .Soviet planes have been by diiy-night.
.lohn Clark, director of NASA Geophysical and Astronomical Urograms, said there has not been tjme to digest and analyze the Information .which OSO I has been transmitting on IS dif-
But he said the fiiidings are sure to be impressive because OSO I is providing scientists with their first recorded emissions In the gamma ray, X ray and ultra-violent spectrums of the. sun.
They have never been captured in this manner betiause the earth!s atmosphere filters out the»
May Draft Call of 6,000 Issued by Defense Dept
WASHINGTON UPI — The De-fense Department today issued a
draft call tor 6,000 men In May for the Army.
While this is the same number drafted tor March and April, the Pentagon said it- will bring to 135,-000 men the number- called by Selective Service from the, begim
l-up of last August.
As a result of(k think^igher draft calls, and other ' penpnnel actions, the' strength objective of the Army including provision for manning the two new Army .divisions has now been reached,” the statement said.
The Navy, Air Fon^ and Mane Corps do not intend to ^raw bn Selective Service during May.
" There has just, been a meeting of all of Eisenhower's top nd-visers,' he (DeweyI said. "They have asked me lo tell you that it is (heir opinion that at the elusion of the broadcast tonight you should submit your resignation to Elsenhower. As you know, I have not shared this point of view, but it is my re.sponsibility lo pass this recommendation on to
you’.
NIXON SHOCKED Nixon said he was shocked and asked: " ’What does Eisenhower want me to do’?’’.
■' haz.ard-|	* 6r -*
the Rus-j "Dev.ny hedged at this point,’ have sehedijled four mill-!Nixon-added. ‘.'He said he did not
(;uy fhghts lonight in the air ridor between Berlin and itam-hiirg, informed Western sources: sai(i today.
wont to give the impression that he had spoken directly to Eisenhower or that this decision had been approved by Eisenhower. But he went on to say he was sure that, in view of the close relationship between those with whom ho had talked and Eisenhower, they would not have asked him to call unless this represented Eisen-how'cr’s view as well as their own."
A spokesman for Dewey sail Tuesday Dewey had not read the Nixon remarks and^could not comment.
Western sources said Western traffic will continue through the Hamburg-Berlin corridor as usual.
a busy time for civilian air companies. In all the corridors a dozen liners — American, Briti.sh and French—are scheduled lo be the air.
It Wasn't Smooth Start
RACINE. Wis. (UPI)-The late Samuel Curtis Johnson, recently elected to-the Wisconsin Industrial Hall of Fame, experienced a number of business failures before founding—75 years ago—the i pany that makes. Johnson’s Wax products.
At the end of his broadca.st, Nix-
1 told his listeners that he felt he should not quit but that he would leave the decision to the Republican Natiorial Committee. He urged his audience to wire or write the committee as to what it should do.
Nixon said he did not learn immediately that Eisenhower had praised him for his performance and that the. general’ wanted to meet him" the next night in West Virginia, It was in the absence of this - knowledge that he dictated the telegram which the aide destroyed, he said.
down and he flew to Wheeling. W.Va., where Eisenhower greets him with the now famous endorsement: “You’re my boy.
BIRMINGHAM
Membership eit reaohei th«slr goal by •IgnihK
up 3,428 ne# oip ronewinf intm* ban. 400 more than Init ytMr’a
ThtoWlb the Mile •! meinlMr-
work-
Emphasis was placed on the sale of 1100 civic membenhips. Snllon told, through a division headed by Dr. Harry C. Llcht-wardl. The division sold 32 civic membei'shlps to IrHlivIduals and Hcrvlee clubs. .
About one-fourth of the local Y’s operating budget la financed by the United Foundation, Salton said.
Pint lady Racti From School to Horiaback to
lop membership salwroait liuLbft ^ campaign vzai hjro. Jamea T. Wli-
FaihJon Show
ion’otl627 Marylaml Road,
frdit......................
121 to her <|redit. Next highest was her twin sister, Mrs. Edward E. Volkman of 300 8. Cranbrook Crosi Road, with 00.
★	# ■ A
Mrs. Thomas R, Cassell of 1609 Maryland Road, a neigHltor Mrs. Wilson, was third highest In membership sales.
tial bodyguard and cleared four
her six-foot aaieorte went turn* bling off Ms horse on one of the
Her car dodging sacred cows In the street, Jackie started the day wtm r’vwtrw uoyr twr tional school Then she presented India’s children with a portable American schoohwm for young art students.
Mrs. Kennedy changed her costume five times during the day and such was her attraction that crowds broke through police lines and peered through tho glass windows of her limousine. Be-lur-baned, black-bearded Sikhs seemed pleased with what they saw.
Mrs. Kennedy wore an apricot-colored <-otlon sheath, high in front with low oval back, ,lo the fashion show at the New Delhi Emporium.'
It featured lovely Indian models, showing both Western dress and Oriental silks and saris from the 20-million home workers of the cottage industries.”
a been prohibited along both aides of a threa*quaricr mile stretch of Lone Pine Road in Bloomfield Htlla.
AAA
The dty commiaaion Imposed the ban last night on tho aectlon between Cranbrook and Labser roads on the recommendation of City Clerk-Publlc Safety Director Robert J. Stadler.
Jtadler said thet H wee eapMit-
ed that the paving of Quarton road would reduce heavy traffic on I^ne Pine but the rongestlon still exisis, niaUng It necessary to eliminate, all parMng-in the past there had been limited parking in the area and no parking on one side of the road in several stretches.
The commission, in another action, accepted the low bid for fleet iasurancp from the J. L. VanWag-oner Agency in Pontiac.
The policy, to cost $875, will give complete coverage to all city-owned vehicles.
The commission also agreed to have the city participate in May-Exchtngc Day to be held May
21.
Charges UAW Used State Fund in Strike
LANSING lA) — General Motors Corp. charged today that the United Auto Workers used the slate ■mploymeni compensation fund lo finance a strike against GM last September.
The two-week strike bore out fears that the 1939 “Ford Canton’ decision of the state supreme court would force employers to help pay strikes against themselves through their contributions to the jobless pay fund, said Louis G.
5M vice president for industrial cqlat ions.
Seaton, writing to Colin L. Smith, manager of the Michigan Employers' Unemployment Compensation Bureau, said the potential drain on Ihe fund from such tactics is “staggering'.’* He called for enactment of legislation to cancel the effect of the decision.
Australian Ex-Laborite Forced to Take 'Rest'
SYDNEY, Australia (ffl—Herbert . Evatt, former loader of Australia’s Labor party, is suffering from high blopd pres.sure and will have lo rest for the next two months, his wife said today.
Soon afterward, friends calmed—Evatt, a Jormer presidentrof the
U.N. General, Assembly', is now chief justice of New South Wales. He became ill Friday just before starting on a world tour.
Crucl^*TTOrtr-Block Cease Fire
Terrorists Attack French Barracks
ALGIERS (Jl — Secret Army terrorists attacked^ vC-French riot police barracks in Algiers at dawn today, firing rbekets and machine guns for 13 minutes at the big building.

Riot police quartered in building returned the European ten»rists’ fire. Hundreds of residents of the“area Tvatched from their windows as rockets exploded and guns cracked.
There was no immiediate infor-mation on casualties in the attack.
ganizifttion, terrorist o^anization of right-wing Europeans.
Etaewhero In Algiers terrorists had killed four Moslems, including a nwjor in the French army, and wounded five before Three Europen^.were by gnpfire. ^
French and Algerian rebel oU ficials went into their second week of formal peace talks at Evian, the French-Swiss border. Important hurdles were reported still blot'king a cense fire in Algeria. After nearly nine hours of dis-jssion Tuesday, the two delegations were still at odds over the make-up of a proviskmal govern* ment to administer Algeria be* a cease fire and full Inde-
speht much time in a discussion of the persons to fill the seats
provisidnal executive
pendence, and on the role of Algerian rebeljroops in future action against the Secret Army Or-
Relafed^Sfory, Page 23
Both sides still predicted they would eventually reach 'full agreement.-----__________ ^,
In., the barren interior, should have a similar support role under the authority of tile executive commission.
Other uunettled questions rc-poi-tcdiy include "n amnesty for Algerian refugees in Tunisia and Morocco and the establishment of courts to handle fdisputes arising under the generah agreement.
One informant reported the con-
Inlormants said the conference
commisSibn. Several names advanced from both sides without winning approval.
The French and the Algerians have agreed that the provisional regime should have a Moslem local force at its disposal to maintain public order,
They have also agreed ihat the French higb commissioner will have French soldiers and police'at his disposal, to back up the local force, particularly in Algeria's predominantly European cities.
The i«bel nattpriallsts now are intis^ng that their «vm troops.
ress Tuesday but warned what he called undue optimism.
—Warshqte^ of -the French Mcdh terranean fleet patrolled Al^rian
waters in readi.'.ess fw any major action By the secret army to
ference made considerable prog*
In Algiers, houitewivro stocked supplies In pr . aration for a threatened general strike.

.J.'

^army, ' violently opposed to Algerian independence, has ordered a strike for the day of a cease fire.
French army troo^ prepared to take over essential services during the strike.*^"
Terrorist attacks in the North African territoty killed 29 persons and woupded 55 Tuesday.
The arntput waa
Mrs. Janies F. Miller Jr. Service for Mrs. James F. (Jeannette E.) Miller Jr.. 50. of 999 Top View Road, Bloomfield Township, will be 3 p.m. Friday at the B(>11 Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Gemetery, Troy.
Mrs. Miller died today following several months^ Illness.
Her husband is an executive of the Detroit Stamp and Stencil Co. Surviving besides her husband •e a daughter, Anne Margaret, son, James F. Ill, both at home; and a half sister, Mrs. James Barber of Detroit.
SIMMS DISCOUNT PRICES?
FREE
5x7-INCH
enlargement
(If'orth S9c In Mo*t 8torf»)
. . with every roll of black/whHs film developed ond printed. YOU seleef the icture you desire enlol-ged. •
Lifetime—Fadepoof
BLACK and WHITE
Tz'i' PRINTS
From All Popular Size Rolls
PHOTO!
•	Dated and Decaled Edges
•	Automotic ELECTRIC-EYE Goarontees Parfoct Print!
•	Regulor 10c Quolify '
COLOR FILM PROCESSING
99
» to be ml ore made.


1 UK PONTIAC r^pss. WISDNiAdAY. kAHCll
Sacrifice and Common Sense
Union, Management Save Faltering Firm
THEli
Thfl comtMUiy «({rc<'d.
Then the union Un»‘lf woi ked out a ilclnlled plan.
Hr MCK V. irox
NEW YORK (UFP	«
•uccew jitory. It la the etory of how A SS'yeai' old buslneu. about to close Its doors and put 1,200 men and women out of work, was •aved by a heartening demonstration of unions and management working together.
' ♦ ★ ★
The company Is the Ruppert Brewery, founded by Jacob Rup-pert two years after the Civil War when massive horses trundled the beer barrels on wagons through llje streets of New York.
The unions are locals of the
The method was sacrifice and comihon sense. Executives took 10 per cent wage cuts
nationally by James H, Holla
year. Breweiy worl era accepted flve>wesk rotational layoffs. And the oldest workers were persuoded to retire on pen* slons plus an "Incentive" bonus. COMPANY ON PKKT Now a little over a year has UBied. The company's recent annual reiKirt showed a 1061 profit of JC12,Ti3 compared to a |2.5 million loss In I960.
Out of tills "shanvthe work" experhnenl may come a lesson
and a precedent for other com-panics encountering the
of high labor costs
unions gravely concerned by unemployment)	•
« not automation that brought Ruppert to a crisis in 19S0. It was an Ill-fated attempt to morcbandlse Its beer widely outside Its prime New England-New York-New Jersey markets withodt sutfldont funds for a long-range sales campaign.
Over-all sales dropped and It ] I'vcloiH'd Inlo a situation where Ruppert simply had too many em-pities for the amount of beer It could sell.
What happened then Is told by John J, Waldnm, vice president of Ruppert and Us ehlel exeeu-live offleer for the past year.
Waldmh Vvei the warmest ami ansttntliig credit to the unions for the part they played In saving tl only brewery led In Manhattan.
reasons) one of them a unlOn oentraot providing stiff terminal pay.
It was then that the company told the union it had to have relief on Us lallbr coals. The union asked how much. Tlie company said 10 iH'r wnt.
%omsm OUT mN
The company's p
that t major stockholder had up sufficient support for a proposal to sell the company brand and other assets, tear down the big red brick buildings and consiruct apartment houses In their place.
Tlic union asked whether the
Pontiaj^Opticai Crater
Railroads In the United Stulim spent almost $4 million more for lumber and other forest products in 1960 than In the preceding year.
TROUBLE HEARING on the PHONE'
FREE!
Telsphone Attachment (or the Hsrd-of-HearIng another wrvice of
PROFESSIONAL
Nearing clinic
101 N. Saoinaw, Pontiac Dial; FE 2-0291
Aak for T«ln|>linii« AUaiilinii.iil.
#MBdirQDil( CREAM
ERG
FopDETERGEHTHAHDS DIAPER RASH, RED CHAPPED SKIN
fimmvmmcm mmmmmi sms pm
98 North Sogrinow Street

DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL! DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL | DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL | DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL | DOQR BUSTER SPECIAL
400 ShMt Pack of
Kleeinx.Tissues
3pks*.0y‘
Reflulor S9e bOx of w(f, i_________
tliwn in wAlte end colon, limit 6. -DRUGS Main Floor
DorCSixai In
FlashliglitBatteiy
Heg.	RC
JOc	Jl
Choice of Maniun 0 battery or live Rami C batterlei. Limit S bat-terlei-SUNDRY Main Floor
Kodacolor Film
SI.2S IQc
Roll
Man's Adjuifobla
Shoe Tress
27'
All metal treei to fit >hoe ilzei 5 to 12. Shoei look better, loll longer. -HOUSiHOLO 2nd Floor.
Full GALLON Con
Paint Thinner $u9 RQc
Value EyPHiP “
Beil (or thinning oil paints (Except latex base) and cleaning paint brushes, limit 2. - PAINTS 2nd
DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL				DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL'
Ladiai' - Mittat'—Girl t' Tennis Oxfords $2.49 "I 44 Value M Durable tennit oxfordt in white, black or Iliac colon. All li/ei 4 to 10. -SHOES Boeamant		Babiat Attorfad Receiving Blanket i «-x. QO® 59c MW Choice of aisorted sizes and colon -CLOTHING Main Floor		Famous 'LILY' Brand Sewing Thread 12 *'”•'‘39* Black or while In 10 to 100 size. Spools of 50 to 60 yards. For sew- -DOMESTICS Basamant
TOMORROW (~) Onen at NOON 'til 9 P.M
CLOSED in Morning —Open of 12 Noon!
9-Diseount-Packed Shopping Hours
Jimmj
"9-HOUR SALE" Discount Prica Togs Ara in Every Dept. Throughout 3 Floors at SIMMS
Every item in this advertisement is GUARANTEED BELOW regular PRICE tomorrow a( Simms. . . plenty of other items at DISCOUNT not advertised, but ore in the store, look for them!
YOU owe it to your pocketbook to attend this money-saving event to see how much more you save at SIMMS during this 9-HOUR SALE EVENT. .	.
SORRY—NO Moil or phone orders at these super-discount prices . . . and we reserve the right to limit all quantities, so that more customers con shore in this DOUBLE DISCOUNT SALE.
'AShop Every Department on All 3 Floors ir
MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS
Gives T 000 Lights
Book Matches
Factory Specials
50'°'8‘
‘Corky’ Cigars
50 1®5
Regular 2Sc carton o( 50 book malchej *| in solely pad style. Limit 2.
-TOBACCO Main F
Regular $2.50 box of 50 six cent smokers. Limit 2 boxes per person.
-TOBACCO Main Floar
Entira Stock of 5" Candy Bars	p New Model—Men's RONSON sr.'!t
15“44*	$23.50 1 1 88 Value II
All bronds include Hershey, Milky Wby, Nestles, etc. limit 15 bors. -CANDY Main Floor |	Newest model Mork ll-CFL shaver complete with cord and case. No trade. ' -SHAVERS Main Floor
DRUG DEP'T. SPECIALS	
For Feminin* Hygiene Ketex Napkins	3 Famous Brands In ”“5"- Permanent
48-r*	Values OOC to $1.50
Regular $1.83 valye—famous soft, absorbent Kotex at discount. -DRUGS Main Floor	__Choice of Toni-Tip, lilt jiefresher, Hud-nuf 20-Curl for touch-ups. Limit 2. -COSMETICS Main Floor
SCHICK or GILLEHE Razer Blades	5 Famous Brands of Hair Sprays
	$2.00 CQc '"■'■“■051
.Regular 6^c pack of Gillette Super or Schick Krono blades. Limit 2, -DRUGS Main Floor	1 Jumbo IS-ounce size—Lustre Creme, 1 Lanolin Plus, vUquinet, Nestles or 1 French Touch. , -COSMETICS Moin Floor
Ail Famous Brands Teeth Pastes	Free Dremo Fresh VO-5 Hair Groom
2 39'	$1.35 Fatue
Regulor 31c tubes—Colgates, Ipona, Cresb GleCtti, Pepsodent, etc. Limit 4. -DRUGS Moin Floor	■fomous Albertos VO-5 with Dremo-.--esh lotion free. Limit 2 deals. . -COSMETICS Main Floor
PHOTO DEPT. VALUES	
Choice of 2 Powers Field Glasses	All TRANSISTOR Pecket Radie
S6.00 Value Wilh._ 1 Case *	JI87 Compare to 59
Pocket size field glosses in 3 power or	Complete with battery and earphone
■ 2'/4 power. Limit 2 glasses. ./ -CAMERAS Main FIoom	broadcosts.-CAMERASMain Floor’
SHOORfSAU
Box of 8 Pieces
Slate Chalk
Bpx o( 8 pieces of chalk in while or .colored. Limil 3 boxes.-SUNDRY Main Floor
2nd FLOOR SPECIALS
Standard 6-Inch
Mail Envelopes
100125°
Regular 39c pock of m „ , lopes in standard 6 inch size. L .3. -SUNDRY Main Floor
Choice of 3 Popular
Bulk Candies
15'
Choice of Orange Slieds, Spiral Jumbo Jelly Strings or Spearmint . Leaves. -CANDY Main Floor
Jmnoui 'Creston'
Coloring Crayons
Regular 15c box of 16 assorted
spring crayons by Creston. 2. - SUNDRY Main Fleor
150-Pc. Combination
Stationery Pack
37*
Reg.
Pqck includes 100 sheets of fino, writing paper and 50 moil envelopes. -SUNDRY Main Floor
5-Cell. All Metal
Flashlight
(1-95	RRc
Value	dif
Fixed focus flashlight throws ISOD-ft. beam. With bulb. Batteries extra.' -SUNDRY Main Floor
Toothhrush
3 19*
Regular 25c value — nylon I .lost..longer, stay firmer. Limit 6. -DRUGS Main Floor
Feminine Hygiene
Travel SyriiMie
J8°
$2.79 U||e Value
•Perfect for traveling—compocf unit complete with ottachments. Limit 2. -DRUGS Main Floor
Vaseline TMte
54*
2-ounces of regular Voselir tonic for neot hair grooming o(l
day. -DRUGS Main Floor
10-Gollon Size Garbage Can Will, 159 Cover 1 Regular $2.29 value—10 gallon con with ball handle. Limit 2 cans. -HARDWARE 2nd Floor	Galvanized Steel 10-Qt. Pails ”'■ 54® 1 Hot-dipped galvanized steel pail with II bail handle. Limit 2 pails. 1 -HARDWARE 2nd Floor
, Medium Capacity Rubbish Burner AAc Value All wire trash burner with safety top and bottom draft feature, limit 2. -HARDWARE 2nd Floor	II House Painter Set- I Paint Pan and Roller 1 . SIM COc r«(u. 1 7-inch paint roller complete with metal 1 point tray. Limit 2 sets. 1 -HARDWARE 2nd Floor
6-Foot ELECTRIC Extensien Cerd 23® ' Handy extension cord for home use— FULL 6-foot length. Limit 2 cordr. -HARDWARE 2nd Floor	1 'WELCOME' Rubber Beer Mats $1.69 AAc Value 17x27 inch size rubber mat for doorways, porches, etc. Black rubber. . -HARDWARE 2nd Floor
24-Inch RUBBER | Stair Treads 1 4^100 Reg'ulal 5()c value—block or broWn ribbed rubber treads. 'No limit. -HARDWARE 2nd Floor	1 BERNZ-O-MATIC 1 Prepane Tanks r SIM 100 1 Value ■ ■ Genuine Berni-O-Matic propane tanks ■for propane torches. Limit 2. -HARDWARE 2nd Floor
Silicone Treatiad^ 'ssn Cevers * 34® Tailored to fit- oil standard 54-inch 1 boards. Slip-on style cover.' I -HOUSEHOLD 2nd Floor 1 On Metal Plaque I WeaHier Barometer >3.00 $148 Value 1 Germon made barometer set in metal 'sunbursP .plaque. Plaque is 12-inch. -SPORTS 2nd Floor	Makes Perfect Patties Hamburger Press . 48® 1 Hardwood press makes perfect ham-1 'burgers and sausage patties. 6-inch 1 diameter.-HOUSEHOLG2nd Floor 1 Famous RUBBERMAID 1 Shelf Cushien $1.95 0"T® Value J g 36-inchlength, 11 %-lnch width. Ribbed ■ rubber in red colors.' -HOUSEHOLD 2nd Floor
Spring Coil-WOOD Clethespns 593?	Soft Poly Plastic Utility Pans $1.00 'COc Fa/«e
Regulor 49c seller-rpock of 50 polished hardwood pins with spring coil grip. -HOUSEHOLD 2nd Floor	15-diameter, cushion soft plastic pan for utihly purposes. Golors.*- -HOUSEHOLD 2nd Floor
!2-Qt. Size-WICKER Wastebasket CQc' Value pQ Woven wKik^r bosket with side carrying handles. Extra durable. -HOUSEHOLD 2nd Floor	Western or Remington Rifle Shells . SO 68” Regulor 80c box of .^shells by Western or Remington, ifong rifle only. Limrt 10 b'oxes.-SPORTS 2nd| Floor ;
4 Famous Types of
Nestles Shampoo |c
39*
e-ounci
Creme, Egg, Lemon or Nescurhype.
-COSMETICS Main Floor
ROYAL 16-ounce
Buhhie Bath
34*
16-ounces of Royol Bubble Bath in pine or oppleblossom fragrances. -COSMETIC Main Floor.
Free Pump Dispenser
Woodbury Lotion $1.00 OQc
Value 99
-COSMETICS Main Floor
Woven Oval Style
Clothesbasket
$2.00
Value
127
Sturdy woven wicker basket with side handles. 27" overall size. Limit 2.-HARDWARE 2nd Floor
Famous Wagner
Carpet Swedper
499
Handy sweeper to pkk<ip. soil .between vacuumings. limit I per person. -HARDWARE 2nd
Portable 3-Speed
Electric Mixer'
8”
3-speed hand mixer forony kitShen • mixing chore. With cord ond beater ejector feoturb. -^ELECTRIC 2nd
Durable Aluminum
Fancy Cooky Cutter
° 3®
Bright, durable aluminum cooky cutters in assorted designs. Eosy to Cleon. -HOUSEHOLD 2nd'
Magnetic Lid Lifter
Hand Cao 8pener |e
«.9<r
JVaiue
5-m-one con opener opens ony size con... wHh bottle opener etc. limit 2. -HOUSEHOLD 2nd-
Plastic Chef Size in
. Salt, Peppw^. c
27°
ShtSker set is easy to filL eosy to clean and has twist lock covorjHas-tic.-HOUSEHOLD; 2nd Floor ^
/
MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS
Irregulars of $1.50 to $2.00 Sellers
Ladies’ FameusBfas
Your Choice at One Low Price Famous brand names In this group.
choice of styles in sizes 28AA to 36A. ' Stock up at big discounts now.
-CLOTHING Main Floor
15*
Plastics anil Cottons
Ladies’ Half-Aprons I
U.S.A. Made-Boys' ^
Flannel Rebes
Keg.
25* i 1
100
Choice of ossorled styles, ossorled trims, pockets, ruKles and plain
Washable flannel in blue plaid, si
One Special Group—Your Choice of LADIES'
SKIRTS-SLACKS-PUSHERS
Regular Values to $3.95 Choice of all wool skirts in sizes 8 fo 14 or pin-sfripe slacks or pedal pushers In prints or solids in sizes 8 to 16.
-CLOTHING Main Floor
1
00
SEAAALESS Nylons in AAesh or Plain
Ladies’ Nylen Hesieiy
Values to $1.00 Pair Slightly irregulars which won't effect beauty 6r wearing quality. Mesh or plain styles in sizes 8,'/2 to 11.
-CLOTHING Main Floor
3e1
25
BARGAIN BASEMENT 1	
White Cotton Knit Beys’ T-Shirts 4 ar jOO Washable white cotton T-shirts with nylon reinforcing. Size medium ond forge -CLOTHING Bosemmt	Boys'Woshabio Bress Pants ■ «2.9s 157, p, /“‘-I 4n Royon.acetole Ronnel pants with Justo-Tob. 1st quality fai sizes 8 to 14. Brown or greyi -CLOTHINO Basement
Wash W Wear 	 Kiddies’Slacks 1 $2.50 Cotton cords in blue or olive shades. Matched belt, zipper fly. Sizes 5-6-7. -CLOTHING Botomont	With^WmoF — Boys’Raincoats $1.00 MTfe * Value lightweight ploslie rotnocM Mmptete with helniet. Sizes small, medium and Iqrgev -CLOTHING Bosement
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. PONTtACS No, 1 QQ ilb I - DISCOUNTER VQ Hi 1
TO BE MAKRIKI) - Isiiglisli actor Edmund Purdom grmda Linda Chriatlan with a ki«s on the ch(H'k at Mexico Oty’s International Airport on her recent arrival from Rome. Purdom, who bad arrived earlier In the day |rom U>s Angeles, stated, “I’ve come to marry Linda.” She was tmcc married to the late actor Tyrone Power.
Strip Professor of His Ministry
Presbyterian Judicial Commission Acts Over Doctrinal Dispute
PRINCETON, N.J. (UPI) seminary professor has been stripped of his ministry in the "United lyiaiiatASrlW't^ because of a dispute over doctrine.
Because be refused to declare his belief In the doctrine of the virgin birth of Jesus Christ, Dr. ,]ohn Harwood Hick, 40, ^uart professor of Christian philosophy at Princeton Theological Seminary, was rejected as a minister of the three-ffiUlkm-inember church.
The eeiilfwersy now seems headed tor the general assembly of the ehnreh, its ruling body. The assembly Is to be held May 17 at Denver.
Falling to appeal, Dr. Hick apparently will lose his proldisor-ship at the seminary, the oldest Presbyterian seminary in the t tion, which requires its faculty members to be ministers.
The decision was announced Tuesday by the permanent judicial commission of the church’s New Jersey synod. Acting on the com-plaiid of 18 ministers and ruling elders tt the synod’s New Brunswick presbytery, which includes Princeton, the commission reversed the presbytery’s decision that Dr. Hick could retain his ministry.
The commission said on two occasions that wdjjle Dr. Hick “did not deny, he did not affirm his belief in thr docfrihe dt the virgin birth of Jesus Christ.”'
In a statement, Dr. ITick said he anticipated ‘^when this matter is finally decided by the general ^naitoinhly of OUT church, the broader view will iwevail.”
East Coastline Is Altered by Recent Storms
NEW YORK (AP)-The Eastern seaboard coastline was altered substantially as the result of last week’s storms that swept in from the Atlantic, a federal government official said Tuesday.
Cqj5t. Lawrence Swanson, the U.S. ^oast Guard and Geodetic Suweyis assisflintiiireclor of steal science, said some channels were filled in and others created.
A * W
A spokesman for the survey’s New York district said prclimi-naiy reports indicate major shoreline changes at Westhamp-ton, Ivong Island, and Long Beach, N.J.
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LANSINO (AF) - Poor school dlitrlcta with thi» leaat taxable property would gain the moat under a school aid bill recommended tor passage by the House Educa> tlon Committee.
The measure came out of the committee Tuesduy and went Icrt-mediately to the Ways and Means ■’ommltlcp for a che«-k on costs mil iKiNsible anicndrnrnt.
IN IJNK —• Richard Magulri', 47, a White House aide tuid former Boston lawyer, has Insm mentiomHl as a prospect for the treasurer post of the DemcK-rnllc party. He may lM-corm> the parly’s top fund raiser if. as expected, the po>8ont trensurer, Matthew H, McCloskey is named ambassador to Ireland.
Tmnpilce board Now Exists Only in State History
LANSING (AP) - The Michigan Turnpike Authority, once a storm center of controversy in thf state, exists today only as a ‘	'
note to history.
Highway Commi.ssioncr John C. MacklP4)i'e8enled three volumes of authority records to the State Historical Commission Tuesday, Thi authority was formally abolished by the legislature two wedatragta The ai^hority was created by the legislature in 195.J to investigate the possibility of building toll roads between Toledo and Bay City and from Detroit to Chicago.
Rep. Raymond C. Wurzel, R-Port Huron, Education Committee chairman said the proposed •hanges would cost about J2l ndl-ion u year. That does not take Into acx'ount an additional $10 million required for an expected 50,-000 increase in public school rollments next year, he said.
Hl*g MPECIAL All)
The two Increases, he said, would raise slate aid costs to about $313 million.
Another provision in the bill raises the poaxlmum state equalized valuation for districts to be eligible for special aid to “distressed districts” from $7,000 to $11,000 p<’r pupil.
Wunel said he anticipated efforts on the Housi> floor to raise fife deduellble ItilllAge factor even higher.
It received appropriations totaling $650,000 hut never constructed a mile of highway. The turnpike idea was abandoned when Michigan and other states started receiving federal millions for interstate freeways.
II-Ounce Boy Loses Fight for Survival
PALM SPRINGS, Calif., (UPD-An 11-ounce tioy 'Tuesday lost a 50,000 to 1 chance of survival.
The Infant, bom Sunday to Mr. and, Mrs. John Batista of Palm Springs, died this morning. If the boy had survived it would have been one of the smallest children to live.
Doctors said apparently there were no contributing factors to the infant’s death other than its size.
Bette Davis to Leave Cast of Williams' Play
NEW YORK (AP)—Bette Davis •says that Shelley Winters will place her April 4 in the cast of Tennessee , Williams’' Broadway play, “The Night of the Iguana.’’ Miss Davis said she originally had signed a 6-month contract and had chosen to exercise her option to withdraw. She sai4 there was nothing to rumors that she had been in disagreement with the management or cast n bers.
Senators Set Hearings
WASHINGTON (AP)-A Senate Armed ' Services subcommittee will begin open hearings March 21 on the stockpiling of strategic materials. President Kennedy has said an excessive amount of suqji materials has been accumulated.
(Advertlaementi
Vi^keup larin' to
Bill Would Hdp Poor Disliicis
Unit Approves Motion Increasing School Aid and Deductible Millage
'riin bIH would raise the p i- r pupil slate aid bmnula fruin I2IIS to and the deductible millage factor from to SY« mills, liicis^asca In deductible millage give poor disirlels a bigger share
e ihai our low valuation districts should get more state aid,’’ he said, “but I think that 3V4 mills is about all we can hope to get through the legislature this year.”
Wurzel criticized Gov. Swnin-
in’s proposal for an eight p e r cent across-the-board aid increase.
"This would only compound the inequities in school aid distribution,” ho said.
Swainson's bill died in the committee.
Mackie to Ask $1.75 Million for High Winter Bill
LANSING (Jf» — With its budget exhausted; the State Highway Department is going to ask for $1.75 million in special appropriations'to help pay the highway maintenance bill for a long and stormy winter.
State Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie said the department already has overspent Ms $5.5 million winter maintenance budget by $100,000,
Mackie said he would ask the legislature to transfer $1,25 million to the maintenance fund from the gas and weight tax fund which finances highway constructim. Another $500,000 will be sought from the Department of Administration, he said.
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What Will Be Result of Disarmament Talks?
Disarmament Is a Uttle pe virtue. Nobody is r^ly against It. The French are not participating because DkGaullk doesn’t see any use In talk' Ing with the Soviet Union at this time.
A new try will be made startling today by representatives of 17 nations meeting In Geneva under United Nations auspices. On Monday and Tuesday the British and Russian foreign ministers and the U.S. Secretary of State met.
These talks are the result of a resolution adopted unanimously by the 104 member United Na-, tk»l» General Assembly last December. Actually, it’s kind of an East-West compromise asked, “as a matter of urgency” that the new disarmament body seek agreement on “general and complete disarmament under effective international control.”
- - At-thr tlrto irhidt*	get
very excited about, the East will again be represented by the Soviet
This Is about as absurd as arguing that you could not drive a car alone without hiring a stand-in driver.
★	★	★
Now that the commission has reported, management and labor are Imund by a prcvloua agreement to negotiate over the recommendations. The unions against Ibis l>u} Ualmr Secretary Goldberg is urging both to settle their differences on the basis of the'report.
★	★	★
Why not abide by the findings of the 15 man commission? Tl)ey spent 16 months gathering the facts, and it would seem utterly silly to waste this time and money.
The Man About Town
Signs Both Ways
Indications of Spring Are Disputed liy Others
I • M	takes^, .
twice ae long to rest up after taking half as long to get tired.
■'	: T ^	^
Voice of the Pjeople; '
*No Wonder AccidenU Less in Airplanes Than Autos*
When an editerlal such as ’’Plano Acridents Low Compared to Auto" Is foisted o« on readers. It makes me wonder It The Press considers us all too stiiirid to* realise thkt there are aeveral million more aytomobllos than airplanes. When you consider tliat 80 per cent of tho population do not use airplanes, but 99 per cent have one or more cars, how cun you draw any comparison?
Accoidlng to The Press’ way of thinking, the aafelt way to travel would be In a rocket capsule shot from Cape Canaveral. Then# hasn't been one single death In all those countless miles of orbit travel. Let’s have one of your brilliant ^torlals condemning the airplane and praising the rocket ship. How soon can you book paasage on It?
His Future
David Lawrence Eeminisces:
Things No Different in 50 Years
Believe Referee Showed Partiality
Pontiac Parks and Recreation could do with a thorough examination of the partiality shown by one of th<; raferees in the game between CIO and 300 I.«unge, Thursday, March 8.
★	★ Sr
When so many young people of this area are subject to such bias conduct as was shown by this referee, It will definitely have Its effect In their future athletic endeavors.
Bill Brown
Holly
The one who referred to the 300 ' Lounge game (March 9 paper) as a "well-deserved" victory, did not watch with an unbiased view. It was far from fairly refereed and I’m convinced that all concerned with the 300 Lounge game admit to themselves that truth.
Hilda Killian
Qrtonvllh?
^Highway Slaughter Can Be Reduced*
Evpry year thousands of people die because of carelessness on our highways.
One method of cutting down the number of accidents is to make It more difficult for a pepson to obtain a driver’s license.
8 8 8
A thorough physical examination should be required, not only (or the person who has never hsd a license but for everyone who Is renewing a license. The I the
If people who are too old, physically Incompetent, or do not possess proper knowledge of traffic laws and ttu* skill to drive properly HIV kept off the road, then we will have fewer accidents. ^ James L. McUInnls 245 W. Brooklyn
,	,	, ,	_ Quite In disagreement about the pros-
Unlon, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Po-	early spring are
land and Romania. The lineup for the West wUl be the United States,
Great Britain, Italy and Canada.
★ ★ ★
The new element will be the relatively independent nations.
These eight are Mexico and Brazil, rqiresenting Latin America; Burma and India, for Asiaf Ethiopia, Nigeria and the United Arab Republic, for Africa and the Middid East, and a neutral European, Sweden.
Gordon Schenker of Waterford, who phones that he saw a caterpillar on a snow bank — crawling north; and
. Mrs. Gladys Wellertbn of Birmingham, who sends word that she saw a caterpillar on her porch—crawling south.
' WASHINGTON-"'niis unchanging world" might well be a caption on the dispatch presented here today.
It was exactly 50 years dgo this week that the writer—as an
chest but not seriously Woundisl. Woodrow Wilson gullanlly suspended his sp<<ech-maklng uhtil Roosevelt’s recovery.
’’conservative” did order the Department of Justice In 1012 to take action against the merger of the Southern Pacific and Vnion Pacific railroads, and tho courts agreed.
Nor was the world of the dance
*Miniiiiiiii Wage Bill Needed by Carhops*
It is inconceivable how an organization designed to furthering athletics in this area can contend with such a partial and biased official as in Ibe 300 Lounge game.
It is difficult to believe that a per- __________________________^
son who supposedly Is objective tcrcstcd in'human rights, could allow his personal feelings to
At a recent meeting held In Lansing on Bill 675 Minimum Wage, we heard testimony from people in-
Incidenlally, even in 1912 the^re much different in 1912, though they influence his decisions in an ath-
Associated Press	servicemen who
, reporter — found ^oyed by their tour of duty, hiiqself riding reserve divisions of the U.S. Amy horseback at	mobilized by President Taft
night through watch the boi-der between Texas the mountains of Mexico. In the same year.
an- didn’t call it the “twist.” The letic contest.
"ragtime" music fad brought out I series of what were called animal dances.”
8 8 8
These were denounced in the
I was under the mistaken impression that the purpose of the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department was to promote '
LAWRENCE posse of detectives who were searching for a band of outlaws.
southern Vii^inia y.s. Marines were landed In press and In the pulpits of the land! sportsmanship, not only among the	our cran is
a 10 n g with a cy^a because of di.sorders tljere. Among the names given were the actual teams participating, but	«	■
When the sap In the maple trees begins, to run early, we have an early spring, says *
Phil Waskom
of Drayton Plains, who tapped his trees three wfeeks earlier than usual, and Is getting a good run of the sweet water that	"VTtnmPv'"fhrXritf violence.
This will be the first sizable formal	being boiled down, ends up on flap	k	• ^_
discussion of disarmament since June jacks.
27,1980. That's when the Communist
i tljere. Among the names given were the .	8	8	8	..jux {rot,” the "horse trot.’/j the
Not all the turbulence was in "Crab step," the “kangaroo dip,’
among young people of this area.
They were called the Alien Gang, arid they had shot up a courtroom,
politics or International affairs, the "camel walk,’’ the "hsh walk,” Ljibor union disturbances were big the "chicken scratch” and the in the news. A two-month strike "lame duck.” But it was the of textile workers in Massachusetts “grizzly bear" and the "bunny
and they had snot up a _	,	characterized by craisiderable hug" and the "turkey trot" which
killing the Judge on the bench, the	8
half of an East-West c dnf er ent e walked out after three months of futUe talks.
We would like to think that for the good of the entire world. Premier Khrushchev would go along with some proposal for Inspection machinery. It’s that simple, he holds the tvus|p card.
If he won’t agree it will just turn into another bickering session with little or no gain.
' ir ir W President Kennedy said at his March 7 iiews c»nferei^ that it
would be proper at Geneva to discuss Berlin and Germany or South Asia because these matters directly influence the progress of armaments, ]^r-ther, he said, “If we fail to get an agreement on toting, theri . . . we test. And I presume others will test. And I regard that as very risky procedure for the future of the human
A 15-yeir-old pony, owned by the family of'
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fulger of Rochester, has been an unfailing weather barometer all of his life. When we’re to have an early spring he begins shedding his winter coat early in February. He’s still In full cold weather attire.
Several of Oakland County’s leading farmers, Including ■
Earl Voorhels * ’ of Davlsburg, highly endorse the ' "Let owners run their farms” plan which Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman gave as advice to Soviet Premier Nikita Shrnshchev
In the latter’s efforts to solve Russia’s agrlcultmal problems.	'
Writing me from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Ted Hubert
of 1367 Llnvllle Road, Pontiac, says the Florida papers surely make big news of anything wintry In the north. He also says they’ve had some real snow In Fort Lauderdale.
Regarding that Olidden auto tour that started . In Pontiac In 1907 and went to Pike’s Peak,
George Olsen
of Birmingham states that three Poh-tiac men,
W. H. Dawson, A. G. North and' H. G. Hamilton
had just been named directors of the
one juror and two spectators.
Thera was no ban then, any more than there Is today, on the possession of deadly weapons. In 1912, however, some people were already advocating disarmament o( nations.
There had been fruitless international conferences at the Hague before, lyut. In that very same year talk was heard of possible naval disarmament. Winston Churchill, naval secretary In the British Cabinet opposed it, but reversed him-.self^ the next year when he declared ip a public speech that Britain would be glad to sign
may seem surprising to many people today, but a Republican administration often referred to as "standpat" or
were the most popular.
Fortunately or unfortunately,	.
they didn’t have any television to follow in 1962.
The Almanac
By United Press International Today is Wednesday, March 14, the 7.3rd day of the year with 292
(Copyright 196'2)
bill.
Dr. Harold Hyman Says:
Liver Bile Production Much More Than Needed
The moon is approaching its full phase.
The morning star is Saturn. There is no evening star.
On this day in history:	^
In 1879, Albert Einstein was born. Sl|1ll6S . In 1923, President Harding became the first U.S. president to file income, tax.
The four people who gave testimony in favor of this bill are not connected "with any union. They were public relations staff people of the Young Wome.n’s Christian AswMdatlon and a Deputy Coin-iiilsNlon of Izibor.
Since our craft is not under the are seeking a stale wage law in which we ask a minimum of 75 cents or $1 or whatever the legislators are willing to give us. This is to project the many people not covered who are working for such establishments as restaurants which sometimes pay carhops as low as 30 cents per hour.
I’m sure we have people In sympathy with this cause. Urge your legislators for passage of such a
Pauline Mott
One of the medical fables that seems Indestructible is that of ‘biliousness." People who feel out
■disarmament’’ treaty with of sorts .jstm .complain of feeling Germany.	’’blUous.’’ ^	^	^
^	8	8	Letter writers continue to ask
The proposal was that the two for stimulants to act on a "slug-
available, there is no known condition for which they would be helpful.
In 1933, Congress approved a Roosevelt-backed' measure authorizing the sole apd manufacture of 3.2 beer.
In 1950, following a prolonged drought, the.City of New York
An Eastern man was Jailed for writing ten rubber checks. He’s in for a long stretch.
8 8 8
A Cross-country runner has a lot of wind, like the hole-in-one golfer.
8 8 8
Their actions show that a lot of
than bllloifiSiness when you feel out facmrers”fram calling their prod-i of sorts. And seek relief from
.................... - '--------- some measures other than so-
called "liver pills’’ or "bile stimulants.^
Report Say8.Railroads Nved Modernization
The Teport from the Presidential Railroad Commission studying the g^filirerailroad system seems to indi- cartercar Company, who were behind the
By a 10 to 5 vote the commission has ;^id that part of the featherbedding must cease.
The recommendatHm that 30 to 45 thousand jobs be eliminated supports the management claims^— that working conditions have hindered beyond question their opera- Flooded Detroit expressways tions of the Nation’s railroads,
-—*-------★  ★- ★ .................................. -  , -
The report calls for a replaniiing of habit of turning into canals after a
wage structures and updating work- mer shower.
Ing conditiOTis to keep abreast of the new and modem equfpment.
Easily, the commission’s rc-pmt seems to make sense. The
Whooping It up for hi| home town,
Joe McCall,
Holly Publisher, tells me that there Isn’t a vacant retail store in the village, and we wonder If aw other Oakland County, tor'Michigan), aty or villaije can say as
news, according to a phone call from Ronald Keed'
of Blrpdnghtun, who says they have a
So, unless you suffer an obstruction to your bile passages and
.ne propusm	.... --------------------------------------- f™ fVlously Jaundlc^, better
rival naval powers would agree gish liver.” And, despite govern- Iwk tm TOmereJtplanatlon other that, lor at least one year, neither mental action restraining manu-	v™.	n„t
would' build any more battleships, facturers froin calling their prod-^
’The idea was to proclaim a "naval ucts "liver pills,” there is a suis-holiday" thereafter for an indefi- tained demand for drugs fei”8tlm-nile period. The plan got nowhere, ulate” the largest organ of the body whose efficiency rating cannot be approached by the most impressive of human handiworks.
Here are some of the facts about liver functions and the secretion of bile:
Among the more than 30 known activities performed, by the countless thousands of microscopic liver cells is the manufacture of bile.
- The dally output of bile I# about a pint, vastly more than body requirements.
After being collected by a _ dis- branching series of channels with-asto ”in‘'”New Yor,k a^4%le of the liyer, bile is stored In the weeks aeo	S^ll bladder during periods of di-
° gestive inactivity — during sleep U.S.’ FIRST NOBEL PRIZE	between meals.
Not all the news was, negative,	★	8	8	be well to
When we eat, and especially "J^vsieian when the meal includes fatty foods, the gall bladder cwitracts and, squeezes out, some of the
hired Dr. Wallace Howell, director youngsters get up In the morning of Mount Washington Observatory, fueling, fresh, for $100 a day to act as official .	8	8	8
"rainmaker.”	In the good old days a man
8 .	8	8	_	I ■	■	- -
A thought lor the day: Famed i physicist Albert Einstein said, “As long as tWSre are sovereign nations possessing great power, “war is inevitable."
Many wonderful summer trips are now being followed by a fall behind in funds.
In that same year of 1912, two state*—Arizona and New Mexico —were added to the Union a* the 47th and 48th. Also, there occurred the biggest transportation disaster of all times. There were more than 1,500 lives lost when the new Hteamship "Titanic,” speeding too fast through dangerous waters in fbe North Atlantic, collided with an Iceberg." - • Because of an “Insufficiency of lifeboats, the casualties were heavy—almost 16 times, the number killed
Case Records of a Psychologist:
‘Hospitalitis’ Fad Syt^eeping U.S.
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE L457: Myrtle R., aged 56, is a vivacious grandmother. '
“Dr. Crabe, my husband and I like to go to Canada on a fishing trip each summer,” she began. * "Since I hadn’t received a medr-cal check-up for several years, I decided it might
however, for in that same year, Prof. Elmer V. McCollum of Yale discovered the curative values of vitamins A and B. 'The Nobgl
Ppze in physiology and medicine "Stored bile. In the intestines, re-
was awarded for the first time to an American, Alexis Carrel, for his experiments in the transplanting of blood vessels and organs. *
8 8 8
This correspimdent, after several weeks in northern Mexico, L,a revolution had broken ' thar~year, got back to the
The Coiintry Parson
physician prior to our trip.
"For wc,go way I back into the wild I country of Can-1 ada. And might suffer an' attack of append!- DR. CRANE citls, I don’t know how we would, ever find a doctor.
"Well, my physician immediately Bent me to the hospital for my
jiiaia jssne hinged around the,
45,600 firemoi helpers now paid to sit in diesel locomotives in freight nr y^rd service. The fire-^ «c» have absointely nothing to dn juid-thRJ!aiiroad8.cli«ge this ii 4»etiiig $250 mfllion a year.
The unions sjrgue that the firemen q, ciarkston; golden wedding, sre necessai^ for toe safety of the	Grov^ Schesrson
fiQliiie^ln^ease soidetoing happens of waUed Late; s2nd birthday.
Verbal Orchids to-
^	Mrs, Michael Bauer
of 51 Parkhurst 8t,; 90th blrttiday.
Mr. and Mn. Aiutin Felch of Rochester; 52nd wedding afftiiversary.
Blrs. Angnst Pawlson of Keego Harbor; 81st birthday.'
. Franklin Burnjtby _ of Bloomfield Hills; 82nd birthday.
Mr. and Mrs'. Lucious Miller
leased bile assists In the digestion of fats.
So efficient is bile foimation that the surgeon may remove the gall bladder without disturbing fat digestion. .Seemingly, Just the amount that continues to flow day and night from the liver cells Is .medical check-up. enou^ to perform biliary functions.
_ So iafLaaJauJmim^ no more -nc«d for stored'bile than for some of the farin •lIr^ pluses that accun^ate In our land Of plmty. *
As you can easily see, we don’t
own office.
And without subjecting her insurance company to Several days’ hospital expenses. /
Furthermore, th^ room that Myrtle occupied would then have been availaUe for surgical or pregnancy cases that acutely needed
■if-- ■	: yj
If .you readers require surgery or it you expectant mothers are ready to deliver your baby, then a bo8|dtal is an excellent location (oir suon medieal and surgical care, 7
But if wu need X rays, blood counts, uranalyses, and alHbe other; expert "medical services im volved In a good medical check-up, then wily lo to the hospital?
If your doctor can't use his eyes, ears and palpating lingers to make a dia^osis In your own home or his mvate office, then he is shunting 7his proper medical duties to laWtechnicians In hospitals.
Too many modern medics are thus relinquisNng their duties to mspital'nurses, lab and ?f-ray te^inidaas and extents Irom the "So they sent flowers and sjOT- /junior or senior claases of local. .	pathy cards and even candy. They / niMlipal cehnnl*
need medictaal bile stimulants any expressed great concern, yet my /	.
more than the farmer needs 'more (joctor found nothing wrong with' HORSE SENSE IN MEDICINE
me.' '	'	/ But part of the fault for this
"Why do so many doctors clutter •■mad epldentfcjoT "luMgdtaJiitls" up our hospitals with patients who that e^Ucts Amerioa lies at the should be examined in their pri- feet oi JHOtt laymen, vate offices?’*	7
Myrtle’s medical check-pp in his The more you go to hospitals for
needless services,^the higher your hospital insurance premiums.
..,8“ 8 8 ■
And the more you pay for health Insurance, the more you insist on going to the hospital on any flimsy
7iie kept me there for several days. Meanwhile my friends tearited about irfro^ squib In the newspaper, saying I was one of the new patients admitted on the medlcq! service.
excuse. Just to get a return on your premiums.
Get hep. Watch us doctors. We rarely submit to surgery or lie abed in hospitals.
Yet physicians are under probably more strain than anybody else.' So vaccinate against "hos-pijalitis” with this newspaper "horse sense.”
’ "A happy old age is likely to bo the reward of*a busy and
wheat.
And, should that need arise, all ■we are required to do is start the" meal with a teaspot^ul of cream ' or a" piece of bread that is well-buttered and the gaU bladder will ’ oblige with a spurt of stored feile that Is more than enough for digestive purposes. .. .
8 8 8
So much then tor the quantity of bile secretion. But how about drugs to improve the quality? Well, finit off, they are
Secondly, even if euch were
:s; U’A'U

(Copyright, IMt)
MEDICAL NONSENSE 'Myrtle’s question explains the Jammed hospitals and the constant demand on you taxpayers for additional millions to add new wings to old hospitals or to build newer and larger -"Cathedrals , of Healing.” \	. --r'- . "■
Actually, any good GP (geheral practitioner) coUld have handled
You inrist on going to the hospital, even before you want a doctor to look into your mouth and ask you to ray'^"Ah.”
’ ' "But we have hospital Insurance,” y(W may argue) "so we might as well get some money back again to .offset those insurance premiums we’ve .been paying."'
A vicious dpfle is thus started.
1 local ncwi prlntad In — “ —"	«iT
The Pontiac Press li delivered by ; carrier (or SO cents a week: where mailed In Oakland, Oenesee, Living-
.pialaa to ^•|*Unlted“States *W4« *a roar.^ .AU mall subscriotlona payable
Michigan. Msmber o( ABC. I
Reque^s Probe of Tax Board
Senator Says He Only
Seeks Unit to Equalize
Assessment Rotes
I^ANSINO m-Thi chftlmmn of the Senate TMeUon Committee hee eaked fbr e epeclal Senate group to inmtlgate what ho terma failure o| the State Tax Oommia-alon to uphold the law.
* W *
The committee won't be tough aa the reaolutlon asking for It sounds, Miya Sen. Clyde H. OeerllngS, R. Holland.
aaaeaament throughout t h r state/’
WWW
The thrcatenting title of the resolution asks for a apeclal committee "to investigate the failure of the State Tax Commission to properly administer and enforce the constitution and property tax laws of the state."
'SHOVIA Bn nQUAI/
"We should have personal prop-(frty assessed at the same rate as real property,” Geerlings said. V	WWW
Hie resolution said personal property Is being assessed In approximately double the rate of real estate. The assessment ratios range, the resolution said, from two per cent of market value to us high as 175 per cent of the sales price.
The Tax Commission also testified, the resolulhm said, that It Is permitting discriminatory
Eventually, Geerlings said, all property should be placed rolls and assessed at actual cash value.
The Tax Commission, Geerlings noted. TOntrols the State Board of Equalization.
WWW "We probably won't hold more than one hearing," said Geerlings. "We just want to hear progress report and keep the thing alive to eventually bring about uniform assessment,"
TUB PONTIAC PliESS, .WEDNESDAY, MAIU H u. inna
OIIIIJU MI8SINQ — Mrs. Heni^ A, Henderson of Conway, Tex., holds a picture of her 3-yearflld daughter Sharon who has been missing from her home, 30 miles east of Amarillo, since about 3:45 p.m. Tuesday. Texas and New Mexico law officers are seeking a 19-year-old baby sitter who was left In charge of the child and who is believed to have the child In her custody.
Canadian Senator Dies
KlOCKVnXE, Ont. (AD-^Sen. Arthur C. Hardy, 89, dean ol Canada’s upper house, died Tuesday. Hardy, a Uberal, entered the Senate 40 years ago and dur-
Marriage Licenses
Donald D. Binkley, «4t B. Mai
uonam v. mnaioy,
Troy and Dorothy J. Summerton, Troy Tom Miller. 4S1 Telegraph Myrtle Huey. 451 Telegraph 8 Erneat '	---- ----------

. Roblnsoi Robinsoi
4955 Mohawk,
I Troywood.

Walled Lake and Oeorgia J. Hardy, asd Wolverine. Walled Lake Thomaa K. Jonei. 454 Marlon Francee V. Musser,
George Andry, — and Helen Ur.su, 16861
Kenword L. Hodge., —	-----
Drayton Plains and Nancy C. Swartk baugh. 4» X. Bhellleld Edw. R. Leary, 33320 Freedom, Farmington and Laura O. Lavln, 33240 Flanders, Farmlngtdn William 8. Bow, 21301 Telegraph, Southfield and Dolores B. Rosenberg, 16647 Bralle. Detroit
ing his tenure hfld the office of speaker. His father, Arthur S. Hardy, once was premier of Ontario. Hardy was bom In Brantford, Ont, but had lived ip Brock-ville more than 80 years. OPItTrONITII
To the ONE MAN in TEN
H yo* haven't
pooea of Mtod, Hwaoevtng___
•pMd wiMa tm hova ILOCK flgar* year taa, OtT STARTED
NaHaa'i Lorgail Tag ItrviM 207	Aciwat the IMIml Slaloi
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Congratulations, Bill Bennett
ON THE OPENING OF YOUR PONTIAC
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SAVE 75!

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Complete on^ step„ one hour service. Bring in all your cleaning and a whole week’s wash. It takes less than an hour and you’ll SAVE TOO!
I Bring This Coupon! j I Good only Thursday and Friday	I
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LAUNDRY AND CLEANING VILLAGE
1105 JOSl-YN-AT THE CORNER OF 3rd-PH. 8-2786

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PBDCIIAI,
toE PONTtAC FHESS. WEDNESDAY. MAllCn U. 1902
Farming Shows Up Communism*s Failure
Ry I^IU NRWMOM I( Bny one departiUent were to he Jielected ai a aynibol of Com-muniat failure, then agrloillure would have lo l*e a foremost van' dtdate.
4.grltiiilmral «h(»rlromtmr8 In the Siwtot Union have pwHHvupied NlktlH KImishrhev »'nce last Nm vomlter.
Hoffman to Stay in the Hospital
Allegan Congressman Expected to Return Home Next Week
WASHINGTON im~Ilrp. Glnre E. Hoffman, R-MIch., Is expected to remain at the Belhesda Niiv^
Then, aaya his son Ijpo, he will go home lo Allegan, Mich
The M-year:«ld csoBgretsinan' haa been hoapllallMMi aln<M> March S when he suffered his second stroke hi six inimths.
"I believe he was sitting In his wheelchair In his nparlment (here) when It happened,” Leo Hoffman told newsmen Tuesday. ••Apparently'this one Included some in volvemeilt of the heart." •I'XmEtlONK tX»NCI,l'8ION’
The congressman's son added, ••There Isn’t much to look forward to." -
Asked if his father would retire from politics, the son replied:
e you might say it's
|n the (lovlet IlniM, private lirisn amMfg the peasants lues to contoiind the eeon-planners by producing the of Hov|et eggs, milk, pmib try Slid a large proportion ot Us meal supply. ,
Tolnlly collect I vlml East Gei^ many, once Ihe larder of Hie whole of Germany, cannot produce 'Kough to feed Itself.
Uolund's farmers, enjoying more. J lailmde than most within the Oom> miinlai empire, have demonstrated Indlsinitiihly'^tlmt they value prlv-iiie ownership of n horse aliove commimMl |iarinershl|) In
•Hie list could be expanded. UIIINA’M RVXIORD In IDTiH, aa part of the ''great h‘HP forwai^," Red China b^an lunmilng MW million (leople into lO.IKKl giant eommunea, IVlvale enterprise, ns well as family life, to (lls«i>|K'nr In an ovemlghl lunge toward Ihe la^rtecl Com-iminist stale.
EVen as dtHlIcaled a ^mmunlgf as Khrushohev iTdlculea the Idea, thus perhaps fdr the first disclosed the now widely adk verllatd rift" with fled Chinese lendt'r Mao Tse-T\mg.
(k-lermlned t'hlii-have Iws'n fort'ed iMiiiiiodalInns.
But the old baokyird fteel ftirn* ices and other home industrlea vhich were to provide the com-.nunoa with much of their oiyn eqoip^enf, long alnce Jiave dIsap-
Just hasn’t «• anything yet.’’
Hospital officials said today that Hoffman is not considered lo be in serious condition.
★ ★ ★
He suffered a stroke last Nov. 9 and has not attended a sessipn of Congress since last September.
Burglar Bmpect 'Working Way Through College'
iSREENVILLE. Tex. (AP) -Don Alleft Elliotl, 23, arrested with three. Others Tuesday on burglary charges, was quoted as saying he was '‘just working his way through college.”
Dist. Atty. Cameron McKinney said EJlidtt, of Dallas, and Tal-madge He^ck Jadtson, 19, ot Killedn, Tex., were students at East Texas State College. He said the other two, accused of bur-iglary, Robert Stanley Box, 18, of Denison, T«c,. and James- Let McKinney, IS, of Dallas, were students at Paris (Tex.) Junior College.
Hie -district attorney said statements by the four cleared up 17 burglaries, 10 cases of theft, and 35 cases of breaking and entering coin-operated mgaiines.
Snowed by Piles, He Shovels $1750 into Removal
' MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP)-diarles Haubrich looked with dismay at the seven-toot snow piles along the street in front of his camera shop. They extended eight feet into the street and three feet back on the sidewalk. „He called his alderman. No luck. So Haubrich shelled out $1,750 to have a tour-block stretch cleared of snow and ice. It took three trucks three nights to -do the job,
Haubrich hopes lo get some of his investment back by asking the 180 merchants along the four blocks for 50 cents per foot of cleared area. So far he has received $300.	•
Ann-Mprgret Calls Off Troth to Businesmon
HOLLYWOOD (AP) Actress-singer Ann-Margret has called off her engagement to Beverly Hills businessman Burt Sugarman less than a month since he put a 3%-carat diamond ring on her finger, her studio said Tuesday.
* * ★
; The 21-year-old Swedish-bom Jiertormer is in New York to publicize her new film, ‘‘State Fair." The 20th Century-Fox spokesman said lie HJndetstood she ended the engagement before leaving Hollywood.
yoO'mayhAve
fiimm
AND NOT KNOW IT YMt*tin(,iMae-i^ekinc,atomMntiBC ' metal itch ar« often telltale eieu «
, Pm-Wonns,,:usl7panuite(thatnied--^
, left experta aay nueet 1 out of every.
^ Mt rid of Pin-Womu, they must be-killed in the ii^ inteetiae where they live and ffiultiuy. Thst'seuctly what Jayne's P-W tableta do... sad - here's how thw do it;
Piist-~	■
the taUe__________— .
—they ditaidVIe. Then—Jayne * era, medieally-iHiproyed incredient ’ corn njdit to work—-kiUs Pia-Wemis
^wis, hifUy oontM^ Pto-Wtonns . ’ whfeh infihet atmmiiwBuliw. Get pen-' ,niBS Jayns% JMT Ysmifnns . . .
DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PUINS
THK PONTIAC PRESS. WKDNESDAy, MA)l( II 14, IIM52
NINE
Soviet Aid Goes to n Neutrals
India Guts Top Sharo of $1 Billion Annual Outlay, Sayi Report
WAiJHlNOTOK (AP) - Indk hmida the IIM «t 3T countrlee out-aide the SlmWSovlet Woo which have received economic cumlat-anoe tram behind the Iron Cur-
i^aldent of the United Statea. lie waa bom March 16, 1767 at-Well, Wo don’t know emotly
Authoritative aourcea, reporting this today In connection with Prcaldent Kenncdy'a foreign aid nicBaage to Congraaa, aald auch economic aid grunie and (Tcdlta have averagiHl idxiut fl billion ai luially for the Inst three yeaca.
The total outlay from 1984 when a start waa made with a modest $11 million loan to Afghanistan, Is figured at J6.5 billion through 1961. That includes $4.4 billion In '(■onamlc aid and $2:1 In military
Moat reference books say it was In the Waxhaw settlement In Lancaster County, South Carolina. North Carolina soys It Isn't so— that Jackson was bom Just across the border In Union County, North Carolina.
aid.
Besides the money the bloc has sent 8.500 economic and 1,800 military tecbniclans to less^vel-dpa countries.
INDIA CiRTfl MOST
No country-hy-country breakdown of the military aid is available.
India had the largest share In economic assistance with $950 million. Indonesia was second with $64l million, Egypt third \vilh $615 rallllon, Cuba fourth with $357 million, Afghanistan fifth with $217 million and Iraq sixth with $216 million.
The Soviet Union is the leading donor in the bloc, providing about $.1.2 billion in economic European aatellltes, especially Czechoslovakia, have furniiAed almut $950 million, and Ped China about 1390 million.' ,
North Carolina Pigs Int^ History
Was President Jackson Bom?
to the plantation home of a sister and brother-lmlaw, Mr. and Mrs. James Crawford, Just Inside South (5sroUna.
Ehter the controveray.
Jobs and Hours
AN OLD AiUtUMKN'T
The Tar Heel state has hired a young historian. Max Harris, to determine which. If he succeeds In settling the 195-year-old .argument, one of the states will have to tear down a monument.
"Hero was boro, March 15, 1767, Andrew Jackson, seventh president of the Unit^ States," reads the legend on a monument in.a 'wwMed area wr Diiitdi Ocainty, N.C.
A half-mile away. Just the slate line in South Carolina, is another monument to Jackson’s birth. It stands on the edge of South Ctucllna’s Andrew Jackson State Park.
The story begins In 1785 when Andrew Jackson Sr., an Irishman, settled with his family In the Waxhaw Indian lands spanning the border of the Carollnas, Just Inside North Carolina.
He died two years later, leaving two samll sons, Robert and Hugh, and a pregnant wife.
ENTER CONTROVERSY
Mrs. Jackson decided to move
llie South CatoHnians say Mrs. Jackikm and Krir sons arrived at the Crawfords before Andy was horn.
Not so, say the North Carolinians. Labor poiiis, they claim, i ' In on the Journey, and she stopp at the home of another slater and brothe^ln•]aw, Mr. and Mrs. George McKemIe (or McKamie) and gave birth to the child, moving on to the Crawfords when ho was six weeks old.
Figurek Dofy Winter Seaional trends; Pay Increases Slightly
WASHINGTON ie~Fuctory Jobs, pay and hours all increased In February In defiance of the winter seasonal trend, the Labor Depart-announced Tuesday.
Aaalyria jQl last montha’ em-
Tlic silo of the McKemlc cabin I on the North Carolina side of the boundary—by a dlittance of 407 yards.
Jackson was the only presidcnl in U.S. history with two "home ’’ and, apparently relishing the situation, he never directly disputed the claims of either one.
Each of the Carollnas can furnish direct quotes from Old Hickory himself backing up its claim. Jackson said In 1828 that he was hem in Seuth^CSaroltna. lnH®H, he said North Carolina.
from S.8 per cent to S.O per cent, brought equally favorable news In earnings and hours of work.
The department said that the work week lengthened from hours In February to a • full 40 hours In a month in which It was to shorten. The average factory worker now is getting one more employment a week than at the bottom of the recession a year ago, and the work week now is longer than at this In any of the past five
Average weekly earnings Increased riightly to $95.20.
Penneys
(B(oT
’^^1V1VERS5^
Spring hats
are blossoming
at Penney’s
398

It wouldn’t be Easter without a new haA. And leave it to Penny’s ■' to'bring you a tremendous collection of the season’s* smartest, most , becoming toppings at these spe;cial purchases prices. Find all that’s new in every ’62 variation on the cloche, the pillbox, the sailor, the bonnet, the toque. Beautifully fashioned in straw or rayon shantung. Many beguiled with flowers, flirtations veiling. AU-unahashed in their flattery whether you choose a tall or small. In colors that sing of Spring. Come try. Come buy several to make this your headiest year everl .	.
USE YOUR PENNEY QfARGE CARD
PENNEY’S: MIRACLE MILE
OPEN MOPWAY Sih) SAnffiOXY l(MX>A.M.«»9K)0PJA
taiped Jiy ji Jackson eampaign manager which supposedly. told the story of the McKemie cabin-
Ex-Aid* of Mostad*gh Dl*| in Iran Hospital
OHANOED MIND North Carolinians
Even Virginia cnlared Ht® !>•<>• ire in the 1850s, claiming
the home state of Andratv Jackson.
This promplcil Col. Samuel Walkiip of MoiUYte. N.C., Union County seal, to m»t alanit oljtaln-Ing more iiffldavlts from elderly i(S of Itic WaxluiwH. qiiese
d«a‘umentH also tell tite MtfKemIe cabin story.
TEHRAN, Iran (m — Ayatullah Kiishunl, once right hand man of t-pr<*mler Mohamnuxl Mossadegh, died tCKfay in a liospltal where h<! b«d is'en under treatment (or lifonchltls. He was 86.
Kashanl, a Moslem religious leader, played a key roh> in staging the demonstrations in 1950-52 in support ol Mossadegh’s biutchs-(ul launpalgn to imtlonull/« In oil industry.
But when Mossadcgli began opposing the monarchy, Kashanl broke with him.
Three out of tour new churches have roofs of engineered timber oonstnictlon.
Some historians say that when Jnekson was born, the McKemie 'ubiii was In South Carolina.
The surveyor eslabllahlng the first • boundary between lli<! two slates inadi; an error. It wasnl dihal until Ihe king of Englatsi interventxl in 1771. When the ,n boundary was drawn, Ihe McKe le eabin came inside North Ca lina.
Ij»sI year, the North (?arolinn General Assemlily appropriale<l $12,5(KI to pay for an invest Iga-llon to W'ttle Ihe (luestlon. Harris hired two months ago to do the Job.
son was born In North t!arolino,’' Harris says, "I Just want to find out definitely where he
SELLING OUT ODD LOTS
VINYL
LINOLEUM
WAU
LINOLEUM
SMITH’S TILE OUTLET
Penneys
COD!
^A^JV|VERS^^
IT’S OPEN HOUSE AT PENNEY’S
See gay Spring Fashions for the Family
>v^
Visit Peimey’s This Weekend, Enjoy Our Fashion Show
Penney’s is going: all out to make this Open House 'Weekaid 8 festive one. Style shows featuring spring fashions for the family .wiU be given-^on-l^ursday'and "Fnday evenings and on Saturday afternoon. Many other wonderful events are* also planned. Bring the whole family,and enjoy yourselves at Penney’s!
« See Spring Fmhhms for the Fondly at These Times:	, - — -
THURSDAY 7r30 P. IW. FRIDAY 7:30 P. M. SATURDAY 1:00	3:00 P. M.
PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE
OPEN MONDAY THRO OATORDAY 4
1fl|*0AM.to0!nP,M.
■ L
1
^


y»y,
Tim PONTIAC PBESI^, WKbyESDAY. MARCH U, 1002
Sick Youth in Priwn for False Sub Story
BRUNSWtCIt. On. (I’Pf) ~ John Wwley Thomiii. 17. Tnowlny wnit ■OtKoncnl to four yonni nt thr SprtnKfiold, Mo., Mwllcal t>ntrr fur fc'dcral prluoners for broadcasting a falsa report that a mys-lermiis submaiim* had attm'ked a shrimp latal off the ('.eorgla ooui>(,
Allorneys said tlu< youth Is siit-terlng fn>m "physiral and menial atekni'HK " Tlumuis was arrcatcd last month by MU attmts who said he bmadcast the ri‘i«>i1 on his short wave set.
News of Service Personnel'
Tw<t nirminKhnm residents now swvlng with the U.S. Army who have rerelvcd ri'rognltlon hi their rpsp<'etlve battalions mY* .Sp»'e, 4 (\)ltn M (’umphell and Pvt. Marvin l). Nat/.kr. <
Non of air. and Mrs. I.lovd N. ('nui)i(iell of S.H.W Fiilrwnv IJrlvo, ('nmidn'II nss'nily was
In tleniiany where he Is ns-algwed to the SSrd Nlgnnl Hat-
A radlo-leh'type o|ao’ator In the battalion's ('onipany (' l.s Darm-Kladl. he entered the Armv in ISiO. eomph'led haste Irainint; at !• I Ltsmard Wend.
Oil Truck Spills Load;
Niles Driver Uninjured
WAYI.ANM Ifi Oil Iniek dr Hotierl WcHsIs, 40. at Ndes e.seajK.Yl Mo Injury Tuesday whm hU vehicle'OcIoIxt.
CA’erlurned (ui tl.S. l.tl foe nnlos|	* A
north of Wayland and spilled	private Nai/.ke,
gallons of hu'l.	fccrtrude Mhkllemas of 2'i l.l I
Mis
' MH
firing wllh the Army' rifle In Ormany.
The lavt graduate of RIvmIng* ham High School entered the ice In June 19.59 and was tioiied at F't. Ord, t'allf., before arriving oveiseas In k'ehrimry tlHiO.
Army Pvl. Jimmie 1), Winslow, son of Mrs. June M, Wlimlow, 9llU llllh'resl Drive, riarkslon, has rompli'ted the nirliorne course at the Infantry Scluxil, Kt. Hcn-nlag, Ca.
I Chester .Street, ha.s acha'vcd Stale police say V\o<x1.<i .sought logn If Urn as a top Armv marks to pass a car when his Ireek hit a man by qualifying for llu> cxix-rt soft slioulder and overturned, I marksmanship badge during rangi.'
l‘rlvnlo Winslow rei'elvetl his |siriilnHi|N^r wings n|nm eoni-pletlon of four weeks of Inlen-slKi training nnit Inslruetlon In ulr tniiis|Hirliitlon and delivery.
He entered Ihe sereicc' in .Se|v lemher 1%1 after attending New Lqlhiop High .School, New I/itlirop, iiiiil was last HtatiotaHl at Korl (.onion, Ca.
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WINHIXIW	nilNIVAN
U.S. Army Private Fret Hay Dunivan. son of Mrs. Hohort McDowell. 169 Flsmcrc SI , recently completed eight weeks of .idvaneed training in M. Rilc’y, Kan.
Private Dunivan received hii basic training at Ft. Knox. Ky. nnd prior to entering service he attended Waterford Township High School.
Two local U.S. Navy personnel soi-vitig aboard the heavy cruiser USS Los Angeles, which recently returned to I.«ng Beach, Calif., are Charles E. Bam, machinist's mate third class and Gary E. Crandall, seaman apprentice.
Ihiin Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Bain. G24K Kos-slter Drive, Waterford.. Seaman Craiulull Is the son of lk<rnard E, ( randall of 1'24 S. Josephine
■I’vt. E-2 George H. Voss, of Mrs. Theresa Voss, 935 quois Road, is presently slationed at M. Knox, Ky., upon completion of his basic training at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo.
VOHN
VORCK
Marine’'T^l David C Vorse is scheduled to eompleie Ihe foiir-wleek Individual eomhat truining eours(> at Ihe .Second v-infimiry Training Regiment at the Marine Corps Base, C5imp IVndleton, Calif.
Private Voree Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alliert S. Voree of 71)5 Uohinwood fit.
James R Cnpiito, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Cnputo of 547 Valencia Drive, entered the U.S. Army service In February at M. Knox, Ky.
He formerly attended Pontiac Ctmlral High School.
Airman Basic .{x'ffrey W. Uyden of Keego Harlmr 1s being assigned to the U.S. Air Force technical truining course fur radar muinte nance siieelnlists at Keesler Air Force Base, Miss.
Airman Ryden, son of Mr. and Mrs Wesley M. Ryden of 1788 Beeehmont In Keego Hurhor, is 1961 graduate of West Bkxmi-field High School. Oridiard Luke.
No New Evidence in Eichmann Appeal
JERUSALEM, Israel (UPI) Adolf Eichmann, sentimeed hang for his role in the slaughter of six million Jews in Europe during World War II, has not pn>-dueed any new evidence in his appeal, it has hi'cn reported.
The text of the 15,000-word appeal was made public Tuesday and it said that Israel had right to try Eichmann. The former Nazi ks. lieutenant cplonel's West German defense attorney. Dr. Robert .Servatius, pri'pnred the appeal of the sentence passed last December.
The appi'al will he heard starting March 22 by a five-man Israeli supreme court. It is expected, to take four or five days.
3rd Term as President
Private Voss, a 1961 graduate )f Waterford Township High
FLUSHING M — The village of Flushing, a Genesee County community west of Flint, re-elected C3ayton A. Fraser Monday to third term as president.
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How do you measure 30 years?
There are many ways to measure^ three decades.
You can slice them up* into months, weeks, days ... even minutes. You can squeeze them all together into one big generalization. Or you can do what Osmun’s does. -
We have seen young customers become old friends. And we have come to know, and understand each other .. . as only real friends can.
Together we have reckoned the years, in personal, almost trifling ways: a sriiile ... a handshake ... the right color or. the wrong collar. Rowing tilde.
these little things takes t
All of us at.Osmun’s feel our time,has' been well spent. And judging by ■what you tell us, you feel that Osm.un’s is likg a member of the family.
That’s the best way we know of to measure 30 years.
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TIIK rONTIAC PHKSS WKONKSDAV. MAIU'll U, UMJ2
- ,SI<’<*py-py«‘<l kiltcn who npi^ MoiiK'lhinu more Ihiin (Vilnip. |N)|>s up for h|/( Ciinmlji Col Is lllf’i ully cnM-kod, Oi'm il ix)t^4'<r.'
I to huvr nlpiK'd ■liull In Olliiwii.
Poverty Favorite Theiri</
Proverbs Say/the Same No Ma\ter Which Nation
j
In Knul^nd ill fho broth, [i with ilt'vcn
WASHINGTON — In Knuyndi lish maxim (hat mainlHins: "Lillie too many eooks spoil fhe brotli.jRcxKis, little earos." in Bussia a child with «'ven ThouRh useful, proverbs often nurses losi's an ,eyc. In China too lire eontradihory as in “I,x)ok be-rnany brieklayeVs build a (bpsided'fore you leap" and , "He who house.	j hesitates is lost." The proverbial
solution to this stalemate is "Cir-
Many other strikininv similar j cum,slnnees alter oases," in widel;
proverbs crop up in widely .sepa-ibwltar miRht be "Wise men make rated parts of the wwld, the Na- proverbs, and fools repeat them." tional GeoRraphic Society says.
Oakland County Using Some of Them
Jackson Prison Group Prints Books Into Braille
H.V l,AKKV mii,Mi;ii jMckwiii (Ullien-I'alrloi WrIHen (or the Al> •lAt'KSON ~ A human Intefest story at Southern MIchlKim Prison Is wail inti (or Nomeone to wrlt<‘ the final chapter.
Hie lng(<tdlenls fpr an inspirational yam already aro theiv; Six crlmlnalH devoted to helplnu tlielr fellow men, a Rroup of Jackson irsldents who wiMild like to lii'lp them and scVeral scattered Ri-oups of blind students IlirouRlioul MlehiRan wiio are di'spi'rately in need of Hrallh' text IxKiks.
1'htdr story Is one that eoiilil <>uslly ix'store anyone's fnltli III the liiiiiiaii race.
The one factor which could tbi-ow a monkey wronch into the tale is money. But Jackson ar»*u Lions Club members ai'e sle(i-ping in to lielp eliminate that threat.
The story Ix-nan unfoldlnR In 11),’)R Ilf tile prison wlien an inmate serving life for murder, Charles Hanna, bei'ame interested in transcribing written words into Braille.
STllDIKI) BRAILLH Hanna began studying the intricacies of the Braille method and succeeded in getting five other inmates interested. Together they formed an organization known as the Michigan Braille Transcribing Service which has blossomed into one of the most productive volunti'er sources of Braille material in ibi.s country.
H,v»leiii. Ilio deniund gmws dally.
Becauae of Ihia, 'J1 moist in-malea now are undergoing tlie yeae^long period of Inatrucllun that will ennble them to beeoma ci'rtlfled Brullllst#. Their labor will be fn*e of charge, but there will be atill other expensea to Im> dealt with. This Is where the two Jackson Lions ehilm come Into the pleturo.
Kenneth I’aimer mid Donovan K. I.ewls learned Ihlit although the Inmates were Iranserlblng the material at no charge, there still was a matter of postage, pa|x<r and other e<|ui|>menl to contend with. Up to then, the inlsoners had been digging Inlo
Wyoming Boy Admits Milking Dairy Supply
LARAMIK, Wlo, ((P-A I.aramie family couldn't understand why its dairy bill suddenly hxik a shiii p increase.
Police invekligaled ami go) a confession from a M-yem-old neighbor boy.
He admitted slipiiing over.,^.lo ttic home after dark and changing the dairy order. Then he would s(‘t his alarm dock for a.m. and pick up the extra icc cieam, chocolate milk and orange' drink before the family awoke
their own pocket!, for (lie yiecc«< nary funds. But with much more work to he done, they wei'e run* iiliig out o( money.
# w #•
"Tile tratiHcrlbtng of print Into Braille In r tlme-coniumlng nml exacting Job," said Lewl«.
"When the American Printing House for the Blind or volunteer grou|is throughout the country transerllie malerial, they either must pay highly for lalnir or do il in their spun,’ Utne. These men at the prison have pletMv of lime and Hie neeessary .skill.
Thole e'ffprtb Hhouldn'i be wasted."
MIIKU MACnilNIil The btggeat problem, right now, Pnliner suys, Is the pro-curentent of a new typo of diip-Ucatlng machine that will enable the prisoners to transcribe material on. a mass produclkm
"With Ibis moebinn unllmlti'd (|unUlltles eaii be jmiduced," be said.
"nuiUsmirlH -of fK'hool iKKiks euir be run oft with the same
amount of transcribing labor lhat would be required lor Just a few liopies, The only addWkmul cost Involved vyould be the wctual paper and binding of each iKxik."
Mom Hum half g iiillllon
soppoH to Ihe project, as well ae submM the nsmee of gruups In (heir locallliee . who need Braille iimicrisl.
"Alxiut no |x«r cent of llm Imnshitlon work being doin' by the iirlHonei'M will go for si'liool
texts and lesson plans for blind chlldiun," Uwls said.
."M(¥i schools now fa<fo up |o a niuc-mimth wait fbr books to lie transmtlied by avallabte ageti-ctos. Wb iKijm (0 begin placing more crMIcally needed educational material Into the hands of blind children who ‘ never would have llie n of suifh learning."
Tile unfolding human Interest story may yet Imve a happy e II d 1 n g. At least. te'Wis and I’alnier arc hcdlog It will.
TIIA(;kI,KSN train — New supply vehicle capable of enrry-Ing 150 tons of cargo over practically any terrain in the world IS being tested by the Army m Texas, Tim 57i!-foot-long overland train has l.'l curs with tires four feet wide and 10 feet in diameter.
Kaeh of its 54 huge wheels is powered by individual electric molors. Tlii'cc gas liii'lilno engines generate electricity. Ten cars arc for cargo, two carry the power plants, and the front cur contains contnils.
TriinMcrlbed Braille iiiulerial has been sent (roni the prison to such places as the MieMgan School for the Blliul In l.aiiHlng and the Oakland ('cunt,/ School
The Stroh Brewery Co., Detroit 26, Michigan
The Japanese say: an’s hair Is strong enough to keep an elephanf tied." An Kng- , llsh proverb claims: “One hair | of a woman d/aws more than a j team of oxen.’	|
The.se Iribuies to the lenacily of women and/similar duplicates apparently (teveloped independenlly in different areas as man drew upon common observation.s, cx-| perienc^, and problems.
Thousands of proverbs been/coined about women: A group of West African sayings has a farpiliar ring: "If you want peace, gibe ear to your wives proposal.s / . Who marries a beautiful an marries torment . . . Women /take up their market baskets and / also take up gossip.”

' all
Chivalry dies in the old English couplet; "A spaniel, a wom-in, and’a walnut tree. The more theyre beaten the better they be.” Russians put it more gently: j "Ixive your wife like your soul but shake her. like a pear tree.
A popular international .lljeme! warns against excessive talk. The! Chinese hold that a great talker | never wants for enemies; talk does not cook rice; and mischief all comes of much opening Of the] mouth.	'	I
(LV KIHIKKN U(>RI>
The Engli.sh caution that "a ■ siiiOkrn word cannot Ixi recalled.' Russian and .lapance piovcrbs cxpre.ss the .same idea metaphorically. Russian version: "A word isn't a bird: if ii flies out. you'll never catch it again." Japanese; "A word (irice uttered is beyond the reach of four galloping
I’ov*>rfy is ;nnoth«’r familiar | theme, and a thread of eynieism | runs through many of the sayings on this subject.	j
West African; "Being poor, makes it hard to have friends but not impossible." English; "When: poverty comes in at the door, lovel flies out at the windob." Italian; "Il is more easy to. praise poverty ' than to bear it."	:
But being poor ha.s pensations, according to
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Spring Term /BegiiSs TMs “WeelT” Bulletin Available on Request
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
WF,PNK8DAY, JtARCH 14. looa
1‘ONTiAC, mriik;an.
TllIHTKlW
City Ctrl Sailing Aboard ...the SS Hope to Peru
BY l*AT EVANS
When the SS Hope depiiilH fivin lt« S«n FrunelHco dock IIu^Ndity en I’oule lo I’ecii, omonic the iihlp'o Hluft find :t5 U.S. nuiHeii wnvlng iKin voy-dlKe will be Carolyn Stoll of StlrlinK Road.
Clioxen (or the inlxHlon from 1,000 applicHnlH, Mijix Stoll diiUKliter of Mr. and Mrx. Don Stoll, l8 a gruduntc of JPnntluc Central High Sehoof and the University of Michigan School-of Nuraing. She received her B.S. degree In nursing from Wayne Stale University In Detroit, where she also became affiliated with Sigma Tlieta Tuu, nutloni^l honorary nursing sorority.
The voyage, though Miss Stoirtf first; will murk the setrond for the Hope. The Hope sailed fronm San Francisco on her maiden voyage in September I960:	Indonesia, where
the ship spent 7*4 months, was the fimt slop.
On June 15, the Hope began a stay at Saigon, South Viet Nam, where staff members worked in «ix looil hospitals and held clinics in villagi's in
other areas, treating more	Asia ended Sept. 14 last fall
thon	28,000	patients. 'Hie	wlum Hope returned to the
maiden voyitge In Southeast CidKornlfi dock.
The SS Hope, former Navy ship on loan to the private Pedple-to-People Health Foundation, supported by public contributions, will anchor at Sala-verry, Peru, April 1 to begin its second mission in sharing this nation's modern medical knowledge with newly developing countries,
Women's Section


Don’t Fool Self, Abby Says
‘Other Woman’ Is Upset
BY ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; The "other woman" doesn’t have a chance with you. You con-
h e r before knowing of the facts. Well. I know more about it than you, Abby, because I have been the "other woman” for ' five years.
11c loves me and I love
is more than some MARRIED women can say.
Yes, I am waiting faithfully for him because, one day, I know that he will be my husband. What do you say to that?
THE OTHER WOMAN
DEAR OTHER: 1 say, quit kidding yourself. YOU may be honest, faithful and loyal to him—but he is lying, cheating and two-timing his wife.
If you should realize your dream—what will yqu have? A man who is well-trained in
DAR Members A ttend Annual State Conclave
the art of cheating on his wife. Cong*atulations!
DEAR ABBY:	1 am ten
years old and'have a problem. My grandparents always talk Italian and I can’t understand them. They have been in this country for about 25 years and It’s about time they learned English. I guess maybe they can. but they ’ 'don't. How can I gel my grandparents lo talk English? They KLS.S me in Italian, too, which is very rough.
TROUBLip BOY
DEAR TROUBLED:	You
arc passing up a wonderful opportunity t(( learn Italian. Ask them to tdach you! And when they kiss you in Italian, say, "’Grazie, e basta!”
Eleven members of the local General Richardson Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, are attending the wnual Michigan DAR state convention today through Friday in Detroit’s Statler-Hilton Hotel.
Representatives from Pontiac are Regent Mrs. Frank Allen, fSrmer Regent Mrs., Lisle Echtinaw who is state chaifman -for DAR schools, Mrs. T. W. Jackson. Mrs. W,
H. O'Laughlin. Mrs. A. H. Monroe, Mrs. H. P. Going and Mrs. E. G. Clark. Others are Mrs. B. D. Scott, Mrs. Harvey Btdstrup, Mrs. Marian Benter and ^rs. H. C. Bates.
Principal convention speakers will be Mrs. Ashmead White, president-general, and . W. Ned Cary, executive secretary of Kate Duncan Smith School in Grant, Ala., one of the'major DAR projects.
____JRve*sid4nf-at-the-conference—
will be Mrs. Clare E. Wiedlea of Sturgis. General ebariman is Mrs. Walter Kleinert of Birmingham.
Wednesday’s program will include a memorial service. On Friday DAR Good Citizens, 402 high school seniors chosen to represent outstanding qualities of character,), citizenship and leadership, will be featured. Following an impressive processional, the girls will be guests of the national organization at a luncheon during which the state winner will be named. She will receive a U.S. Savings Bond and compete for Rational honors.
Good Citizens sponsored by General Richardson Chapter include Judith Runser, Avondale High School; Marilyn Cof-fing, Pontiac Central; Paula Parker,' Clarkston High; and Sandra Huerth, Lake Orion Community High.
Others are Linda Larson, Pontiac Northern High School: Jean Wohlgehagen, Waterford Kettering:	^Jiidi" Ely, " West
Bloomfield; and Susan Sutton, Rochester High. The girls will be accompanied by their moth-
CONFIDENTIAL TO "Otc LIE”: You made a bad deal. So far, all you’ve .lost is money- Pull out before you [o.se your mind.
For Abby’s booklet, "How lo Have a Lovely Wedding,” send .50 cents to Abby. care of Ttie Pontiac Press.
The Mac Apigians of Alice Street, -■Bloorrtfietdr
_ Township,-----1
announce the j engagement i lofTheir' daughter Betty Lou to Robert J. Kessep son of the Bertram L. Kessels of j Dflaware Drive.
PerhnpM the moat vnhmlile Hem Mlw Stoll will take, but whid) cannot be filled Into a sultcuKO, In her medical ex-perlqnco chiefly In iM'dialrlca. Her lUst full-time ixislllon was as head nurse In pe<lialrieN at University Hospital, Ann Arbor,
Prior In Ihls time, whili- still atlinuling Wayne stale Unlvei'-slly, she worked part liini' at the Children’s Hospital in Detroit. Last summer was spent in pediatrics al William Beaumont Hospital.
As a memlx'r of pro,i<‘et Hoja^, a privately sisamored program, Miss .Stoll with the others abounl, will shore mo<l-ern medical knowledge and skills with m«wly developing nations via the primary vehicle, the SS Hope.
The Hope, formerly the U.S. Navy hospital ship Cohsol-alion, on loan from the government lo the private People-lo-People Health Foundation, and supported by [niblic contributions, will anchor at Saln-verry, Peru, on April 1.
Sidaverry, JOO miles noilh of Lima, is the port (oi- Trujullo, site of (he new medical sclwoL-, at the famed University of LIlK'rly, founded by Simon Bolivar. It is some 50 miles from the scene of the recent disastrous nvalnnche at Ml. Hunscaran.
The ship iind its staff will augment the facilities and faculty of the medical school, designed to train physicians (or all of Northern Peru. TIL%CHIN(J PROJECT
Since Hope is primarily a teaching pro.ie(;t. Miss Stoll will be working ns a leaching nurse, giving on-the-spot instruction to Peruvian nurses white working with Peruvian patients in the ship’s hosptial.
While in Peru, Hope staff members will use the ship as a base for trips to other Pei'U-vian cities, where they will hold seminars and work in local hospitals, on a program geared to the country's specific needs.
It is irossiblc that the Hope staff members will also perform field missions in neighboring countries while the ship' is based at Salnv('rry, before marking (lu'ir journey home-
ward.
Plans Annual Card Party
DEAR ABBY: I just can’t understand my husband. Due to .strikes, lay-offs and sickness he ha.sn’t worked steady in two years, but he is so self-conscious about going bald that he goes to a hair place for treatments twice a week.
I have had to go to work nights to help out. The kids evert put cardboard in their shoes, but that didn’t bother their father. I told him to quit worrying about his hair and to feed the kids, but it was like talking to the wall.
I, think there must be an-, other woman he’s trying to-please because I’ve made it plain I don’t care if he has hair or not. What makes a . 52-year-old man act like this?
HIS WIFE
DEAR WIFE: Vanity- 'The kind he must feed at the expense of his family.
Sylvan Lake Branch of fhe Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association plans its annual scholarship card party in the Oakland County Boat Club, Thursday ai 8 p.m. Light refreshrrients, table and door prizes .are being offered.
Chairman Mrsf Lola King is assisted by Mrs. Wayne Smith, Mrs. Raymond Dombrowski and Mrs. Albert Kohn.
Also assisting are Mrs. Robert Felt, Mrs. Richard Jarvis, Mrs. Paul Antilla, Mrs. John Roeper, Mrs. Willis Brewer, Mrs. B, A. TePoorten and Mrs. Richard Gavette.
Will Review Book
The Waterford Book Review Group will meet Monday in Waterford Community Center at 1:00 j).m.
Mrs, Eugene T. Cleland will review “Journey Into Summer,” by Edwin Way Teale. Mrs. William Shunck and Mrs. Harley Stephens are to be the
Luncheon SJoted
Mrs. Harry Striffler of East Iroquois Road will open her home to members of the B'ireside Club for a luncheon B'ri-day.
BBTtY LOi/ APIGlAN:,
Betty to Robert Backus, soA'of Mr. and Mrs. Albert’ Backusf' of West Wailon Boulevard. < No wedding date has been set.
.v | ,

Anxiously awmting the SS Hope mission to Peru, Carolyn Stoll packs her trunk for U’one-year <-stay. Chosen from 1,000 applicants for the mission. Miss Stoll will he among .7,7 U.S. nnr.ses on the
,e Pr««* Photo
.staff. A Pontiac Central High School and Uni-■ versity of Michigan graduate, she reeeived her B. S, degrei • in nursing from Wayne Stale University. Her parents are the Don Stolls of Stirling Road.
Class Reumom Wonderful. . . for MEN
By GAV I'AUI.EV NEW YORK (I'I’ll Di'.'ir alma m.-iier. Never mind.
Never mind l■enlinding nii' that now is the lime for planning the class ivunion. When you mention reunion at oui' house you just create disunions 1 hav(‘ many lender thoughts aboui rny campus years, but . .
Every mail brings reminders that the years tire passing and no matter how many coats of cream with which I grease my chin every night, nature still r caches up and grabs us women by the throat. Your announcements of June get-togethers help not ut all.
This, dear almu mater, is a f e mule talking. Men don't seem to worry atx)Ul double chills and middle age and thickening middles and men, including my husband, seem to op('ti mail announcing cla.ss reunions with the whoop-li-do
comment "Hey. good ojd Charlie, Isiy, it'll be good lo see him again!''
The respelling of reunion into disunion begins when he >'e-minds that he hasn’t seen ‘■g(K)d ole Charlie” for 15 years. Then I remind him that "g(X)d ole Charlie’’ was the one who blew into town and announced, “Hey, I'm clu.ss of —, and would you sort of stand back of this check for me?” Anyway, "good ole Charlie” with his third wife and check that bounced don’t really matter in this over-all look at the reunion business.
NO REMINDERS, PLEASE What I’m talking about, dear university, is that in this world of females, I don't think we want to be reminded about the ' good old daypj^ I don’t.
What woman wants to face a look homeward when somebody will remark casually, "Gee, I remember you . . .
you HAVE put ,j>n n few pounds, h a V e n ' t .vou, my
dcii
, thinking
And there that fiDin a 14 through several years of "growth'' only indicate you're bucking up all those durned life insurance statistics about the average.
My husband can’t understand this line of thinking. He is geared to return to his dear halls of ivy, to dump whatever clothes are clean into an over- . night case, and take off like a teen-ager embarking for college.
cla.ssmales you haven’t seen in—years.”
My answer is, "Buster, remember that on YOUR -Ih, .vou took a week past the official scheduled adjournment to get liome and in WHAT condition, might I ask?”
His answer was, "Well, there was that roommate who had h e 1 p e d me through calculus
This is when the household begins really to change the spelling of reunion into disunion.
He urges that, “Dear, a fCW days back on the campus in June will do you a world of good . . . there are a lOt of
WONDERFUL FOR MEN
I'm sure reunions are wonderful—for men.
But as for me, permit me not to look back to grim reminders that;
"Well, my goodness, you haven’t changed a bit, but
’“No^fllet’i
(T let ’s see, what year were YOU president of . . .
"Well, I always thought he was a jerk, even when you were dating him, but look where he is now ...”
You are cordially invited to attend our 48th anniversary celebration
OPEN HOUSE
AND
FUMITIJRE SHOW
3 m^mx ^
TONIGHT, THURS.—MARCH 14-15
7 to 9 p.in.
REFRESH]
pEgS^
GHTS! DEMONSTRATORS!
This is a ShoAv .., Not a Sale ! Corae . . . Join in the Fun and Festivities . ». Help Us Celebrate Our Anniversary . . . At Either Shore! '
ECON’OM'X
f-uxiiiture
FONTI-A-O
Sei S. SACjUN-AWi
SXJ3BXirRp3B-Au3Sr
fuuniXL-ure DRAiSrTQlT .
•' .-’KWSTi '
a i KKN
THE l»ONTlAp PIIKSS. WiePNESPAY,
Be Objective When Comforting Children
fly MlfRIKI. I^WRENliK Mu' Hwii'h Mwi^ hw «nJ hfr
Dwi* Mm. ljiwi«nc«:
Yml nemOy wntte about • girl who- mu ahvayi runiring to , ■ iMPlgldMir alter trouble with her My nteee ttoee thie ‘ me.' My iteliNmlatr i« a t«n»e. inIteMt woman who !■ never pteaMNi with anything.
hhe nage her daughlrr about every Uttie thing until the girl can't tMw any more, t lmow she hutee me fw letting my niece bring troublm to iM, but for the chlM’a ....
ANHinCB! For the rhi
Beoauee what another chiM wantf w^len he to,ua about his parent SUBSTITUTE altentipn. tention lie hungers ter ii his father or motlwr.
When it t| denied him, appointment la to '< that he may be compelled
fiifnd or a relative express hla hurt and
aetly as a traveler In deenrt eonnliy. uses his eantemi’s stale and tepid water to try and slake his thirst.
WImt the traveler really wunls
Is iheTresh and sparhllni; water of the brook ho hopes lu find— and 'What your niece wants la reconciliation ,wlth her mother. Her eorhplainta are appeals for your direction on how to accom-pliah this end. mSIlKH WARNINfl
Sometimes the hope of the child who oomplalns to us about a par. ent Is never satisfied. Because we have no certain way of knowing thla, we take great responsibility when we destroy this hope by OUT own antagonistic criticism of the parent.
The great British psychiatrist. Dr. Ian D. Sultle, has written these most important words fw you;
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116 North retry	FE 2-6361
“Hate Is Just pronob to the hated person and owes all Its meaning lo a demand tor love."
If we know these words to be true, then we cun be helpful to a child who comes running distract-t>dly to us with disappointed hun-1 ger for his parent's love.
We help by listening to your niece's angry accusations of her mother—but we do not Join her In them. Instead, we remind her that parents also suflcr when chll-show no Interest In them. Wo sayt
“You're hurt because year mother wwi't ha Inieresled In what you'want. What about herr Do you think aiWa feeling lull of benns right aowT
Isn't it possible that ilu! Is feel ing just as hurt at your refusal to show any interest in what she wantsT Parents and children are so diflereni you know. Par enls need children lo show I ekt In them Just as you want us lo show Interest In you."
Though we may full In hel the child (o a reconciliation with parent, he needs to become aware that he wants It. For thjs Is the truth. E^ren If he do get whnt he wants, it is still the truth that he wants II.
^INCE 1917

fall
planned by	^
Marilyn Louise «. Scarbormgh, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Kaymoud Sairhvrough of West Strathmore Avenue and Alex r.
I.ucier, son of the Ernest Luciers of Judah Roiul, Gingellville.
Mr. and Mrs, Leslie Parsons of East
Hopkins Street announce the enguf^ment of their daughter Ji^et Louise to . Pvt f,
.sti
and Mrs. Ruie Parrish of Raldwin Road, Cinge.llville.
A spring wedding is planned.

^ MARILYN L. SCARBOROUGH
1 I *; ,■
JANET L. PARSONS
■*%oc
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Rocker Chair Cushion Sets- Pkg. $12.95
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BUDGET TERMS '
1680 South Teleyr.
dtttt South of Orchord tiko Rood—Frdf Parking -
Tuesday Musicale Draws Bravos
lly BKKNK'K UONKNTIIAI, The mimuil spi ing conc«>rl of the ’onllac Tuesday Musicale Chorus, with guest arllsl Mifiy BarllctI, harpist, was heard Tuesday afternoon at the Fellowship Hall of Grace Lutheran Church.
The program was ln(rodue.ed by Mrs. Dora Dawson, whose appropriate comments were a delight to ihe audience.
Under Ihe sensitive and aceom-plishi>d baton of Its director. Mrs. Ferdinand Gnensbmier, the '27-voice chorus displayed professional WrisletahshljT in an unusui(r"pi^ gram, broad in scope, of seldom-heard but very appealing music.
The chorus has a full rich quality, with a fine blend of voices, which Mrs. fiaensbauer plays upon with color and with dramatic Intensity. Her eontrol of the chorus, with its oloar-eut attacks and releases, excellent
Fashion Pages Theme hr Style Show Thursday
Psi Chapter, Sigma Beta Sorority, will present “Pages of Fashion” at the annual style show and card party Thursday evening in the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland building.
Chairman of the affair fo begin at S p. m. is Mrs. Wayne Booth. Heading various eonimlt-tees are Mrs. Norman Auer, refreshments; Mrs. John Spragg, decorations; Mrs. Shakey Godo-^:hian, door prizes; Mrs. James DeFlorlo, tickets; Mrs. Marilyn Koch, publicity.
Mrs. Ezio Bisogni will comment on fashions presented by the Phyllis Lee Shop, UnlMi Lake. Models will be Mrs. Thomas Thornberry, Mrs. Wallace Williams, Mrs. Jack Kudray, Mrs. Charles Fopmier, Mrs. Frank Phelps, Mrs.- Morgan Siple and Mrs. Matthew Ahern.
* > ♦
Tickets may be purchased at the door or from members.
Ing, makes for the ran' kind of performant'e whirh should he heard by a large public audience. The program featured composb Iona by contemporary compoaer William Schuman, and contrasted his three canons on Health, Beauty and Thrift with his Prelude, based on Thomas Wolfe’s pixdoguc con-{'erning the loneliness of man, from ”l4)ok Homeward, Angel.” This was the highlight of the program, particularly In the solo portion, .sung with maturity and undenit«ndh)g*by Mrs. VlclbFBtnd* qulst,- with the Introspective background of the chorus giving her both support and contrast.
★ A *
"Old Shoe Boots and Leggin’s," a southern folk song, was charmingly sung with solos by Mrs. L. G. Cox and Mrs. J. B. Nicolls Jr. The first portion of the program concluded with Davis’ ecstatic song, "I Am Joy.”
The chorus’ second group was compost'd of three songs by Brahms, accompanied by harp, and featuring the French horn aceampaniments of William Brown and Pastor Guy Smith, who played with artistry and understated simplicity.
The program concluded with the charmingly sentimental “A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes” by David, Hoffman and Livingston. Mrs. Walter Schmitz accompanied the group at the piano, and showed at all times a keen understanding of the changing moods and intuitive response to the conductor’s needs.
TALK ON HARP Between choral groups, Mary Bartlett presented a fine and illuminating talk on the harp, its mechanism, background and technical difficulties and showed her complete mastery and affinity for the instrument by playing tour selections which demonstrated the wide range of color and virtuosity.
The Michigan Federation of Music Clubs’ choice of the hymn of the month was from Haydn’s “Creation” and was sung by both audience and chorus as the meeting convened. Mrs. J. B. For-
for the April IQ men’s night pr«i-grnm, at Ponllae Northern High te'hool, featuring B o • ■ n r t and Fisher, dnoplnnlsts, and Esther Benson, lyrio rnttrist. ProM^n go to the scholarship fund. Auditions tor schoiateUlps will be Sunday afternoon at Grace Mth-eran Church, S p. ni.
Election of officers followed, and the slate submlUed by the nominating committee, Mrs. Dawson, Mrs. E. C. Russell and Mrs. W. H. Sink, was unanimously cletrted. The
Dr. Fink Addresses Teachers' Club
An Instructor of mental health at the University of Michigan addressed members of the Teachers Exchange Club recently.
Dr. Jerome Fink spoke on "Creativity versus Conformity” after the dinner meeting at Bethany Baptist Church. The speaker is consulting psychiatrist lor the City of Pontiac and the Oakland County chapter of the Children’s Aid Society. Dr. Fink is also a staff member at Pontiac General Hospital and The Haven Sanitarium, Rochester.
Hostesses lor the evening ' Lenore Cornell, Hazel MacGirr and Geneva Forslund. Guests were Mrs. Gilbert Collins and Lulu McGregor.
Redmond’s
\..
where quality is priced . . .
RIGHT!
FOR A LIFETIMB OP PROUD POSSESSION
FOR A LIFETIME OF PROUD POSSESSION-
O
OMEGA
officers are Mrs. C.i'orge Pul-, president; Mrs. Victor Lindquist, first vire presldenl; Mrs. James Rosenthal, second vice president: Mrs. 0. W. Schmidt, recording sQtretery; Mrs. A. B. Easier, corresponding secretary: Mrs. M. F. Hathaway, treasurer; Mrs. R. H. Austin, assistant treas-ui‘«‘r; and Mi'S. P, A. Vlericch, historian.
AAA
Social committee for the afternoon consisted of Mrs. W. J. Wharton and Mrs. H. N. Steinbuugh, WKibatonen,-assisted by Mrs. W.-J. Coleman, Mrs. C. E. Armstrong, Mrs. W. E. Brace, Mrs. H. V. Phipps and Mrs. H. C. Carroll.
A A A
Floral arrangements were by • Mrs. F. A. Voelker and Mrs. J. C. Covert. At the tea table were Mrs. Putnam and Mrs. C. A. Benton. Greeting guests' at the door were hostesses Mrs. P. R. Carr and Margaret StewaWI.
Bikini Shelters
(UPI) — Beach shelters are short little dresses to be worn over swim suits. They appear as narrow, knee-length shifts or tent silhouettes. Many have a brief, jumpsilit effect with a front zipper for a. quick wrapping after a swim. The brighter the color the better lor these whimsical outfits.
Have You Tried This?
Hearty Chicken Salad Is Spiceci With Curry
By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Home Editor If you are entertaining your bridge club and wQht to serve something that isn’t sweet, here is a good recipe to try. Curried CTilcken &lad.
Mrs. Roger Berlin, our cook today, is a young homemaker. She enjoys some hand work. CURRIED CHICKEN SALAD By Mrs. Roger Berlin 2 cups cubed chickert 1% cups cooked rice % cup drained crushed pineapple
1 tablespoon red wine vine-
gar
2 tablespoons salad oil 1 teaspoon salt % teaspoon curry powder 1 cup diced celery % cup chopped green pepper % cup broken pecans Mayonnaise to moisten Lettuce
Additional pecans
Mix chicken, rice, pineapple, vinegar, oil. salt and curry powder. Let chill 2 hours. Just before serving time, fold in celery, green pepper and pecans. Add enough mayonnaise to moisten.
Serve on lettuce, garnished with whole pecans. Makes-6-8 servings.

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Phone: FE 2-3612 81 North Saginaw St.
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DETROIT BUILDERS* SHOW SAMPLES W NATIONALLY FAMOUS BALDWIN PIANOS
Act Promptlyl Substantial oav&gs on a select but limited group of world-famous Baldwin pianos displayed only at the Builder^ Shbw ... SALE' PRICED for this ohee-a-year event! Your chance to own a re^ fine pianp for less than you’d pay for many ordinary kinds on the mar-ketl Choice of newest styles and finishes.
OFtN FRIDAY and MONDAY IVININCS TIL 9
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119 Nfirth Saginaw Street'.,	FES-8222
Tim PONTIAC PIiK8^ WKPyKSDAY, MAIU II U. n»08
hTF'l^lfiKN
St. Michael Scouts Mark Anniversary
8«v«n Girl 8e«ii troopf ot 8t. Michael’! Church celebrated the gtdden annlveraary of icoutlng by attending church together In ‘ form on Girl 8cout Sunday.
Breaktaat following the eervlce waa eerved to m gtrin, leadeni, ■ponaora and; gueala. Gochalrmen for the bronkfaat were Mra. George Taylor and Mra. Charlea Engliah, aaalatcd by a committee of iMu-lah women.
During the program, Brownie Seoul! Roaeninry Plche and Undo Myera prewmlwl llev. Fr. Jumea L. Huyea, paator of St. Mlchael’a, with druperloa for the meeting rooma. Mra. Henry Slmpaon no-cepted the troop'a gift to their aponaora, the Altar Sca-iety, from MarbMu- Si!out Sharon Stadler.
Troop KCS, under the leadi ahlp of Mra. WUIlMn Cook, w announced winner of tho drivo for while goode for eanoer pnd aewing. A total of IM pounda ot material had I
Mra. Donna LaMaccio apoke alwut aenlor round-up. She pointed out that the two Pontine glrla selecUHl, Roealeen Taunt and Jane Tripp, are both from St, Midwol’ Mariner Ship 590. She concluded her speech by pinning Senior Leader Mrs. Cyril M. Davla a guard signifying 10 years* service In scouting.
Girl Scout officers, Mrs. La-Macdo, executive director; Mra. Elwyn Tripp, president; and Mrs. Morgan Siple, neighborhood chairman; were guests.
■a ★	★
Altar Society ofOcera present were Mrs. Henry Simpson, Mrs. Jose(h Cara a bon, Mrs. John Myers. Mrs. Dennis Daugherty and Mrs. Bernard Amman.
Also seated at the head table were former scout leaders Mra. Leo Halfpenny, Mrs. Bernard Ei-bergen and Mra. Kenton Plourde.
Troop 362 with Mrs. Joseph Kochan and Troop 84 with Mra. Anthony Stadler were plso present as guests.
Twist-y Designs
(UPD—The twist dance has had its effect on spring fashion designs. Loops, tassels and fringes ornament dresses al! over or are limited to edgings.
RV'l'UANN USINCER
An Ang. 25
Xiding i$ nnrd by JlhtUMnn (hinf{0r, daughter of the Walter Warrens of Lansdoum Streot, Drayton Plains, and Robert E. Gordon, son of the Edward F. Gordons, Rosshire Court. Miss (/singer attended Ferris Institute and her fiance, Flint Jr. College.
iro than 290,01)0 Americana of nil agea are admitted to meiilal hoaiilikla In each c
of Corwin Court. May vows planned.
DOIAIRES ELAINE DePAVlf^
HELEN JEAN BUJiLESON
Pender-McKinnon Rite
Says Evening Vows
Nuptial vows of Joan Klalnc Me KInnon to John E. Pender wer* spoken beforo Rev. Wilbur Oanier In a candlelight ceremony Saturday evening in the Covert Methodist Church, Waterford Township.
Parents of the bridal couple are the Claude C. McKinnons and the Millard J. Penders, all of Over-rldge Street, Waterford Township.
Styled along princess lines, tho bride’s ballorina-lenglh gown of white peau de aole was appllqiiod with Aleneon lace eu the bodice which had elbow-length sleeves. A crystal tiara caught her ahoul-
oarried a somicascade of while carnations and slcphanolis.
Gail Lopucki, Royal Oak, the bride's only attendant, appeared in mist green silk organza over taffeta and carried white and green carnations. Nlta Kay Pender, sister of the bridegroom; was flower girl and Matt Sweazey, Oak Park, the bride’s cousin, carried the rings.
AAA
On (he esquire side, were best man Robert Harrison, Oxford, with MRS. JOHV E. PENDER Thomas McKinnon and Michael
JacJiie Will Visit City of Ancient Indian Ruler
By United Press International By his own admission, Akbar was great. But the abandoned walled City of Fatehpur Sikri which Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy will visit Thursday was one of his mistakes.
Akbar was the grandson of the chieftain Babur, who founded the Mogul Dynasty in India and claimed as his ancestors Genghis Khan and Tamerlane.
and In 20 yean
Akbar was illiterate. And it was one of the measures of-his greatness that he became one of the best-read men of his day through the use of court scholars who dutifully kept him abreast of the latest books and writings.
•WISE AND JUSr
The history books say Akbar also was wise and just, Moslems' and Hindus to cooperate for the good of all.
But the chieftain erred badly when he decided to shift the Mogul capital from Delhi to Agra, 120 miles to the south, and from there 27 nilles east to Fatehpur Slkrl.
The hitch was that despite all the trouble Akbar went to in building Fatehpur Sikri, the city had to be abandoned in pH years because Otere wasn’t enough water to take care of the Mogul court.
But the old place still is well worth looking at, as Mrs. »Ken-nedy will see Thursday.
Akbar chose Die site ot Fatehpur Sikri out of gratitude to Sheik Salim Chlriiti, a holy man who lived neartfy. The aheik gave Akbar Us blessing and prophesied a sen for the Mogul ruler.
When the son,was bom, Akbar “ordered constructirai to begin. Vatehpiir Sikri stiU UjnCTCdlent fXHidition 400 years later. IMPRESSIVE PALACE
It fe a-w£djed- cify w^ like a :hi«e fortress. Its palace is filled with courtyards, impressive stone - walled apartments, marble window screens and bath-Ug chamfaers.
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The entrance Is dominated by Akbar’s hall of public audience where, sitting between two screens, the emperor would dispense justice to his subjects.
One courtyard is noted for its red sandstone square^. On them, Akbar and his queen used to play chess with slave girls acting as chess pieces.
brothers of the bridal couple, seating some 250 guests.
AAA
P'or the wedding, Mrs. McKinnon chose candlelight beige silk crepe and chiffon over taffeta, with green accessories. Her corsage was of green-lipped carnations, mother of the bridegroom wore fuchsia accessories atjd carnations with a pale beige linen sheath dress with matching lace jacket.
The newlyweds, returned from a honeymoon in Michigan, arc home on Oregon Street, Waterford Township.
Grandparents of the couple, the E. J. Sweazeys of Bradford Street, Mrs. James Stewart of Oxford and Mrs. John Pender, Lake Orion, attended the ceremony and church reception.
Great Day for Green
Rowston Proclaims ORT Day
Honors Vocotionol Trailing Agency os Drive Climaxes
In recognition of the great strides taken by Women’s American Organization for Rehabilitation through Training (ORT) In rebuilding human lives by vocjt-tional education. Mayor Philip E. Rowston-has-.deelai'ed today ns ORT Day In Pontiac. 'Tltis climaxes Women’s American ORT midwinter membership ^ r 1 v e which continues all year to sup port the World ORT Union program.
The largest nongovernmental catlonal training agency in the world, ORT provides and maintains schools for deprived peoples and instructs them In over ’TO modern industrial trades and skills.
ORT schools combine ara-demle high school with vocational training wherever such training aids Individual and economic rehabilitation.
In 1960-61, .36,827 ORT students enrolled In 608 (raining units. The number of students doubled in the past five years and is expected to continue this rise. About ’40,000 ORT students are currently en-roUed In twenty countries spanning the five continents, AAA
ORT has been the vocational and rehabilitation agency of the Jewish people for 82 years. Its global program is financed by the World ORT Union and affiliates and receives the second largest amount of support through its contributions from membership dues.
Financial aid Is also received from the Joint Distribution Committee, a inember agency of United Jewish Appeal, countries housing ORT schools and foundations throughout the world.
Women’s American ORT is the largest affiliate with 60,0f)0 members in 413 chapters in all major American cities.
Forest Lake Country Oub will feature an all-green theme for the St. Patrick’s Day dinner dance to begin with 6:30 p.rii. cocktails.
A . special "Dinty Moore” gourmet dinner is planned for tho£« who prefer it.
assisted by Mrs. Nederiander, the James McGuires, the John Gillespies, the D.. P. O’Greens and the Alan MePhaffs.
Mra. Kenneth Palmer is In charge of the club’s first spring bridge luncheon and card party today. Assisting her are Mrs. Charles Stein, Mrs. Herr seheU--MUkr,__MrS;^Ifenry Sokol and Mrs, HarSffHeBckr -
Roundup Calls Girl Scouts
tn conjuncUon with the 50(h an-versury of Ihc founding of Girl Scouts of the U.S.A., 10,000 girls and adult members will gallic .luly 18-.31 in Itutlon Buy, Vt., for tlic 1!K)2 Gii'l Scout Senior Roundup.
. Some ‘200 Glii (Julde Hungers (equivalent of S«'nior Scouts) from approximately' 20 countries w Join Hh^ 14- to 17-ye!ar-old campe from 1Im> United States and Its possessions.
A “city” of 6,000 multicolored tents will be erected In the 2S0-State Park.- fa-cnttHi on the shores of Lake Uhumplalh, The encanipnient, located alMHit 25 mihm soiitliwc-st of Burlington, temporarily will Ihi the sixth largest city In Ver-
IT conslnictlng a cider press undiordiimtor for roundup ll■uinlllg, and dll nmke elder for other eurnpers. Mrs, Wlllltmi (^rommett Is stuff Mrs. KIwyn ’I'ripp Is council co-'udvisci'.
MARCH 17
Knigrant
CAIlIilATIOItl mSAGIiS .
75'
IIIITI'OIIEKR.: 5«c
JACOBSEN’S
Flowers
101 N. SiiKiniiw
STACKS for Spring
This spring, the lower the stock heels, the s m a r t e r the walker! And they're so lithe,
politon Noturcflizers with the :	heel-hugging, toe-free fit! .
Third to be sponsored by the , , Girl .Scouts, the 1962 roundup is|
(he largest event for lecn-ag('d, girls in the free world. The first roundup was held in July 19.56 at, Highland Recreation Area west of s Pontiac.
Eight seniors will r<«pres«‘nt the Northern Oakland Cxiuiily Girl 8euut Connell at the cninp site. They art' I^sHe Sclss and Rosah<<‘n Taunt, Pontiac; Merrily Weber and Jane Tripp. Waterford Township; Sandra Bragen, Auburn Heights; Karen Hw> Ash-hiiugh, Orlonville; and Ann Aldrich and Kathic Stouteiihurg, Ko<!hester.
Eight alternates are Janice Sheppard, Ponti^d Diane Hurshbarger, Auburn Heights; Gail Hooverson, Orchard Lake; Lynne Springer. Con()ie Simpson and Marla U»m-beri, .Waterford Township; Merry Johnson, Rochester; and A 1 i Kirkpatrick, Utica.
MEET TWICE A MONTH To gain experience in setting up camp, learning roundup songs and practicing the demonstration they will present at roundup, the girls have been meeting twice a month with trainer Mrs. Jay Bendall. The demonstrations illustrate typical features of Scouts’ respective region or country. Local council girls
Tops in Brifdge Ploy
Eight couples garnered top flight honors at the Xanadu Duplicate Bridge Club’s m^o n t h I y master point game Sunday evening at the Waldron Hotel. Eleven tables were in play.
-----
THB SHOE WITH THE BEAUTIFUL FIT

Arizona ranks as one of the lead-states in copper production.
\ By lerome Lawrence and Robert E, Lee
The dynamic dramatization of Scopes “Monkey-, Trial” of 1925 to be presented by the Students of Pontiac Northern Senior High School
Friday, March 23—Saturday, March 24
NorriMJm ffigh School Auditorium
Adults $1 Students 75c
CuEtain ^tOO P. M*
Clip and MaUThis Handy Mail Order Coupon
lDRAM4dpErT.=
I PONTIAC NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL > 1051 ARUENE I PONTIAC
■	£n(:losed Is ($	) Please Send Me
■	(	) Adult Tickets (	) Student
■	Tickets for □ Friday ' □ Saturday
1 PIsas* Indicate **AME ........................
■	Ddr Ton Wish ADDRESS ......................*..
I richtis for CITY ......... .............
To
^Oui^____
Dl^lGNERS Mi^lNERY PREMIERE
Thursday, March 15th
Please come meet Mr. H. Director noted fashion authority who will be here all day, with a collection of designer hots for your selection.
IT’S
MnUNERY WEf» nt ASmi]R»S---
So piclryour spring posie^orly . . . from our flowery flirts. Little nosegays and frothy romantic blossom bonnets . .. clocHes/caps, pill-boxes... suit your mood and pocketbook. An Infinite variety of designer magleln our exciting new spring collection.	-	'



mm
SIXTEEN
‘I
THE PONTIAC PjlESS. WEDNESDAY> MAECH U> 1068!
SEW SIMPLE
&micE Farmer
Tlilt WMk't Tailor THx winner i« Mn. David L. DeWoUe, Falla yUlaiiff, Oonn., wltlii thla auggeation:
“After making a cotton print dreaa for my amall achool child, I nearly alwnya have enough material left for a ruffle for « fiettlcoat. It tahN piwotically no axira time and what a tm^tly >naemb)e' thia makai^ 1 find your column a gold mine or good help, and your lnfo^ matloit haa gotten me 'oft the hook' no often."
★ ★ ★
CANT wm DONE “Dear Mra. Farmer:
“How do you line a one-picce aklrt in the back only?"
Mra. R. T.
ThIa la one of the dlMdvantagea of a aklrt that la cut in ONE piece, by thia we mean, without aide aeama. You niuat either line the aklrt completely or pot at all, aince there are no aide aeama to attach a partial lining to. You muet alao be aurr to mcnaure the aklrt at your'hip line and then meaaure youraelf, the aklrt must be 2" larger t. Thia ia very Importnnt to do before cut-
ting your akirt because a one-piece aklrt cannot be let out or taken In after It haa been cut.
•k it it
TO REMOVE RIINIE
“Dear Eunice:
“I put a hem in a aatin sheath ^l ess and used hem binding on the cut edge. Wlien I pressed the hem with a steam Iron "On the wrong aide of the aklrt, there was a ridge showing on the fight side. Is It the material, or do all materials make a rWge when pressed?"
. '	Mrs. P.
Alter the hemline has been accurately marked on you, turn up the hem on this line and baste through both thicknesses of fabric, then ptreaa. After the hem has been pressed, lilt the loose edge of fabric up and press under the hem, this will remove any ridge that has been presaqd in. After the width of the hem hna been ept evenly, apply hcn\ tape, and toosely 8llp^ltttch the edge of the hem tape to your garment. It la not necessary to press this hem again.
ic it it
PITT IT IN BY HAND
“Dear Eunice:
“The dress I am making has a blouson bodice with a zipper down the center back. The zipper has made the bodice back appear very stiff and I think it has ruined the soft appearance It should have had. Is it too late to do anything about it?"
Mrs. P. E. S.
In most blouson dresses, you will find that buttons are used for the closing Instedd of the zipper, in order to achieve that "soft" look. Since you have already cut your gamrent and must use a zipper, try putting It In by hand instead of machine. It will be much more flexible ^ipd you will have more of the blouson effect to your t^icc.
SEND IN QUESTIONS
“Dear Mra. Fanner:
“We are a group of teicn-age girls who would like to know how to sew but aren’t offered such a course in school. Couldn't you please make your column a little easier to understand for 'beginners’?”
Beginners
I have tried to vary the questions u.sed each week hoping that at least one question would be helpful to everyone. It’s up to you to send me the guestions. I’ll do my best to answer them. I’m pleased as punch about the interest from girls your age. Having two teen-e™~ myself, we keep our sewing machine hurqming all the time.
If you want sewing help with the 20 most common problems, send your request with 25 cents and a self-addressed, stuped envelope to Eunice Farmer in care of The Pontiac Press.
Exchange Student Addresses Group
Holland exchange student, John Simon, was guest speaker at, St. ^tc^n Lutheran LaaiM"tTuild, Drayton Plains, meeting Monday. A student at Waterford Kettering High School. John sixikc of his native land amt playcKi several selections on his guitar.
Age Doesn't Receive Much Respect Today
By RUTH MILLETT Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
One of the worst things about being old. says a man who is young for his years, is knowing that younger people are going to blame everything about you that does not please them on your age.
regarded as a garrulous old bore — no matter how much sense your words make.
Are some of the neighborhood children brats? If you're old ywi don't du% say so — or you'll be marked down as an "old grouch" by all the young parents in the neighboiboqd.
Are yon honestly appalled at , .teenage vandalism? You had better not voice your feelings too ■trnm^y or parents of teen-agers wiU think your age Is making you •veriy critical of the yoniig.
Do you see in the past lessons for the future? Point them out and you will surely be accused of living In the past.
Tell a story more than once -which anyone might do at any age — and you’re getting so old .you repeat jrourself.
Are you pessimistic about the state the world is (n? It’s all right tor “angry young men” to voice their dissatisfaction with things as they are, but the pessimism of flie old is blamed on their age. MUST BE BRIEF Do you wish to have your say in community affairs? Thra keep your remarks brief or you’ll'be
Turn down a new idea because you think it doesn’t make sense and you’re too old to change with the changing times.
Are we realty that quick to discredit the old on the basis of age? It’s a pity if we are for we can only erep^ to be treats in the saSie fashion some day,, having our agls regarded as a sign of fodishness, rather than of wisdom bom of experience.
For a new look at* the other end of the age spectrum, see Ruth Millett’s booklet, “Tips on Teen-Agers.’’ Mall 25 cents to Ruth Millet Reader Service, care of The Pontiac Press.

Characteristk of Irish Hospitality
Meet Our
LEPRECHAUN, Sean,
Master of Kitchen Magic
IRISH
STEW
Church Women Planning Benefit
June Group of the First Presbyterian Church were guests of Mrs. A. Ir. Druiy, Bimingham, for their luncheon meeting Friday.
A report on National Masonic was given by Mrs. William Beat-tie and Mrs. Leo Donaldson outlined the Bible study.
Plans were also announced for a benefit sale at the church April 6 and 7.
Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Jdin Maginnis, Mrs. Hugh Archer and Mrs. Ericsonf'Lewis. Group pialnnan Mrs. E. G. Winn conducted the meeting.
Marbach Group of the First Presbyterian Church met at the home of Mrs. Richard Keift on Wenonah Drive Monday. Devo-.tiot^ wiere-led by Mrs. Robert Ir»-wdn and lS^r ’Eimer-Barker- ga^ the Bible study.
Cobostess Mrs. Jerry Viaiite served refreshments after the

Color Television HEADQUARTERS
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New t Accents in Color, Fabrics
Men’s Clothes Go ‘Happy’
PTA Meetings Set
This pretty wife looks, over one of the mw sfmdes now available in men’s clothing. Men are more fashion-conscious today—that's a break for the little woman. Men are also more interested in their figures than they once were.

•I.ANK E A. SMITH Janice A. Smith, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Smith, of South Marshall Street has graduated as an air .ljnes stewardess. After conipleting training in Chicago, lit , she now serves aboard mainllners flyihg from Washington, D.C. Prior to serving aloft she was a dental assistant.
Local Chapter Hears Speaker
Alpha Omteron Chapter, Delta K a p pa Gamma Society, heard Cupt. Ilia St- Johns of the United Stales Recruitment Service, at an executive board meeting and luncheon In Royal Oak's Howard Johnson’s Restaurant.
Charlotte Richards presented the speaker whose topic was “Women in the Service of the United States." '
Hostesses were Mrs. Vem R. Richards and Faith Alway.
Membens will attend the hit comedy "Do Re Mi" in Detroit Saturday.
Staje President Mrs. Florine Hall will speak at the society’s April 7 meeting in Devon Gables. Guest chapters for the occasion will be Alpha Beta, Kappa, Alpha Gamma and Lambda.
Officers Selected Church Women
by
Berean Class of Memorial Baptist Church held elections Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Jack Anderson.
Members eho.se the following as Class officers Jor this year: Mrs. Cecil Lankfoiti, president; Mrs.
V i s Gillctt, vice president: Mrs. August Erickson, secretary; Mrs. Harlan Milliman, assistant secretary; Mrs. Charles Morarity, treasurer; Mrs. Kyle Wharff, assistant treasurer; and Mrs. Frank Lar.son, publicity chairman.
Refreshments were served by Cora Backus and Mrs. James Schram.
Dance Theme Irish
A St. Patrick’s Day dinner dance will open the spring social season at the Bloomfield Hills Country Qub with an intenvationally famous orchestra playing for dancing.
Member hosts and hostesses
for the dance which will feature a “Wearing of the Green" theme will be the Worth Kramers, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Jones, the Howsihi Keatings, the Gail Smiths and the Robert ■VanderKloots.
By JOSPIIHINB LOWMAN Men, Goa Mmi them, kw becoming more fashion minded. In other words, they are bocnmlng more Interested in ibe way they look, and, theretore, In the (dotbes they wear.
1 will let you Idi on a Utile cret- They are alio more IfitereaMl in their figurea than they once
think this Is partly due to the emphaale which is being placed on the dangers of overweight, hilt also because the intelligent man now realizes that the way he looks is Important In business us wel' in love.
Today the successful man is well groomed and his clothes art attractive and in good condition. ’This is a mark of self-respect. HAPPY TREND In Waslilngton lusl month at the annuiil meeting of. the American Instlliite of Men’s and Boy’s Wear, In <t»njuncllon with the convention of the National Asaoclatlon of Retail Clothiers and Furnishers, the famous designer Ully Dnche gave a fascinating talk. She suggesttHl that this increase in masculine interest in clothes is a happy irtwd for women, I think most women agree.
Miss Datbe does feel that men are not taking advantage of the colors now available In men’s elothing. She said, “I am not s|)caklng of sportswear^ but for business there are new, subtle shades In suit fabrles, new ae-eenls In neckwear, socks and
taslefully coordinated with new
I certainly agree! I do not how men have tolerated those never changing blues and browns and grays for so long. No variety whatever! Today, there is great variety tn choice.
a man is going lo buy some new clothes, why shouldn’t he buy those which flatter him? Why shouldn't he take into consideration the color of his hair and skin? SOME EXCEPTIONS I believe that mo.st women like I SCO their hu.sbands well turned out, with well-matched accessories. I think they like to see them in becoming cotore, in happy clothing. However, there are some exceptions I suppose.
Some women	jumpy
and Insecure it their husbands look too attractive. 1 know one woman who deliberately fattened up her spouse so that he would be unattractive to other females. What a life!
So if you are going to try to jog your hubby out of a rut, clothes-wise, and if he comes home with a green suit, don’t let your eyes turn green. Give him a pat on the back, not a verbal whack on the head.
Also, if you are not fattening him up, perhaps you would like to send for my Tubby Hubby Diet if he needs to lose some wie«ht. 'This will give him a loss of from seven to 12 pounds in 12 days.
If’ you would like to have the Tubby Hubby Diet booklet, send 10 cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request to Josephine Lowman in ' of The Pontiac Press.
AU fish but the walleye eat heavily on water fleas, but the walleye eats only other fish. The catfish will eat anything at all.
Some to BiiCiMMi
It costs mora than 1600 to ewate facilities lo wake one ton of i^l per year, Including finishing lacHI-tios, - working capital and the
sourcea of raw materials.
Members Of the Waterford Toww shl^ School Board will be making their flntd appearance at Parent-Teacher
Thursdiy speaking on the propoeed tlve-mtU Incwase that will be voted on Tuesday.
BUiA UMiaBTT
Following a half hour open houm at the Eliza Seanmn Leggett School, school board president M-don C. Roaegart will dlacuss the aspecis of the mlUage propoeal.
Mrs. Veda V. Montgomerys sixth grade class will present • oral musical numbers at the 8 p. meeting. The business program
will prewde an election of afllc«r|i !(«• the coming year, p-*-"*-*-*'* win be derved hy the mothers.
WOVOIITON
Frederick J. Poole, hoaril of edu cation truslee, will be the featured speaker at the Douglass Houghton Schotd PTA meeting sriieduled for
Tp-m. A busineM meeUiut wlU pro-■’ talk on the mlUage pre-
cede i
Refreshments will be served by the third grede mothers who chairman is Mrs. Hoyt Pcnland.
Women: Do Plan Shopping
BURT
The Waterford Boys’ Chorus, remprlsed of 66 youngsters from 24 schools, wUf sing at the William Austin Burt PTA meeting. Mrs. Jtfnet Grimes is the director of the group and Miss Judith Dunn is accomimnlst.
Hy the Emily Post Institute
Q; I use llie subway every day lo go back and forth to business ilind nothing irritates me more than to see wjmen who are apparently housewives out on a shopping spree, enter the train at the height of the rush hour laden down with packages, thus adding to the transportation problem.
I think It Is very inconsiderate and thoughtless on their parts not to set aside specific hours for their shopping and to avoid using the transportation systems during the rush hours.
They would ho doing the workers a great service. I would appreciate your commenting on this in your col-
A Not only would they be doing the workers a service but they would add greatly to thetr own comfort as well. It is very inconsiderate on the part of those who are free to go to the stores at any time they please, not to arrange to take the subway after the commuting rush hours in the morning and early enough to get to the stores in time lo do their shopping and to go home again before the returning crowd gets on its way.
Q: At a dinner parly that is served by a maid, shouldn’t all the women be served first and then the gentlemen?
A: No. Skipping around the table serving the women and then going around it a second time and serving the skipped gentlemen is undoubtedly polite tn Its intention but it would be needlessly ■ timetaking and dish-cooling. Service begins with the women seated on the host’s right and proceeds around the table to the right, each one—lady and gentleman — being served in turn.
Q: Is it true, as a friend of mine says it Is, that If two people are walking together on the street and they are engrossed in conversation, that a friend passing by should ignore them and not even say "hello"?
A: If they are so engrossed that they do not notice her, the passing friend should ignore them and not interrupt their conversation.
STAPP'S.. , Introduce the Boys to Hush Puppies
Made rugged for active boys
BREATHIN'BRUSHED. PKSKIN CASUAL SHOES .
Even the most active teenager finds it mighty hard to mis* treat a pair of Hush Puppies. Steel shanks not only give the right support but keep the shoes in shape. And, the/ra triple Hell-Cat tanned, h brisk brushing removes any surface spit. Ground-in stains disappear with suds end water. Choose from styles, sizes and widths for everyone.
Available at Downtown Store Only!
STAPP'S
JUVENILE-BOOTERIE
28 E. Lawrence St., Downtown rOpM Men., to 6:20 end fri.. to f"
mmtiiig at which timo the elcollon of otflocrs for the coming year will be held. The meet-lag will Ix'gln at 8 p.m.
A pancake supper has been
Monday at the school by the Tickols may be obtained from
the set
ANDBR80NV1LCE A 'Back to School Night’ is the ..reme of the Andersonville School PTA program featuring a 6:30 p.m.
served by the cafeteria employes at the school,
HUDSON fXIVERT
‘What is Special Education in Waterford," will be discussed ut the 7:30 p.m, meeting at the Covert school. A panel, including Mrs. Ruth Mlghell,-4lagnosU6ia»f-Mrs, Marjorie Walters, Havlland School Special Education teacher: James Jenuwine, Special Education teacher at Crary; and Frieda Hug-gett, supervisor of visiting teachers. Mrs. Victor Babka,' meptui health chairman is in charge of the meeting.
Hears Tdik on Geography
A discussion of the geography and people of the Netherlands was the topic of guest speaker Carla Teunissen before the Fellowship Class of Baldwin Evangelical United Brethren Church Saturday evening. A native of the Ncthcr-lahds. Miss Teunissen is a nurse anesthetist at Pontiac General Hospital.
President Roy Ritter presided and devotions were led by A1 Lovse.
Next month’s meeting will be in the church parlor with the Leslie Bells as host and hostess.
Shows Slides to Federation
aty Federation of Women’s Clubs met at the home of Mrs. Howard Powers of Cherokee Road Monday. Members enjoyed a tedk and slides of her native New Zealand shown by Diane Vichie, ah exchange student living, at the home of Mrs. Charles McLaughlin.
Hostesses Irom the City Pan-"^Tiellenic Association were: Mrs. William Belaney, Mrs. William Freyermuth, Mrs. Robinson Bronoel and JdAnn Van Tassel. , Mrs. Fritzi Stoddard presided at the tea table.
SALE
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of
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f » f f
continues at
Rarutnod
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We guarantee y o uV cleaning^ will look better and last longer through our many years of experience
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605 Oakland Ave. F£ 42570 ^


THE yONTtAC^ PEB8S, WEDNESoXy. MAHCH u, io«2
SEVENTEEN’



f ■
as a matter of fact, ifs just good sense to stop at TOMP^ whore you receive TOTAL SAVINGS on all your family’s food requirements with
NORTHWOOD MARKETS
888 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD
Prices in This Ad in Effect MarcH Uth thru March 2()th
O^EN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY	9 P.M.
SUNDAY 9 A M. fo 5 P.M.
SCOUNT PRKES EVERYDAY!
Maxwell House, Hills Bros., Beech-Hut
or Chase A Sanhori
Re^a
Price
69«
DISGOUHT
PRICE
U.S. Gov’t Inspected Lean BEEF
STEAltt
ROUNDUO SWISS Du*
•	SIRLOIN... 69°'^
•	T-BONE ... OO* "^
•	PORTERHOUSE 99
Lean Boneless ROLLED RUMP ROASTS Freshly Cubed MIHUTE STEAKS Lean, Boneless STEW BEEF

Morrell’s Spiced Luinclieon Loaf
POPP'S MICHIGAN GRADE NO. 1
SKIHLESS FRAHKS O or LARGE BOLOGHA 0
REG. PRICE 33c
lbs.
for
CINHAMOH ROLLS......29‘
TTALIAH BREAD ...... . 25*
Reg. ISe djffy Chocolate, Yellow or White
Cake Mix.................... DISCOUNT PORli; Pkg. 9c
Reg. STc DOMINO Sugar.........DISCOUNT PRICE, 5 Lb. Bag 49c
Reg. 3 for 55c CAMPDELL'S SOUPS,
Meat Variety............... DISCOUNT PRICE, 15c Can
Reg. 3 for 43c CAMPBELL’S SOUPS,
Vegetable Variety..............DISCOUNT PRICE, 13c Can
Reg. 43c STARKIST Solid Pak White Meat Tuna,
Reg. Can....................... DISCOUNT PRICE 3Tc
Reg. 91c DEMING’S Red Alaska Salmon,
1 Lb. Tall Can....................DISCOUNT PRICE 19c
Reg. 3 tor $1.04 CHICKEN OF THE SEA, STARKIST, or
BREAST *0 CHICKEN CHUNK TUNA... DISCOUNT PRICE 3 cans 89c Reg. 19c KOUNH KIST Kitchen Sliced Green or
Wax Beans.................DISCOUNT PRICE 2 303 cans 33c
Reg. 2 for 33c LaCHOY CHOW MEIN
NOODLES...................DISCOUNT PRICE 2 303 cans 25c
Reg. 19c KRAFT Macaroni Dinner........DISCOUNT PRICE 15c
Reg. 29c KRAFT Spaghetti Dlnnpr .... DISCOUNT PRICE 25c
Reg. 45c CHEF BOY-AR-OEE Spaghetti Dinner
With Mushrooms i .	...... i....... DISCOUNT PRICE 39c
Reg. 1.59 CHASE i SANBORN Tnstant Coftee
(25c off Label) 10,oz. jar.......DISCOUNT PRICE $1.25
Reg. 33c STARKIST Noodle Tuna Dinner,
ISVi oz. can.......................DISCOUNT PRICE 27e
Reg. 45e LADY BETTY Prune Juice,
Quart Bottle.......................DISCOUNT PRICE 39o
Reg. 33e PAW PAW drape Juice,
24oz. bottle.......................DISCOUNT PRICE 250
Reg. 49c DeKLINES Old Fashioned Pickle Chips,
Quart Jar,.  ..................... . DISCOUNT PRICESOo
Reg. 39e CHIVERS imported-Jams and Marinaiades,
Assorted FlavorshlSCOUNT PRICE, 312 oz. jars $1.00 Reg. 49c Del MONTE Florida Orange Juice,
46 cz. can.......................DISCOUNT PRICE 43c
Reg.25c DOLE Pineapple-Grapefruit Drink,
DISCOUNT PRICE.....................5-29-ot. cans $1.00
Reg. 2 for 21c ROYAL Puddings—
All Flavors.................. DISCOUNT PRICE 9c Package
Reg. 6 for 65c GERBERS, HEINZ, or BEECH NUT
Strained Baby Foods.^.........DISCOUNT PRICE 6 jars 59o
Reg. 19c WINDOWLITE Glaso	.
Gleaner, 10 oz. bottle........ DISC0UNT1>RtCE15r~
Reg. 45c BRILI.-0 Soap Padi
Pesebke’s Finest ASSORTED
UWCHEM UMVES
•	Copked or Beer Salami • Bologna
•	Relish or Olive Loaf
0 Veal or Veal Cheese o Liver Loaf
0Z.PACKA6E
8c off Label
GOLD MEDAL
FLOUR
Reg, 99c
to 89^
Bel Mente |:^j
14 oz. boMe
CATSUP Ic
HUNT’S Reg. 43° Large IVx Can
FRUIT
tiunt's
COCKTAIL
DISCOUNT
PRICE
PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND
....DISeoyNTPRICESSo
Reg. lOo BLUE RIBBON Ammonia,
Quart BoMe.........................DISCOUNT PRICE ISo
Reg. 2 for 3$e AJAX Cleanter, 14 oz. can.... DISCOUNT PRICE 15c
Reg. 2 for 33c C0JIETi1leantar,^J4vz.«an,,.^i$CQUNTWIfCE^fSc Reg. 00c WOOLlfE Cold Water Wash for Woolens,
0 oz. Package...... . v.............. DISCOUNT PRICE 10c
Reg. 29e LaFRANCE Bluing, 0 OZ. package... DISCOUNT PRICE 23c
-AOfnrpose
Potaioes
10 lb. 39*
Reg. 15c JOHNSON’S Kitchen Jubilee
Wax, 14 oz. betti...
Reg. 19c JOHNSON’S Pride,
0 oz. Bottle  ....................... DISCOUNT PRICE 69e
..DISCOUNT PRICE 65c
Reg. $1.09 SmONIZE Self-PeliBhing
Viig W«f ^.Uat. Can.	..........DISCOUNT PRICE SUO ,
Reg.1AIBRUCWSFIiierW4haei=.,..^
....................;7r.v.iTBneOUIITJlAeE $1.19
Reg. $1.10 BRUCE’S TURustre Wax, quart. .DISCOUNT PRICE^e~:
Cleaner, ^art................. . DISCOUNT PRICE 09c
Reg. 27c CUT4IITE Wax Paper, 125 ft. i^lr.... DISCOUNT PRICQ 24c Reg. 33c flANOI-WRAP Saran, 190 ft. roil:.... DISCOUNT PRICE 21c Reg. 35e KAISER Aluminum
Wrap, 25 ft. roll.......... ..... DISCOUNT PRICE 29c
SI FAVORITES
SEALOSWEET
0RAN6E JUICE.........
SWIFTS FROZEN DINNERS HAM-BEEF-TURKEY-.. CHICKEN-MEAT LOAF ...
8JJS*1"
SWIFT’S FROZEN MEAT PIES CHICKEN-BEEF OR TURKEY. ...
BIRDSEYE FROZEN VEQETADLES GREEN PEAS-SPINACH-CORN or PEAS and CARROTS ...
39*
’4’.-89'
muh
M? COOKOOOK
See Page Ad in Tonfdrrow’e Poiftiac Preii eOjiy inttroetio|is on hew to obtain

WE ASK YOU TO COMPARE - IF YOU ARE PAYING MORE, YOU ARE NOT SHOPPING AT TOM'S

^	H if'
DISTRIBUTORS, INC.
1108 West Huron Street
WHAT BARC
THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY
W/>
Everybody has "fho luck e’ tho Irish" at this Qold, bargain-pack«d ST«.JAtii.. RICK’S DAY SALE, whoro tho "SAVING OF THE GREEN" Is storo-wldo shopping fun. Como in, bo happy, go thrill
FRIDAY,9ajn. to 5:30
Have Your Old Norelcd Cleaned, Adjusted And Lubricated nOQ
• 3Piic« 2-ayut	<
eOMIIMTION COOKER
f 2-Pc. Larft 4Qt COVERED DUTCH	^
OVEN
Cooking; is a JOY id th modern deiig;a Jo]r Q heat Joy -war* prostri cision fabricated fn> oi utensil retain utensil is eqji^ipMllil and knobs.	^
BY NORELCO FACTORY REPRESENTATIVES AT
SPECIAL INTI PRICE....
TRADE FAIR
For only 98c, tomorrow, you con have your old Norelco restored to peak performance at Trade Fair. Factory representatives will clean it, adjust it and lubricate it. And while you ore here you'll wont to
see the new Nofeico "Floofing-Heod" Speedshover and the versatile Norelco "Sportsman" ... both ideal gifts.	,
Tliis specidt Tune-Up offer ovoil-oble.one day only—'Friday, March 16, 9:00 o.m. to 5:30 p.m. at Trade Fair. ,
AOJUSTABie, POWERIVL 1
tvanunnas
7-50 Centar FoCus.-— CocAed Lens
BINOCULARS



SOLID LEATHER i^.CASE
■ ' ^ 1 \
THB PONTIAC FEESS. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14. lona
Ith JOY quick-heat, easy-to-care for, smart Quality Stainless Steel Cookware. Low* Iini ta^er—more nutritious meals. Pro-I tn top quality durable stainless steel, Joy I {leaning surfaces indefinitely. Every Joy kiiftaafety-grip evercool Bakelito bandlee
lODQCTORY
.flUIOIIS
PRESTO
FRYPAN
FOR ONLY 88
ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES
j ROMEX	91/ie
CABLE, 14.2	iL/Zft.
I KOMIX14.3	A
WITH oaouND, rr.......eS 14
ROMIXCABU
I ia.3, n............... el
ROMIX
STAKIS, Rkg............j£iW
I, ouniTRox
I SWITCHBOX
I SINOLIPOLS	lAC
TOOOLI SWITCH.........   iy
SINOUPOUTOOOM SWITCH
I “T" i'etlnfl.........jdtM
I TISTIRS............  .59*
■XTINSION CORD WIRS
Brewn or Ivory, Feol. '.. O
“Sylvania Electric
IBULBS T	|Ac
3S.40-t0.n-1MwMt.NM*	■
•*M I* 4*M*n. limit t~Y*wr	B| fg
■ POWER TOOLS 1	
JACOBS CHUCK DRILL. .	$J88
SABRE SAW		$^88
JACOBS CHUCK DRILL. .	$^88
7-INCH ELECTRIC
POWERSAW
Electro or Speedway Brands.
Values to $44.95
clutch end rip guidot. Cuts 2x4's at a 4S dogroo englo. Tull factory gaorantoo.
SPORTS EQUIP.
AMERICAN MADE WILSON-FRANKIIN-SONNET
BASEBALL
GLOVES
GROUP 1
5.00	to 7.00 Value
GROUP 2
9.00	to 12.00 Values
GROUPS'
13.00	to $20 Values
Tour Cfibico Whllo They Lott
MISCELLANEOUS
Wood Handle] Stainless Steel
STEAK
KNIVES
|C
NrNF/rKRN
ii'

V- .-
■ ■■■
TWIMSTT-^
Tim POOTTAC rHKSS. WEPNBSnAY, MAHCH U, IMa ‘
TRIPlJC UIX'KKK -- A parly l>runch that )«lp riHpm w'ould wriconio on wookend moitl^ ItHKR 1« Fruit 'll" Mam Pamnkt's. OiHw, too, jptlin rnjoy thl» appetizing meal lierauHc it con-
Use Custard Filling in Cream Puffs
Fllline your own cream purls not as hard a job as the novice might think. To till 12 large cream puK shells: mix IV4 cups sugar, ia cup flwr. teaspoon aall fti .saucepan. Gradually add 1 cup boiling water, stirring to mix well. Gook over low heat until mixture thickens, about 20 minutes, Stirling often.
Meal on One Plate Satisfies Even Dieters
Blend 1 tall can or 1*3 cups evaporated milk with 3 eggs .slightly .beaten. Stir Into first mixture slowly. Cook V minutes longer.
Tlie bane of dieters at a party | is trying to enjoy food and still! keep within their calorie llmit.s,! It's pretty haw to do when ‘itur-ruunded by’ warm hospitality and goo<|'fellowship.	'
For your next party, ns a host--ess who wants to aid dieters ".stay ’ inside their belts,” plan a menu g that includes sugar and the good ; foods containing it. .Sugar satisfies stirrii*.constantly until thickeneci and smooth. Cool filling, then add V ?i teaspoon vanilla.	I to a teaspoon.
Use to fill cream puffs; when:	*	*	*
sei-vlng top the puffs with choco | On weekend mornings, for ex-| late sauce.	j ample, what could be more salis-
--------------------I lying to late risers than an ap-
I .	. ,	ipetizing brunch of Fruit 'N' Ham
CookinQ KidnOyS	pancakes? The pancakes, ham
Do Little Repairs on the Faucets
Fauttels ter modern plumbing fixtures acQ eauippW wlth.inerntoi's at ilte end of Otu fuiwict stxtut. After pi'olonged use, the sfi'ainers on nerojors Iwixnne cloggW m ‘ Ilte wafer no longer flows fwely.
* * *
When Ihls Impiiens, the houso-holder Is ailvlHed to unHert'w the neralor ami elean.lhp strainer.
II Hie strainer wlira aix? dam-agtal or If it In lm|>0Hslhle to clean 'ator, the houiudiolder should take It to a plamtiing (‘oniractor and get a new one.
It is lm|Hirtant to show the old aemlnr to the iiluniMiig riintmc-lor so lliut llie threads can bn iiislehiMl.
A suggestion lor the liouseholder ivho wants to fix a leaking (atieet Is olfered.
'Hie use of a "bare'' wiench on the eluvmlum surfaee of Ihe faucet is not advisabliv It is suggested that the leeih of the wrench lie ‘d with adhesive tu|M\ It s nvallnble, cloth should used lit'lween the wrt’neh and the faueeb
No attempt should Im made to force parts that do not eoiiio apart easily.
.Many suggestions on easy plumbing it'pairs are offered in a liook-let, ’Tlumblng Care and Repair" pulilished by itie Bureau. House-iiolders are advised to smut 10 cents for Hie himklel to Ihe Plumb-The nnliro meal contains ahoiit |„g . Heating - Cooling Information t5.X ealorles.	Huivau. K. WackCr Drive, Cbl-
*	* A	Icago 1, 111,
Fruit n«ni Faneafces Ta cups sifted flour 2'.3 tcaspixnis baking powder I3 teaspoon salt ’4 cup confectioners’ sugar.
2 eggs, well-liealen m cups milk
2 tablespoons buHer, melted
tains sugar an all^' in holding Ihe ”Bcll. Line ” — by satisfying hppidite faster than most foods. Tile iiieal adds up to ■lfi3 calorics.
iMexican Panocha iUnusual Candy
I To Ining a box of homemade Mix and sift dry Ingit-dients.l‘'f"fy Add milk to beaten eggs and stir
into dry ingredients. Bent in melt-	‘^eir home. Mexl-
ed butter. Cook on hot griddle. ™"
Yield; 12 pancakes.	1	*"
■ ^	^	I shop so 11 will be an unusual
treat.
With the exception of those from beef, all kidneys are tender and broilable, advises the American Meat Institute, kidney tastes best when braised or simmered. Plan on three to four servings from a beef kidney, one or two servings from a veal kidney and one serving each from lamb or pork kidneys.
and pineapple slices may be prepared in advance. Just before serving time, they are dissembled on an electric warmer to keep hot on the buffet table. The orange sauce can be made ahead too.
To serve, place slice of grilled ham over pancake and top with a slice of broiled pineapple. Ae-compan.v dish with orange sauce.
Orange Sauce ’2 cup butter
cup sifted confectioners' .sugar ?!i cup orange juice 2 teaspoons lemon juice grated rind of I orange Melt butler; stir in sugar. .\dd orange and lemon Juice; heat to boiling. Stir in grated orange rind. Yield: IV4 cups.
"To-serve; Top one pancake with slice of giilletf Tfam. Add. broiled pinf'apple slice. Top with o'rirTa-ble.spoon hot Orange Sauce.
Combitu' '2 ounce unswi'clcned grutwl chocolate with 3 cups firm*-ly packed brown sugar and 1 cup (vaporaled milk. Bring to a boil.' Add 1 tablespoon butter and stir occasionally until candy reaches softball stage- (238 degrees), move frdm heal.
★ A A Add 1 teaspoon vanilla and l',4 cups choped nuts, mixing until candy begins to haWen. Turn into buttered 9-inch square pan. t?ut Into 2 dozen squares.
ECTRA SAVIII6S OH THESE ‘UHLE MRKEr HOF LENTEN SPECIALS
CO-OP SPECIALS
COOK
iiciMiPtRCH
Fium

3 Lbs.
QROUND
BEEF
89*^
Trss Swsst
OBANQE « JUICE
0 for 89*^
0„tctou.Fr.«» ««»;«•
Lake-Pak»»«
fiuets 45'
T2-OZ. pka-
Fairway’s Finest Quarantaad TENDER • SIRLOIN •ROUND •RIB •CUBE
STEAKS.: 7%
b.
REPEAT OF A SELL-OUT! Libby’s Mix ’Em-Match ’Em SALE Your Choice
100

5i»1'
60c SAVINGS on 6 Libby Labalt oik for tpacial blank at our ttor*
Ny« Largo Curd
CREAMED
COHAGE
CHEESE
1 IQc
INTRODUCTORY OFFER
a la Brandywine READY TO SERVE
MUSHROOMS C, $t
7-oz.ean-reg. 39c	|
COMRINATION SALE
•	Green Peas....................2 for 39e
•	Chopped Spinach...............2 for 39o
•	Leaf Spinach .................2 for 39c
•	Mixed Vegetables..............2 for 49c
FREE
$1.95 COOK BOOK
S«e page ad in tomorrow'* Pontiac Pres* for easy, complete details on how to obtain your Copy.

and PONTIAC Cd-OP
OPEN'DAILY 9<AMiJ^P.9.rPM:^^Umm
OPEN HOUSE
STARTS
WEDNESDAY
March 14 15-16 and 17
AND A SALUTE TO 4H CLUBS
GIRL SCOUTS
SQUARE LAKE AT TELEGRAPH
Parking For 5000 Cars
OPEN 10 'TIL 9 EVERYDAY
CAMPFIRE GIRLS
COME
ONE
COME
ALL
nn PAI^F anfl PAQTIIRF ttl A^QF^ at w. t. grant store EACH CLASS ABOUT 20 MINUTES
I llkil I VI Vll Clllll I W I U nh Vlift WIbV THURS., and FRI. 5:00 P.M. thru 7:00 P.M.-SAT. 1:00P.M. thru 5:00 P.M.
“ART of MAKE-UP"
AT CUNNINGHAM’S DRUG STORE
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENING-ALL DAY {MltlRDAL.
FREE|A1R-CARE DEMONSTRATIONS STYLE SH0Wand4-H CLUB TALENT
AT DONNELL HAIR STYLIST
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 6:00 P.M.~SATURDAY 3:00 and 6:00 P.M.
AT J. C. PENNEY STORE
THURS. and Fm. 6:00 P.M.-SAt. 3:00 and 6:00 P^M.
INFORMAL MODELING
• AT LIOR DEPARTMENT STORE^
IM PJI. to 9:00 PJI. YNORSDAY Yhni SlYDRDAY
r
FREE GIFT CERTIFICATES... FREE SOUVENIRS ... FREE (ZOFFEE... DONUTS
e Oi
e_— Come All — Have Furi During Qur "Of^nrHouse'
THE iPQN^hAC PiClsa WEDNESDAY. MAUCTT ll.J
N0.13A.
. TWBWTY-ONR
l>OUBUEv^,STi
tWTY^O
AMI
IPS
PIUS FR^ FOOD WITH DAILY DODDLE CODONS Mo. 13 mM 14

FREE FOOD
With Doily DoubI* Coupon i
N0.14
FREE!
Strawberry Preserves
WITH MAILED DAILY DOUBLE COUPON NO. 14 AND PURCHASE OF ONE AT REGULAR PRICE...37c
itRAWBtuK* Buy one.........
1 get one FREE
SWEET JUICY FLORIDA
Valencia Oranges
8^5D
Potatoes..20"99‘
FOR m YOUR DAINTY WASHAUiS
LUX FLAKES............ u«oi sizi pro. 34C
POR THAT SMOOTH COMPLEXION
LUX TOILET SOAP.... 2 rio. sin iars 23C
S< OPP PACK
LUX TOILET SOAP .
NO MIASURINO NEEDED
VIM TABLETS.. .
• 3 lATH sin MRS 28^ >..oo34^PX0.41€
REGUUR Sin BARS
PALMOLIVE SOAP........;..iSiARs23C
BATH Sin BARS
PALMOLIVE SOAP...........biars494
assorted colors to choose prom
CASHAAEME BOUQUET SOAP mimm23€
centlb and mild
CASHMERE BOUQUETSOAP sumwARC
POR YOUR AUTOMATIC DISHWASHERS
CASCADE.............. 204»r PRO. 49€
POR AU BAKING AND PRYIN8
CRISCO ......... 34B. CAN 8SC
4CQPPLABD.
FLUFFO.....................34B.CAN79C
LAROI Sia BARS	^
IVORY SOAP..................sbars35«
MEDIUM SIZI BARS
IVORY SOAP................. 3 BARS 35C
PERSONAL Sin BARS
IVORY SOAP.................... BARS 29c
ISreCIALLY GENTLE TO BABY OOTHES	4
IVORY FLAKES ........ iio. sin pro. 35«
POR YOUR UN6ERIR &
IVORY SNOW .....oiANTsinPACKAoiDIc
IOC OPP lABIL i^lSTANT COPFEE
MAXWELL HOUSE.......................44>z.jar 89F
7 DELICIOUS FLAVORS	..“ “	4
ROYAL INSTANT PUDDINGS s pros. 37C
DARK AND OEL^IiOUS
YUbAN instant coffee .«4>z. jai99€
PINE SCENTED CLEANER
LESTOiL.............OF. B1L 69^
MESHPR02IN -
BirdB^Eye
>AWI 25c OM	^
• S4VI25.0NS-
Green Beans
^OS
I UB ON4
aoyUi
Broccoli Spears,Ji|r|
SAVE 10c
Chef's Delight Cheese
MVI .
Spinach I
I looz. Of
I French Fries*
[SWEET PEAS 2 *” 30*


"U-
THM PONTIAC PRESS, WEPNESDlAy, MARCH U, lOfla
New Products Help You Feed Your Family or a Crowd

■V JANET ODEIX rmttM rrm Hmim Editor For aoine time we hove be snvliw noOcee of new product* until there were enough to w•^ runt *n Article. Thet time hiu <•0010,
144*1 rtml with the younger generation, Aigtle-cherry ;Kiloe I* H welcome addition to one baby fotxi Une. Fortified with vitamin C, It take* the place of orange juice for children who are allergic to the latter. The other new baby food I* atralried creamed co Many of ybu get Involved in quantity imoking, either with <-tmrch or iwme other organization. It you would like an excellent new little pamphlet on freah fruit and vegetable dl*he*, here’ what you do.
InBlttnttonal Dept.. United iYi'*h
Sweet Sour Way to Fix Shrimp
From our newest state comes Ideal dish for Lent or any other time of the year. It's Hawaiian Bweet-sour shrimp.
The delightful flavor of thi* exotic combination of *hrlmp, pineapple. and other ingredient* will make this dish a regular menu feature in your home. Deapite the many ingrwlients, It is easy to prepare. Good accompaniments are rice, bean sprouts, or Chinese noodles. -	—^
Hawaiian Sweet-Sour Shrimp H pound fresh shrimp or prawns or 1 7-ounce can shrimp 1 No. 211 can (114 cups) pineapple tidbits
14 cup syrup from pineapple 1 meclium onion, cut coarsely
1	green pepper, cut coarsely
2	tablespoons salad oil
3	tablespoons vineggr
1	tablespoon soy sauce
2	tablespoons brown sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch, mixed with 14 cup cold water ’4 teaspoon salt V4 teaspoon garlic salt Vs teaspoon pepper.
Devoin and dean shrimp. Drain pineapple and save syrup.
Saute onion and green pepper In salad oil until tender, but' not soft. Add shrimp, pineapple tidbits, pineapple syrup, vinegar, soy sauce, brown sugar, cornstarch mixture, salt, garlic salt, and pepper. Simmer, stirring until thickened. Yield; 6 servings.
Bologna Turns Into a Roast for Baking
Fruit und 'Vegctubln Aaaacla* tion, SM Firth Avenue, New York aty I. The pampliM Is
Have you seen the new '‘.Slide-Pak" doughnut conlainert Used by n Detroit bakery, tl It divided Into individual section* shaped like the dougbmil*. Keeps tlwm fresh and serves a* a hand^ accfsaory after It’s empty.
SOUP MIXES Two new soup mixes came h our desk not long ago. One croam style chicken smip; the other Is country style jKttato soup. Use lM)lh for sou|i or lo enhance Ciiss<;role dishes.
Hlnclude Beans
Baked beans >
General Foods bus put out slim little 9<K)klMx>k dtwoted i tirely lo using frozen foods. The pictures arc tantalizing and the recipes enticing. They run the gamut from appetizers to outdoor cookery.
Here is an interesting dessert recipe from ttie lYozen Foo<is Cookbook.
Need some extra energy these days'). Dry beans arc a good soun’e, conlalning (he H-vitamins, es|iedully thiamine ami worthwhile nn|ounis of calcium. They aro real nuggets of mineral value for the Iron they provide— a cupful of cooked beans holding about half of a day’s ncwls. And, bc.« all this, lieans provide protein which your laxly has to have to l)uild and re|H»lr organs and Us-
Shells
] cnvtdope dessert topping mix
*4 cup milk
t-9 teas{KK>n vanilla
1	tablespoon grated orahge rind '/3 cup chopped nuts
2	packages (1? or., each) sliced peaches, Just thawed.
Prepare dessert topping mix
Kitchen Scale Has a 'Weigh' to Please
At last there's a kitchen scale easy to use. The weights show in ounces and pounds instead of grams. Invaluable for home freez-pressure cooking, baking, weighing roasts, canning, etc.
You can weigh luggage for fir travel, the laundry, and check grocery purchases. A handy list of measurements and weights is right on the scale platform.
Another feature is its flip on-off dial lock to "remember” exact weights. And the scale can be stored on its side.
This newly designed Borg household scale comes in all white; also yellow or red platforms. Weighs up lo 50 lbs. and is guaranteed accurate.
Available at housewares departments of all leading stores. Made by the Borg-Erickson Corp., 1133 N. Kilbourn Ave., Chicago.
ed on package. FV>M in a
Drop mixiuro onto waxed (taper, aliQUi H dup ai a time, With a ■poon, make a depreaslon on ihe io|) of each mound. Fi-ecze until flrm-*^2 lo ,1 hours, kill with peaches Just tK>(ore seivlng. Makes 9 servings.
HOFFMAN
in Hearty Salad
You c
gel the most gcKxl from protein of the bcnn-fattilly f<KKls if you Include in tlic meal some r other (trotein.s from on nnimtil source. That’s bC-thc two types of protein, made of different comblnHlions of amino adds, make a strong team.
A ta.sty way lo combine the prolcin.s is in Benn-Sluffed Tomato Salad.
B<-aii-8tuffed Tomato Salad
2 cups cooked diy beans
1	cup diced luncheon meat
2	tahlespolm-.i iii.ely clxtpped green pepper
1-3 cup tart salad dressing
4 tomatoes
Salad greens
1 small onion, cut in thin rings Mix beans, meat and groe pepper with the dressing. Split to-| maloes in quarters two-thirds of| the way through. Spread open and fill center with mound of bean’ mixture. Serve on salad greens and garnish with onion rings. Serves 4.
FALSE TEETH
More Firmly in Place
Just sprinkle • Uttls F your plates. This ap—“ powder hr’-*-
comfortably. No summy. gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Does not sour. Checks "plate (^or’’ (denture
Here Is an ecwiomicai, aflrats-: five family entree, a good ^hange of pace to serve . . . Bologna Crown Roast!
Bologna Crown Boast 2 to 3 pound piece, 4’4 Inch bo-!
logna, unsliced	!
1 large swert <»iion % cup wafer 1 small union * % oz. can' tomato sauce teaspoon chili powder teaspoon dry mustard % teaspoon sugar % teaspoon salt f4 teaspoon paprika % teaspoon pepper	I
Take a 4f4-inch diameter piece i of bologna weighing approximate-^ ly, 2 pounds, stand it on end with i a sharp knife cut ’4-inch thick] . slices down the sides to wjthin about % inch ot the bottom. , Next cut a lai^e Bermuda onion 4n very thin sHces and fuck two I or three slices into each cut in the meat. Combine tomato sauce and water in a small pan, add the smaU chopped onion and seasonings, heat to boiling!
Stand bologna roast on end in a shallow baking pan, pour the tomato sauce over it and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) for approximately one hour. During the baking process baste the meat several times. Serve with sauce t poured over top. Makes 6 to 8 servings.
Make Baby's Gelatin With Fresh Fruit Juice
Next time you make a gelatine dessert for your baby, why not, give him the nutritional advantage of making it with fresh orange juice? You can make Orange Gelatine in as little time as ‘ it t^es for the synthetic-flavored
■" Spriidde 1 ^envelope unflavored g^tine on ^ cup orange juice to ^-wtften^^ana-;<)odt-over tow' heatr stirring cmstantly, until the gelatine *ii dissolved. Remove from halt, sir in 14 cup sugar and 114 more cups orange juice. Poiu’ into de*s^ didies and chill until
Just for Rsh
uorden'sl ALPINE SPICE
Cottage Cheeu
ALPWE SHCt
is fiilferant enoagh to be flour oiid delicious ...but not too dllfereot! Ujhtly flovorod with a savory blood of chive and earrmray seeds
Get- set For-bmer hlrtwetf'^ThOTriffiSr^ sweet, fresh Cottage Cheese;^	. jindjiojLPn!y._dur'::^.
-ing-Lent -faot^all thtTyear'^round. Available in our regular varieties, plus our featured Alpine Spice!
OU oFTkrt irwych fridi has
J
fish flavor. If may,te used again; to fry fish but s^iould frnt bej strained to remove craiBbs-which will bum and speck wftatevM’ is} Dried neitr. .	^ ■
Chive * Whipped Creamed ; Piheopple • Reffuldr
New 1* fha, tinraWyouToTdimif^to
6aii Borden SIok
EXTRA Vitamins, Mifimis, Pretoin* ,
all EYES aro on HOFFMAN’S PRICES. ..SEE FOR YOURSELF!
SWIFT’S YOUNG 9 to 11 lb. Average
TURKEYS 25
29*
★ ★★★★★ ★★★ ★★★★★★★★
THRIFYY SHOPPERS SHOP AT HOFFMAN’S
LENTEN SPECIALS
MILD
it M ^
COLBY CHEESI
★ ★ -A- •A’ ■A' ; 12-OZ. PKG. BIRDS EYE
PERCH
Lookr : ^Here!
SWIFT’S PREMIUM x	. ■■■»■■
@0UNO[nuns
IC
CHEESE WWI..I
'ic^-k'k-k-k'kicic'k'k'k'km
SLICED
BACON
iC
[EACH
★	■A’J
SAVEI ^ SAVEI
SAVE!.
lb.
LOWER	PRICEM
WHOLE FRESH
FRYERS

LIMIT 4 FRYERS
PER
CUSTOMER
_	Grain-Fed Steer Beef
ROUND-SIRLOIN-CLUBt
SIHKS
None
Higher
lb.
SNYDER’S
FINEST
Tender Center-Cut
ROUND SWISS STEAK
Mb.
FREEZERSPECIALS
GRAIN-FED STEER BEIF
J|lf‘.. - Fbre ^ Hind-Aft;
s	Quarter* Vlrlb Quarter "lirrc
Ask To See Pontiac’s Largest Cooler!
GRAIN FED STEER I NO MONEY
fvH flC,' h'or£
Side •tWB Quarts WWn ' Quarter It
FREEf lO lb. Sfeakettes with each Quarter
«’-»Wrappad — Trezen —DaL Fraa | ..... „Wa4il*© Supply Frexan Vagatablas, Fruits, Juices AT WHOLESALE PRICES
DOWN
Just Say Charge It
SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. - FRI. - SAT.
PARK FREE IN REAR
HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc.
QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOLESALE PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST.	we reserve the right to limit quantitie.s
Open 9 to 6 Daily—9 to 9 Friday
FE 2-noo


A r
THR PONTTAC PllKSS. WEDNESDAY. MAIICH 14. 11MI2
rWENTY-THREK
Find Compromjge on Election of Suprewte Court
Con-Con Ends Judicial Branch fight; Executive Next
Ahoul .'ll) p«r cetil of Iho doHlhHlroHullInK fi'oni m6»or v«htcl« ace)- " ttiid 35 p«r cent of the liv)urto«ldonta occw on wcakenda.	\
{.ANSING WHfGonititutloiMl con-vontlim delegatai, wtary from neMny- Ihree woeka oi dtlwte on Mtchigin'a court	turned
lliftr ittentlon today to nnothor aiiblaot i»x{M«i«id to touch oft an* other oralwiCil wrangle — the executive branch.
EMiauaitve diacuialon on the Judicial brunch waa oompleted in comralltcc-of-thowhole Tuetiday with a tentollve contpromlM agreement on the contraveralal matter of how to elect tlcet.
All propoaala muat 14 *P-pn»v«dl on af leant two more roll eall ballola before they wUI be liiohided In "the propeaed )iew
Id joilticai party oonveidlona aa at mt. but in addlthm any incum-JuaHoe could nominate hlm-iwK 1^ flUng noiict td hla li
Ai finally-^adopied. the lupreme court plan oalla tor olootlon of nine Juatlcea on a non-pmtlaan ■tute*wlde baala.
The pmaent court haa eight membera.
Candldalea would Ih< nominated
Young Republicans to Hear Democrat
One other method of nomination aa Included. Thla would allow fiy permn otherwlae qualified to be a auirreine court Jtiallce to be-c!ome a candidate by tiling nominating iXiIttona containing at leaat three i»er cent of the total vote caat tor the office of governor at the laat election.
The Young Republlcana have decided they can learn aome-/tl^g from a young Democrat.
They've even gone so far aa to aak him to addreaa a meeting of their Oakland County club.
And the young Democrat haa accepted!
John J. (Jw') Oolllna, 27-year-old state chairmiln of the Democratic parly, relayed word yesterday that he would be on hand for the Young Republicans’ March 20 meeting at 8:30 p.m. In Grove Higfh School, Blrmlng-haih.
"I understand Collins waa hesitant to accept at firpt,” said Boris Sellers, the Young Republican who arranged for Collins’ appearance.
accepted on the basis
‘But he accepted on the basis
..'TOsnSTiouidWwisiriMt-
or and that we are gentlemen and he Is a gentleman."
Sellers said there would be no “mud-sllnglng" at the meeting.
County Survey May Hit Snag
Area Planning Group Opposes Broader Probe by Research Group
The Oakland County Planning Commission’s efforts to obtain 5192,163 federal grant for an e( nomic survey of the county are being jeopardized by the Southeastern Michigan Metropolitan Community Research Corp, commission director George Skrubb said yesterday.
The research corporation is seeking $3 million of federal funds for a general survey of the metropolitan area, Skrubb said.
He told the legislative
ways and means oommwwes th€> Oakland County Board of Supervisors yestorday it wasn’t likely that the fedr“*---------
I the (
The committees agreed that the planning commission’s^ r e q u.e s t would prove more beneficial to the county, If approved.
They instructed Skrubb to vigorously oppose the research corporation’s program, saying it WM an effort to make work to JuSUfy its existence, having no practical application to Oakkuid County’s needs.
These needs are spedflcally the concern of the planning commission. committee members
Skrubb^said the research corporation w^s initially financed by the Ford Foundation to explore ways
economize In local government 1 has no business in the plan-g field.
The County Planning Commission iVIng submitted its arelicatton r the Rinds at the beginning of e year, is expecting a reply metinie this month.
The money would be used to Bip underwilte the cost of nn
conducted by the also to enable Us faster completion, according to Skmbb.
Considerations of the survey include county populatiffli, labor fdree and employment, industrial composition, industrial land use. market structure and wholesale ndarkets.
It is aimed at developing a better understanding of the county’s economic potential, said Skrubb.
Nikita, Brezhnev Tried in Absentia for N-^Test Harm
SNOA. Italy (UPD - Russia’s niar Nikita Khrushchev and Ident Leonid ftrerimev are be-tried in absentia in an Italian t qn.,xharge8 of banning the Oi of ItaUans through nuclear
» Genoa Ovil Tribunal started Ings Tuesday m a damage smt fht against- the two Soviet !rs<by a local attoi^, "Nino b Sale.	^
ie admitted, in bringing the suit last year, that his action mairfly symbolic, but he said iild set a valuable legal, prece-
whlch might cause some to wonder why they’re taking all the political fun out Of the affair. Sellers explained;
“We wuiit to hear an objm-tlvn, cottstnietlve talk by a Demncrat—and CoUlna la the
Another big reason for the speech. Sellers said, is publicity.
“We need publicity, so we have to do something the YoUng Republicans haven’t done before," Sellers said. “It wiU mean lots of publicity tor both parties.”
Actually, Democrats have participated in at least two slml-tei.QfliJftMJ^unty YQung.j,fi-. publicans’ meetings in the past. But Sellers stressed that those appearances were “debates" and this is not.
ColUns', formal speech, not yet announced, will be followed by a question-answer period. The meeting is open to the public.
vidunl districts rather than on a the p«s«e .system by the legislature within five years after the
timm depewdewie upim a pollti-oal party to Ua Job.
othar Judicial proviaiona tentar tly^ly approved by the delagataa
■Election’ of JudgcH to fill VA-caftelea in all <'ourtH of record, right lo
The proposal was approved in two roll call votes, 82-46 and 7341,
ellmituiling the giivci appoint Judges. The i . would be allowed to fill vacancies temporarily with retired Judges. •UllinlnatlMi of the Juatloo of
of the compromise settlement came only after delegates rejected several other pro-‘ including one by which Jus-ilces would be elecled from indi-
S. Vietnamese Drive Only Partial Success
SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AB)-A two-pronged government drive to into hundi^ of Communist Viet Ckav guerrillas in the Mekong Riv-" “ was winding up today ap-only a partial i
Government forces succeeded in killing an estimated 200 guerrillas in combined ground-air attacks op Viet Cong concentrations in the
But the other operation by about 1,500 government troops in a mangrove swamp in Klen Hoa Province is coming to an end without finding ttte main Communist force believed to be in the area, an authoritative source skid.
WIN a CAR FREE! or one of MOBIL'S 15 other prizes...
APRIL 5
Ptop«wmta ot the dlalrtri plan ImUoatod th^ have itut yet given
Hm provision la style and dnit-
a iicw>
of Jiklgeg with n cpiiH of u| handling cases nppciitcd fram tltc lower I’ourls under rules «» iu* established by the supreme oouii.
a Into «
with the auditor genei^~tir-be--come a legislative audilnr.
Dclegalet were propared for me other long Mretcb of debate on toe eeoommandiittons of the executive branch ixnnmlUoc.
Another pipposed change, in ihe oxecullve brmicli calla for rou^ year Iciins for the governor and 1 guverlior In place of ihe pi’esenl two years, with tlie two running as a team like the presl-deiU and vkxi president.
The governor would oSnllnue to be nominnied in a primary, while lieutenant governor would lie len in :i party conyenilon.
poaal enlla for ap|Milnlmeiil of iiuuiilHirs of tile Hilailiilstrullve booed rather (ban eltHdlun, aa at
Moat of the ad board members rould be named by llu‘ goveri
Hoffa Says Teamsters Need No 'Guidelines'
Urges Marxist Spirit hr Young Cubans
HAyANA (AP)—Prime Mlnisterla Marxlsl-l,cninl»l, Castro said
Fidel CJastrojurged young Cubans '’there will l)<‘,no communism (in
today to develop a more IntenscICulm) before :«) years." Gofnmunist spirit and deolar.,d "We're noi inviting anyone
that they will some day live un-
Thc Prime Minister promised Cuba’s younger generations new society devoid of egotism and individualism. He called on Cuban youth to develop a morq intense Marxist spirit, a more Communist spirit" and said the young of his island nation will some day live "In another more advanced stage, not socialism nUmr"	..
study Marxism," he saicl, asserting thajt Cubans have embraced Marxism-Leninism "'because the revolution has taught them because anyone them."
Castro set no date for Cuba to become a Communist state. In a speech last December, In which he publicly identified himself as
YOUTH THAT THINKS He said Culia dcH's no young generation that "listens and ivpeats but a youth that thinks and is not revolutionary by imUatiOB.
Castro addressed a large crowd University of Havana rally commemorating an abortive student attack against ex-Presldent Ftilgehcto BtiUsta’s palace five years ago.
mPEMlCHERE
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Team ers Union Pnssldenl Jnmes R, Hoffa says his rank and file mem-liersldp, noi govi’rnmeiit guidelines, will determine future Teamsters demands at the bargaining table.
Hoffa crittetzed Lalmr Secretary Arthur J, Goldlierg’s stand tliat the government mid private me diators should provide guides t< make sure that collective iiargaln-Ing settlements “Inke Into account the public interest."
'As long as I am prosldc'nl of the Teamsiers,’* Hoffa said 'I'ues-day night, "the decisions on what we will demand at the negotiating table will be made by the rank and file members and not by Goldberg or nnyliody else.”
Ii^vsriu«m«nt)
laitt BuU«ttn
eOLDS THAT HANG ON
Here’tt What To Do
New Ywh, N.V.-An alanniiig In-cronse has been reported in this an>a of virus colds that seem to tiaiig on for days and make one
.feel H(
Wlien yon feel yourselt coming down willi a eold-feverish, have a headache, chills, snifileo, that ‘grippy’ nche-to-the-bone feeling-stay in bed, if possible. And by all moans, start taking Aimcin® of once to promptly relieve your misery. He sore it’s Aimcin Is'cmise Anacin is like a doctor’s prescriiition. That
vomhinalUmof mmliimlly nroven •edients. Here’s why Anacin ) different and so effective...
' Anacin tablets are stronger yet safer. They give exfro medication missing from aspirin,still
grippy feeiing fast... help over-
the acoompanying depniK aion fast.
It’s these extra ingrediento in Anacin (recommended by so many doctors) that muko the big difference in the relief Anacin brings - the big rliffer-
___...	...... ......'ll
n iivi.______--------------
plete rmlef from headachsi aspirin. Long-lasting relief I mieeriee of head coldt and
those aching virus colds that
l^liko many cold remedies. Anacin doesn't leave you ‘dopey or ‘sickish.’ Anacin may be taken as directed as often as needed without upeetting the stomach. See if the extra ingredients In Anacin don’t give you the relief you need from extra miseries the flu and cold season bring. Buy Anacin today.______
Take Barbara Stanw/ck to HospitoL for Surgery
HOLLYWOOD (API —Barbara •
I	ll/xanlfnl s\es/\K<sKl tr until Vk*l. _
anon Hospital, probably until Friday.
When the actress was admitted Tuesday, uUendanig said she would undergo minor surgery. Its nature was not disclosed.
NEWSPAPERS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID
-WE PICK UPCHURCHES dSd SCHOOLS
FE 2-0209
*ie##eeeeeee#*4*si»» PoimAOSORAi
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
at Cobo Hall finish Una to cahbrata
1962 MOBIL ECOH^Y RUN
Starts from Los Angolet March 31 Ends at Cobo Hall April 5 First Dotroit flniih''in history

o
'At win a duplicoto of too cor goltoig too most mijM per sollen in too 1962 Mobil Economy Run. n'f know toe make and modal until toe flnish.
Buyei^s
guide
to
America’s
most
complete
LUXURY UNjUMITEO.. .This is Thunderbird-unique in all the world. First of the trim-siz« luxury cars, Thunderbird Is for the man who insists on the ultimata—In luxury, In performance, in distinction. Four gleaming editions; Landau, Hardtop, Convertible, Sports Roadster.
TOP PERFORMER .... Galaxie is the undisputed styling and performance leader gf the full-size cars. Available with a 405-hp Thunderbird V-8 (coupled to a four-spaed stick Shift), Galaxie will outperform America’s costliest cars. Seven models Including the stylish Sunliner.
car
m
m
selection! I
A NEW KIND OF CAR-WITH THE WORLD’S NEWEST V-8 ... Take your choice of two all-new Challenger V-8’s. (They’re'all snap, sparkle and'smoothness!) Stretch.your legs, don't worry about your hat-Fairlane's full-size. Ouality's high. Price is low—below many compacts. Five exciting models.
^ IflilM one of too S Apocho CMof’62 comping trailors. Five lucky winnore will bo awoidod tols unbootaldo crid to happy outdoor living toning 1962. Fficod at $S2S.OO f.6Jb. Lopoor.
Whatever you’re looking for in a oar, iook to the long Ford line. These are the cars with the features of tho fdture that put you years ahead now... dollars ahead when you trade!
WIN on# of 10 Kodak Brawnio movio comorat with ultro-fott Ion*. You con UM ono of tom to mokt yew 1962 hoHdoyt unfergottoMo.,
ENTER YOUR NAME NOW!
That's all yoB hove ft dto-Fiotoing to buy. Sto sny HHBilOLY MOBIL DEALK within 3$ miles of downtown. Detroit, oe.writt to JHOBIL ECONOMY
KtJNrMCTHr^BL-COBIPANY, 90S West-Ottnd--
Boutomd, Detioit 32. for entry blank. Fill out sod deporir widi Dealer or mail to die MOBIL OIL COMPANY. HELP CELEBRATE the first DETROIT. FINISH of the MOBIL ECONOMY RUN. Entries assist btrMehtdUtwmkba^, April 4,1962.
AMERICA’S BEST SELLING COMPACT ... Its name is Falcon-and it’s the lowest-priced* six-passenger car on the American road. There are five models, exclusive of wagons, ^hoose the new 170 Special Six engine, or improved version of the Six that broke all records iri' the '61 Mobilgas Economy Run.
THIRTEEN WAGONS FROM AMERICA’S STATION WAGON SPECIALISTS ... The finest wagon collection assembled under one roof. Five full-sized-fiSrd wagons.. .. and eight Falcons, including three big. new Club Wagons that are priceiJbelovi^any standard compact wagons.
r:.V
Mr

SEE YOUR FORD DEALER FOR THE BUY OF THE YEAR
■i rr -t;
■-11



,-V:
’nvKNTv-wnm

TITK PONTIAC PRKS(S. AVKbyKSliAY. MAIU II U,'108^
MAXWELL HOUSE
l-LB. CAN
COFFEE
MAXWiU HOUSE
COFFEE I-Ib. jOe “rrh..
Can ■	Coupon
Llmli I C0U)Mn ParCuitamar-Nona f« Daalart ar Mlnart - (niiliai March 11, 1961
SALE DAYS
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, thru SUNDAY, MARCH 18. 1962
FARM FRESH Grade A
WHOLE
FRYERS
29S
, WHOLE	FRESH	FRESH	FRESH	CHICKEN 1
, ROASTING	WITH BACK PORTION . CNICKEN	WITH RIB PORTION CHICKEN	CHICKEN	NECKS and ,
CHICKENS	LEGS	BREASTS	WINGS	BACKS ,
39'."':	45' v	55' 1.	29*	55'"» '
iioT DOGS.... 3 "ilS. i luncheon meats 49*^ ">
PRESSEL'S-Skinlost	COC ii. *	'	OOC il
Polish Sausage 09	| Liver Sausage u 9
HYGRADE'S	.. 1 ARMOUR STAR	n
Corned Beet Brisket 69	‘ Canned Hams 2 cl:n^2®®
FRESH
GROUND
PLAIN	DOZEN
§y©AR ,	if Hi
OSNIII^
IPitoBmlK
l^QUPfllDlRS
tomato
TALL
CAN
M-02.
CAN
ISrSniS? k ~
aia SWISS CMKt_
cneIse spread
Cera Meal Mu! biscuits
BANQUET-Frozen
FRUIT PIES
• APPLE • CHERRY • PEACH
HAMILTON-Grade A
LARGE ^
fGGS
30*
Dozen
Mb 7^ Pke. ■ "A#
[day’s paper!
JPUSUUID
mmi
TIfiBIIS
OOlP" —
nNMmE
jyicc
Sold
2 Can
^-oz. Can
lb.
loaf
CALIFORNIA
PKG.
I) ORANGES
49L
SOUD-RIPE^CELLO PKG.	^
TOIUTOES	IS"
CREEN OIHON^ or RADISHES "' ”
PEOPLE’S W FOOD TOWN
SUPER MARKETS
Extra COLO BELL ' Stamps With Purchase of Any Fresh
PORK ROAST
Cfl EOraCOUBEU Stamps With Purchase
of Any Lb. or More pf
PIHCOilHINU CHEESE
EitraCOEDfEU Stamps With Purchase of 10 Lbs. or Moro of '
POTATOES
EaltaCOUKU	H|)	(|||
If Stamps With PurchitiK of .3 Cons or Moro of	pf) ^111
YiSl----------Jll?	ill Spoflhottixrr Elbow Mocoroni	III
f	Jc|(-'' Ua.n , -Coapa«,|Kpi„,
M	.Extra GOLD Bltt	ilj
Stamps With Purchine ff>
of Any 3*lba Pkg..of Prince
THE IWTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAV. MARCH si t. i«02
ONECHOR
EXCITINGLY DIFFERENT!
twenty-FT?!||
E
Your Guarantee of a New Consistent Quality in Meats!
'	, o	»V.1»	1 (:oulcl’S
- lOX Light or Dark Brown	^	H
DOMINO iAc|EGG_.„|n<
^	I 12-oz. Cello Bag
1-lb. Carton
V/hite or Colored _ _ 1—H
Kleenex I0(
TISSUE
’400 ct. Box
Chunk Style Vi flat
Cut-Up	0% 0^r
FRYiRS33le
Table-Rite Chicken
BREAST
Table-Rite Chicken--
LEGS A9l
GLENDALE
LUNCHEON
USDA Choice Table-^ite Beef	USDA Choice
RIB jgc
STEAKS
IB.
RIB ROAST
Table-Rite Beef
5” CUT
nisto
3-lb.
Can
(With
Coupon)
; CriSCO a us 59" !
With This Coupon	|
Good at Any IGA Store	I
Effective March 12-19> 1962	*
Limit 1 Coupon Por Cuftomor	•
Pillsbury’s FLOUR 5 39‘			—-Cfeemy—— COTTAGE CHEESE Mb. io® Carton |
Kraft Philadelphia CREAM CHEESE 29V	Morton s or IGA Frozen POT PIES Beef-Chi cken-Turkey 15^.
IGA or Fairlane Frozen ' Your Choice (HIT GORN ■ ■■ic FRENCH |i|; FRIES ■Vi	California ORANGES 163 Size f
wTe'ks bonus buy
IGA Royal Gold
ICE
CREAM

29
With $5.00 or More Purchase of Groceries/ Meats or Produce
V2-gal. Assorted Flavors
• FRESH
GREEN
ONIONS
5< .
luncb
Sale Dotes i March 15-16-17T
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quontitios. None Sold to Minors or Dealers
YOU GlILMORt AT^
TENUTA’S Super Market 3515 Seshebow Rood Drayton Plains, Michigan	^ WAITE’S I.G.A. ^oodwoy Lake Orien> Michigan ^	L&S	 X Super Market ^ 331S. Broadwcqr Lake Orion, Michigan *	FELICE Qualify Market , 1116 W. Huron St. ' Pontioc, Michigan	GINGELLVILLE Super Market 3990 Faldwin Avm Pontiac, Michigan
!-rWINGERrS -I.G.A. 1980 Auburn Ave. Pontiac, Michigan	_ PJHIPPS’ I.G.A. 68 5i Washington Oxford/^^MicfiiRon	BREEN’S t.G.A. ' ^ Main Street / : MilM, Michigan	TR ADING POST ^ I.^A. 3393 brmond^ood RR No. 1 Etavisbarg, Mich.	GIROUX Super Market ISIS Union Lake ., Union Lake, Michigan
O.K.
Super Market
514 N. Soginewj Holly, Michigan
DeFLORIO’S Qualify Market
420 Commerce Reed
H&S Super Mark^.
465 South '
drtehvmiCi
		
h'J,	<

cTWiBWlT^gOE,

4i#
'i\p
iii',
■	, V	‘	■	■	■	.	. p,	»-,•,,■	pi-'.
THE PONTIAC PREBSUWEPyESDAY, MARCH II, 1002


Itatioiling	. ' 7 ■ ^'t,, \	'. ■	' ;■ “ "'y 5-/
Cuba Ignores US. Foodstuffs Still Exportable
Qirls Escape Ipjury as Bus Driver Faints
WASHINGTON (AP) « CtiBlm* now ttghtontftg their twits food rationing progrorn grow ftit tf they had ace noma of tlw foedaiuffa which atin ran ba eKpiorted fo them llrom th^ United Statoa.
The Cwnnierct Oepattment hai a whole page In its ragulatlons Hating foodatuna that can be ahlpp^ to Cuba-4tema like meat and meat prodtKla, animal oH« and fata, oh«*M, oatmeal, break' fast cereala, vegetable • oils, canned vegetables and prep*\prd mixes.
and cooking cilg==aii?^-^^	aympathlae with the Cuban
the food rationing plan Cuban peopI(r^ns~iiii‘"~1lir'aricHRia~-eI
tn general, the list rontalna pro pared or pr<K;eased food*.
Sm»w _cd_ the hemslike lard goes, hunger follows.
)f medicines and mHIcal supplies II
rationing plan
Prime Minister Fldei Castro Is launching next week.
^e .Stale Department blamed Cuba’s food problems on Castro's Communist system, tt described as ridiculous his charges that the United States has caused thg Oi-ban food ahoiiages. mimiRIt ItllJlXlWH RRINI'
on humanitarian grounds."
communist agricultural show what foodstuffs, 1( any, have been shipped to Cuba ao far this year aren’t ready. But the 1961 i recmds show no foodstuffs were i shipped to Cuba from July
Our embargo on trade with Cuba excepts certain foodstuffs,
"They were able lo buy from a a lot more than they did," ne official said.
Why didn’t theyf	_____
.state Department press officer Joseph W. Reap said In a stnle-ment Monday night:
"H has bt»en clear for some lime that Cuban agrpiulture is In trouble. Wherever cbmmunlNm
BAZLErS THURSDAY
SUPER SPECIAL
78 N SAGINAW
4348 DIXIE HWY.
L«an, C«nt«r-Cut
PORK . ^ SCHOPSOVi
c =■
i
LB.S
\
Slicwd Free WHOLE
fPORK - _ jjlqins43
ij ^---- -COUPON------
K I . ...	good at
.• I This voluoble coupon en-	-
% titUs baarar to a 1 LB.
I LIMIT with maat pur-. chasa.
' I
REMUS
BIHTER
49$
G05D THURS. I
••b	march 15th --
■; u.- --------COUPON--------------- %
BAZLEY’S THURSDAY
SUPED SPECMl
78 N. SAGINAW
4348 DIXIE HWY.
JFK's Mothef Rests Following Opofation
BOSTON (AP)-Mrs. Joseph P. Kenn«>d,v, Vl-year-old mother 'of l^i'Mlilenl Kennedy, was reported l•esllnK comfortably loelay at Jll. EII/.aheth'H Ikmpilul following a hernia opernllon.
The opoialion was performed Monday by Dr. Roy J. Heffeman, a gynccologlsl and Kennedy fnml* ly physician. He aaid Mrs. Kennedy withsliKKl Ihe hour-long op-eraiion well. After an afternoon visit, the doctor reported she was
I excellent condittoh.
There, wei-e no signs of malignancy, he said.
Tlie wife of the foimer ambassador to (JiY'at Britain had been troubled by a pelvic henila. She has been under treatment by Dr. Heffc'inan since last September.
A('K WINNKK — dene Medregor (left) of Dallas, Tex., presents an ace of spado,s and a trophy to dlenn Abney, .'I;'), Canoga Park, Calif., the ace of the 1962 international gin ninimy tournament in Las Vegas, Nev. Abney won $10,000 which was first place money m Ihe event. Over 800 players participated. Me-'^Gregor wa.s la.st year's winner. -	-	'
Dances 96 Hours 31 Minutes
Twister Hits the Deck
HARLOW, England (API—Kevin O’Brien today pant-Ingly abandoned an attempt to twist for 100 hours nonstop. He quit after 96 hours 31 minutes and claimed he had set a new world mark.
After walking off the local dance floor where he performed the marathon, the 21-year-old toolmaker slumped on to a stretcher, had a blanket laid over him and was hustled off home to bed.
★ ★ ★
According to local records, the previous twist mark was 62 hours 17 minutes set by 17-year-old John Hill In the north of England March 3.

THE RIGHT COlfBlMATlOM for yoiip
SAVINGS
SAFETY Every savings account is insured to $10,000 by the Federal ' .Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation; First Federal is Oakland County’s first Federally Chartered Savings and Loan Association.
AV
KA
AILABILITY •Advance notice of withdrawals is not necessary; adiditipns or withdrawals may be made in amounts as low as $1. Our Charter makes possible payment of investors’ funds in full or jpagt without fines, fees or forfeitures on your part.
SE
E OF RETURN First Federal Savings of Oakland
pays 4% current rate of dividend compounded quaVterly. We have always paid the highest rate of dividend consistent with insured safety.	—
RVICE Prompt, efficient and courteous service in a pleasant atmosphere. Six offices to serve you as well as save-by-mail and drive-in window service.
WHERE
you 'save DOES make difference!

' • Tf.l W. HURON
•	DOWMoaN
•	ROUHESTKK •ruRAYTON
, PI.AIN.S
f: , • wai.u^;d I.AKE
•	MILFORD
WE INVITE YOU TO OPEN YOUR SAVING.S AUU.OUNT TODAY AT FIRST FEDERAL - S.AVINCS OF OAKLAND
Parljs occupy 27,114 acres of cw Ifork City or about 10 per cent.
Tlicre ore several poMlbllUlos. *or example: Cuba’s jwnning
back to October 1960. In Moiroh 1081. the regulations were ravlMM)
exporters shunning the business. ’ The U.S. list of eligible expwta (HHilalni no major grains, no rice,
»r grains,
...	....... onioni. H
have corn, but It has corn gril6. corn meal and hominy. II has popcorn, but no pop«»rn seed, Uvestork for breeding puTi imes, seed, hatching eggs and nby chicks Cuba,
One Commerce Department worker explained, "We felt we shotildn'l Khip anything that would conlrlbnl(« to Iheir economy Iml Hi Ihc same lime we shoiildn'
I hem f(xxl.”
On Feb. 3 ot this year, President Kennedy drders4NMotal off of imports of Cuban products. At the same time, he specifically authorised the continued sale of certain food a Cuba.
■ U.S. export* lo Cuba In 1961 totaled $i:i,690i,.’«i8. Of this, $9,640,. 000 was In (oodKiuff*. Tlml Included tt million doUars each of brooding cattle ami baby ehlcks iK’forc the ban, $42,000 In canned vegetable*, $246,000 in conned finlt*. $14,764 In breakfast cereals. There also was about $;t00.000 in canned baby foods. HUBHiDIKICU FtKmSTUFVS
The embargo on exports to Cuba applies to subsldUed foodstuffs, These Include Items like wheal and other products qulrad by the Commodity Credit Corporation in fis price support pix)g!um,
The, embargo on exports goes
IJOLTSVHXK. N.y. m - The driver of a school bus carrying a teacher amf 26 children fell unconscious at thf whedi Tuesday
lT»o children—members of girls' basketball team at the private Knox Bohool In Saint James -escaped uninjured.
★ A ★ .
The driver, John Wutgar, TO, of Mht Jimes, qulcWy leoovered consciousness but collapsed and died moipents after walking away An autopsy
iAdv»rUMm*nt)
(ASvtrtlMmMiU
Life lisnrance Only 1'
.	.	*n«	r»»M. t
•nlr l« f»r Uii nr»t SMnIk. Thit Is	h.	»ih Jut f
•ptiiliil SS Ssjr ttftr to IntrsSSM s	M» •s«»» wIB toll. f
‘	')N« Itoakto rratonUtoi MtotSIfto Ik*	S«to» kkS Mali toSar
Fallcj Ikal! Intarto jaar k«n*-..-4 .,,1, ■.
(tolarr tof.	'
MAIL TO TiMa Lira iNscaANce co. n«»i. «ci« san antonio s, tbxas Mr Nam* U <rrlni>.......................... ................
, ,...altol ar naatal iaiaalfmant ar icfwaiUir aar naSIral ar aartarr (raataiaal la B jaara. It •imstlaa, tlra fall Salalli. Satot, ala, an iaSsrato pai^r. SIsa Hara X......................................’...............................
FREE RES RIDE
TO AND FROM
EMMANUEL SUNDAY SCHOOL Coll FE ZS328
CONTINUES AT PEOPLE’S UNTIL PRESENT STOCKS CLEARED OUT. EVERYTHING SACRIFICED!
Come in for Bargains of a Ufotime!
LADIES’
Plastic Dress Hangers
MEN’S
Wood Suit Hangers
Men’s SUCKS
Values to $14.99
$2 $3 $4
MEN’S
SUITS
Origimilli; *49.99 to *69.R
*5-M0‘*15
DRESSES
Sold up te *15.99
»** *1*2 -
LANES’ SUin
Sold to 39.99
LADIES’ TOPPERS
Sold to 29.99
*3-*5-*6
Ladies* Smart
BLOUSES
and
Ladies’SHOES ]
Reg. to $9.99
*1-*2
Men's SHOES
*2-*3-*4
6irl$’COATS.. and TOPPERS	Kris’ DRESSES	B^’Z-Neee - SUITS
*3-*5	39*. *2	
Man's and eoys’ JACKETS

People's
STORE OPEN 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. 8 N. Saginaw St., Pontiac

,5-'
THE PONTIAC ITOSS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH Hr 1062
Maria Von Trapp Fights Reds With^ Christianity

Kj raviXUI MATflClIJO ’ oniMtmble), ah« hiia mud® it her
kEW yORK-JHi* lereiM im> of Btuoiwn Maria .von irapp did not ohaniw as ah* aaid, calmly, “Within two yeara. Pwhapa iho Cbmrnuniifjriidiriuiw over all the lalanda of the South
'*‘mhln 10 yeara." ahe Itnued, atill placid, “there will bo no white people left on thoae won-derful lalanda. Onedifth of the wlMde earflt la them, and It ia going ao faatk and the American people are completely dlBlnte^ eated.
“I call it,'' and for the flrat time ahe frowned, “Parndiap already loat."
mlaalon In life to prepare the South VhicIflo'B nativea to 0ght ChriaUanity.
The famed mother of the alnx-Ing Trapp family, which I dla-
nearly two decadea on Ihelcon-
what la happening.
With aome of the 10 Trapp children and their prlcat father fVnnz Waaner (who In Austria blended the family’s voices Into a unique
ght as best wo can, but vye are flghting a genius force.
“May I tell you luw the Own munlata have operated among these poor people, many of them so primitive they might be called a Stone Age culturoT The (lom-munlsts follow two lines. They handpick some of the brainiest natives and take them to Aua-tralla, where they train them in Bed doctrine. Then they send them ba<*k to (heir lalands to ferment against the white latople.
who say to the natives, over and Bver, 'Watch the big bW in the sky (an airplane, of courae). It is sent by the ghosts of your an-I with gifts for you, See, it Watch—the white people go over and take your gifts."
Daroneaa vdn IVapp smiled,
“They also send In while (kan-munlats, nut from lliissla but from Australia usually. Not Just Each Island has Mi
eat to leave out part of the South Pacific; no Maud Is too tnaignlfloant, no tribe loo smsll.
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Kidcl Castro's announcement of food rationing Is n stunning admission of the falluie of stale control of the Cuban cronomy,
la blaming the Uallod Blatea for hia food prublenu, Castro Is seeking a scapegoat, to alibi his regime’s liialilllly eapllallHin with snclallsm.
At ho time has U, S. economte pressure on Culm ever applied to (iKHlsIuffs or medl(;lne (!uban people.
The supply woll has simmy run dry In ciba and Castro hajs been
Smoke Causes Alarm at Base
“You havo hoard of tha great
cult’T
“This la the white Oomip|Utt|ata *■......to the natives.------------
wdarily. “Then, after the people
haVe heard this for months, sud-. ordinary Wednea-d^ the natives take clubs and batig-bang^g, they kill the white man who are taking their gifts. ■
*Hiey eaw't understand why the birti doesn't fly nwny ngnln. Rut they I
Thia la Iwplening e
“As soon as the white (3ommu-
back?
stupid," she said with some dla-“They don’t hght with kindness and acme., they^-continue
mat cwi convhntrthrTi^ea that Trying to lord It over the people,

all white people ara his enemlea— It uBually takes about a year of hammering home tlu« polnt—hls Job la done. He leaves,"
And the white people in residence on some of (he Islands; aren’t they smart enough to fight
thinking that's, the way to win. "That’s why our work Is
Rationing in Cuba Rap& Socialistic Why of Life
'I’he Trapp family’s "work" centers ai'oimd a training center nnd mtiBlon in FIJI, where natives are brought from all over the islanda to learn Christian and non-Com-munist philosophy, and are trained to teadi school.
forced lo admit that not only has Cuba lost agricultural gelf-aufflci-ency but that Ifovtet Russia Is unable to help solve the crisis.
Castro's uimouiu'tunenl of hsMl rationing recognizes u atnlo of
ini’a for *
R simmy Iro hajs b
affairs that has existe'd in (kiba for many monlliN,
laird luul c u i> k I n g oil, lw< Cuban kitchen inusls, have iHsm uimvallahle lo the average Ihmino-wife for a year. The age In a nation whr
Excitement at Missile Launching Silo Touched Off by Motor Fufnes
'TOPEKA, Kan. (AP)-A smoking motor deep underground touched off a tense alarm Tuesday at an Atlas missile launching silo.
Forbes Air Force Base reported no explosion, no fire, no injuries and apparently little damage.
The trouble was at site No. near the town of Worden, 18 miles southeast of Topeka.
ALARM SOUNDED
cause Atlas missiles carry nuclchr warheads, the smoke resulted in the sounding of Broken Arrow” alarm, ii eating damage or danger to an atomic weapon.
Fire trucks, ambulances, spe^-dal security guards, a radiology monitoring team and the air base’s top officers raced to the scene.
‘It was an erroneous report, originated when smoke from a motor was carried through ventilators,’’ said Capt. Albert E. Han-neman, public Information officer at Forbes.
Remove Equipment, Oil From Grounded Ship
BEACH HAVEN. N.J. (A|>)-il and heavy equipment were removed Tuesday ftpm the Destroyer Monssen which aground off Long iBeach island during last week’s disastrous storm.
A Navy spokesman in New York said salvage vessels will remove as much equipment as. possible before tugs attempt to pull the ship free.
FOR LIAAITED TIAAE ONLY,
News Analysis
Castro per rapitu voiiNumptioii was 100 iMiiinds |M^r year fonkxl Casint last year to de<;ree two meatless days a week,
C.asoltno Ivin been limited lo es Bcutial UNO fur a year. Even the fish supply in an Idand nation has dropped off lo a bare trickle because of the failure of the Chinese commune-style fishermen’s ax»p. ratlves.

TIicho fixKl facts have Im'i'ii piled l)y the average 2,000 Culians l(‘aving the Island each week for new life atiroad. Tlwy have been amply corrolwruli'd by f o r «■ i g n newsmen in recent visils to Cuba.
are Incredibly Baroness von Trapp’S fac lighted with a wondrous smile. ’Serwho?" she saW;
Tlie buronesR's daughter Marin is stationed In the section of New Guinea wliere Iteudhunters still ■xlst. New Guinea, she believes, is nlmisit completely lost lo ttie Com munists: the whites are already ihovlng out.
The baroness herself travels tlic Islands, eonsiills with bishops, lectures In the United States and tries to raise money for the cause.
Most of the profits from the Trapp Family Lodge, a picturesque year-round resort In Stowe, Vt., and all of her lecture proceeds, go to tlie mission.
Asked why she works so hard In what she admits Is a lost eaiise, she said that, even though
d<Mi’t have to lose all the 8 n
llieni. The
(brlsllan leatdiliig ran go on.
So she hasn’t given up all hope?
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• V THE PONTIAC PBK8S, WKllNKSDAY, MARCH U, lliea
Tireless Bariy Goldyrater Making !$l3eeches Like Mad
WASHINGTON (NEA> *- Hu*-gedly iMm^bnnM Barry GoMwater, tlrcksaa invaclKir ooiuuihaitlain, hnt pilot, bad^t fancier, appeara more Mteemed by Repul^tlcana and Intereatad youiut people today Ihiin during hi* phenomenal 196J effort, whan hr , banged out 330 apeechca fim tpwni and ncbools coast to eout.
In 1903'a first two months the 53-yeaiMtld aenator from Arieonu np(^ 46 times.
others sure to l>e added,
A March conservative rally'ln New York's Miidison ,S(|iiar(‘ Garden at which he was Ute star nttiaotlon pullatl in more than -16,000. Goldwulcr overloads the hulls whei-evcr he tjoes.
And i«t what can only be called ’•The GoMwateC Paradox" is as marked in 1963 aa It was In I960 and ’61. according to cmis-tectlon InteivtewB with key Republicans. Doinrr Non
with tew exceptions, national leaders and tough professionals in New York, Masaachusetls, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Mldiigan, Illinois apd Cuiitorniu doubt Goldwater will be his party's 1964 presidential choice.	►
Sr ♦	★
Their reason? Tliey don't believe he could wih the urhan-1/ed big states considered essen-tinl to election.
They Imvc said tlil.s licforc. Hut lime, new events and new faces, like George Romney's In Miclu-gan, upiiear to have reinforced their judgments.
Sayi an IlUnols po»tt6l|ni ’’Bairy haa reached hts apex and la edging off."
W A ■ ★
A New Yorker not allied^ with rival Gov, Nelstgt flookefaUar adds: "Barry’s he«n standing still for the past five months.'
Goldwater himself performs If all such comments were In another >vorld. Daily he reafthms his Intent not to be a candldale now or later. A professional hcllcves him coniincnls:
"Any serious cundidafe should be doing llii'i'c tl.iiiiKs right now —-sjwaking around the country, raising money, building an organ-
AN ATTRACTIVE FAMILY — Large and attractive families seerri to be the hallmark of currently active politicians. Here are (left to right, seated) Barry Goldwater Jr., the senator,
Mrs. Goldwater with granddaughter Cynthia Ross, Joanne Goldwater Ross, Carolyn Ross and Peggy Goldwater. In rear aie Mike Goldwater and the senator’s son-in-law, Dr. Thomas Ross.
School Election Bill Signed by Swainson
DANgaNG tilt — Gov. SwainsOn Tuesdi^ signed into law a hill to require that any person elected or appointed to a board of education be notified within five days after his election and that he file an acceptance within 10 days.
Another amendment to the school code approved by the governor adds district libraries to units of coimties receiving fines levied against lawbreakers and collected by the counties.
»K°'Sto’'Cul)8 to Argue
of Bob Kennedy gefore COUIlCil
. America’s inadequate highway system Involves a loss of ?3 billion annually in lost time, 'mishaps and other related factors. I
WASHINGTON (UPl)-About dozen youths staged a quiet sit-in demonstration for several hours in Atly. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy’ outer office Tuesday.
The c(^lege-age youths, both Negroes and whites, told surprised Justice Department officials they were members of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and wanted faster action on efforts to protect rights of Negroes.
John M. Seigenfhaler, administrative assistant to KenppdV, said asked them if they wished to see-the attorney general, but their spokesman replied only that "This act of civil disobedience. ”
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U.N. to Hear Complaiht Against OA$ Expelling Island Nation
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (JPt The U.N. Security Council is i peefed to agree today to take up Cuban complaint against the Havana regime’s expulsion
Organization of American States (OAS).
Western delegates predicted not even the United States would object to the CtabSn complaint being put on the councira, agenda. But they aliso predicted that after a few days debate the Cuban complaint would be voted down.
Fidel Castro’s regime contends that the OAS action expelling Cuba from the organization and reducing hemispheric trade with Havana violated a U.N. Charter provision that says regional agencies will take no. enforcement action ithout Security Council authorization.
■■	■	if If if
Cuba asked the council to suspend the OAS actions until an advisory opinion can be gotten frorn (he International Court of Justice at the Hague.
★ it if 'The United States and others argued that the Security Council n September 1960, by merely ’taking note” of similar OAS ;tion.s agaiast the Dominican Republic, had already decided actions by OAS did not require authorization.
his mood often.
Now and then, weary of dictating letters onto disc recorders, he j puts on 10 or 15 minutes of music I for his own and a surprised secre- | tary’s pleasure.
Putting mechanical models toi- j gether still intrigues him. .Once his aides heard this appeal to model-maker on a disc other-
Kennedy Hails Alliance Gains, Prods Latins
WASHINGTON (Tt - President Kennedy has salUfed' the first-year accomplishment.s of the Alliance for Progress but prodded the hemisphere nations to "act much more rapidly and on a much larger scale.’’
Kennedy spoke Tuesday at a White House reception for Latin , American diplomats, celebrating the first anniversary of the date he launched the alltoce, a mas-alve program of aid for Latin American republics.
He sqid the first months of the program have strengthened confi dence that the goal'of a better life for the people of the hemisphere is "within our grasp." it if it
He said heartening accomplishments had been made and he prpmised an intensified effort by the United States to speed Latin America’s .nodal and economic
Paint Job for Drivers, Bus Owners Amended
j JACKSON, Miss. (APX-r-Mis^ |sippi’s House of -Relsresentatfves I had to amend a bill requiring that i school buses sold for other uses [must be painted a a>U«r other !than yellow.
I the owners arid operators should I be painted, instead of the buses.
bation. Barry is doing only one of these." ,
■ The oppcNdte view, trom •
■oned Eaatei^ politician:
HE HAR THB BUG "Goldwater haa the bug. and once you m you never lose it. He's travettng more, writtm^re, working harder than anyone. Why do It If not fur the nomlna Ikmj"
Whatever Ills long range aima in politics, the senator’s pursuit of wildly assorted sidelines—a lifetime chase—has not slackened a bit under the sfrnln of constant Irnvel. I/)ok at Ihe background he brings to hi.s extracurricular enterprises:
"Here Is a luart who, lugRliig Ills wife I’eggy aiwig, once drove
l.?(W miles la a jeep around Navajii reNcrvaUmi lands wllli-eiit eve(( ntuehlng a real rund. (Earlier lie had propooed to her hi a lelephonn booth.)
In 1940 he and aome friends slithered 700 miles down the tricky Colorado In a flatboat. Another lime he clambered 2,000 feet along a canyon wall to nail down his discovery of a natural brii With a wartime flying buddy, sparked a ni(x)nllght ricksha nice In CalcuKa.
★	★	★ ,
At his own department store Ih I»l)o<'nix, he sma.shed a record with 204 merchandise sales In a single day.
*	★	W
All hjs life he has moved In a gadget-rliiuered world. At 12 he helped	build	the	first	Phoenix
radio station. He still holds a ’’ham" operator’s license.
In his Striking blUtog, home
outside Phocitbt nnd In his WnsK-Inglon apartment, he has pul hl-fl oullels everywhere but In Ihe elosels.
Goldwater contrived an electronic flagpole for his Arizona Piacp, An electric eye triggered by the rising and setting sun raises and lowers both the flag and the pole.
”On days when it doesn’t work well,” he says. "I get complaints from neighbors about flying the flag at night.’’
Already well celebrated is his sleek black Thunderbird with some 17 special gauges and gadgets on near the dashboard—the lat-a "radar detector."
MORE IMPROVEMENTS
"There’ll be more improvements soon,” he asserts. "They • all help the driving."	*
Goldwater can hunt, shoot, fish, e is a master of Indian lore and j Arizona history, has a collection i of 450 Kochina dolls, Hopi Indian I creations of painted wood and I feathers.
• . ■ w1m'W4(| with iMlhtwltil bulb|(liid the Utile eorew nut that goesiflown as a raaem pOot. M:	on JMK Can you please send me Even those Reoubllcan :
'Dear Sirs: I have had a Iot|anolnerr’	[
of tm tHitOoR yo# new. model iogether. ■“	" *
I how Goldwater’e getlieta would blend with JeoqtMiUne Kennedy’s antiques In the White House. (Nexti. He’ll have to move in
,' But spmel^w I cWilthe many Jets (ktidwater haalciBuld win—just so they cwM see,lNevwiiber.)
Emm
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OILIE fRintR onn of Ociroit'i oriQlnal djicouniart
DURINQ MIRACLE MILE <*0PEN HOUSE” , ^THIS WEEK IT ^FREnER'S*
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ari^ furthormore, I promlt* to givo ypu ono of tho host APPLIANCE^TV— or STEREO doal* in tho Unitod Stafot. Ovor 122000 tporklin'^ now ap-ptiancos, stereoa and TVt. Toko thorn away at ridiculous prices ... all guaranteed. Remember service comes FIRST, AT FRETTERS.
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WE SPECIALIZE IN
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$10.00 DIIOOUNT on the purchase of any major appllanca. TV or atarao.
(Portable TV’s axcaptad)
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■V
■
tUjfl I»6nT1AC	WIAdWksUAV. M^jCIl It. II
•\'''XX'‘"\
\
THUilY-ONIil
V
BEEF SALE
49 f • f •{•graph A
i	Qpm Dally '«N t mh.
Noturolly t«ii(|er—Blut Ribbon Forms—Tobit Trimmed
CHUCK ROASTS
149S N. Main—RochMMr
OyM Maa.. TwM., tat. 'M « — DHiar Dayt 'M •
Fresh Roasters
U. S. Govt. Inspected Oven Ready,
3'/2-4-lb. Avg.
39
Round Bone Cuts
59
Pork Roasts
^	Practicelly Bdnelesi,
; ,	Boston Butt
39:
lb.
Blue Ribbon Farms Standing
Beef Rib Roasts
4th end 5th Ribi
1st to 3rd Ribs 1*.
651 691 75
i'JH
Coffee
Boneless Beef Beef lor Stew Swiss Steaks Rib Steaks
Chuck
Roa^it
Boneless Lean, Cubes
Center Blade Chuck Cuts
Table Trimmed 7" Cuts
69 V 79*. 69 V 79*.
Slab Bacon
PI Mygrade's, . Whole Hickory	or End
Smoked	Pieces
J jl:
White, Cherry, Lemon, Yellow, Sj5ice, D'Food
Duncan Hines '	90	OAO
Cako Mixes	J	'
Dele rest Pre-Ground	Mb.
with Coupon Below	Bog
Salad Dressing Kraft’s
Miracle Whip
Flour -^1
TO Food Club
" 25-lb. Big
No Coupon Needwl
Cashmere Bouquet Soap Cashmere Bouquet Soap Ivory Mild Soap Lifebuoy Coral Soap Lux Gentle Flakes Spic & Span ^
45S;35'
3^49'
3 Mad. r\ r-c Bart OO
2!S.25‘
Larea Q, Cc Slia oD
r ST*
Men effect/ra thru Sefwrdlay, JKarth 17. Wa raterVa tht right fa limit quuutlties.
Oiool ^nsp Sfruits (inJ VegetaUes
.U.S. No. 1 Michigan All Purpose
Potatoes—
10 •-29
5

during Sfkis Qreat DEL MONTE Sale!
New Crop Florida Valencia
Oranges
•■I
Blueberry Muffin Mix Nabisco Coconut Toasties Nabisco Kettle Cookies Nabisco Brovyn Sugar Shur-Good Cookies Hekman Cinnamon Crisp
39*
pko 43'
>	Cream”i!ar Whole Kernel Gem’^
>	Eerly Gerden Peae St
’^'29'/
29'
6 9'
Cans ■
9V*-ot.
PkO. Zt
# Cling Peachee t Fruit Cocktail
14-01. OQc
^8 O /
Snow Crop Frozen	■■
OiaB^ Juice	99*
Wisconsin Fancy	MT Bbai
Sharp Cheese "^ 09
4<^99*
•	TeoMrte Cattup 'lix
•	Plneapale-Grapefrait Drink
5-89'
t WIiele Temotoos t Stewed Tamoteas
OEEX XIfNJER Gir='
F/XSXEPt WIXM GOLD BELL GI EX GX/VIVH-
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THB PONmC>EB«k WKDNESBAY. MARCII U, im
"A'"


MmcIi it. W* MHr«f Hm»	Ibnll

YOU JUST CAN'T
FOOD STORES


FOOD STORE ^
ONE OUT OF THREE
Of The Following Ifems Below
With Coupon and $2 Purchosc or M
Pure Cane
DOMINO
SUGAR
5-39*
-la-
CREAil
i/a-Gol.
Ctn.
Hills Bros CoHee
FREE With Thif Compos
50 EXTRA "iiJ- STAMPS
With $S Purehoso or Mere
(Not tiKiudhw Boor, Wiot or Ciparottos) IIMoom Thit Coupoa ot NotiemI Food Sterot.
...... “
it Ooo CoMpoo rof Family.
Government Inspected-Fresh Whole
FRYERS
Oven Ready
GRADE 'A' TURKEYS
^met f^arts
lb.
Breast I Legs I Wings
- with. Ribs WHh ioek Portion l - Tendei' A fosty,
>U29'
lb.
ib. I
The Ineomparable > Oven Ready Gov't. Graded
Cacklebirds


.300
Cans
300 eXTRArSTAMPS
With Coupon at Right and Purchase Indicoted of Hunts Items Below
Hunt's Apricots Hunt's Peaches Hunt's Tomatoes ^
PLEASE CHECK ONE 50 STAMPS Witii $1 Purchase 100 STAMPS With $2 Purchase STAMPSJ¥ith $3 Purchase PS Wit]^$41*ureRa!W STAMPS With $5 Purchase Q300 STAMPS With $6 Purchase
RoJoom thit coueen «t Notional Food Storot Coupon Expir** Set., March 17 .
Hunt's	'	Hunts	*	^
FruitCocktail 4tomato Juke
INSTANT
COFFEE
SAVE 30c—Deol Pack
Hills Bros
Delicious
Salerno Fig Burs
Deal Pack — White or Colored Facial Tissue
Kleenex Tissue
Imperial
Mcirgarine ^
Liquid Detergent
Swan Detergent
• * • *
Prieo With 12-Ol. Mailed Cetipen Can
Orchard FresirT^Roien Sliced	5c Off Deal — Nettle's
Strawberries rr7499' Chocolate Morsels . .'fkT 43'’
Hunt's "	TopTdste with Beans
Tomato Paste . . 2 12; 27' Chili Con Carne . 4”^^- n“
Hunt's	Top Taste
Tomato ^uce . . 2
Deal Pack—Handy
23' Corned Beef Hash. 2'^^
Sweet or Buttermilk
Northern Towels . 6 '? *1“ Pillsbury Biscuits* . 3
$]00
29'
Natco American or Pimento
Sliced Cheese
American Beaiity —Deal Pack
Spaghetti
212-0* Banded.
garden Credit ^ro
CUT CORN, PEAS, PEAS & CARROTS or CRINKLE CUT POTATOES
2 Id. 49^
■	•* P- FREE With Thi* Coupon
50 EXTRA niJ" STAMPS
With PurchoM of Mb. Pk'ff. •*
J SPROANCB BREAD MIX
L Sil ;;R*dMm Thh Coupon ot Notional Food Storoo.
a Coupon txNm Sot., March IT. ERR
FREE With Thi* CoupSn
25 EXTRA STAMPS
-Coopen Expiru Sot., Morch 17. .
FREE With Thii Coupon
50 EXTRA «5l?r STAMPS
With PurcbOM of 2 Pockogoi of
ARCHWAY COOKIES
SodMm Thit Coupon M NotioMt^oorT MurMb
Coupon CxNroi Sot., I
Uqeid Cieoucr With Ammenie-7e Off Label
REDEEM 7«	. ^ PlOc
MAILED	2r
COUPON ‘ BN. Wit
Handy Andy
-*.|Ser AeleeiaHt Washers
"Active All"
COUPON Fks.
For Fluffier, Whiter Clothes
Fluffy All 'S*.
Liquid Determent
Liquid All
3e Off Label
. 3	83' Breeze , . .
Washing Detergent
. 2; 75‘' Vim Tablets
<12e Off Label	,
'xs 31' Liquid Wisk .. ... /i2r'*1*^
—15e-OfHLobe|— -•!	* —^
<j™. $2« Giant Surf . .	..	64'

i. \


fWSS,. W	MARCH U, 1061

TmiertrTBmt

." -V ■■
THAf NATIONAL MEAT!
NATIONAL
FOOD STORES
FUILY
Hickory Snioked, GiUtrous Shiank
Portion
Lb.
39

Smeked Ham	S.lKt	14 to U U.
OHOIGE BUTT PORTIOE	GENTER MM SUUES	WHGLE 8MGKEB HAM
U.49*	LI 89*	u.49*
FOOD STORED
Extra Loan Slicad
BOII.ED
HAM
7^"
Mb.
Pkg.
NaHoRoTt So Proili
Top To«fo SUnloit	MI«holb#rry'« Grad# I
Pork Sausage • • • Pound 49* Beer Salami . . . . “ 59* Haddock .
Hygrode's "All Meaf"	Presh Woter	MoHoeol’i So Fresh
tell Park Franks * . •%. 59* Boneless lake Perch ’Sf 39* Fish Sticks
’»■; 49*
ftSr 39*
SAVi
12*
Heinz Gay 90’s Sale! HEINZ SOUPS
KETCHUP
4't^39
•	ALPHABET	• CHEESE SOUP
•	CHICKEN NOODLE • CHILI WITH BEEF
•	GREEN SPLIT PEA • VEGETABLE BEEF
e CREAM OF MUSHROOM
3
ll-Oz.
Cans
SfOO
Vegetable With Beef Stocks or
BEAN SOUP
Ill-Oi. Com
SAVE lOc-Strainod Varieties ’
HEINZ tii BABY FOOD III
4</i-Ox.
Jort
$|00
Salerno Saltine
Crackers
25*
1-Lb.
Box
Velvet Creamy
Peanut Butter
32-Oz.
Jar
SAVE
Dunean Hines Early American
Cake Mixes
Orange, Fudge Nut,'Butter Fecwi,
Clierry Almond or Apple Sooeo Roliln
2^69*
^ou^uit C^an^f ^Ind Jresker.^inef produce!
FRESH
TOMATOES
214tOz.	C
Orchard, Fresh Frozen
Orange Juice
6t^89*
Florida
Fancy
Red
Slicers
39*
TO*
Washing^, U.S. No. 1
P'Anjou Pears . . 2
Medium Siie, Waxed, Canadian
Rutabagas . . . . .
Cleaned and Washed, Ready to Cook
Fresh Spinach ... . 'tS*-19*
n Site, White or Pink, Stedless
Grapefruit .	10 *« 59*
Florida, Fresh Endive, Remaine or
Escarole Lettuce . . .	19*
30 Sizel Collfernia, Delicious in Salads
Avocados . . . . 2	29*
Part, Trepicona Orange and Grapefruit	^
Citrus Salad . . . . o-* 59*
Washington State,"Fancy^oollty -■__
Winesap Apples . 3 iti 59*
Top Taste
Raisin Bread
SAVE
1“
216-Oz. ^^
Loaves jIt

FRCI With Tkh Goupoe
25 EXTRA «5“r STAMPS
'Ml PuNboM ot Any 3>Lb. Bog or Mora •<

FREE With Thh Coupon F?F.
25 EXTRA ”tSr STAMPS
Wtlb PuiSiiio if WOi. Cw ot STA-FLO SPRAY STARCH
i Rodom TM»_ Coupon m
eSpoinbiNl^Snt, MoNh
FREE With Thii Coupon f-t- |
50 EXTRA -SIS" STAMPS j
Ml PwchoM ot An, PaUuNN ot J
rROUND CHUCK or MEAT LOAF |
iRodonm Tbit Cwipon ot NatInMi toad Stmr. _ 1 I--7iiie,igi 17; JM. *

FREE WiHi Thin Coupon F<F>
50 EXTRA "g!?-'STAMPS
I ParcboM Of An, PaiM ar Maw al
ORANG|S___________
Caupao Exp^ Snt.. M«dl IT.
Se Off Label
Lux Soap... . .
5e Off Label
Rinso Blue . . . . • 3te; 85*
TeOffLobcl
3 K 49* Silver Dust Blue. a . ®£r 74*
Uqoid Oetorgeof	f-
Lux Uquid . . .... . <^63*
Soap of tbe Sfors
Lux Soap..............'4 b. 43*
Tbo Active^Seop for Active Peopla
Lifebuoy Soap. 2 .7; 25*
Mild and Refresbiag
Lifebuoy Soap. . . 2 SS 33* Praise ^p. ii ‘.’'.*’2 Ss 29* ^
.'■ ||||- ■
f

jmmmsK

THE POymC PKE88. WEDNESDAY. MARCH U> 1008
Schools Request Boost in Funds
iltcfion SchtduUd
April 25, Hik« V«to«d Lott Month
IfOULY—Votdr#' reJeoUon lust month of school dporiiiing funds Imui mmlc It nccossnry for the Holly Honrd of Kduontlon to Bgiiln kcIuhIuIc II HiH'ctul cUH'tlon rc-(|UCNtlng ndditlomil revenue.
Approvnl of seven mlllH will he asked April 25, just two months after a request for eight mills and a |950,000 Iwnd Issue for new !hool construction were defeated.
Hill Mhool board Intends lo
T.\1,KNT SHOW WINNKUS — Two pianists. Chri.sline Itrowarskl, 13. and Bob Haskell, 14, last night shai-ed honors ns first place winners in the 10th annual "Pop” Concert and Talent Show at Romeo High School. Christine, a sev-
enth grader, topped the junior division playing the "Blue Danube” and Bob, a ninth grader, led the senior divsiion. He played the first movement of Beethoven’s "Moonlight Sonata."
Oxford Church 125 Years Old
Will Mark Anniversary
OXFORTh-Members of the First. regularly In the town's first Methodist Church here will cele-1 schhoolhouse which evidently stood brate thp 125th anniversary of on the Roe Sausser property.
their local organization with family night cooperative dinner and program at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the new Fellowship Hall of their church.
Pre.sent members who joined the church 40 years or more ago will be honored.
Although some meetings were held in the vicinity from 1834-1837, it was in the latter year that
In 184.H a church was built. Kvldenen Is lacking but indications are that U occupied the property where the Junior high schoof now stands. This was later thought to be too tar out of town, and in 1858 the church was moved to a spot that Stan’s Grill now occupies.
The present church was built in
class was organized to meet f1868 at a cost of $8,000, and dedi-
Soufhfield Council Plans, lo Sue the School Board
SOUTHFIELD — City Council proceeding with its court action against the board of education for payment of $24,741 in sewer tap-in fees deig>ite the board’s request for time to study the issue.
City attorney Jame& N. Ginn has been instruct^ to file suit in cir-aut court to :	the
billed the school board for tap-ins to the Evergreen Interceptor last September at Birriey,’ Brace and Northviile elementary schools.
’The Board of Education has refused to paj, claiming cxemip-tion from assesment under i ‘ Michigan law.	i.
A meeting of the school iwardi with its attorney. Carl J. Phrun.i “'schf'duled ta.st Wednesday, wasj cancelled after the sudden death] last week of School, Supt. Glenn. »Schoenhals. "	I
STlJDYDfO MATTER	j
Phrun was retained by the school board to study ■ the matter and, advise - board members whether; tap-in fees constitute an assess-] ment or a service charge.	].
The city now is billing the j seho<il district for service | •■barges rather than ass*-ssiiieiits. 1 'rhe Board of Education, to honor
the deceased Schoenhals, has approved the jfenaming of the South-field High Scho<a to Schoenhals High School when the .proposed high school addition is completed. ■k-kir
Assistant Supt. Norman A. Olmsted is currently acting as superintendent until a ne\y, chief, administrator is appointed.
Vote
Rochester Teachers to Hear Dropouts Problem Analyzed
ROCHK.STKR - I/K'al children will he excused fixmi school Friday while their tenehers analyze the problem of student dropouts II local Instilute day. Asst. •Supt. Douglas Lund, announced today.
Dr. Carl B.verly, chairman of the World of Work Study Commit-
Of the funds being sought in next month's election, six of the mills would be an extension of current taxes that expire In June. W011I.D PAY TIOAaiERH The one extra mill would provide fund.s lo pay the salaries of teachers needed to meet Increasing enrollment.
The six mills being asked to he continued provides about $100,000 annually for the school distriet and represents IS per cent of the operating budget, acmrding to 8iipt. Raymond
M1t,"Thc lxjard* TOst^^
Ing the standards of the school district.
k k k
The total school tax In the district would be 22.75 mills for each $1,000 of property if the millage request is approved, the superintendent said.
"It would be one of the lowest tax rates of 30 school districts in the (XHinty,” Barber added.
He explained that the school board has called for the special
cated March 7, 1869, by the president of Albion College It has been remodeled several times, the major change taking place after a cyclone ripped off the steeple and the front of the church in 1934.
Included in mementos that have elei'tion in September because the
been preserved is a. 1843 list of materials for the "meetinghouse.’' Witten in a notebook of William Powell, one of the early support-era of the church.
Also preserved Is the 1855 deed for the property on North Washington Street, purchased so that the first church could be moved to it.
There are also the lists ol donors and contract for the 1869 church.
Families who might have infor-i|ifition pertinent to this early period should contact Mrs. '	^
Kamm, 73 Park Street, church would like to verify some of the historical facts about which actual records are missing.
The present pastor. Rev. Fred Clark, who will soon begin his ninth year, has served the local church longer than any other minister.
Nike-Ajax UnW n Auburn Heights
William Adcock, principal of Led-1	i	n	i
erle High School, has been	jjl AwaTCiS
temporary assistant to .the super-]
I A Nike-Ajax. unit st attuned in ! Auburn Heights has placed third iin competition for the Eisenhower, i Trophy as the outstanding Michi-I gan National Guard Unit of 1961.
■ The winning unit is Battery C,
I 1st Missile Battalion of the lT7tli
■	I Artillery, commanded by Capt.
. ! George A. Baijo of -Livonia, at
j Wyandotte.
I Award of the trophy, named for former President Eisenhower, [is 'based on attendance, active [duly evaluation and inspection.
I Second in the competition was I Battery. A, 2nd liowitzer Battalion, 119th Artillery, Albion^ and I third, Battery C, 2nd Missile, Bat-Ualion, 177th Artillery, Auburn
■	Heights.
Juvenile Protection Subject of PTA Tjalk
AUBURN HE;IGHTS-A tjlik on, juvenile protection will highiightj tomorrow night's meeting bf the| Sione-Auburn Heights Parent-j Teacher Association.
lack ol clas.srooms is critical.
When school begins- in the fall the district will be short by at least two classrooms and the problem will become worse the follow-1	president,
ing year, said the superintendent.
Chorus to Stage Annual Operetta
Walltd Lokt Jr. High Singers Will Pefform March 23, 24
tee of the Detroit Publle Hehools, will bo the principal spouker.
Hli subject is "The School's Rc-sponstblltty In the World of Work."
Huf fsoully has been divided Into 14 disomwlon groups to consider the Implloallons of By-erly’s statements tor Koehester. A fou^mnmber |mnel will pi«-
At Oxford High
Slate Vocational Talks
The punellHts will be George Stringer, dlroctor of counseling: Ray Ijiwson, chairman of Rochester Senior High Seh(K)l English depart inent; Mrs. Laralne Schwelg, fifth grade Icaelier ft-om Brook S«‘h(K)l; and Fred
OXTORD- Some 400 lo 500 students and pai-ents are expectinl to attend the first eureer confe ice at Oxford High School, 7:30 m. Thursday.
k k k Representatives of 25 vocational areas will he on hapd to talk with individuals and groups about career opportunities.
Among them will be Hgfry J. Reed, managing «MlUor •»! The Pontiac Press; Bryan Chapin.
head of food distribution tor A & P.
Others will lx- Tony Steils, Detroit Tiger ba.seball scout; Army, Navy, Air Force 'and Marine Corps recruiters and members of several other Vroffeslons, trades and (hv eu pat ions.
★ -a A
Students and parents are expected tQ, come from Clarkston, L«ike
Kenneth
per-
William Porter Named President of PTA Council
AUBURN HEIGHTS - William U. Porter was elected president of the Avondale Area PTA Council last night at the Council’s regular meeting at Avondale Junior High School.
aimnel diroelor for Detroit EdI-
TO HEAR DR. WEIJA Elementary classroom teachers nd secondary mathematics tench-^ are expected to hear Dr. David Well^i, director of malhe-matlcs education, Oakland County schools. His topic Is "Trends In Mnthematies."
Harold E. Bennett. Southfield public schools, will meet with secondary language arts teachers. Dr. Julian Greenlee, director of science education, Oakland County schools, will direct a seminar for junior and senior high school sci-nee teachers.
Social studies teachers will use the afternoon session to preview six new films In their subject
Oxford for the conference, which is sponsorod by the Oxford Parent-Teacher Interest Group.
The caai(er«n«se, undergo direction! of iJirry Ferrtgan, Oxford High Hehool guidance eoim-selor, will begin In the school gymnasium with a general meeting.
Students will then go to various clas.STOoms in the school for discussions with the career representatives.
Mrs. Russell Williams wasj chosen first vice president, while-Mrs. Carl.vlo Bragen was named ^
Last month’s defeated bond issue would have been used to finance the construction of a 13-room elementary school, north of Holly, a seven-room addition to the Holly High School and the remodeling of the Holly Junior High School.
Speaker, will be Donald of the Juvenile Division o land County Probate Court, aIso--wiU-rifflw_a_film	aid
LINDA E. KENNEDY
Mr and Mrs. Finriey Gv^en-pedy, of 137 N. Andrews St;, Lake Orion, announce the en-Rolphj gagement of their daughter *^***^■1 Linda Elizabeth to David Lee juHenv son of.Mr, and Mrs. Don-
I Furniture Firm Prepares !Parts for W. Coast Plant
I GRAND RAPIDS iffV-Furniture I City Upholstery Co. of Grand I Rapids, makers of medium-priced upholstered furniture, ■ has added a second fhift to builtt up a parts backlog for a plant it is buildi at Bakersfield, Calif.
Dale VanOtteren, president, said ground was broken Monday for the new plant scheduled to be
Song Festival Slated Tuesday
500 Rochester Pufjils Will Offer Selections at Senior j^^igh Gym
ROCHESTER — Five hundred Rochester students will take part in the Fourth Annual Festival of Song next Tuesday in the senior high school gymnasium.
' ★	k	k
Fifth and sixth grade choruses from all the elementary schools will join junior and senior high .school vocal groups in a mass rendition of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic."
k	k	k
"Sound Off,” army ma*’chmB song, sung hV the boys SenioB High School Chohis will open the program.
The selections wiH lnclud«i “The Last Words of David,” by Randall Thompson, sung by the Senior High School Choir, and “Hfey, Ijook Me, Over,” which the North Hill Chorus WiU sing.
The Junior High School chorus, under the direction of Bernard Leshley, will sing- a musical comedy medley.
k k . k .
The senior high school vocal groups have been trained by Frank Irish. Alex Dubs, David Greenlee, and Mrs. Joan Spink,
The new recording secretary Is Mrs. Ix>nnie Mitchell, and clecte<l corrcspomling secretary was Mrs. Edward Lo<»er. ,
Also elected were William Bishop, treasurer, and Mrs. G.'A. Go-fprfh, historian.
The new officers will be installed at the council’s May meeting at Stiles Elementary School.
Roscoe V. Crowell, principal of Avondale High School, served as chairman of the nominating committee.

BOSE MARIE CUDNOHUL’SKY
The engagement of Rose Marie Cudnohufsky to Leon Howard Storm is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cudnohufsky, of 1940 S. Lapeer Road, Orion Township. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon B. Storm, of 1434 Lapeer Road. Orion Township. No date has
PTA Schedules Talks on Safety
County Council to Meet on Tuesday Evening at Hudson Covert School
Members of the Oakland County Parent-Teachers Association Council will hear two talks on safety their regular meeting next Tuesday evening at Hudson Covert .School, Scott Lake Road, Waterford Township.
Speaker during the first half of the program will be Joseph Zabelskl, traffic	eduea-
tion consultant for the Automobile Club of Michigan. Theme of his talk will be “Your Safety Depends Upon Yon and^No One Else.”.................
A color film of safety patrol duties also will be shown to aid safety chairmen in their own particular schools.
k k k •
'Summer Safety” is the title of a talk to„ be given during the second half of the progi-am by Sgt. Donald Kratt, safety director of the Oakland County-sheriff’s department.
k k . k
Also on- the agenda ft election ol officers for the coming year.
Registration will begin at 7:30 p.m. with the meeting slated to start aft. The entire program is under the direction of Frank Rud-laff, council program chairmam
Indicted for Cor-Noping
GRAND RAPIDS (flV-A federal grand jury Tuesday indicted two South Bendl Ind., men on two counts involving transportation of a stolen car Jan. 26 from South Bend to Buchanan, Mich. William L. Duckwall, 27, was charged with aiding and abetting Richaird R.
Julien, of 240 E. Flint [ready- by July 1- The Grand Rapids unit will .supplj ^aips^-anilt^eaFyings.—
______________ -“6 _________.... ........... .. ...
how the county program lJp'bratesr|-5j;^-t^e-0r«)n.-_NQ_d_ate has 1 Rapids unit will .supply it with PTA officials for the (oming| jjggjj {qj. the wedding. year also will be elected it session to be held at 8 p rr the kindergarten room of f
I ■ Whole,Maine LOBSTER!
and Steamed CLAMS ■ ^LL YOU CAN eat
fonr«M.rvotienf coll 682«1616*.g
ITCH’S TAVERN
9EER-WINE-COCKTAIIS
4000 CASS-ELIZABETH ROAD
f ■■■••■■■■iBMBBaaaasavApaaBaaBoM

HUii a aiimmury of evni^iiNlonM
WALLEP LAKE — Tb« Viking Chorus ol the Walled Lfiko Junior HIgli School will stage its second annual oiwrolla "The Saucy Hol-lumlalH(>" al 8 p.m. March 23 and ’24 al the school.
'I’he story, written by Paul Bliss, tell (K)f a prjncess of the royal house of Snyder who possesses a state secret and how a foreign prince tries to learn that secret.
Hinging roles, l«> Iw allernuled at the Friday and Saturday per-termanpes, will be played by the
Hans, a Dutch youth, by Duane McCallum and Art Walker; Mcena, a Dutch girl, by Brenda Steiner and Dianne Smith; the king by Janies tkmn and Carmen Cayal-luro; Ihe queen, Ann Smith and Laura ,S(*ara; the prince, Dennis Price and Donald Mussen: (he prin-LyUla Shepard and Pamela Jeffroy.
The roles lo be handled by one student at holh performances are those of J(M*, Ihe sailor, by Michael Mengyan, and Doctor Quick by Curl Grapenllne.
IlolHTt Boberg, hl'nd of the music department at the junior high, will direct the production.
Ask More Detroit Firemen
DEritOlT (AP) — The Board of
To Outline Sewer Plans for Utica
UTICA-—Prompted by the State Health Department, the city council la.st night took action toward construction of a new sewtq;e disposal plant here.	‘
Engineers for the pity, Hqbbell, Roth imd Clark, Inc., were instructed to prepare plans and cost estimates in time to meet the June 21 deadline for applying for fede,ral aid.
The action was taken after Maurice Richmond of the State Health Department told the council that Utica was the only city along the (Tinton River that had not yet taken steps to correct its inadequate sewage disposal facilities.
He indicated that State Health Department action to force struction of a new disposal plant could be expected if cooperation as not forthcoming from the city. k	k	k
The federal government will pay about 30 per cent of the cost, Richmond told council members. k	k -k
In other action last night, th® council provided for reducing Utica water bills by dropping the revenue bond charges.
recommended the addition of 157 new firemen to the Detroit department in the fiscal year starting July 1.
Walled Lake PTA Unit to Sponsor Cord Party
WALLED LAKE — The Decker Elementary School Parent-Teacher Association will sponsor a card party from 8:30 p.m. until midnight Saturday at the school.
’Tickets can be obtained by taetiftf- the school or at thi door the night of the-party.
Absolutely last 3 Days!
$traitd
Performances 2 - 5 - 8
NOW AT 1:00-10:31
HURON
FUUOFTHELITTLfTMS THAT MAKE A BIG MOTION PICTURE GREAT!
"] FRANK CAPRA'S
I Pocketful of Miracles
^nd ^et 8:22 OnlyS^
JOHN GREGSON/SYBI^ORNDIKE/FINUY CURRIE
CornmfTRIDAY
<’SPARTACUS”
2103 s. teleoraph no. FE2-tOOO
0p«n G:30-Starts T P,M.
At No Extra Charge ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS
\ FIRST RUN 1
ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE
VIVIEN LOGH
IN TENNESSEE WILLIAMS'
THE ROMAN SPRING OF MRS. STONE”
CO-STARRING
WARREN BEAHY
'■^‘	■'	1^	, '	THE PONTIAC PSESS. WEDNESDAY. MAECH U. IBM
• TiiiErr-Fiv»::.»
ASURE-FIRE SOLUTION TOTHISMAN'S SPRING CLEANING PROBLEM
His problem, Jike many people’s at this time of year, is what to I ^ do with all those wonderful, useful items he no longer needs;"
The solution: ^Sell the things lie wants to dispose of with a Lcp^ result producing Pontiac Press Want Ad*
these little ads get results! They are low in cost 1^A three line
want ad will cost as little as $1.75!

It’s so ea^ too!_ Cali on-the^4elephonei Write a note! Send a card listing the things you ivant to sell. An experienced Ad-visor will see that your ad is in The Pontiac Press. Call your ad in tomorrow—	_v i	i
11


;v ■ ;,i j
FE 2-8181



HkRE ARE SOME OF THE MANV REASONS WHY YOU SEE

fm
at FOOD FAIR
Tii«r«'f • wide end wonderful world of Ane foods tt* diopse fronir—fou an get ell your
You get the finest of matt^ t you'U find Ametia'i inost	We do everything possible to
both tresh end smoked, in our	femoui IsMi the ones you	ineke every Pood rsic « elesn,
an get ell your	Mat Depertment... the kind , know end truit^odking et	bright; plmssnt plea to shop,
household supplies	thet putt smiles on your fem< you from eveiy Pood rsir	Pom jf'air folks gteet yoii with
foods end household supplies thet putt sniilw on your with oiie trip to Pood Pmr. lly's isos et the teble.
shelf end counter.
Srleai •fftctiv* (hraufh Sa*.. March IT. Rl«ht ratarvad fa limit quantitiai.
Here's a Treat for Beefeaters!
Wholesale Cut. Fresh Frosted, WHOLE
Beef Tenderloin
or Center Cut
Round Steak
Lanfan Paafurai Full-Flaverad Pinconning Mild Cheese			 LE. 49'
Prassal'i Grada 1 Sliced Large Bologna			 39'
Patars' Gracia 1 Skinless Wieners 		I-....2 At 79'
SAVE UP TO 10c! HILLS BROS., CHASE & SANBORN COFFEE OR
Maxwell House
With Coupon Below
SAVE 10c! SUZETTE BRAND FRESH
Pineapple 4
Fig Bars, a. .2^ 29
With Coupon Below
SAVE UP TO 28c! POPULAR BREAKFAST
Cereals
(OVi-Oi.
•	ChMfiM 8 '/4 -Oi.
•	Alpha Bits
Kallogg l2-Oi. ' • Corn FlokM Kallogg lO-Oi.
4.5|00
SAVE 4e! PREMIUM quality BLEND—RICHLY WHIPPED	Quart *%t-c
FOOD FAIR SALAD DRESSING............................ Jar 35
Orange Juice
6 c-89^
CHICKEN NOODLE. CHICKEN RICE, POTATO OR BEEF NOODLE
WYLER'S INSTANT SOUP MIXES.........
Package
9'
HONEY SWEET
7 303 $|00 C
SAVI 20el CUT WAX BEANS OR
FOOD FAIR CUT GREEN BEANS ....................6 CaV,
6 303 $ I 00 C
NEW LOW PRICE! PIECES & STEMS
CAVERN BRAND MUSHROOMS
8-Oz.
Can
49'
chunk, Light—-Chicken of the Sea or	«
BREAST-O-GHICKEN TUNA^
Chunk, LigM Meet ,	a 6'/2-Ol $|C
FOOD FAIR TUNA.......4 Can,' I
6'/2.0z. QQc Cam OY
Dragon Brand
LONG GRAIN RICE.
.2	29^
SAVE llcl SPAGHETTI IN TOMATO SAUCE WITH CHEESE—FAMILY SIZE
Fraitco-American •»
SAVE lOe! VELVET SMOOTH or, CRUNCHY	' ,
Peqnut Buffer ,,.. 269*
Hoffman Houta	.
TAI^TAR SAUCE
8-Oz. OCc Boffle ZD
Deming's
Ajosko Soekeye '
Red Salmon
79‘
SAVE 16c! YELLOW CLING HALVES or SLICES
Food fair Peaches 4
100
FOOD FAIR COUPON
50 Extra l!^!l Slampt :
with Pmtliatt ef $5 Df Mora «
axeapf bear, win., eigar.ft.t, #nd bated . ■ goods . . . through Saturdayi March 17th.' * Limit: Ona Coupon . P ■
Maxwell Heate
Special Label—Regular Size
Northern towels . ,
Ispecial Label,
JUMBO Norfhern Towels.
.2;.^129'
$100
In 4-Roll Pack*	| >%
JONI TOILET TISSUE...... I 2 Roll, 89
Charmin Whifa Embossed
TABLE NAPKINS ...	.. .rl'o 10'
- In Plastic Safafy Jug!	C" II	a a
SLOBE LIQUID BLEACH .... jl, 49
FOOD FAIR COUPON
2S EXTRA S.&H. STAMPS
with purchaia of I or moro-1-lB. VACUUM CAN FOOD FAIR COFFER Through Saturrlay. Mar. 17 P
FOOD FAIR COUPON
25 EXTRA S.AH. STAMPS
wifh.purchoso of I or nMra 10-01. KRUN-CHif POTATD CHIPS with PARTY TRAY^
.Through Saturday. Mas. 17 P
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MIRACLE MILE Shopping Center
TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE ROAD
DIXIE HWY. In Drayton Plains
CORNER WILLIAMS AND WALTON LAKE ROADS
V '

THK rONTIAC IMIF^SS. WKl)jVKHl)/VY. MAHC H IK liKii
TH rUTY-SEVEN
Northern falls by Wayside in Class A Regional Tournament
Host Bentley 62-52 Winner Over Huskies
Bulldogs Moot Victor of PCH-Rodford Gome at Livonto
By chuck ABAIb Host Livonia Beni ley combined dome slziillng ahootlng with Ponlinc; Northern’s worst performance in Hcvorul weeks to eliminate the Hyskles In the opening round of class A regional basketball play last night.
Deadeye Lannie Carrier pumped in 28 points to spark a 62-52 triumph and send the Bulldogs into Friday's championship game against tonight’s Pontfac Central-Detrolt Redford victor. The latter battle Is set lor 7:80 at Bentley.
area *’A” quintet In notion Monday, also fell by the wayside bowing to Detroit Kastern 7S-M at Kast Detroit.
Besides the big PCH contest, other large schools will be busy around the area. A doublehcader at Femdale will match Royal Oak Kimball and Detroit Northern at 7 With Fitzgerald mOetJng Detroit Penihlng In the nightcap? Saginaw and Arthur Hill tangle at I) at Flint and host East Detroit faces Grosse Pointc at 7:30. Troy and Farming-ton go the post Thursday.
Bcnilcy. unable lo find the range very often in slruggling to its district lltlc last week, was just the opposite last night. The Bulldogs hit a red-hot 47.7 per cent on field goal attempt.s with 5-for-13 their ’’off” quarter.
Northern made a good .17 per cent and 12 of 14 frbe throws but the shooting could not make up e play, a short-d s o m A
ragged balL handling.
PNH kept it close lor one hall but Bentley pulled away and stayed well in front on an 18-5 3rd period edge. A 24-point Huskie finish gave a good Pontiac following something to cheer about but failed to ever tighten the score again. COLD START After missing its 1st five floor shots and trailing 3-0, Northern .stole the play the rest of the opening quarter to lead 14-13 after cighi minutes.
if -k- ic

Fenton Eliminated; Squeaker by Capac
Fenton was dumped from Class B contenllon while unbeaten Capac was squeaking by in Class C on the opening night of regional basketball pidy Monday.
St. Michael begins "C” action tonight at 9 at Eastern Michigan University In Ypsllanti against Ann Arbor University High.
Plulouaiiig Marysville
strong to taka Fenton M-M at I'onttae Northern, (lapae nipped lialroU Aanunclallon, 70-68.
Coach LcRoy Decker’s FH.S quintet took a 12-9 1st period lead but fell behind by two at halftime Femton got going again and was in front 42-:i6 midway in the 3rd (luurter. It was cut to 44-42 by the md of the sesNlon and stayed close
Regional Cage Pairings
Gary Ha,yward and (Carrier kept trading baskets in the 2nd period. Carrier’s 6th of li fielders broke a tie midway in that round and Bentley started to show who was boss. The home team left at half-time in the van
18-23.
A quick two pointer appeared to get the Huskies off to a good start after the rest but the Livonia boys swished their 1st lour shots to get their momentum again.
It was 46-28 starting the last quarter. Ed Wasik, who matched Gary Hayward with 18 points, tallied 12 of his total in the closing session making 6-for-8, but Bentley was able to prevent any real comeback threat mostly on the strength of 12 fOul toss conversions in 13 tries.
Carrier took the winners’ only three shots of the 4th quarter and clicked on two to finish H-for-20.
Bill Bollin, 6-7, recently promoted jayvee, scored 12.
Tonight's Games
CLASS A
AT LIVONIA—-Pontiac Central vs. Redford, 7:30 p.m.
AT EAST DETROIT—East Detroit vs. Orosse Pointe, 7:30 p.m.
AT FERNDALE—Detroit Northern vs. Royal Oak Kimball, 7 p.m.; Detroit Perishing vs. Fitzgerald, 8:30 p.m.
AT TRENTON—Detroit Northwestern vs, Allen Park, 7:30 p.m.
AT FLINT—Saginaw vs. Saginaw Arthur Hill, 9 p,m.
CLASS B
AT BATTLE CREEK—Mason vs. Rockford, 7 p.m.; Albion vs. Beidigg.orp^__________	‘
AT TLINT—l^toiv-Plg^	vs.“^xTS’nffigr'7:3ir¥
p.m.
AT MOUNT PLEASANT-Ludlngton vs. Standlsh-Ster-llng, 8 p.m.
CLASS C
AT YPSILANTI—Grass Lake vs. Addl.son, 6 p.in.; Dundee vs. Detroit All Saints, 7:30 p.m.; Pontiac St. Michael vs. Ann Arbor University High, 9 p.m. h AT BAY CITY—Deckerville vs. Marlette, 7 p.m. Saginaw St. Mary vs. Bay City St. Stanislaus, 8:30 p.m,
AT LANSING—Jackson St. Mary vs. Hickory Corners, 7 p.m.; Byron Center vs. Pewamo-Westphalla: 8:30 p.m.
AT PORTAGE-Benton Harbor St. John vs. New Buffalo,
7 p.m.; Centrevllle vs. Wayland, 7:30 p.m.
CLASSD
AT FLINT—Flint St. Miry VS. Ruth 8S Peter and Paul,
6 p.m. -
AT MOUNT PLEASANT—Saginaw Sacred Heart vs. Beal, City, 7 p.m.; Au Gres vs. Vestaburg,-8:45 p.m.
J AT PICKFORD—Gaylord St. Mary vs. Nahama, 7 p.m.;
1 Boyne Falls vs. Falrvlew, 8:30 p.m.
^ AT TRAVERSE CITY—Manton vs. Suttons Bay 7 p.m.;
I Onekama vs. Hannah St. Mary, 8:30 p.m.
kmw
until Frank Polk’s two free throws put Marysville in oommand for good at 53-.V2.
polk garnto'ed 14 and G a r > urncH 12 to lawd a balanced at lack, A1 losunebcig of Fbnton won game lionois with 22. Dick Baclilcl added 12.	“	' *
Marysville will go ugai^sl unbeaten Wayne-OnklaiHl dutnipion Northvilic Thursday at PNH roF lowing a Ctarkslon-Clawson duel which starts at 7.
HAWKS HERO
Rick Hawks, CttPac's onlyisenior, wait the Chief Hero. Hir field goal with Just three seconds to piny |)roduced a 70-68 triumph. Dan Petz headed the scoring with 19.
Defending state champion Grosse Pointe St.- Paul kept alive hopes for a rep«tal by t>ell-lug Detroit St. Hedwtg, 67-61.
The two Class C powers will bo involved in another Iwin-bill Thyr.s-day a( Ferndale with Detroit ,SI. Cyril clashing with .St, Paul and then Capac against Ml. Clemens Si. Mary.
Jil. Mikc>, a distj’iel champion after a. losing iteasan,.jmjq,iateli tile best previous seluMil tourmw aecomplislimenis with one n'gioii-gani(> win and si'l a rt'eoni Ity taking a pair. The 193,') and 1!).% Shamroeks each won once. Ann Artwr will b(' a slight favorite on il.s belter (12-5) record.
Memphis swings inlo (')uss 1) igional eompi'liliOn Thursday at Livonia Bentley against Detroit St.
IIOMKIt IIAI’I’V - Dolroil Tigi'i i(s)kie Purnal Goldy (right, willi Deli gralulalions fron
1>'0.

Port Huron gave Eastern a busy time. Detroit was ahead by t wo at the initial quarter but Port,Huron went in front 32-29 at half-time. Eastern went back up by two at the 3rd quarter and then appeared to gain a safe edge. ,P()rt Huron got back within twb vrith four minutes to play but could not stay

Bill Yearby topped four Eastei
boys in double figures with 22. Charley Ingram canned 2.3. Tom Fraser 17 and Eric Price 14 in do-leat.
BENTI.KV (sai
NORTHERN .....
FO FT TP 0 Hay'd 6 S-8 18 Shields 3 0-.9	4
Wasik 8 2-2 18
3 OeFlOrtd 0 3-3	3
Totolt 21^^37 « Northern
Bentley ..........

Jim ^bbins of Royal Oak has signed Dearborn’s Troy Ruttman to drive one of the Robbins Specials in the 500-mi}e test at Indianapolis Memorial Day.
The National Boxing Association is pdihng its members to determine whether Floyd Patterso4i’.s )mvytiveight> championship. sh
be vacat^.
CHAMPS MEET — Norm Ca.sh (left) ol the Detroit Tigers and Stan Musial, star of the St. Louis Cardinals cc^mpared their big bats yesterday prior to the. exhibition game bf the two teams. Cash won the American League batting title with a .361 average last year. Musial is a-seven-time batting champion of the National League.
Ransom ot PCH Named to All-Valley Quintet
Rudy Ransom, Pontiac Central’s versatile and talented forward, has been named to the 1962 .^l-Sajgi-! «aw Vattey ConfeTence' 'Basketball team announced today.
Joining Ransom on the eJUe honor squad selecteiil by coaches and league sports writers are Dennis Schumacher of Arthur HUl, Jim Yuille of Flint Southwestern, and Ernie Thompson and Brian Best of Saginaw’s title-winning qlub.
Ransom, who boasts a variety of shots, was the Valley** 4th be^t scorer this season with 199 points in ^ loop games for a 16.5 average as he paced the Chiefs to ‘ ‘ finish.
The 6-2 PCH star had the neuverability to play anywhere on the court.'He has been most effective in the pivot, but also scored well from the outside and delivr ered at ail times*^ plus doit^ some Key rebounding. , He shot well with either hand.	-~
^Thompson,, Saginaw’s brilliant .6-foot-^ Cfnieri'lindce all circuit scor-
ing marks and swept the back-ds. Thompson -tallied .314 points Joe a 26.2 average-. Best'his 6-4 teammate, averaged 17 per con-
; Yuille, Southwestern’s 6-faot-9 guard, and Schumacher, the Hill-lies’ 6-1 outcourt specialist, were, both deadly from the outside.
Yuille averaged 21.1 points per game and Schumacher 16.9.
All members of, the first team are seniors.
Elected to the 2nd unit were Jim Toles of Flint Central, Keith Kundinger ,of Arthur Hill, Lovell Humes of Saginaw, Larry Jasfer of Midland and Charlie Haynes of Flint Northern.
Otto Kennedy and Clareime Douglas of PCH received - honorable mention.	' '
Others include Bob Barnett,
Flint Central: Clayton Wilhite, Bay City Handy; Bob Schafer, Bay City Central; Bruce LaBrilche, Sogi: Pitubur^n n< Bob Speer, Saginaw; Craig	(A>
D(ilL Arthur Hill; Don Badi. ,Bay ..........
CSty Handy; Carl Cm^jrek,. flint Southwestern, ,
Local Quintets Fall at Detroit
Buckner, Tripp Ousted in Inter-City Tourneyi on Lasky Court
Buckner P'inunco ot the City League and Tripp Contractors ot t h e Waterford Recreation 1 o o p. J champions of their respective eir-euits, were clirninaled Tu sday night in the Class B Inter-City | Recreation A-ssoeiation basketball tournament at Detroit's t.a.sky gymnasium.
Buckner lost a 76-68 decision to Dearborn Township and Tripp was handed a 48-39 defeat by Trenton,
its fir8t*setbaGk of the season.
The Buckner cageni fell behind at halftime, 32-2.1, and never could make up the deficit, Jerry Pant scored 22 points for Buckner. Bill York tallied 16 points in Tripp’s losing cause.
Jo-Jo’s, Pontiac’s Class D champ, meets Livonia tonight in the "D; Inter-Cjty tourney on the Lasky court at 9 o’clock.
Town & Country moved into the finals of the City League’s Class C playoffs with a 36-32-victory over Colonial Lumber. T&C faces the Wallace Cutters tonight for the "C” title on the PCH floor at 8:30.
Gary Acker rifled 35 points lo feature Beardslee’s 75-72 triumph Felice in the Natiobal loop’s lower bracket playoffs. The loss eliminated Felice.
i Hiiblia Morion MO) ami ■lit on shirt i receive eon-Ihcir lioniers yesterday
against-the St. Louis Cardinals in .SI. Pelersburg, Fla. The Tigers defeated the Cards, 7-1, for (heir third Win In tour starts ot the Grapefruit Circuit and Goldy continued u.s the liatting star.
Bengals Trim Cards, 7-1
Rookie Goldy Continues His Hitting Spree
Experience for Freehan
Tigers Must Protect $100^)00 Investment
LAKELAND, Fla. - The Detroit Tigers have a $100,000 investment — possibly more — in Bill Freehan. The large outlay of money for the giant wllegian has created some interesting questions and problems.
The Tigers must decide the best way to protect their investment.
Do they risk keeping Freehan with the major league club all season in a year thej) feel they have their best shot at the pennant since 1950? Or does he go to the minors TATf-H Rill FroBhnn wlicre he can catch every day?
will rr^n .b«>rb more „p.rl. ence more quickly sitting on a major league bench under the guidance of Bob Scheffing, an ex-catcher. ,Or^ in thejminors? ____- .
’’Freehan will go someplace ho
can catch every day,” Scheffing. “He doesn’t have much to learn, but there’s no way to learn like catching every day. I wouldn’t want to keep him up here on the bench, so that ! can teach him personally.” “TTiore's still a chance he’ll make the Tigers this season. ] haven’t settlecf that definitely on the club yet. And if he does go down, he might be back up by July or August and I wouldn't hesitate to use him.”
the Detroit Tigers’ $100,000 investment is willing to play in the minors so that he can catch every day. The Tigers want him lo gam the experience and may send him to Denver.
The chances are more than likely Freehan will go to Denver or possibly even to a minor league lower than the American Associa-
tion.
DeBusschere Offered Pro Baseball Contract
DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Tigers -reportedly have offered University of Detroit baseball and basketball star’ Dave Debusschere a $65,000 bonus contract.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Offers have been pouring into the U-D athlete’s hands since the Titan basketball team was bbsted from the NCAA playoffs Monday night, thus ending Debusschere’s college career.
Debusschere indicated Tueklay night that he might sign a base-
NATIONAL league jO,s Angeles	3
lev York	3
Milladelplila .......... 2
MUwaukee . St. Louis . Pittsburgh Chicago
.; r'
„	, TUESDAY’S RESULTS
New York (A). 4. Minnesota 3 Kansas City S, Washington 1 Detroit 7. St. Louis 1 Chicago (A) 5. Philadelphia 2 New. York (N) 4. Pittsburgh 0 Los Angeles (N) 10, Milwaukee 8 Cnlcago (N) 13, San Prancisoo 5 Houston 2, Cleveland 1 Boston 3. . Los Angeles (A) 2 '“-clnnatl 4. Baltimore 3, night TODAY’S schedule cinnstl vs Washington at Beach
-	•	[N) va New York (N)
ball contract within a week or two, but won't report anywhere until June.
WANTS DIPLOMA
“I’m definitely going to finish school,” he said, “I’ve gone too long to throw it away now. Twb more months and I have my degree.”
The' Tigers are believed on the inside track with Debusschere because of a reported agreement to let him also play professional basketball. TrieT)etroit Pistons of the National Basketball Association reportedly will make Debusschere their first draft choice and will offer'him a $20,000 eonlrae
The 6-fool-5 pilchei’ .said he al.so has talked to the Chicago White Sox among—ntlier professional baseball teams; Diamond scouts have followed him closely sine he- was graduated from Detroit’ Austin High School in 1958. The Tigers offered him a $45,000 bonus to, sign then, and Cleveland offered $65,000. The new Houston Colts offered him $80,i summer.
Debusschere .twicb pitched the Titans into NCAA baseball playoffs and hurled twonsandiot t^ms to national titles during his' college years.

PSAS'
(A) vs ChlCAIO (Nl At MpAA Boueton At ApActae Juocttcn
tMtndt 'yi CbicAgo (A) aT________
MOineii^ ri Xaoaaa City At ffe>t PaI»
PRO BIO-U. Of D. star Dave DeBusschere is now ready to make his bid in the pro ranks aft^ a sensational college -ca-reer.in basketball and baseball. DeBusschere reportedly is being ‘oR»(«di $65,80(1 by ]Bie Detroit
F^ietz, Langan Hit 256
Pietz and "Tom Langan shared high game honors at SO, Dave Karaska rolled 255-664, Ron Cotner 244-660 and Jagk Trealor 245-669 ib the Farmington Qassic this week. Clearwater Pools hit 1,073-1,038-3,102, Hagerty Lumber. 1,063-3,081 and Cameo Jewelry 1.061-2,994.
Prt BVikcllA^t/A GIaaca ^
.................
The strapping youth from Royal Oak, still a junior at Michigan, is in complete agreement with the Tigers’ program for Kis progress.
"I don’t care where I go as long as I play every day,” said the btqnd athlete who’s played less than a season of pro ball. “It’s the only way to learn when you’re 20.-^If I-were 26, It’d be different, I’d like to stay in the majors right now. •
”If they send me all the way back to Class D, I wouldn’t care. Just so that I can play every day. Experience is one thing I don’t have,	'	f
I don’t feel I've done very well in spring training, but I sure have learned a lot in just a few weeks.’ TTie 6-3 Freehan has bit well in every league he’s played. Sent to Duluth in the Class C Northern League, he barted .343. Promoted to Knoxville of the Class A Sally League, he batted .2^. Brought up to the 'Ilgers at the. tail end of last season, he - dazzled S^effing by batting .40tf in his first four major league games.
Big Qutfidder Blasts 2-Run Homer to Pace Detroit's 3rd Win
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. - Thf Detroit Tigers’ top spring training development so far is the unsung kids— those not even on the major league roster.
And Purnal Goldy, a 24-year-old slasher starting only his fourth season of organized baseball has become the most devastating hittei ' of the young Grapefruit League
Tiger Box Score
5 0 2
Warwick cf 6 0 1
3 0 0:
rf 5 12 2 ■White lb ColAVito If	1	1	0	1	Boyer 3b
' lb	3	0	0	0	Musial If	3	0	10
Boros 3b	3	13	1	Landrum
~	' An c	4	0 0	0	Mfnoso rl
. Jes ss	4	1 I	0	Oliver c
Aguirre p	1	0 0	0	Ootay ss
“ustAl p 1 0 0 0 .Broglio p 0.0 Morton 1112 Andersop p 2 1 OrzendA p	1	0	0	0	Gregory P	®	®
Hughe.s p	0	0	®	0
C-HerrerrA	-	-	-	-
10 0 0
Totals
35 1 8
34 7 0 8 ToUIs^
A—Hit home run far Dutfl B—Singled' for Oregory Iq C—Hit into force -play lor Hugjes la
■h	^
E—Wood 3, Landrum, Boros. FO-A. petrolt 37.10: St. Louis 27-8. B-P Boros, Wood, CAsb; Boros-Cash; Left—Detroit 5. Bt. Louis 0. 9E—Bruton, Wood. Javier. BR-Morton, Oeldy. 8P--ColatiW,
IP H B EE BE 60 Agulrw (W) ......3	4	1'	*	‘

) (L) .
3 0
1	2	3
Oregory ...........8	4 S 3
Hughes ......... 3	1	0 _
U--WiIllAms, Prummond, Barllck and Hurley. T--2;44. A—4,003..
Rorr  ........Oil 000 80O-7 t 's
LOUIS  ........001 000
'.-suatot'-i8t.-or««au'<t) an* “	■■ ). AadersMuO), Oregory
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*8), Hughes I L-^rPrCBliO,.
Goldy did it again yesterday. H« smacked a trementlqus line driyt over the center field scoreboait 420 feet from the plate at A1 Lani filed. His two-run homer was the big blow. as the Tigers licked the “Louis Cardinals 7 to 1 and ran their exhibition record to 3-1.
Goldy, after Jour games, is hitting .500 with seven hits in 14 at bats. Two of his hits have beet homers and one was a triple.
Manager Bob Scheffing shook hia head in disbelief. -
“I’Ve never had a rookie like this one before,” said Schefflngy who Is In his fifth season as a big league pilot. “He can hit and hit and hit and his fielding has been ekay, too.”
Only AI Kaline could shove Goldy out of right field at this stage Kaline has recovered from his sore left shoulder. Schspffing sai^ he’d make his first spring appem’ance in today’s rematch with the Cardx at Lakeland.
’Tm moving Goldy over to center and giving Billy Bruton a rest,” Scheffing said.
Bob Dustal, a right hander of the Denver, j^ter along with Goldy, was the most impressive of the three Tiger hurlers who stifled the Cards. -
,J8;ustal faced the minimum ol nine ’t)atters in three innings ol work his first time against a major league lineup.
The Tigers now have ' scored 33 runs' in their four games. They belted St. Louis pitching for five runs in the seventh inning yeste^ day —and it was the fourth time .they’ve had a rally of five runs or more.
Goldy’s home run and anothei two-run' blast by Buba Morton fea-tured the uprising after theUgers / entered the seventh protecting ® / two-run lead,-Morton’s homer came as a pinch hitter. The ball cleared the center field wall at the 41C marie and struck a palm tree.
Hank Aguirre, the starting pitch-r, received, the’victory although he surrendered the lone Cardinal run. The tally iras helped around by two scratch hits off Aguirre's glove.
Hillsdale Tackle Signed
OTTAWA jiPi-signiiw of Jta RlcbehdoUar, 245-pound' tackle

from Hllisdalfr Gc^g«>r'#l& "i MouniEed today by tth> 0«awi-i Rou^ ^tidars, of the Cfm^ > Fhotball League. ’|	i
' ' - *'■ ‘ ‘
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Tte&NTIAC PRESS. Vym)NEHDAY, ^tAHCH U. 10(Vi ** i
. OutfklldM’ l4Mm WMglMNr IMMMd III* I.M AhmIw Angtlfi '
^ I In iin with m. \
Wings-Rangefs in Showdown for Playoff Spot
Signi^&lank Contract
VKRO BKACn. FIm. (APl-l^e Walls dflighM by th« iradf that (nintifhrt^ him ft-om tiw N*w York M«t« to th« l^w Anfal^l Uodiani laat winter, Rl)(n«a blank contract with hl« now tea
Manlr*!
DMnat

i


SKIERS!
ALL SKI ITEMS
MUST GO NOW!
Vi off
EVERYTHING BELOW COST
1961 *'62 Rentals used 3 months Skis, Poles, Boots, Bindings Complete outfit $44.50
WhUe they last March 15,16,17
mSILVERWOLF, w.
4100 N. Woodword	Royal Ook, Michigan
Howe to Shoot for Big Goal of NHL Career
Winner Tonight WooM Likely Take 4th Place and Tourney Berth
NKW YORK (API-Thc Detroit Red WlnKR nnd New York Ran-) have their showdown meet-_ at Madlaon Square Garden tonight with the winner likely to go to nail the hairlh and (Inal berth in the National Hockey Lcague'a SluiUoy Cup playoffs.
A a A
Tlie teams go Into Iheir last meeting ot Ihe season lied for fourth Rla<-e with 57 points—Ihe Rangers with a 2»-:iMl reci>rd and the Red Wings 2241-13.
JUMP WITH JOY - Sweden’s Ulf Sterner (left) Jumps with Joy after scoring the first goal against the Canadians in last night’s World Ice Hockey championships at Colorado Springs.

ar raoiofix
Colo. ’Tlic dejected goalie at Ihe right is Canada’s Harold Hurley. Sweden has virtually . clinched Ihe title after defeating Catiada, 5 3, for their fourth straight win.
Fresh from in outsttndlng performwiice stote competition, bowlers of Elks Lodgi 810 stirt an InviSlop of the National B.P.O.E. tournament this weekend at Oreatltakes in Detroit.	,
pmitlae will easily have the largest entry in the meet although there are participants from several Ikrge cltl^ In 13 states. There are 66 teams and H6 In minor vmm from here. SOch places as Detroit, Chicago, Cincinnati, Toledo, Columbus, Buffalo, Fort Wayne and Flint don’t come near those totals.
There will be only two teams taking part this weekend—3rd of the event. The " others will all follow March 24-25 hoping to share In the 2,170 prises to be awarded totaling $33,088.
Pontiac’s only previous championships have been In doubles.
Paul George And Lou Koprince lurned Ihe trick In 1959 with ^
lonighi, DcIioIMihs five «ameH Jacobs and M. Ryerson won *^'*“ hIx years before at 1,‘280.
P. L, of P, of Ponllac still ranks 2nd after nine weekends of the Michigan Men’s baHle at Kalamazoo with 3,279.
Good scores keep ringing out of the Greater Detroit Bowling Association team tourney at Huron Bowl. Tom McKay of the GDBA
TVKSDAV’S akSCLT.S N«w«jr4wb m. ««w*u N 'c|«v«lsnd US, Chlosgo loi
Swede Skaters in Lead
U) play, Ni'w York four. The Wings still would hove a chuiice sliould they lose, Bui a loss almost certainly would mean the Rangers would miss the post-sea-compelltion for the fourth straight year.
(iKNlD HHAPK
Both teams aie in good physi-
.!ul,shape (or (he showdown, al-	-.	.
though (he Rangers’ player-coach | staff hit 702 topped by 256. E^e Doug Harvey, has a soio left Chlesa of Center Line liad 279-
COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo. (AP) — The crack Swedish Ice hockey learn has virtually clinched the 1962 World Amateur Championship and there’s nothing the United Slates and Canadian teams can ’do about stopping them.
The undefeated Swedes, the dark horses of the 8-team cham; pionship bracket, streaked into sole possession of first place Tues-
sald today,“We’ve still got to win the other three games and
I’m confident that we w....
Any chance the U S. Nationals and Canadians have left rest with weak British and West German teams and a fair Norweglen .squad which is in a three-way deadlock with the U S. and Cana-la for second place.
rrlst and winger Dean Pfcntlcc has a sore leg. Detroit stUI loptn’aUng with young iUink H sen as-goalie, with veteran Terry Snwchuk sidelined with a bundlls condition in his left shoulder.
In 13 previous meetings, Detroit six games, lost four and there have been three ties.
leading the team he sponsors into 2nd place in Class C. He left the 3 pin after eight straight
Quallfylnf win start May I
day night by defeating Canada [have a nationally televised match II was their fourth straight | scheduled Sunday, but It's likely triumph.	to be a battle for second place.
“That was the big one, ’ Artie| Sweden, which last won the Sli-omberg, the Swedish coach, world title in 1957, Is Idle today.
A sidelight to the ghme tonight is Gordie Howe’s bid for his .500th NHL goal. The brilliant Red Wing winger has 499, second only in league history to Maurice Rich-The United States and Canada ard. who retired with 544.
Hoyt Realty Wins Two in Waterford Playoffs
Hoyt Realty knocked two opponents out of the Waterford Class B playoffs last night.
Wendy Meyer hit 19 points as Hoyt ousted Don Ncholie, 67-62. Two games later- Hoyt was back at it again, this time bouncing Johnson Si Anderson 59-43 as Meyer pumped
Dick Hobson scored 22 points in loading Nesbitt’s to a 70-58 ’’B” playoff decision over O’Neil in the middle contest.
Walled Lake Hurler Signed by Indians
Thomas Wlllwerth, former Walled Lake High athlete, has signed a contract with the Cleveland Indians and will report to their training camp at Tucson, Arizona March 19. i Wlllwerth, a left handed pitcher, (graduated from ^Walled Lake ii l-f4l957 and ha .,'#5 served for fou years In the Air ' '' Force. He pitched WIIXWERTH for Air Force baseball teams and in 1961 he received the best pitcher award in the European theater. He returned to the U.S. in September,
Memphis Open Begins
tling lor 125,000. Early standout Dick Weber will be back after being sidelined two weeks with a hand injury-
Don Carter had taken over the money lead with $11,422.50. Early leader Weber has dropped to 3rd wMe Idle at $9,400.
Eliminations start Thursday morning nnd continue until tour semi finalists are decided. A battle for the $5,000 top prize will follow.
•82i
Motor Mart Safety 6ei;fer
Ifl -1» I. IbMcda n3-7W.-R 3-7IM
at West Side i In Bowl-A-llannd Hawaii tlngkia hMidloapw House ftnals, area
flown to Hawaii for the big duel. Milford Doubles at Fairgrounds and East Highland Rec^Slhgles Join local tourney ru8h l/ils whk-end. Another will be (he\trl-Cpun-ty team contest starting at Maple Lanes Simday.
Lou Kot>rincc expects to have Bw North Hill Lanes open around April 20. Construction Is goitig along well. Brown empire has Yorba Unda Lanes going up fast at 13 Mile and Woodward.
Latest report from American Bowling Congress on season high scores has, Falstaff of St. Louis heading five-man team series With 3,560,- Kenwood Pharmacy, 1st In five-man game at 1,276, Mensloy Ahderson of Norwalk, Calif., topping four-mart series at 2,800, C & L Plumbirtg, Paterson, N.J. No. 1 in four-man game on 962, Ollie Wessel-Cliick Coffman of St. Louis 1st in doubles series with 1,538, an Abilene, Texas pair with high game of S'TO and Elvin Mesger of St. Louis in front for individual series with 856.
A * A PIN EXTRAS
Monroe Moore,, that man agaiq, paced team No. 6 to 3,174 and 1st place in 300 Bowl Senior House League with 711 topped by 255. A. Fitter hit 222-635, R. Fair 223 and Don Dayne 245-251-704. Ih Pontiac Motor Inter-Office play there, secretary C. Walter rolled 256416, B. Medlow 225, A. Heim-bring 233 and W. Milalek 227 . . Bloomfield Hills Is another high school reported to have an outstanding keg setup.
The Gavles and Gormans combined for 2,264 in Sylvan Mixed with Joe Oavie high at 888 and Ruth Gorman’s 528 a good low. Betty Wallace toppled 7-9, Ida Shabas T-8-9, Leone Ixurens 6-7-10, Jean Sepere and Sne Cole 4-7-10 there. Methodist Dide Olson had 189 trlpUcalh . . . B. Hickson soared lM-616 In Elks Lnd iM noe. Gen Bmdiesr Is far ahead in average at 171. Father-Son tourney very successful at Airway Lanes, Recent top scores there were 257-605 by Waterford teacher George Kressbeck, 236413 by Young Greg Hill, a 216 by Vera Shutron and 214s for Helen Stockdale and Judy McCar-rick. Shutron and Stockdale are in Heart of the Hills League . . . Calvert Implement bowled at the ABC today . , . .Farmington Oas-sic at Nor-West has opening for one team next season , . . Mrs. Emma Hill of Detroit resigns July 31 after being president of Women’s State Bowling Association since orgartizing it in 1926.
Basketball Scores
J. Port Huron B4 <»t I. Pontirt-WorthOrn S2
Allegtn ursna Htn 43 (at Kalamuoo).
5S (at Pontlaot
Bedford 8t. Mary 41. Harper Wooda 3» laf. RosevUIe)

^Detroit Annun'clatlon «8 ( .......-
Prankfort 8^. ______
'* *t Petoakey)
Pojnte Si Paul 67. Detroit {
e City St. «ancli
Iwlg .51 (
: Perndalei ’

H^ard City S
Chrlatlan 57. Mattawan 86 ^?Man__57, Hart. 41_ <at jsV^Paa W. P»ni St Agnes 4«
Tuesday a College Baakelball XCM TOUBNEY mall state 78, Arlaona State Unlv. 73 .............«E,S?EY~”
Oregon Si_.........
NAtt 1-----
Orange. Calif., state M. Stetaon 79 Western Illinola 76. PVitt TO * Soiitheaatem Oka, 83, College of Idaho 64
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Timn v-nink"^
Time to Remove Shanties From Ice on Area Lakes
vafhn
Game Division Experts Worried About Increase
Decline to Estimate; Bartlett Urges Return to Antlerless Season
LANSING un — Unless some near miracle occurs, deer by the thousands will starve to death in Michigan’s north woods this month.
That is the dark verdict of state game Experts who recently surveyed the effects on the deer herd of one of the toughest, stormiest winters in years in most of the state.
Ilo H. Bartlett, deer specialist for the State Conservation Department, says reports of deer starvations already are filtering
here and are expected to liiok up monuatiiiii through the month.
"We anticipate heavy losses this year, especially among the young deer," he said. "They are virtually Inevitable. It will take some unusual warming trend the like of which has not occurred in the last 30 years to prevent It."
March is the time of dying for hungry deer. After a bad winter and weeks of being closely bunched in their yarding areas( deer have eaten all the accessible food. Fat reserves gradually diminish by the time the first breath of spring stirs the sap in the trees, the younger and weaker of the herd have no strength left for vival.
TIGHTLY YARDED
Deepk snows this year have kept most of the herd tightly yarded— "More so than they have been In years," said Bartlett, who took two-week tour through the Upper Peninsula last month to assay the situation.
In the light snow belt of the Upper Peninsula, running along
MANAGE TO SURVIVE While Mictiigan's deer herd is having its problem finding enough forage to carry many of its members through the winter, the state's elk are faring better. The elk (above) are much larger animals and can move about

better in deep snow. Not only can elk range farther fmm yarding areas than deer, these animals also can reach much higher for succulent twigs on tree branches.
Iron Mountain to Brimley, snow is the deepest in the 28 years the department has kept records, deeper even than 1S59 when winter took a heavy toll of the doer herd. Snow depths averaged V/t to 2 feet In the middle of the month, six Inches more than normal.
In the heavy snow belt, covering the rest of tiie peninsula, winter has bran severe, but not much more than usual. Snow depths averaged about three feet last month and went up to about 3.7 feet.
In most of the northern Lower Peninsula, wipter has been the toughest on record, Bartlett said. In the normal deep-snow area, stretching from Cadillac to Gaylord, depths are ab«tf average but elsewhere are considerably above normal.
The average is two to three feet.
"The weather has been bad over a greater area for a longer period than any year on record," Bartlett said.
wking back, state game men •et that the State Ctonservation imission decided- against a doe fa\m harvest in all but small Hiamaged areas last fall.
:t’s too bad we couldn’t have sn some the dew then, Be-X tfiey were doomed to die any-Bartlett saii “Even with-thls severe winter, the carry-capacity of the range isn’t igh to support the herd we’ve
irtiett and others firmly de-e to. estimate the probable vation death toll in the , deer i this spring. It’s too early to specific, they say.
-people wl^ go out looking them won’t see nearly as 8 they did In
0	starved," he said. “Both lerd and the range have de-d since then, but tt’s Bkely the~ proportionate toll -will ! high.”
•vation losses won’t be no-too mucb in the 1962 deer
1	although the spikehom itlon will be down.
we can get a fairly mild win-
gtt^real^^he^l^ wilLbouiiM back,”.Bartlett said. "But if t two too^ wintera in a s are bound to be 1^.”
COLD FUN — Crystal Lake near Buelah seldom fiWzes solid at aii points. Robert Heffner donned his hip boots and waded in the icy water until he found ice solid enough to hold his weight.
Obedience Glosses Set for Rochester School
% Woodward School in Rochester will be the scene of the latest Southern Mich i g a n C^dience Training Club class.
’There wUl be a demcHistration at 8 p.m, March 22 to kickoff the class. Registrations also will be taken at this time. Persons plan-attend are request^ to leave their dogs home stration night.
Additional information is available from John McNary (OL 1-0594) or James McKim (OR 4-1234).
Declines One Million
Commercial fishermen netted nearly 24 million pounds fish from Michi^’s Great Lakes waters last year, a drop 0t-d5<xit-one million pouti^ from 1960. '
Air Pollution Proposal Before Committee
Con-Con Looking at Conservation
by United Press International Most people are accustomed to thinking of conservation in terms of soil, forests and wildife.
W	W	A
A select committee of the Michigan Constitutional Convention has taken a much broader view. It the committee recommendation is accepted the state will become the first to give sweeping recognition to conservation in its proposed constitution-.
♦	★	★
’The emerging problems committee, headed by former state attorney general Frank G. Millard, R-Flint, has passed a proposal which declares that:
"The state holds a paramount interest in the air, waters, and natnnd resources of the state, in the interest of the health, safety, and welfare of the people. The legislature shall enact appropriate leglslatton to protect the air, water, and other natural resources of the state against pollution, Impaiifnent, or destme-tiom so that the Interest of the people may be preserved.”
If this is put in the constitution Midiigan win become the first state to officially recognize the problems of air pollution.
★ ★ ★
Although the matter is not new, information on the extent of air pollution is generaUy confined to technical groups dealing with the subject. From time to time the
information barrier is broken when tragedy is tied to pollution. SMOKE DEATHS In Donora, Pa., in 1948 there ere 20 deaths and nearly 6,000 persons were made ill when pollutions from factory smokestacks held close to the ground by unusual weather.
More common, however, are incidents such as the de-ath of cattle In Oregon, the poisoning of plants In Florida and “mystery" cases of white houses turning black or brown overnight in various parts of the nation.
Air pollution control expert Eugene A. Sloane, editor of a publication called "Air Engineering,’’ tpld the committee that Detroit and all of Southeastern Michigan n the edge of a great highway 'aerial garbage which stretches from New York City to Chicago.”
Solunar Tables
The schedule of Solunar FbriodS, as printed below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s SOLUNAR TABLES. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during^ these times.
. A.M.	P.M.
Friday..... 2:10	8:20	2:38	8:4(
Saturday ....2:58	8:05	3:20	0:30
. 3:M	0:80	4:05	10:10
. 4:20 10:30	4:48	10:00
,5:00 11:10	0:20	11:30
Shifting weather patterns can, and do, sweep this blighted air across nearly all of the southern third of the state from time to time.
★	* W
Even if you live in the most northern sections of the stale you are not free from polluted air. Sloane told the committee that in the remote regions of Alaska studies had been made which indicate that sulphur dioxide air pollution is almost world-wide.
Of f
, the c
r you 8
Cranbrook Publishes Book on Trout Flies
A, , new hook on "Majdlies of Michigan ’Trout Streams," ivritten by Justirf W. and Fannie A. Leonard and published by Cranbrook Institute of Science,' is now available.
This illustrated manual deals with a group of Insects that are both interesting in themselves and economically important In relation to trout stream productivity.
Justin Leonard is on the staff of the Mich^n Department of Conservation, while his wife, Fannie, is a member of the Department of Natural Science at Michigan State University.
' iTheir book is addressed to anglers ' and entomolc^sts' alike.
’The book has ISl pages, 25 color photographic illustrations, 82 figures in black and white and is available in doth binding at $7 and paper, binding at $6,
to the source of the more likely you are to be affected.
The proposed language would encourage the legislature to establish a state-wide air control law which, would be aimed at the sources in Mi c h i g a n. As an industrialized state these are many and widely scattered.
In many cases air and w a t e pollution in Michigan are closely related.
NoMoradil Drilling
state game areas in MIcI ^ were added last week to state parks and recreation areas under
and gtti drilUng.
By DON VOGEL
It may not Iw too noticeable yet, but lakes In I he m ea m e beginning to oiHOi up,
* ik A
I^akcN with rivers f 1 n w I n g Ihmugli tlieni, and llwre me plenty In Oakland County, are the first to simw open water. Many of these lakes did not freeze at tlie Inlets or oullcis of rivers.
Allliuiigh. there Is up to 2U Inches of lee on sdnie lakes, the is'eeni warm weather, wind and rnins have eomhiiied to start the huiieyeombliig prue<’ss,
As the icc softens, shanties left too long begin to sink. If not removed. the Khanties eventually slip through lo the Imttom. A few olwuys take the deep plunge March.
Stiff fines and costs face those who lose a shanty through the Ice. That’s one of the big reasons for requiring tlie owner’s name and Hddross on the side of the si rue ture.
Dark houses on (he bottom cause problems for fishermen snugging lines, tile rusty nulls are hazards for swimmers, and the frames can do a good jot) of bending n propeller or sliearing a pin on an outboard if in shallow water. AAA
Shanty owners are liable, according lo the law. If the building breaks through whether during the final thaw or earlier in the winter, i(M)l) UATtll
Fishermen are still gelling out )n the lakes.
Iz'e Jarrell of .148 Auburn took (our lai-ge, pike (ram a-Jake-iUrtir Holly last weekend. He caught a 10-pounder Saturday and iced three Sunday jthat totaled 24 pounds.
Also included in his catch was a limit of lai'ge bluegllls. Being a true angler, Jarrelt declined to disclose the name of the lake. LICENSE INCREASE
Conservation Department of dais will be waving their crying towels in earnest if the proposed fish license increases fall to clear the legislature.
never gel mil of eomiiilliee.
Fjlilui'c ,of tlig bill lo pass will mean smotlier soureo of department Income 1o.h|. This won't hinder tills year's nuHterity operation because the money couldn't be figured into the new budget.
I’liinning for the 1962-63 fiscal .V<'ur may result In moro cutbacks. Maytsi this time the depiirlment will b(! forced to lay off at the top Instead of at the tsMtom as happened this year.
ports from the House of Repre*
Trout Fishmg Movie Ready for Viewing
■'Twmt, Imkes, and 'rackle,” a color-sound moviy on trout fishing in Michigan, is avullahlc free for public use through the Conservation Department’s film loan service.
AAA
T l> e how-lo-do-il film takes viewei's on an 18-minule fishing trip, showing them trolling, spin casting, and other ways lo go after trout In lakes during the wann-weaiher seasons.
AAA
It should order the film two weeks In advance, giving the name of the organization and alternate dales for use when possible.
BIPARTSAN PIJIN
"We would hope that the legislature would set up a central pollution control agency with some! -stong,,jpower,,.to-.;en^ suit of this ianr-uage” said Wei-] don O. Yeager, R-Detroit, a w>m-j mittee member.
“This is surely not a partisan matter," said Tehodore S. Brown, D-Detroit, minority vice chairman of the committee.	I
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Auto Electric Retains Margin in Bow League
Auto Electric retained its five-game lead in the Waterford Township Recreation Department’s winter archery league by holding runnerup Drayton Drug to a 3-3 tie. Three nights of regular-season action remains.
AAA
Bernard Shaw of pace-setting Auto fired one of the season’s best men’s-freestyle scores (255) while nephew Ron Shaw shot a 232 for the best junior-freestyle mark. Bernard leads the season averages in his specialty with a 234 mark while Ron tops his class ^th a 199 average.
Other results: Lakeland Pharmacy 4, Waterford Fuel & Supply 2: Chiefs 5, Tomahawks 1: and Straight Arrows 5, Five Feathers
1. . ■„ . ..,.......,.......J
Mel Inglehart of Lakeland (season leader with 225 avg.) fired the top men’s-instlnctive score of 227, while Dan McNeil of Chiefs boasted the highest junior-instinctive mark of 148 to up his leading average to 128.
m
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THE PONTIAC PRKS8. WKDNKSDAY. MARCH U. 100S>
Vto Mhwrliit m top www<Bt tiiwi «t kumOr fmm tf< l*WWS..S||d,.,WW Vf
Hum In	Ms.
QnsHitloiis nst tunuMisd M Dslititt Borsmi ol Mulnts. u of
Mart Rally Gathers Momentum
NEW YORK (AP)--TlMt stock market fslly gsUienxI
Pftrolt Produce
rBCR
fe=
w: :-::::::
CakkaSliv jwWMkrt Variktjr
inbvod up, on s broad front week's tnoat acUve trading.
Key stocks made gains of fractions to a point or so. A notable exception was Du Pont which add^ ed more than 4, touching high (or 1961-62, ns it responded to investment
The Du Pont advance was a big iS (actor towards boosting the mar-
ket averages. ]t>irther suppenf to rs was given
by a String of lesser gains'by oth-r pivotal issues.
While Ihe news background was fairly good, the ability of the ma^ ket to move ahead above resistance levels in the averages was In Itself, a spur to further buying. The performance looked go^ to stock chartists and encouraged the public.
Steels, chemicals, nonferrous metals, aerospace issues, rubbers,
S3 Sff-E;:::.
Turata*. topptr. ku.......
Poultry and Eggs &.‘rs PS VK ISS;
BarroS Hock /l-»i SaekUns* II. DETBOIT «OOS_
DimiOtT. March M lAr» — Bis
Bond Market Starts Mixed
NFW YORK (fl - The bond kets were mixed at the start o( trading today. Prices have been sing for more than a month.
Over the counter dealers In U.S. government tiecurlHes quoted long Issues off 1/32 to 2/32 and intermediates mostly unchanged. Volume was at a minimum.
There were spotty advances among corporates traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Most were centered in the rail and utility sebtions. Industrials were no belter than irregular.
There were few changes amounting to a full point or more- An exception were New York, Lackawanna & Wester Railroad 4s, off IMi at 41«k.
n.j
W#ek Ato 77.3 Meath Afo 7(.S T*kr Aso 7S.7 INl-SS HIth 7».7 IM1-6I Ixiw 7.19 1990 Hlgli 1990 Lo«
I IbS. VUIc. Fgn. L.Vd.
lots SO S 97!9 oil 3
79.9	91.4	91.9	13.7 97.!
null orde^retall• and farm im-
IIMPROVKMRNT IN gOllS Improvement in (he Job picture wds noted by government officials on the basis of gains In manufacturing employment. Meanwhile, top level labor negotiations resumed In the steel Industry. The deadlock oveip Berlin was said to odd considerable flrmneu to the aerospace and other defense issues which have bdbn aoft recently in view of the Geneva disarmament corlference.
PMces were generally higher on the American Stock Exchange In moderate trading. Syntex resumed its advance, adding about 3. Gains of a point or more were made by Berkshire Frocks, Globe Union, Seeman Brothers, Restaurant Associates and Technical Materiel. Mead Johnson was off about 2 and Sherwin - Williams than a point. United Asbestos and Magellan Petroleum >re active fractional losers.
American Stock Exch.
Figure! oiler deelmol pointe are elthi
Meod John .11. MId-W Ab ... IS Mutk P Ring . It.S NJ Zinc	34 .
Pociflo Pet Lid 14.1 Poge Wer .	31.1
Sherw m ...101.3
Teohnico .. 19.1
4 in Area to Get 5ervjccy\wards
Ford Traitor Divition to Cit«) Employet for Roloi in Community
Four employes cit Ford Motor Co.’s Ford Tractor Division have been, selected to receive Ford community service awards for their outstanding contributions to community betterment during 1961.
To be honored with mounted silver scrolls bearing their names and an engraved commendation of Henry Ford II are Robert J. Allison, 831 Chapin, Birmingham; Bu^ dette W. Dzendzel, 207SO iSherman,
CobU Kleo Cong Mng . CreSe Pel Dynem Am Imp Chem . Imp Oil Imp Tb Ce Kttleer Indui
-Ihe NeMoflt Stock Exchange
economic puimtors had hoped. And ‘ ■	't laying out as
3 awards will bepresentiir L Jl. Hampsoii, Ford vice
Southfieldi VeriKm E. Nickel, 9969 Middlebelt, Birmingham;
Richard R. Rogers, 2302 Lloyd, Royal Oak.
The by
preMdent and aivwonai general manager, at a banquet Marnh 80 at the Ford oMoe, MOO B. Maple. T. A. Beaver, dlvtslonal industrial relattona manager, eerve hs toastmaater. The banquet will be attended by civic leaders and offlolals of South
Ecoliomy a Bit Shy ^ • of the High Hopes
By JAM DAWSON Al* BuMimnm News AualykI NEW YORK«-Consum«ri
much tor expansion as had been counted upon when the economic plans for 1062 were dwiwn.
But the Chided prtlea may re-mt these comiMaInts a lltllo. They may think they’re spending ulte a lot under " lances.
Many a consumer struggling rilh the month’s bills and his income tux forms may wonder how could figure spend more.
And business spending has been going up steadily since the second quarter of 1961. The government ltd continue
IMPRKltMIIVW CilAINI Considering the excess produfv ” tion capacity In sonM indiuitrles, ■ such gains are viewed by many as But in the last fliree months of 1901 the annual rate was f39.4 billion, and in the flrat (hiee months of 1962 it Is estimated at |36.1
through 1062,' and even pick up considerably in the lust halt ^ this year,
to odd Up, on the contrary. I steady growth.
’The trouble eeems to lie In the great expectations and high goals for the eoonomy set forth at the start of the year. Government of-floialf insist these goals ean sljll be niet, despite a rough winter^
mw YOBK (API-PoUmhii 1
CRIOAOO. March « <AP)-(OTDA>-Potetoee kiTivsIe 19; «o trsok MO; iotkl 0.8. ehtpment* 900; oId-»upplte«
nioderete; demend modvM* --------
tor rueeeta firm to eUghtty round reSe^ kbom eteedf “
fitnne*eouT "North’ bjkW Valley round rede 3.M-T"*-Iredhig Uiufllclent to <
CHICAGO BOma AND BOOS CHICAGO. March 19 (API — Chicago mercanUle aachanga - butter iteady:
ro?‘e"5;i
B C 5944: oara 90 B MV«;, 00 C OTVe.
Eggi about steady; wholeaale buying prices anebanged to loaier; TO par pant or batter Oi«da A whttaa 33; mixed
85J: 5T.M:
Livestock
DETEOrr LIVESTOCK_______
steady; fear aeattered .loads and 1^
Ugh good und low abolce ete"* itoiisrd“Jtoew'3L0^^	a^ri
weigSt nSuty up to 17.60;*m2M>ara euttera n.OO-lO.IW. ,	......
Hogs 3M Barrowf and flits steady to .350 lower: apwi .itoadr number 1 imd 3 100-3M lb. 10.70-17.00; 3 and I»3M ir^M.30-10.70 ; 3 and. 3 330-B |r^S!TO-10.35: number 3 SoKSjl lb. lO.a 10.90; number 1. s «>e * I*??**® " 30.00-10.39; 1, I “<> > JSJJ® .I®- “i
|S:K‘S;	^
„V.al.ri00,^.flteMlj.^
r.SSi!i6 ‘d^lnWact
tidi.) Hlfli Low Last Che. 21 49V4 45	4SV«4^ ^
19 26% ^ —'
"'ft* 7»(?"70yr'TOI
10	101k 191k
iJ SJi ...............,
14	091k	9914	9914-r	Wl
19	414	4Vs 4V*— Ik.ueu cu» i.iw
S	31	31	31 ..... Oen	Motors 3a
37	1114	1114	IIH-	Ml Oen	Free	1.30
11	4IVk	49	48V4	...|Oen	Pub	Sr .1
t	901k	3014	SOSf	WjOenPubUI 1.20
34	»	49*4	49V-	14	0 TelAEI .7*
I	9.IV4	99Vs	05Vs+	Vs	I Oen Tire 120
11	2014	2014	3014 ... 9**’«Cp ^
no	20	271k	20 +	14	Oerber Prod 1
24	90H	0914	TO9k	i
94 11414 m 11214-tolomeUe j.lO 47	21I4	«14	2114-14	Olen Aid .«
1	1914	19%	19%-r
27	4214	43%	4214+	%	goodyeer .Mb
102 4014 4014 40% e 14 OraceACo 1.60b 30	47H	47	4714+	%	grab Paige
0	711k 7114 7114+ Ikig™** On -*0b
41	9>/k OH »%-14 Off" 0 8111.40
37	3414	3314	34
a	37	3014	39V-	14	Ot No By 3
51	19H	a%	1914^	O'W *'*" »™
7	4914	49%	98Vs.... greyhound 1.10
1	37%	37%	3714+
13	90%	39%	00Vs+	%jOuM	M
AmTelATer 3.90	91 133% U1 133%+'% Oull Sta lit 1	4 «
Am	Tob 3	13	94%	»3%	>%+	%l	—.H---------
Am	Vlacoee 2	3	99%	99%	»%	r in
AMP Inc .35	1	31%	3114	31%+	%	M
J?	ii.	izs	a,-,:
16 49%
™.™ ™	.	17	70%	ru	(U7S
ArmourCo	1.40xd	17	03%	S3	53
-	4 Ck	1.60a	8	73V»	70%	72V.
OU 1.20	7	26%	26%	26%
£3130%'; I
... ■“*«

spots SO hlg^er.’l^cbolce and prime weighing 1,260 ika. im; choice and prime
bulla steady to weak; realera and feeding cattle steady; Itoee 1.200-l,50Vlb. stouter a^rs^31JI<>-3Ti«L J^’’ 19§0;* oth3?wS	^ rff®;
1.150-1.450 lb. steers ».75-30;75; choice 28.25-28.50; load lots mixed and choice 25.50-26.25; good steers ».»«-; tempo sou nsn load 1.025 Ib. cutter and uUllty cdn Pac 1 Holsteins 18.75; high choice imd mlx^ Carrier Cp choice and prime heifers 27.26-28^00; carter Pd bulk choice 25,50-27.00; good and low lease, JI choice 22.00-2950; moat utility and com-■ cater Trac Bierctal cows 16.50-17.50; canneni and celonese 1 cutters U.60-19.60; most ttttUty apd com- cetotex 1 merclal bulls U.bl^.OO; few good and!cenco j,, choice vealers 28 00-34,00; load mostly cen Hud O 1.04 medium 900 lb. mix^ grxde feeding -	- — - —
*^eep"^iw: moderately active, slaughter tombs and ewes steady; deck choice
‘w“Jt'Se.?e3 iT.Sf'HotS^.'Sa
»7.«l«d sMoO-K
iss.’iss'jsi.za”"'”'-
1 S3?^,a“ •
ti a ~ an:	Holland Fum
a uas ui4 Swj. to	' *®»
.2 S/T sir sUr'*' JtiHooker Ch 1 »1 Cp Am isehxfln l.3i MtLAP 1.60
51% 51% . ,
17% 17V- %t
36	36%+ % UmU Cem .80
130% 133 +3% Uland 811 1.60 „ .. . 39% 40%+ %lnlertoklr 1.6 9 79% TOVs 7D%+ % tot BusMch 3 n 1%	1%	1%	, lint Harr 2.40
'* 46% 49% 46%+ % tot Miner 1.60 a «to SSI4— %;lnt Nick 1.60 4+ Vs tot Pack 60g
*' *11 P--- ' “•
-It :
__________________
13	94I4 94% 94*4 I _ ■ .
124	38%	36Vi	38%-	%'Johns	Man
2	59%	59%	59‘^r-	Vs; Jon	I^an
6 19% 19- Wk+ H'Jon**^ f 16 15% 15% 15% ... Joy BUg 2 2	17%	17%	17%
14	I4Vt	14	14VS
Main speaker will be Dr. D. Varner, chancellor of Michigan State University Oakland, whose subject will be “A New Look at an Old Frontier."
★ a a ,
Activities used as the basts for Ford’sii^'ommunity service awards among its employes include public service In elected or appointed capacities, participation in political activities, work with civic groups direction for youth or recreation programs, service for fund rai.iing campaigns and unselfish effort in the interest of special projects by clubs, societies or churches.
50 43% 42%
74 37% 36%
1	4%	4%	...
53 55% 53	55%	+
4 118% 118% 118% 8^15% 15% 15%
2	27V« 27V+ 27V*.
1 42% 42% 42%-
Sou Ry 2.90	4	55%	55%	55% + „
Sperry	Rd 1.12f S4	32%	22%	22%— %
Spiegel	1,30	n	35%	35%	35%— %
Square O la	2	35%	35%	35%...
----- •	5	67V4	66%	67 + %
61	30%	29%	29%+ %
9	58%	58%	58%+ ■'
19	55%	55%	55%-
Id Brand 1
; 13V4 13% 13V4 ! .
ii 550% 530 ■ S50 '"-l2''istd olllnd*'l 25	56%	55%	55% +	% qm oil NJ 60e IM	54
li	»?«■	5?’'*+	%,itdOU Oh 2to	1	58%	59%	58%.,,
I Stand Pkg	19	23 %	22%	221^
Stan .War 120	3	32%	32%	32%—
^	51	J^ Sterl .Drug 1.80	14	88	8714	87% +
L	21	21	21 +	V4 sterene / P 1,50 19	36%	38V*	36V4 +
—J------	I Stud Pack	19 9% 9% 9%—
39 55 % 55	......... "	”	"
2 241k —
23 70	99*4 (
X 4r/e 47% 48%
* {> Kalaer Al .90	54 38%
I ? KayurRolh ,40a 108 24V4
^ ^ KMintocott l	AA m
Stocks of Local Interest
Ptgurto after deetmal pointi are dibtbe
Bid At

Aer^ttlp
'“co'T'pfd; 12.1 isj
Mrman Pood Btoret ............n.8 18.1
Oavldaon Broi. ..............
- -	- Moful-Bower Bearings
^BalI^^*.._Bearlng'...
rro Cp L rt-teed .6
15 76 74Vj 74V
I 32% 32',4 32% .. 1 45%, 45% 45*4 +
8	26 '	2514	25%
6	56>4	S9'4	56%
11	.16%	16V*	16'/»-
4	29%	29%	29%f	%
3	25%	25%	e%i'	%
54 58%........... -
rt A Co 1
Tenn Gas 1
ChlPneu T 1.20a
ChlRIAOPac 1.60	. — ___________ ..
Chrysler 1	54	58%	$7%	57%+	%
err Plnan 1.50	39	48 %	47%	48%+	%
Clttoe Sre 2.40	24	S6'4	59%	S9V*-	V*
■■ Bini 2	1	67%	9714	67V»+	'4
cola 2.40	29 *3% •!% 93%.......
Palm 1.20a U	»%	00%	SOV*-	%
• Rad	24	34%	33%	34 -	%
20	19%	1S%-	19%+	•'
7	42	41%	42 +
10	29%	»V*	29% ..
1	2814	28%	29*4 +
Goto FAIr CBS 1.90b Coluffl Gas 1.10 CM Piet ,75t ------ Cred 1.90
44%
2^1
IS 91% 91	91
1 Pw 2.80 26 82% 82%
high CA h Port C

I 371* 37%- %:
36 V*	3614 +	%	_ ,
231*	23% +	V*	g,®
P-‘	SI'*:	TO
I 42%I Vl'h*	PI,
. 45% 46V— S Thibkol |l% 31%T %
Trl Cow 17% 17% , %lTwent C I 15% 15‘a - i.'TXL Oil
,	22%	22%	j
I	6%	6%	Underwii
.	33‘‘	32,^3a	UnCarb
.	9 24% 24‘4 24',. ..
35	58%	58%	58'4-	%
I 11	45V,	45V*	45%+	V*
42	21%	21%	21% .
; 40 101	99	99	..
31	41%	41*/*	41%+	V*
4	18%	18%	18%+	'/a
24	30'4	30%	30V	■'
Treasury Position
WASHINGTON (API — The cash potion of the Treasury compared corresponding date -	- -—

Gold assets .
« 132*4 1
; Un OU Cal 2b	8	66%	65%	e
iUn Pac 1.20a.	25	-32%	32	J
Mr Un .50b 9	35	34*4	3
lire 2	13	47%	46V*	(
38 23

. 25% 25% ^ f V* L Lt 1.50	1	55	55	55	—	V*
1* 2.40	27	62%	«2	62	—	14
8U ,40e	1 6314 63% '63%+ %
—M—
Trk 1.80	19	43V* 43	43V*+ V*
m Fd 2.4Se 10 26% 26V* »%.....
---...to Cop 2.87f 19 72% 72V* 72%- %
Magnavox .50	103	46% 45>% 49 +1%
Marquardt	1	16'V	16V,	19%.
Martin M .25e	29	26%	261'
Unit MAM 1 US Borax .60 US Freight 11
28	26%	folk	26%...
4. 52%	52%.	52%:+	V*
1" 3	48%	40%	48% +	%
IS	47	48'4	49^	V*
19	93%	93%	93%+	%
1 Air 1 xd"
Merck	]
Merr ChAS	......
MOM 2	14	49lJ	49*4	49*
Middle S nt 1.09	29	36%	36%	36'
Miner A Cb .90	6	23%	23%	23'
Hpte Hon 3 M 133	131% 133
Mton MAM .80	ill	70_	6S%	70
Mohasc+ilnd 40a	4	10%	10%	Kf____
Cb lb	37	48%	48%	-«%....
................ 36%+ V,
Unlv Match Unlv OU Pd .( Upjohn
_ 2_ .16% 361^ ;
_ .... .............. Motec Ind
2	66% 86% 66%—V* I Motorola 1
62f	25	41	40V*	40*4-^ V.
.60b	29	59%	59%	56%-
13 21% 28% 20%-
3	U 12% 13
.	59	12%	12%	12V*-
11 16% 16*/* 16%
38	ti'^loan RIV	M	.90	1	14%	14%	M%-%
a'atSffcoi	." "	....57.9	80.9 itoyco	4	17%	17%	17%,..=
ulMltoM Tubi CO. ...24.2 38 Jgjcca See IJOxd 25 «V* g% «%-%
•	WlDMiM	...........2tA	84.SjDeere	2	■	3	5$V4	Si^/4	55 ...
to . i 31	M.2 Del A	Hud .30*	1	15%	16%
PIP. L. 29.1 TOl5 r ^
,7.TTO.f 10“ f
6	64'% 64	64%+	y*
27 2^ 24% 28% + V.
7% . 7%+ •' 15 52% 52% 52%..
7	92% 91V. 92% +
21 42% 42	42% +
i 4 26-	25% 26 +•
TO 18% 18	18% + %
4 39% 39%
Brdiito«4SSS!‘™-
t.S4 9.24 Dpese bd	—
12.fo 13.20 du Pont 1.309' « 33 ItIo 19.51 DwI U 1.34	5	„
»S'W
Ofdr 1.10 S 53% 53%
xssigf*
s«M*th ......... »M xa.TO	2 T*
.jton Xteetronlci .S.Ti 5.49 S*^ J>»	•	J..
» «% 59% S9%+1
Uil .
) to' 1.60	9 ^ 51% 52%+ 11^
>1	9^33%-4ff=TOrf^
8 28% 28% 28V*... *6	M*4^|^'|
6	44VI 44 M 7* a 9 96% 95% 95%— '
7	3'/*	3'/,	3'/k- I
14 13	22%' 22%...:
47 40	39% 39%...
—9.-59%.-59%-59%..,
2 41% 41% 41»k+
122 74 % 73% 73%+
4 12	11*4 Il%— %
13 24% 24% 24%+ >/« 28 61'4 .59"/a 6!	“
4^,f0‘/a 50'/* 50“
1 »% 23% M'
7 41*4 41	41',,	„
12 39V, 38'/, 39%+IV* .4^^65% 64% 65%+ %
27 34% 34'/. 34‘4+ , 1 2S>% 25% 25'%+ '4 14 39% 39% 39%- '/, 0 IS 30	20%	30 — %
"I 38% 381, 3SV ^
Wilson A Co 1.60 10 ! Woolworth 2.50	29 lav, sz
*"	^55% 55
46% 46% 4$Ve- %
_________
Owens ai .or 2.50 10 89% 89%	*'
Oxford Pxp 19 41V* 40%
—P--
KSigS .20e	”	______ .
Pan A W Air .9SJ4 23% 2^ 23%-
SSfuTV loi	£2^^
Peabody Cpal .30 3 «%-P«nney.JC+-iae8-lS 47
«»»	79 71V, ,99% 71 + IV*
&afes of dlftdends In the foregoing 'e annual disbursements based on
exfhi- diTid«ndfl *re not tncludM!^^^-♦ ip-Also extr4 or extras. -b^Arniual tat«
on . etraiTldend or ex+dlstribution 5-j>aid^ toft year. b-Oeelared oi after stock dividend or split up.
an fecuro
Grain Futures Action Is Slow and Light
QilCAGO W» - Activity in grain futures was slow and light with piices little changed today in early transactions on the board of trade.
Brokers said new market factors apparently were absent and that little Or none of the expected export business had developed overnight. All prices during the first several minutes were within small or minimum fractions of previous closes.
Notices of intCTtion to deliver continued light and appeared to have no immediate effect on speculative operations. One dealer said the corn offers again had been accepted for delivery by a processor.
Grain Prices
Collision Impact Point Worst at Front of Car
CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, March 14 (AP) — G grain:
July ., Sept. .
2.03% 1 2.05% 1
ss?*
I2,7<i,ii;
;. ..	02,508,870.020.85
il	year	76,317,737,253.06
IX)	208,072,886,373.28
......	16,720.021,005.1*
March 9, 1961
........ ................ 9 4,572.102,121.07
Deposits fiscal year
July 1	............ 80,027,114,217.
Withdrawals fiseal year 67,388,301.072. Total debt .... (X) 200,836,122,075...
"old assets ............... 17,372,080,848.25
(X) ItKiudes 9436,030,047.15 debt not ibject to statutory limit.
Suggests Detroit Set Up C^mnerce Department
DETROIT (UPI) — A department of commerce for the city of Detroit was recommended Tues-to Mayor Jerome P. Cava-nagh.
TTie recommendation was nade by Albert K. Jacoby who heads theiretired controller of the Murray city’s industrial and commercial Corp. of America, serves as finan-deyelopment committee.	I dal consultant to the new firm.
-3W JONES I P.M. averages 30 Inds 720.50 up 4.01
-----11s 146.36 off 0.28
____11. 131.04 up 0.55
05 Stocks 245.16 Up 0.02
News in Brief
A phonograph valued at JUO was taken by thieves who broke into his home between 5:45 a.m. arid 3 p.m. yesterdayj Jack Davis of 306 Ferry St. told Pontiac police yesterday evening.
Edlspn Reports Gains in Productionr^ates _
tion, sales, net income and 'dividend^..
Total operating rey« an all-time high of $285,163,000, company officials said.
“It Pktt O 2.21
43 56% 58% 59%
15 SO*/. 59% 5914 ,	,
9 32% SJV* 32% + -V*|n^,
They Whine for Wine
DETROIT (AP) — Chances of severe head and chest injuries In auto collisions are greatest when cars hit at points ahead of the fropt door, a team of researchers told a national meeting of the Society of Automotive Engineers.
Collisions ^t the cento dbOT poSt'eati Ml slightly T^ss dangerous and collisions in the rear or on the rear side are the least serious of the three. These arid' other conclusions were contained in a report on the latest series of collision studies by D. M. Severy, J. H. Mathewson and A. W. Siegel of UO*A.
Using adult, child and baby-slied dummies, (he VCLA team Btagfxi a series of It fully ■Instrumented Interseellon - type eolllsions. They sought to (Ind out what hapiiened to (he cars, and to the passengers.
Today’s report was one of at least eight planned this year on re.sulte of the studies which were conducted with I960 model cars. Collisions were staged at 10, 20, 30 and 40-mile per hour impact speeds.
Some of the observations:
★ ♦	★
■ Occupants are injured when they are thrown a^ut Insdie the car, or are ejected through open doors. Immediately following a crash the occupants in the striking car are thrown forward and shift their positions rather violently	toward	the	direction
from which the struck car had approached.
★ ★	★
Motorists in the	struck	car also
are thrown forward and toward the striking car. Then the inside of their own car hits them.
Area Residents Among Founders of New Firm
Three area residents are among the founders of Omni Spectra, Inc., newly established electronics firm in Detroit.
The first president of the company, which specializes in design and manufacture of microwave components for radar, missiles and space exploration equipments is John H. Bryant, 423 Berwyn Road, Birmingham.
point of Impact is In the great; est danger. He may fee physically hit by the other car, then pinned by what the team called
the “vise-like forees” of the other pasaenger In the aeat
‘‘His chances of survival at speeds of 30 mph and above aix> questionable," they reported,
The team said the use of safety belts reduces the chances dl
Critical head blows may be sustained at impact speeds as low as 20 mph, the team reported.
Ifeli lUl a record |37 bUUon in 1957, In the recesalon year of 1956 It slid to $30.5 btllUm, climbed to 195,7 felllibn In 1960, and ulufoped Bi^rt lait year to 9M.4 billion.
BRYANT
CHEAL
Wee president and director of engineering is James CTieal, 7857 Biscayne Road, White Lake Township. Director of manufacturing is Rodney E. Christian, 2780 Middle-bury Lane, Bloomfield 'township.
Bryan and CTieal formerly Iheld executive po-isitions with Bendix Corp. Research Laboratories in Southfield. Christian pre-jvlously was gen-'eral manager of Bond Internalion-|al of Detroit.
James H: Barrett. 3664 Middle-
these fixures would be reassuring except (hat in each in-slance Ihe government had previously predicted spending would be higher.
A A a
The latest prediction, based on a suryey by the Department of Commerce and the Hecuritles and Exchange Commission, says that the annual rate will rise to $38 billion In tbs second half of this year, to give 1962 os a whole a record $3L2 billion,
.Some. industrial economists doulit (his goal caii be reached Unless consumer si>eiidlng takes up the slack in excess production capuclly.
(XINSUMKK IJfiVKL Consumer spending also contin-es at a high level, well ahead at . this time last year. The trouble 1s that cxinsumers aren’t spending at the record rate they set in November and December.
And they will have tq Spend even more than (hat from now on If the administration’s goal of $570-billion total volume of national production is reached.
Totql consumer Incomes are up and so ore their holdings of li(|uid assets, preAddtogMfea'-AsfearawHbto-for Inci'ensed total outlays.
★	★	'9r
Many consumers may think they re spending os much as they possibly can, or as they safely can. But buslnes.smen think others are holding back. And that’s what is worrying industrial economists as they wait for spring to settle the question: Wilt the consumer spend more, and take on more instal-menl debt, when good weather arrives?
WAIT AND SEE And if the consumer does, will the businessman decide to go ahead with orders (or new machinery or another branch plant?
Washington continues to think that both the consumer and bu.si-nessman will. And Wall Street continues to wait and sec.
Steel Negotiators Start New Talks
PITTSBURGH (ffi—Steel’ contract talks — under renewed pressure from President Kennedy—resumed today after an 11-day layoff.
David J. McDonald, president of the United Steelworkers, and R. Conrad Cooper, representing the basic steel Industry, again headed the negoUatiirs.
McDonald arrived about 7 minutes past the scheduled starting time of 11 a. m. EST along with I. W. Abel, secretary-treasurer, and Howard R. Hague, vice president, and counsel for' the USW.
Paper-Making Facility Planned in Ohio City
WAUSEON, Ohio Ml - Globe-Wernicke Industries, Inc., have announced plans to produce paper at a new facility here.
The new paper-making facility, which will require approxiately 100 employes, will be installed ’In a building constructed twp years ago by Ohio Industrial Park, Inc., said Chester Devenow, Globe-Wernicke president.
Eye Off-Rail County Plant Sites
DETROIT (UPI) —.The annual shareholder’s report issued by the Detroit Edison Co., showed gains	t ★	★
exp»d«,».
By DICK HANSON Changing trends in transportation can bring nev^g^ustry, with increasing job oppforturiitfos, Oakland Coimto Industry's requirement to locate plants along rail lines will lessen more super highways are built and methods of interchanging
from highways to railroads are perfected.
These are projections used by the Metropolitan Planning Commission as a basis for its 10-year pntoam lor the develojonent of off-rail industrial sites In'-' Oakland, Wayne and Macomb counties.
FOR INDUSTRY It calls for the setting aside of ,680 acres (rf land-«ctoo tWr<fo of it in Oakland County—for indas+ trial exp Already many .light industries rely heavily-on trucks to transport goods to market, aecor^g to George Skrubb, Oakland ..County Planning Commission lUrertoy.
tions, they I
decentralize
wt—Wxntate.

|(toT dellv'(
, fjLin binkruptcy .. _____________________ „
bate roorgutied umtof tbe Banknipter Aett or ■ecuilUes auianed by iueta.cjiim-
NEW YORK (UPI) - Wine sumption in the United Statds has increased 51 pef^cent since Wenid ’jWar il, the Wine Institute repbfts.
agree. A>^ fon’t needed when the factory is located .only a hop and skip from marke| via fastTflowing roads with a*minimum of traffic interruptions.
* ■ ★.
Continued' expansion of freeway systems aWay from the city will' oipen nevii countiyside ^ the lo-
cation of industiy, providing other facilities such as water, power and adequate sewage are available.
Rea^qi; Mustries will be able to follow the trenil ais traetor-hauled trailers become suited for transferring onto railroad tracks, Skrubb said.
tires and'^railroad wheels which could be alternately raised and lowered, or perfecttni|( u method of easily shniitiiig toailera from one type ot imdeisiarriage onto another, he added.
An existing labor force was a third factor favoring new industry locating herg,. thq. commission program stated.
the metropolitan area labor force is expected to reach 1,837,009 to a 4-,^,900, population, accordlng^lo'lhe camn9islbri"STe-port. At present, it estimated non-farm employnfoKt at 1,435,009 with approximately 10 per cent of the labor force unemployed.
the tries,
along with the steel iiidastiy, as foiming a noclens W farther development to 'the area. -Also, rubber sfiid .glass ri»w a potential for dei^elopment, according to the commissibnr since' the quantity' now produced here only a minor part of that which goes into the finished automobile. In determining locational factors
for new off-rail industrial sites, two aspects were considered, the commission reported: Suitability and availability of land.
Some of the factors pert^ning to suitabiftty of sites are adequate drainage, ability of soil to support buildings, a water supply, electrical and gas power, good sewage removal, environment and major highways.
In judging the ava lability of land, the type of present devel5p-ijient, proximity to existmg industries, zoning and planning of local government are taken into account.
IN SOUTH OAKLAND
Deemed meeting the criteria at the present time to South Oakland County are the north side of Eight Mile Road from Hazel Park Farmington Township; along Nine and 19-Mile roads In Hazel Paritf adjacent to Stephenson ' Highway, 12-Mile and 14-Mile Madison Heights; a large industrial district In Oak Park; along Maple and Rochester roads in 'Troy; ahd idopg Telegraph
Proposed off'rail industrial fireas elsewhere in the county are 209 acres North <d* Rochester ,on Rochester Road; 249 acres at the intersection of the Omysler freet way and on U;S; 54 east of Opdyke Road in. Blomnfieid T(^-ship an(J 49 acres near Oaritstt^ at the Guysler freeway and Or-N tonvilliB Ro^ intersection;' \
h,


THK PONTIAC- IMiKHS. WKOJiJKSUAY, IVIAHCH U. m\2
F0inT»0N3^ II
Pontiac, Nearby Ar^ Deaths
amnaK w. spraqub
ortto W. f
Sen^ ftMT Goortte W. ^Sprague of 04 Pwlicht St. will b« Mt 2;30 p m. Thurnday at Ft»*t Matlwdlat atur«li with burial Moving lu Parry Mount Parle, Onmptiry, Hla Ixxly la at tl» Puraley Funeral Home,
*r )Mr. Sprague, Tl. at Pontlae General Hoaplial after a brief illneu.
rother.
Serel.se will be at P30 pan. Frf Say^ at the D.mel*on4ohni FU« jneral Home, with Iwrial In Ottawa Park Cemetery.
MRU. OLARKNCK H. STARK Mra. Clarence S. Burnette B.) Stalk;, 55, of 16 Chandler Ave. died unexiwcledly of a heart ullnumt at her realdeni’e yeaterday.
Mre. Stark Icavee her hueband; her mother Mm. Guy R. Wlaher of Moline, 111., a son Robert C. Pontiac, a daughter Alberta J, at
Townililp______________
ty, Mlohlian:
Noticn !■ hereby slven, election -	■-	^ ■"
liven, tliet * epeol*
........... In Welerlord Town.
ol DIetrlet, County of O "
______ of MIohiKMi, on Tueedi
aoth dny of March, IdtH. tS voti the following nropoeltlon:
alien the nmlUtlon on the t-------------
emount of texei which nrny be e>ce>»ed each yeer egelnet property In Weterlord Townehlp Sohopi Dletrlot. County ol Oek-lend, atete of MIohlgen,. for nil pur-poeee except Mxea for the peyment of Intereit and pr.nolpal on obllxatlonn Incurred prior to Dwember I, ltS3, be lif created ai provided In aeotlon 31 of Article of ^the ConHItut^^^^ ?Irt*fror ?»M ^ loSt’boih Inclutive. l?y'Ylvo mint on each dollar ($5.0(1 per $1,000 of the ateetted valuation gi ttate equal Ued, for the nurpote of defraylnc a part _•	-----.1----------(ohool
iBca. lur wiR iiuiimne ui mb
,o1 iht operating expenses
"'•nX'
Drayton fialnt.
Precinct
School, loan Precli Bchool,
MIchlga..
Precinct No. 0: Pontiac Lake Bchool, 2515 Winiamt Lake Road. Pontiac. Mlch-
ateffent
er d Village Waterford,
The following ttatement hat beei celved from the County Treasurer
prevloutly voted Increatei In the --------
r.	•■mitatton affecting, taxable
___D COUN..........
PONTlAC, MICHIGAN Charlet A. Bparkt	Ll^d M. Blbley
^COuJA TREASDRER'B BTATEMlSf/ AB RBQUIRED BY A<?T 203 OP THE PUBLIC ACTS OP 1947 I, Charlet A. Bparkt, County Treaturer of the County of Oakland, State of Michigan. do hereby certify that according (0 the records In my office, at of Pc*-ruarv 3. 1062. the total ol all voted I creases In the tax rate limitation abc the 15 mills established by Section 31 .. Article X of the Michigan Constitution, affecting (amble property In the School District
I Township School county, is as follows:
Local	Voted Years Increase
Unit	Increases Effective
Waterford
ishlp jl Dlslrlc
1059 to 1963 Incl.
TREASURER'S OPPICE CHARLES A. SPARKS Treasurer
Date: February 2. 1902
long lllnegg. Sha inamlHn* of Om H52.
Surviving are a brailuN’,^ IJoyd Young of Drytlon, and
MKM. WIM4AM BBNC» ALLlkrON * Survira tor Mra, William (aarlwm C.) Bench, 87. of 178 llolmra Road will be at 1 p.m. Thursday at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Almont, Burial win be In the Grand Lawn Cemetery, p.drolt.
's. Bench who dlixl Monday Is survived by four daughters,'Mrs. Myrtle Schrader of Allenton, Mrs. I.eah McCool and Mrs, Dorothy GIndatone, both of Rochester, ai^ Mrs. Thelma-Bllemaster of Utica.
Six grandciilldren and nine greatgrandchildren also survive. ^
MRi, ANUHKW MAlAtW NOVI TOWNSHIP Service tor rto. Andrew (Helen M.) Sahn of 87178 Novi Road, will tw 3 p.m. tomorrow at Ttiajfer JFuneral Farmington, Burial will follow si Oim'ncf'vHle Cemetery, Livonia.
Mrf, Salow died Mondmr at Pontiac OstfH>|Ntthle Hoaplial afield
IS a member of ihe First Baptist Church, Novi.
Surviving are a griindsoti, H. Bruce Salow of Deti^t. erar nieces and
Step Up Negotiations to Avert LA Strike
LOS ANGELES tUPD'e-A slepiied u|) schedule of eollecllve bargaining sesalons were scheduled todfiy ns MelTOpolllmi Transit Aiithorlly (MTA) and Brotherhood of Riillrond Trainmen (HRT) refi-resentnllves work(>d to avert major transport At Ion walkout set for 12;01 n.m. Thursday.
Negotiators talked lute into the night last night trying to reach a settlement In the dispute that could ve some 750,000 commuters without transportation.
8AME8 W. liTlPOR ORION TOWNSHIP - Service tor'Jafnes W. Fitch, 41, of 561 Jos-lyn Road, will be 2 p.m. Friday at Allen's Funeral Home, I.4ike Orion. Burinl will follow ut Eastlawn Cemetery.
Mr. FMeh died yesterday at SU Joseph Merey Hospital, Pontine after a, brief illness.
A Marine Corps veteran of World War II and a memiKjr of the Chnrl-ton-Polan American Legion Post,
Lake Orion, Mr. Fitch was employed at Pontiac Motor Division. He was a member of St.
Mary's ('hurch.
Surviving are his wife, I.oul8e; his mother, Minnie, of Orchard Lake- two children, Michael J. and L., at home; and a sister,
"Notlci !• furthvf giv«n, tbit the poll; Mrs, J, M. Baker of Orchard Lake.
jJ,	rin 1 roJS-thJ“e1?H'k
Tim. .ns ih.t th. vntinff duclod by Iho Charlton-Polun Post.
VERN HAKMKS WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Vern Harmes. 70. of 2336 Pine Lake Road, died yesterday in Kcego Harbor,
Mr. Harmes was retired from General Motors Truck and Coach Division.
Surviving are four brothers,
Charles of Pontiac, James of Lynd,
Minn., Glen of Out I.ook, Mont., and William of Albany, Oregon.
His body Is at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor.
GEORGE R. HOBSON A1..MONT — Service for George
By LLOYD M. SIBLEY
Deted: February 2, 1902.
March 14, 1262
STATE OP MICHIGAN IN bate Court for the County i Juvenile Division.
In the matter of the petition concern-
. Ing Johnnie and Rowena Lynn -------------
minors. Cause No. 10610.
To Della Rocedia Wagnei said minor children.
Petition havi^ been filed In this Court ----------------------J whereabouts of
. mother
alleging that the present whereabouts the mother of said minor children i
__________________a children are depei
ent upon the public for support and tl said children should be placed under the Jurisdiction of this Court. /
In the name of the people c. of Michigan, you are hereby notified — the hearing on said petition will be held
le State
1 County Service Center,
ye’d by publlcaUon^of a c< ewspapel: prln
a In 8 - -----
e Ho
DONALD B. ADAMS Judge of Probat DELPHA A. BOOQINE
March 14, 1962
ELIZABETH LAKE
O'l
ANDERSON
WESTERN
SUB0.
NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEAEtNO . _ Notice Js hereby^glve"
I Commission chamber. City Hall, Parke Street; for the purpose of amendtng the Zoning Map of Ordinance No. 044 known as the Building Zone Ordinance to rexone to Personal Service -• J following described property n t. aa in.in.tv. Andete:
to <0
By” order *of”ihe .City Commission., Dated Mareh 7. 1“-________________
'clerk
March 14, 196
STATE OP 54ICHIOAN IN THE PRO-bate Court Vor.the County of Oakland. Juvenile Dlvlaion.
--^^W-^rtaeU Rrajewskl, 'mother of-said
........r-.-------.-------
m9jnillionJ962«-hH6get7^ —of the fltato^d that said cMd ^moffd was trimmed to |82 million by
.iiiHnn will be hald
it fliSland County	Center
-’murt House Tknnax," 13C0B West Blvd., In the Oty	In «W
on the 22nd Wty ol March. A.D. .IW, a$
**’l**^Jng impractical makt petsOTal
be"«f?^by publlcato^^^ one week previous to said hearuw In .The Pontiac »«»». • nf»srt|Pef Pr*“ted and circulated m aald County.
WHness, I.UC Y-	HUJU vucu oicv	a new LuiH.-ein
of'pStiacYn a®Md »unty. iwa uth day of mental health programs' givii«
.
Y (A ttuo copy)
.....
Mweb 1V1202
R. -HDbson, 25. of 624 W. St. Qair St. will be at 1:30 p.m. Friday al the Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Ihe Ferguson Cemetery.
Mr. Hobson was injured fatally in an automobile accident on Dry-den Road early Tuesday morning.
Survivors include his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Hobson of Almont:	two sisters, Mrs. Doris
Jackson and Joytee Hobson, and a brother, Albert, all' df Almont; and his grandmother, Mrs. Lodus-ka Sutherland.
EDMOND LOCKWOOD HIGHlANDJOWNSmP - £ ice for Edmcxid Ldekwood, 76, a former resident of Highland Township, will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will follow at Oak-grove Cemetery, Milford.
Lockwoijd died yesterday after a long illness.
Surviving are three nieces., and nephews.
MRS. WILLUM McNALLY IMLAY CITY - Service for Mrs. William (Janet R.) McNally. 79, of 135 W. Fifth St. will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will follow at Imlay Township Cemetery.
Mrs. McNally died Monday at Community Hospital, Almont, after
State conciliator Gaiy Ellings-worth was to meet with BRT representatives this morning. Coun-
Predicts Nation Will Go Broke on Nov. 18, iS70
PHILADELPHIA (AP)-An economics professor predicted today Ihe United Slates will go broke on Nov. 18, 1970 exactly al 10:30 n.m.
Dr. Arthur R. Upgren, director of the Bureau of Economic Studies at MacAlester College, St. Paul, Minn., told a meeting of iawrance men. bankers and educators he selected th,e day and time of America's financial collapse this way;
"In 1929, our financial structure was only 23 per cent liquid just before the great bust of that year . . . The growth of our whole money system in the next eight years will be such that financial liquidity on Nov. 18, 1970 ' again be reduced to 23 per cent.
"The hour of 10i30 a.m. i.s selected because that is the time of day when all checks are pre-sente4 by banks to each other for payment and the bank clearings take place."
Sylvan Lake Cify Council to Discuss '62-63 Budget
The tentative 1962-63 . budget proposed by City Manager Le-Roy Trafton is on the agenda for tonight's 8 o'clock meeting of the Sylvan Lake City Council at City HaU, 1820 Inverness St.
However, Trafton this morning said discussion of financing the Woodland-Lakeland storm drain and future use of the Fresh ttir Camp was scheduled ahead of the budget on the agenda.
Senate Unit Hears Wagg on Mental Health Plans
The State .Senate is trying to decide what to do with an alternative to the mental health plan supported by Oakland County's Sen. Farrell E. Roberts.
The alternative plan, backed by Gov. Swainson and State Mental Health Director Charles F. Wagg, gives the Mental Health Department jurisdiction over community
and mentally
Roberts favors * lo^ '' rather than state control. He said last Januaiy when )ie outliaed his ]^n that he expected opposition from the State Heatth Depart-
share the cost, with richer counties paying a bigger share than poor ones. Jurisdiction would stay ■ the MentaL Health Department.
At a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing yesterday, the alternative plan got its first legisla-tivet est.
WAGG TES'HFIES	___
Wag& told the. committee that the proposal is part of his proposed
Itus 'year’s spending aUowance for^mental health is $76 million. Waftg called for merger of ex-
health ellnica in adinini|rti«tlon
The ^proposal is "an important and vital step” In a new roncept
local governinents greater tespm-ribility. VTagg said-
y cMra a
become the vital heart of mental health in the future,’’ he said. “The state hospital, as we know it. Will cease to exist."
“If we, do this, hot only do we need state funds, but lej^ative authority,” he added, “We believe heartily 'toe state shoidd 'move in this direction and broaden these types of services.”
‘NO TIME TO QUir
'If this would be turned .over to local governmoits and it failed the results of failing would he felt by state hospitals," he said. “I do not feel this is the time for the state to abdicate this field.”
Sen. Stanley G. Tlwyner, R-Ana
cal-control bill wito SmL erts, said local-interest | would give commniilty
tighter administration. Under
Sen. Elmer R. Porter, R-Ktos^ field, committee chairman, said afterward that local governments are in such bad financial shape that neither plan stands a chance of getting through this year.
Wagg told the committee Biat the Mental Health Departi^iff’s appropriatimi must be Increaaed by $2. miUkHi 'merely to mainb^oj i levels of service.
pr^tl
Asks Dismissal of HoHa Case on JFK Remark
AP
WKIAM TAIJtS-RolMTt Welch, founder of the John Birch S(h:1-ety, disputes re|M)iis of a large loss of memiHTshIp in the s(m:I ely. In Chicago, lie said "Ihe faint of heart" have Ix'en w^Tded
Miss Waterford Contestants Slow in Signing Up
The 'Walerfoi'd TowriKlilp Junioi-('Immher of Commerce urgently needs more contestants for the lille of Miss Waterford o| 1962.
Jack McCaffrey, chairman of the dueen contest held in conjunction with the annual Home and .Sports Show March 23-25, said the n sponse for contestants has bee disappointing so far.
the ennteNi seemed Iremendous a lew weeks ago and we thought we wmdd have more gtiia toan the 14 last yeaii’* Mcy Caffrey said.
"But somehow, the eligible giils re just not signing up. Wc have only a few right now, but we want several more girls and we would like Jo have them right away."
Girls living in Waterford Township between the ages ol 18 and 28, single and high school graduates, are eligible.
The winner will be named the final day of the' show and will lie eligible this summer to participate in the Miss Michigan pageant.
Highway Dept. Receives Assist
Hamilton, head of the Agency for International Development (AID), also said that several countries which have been getting U.8. grants, or gUts, will now receive only loans.
Hamilton was the leadofl witless as the House Foreign Affairs Committee began hearings on President Kennedy's foreign iisslstance program.
CUTS E’XPECTED
In a special message Tuesday, Kennedy asked for $4,878,500,000 for the fiscal year starting July 1, about |1 billion Jnore than Congress voted last year. And Congress is expected t.o do some trimming this year.
U. S. Takes Legal Steps to Gain Possession of Land Needed for Fill
GRAND RAPID.S (UPI) - The federal government, for the ond time in the six-year history of the interstate highway program, has taken legal steps to help Michigan keep its road-building timetable oh schedule. .
U.S. Atty. George E. Hill announced today he has obtained an order from U.S. District Judge W. Wallace Kent giving the government, and therefore the Michigan Highway Depart-
40-acre parcel of land In Marquette County In the Upper
The highway department had been atteriipting to. buy the property for some time to use as fill along the 1-75 right-of-way.
The land is owned by Seventy-Five Qub, Inc., of Grand Rapids, a development and recreation company which owns some 20,000 acres of land in Upper Peninsula counties Mackinaw and ChippeWa.
The State Highway Department said today it had offered to pay $2,250 for the property, but that the owners of the corporation seeking to sell the land by the cubic yard as fill* rather than as a whole parcel.
Cubic yard Side would prob* ably drive the price up to more than $15,060, the d^rtiuMit said.
Highway officials ch(>se to g( through the federal government to gain possession of the land be-of Its need to have the fill available by March 23, when it is estimated its present smirce will be exhausted.
The highway department said bringing fill dirt, from the next ^oiegt"~avallable site would increase construction costs bn the 1-75 project by $32,000 a week.
Flight Recorder Data to Be Itidden for Week
WASHINGTON (UPD-The GvU Aeronautics Board has decided to keep secret until next week infor-manon provided by a flight ccxder taken from the American Airlines jet that crashed Feb. 28
‘'liNesrYork, killing 95.----------
The data is expected to be made
AHENTiON HOME
SOLICITORS
Pontiac araa salat firms ore closing 3 out of 4T«adt turnnd in by horn* solicitort who use our system for getting quality leads.
for Detail* .
BRESSER'S CROSS-INDEX DIRECTORY TR 4-0570
PRUNDO. Fla. (AP)-A stale', ment John F. Kennedy made while cumpalgnlng tor the presidency has l»een offered as a rea-
againsl Uiesfdenl James R, Haffa of (he Teamsters l/iilon.
Jacob KosHman, a’ Itoffa attorney,’ told U.S. District Judge Joseph P. Llab Tuesday that (he statement prejudUNsi the grand Jury which ndiimed the Indictments against lloffa.
Sliorlly iM'foie llic court session was I'ccPMSed for the night. Koss-mmi (old Ihe jiidgi* he ex|H*e(ed to he able to end Ills argnmenls today.
Lieh said Ih' wIII not rule on Ihe motion fur dismissal (or least two weeks.
Ry JOHN HECKLER WASHINGTON (AP) - I'assage [ a $4.35-inllllon job training hill has left Ihe udmlnlslra-(lon facing a hig clmlleng<<—and a hIg qucHllon.
The chall(>n||e Is whethe
Starts Pushing Foreign Aid Bill
President's Progra Urged by AID Director in House Unit Hearing
WASIIINGIGN (y»-I’or(>lgn Aid Director Fowler Hamilton t(xiuy started the administration’s b 1 g foreign aid program on Its hard rood through Congn-ss. He testified lliat other Weslein nations have Increased their assistance programs 40 per cent In the last five years.
In some eases, he. said, these countries are paying out a higher perwnfiig^lir'niei? rpsburees "Iftr aid than the United States is.
ever-growing w<irk fo limp of .swift leelimtlogloal hange llml has quiekemsi the pace of mitoinalUin.
Congress gave Ihe administration a means of (aelng up to the 'lmll(‘Mge 'Diesday in Ihe llil'(>e-year inaniwwer training bill. It also handiid on the big (pieslion Implicit'in Ihjvhlll;
'rrainlng foi' wliat?
With unemploymeni piusisling I over 4!) million, with new orki'i's .loinlng Itu' lalxir force in •cord numbers as the ikisI World War II Iwiby orop mafures and machines taking over moro and more jobs once held by rtien, the question lyusl lie unsweied if Hie ■hallenge is to Is: met.
2 MAIN riufVlSIQNN The adniinistrallon Iioih'k the answer lies jn Ihe bill, wlileh it has iiiriently sought. Passed with strong hipurlisan support, the measure has two main pi^ivisions.
The first authorizes the secre-tary of labor to make a survey of the nation’s manpower — Ihe skills needed and those available •—and then to set up training pi-o-grams in those skills found to be In short supply.
Die second provides for the payment of weekly training allowances equal to the unemployment
Planning J^nit Zoning Reguest Accepted by City
A planning commission recommendation to rezone part of Herrington Hills Subdivision from Residential 2 to R 1 was accepted last night by'the City Commission.
In his prepared testimony, Hamilton said the requested money — $3,378,500,000 for economic help find $1,.500,000,000 for military aid —was vital irt "manning the front line against Communist aggression” and warding off worldwide Communist attempts "to create or exploit economic and political in-j stability.”	’
Dime^Phone Cali Made March 4 Still Going On
SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (AP) The boys at California State Polytechnic College's Tenaya dormitory are getting their money’s worth for a dime dropped tn a pay phone.
The dime was dropped at 6 p^m. March 4. They’ve been talking ever since. The talkathon with the girls at Santa Lucia dormitory now exceeds 220 hours, much better than' a 207-hour mark set at San Jose State but still not halfway up to the 468-hour record held by Texas Tech, of Lubbock, Teje., the boys say.
Actually the two -worms are within shouting distance of each other. '
Each guy and gal gabs away for some 30- minutes before being replaced.
B'lg signs in each dorm warn: "Ekm’t und?r any circumstances hang up."
Official Wins 30th Term
FENTON Of) — Harry G. Lemen was elected to his 30th one^ySar tend as president of this Genesee County village of 6,142 Monday. Lemen was uhopposed. Lemen’s terms have been interrtipted by two years in which He fail( ' gain re-election.
CongreBBjlelpB by PaBsing Retraining BjH
I’ an
compensalion payment trainee's stale, for a inaximiini of 52 weeks.
Those seeking I raining would aptily at the slate einploymenl office tn their aiija. Thert* they would lx* i«Kl(*d In kee what skills they are caixihle of learning. If they aie. Judged trainable they would then be referred to a Iridn-Ing coiase.
In addition to anernployed work-
ers, those eligible for training include members of farm tainllies with a total Income irf less thon $1,200 a year and youths between 16 an(l 22, Youngsters helw«i«n t6 nnd .19 would get no Irnlnlng allowance and those belwetto 19 and 22 would gel $20 a week.
A .A A
Money In -toe bill Is judged to he enough to train a million per-
Discusses Move to Halt Building iri Flood Areas
The final effi'cl of Ihi' thaw of N|»ring, lilti'2, may he fell hy bulldi'i'H ill Pontiac.
City officials indicated I a nighr that stops Tfi%M hfr takSttl^
'■ Tiick down on construction
{Retraining Plan to Aid Micliigan
(li'iiiH llial liullii lioincs on properly llml llicy know have no drainage facilllicN,
Coiiiiiilsslonec Wlnlurd E, B«(-L’lly^ AtJpmey WII-
llani A. Ewart i city's present urdinanees and eodes In see If there Is any legal iiMiHim the «‘lly I'aa lake to regulate or prolillilt Niifh eonstriie-
Congreas’ approval of. President Kennedy’s manpower training program yesterday will have an Initial effect £ytX)»JltU<toigan persom squeezed out of jops by automation, according to Gov. Swainson.
City commissioners,* in accepting Hip recommendation, oi’der City Attorney William .S. Ewart to prepare a resolution amending the zoning may for presentation to the commission later this month.
The change was requested by city planners. Commissioner John A. Dugan and subdivision residents last month.
It will prevent multifamlly dwellings from being constriicted in the area. The remainder of the s division Is already zoned R-L
Dinner Programs for Lent Planned
recent visit to Hie Pontiac urea, the governor said 85,000 unemployed-most ly in the metropolitan area—would start In July retraining "for existing jobs" under the President's plan.
House passage of the $436-million, three-year plan has toe Immediate aim ol getting one million workers oil the unemployment rolls nationwide. The loug-raiiga goal is to meet fully the ehallenge of automation.
The bill sent to the White House represents a compromise between a $655-million Senate program and
$263-million version passed by the House.
Most of the money would be used to pay trainees a weekly allowance equal to uiiemployment compensation in their states.
Those wanting training would apply to state employment offices. At least at the start of the program older workers and those longest out of work would get priority.
COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - The first in a series of Lenten dinner programs at Coihmerce Methodist Church will be held tomiHTOw.
Each of-the six dinners scheduled will start 6:30 p.m., followed by a speaker anci worship service at 8 p.m.
Rev. William Morford \
FENTON m - Fenton, by a 12-vote margin, has reaffimed its decision to fluoridate its water supply. A proposal to prohibit the village from spending any public mdney to fluoridate its water sup-ly lost 313 to 301 in an election Monday.
guest speaker the din-‘	^
ner........i-
Bishop Marshall R. Reed will deliver the message on March 22.
The programs are open to the public. Reservafions can be made by contacting the church office, 1155 W. Commerce Road.
U.S. Tax Lien Filed Against Hazel Scott
WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. W) - A $44,198 income tax lein has been filed by the federal 'government against pianist Hazel Scotty formerl wife ofTlep. Adam Clayton Powell, D-N.Y.
It was learned Tuesday that the lien was filed in the Westchester County cleric’s office here, on Feb. “ The lien covers 'a six year period — from 1949 through 1955, with the exception of 1951.
Powell was'tried in 1960 on a charge that he fraudulently paid only $900. on Miss Scott’s 1951 income — estimated at $70,000.
A federal jury deadlocked 10-2 for acquittal and the foltewing year the government dropped the ( ^liss Scott was not a defendant in case.
THATWOHPERm
mUHO!
i SOLD THE OLD
REFRIGERATOR
WITHACUSSIFIEDAD.. The Couple Who
Said it Wa|^4ust What They \yanted for Thoir Cottage
foryour
UNWAnEDJTEMS
'I CMl
THE PONTIAC PRESS
CLASSIFIED AO DEPARTMENT
EE 2-8181 t .
NtaUmdl CUutVUd Week fhm March IT
State's 85,000 Jobless Could Start on National Project by July
"If W(< have laws to prohibit hiilldei's from imiting homes on land where there’s no drainage, should enforce them. If we haven’t any, then It’s about time piiss some,” Bottom said at Tuesday’s City Commission meeting.
•EOl'LE UNAWARE’
"Many of the flooded homes and basements in District 4,” he said, ‘arc In new or recently built sub-4iyisto»s.„	-
"These iieople didn't know at toe tone they lioughi their homes that they had no drainage facilities or their homes were built on low land.”
Commissioner Wesley J. Wood supported Bottom. Ewart said the problem is "large and complex” and It would require considerable study tof the present ordinances, but agreed that "something should be done about it."
Other commissioners also com ‘ plained of flooded areas in theh respective districts.
Vote for Fluoridation
TOKYO (Jt — Japan’s uppep house of pariiament unahimously approved resolutions today urging the government to press tor the return'- of the U.S.-administered Ryukyu and Bonin islands and the Soviet-held Habomai, Shikotan and Kurile islands. ;
City Clears Slate, Denies Rezoning
City Commissioners have officially denied a request to rezone about 15 acres on Walton Boulevard from residential to commercial for a propose'd shopping center and subdivision.
Action came at last night’s commission meeting, almost a year after the request first came before commissioners. Morris K-Green, a Detroit developer, asked for the rezoning March 28, 1961.
Hie maHer iras tabled unRI Green could prepare detailed
The site is on the north side of WaltcHi at the east city limit line.
OK Bill to Aid Cubans
WASHINGTON (AP) - A bill which would permit use of $1® million in foreign aid funds to help Cuban refuges was passed by the House Tuesday by voice vote and sent to the Senate. In , financial aid for the refugees has been provided by the President's emergency fund.
Highlights of the Past Decade
Earnings Per Share. Share-owners {totdrmmbery.--.
V 1951 $164,000,000 140,260,000 15,419,725 1.68	1961 $285,763,000 231,110,000 39,764,828 2.77	Profflieae 74.0 65.0 " 158.0 65.0
59,765	106,384	79.0
.................s continuing
n power generation and transmmioitt
in openUing efficiency and in idanning fordie ftOare,^ . .The Anmei Repr^ is the teory of anoti
______________, .	.	____ y of another year^cf
mccessful operation and good financial pn^ress.
Detroit Edisoh has paid dividends for 52 consecutiw yetws.
’ THE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY
4	. - Detroit 26, Michigan
y-

yoB^y.Two
CliWik YES on Thto 'Ltot
T»B TONTTAC TOKSS
It's HOW You Study, Not How LONG
By UKBUE I. NASON, ED.O. r 0t MuoaUon. Unimnltjr of Southern Californln
Wo»U<| you he auriirlwd If I told you it takes no longer to get an ’A' than It does to get a *C’?
It*s WHAT you do, Il'« not HOW IjONO you do It.
if your way of study brings you Cs, perhaps It's time to change your study habits. Here's a cheek list of study prlnel-pies which haec proved efflelent and sue-cessful for students over the years.
IVillow these suggestions and you will raise your grades I
____ DO YOU
DR. NASON
“-Occasionally review each course from the beginning?
Think back over the previous work for a few minutes before studying new material?
—Often reorganize the main Idea of a course?
Keep a short outline for each course, and revise It frequently?
Keep a list of things you must complete for each course, checking off requirements as you finish them?
—Take short, meaningful note In your words?,
—Bead ahead to prepare for listening In class?
—After working a set of problems ask yourself what principles were used and ho# y»u can recognise this kind of a problem in test?
—In modern language courses think
directly from foreign words to pictures of meaning, and from pictures ^ of meaning to foreign words?
#	W W
-In learning a new vocabulary train your ears to hear the words and your mind tq bring up the proper pictures by saying the words aloud?
—In studying life science, biology, or anatomy, picture the meaning of all words In your mind?.
—In studying mathematics think In words rather than trying to remember how the problem looks?
A A ■ ★
Try to determine what sort of things you are going to find out before you read?
- Read first for main Ideas, then re read for details?
-In studying, mentally review each section you have read to make sure you grasp the meaning?
—Keep your writing muscles In trim
through practice?	—_
^
If many of^your answers are no, you either are working too hard for grades or you are getting lower grades than you should. Use the questions as a guide for changing your study pattern.
★	A	★
"And remember, nothing will change unless YOU change it!
A	A	A
(You may obtain a copy of Dr. Nason’s "You Can Get Better Grades’’ booklet by sending $1 to this newspaper.)
Free in School Fire but Linked to Others
CHICAGO IH.^A IS-yeqr-old bey was eleamd In family court Tuesday of auy oonneolkm with Our Isidy of the Angels
deHuqunt in oounootlon four of oegeu firm set In snh-
Hw boy had been a pupil ut the Roman OstboUo parachisi school, at the time of the Are. A ke detector operator, John RcM, teetlfled la fsmtly court
I of netting the school fire. The bey declared in oourt that he had made the atatement In-
Judge Alfred J. CUella of family oonrt dbmlaaed the della-qnency petition based on the
To Become Fire Chief
MUSKEGON HEIGHTS W -James Mulready will b e c o m . Muskegon Heights fire chief May
1.	The S2-yeaiMdd Mulready unanimously approved by Oty Goimcil Mc^ay night to succeed Chief Hany Ridout, who is retiring after 40 years.
A»logic J--* Fw^ast
Atom-Free Club Idea Agreeable to Norway
OSLO, Norway W — Norway is willing to enter an atom-free club of nations mi the coralitlon that tcraty obligations of such a club do not alter the world’s present balance of power, the government said.
Foreign Minister Halvard Lange set forth this position in a letter to U.N. acting Secretary General U ’Thant in New York. Norway is a member of the North Atlantic ’I^aty Organization (NATO).
DETROIT (H — Common Council gave informal approval Monday to a $586,800 bid by Arro Wrecking Co. of pearbom for clearing'59 acres of Detroit’s downtown skid row area for an urban renewal propect. Total cost to the city is estimated at $12.2 million, less funds realized from' sale of the lands to developers.
THE PONTIAC PKESS, WKnN><:SI)AY. MAIK U R 1002
FOHTYTHRBIS
iiT Welfare Aid
Houm GOP Committoe Ttlrmi 'Unjuitiffad' Propoiad Amandinientt
WASHINGTON *» r- Tlw H( Ilepubltcnn Policy oppoMd «■ unJuaUfle^> two proponed amendment* to the p*-*-'*-wettare laws which would federal,contribution* by |180 million.
tare payment*, the leKl*l*tlon
r expIrinK programa eoatlng about |I00 mil-
The policy committee contended TucHduy that $140 million of this WHS biiiclo'ted Into the hill nt the last minute by the Wnys and Means Committee and Is not ptt>-vldcd for In President Kenncdy’i budget.
The GOP policymakers objected to this $140 milllun provision, which would raise the federal contribution for payment* to aged, blind and disabled persons from a present $24.80 to $29, with the slate's makltig up the difference to $35.
They- also objected to a |40 mllUon provision raising from 50 to 76 per cent of the federal share of state program* aimed at promoting self-sufficiency and ndiabllltatlon.
In both c«.ses, said GOP policy chariman J6hn W. Byrnes, K-Wise, tliere Is no provision requite Ing the states to Increase their services to these radpleat*.. ma«9> ly to increase the federal share of the cost.
"This is Just gravy for some of the states," he said. "Nobody asked for it. I think it is something Wiihur Mills (chariman of the Ways and Means Committee) had In his pocket the last day and he figured to sweeten it up some.
India's Lower House OKs Goo lncor|:)oration
NEW DELHI (» -rj.The lower house of India’s parliament today unanimously passed a bill formally incorporating Goa and the other former Portuguese enclaves into India.
The bill passed through all three readings within an hour and endorsed by all 323 members present, representing every political party.
THR UOHTRK HIDR - President Kennedy
■hures a laugh with cullers in his Wliitc lloimc office Tuesday a* the talk liu-ns to |K)ltlics. Chuckling with the Prosidcnl arc, from lell, Norman Cousins, editor of llie .Sainrdiiy Ke
view; Walter Hcullicr, Unllwi Aulo Workers president: and Oscar A. do Lima, New York l»iisnless e.\(>cullvc. Tlic Joke concerned Edward (Ted) Kcnncily's st'tmtoriul asplisttions.
GMC Club Fund
to Aid Fire Victims
fund-raising campaign has been started by tho I’oreman’s Oub of CMC Truck and Couch Division to assist a Troy family of
Charles Bares, club president, said the drive will aid Arthur Layman, a foreman at the GMC plant, his wife and their four children.
Layman, 50, and Ills wife Patricia, 45, are in St, Joseph Mercy Hospital with burns received when their home at 2198 Burdic St. was destroyed by fire following a furnace explosion.
Professor at MSUO , Wins Summer Course
Nat Simons Jr., assistant pix>-fessor of economics at Michigan Slate University Oakland, Is or of 40 scholars chosen to receive postgraduate fellowship at the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business this summer. The participants will study contemporary problems in economic theory and their application.
; ;
mi ^

Sen. Humphrey in 3-Car Crash
MARSHALL M. TAYLOR
Canadian. Skid Mishap Ottawa Speech'
American Legion Michigan Leader Will Speak Here
State Commander Marshall M. Taylor of Chdtilac will be guest speaker at tlie local observance of the American Legion’s 43rd anniversary celebration March 17.
To be held at Cook-Nelson Post 20, 206 Auburn Ave., the event will begin at 6 p.m.
Other special guests will in___
Mrs. Irving Citizen of Ishpeming, Department of Michigan American Legion president: .Third Zone Commander William Plummer of Royal Oak; 18th District President Jon Capron of Birmingham; and 18th District Auxiliary President Mrs. Hugh McHugh of Birmingham.
Lisle Alexander of 'Plymouth, state adjutant of the Legion lor 25 years, will be toastmaster.
OK Sewer Service K-for DonelsonJark—
Meeting last night, city commissioners okayed an amendment to the Waterford Township sewer agreement which will extend sewer service to 11 residential lots in Donelson Prak Subdivision.
_ The connection and service fee was set at $125 per residential lot.
Ar noiohx
THEY WANT TO GO — Jane Hajt (left), wife of Sen. Philip Hart, D-Mlch.»/find Jerrie Cobb of Oklahoma City pose on Ciipitol Hill with, an appn^riate prop — a model of a Saturn missile. Thursday they will see 'Vice Presidait Johnson, chairman ol the National Aerraiautics and Space Council,, in an effort to have the United States launch a program for female astronauts. Both women have successfully passed the tough physical tests given America’s seven male astronauts.	—	— -4.;-----
The township area to which Pontiac sewage treatment facilities is being extended Is in the ediate vicinity of Shore and CblBiin drives.
The pennyroyal, an aromatic lerb formerly much used in medicine, is a member of the mint 18. The oil of the plant was losed to have been capable of driving away fleas.
BALOW, MARCH 1?, 1»«2. HfcLEN MarU, 27119 Novi Road. Novi; age 13; dear jgrandmother o( B.-Bruoe Salow; also survived by several nieces and nephews. Funeral service will be held Thursday, March IS. at 3 p.m. at the Thayer Funeral Home, 33014 Grand River, Farmington, with Pastor Arnold B. Cook otnclatlnf. Interment In Ctareneevllle Cemetery, Livonia. Mrs. BaloW wlU lie Thayer Funeral

COOLING THEM OFF — Demonstratiffe or--gahized bank employes are routed by spray from police hose in. Uma, Peru, last weekend. The employes had gathered in front of .the First mtional City Bank (rf New York to pnstest tl^
• -AP FtotMa*
ouster of union officials by tlie bank manager, all. Americans.The union is now calling foe the dismissal of three of the bank’s officials, in order to (tetl^ the dlWe- The J»ue involved wastsympahy' for peasants in a land dispute.
CXITAWA (UPD - Senate Democratic whip Hubert H. Humphrey, D*Mlnn., rode into Canada’s capital Tuesday night as a hitchhiker because his car was wrecked In a highway accident.
Humphrey, apparently none the worse for his experience, arrived hour late for a speaking engagement and admitted he was "a little shook up” by the accident.
The senator and an aide were In Cor en route here from Montreal’s Dorval Airport.
Near Alfred, Ont., about 40 miles east of Ottawa, a car In front of Humphrey** auto swerved Into a nnowbank and skidded across the highway.
Fulwrol Dirtetort
A truck traveling in the opposite direction ploughed into the car and seconds later Humphrey’s car smashed into it.
Both cars were demolished and the truck ended up in
ditch, heavily damaged.
No one was Injured.
A few minutes later an obliging motorist who was driving behind the senator gave him a ride into the capital.
Death Notices
BORDIN. MARCH 13. 19*3. BVI-llna M.. 393 Wuldon Road. Orion Township; «■« 79: beloved wife of Adolph Borden; dear moUmr of Mrs. Monroo Leke, Mrs. Bert
MiBs jvionrilo	Mrs, si
Hertsog end Mrs. Rlt* Bilvls; ,t survived by U grandchildren a 23 greatgrandchildren. R—
FITCH. MARbR 13. 1933, JAMBS
band of Louise Pitch; beloved eou of Mrs. Minnie W. Fitch; dear ■ ' ■ r ot Michael James and
-------pulse Pitch; dear brother
J MrsTlTTitr-taHli ■ • - •	—
neral service will L_ .
March 1*. at 3 p.m. .............
Funeral Home, Lake Orion, with Rev. Wilbur R. Bebutze officiating. Oravesldo service under the auspices of the American Legion Charlten-Polan Post No. 233 at Xastlawn Cemetery, Lake' Orton. Mr. Pitch will lie In state at Allen's Funeral Home, Lake Orton.
IARME8, MARCH i:
Ave., Keego Har-
Sarnies. Funeral
•e pendliji al
. Harmes will 1
y E.. 41
and-Julius H e 1 n e e k e. Funeral service will be held Tburedky. March 15. at I;30 p.m. at the Sparks.Orlffin Funeral H 9 m s with Dr. Milton Bank officiating. Interment in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mr. Helnecke will lie In jtate et the Bparks-OrUftn Fu-neral Home.
mcnalleY, march i
o,ttZ. MAHvrs sa. swiJi JA-Br.^3t^, Fifth BL. Imlay" v-ity, ege 19; dear slater of Lloyd Young; also survived by cousins John and Ouy Ridley. Funeral service will be held Thursday, March 15. at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Imlay City, with . Rev. C. WllHam Lancaster vfflel-* ating. interment In Imlay Town-
grandoblldren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, March IS. at 3:30 p.m. at the First Methodist Church with Rev. Paul T. Hart.. officiating. Interment In . Perry
“al Rome unt" ’ - — >»'•—— March U.^
e talmn-to t_____
ite uatll time of 1
Funeral Rome until 1 p.m. Thure-.day, March 15, at which time he wifi be tal^n-to the church to lie
STARK, MARCH 13. 1963, BUR-nettst. E., la* Chandler; ,age 9«; bel^d wife of Clarence 8. Itark; beloved daughter ot Mrs. Ody R. Wisher; dear mother of Alberts J. and Robert c.^Btark; dear els-,, ter ol Carlos Wisher, Mrs. Alberta Baker, Mrs.. .DeWey Wood-. ward,‘'Mra. Brie Csrleon*and Irm'a 'W«h«: alto (urvlved by three grandchildren. Funeral * e r v f-e e will be held Friday; March 1*. at 1:30 pjn. at the Doneleon'-Jonne Funeral Bom*.	'»•-
taws Park Cem.._... wm fi^n state at.lhe Johns Funeral Roma.
Card tf Tkank*

.......t'lENn OUH
iMiika anil appreclallor
iaees' uf smpaUiy^ aiM?*?lorar*? leiliiga racaivad fl
Iriiiia; ;nTi:;tifo7."‘d«"ri-H,'i
Fell* ......... „	......
deep appreciation for the flora) nflailiigs, words nt eyinpaUiy and
kinjlness astanded to tliam dii ' ill
lapli f Paninilnliiao
in	"	2
U Vpmu'0
M«roh n. 1
N Kutfrnl » a^i^ojad.
'.'.■Jd ’;i.i
ITiti""'
7;tt..r
AlllROTRini) jXaAFP
ARE DEBTS
WORKYINt;
YOU?
gniployat not contaiitad Btralchas your dollar -No charge for budget analysis Write or phona for tree booklel
M1Cmr,AN CREDIT COUNCELLORS
ala Renk Bldg.
It bu,1g.
(Ichlgan Association of
' Amarican Association
iMii ■ wirdHT “ bafKv~ and
aeoiiomleally with newly ms-A-Jlet tablets. 91 i
■ COLD WAliEi 13.50 AND Oi>"' orothy's _______ FB 3-134
MICHir.AN CREDIT
COUN.SELLORS
103 I’antlac mate Bank Bldg.
FB * 045*
Pontiac's oldest and largest budii-et assistance company,___
Off Yolir Bills
wlthoi
.......................
Homs' or 'oillcf'Appt^Unents
nry .\34jHOijltiif'5'ef*<ticc‘
>33 W. Huron	FB 5-9331
--------- --------------- by Btate
MARR^ kfAN 6n Ing experlanoo r"
Rochester Road.
ROUTB MAN FOB BBTXBLlillfBb
DRAYTON PLA1N8
D. E. Pursley
FDNBRAL ROMjt Invalid Car fiervlee
Donelson-Johns
HUNTOON
BXinERIBNCBD FARM nano, ny month. 34*0 Dutton Rd.. Roohaster.
8"® R vt C B ^AN AdEh EXPER-lenced In atuomollve line speotalts-Ing In tires, brake and allgnnfent work. Reply to Pontiac Press Box ■“ -‘''Ing complete -““
Serving Pontlao for *0yt—
19 Oakland Ave,	FB 3-0139
SCHUTT
ENLAROED_AND BEM^ELBD
SPARKS-GRIFFIN
‘Thoughtful Bervfce" FB 3-M
Voorhees-Siple
Cemetery Lott
DAINTY MAID 8UPPLIE8, 780
Menominee. FE 6-7808.______
On and after THIS DATE, March 14, 19*3 I will not be re-
FOUND; MALE BBAOLE.
OR 3-8004._________
ODND: SIAMESE CAT, VICimTY ol 130 Fourth Ave. FE 3--
LOST-FEMALE COCkEB SPANIEL, Jet^^ black. Vlclnltj^ Maybee and
y Sue TMds, Clukston, Sat.
elderly widow. Reward. FB 6. ir oil 4-1—
LOST: SABLE COLORICD fE-male collie. Belongs to 2. little girls. ■*
MALE COLLIE SABLE
__1-. MAN'S WALLET WITH
bank book enclosed. Downtown Pontlec. Reward. Ml *-9380.
BOX REPLIES
At 10 B.
•fflce l)«xes:
S, 7, «). 66, 57, 68, 08, 09, 70, 80, 81, 83. 90, 92, 90, 09, 101, 112.
A Management Position
Due to opening of new store,' * ambitious and neat-appearing m« are heeded to learn business. Experience not necessary, but helpful, Salary-and •-- —-
fits. Ages 20 to 35. Phone Taylor. OR 3-0923.
5 P M. TO 9 P.M.
Tell Everyboidy About it with a
PoStiac Pre^s^ “ Want Ad
That’s because of the greater selection of everything from automobiles to employment offered every day.
■'-r
Just Dial-FE 2-8181
KARNlNo'"l)Hi9''v(EEIU.Vt tunlly in roula* sales. (|uafftl«a-llims; Married. 23 U, 40. hlgli •chool eduoatlon, depeiiilable ear.
aim, Apply 5M0 Dlkla Hwy. » P M, Tlmrsday SAVERi* "|i B'l. k B R,' SXPiERl
1. I,aka Orion Bakery. Apply
“ ....>f only..
Ill pemoii, moniMig only,.
1 ft n Y”M A'R,' BXFBRTUdif'Bi'), own iQuIs. *0 50 Irfds of work.
DIE
MAKERS
EMPLOYMENT OFFICE
IIAVVTIIORNK MI'ITAI PKODDCI S K).
. Must be married,
training (or right men. OR 3-0806.
iiRiVEit Witii owS I^neX ■ ruck or station wegon, lor cleaii-
FXPERIENCI-'.D TOOL dj':sign1':rs
inwood Rd. Lake Qrlo
^ WOMAN iN , WHT™ age* “car'^icl *ssar7
MARRIED MAN
rWT
epsre^ time'" plione Ml"’Voo*3’'Tdr appointment at your home or
LADiics eoR Telephone work! ------'islon and boni- "
■. Collljii
Route Salesman
Reputable concern has ext
opportunity for aggressive, ---
and ambitious man. Ago 21-35. Route already established. Interview by appointment. Call FB
iiAle
SALESMAN 31-3* CATHOLIC
Press Fubllcatir ..........
TREE T R 1 M bt E R S. EXFERI-enoed report to Dodge "
URGENTLY NEEDED
Male 19 or over having good car and Insurance. Willing to work long hours, good pty. excellent chance for advancement -- -
---	- Must have
eopie. Call 3

r 36 to d
o do selling and etock-
..., ____ in plumbing, heating
and electrical in large retail store In Macomb Co. Must be neat ambitious with desire for ad-
-----ment. Experience preferred.
Fonl'— ---------- ^
Reply r

WE WONT PROMISE $25,000
l Y|SAR B do promise you t
S?iK«ltl?n.‘'»n5rJSiih‘"c
plete training and i fringe bene
AverlU, call PE I
T & C Food Co., Inc..
ok. Air year around jot
___let. Old Mill Tavern
dertord, Mich,
Holp Wantod FemoTo
ALTERATIONS
WOMAN EXPERIENCED IN AI
..'■	-"1 pressing. Apply pel
5. Montgomery-Wan
I. 9 to 5. sc Mall.
•AVON CALLING" FOLLOW THE DOORBELL CHIMES ON TV FOR ABOVE-AVERAGE EARNINGS! Phone today PE 4-4508 or write Drayton
BABY SITTER NEEDEp, LAM-"irt School atea. needs owh traps-irtatlon, 5:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m:
CAR BILLER
For aggressive doaletship. .1—..—. enced only need apply. Furnish references — experience — salary expected to The Pontieb F-
CURB GIRLS. APPLY AT BIG BOY
Drlve-In, 3400 Dixie Hwy.
CURB
WAITRESSES
?of cV^'V.i^Ss'SIf't* thT^ shift. Must be over is. Apply m person only
tED’S
at Square Lake- Rd.
DISBWASRER, FDLL TIME EVE-
BXPBRnCNOBD iSAUSLADIBB ~ sports wear and droseei., PnU and p*r| time, Appigi lit, penon. Bar-
ton*. °7t If, 8*ginkw.
KXI'KniW|«0»* WAlTNKa*.
uei‘artmi':nt heads .. sai,e.swomI':n
CASHIER * Al.Tl'iRATIO.YS I’ORTI'.RS
A||j)lli'atlan«^ aie^^iipw being taken
I'tora to up«i ii^ ln"^"poaUa iltir ^hoppllig Oe^nter. Ap^ylluanl
themselves dynan

ALBERT'S
iRttracHani-SchMh ||l
I'iniHli ScIkkiI
N'a"iT(inai '*oDi>o| M ^’ijlorntT'
Work WoRtod Molt
11
A I (JAHPENTEH. 8MAI.I. JOB* A i'lMi*"’'	"*** "*	**''**''■
' <’*iii»»i:NTBir';' ftAapKN‘iinR'‘w6Rk7 new "Alfli
Vmi"l 'fE
AnihlilT'''M'J^
Mtehans a r.xi<Ii:HiKN(;
w
A
N
T
iiADi.iNtL ■ 'brni N ul
MAHin^O~biAN~NlE¥ti«'"li51tK '
Ot« stallmi experleiioe FTC 4 5311 I
VOUNd FOItilON MAN '•
■(X)l) OPERATION. gCALlTV trtljwd.^ ho^^^	tuncUoii
.1. COOK AND WAITRESn «aiued No Sunday or holUlav work. A^pl^ in person at Mliilt
...Mt
t or full WmP tfmuufrwilon wiiii K04X1 rtiiKid whffn Acc'tul* iiiftlnd Wrlto P 0. Bo* 4497. Pon-tlAo with	aalftry deidred
l.adics—Telcplion
MANAGER
rui dress. department. Must IM experienced exeeutlv* and salesperson. Opportunity »w advanoa-•L...	It w. Saginaw.
NCR OPERATOR
Experlanoed on number 3000 NCR for rotsU orsdit store operation. Excellent salary' and employes benefits. 40-hour. S-day week. To work In new store open-ID Pontiac Mall. Ph. Personnel Dept.. TEmple 3-3BOO, 9:30 to 12,
‘""toBE
STOP!
'e who quahfy^*tefe^i iry basts. An excelt
IZr \
excellent part-
. Rochester
area. Regular nours. State perlence. qualifications and
saleb people -1100 montlILy
for wearing lovely dresses piled to "you by us. Just
. canvassing or experl-
cv> ....V—... . x5ilon Frocks, Dept. J-1402 Cincinnati, oaio.
Bar. 0 N. Cass. FE 3-9820.
WOMAN FOR GENERAL OFFICE work. Must like detailed clerical work. Typing required. Write Press, Bo* 101, giving education, job experlenoi
nust be n r Drive 1
f IlfxIS:
21 or over, must have tel-
■ "-‘‘-e fiy Bd
ton PlftlnBi Cloied Mon. Apply
tlSraBSAST
OMAN work. 111
Htlp Wantsd
EXPBRIENCBO PRBFBRRBD 'WITH Real Estate license. Phone PB 3-19V1 or MI 0-8500 after 1 tor interview appointment. C. 8CHD-ETT, REALTOR.
MAN

Food
i route. Experienoa unneoem
'TRADEX"
WE nbeghelp-nowu with these q&allflcatlons sA VllUngness tqplace your r sonal INTEOBITY and that this company before a
3—If you-adhere to tt
__'prMeulon 1 w’^NT YOU!
Lew Hileman Realtor
FE 4154* 1011 W. Huron t* 0-0166
INCREASED VOLOME HAS MADE It necessary to open new branch operation in Pontiac area. We need full'and t«rt time men to cover our leads. Experience helpful. but hot neoessary. No canvassing. Leads . furnished at no charge. Our trelnlng progi^am enables you to-Cam while being trained. C*r and phone essenUal,^
iTTWs^mno-YpTi. anointment. Ask for Mr. Sws
Enplaymant Agencies
EVELYN EDWARDS
"VOCATIONAL COUNSELING
; Huron	Suite
Phone FE 4-0584
.JEronU-Oifiee-
Receptlonlst with tj shorthand. Diversified^. ^*nt-*urro«ntHngi7'5Tayi oxm transportation. Mldw
gisrAStsjir''........
Work Wantod Famal* 12
.OREl) LADY DEHIHF.fl RABY osmun
IIOUSKWOUK wanted' UEPBR-
twoT women iiKHniV, ~"'"Women~w“au "w
wall
R
E
Wi
WALt. ■ WAMMINO iilhg Fli; 4 11603.	1
WAitlllNOS ANU lUdNfNOS. PICK I 0(1 aiidjlel FE 3-90*5	|
WAiin NOLAND" inONINO Picit
YbyNd~LTDY IjESDtFS' ‘work
with Insuraiue company. 3‘i yeiirs experience, References.
1340 or FB l-ai**.
s
Baikling Servict-Supplkt 13
ANYTHING IN HOME REPAIR, carpenter repair plastering, painting, and masonry work CallJor tree estimates, FE 4-5110 REE EiTIMATi* ON ALL WIB E^otrTo
iJlS.roSi.j.
Ldino modernization Home Improvement •-- '—
I Tailoriiig 1/
ALTERATIONS AND REPAIRING. Dressmaking. FE 4-0037 after 4:30
ALTERATIONS GOOD
reasonable. FE 3-iea*._______
DREdStlAKtifO. MAJOR ALTER-
_____ FB 4-'3*03.
DRkiBMAKING. TAILORING, teretlons. Mrs. Bodell. FB 4-»
ACCulllATB	________
W. R. BOLIN
typed. Your home, *4.1 _ CORVOl9IC9Rt-mraHf
WTFB
ROOM. BOARD AND CARE, PRI-
Moylwg qiHt	2?
1ST CAREFUL MOVING.
attentionT“
painting rk gOAVAo
AAA PAINTltfO AND DECOKtAti-lug. 30 ysArx exp^eAi. Free ea-
PEORA1
A LADI -___________
Papering. FB 0<3«.
[NS
D wall 1

____________smaU FE 3-03*7.
PAINTING AND OibORATiiiO
-----improvemint loMi. at to
raiei and eonvanitm term
_____________^
cash FOH ^kNITURB AND &earAon*x Vsf*»1
ET Us Hi

____BUt IT 6r SELL IT FOR
YOU. OXFORD COHMONJTY AUCTION. OA «-8*»I.
WANTED USED —‘ after A-n
u
L
T-
S
TRY
w
A
N
T
A
D
FE
2


' V-,-
FOETVFOUH
THE l^N^IAC PEESS. WEUNKSDAY, MAKCH im
ALL CASH
tuwkl» Mil lor tm.
48 HOUKS
1.AMD cioimunM - til
■oumit
!?l »»4	~ onywhoro in
Ootlona Co.
Dorothy Snyder Lavender
Wl ftl|hlA.,A RMil IMMI ■M l-.HO) BVOI,' Ut MUlIT
ffiOM OWNICfl ONI.r" “aMaiV.
\«r‘V^vw».ssr
j^iSoiia, iiNj^At* HATH, “iifiii
r*ss.W‘r“,5«r"fc
37 A|MHfiMiitt<7iriililiMl 37
HBOHOOM UVltia ROOM,'PR!
rBwuTFTor'rWVAT^TrATii; klUihonoU, WMlior ond ilryor, ««ift aldn. fB 4-071.
TkAROrf HOOilA RRIVAT* RATH Atiulu (» m*i«. riu ii oMid j'Titii 4 ROOOK 1‘iovA'rK ratu
’ i$ OlArk m Apoly
rA¥r3R6SiS“ci,ICAO'RIV/f^^^
omrniiM. ilM R>liitl»Wior4,___
1 ANn	WHITR 317 OH
a OR‘“’J-R<5<ikl. ■ HRAfT 'NKAH
WWan^-k.
.....3-14M............
r ruomh'anu hath, upper ric 4-T— j room'
r apartment' IfVEHV
ioinulird dowiHowii 41a i>i-r lATH, 'NttWI.V
'rooms, PRtVATR BATH IS floor. lOH wiiium* FE a-oTai 3 " hckTms, bAth;' knthanck rlrnn and <im»l 4 B PMiRii’k
I 3 KCKSM ErmiEN AND 1
'SLATER'S
X.T’ANGm, -Rm,TOR 1	43 N PARKE ST
OHTONVIM-R	n»v» FE 4-3t44 NllhU FE 4 S137
433 Mill Jjtrerl_RA 7 331t | j ROOMsT' NIC*I,'Y FURttlSHED,
I nrlvatr tiAth and rniram-a rnuiilit
l.lST	• I.............. -.
n/iTM* iia	■’ R O O M NEAR A U B ir R
w, hav.	for .o,.A '	3 70M an«r 1 pm
iKimrii ami land owtranla * I 3 - ROOM. PRTVAtE 'kntIaNCR
A ionSON N- SONS I	...
r A I 'IVMjS:	I'l 'ic'i . ' •'* ROOM" *NI3 BATH FURNISHED
KrAJJOR.S M . 4-25H adulta 41 Mnraland_____ _
1704 8 Tflasraph_________I
Apartnwntt'Furniihad
1 AND 3-BBOROOM LAKEPRONT at»ta: ParUy lurn OR 3^108 t ROOM EFpiCIIBNCY Alberta Apartmenta
*“ ”,:_£144S!LI_
i BEDROOM DEI.OXE KlTCfilttN-______
■■ ^rtmem Newly decorated ! ATTRACTIVE
r.«F*r4's.“‘i	.....

Huron
Apartnienti-UnlurnilhBd 31
mHIK. 3 ROOIIU.^^ BATH.
PrSHt
. cioie III, ] i'AND J-ilEDIldOM apta. Pailly inrn on j-^ia 3, iAa'NI) 4R(R)M'APARiMEN^r^,
I. iirwl^'
I BATH, ■
I) BATlf HTSvE and
Hy K«U Ommo
IlNDVIiaQI
p.rto.rr'K“J.'"HU,-
---- FK 4 I3S4 or PE i m$,
T iaTv VaVSirtfe taTneTn^
oloae to achaola and all •hopplns Can be aeeo anyllma. Call lor
(lenetal llostiital Area
»t.'tr,,a':;'r!fy.,!:'‘;r.;:
Kllenen. Bedroom ami eloaata. Auto heal, hot water UOuiile only
Modern 5 Room
HTOVR Al Fimmaiir.
AI'AKTMI'NT
y AT 103 m.ooMnEip
imimAnE, NEXT TO ST. 30-aKPII'D llOnPITAt. FE A.at'H ' NEAH pAnTIA'c MAi.l,
3 ..riiuina end htih upper All |lllllllrj pliia alove and fe<rl»era-
Oroliiml C Durt .\|)arliiK'iits
4 room apl with uillUlea turn On E Huion FE 3-3iai lUKlMS. "llATM, OAriAllE ImC. ' ..... .............. t......... -“■■*
MODERN IN EVERY l)ET<
I RCH)Mb.' BAITI ' 'fAHprfED, iitllltlea. adulta, FEJI-O30S _ .HbOM[“crirANr'HYI,VAN i.AKE ---- 1740*^ liiverneaa. _FKJI-47M.
flMENTH
(.'larkatoii^ 434.7041
tiooMB private"uath 'and ...........................'"t‘-
j;'a.[‘‘i{;rN5''r37Wfe?,:r
UPPER 4 ROOMH BATII STOVE.
baby weJ[come,_l!l4 mo. FE 3-4333 WESTTiTnEr S-iUHIM 'AND BATH,
*.T..I"'^ J ■.X”*.....
Rant Houtat, Fiirniihaii 39
I enjoy goiiiK to scIuhiI. Dityliiiie lelevlslot
Sola Houtai
49
UII.DER WU.l, REDUCE PRICE on 3 larse Early American liuinea. 3 and 4 bedrooma, I'.a baltm. brick, ^ good location. Tra^c, op-
firopelTy conalilcrcd. Du It now 11 elaon Bldg. Co., OR 3-ailll. other plane available.
CUS'rOM LUILDING
Finlalied homea — Btarter homea. Rhalla aa low aa 44,100. a. FLATTLBY - BUILDER 40 Commerce Road___343-44BI
Notice of Hid 'I'aking
____JD BtDH WILL BE
OEIVEU UNTIL 10:00 A M.
DAY, MARCH 33. 1043 AT iMic MIOWieWH aTA¥l»“~H10HWA7e' “ DKPARTME44T, 034 FEATHER-STONE. P.O BOX 3044, PONTIAC. MICHIOAN. FOR THE BOARDINO OF HOUSES BEINO ACQUIRED WITH THE RIORT
'PACE

41,300 to mortgage. 334 Otge, FE 3-0473 after 5;30. By «mieri__
'"Ncrii’fiNt; |)()WN
?o7m'‘A:.ir;!.d'^!.‘;n!’.f‘!«a%"a.
rral.7«ru?irn'“U“%“4r
♦ ONE LOOK
you want to move right In : maater. alaeri beorooma, Large llv

r tell. I
A. ( . X oiniiton iS,’ .Soni
.300 W Huron 8l	OR 3-7414
Eveninga OR 3-4448 Oft FE 3-704_4
Owner Trairsferreil
lelnberger trl-level -	3 bedrooma,
3Va bathe, Rocheater Knoll aubdl-■ lion, ,^)>l,.‘f«j^e.or
Reply Pontiac I
PONTIAC L
4 WA-
---- .. iake-fr..... .......
ceptable.. E 111 a Bulldera, I j/471,	_____________ _
WateIeord townshp
-“-PACE"-
Quallt]^ throughout - 3-t rage!* Nicely' looated.*Neer
--JMI88ION OF BIDS Ind BOARDINO 8 P E CIFICATION8 PLEASE CONTACT THE PROPERTY MANAGER. RONALD “ PIPER, AT THE ^BOVE A_. ------ — PHONE FEDERAL
Lake Rda. LoTL at jU will Bgre^ ■”	-
417.4001 But ‘ --lulred.
Sown payment required.
JACK LOVELAND
3100 Caea Lake Road *“ '
ENGINE REBUILDERS I CYLINDER-4110 Ocyllndf-Tbls includea valva grindln., .. bearinga main bearlnga, cam bearinga, r 1 n g a, plna, timing cbali^ gaMets. oil filter, labor. AU ennnea out and degreaaed. All work guaranteed — free tow-
REBUILT ildrORS money down—34 i— *-Hot^r Br-*----
- AUTOMOBILE
BOAT - TRUCK -
0S.I5 ExebaMe, _____
KAR-UFE battery CQ. 3Q3 Auburn Are.__ FE I»io
BMVty Shops
EDNA’S BEAUnr SALON Pertnanenta 44.40 ,• Sbampoo~and Wave 41.75
Botfi^Accestoriet
NOTARY PUBLIC 303 E 1
when 'You Purchase Your
Larson Boat—Free Gifts
HURRY DON’T BE LATE! Vour EVINRUDE Dealer
Harrington Boat Works
1844 S. Telegraph	”” "
FE 3-4033
A-t ADDITIONS, FALL-OUT 8HEL-ter.e. House Raising. Oarages. Concrete Work, Nothin* Down, PAUL GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Eatlmatea	OR 4-1511
COMPLETE MOO ERNIZATION service. Residential and commer------------------.
builder. OL 1-0753.
Ciridnet Making
__________I cabinet SHOP,
1570 Opdyke Road. FE- 4-4340. ' CABINJBT_W0RK. RjEMOOELmo.
CarpcBtry .....
CA^TN9®*W8i»iW®*li*. kind. Reas. FE B-M34 attero CARPENTER, WORK PAINTING Cp0»plete lob insured, OR 3-7817.
Coal
HOCKING STOKER COAL $17.45 A TON
4t FURNACE COJ
OLOASTOKI
Kentucky Lump, „ _ _ ____
E^YLOCK COAL & SUPPLY CO. oToi ‘	■ - T .	—.....
OLBM ACRES NURSING HOME
■OWER VACUUM CLEANING. Place your order now. 47.50, Michigan
IncMM Tax Sorvica
NACKERMAN. FE
E3347,'A 2-317L_______
Benjamin R. Backus
.......FE 4-0401
INCOME TAX SERVICE
YOUR HOME OR MINE
NEIDRICK BUILDINO SERVICE Home. Garage. Cabinets, Additions.
FHA TERMS_______________FE 4-4404
SEWERS AND SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED AND REPAIRED etrick ________________FE 4-3340
r 12 12‘/jc iln ft.
Plywood: all sizes on sale
AIRPORT LUMBER
8971 Hlghla:
2X4 - 8' ECONOMY STUDS ea 3»e
- 2 It., St. sash . . . . 40% off
Waterford Lumber
Cash and Carry 15 Airport Rd. • OR 3-7700
COMPLETE $TOCK Building Materials
- PRICED RIGHT —
SURPLUS LUMBER
AND MATERIAL SALES CO. ......... IM54I OR 3-7042
PI. Y WOOD DI.STRIBUTOR
I. CASS_____FE 2-04
TALBOTT LUMBI-'.R
Complete Building Supplies 125 OAKLAND AVE FR 4-458
MoslHiry
OCK.
_________ 20 yea
Phone OB 3-7009 oi
CEMENT WOTIK—NOTHING TOO
Ntw and Used TV .
Terms Ar- little as $1.25 wk. ■ DQODYEAB BERVICE STORE 30 8. Cass	---
BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS DHILM, POWER SAWS
””	FE 4A105
COLUMBIA NBAk BALDWIN, $66
mo. Carpeted, 3-bedroom,-----
FE S-me. 12 to 4. AvallabI "~3. Builder
Wgllpaper Steamer
Floor candera polishers, bai Sanders, furnace vacuum clei_ ers. Oakland Fuel A Paint, 438 Orchard Lake A —..........
HOMES FOR
Slipcovers
Or Will Sell PONTIAC AREA
CHAIR. $10; DAVENPORT 120: ■ R material; free esiimatr, 3 service. FE 2-7S0*.
Stomps lor Collectors
•* j EXCEPTIONALLY NICE 3-B E D-_ 1 room In Sylvan, jHrF'Y decorated. ^ i heat Refr Tlduiredi^P^
TIEE NICARAUOA LIST Squirrel Stamp Shop 1004	Auburn Heights
GATE HOUSE. IDEAL F
rington lUlls
brick. 6a« heal, ba )rn?r lot. FE 8-8344
lake PRIVILEGES '
Licensed Michigan 'TlEgA ^
MIC KltY STRAKA^^ ■ IV, SERVICE
__DAY OR EVES.. FE 5-1298
Tree trimming Service
MONTCALM-BALDWIN I New 3-bedroom, $55 m oeted- Available soon.
S.B.8. I-
NEWLY DECORATED -
General Tree Service
2 ™
SAM WARWICK HAS 2-BEDROOM brick home In Sylvan Lake, Carport, lake privileges, 4100 lease. 4110 lease. Phone 482-2820 or 682-1714
JTraiKp^atioR Servree
L TRAVEL TO FLORIDA
convenience. FE 8-
Trocking
THESE HOMES ABE FOR
RENT
$55 MO.
HAULING and RUBBISH. NAME
your price. Any time. FE 0-0099.: LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING i, Rubbi.ih. fill dirt, grading andr
Trucks to Rent
V4-Ton PIckmjs ' l>,4-Ton Stakea TRUC3M - 7TRACTORS
OR WILL SELL
New
3 Bedrooms Carpeted “■ Gas Heat Dining Roorn
All Areas
l-B E D R O O M, BASEMENT, rage, 2 lota - Will mII mv equity inquire 107 Adelaide.
3-BEDROOM HOME. CARPETING.
4350 DOWN — 477 MONTH 3'/a bedrooms, full dining roon basement. new garage. ga heat, drapes. Marshall near Ai
burn, Pontiac.
PACE
id Drayton Plains, 1% baths, Ige, shaded lot, Vi, block to Lake Oakland, 412,700. No down payment to qualified buyer. WATERFORD
REALTY. OR 3-4625._________
BEDROOM BRICK, FULL BA8E-

mlly kitchen, dining L,
. located in Clarkston. ____________ down payment to qualified buyer. WATERFORD REAL-.tY...QB.3-.4a2a.
4-BEDROOM HOUSE. 21

full basement. 2-car lining room have resounded to patter of many little feet and ^wlU
could handle It H R. Hagstrom. IM59I OR 4-0354, after 6.•642-0435.
1 BLOCK ireatlon room pea. fireplace.
PACE
REALTOR OR 4-0436 BUILDER
474 DOWN !
”~)IATE POSS^-----
I large 3 bedroom.
home. Has enclosed porch, full basement, garage, carpeting, storms and screens. Located on Roselawn. Full price 411.200 — 4290 to move In - . 68 plus ..... OI I . . Call W, W. Ross OR 3-8021 for details’ "
4 ACRES
ihester
nS?bT.*‘'f!
built-in stove and oven, IVj baths, full .basement, 13*4q’__ recreation
----------414.800.................
000 down and 875 per month.
Ulx'irerice...C. Ridgewav
E 5-7051___________290 W Walton
COLORED
3 Bedroom Homes "O" DOWN
$8,995 — $995 DOWN
WILL auijj^ SW®**’*
....... _
floore. plastered W.alje, Ltr.

ig room, r overelied double, oarage, Lookm
New
roTeda‘*r‘*i;rana’ Laki! Thii lovely
garage. Walk-out ba rarge recreation spat fireplace, i^nothjir fu
Humphries
l-l': 2-9236
83 N. TELEOBAPH RD.
If no anewer call FE 2-5422
GREEN STREET
Neat, "clean 8 roptnij basement,
garage. Nice Ic
....V. ..... immediate poi 87,8l)0. Terms.
LONTIAC KIXALTY
7 Baldwin________PE 8-82'l
NORTH SiIbURBAN -3-bedrm. home wltlM bedrm. Bnnck bar In
$1,500
GOOD INVESTMENT —
bedmis. each, Hard-
NO COSTS NO NOTHING
PINE LAKE ESTATES COLONIALS—TRl-QUAD' LEVELS - RANCH HOMES Pvt beach, park for resident,i Priced at $23,-500 Including Improved lot HOWARD T KEATING CO W Lon* Lake Road, '/< mile east of Orchard OPEN i:
30 locations to choose from Model at 835 Franklin Open weekdays and Sundays 1:
• FE 8-2
r LI 2-7327 after 7
WEBTOWN I
tLTY
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
Building Removal Sale of Buildings In Oakland County, Michigan Sale No. B-0-118 Control 83174 V
e Michigan 'state Hlgh'-

-deacribea «tr
at Fhlch time and
. ------ jv the IK—
llghway Departmenl
Michigan.
Itqm No. 3 -2760 Roch Michigan
d property.
cel 126 r .Rd„ Troy.
Former Rendell property.
OL — 2 story fi
Item No. 8 — Parcel 127
2850 Acacia Drive. Troy, Michigan
- l>/i story brick house — modem, full basement. One frame garage 20*-x
Former Lockhart property.
Item No, 6 — Parcel 123
$9,500
modern, full basement. I frame garage Former Oalio property.
1076 Owendale Court, Troy,
T Ml^B
AND EQUIPMENT Dump Troeke—Seml-Traller>
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
WOODWARD
_ _____ -	FE 4-1442
Open Dally Including Sunday
873 Kettering
Attention, Lot Owners WUl build on your lot with only $50 down — a 3-bedroom i—'■
siding.



Call Mr. Partridge F
VILLAGE OP ROCHESTER 3-bedrm. trl-level. l'/2 baths, —■ OL 1-1487
___ complet-,.
.............. my office Open
dally. Immediate action.
Dorothy Siivder Lavender
70oi Highland Rd. <M59)
EM 3-3303______ Evea, 113-867-5417
Item No. 8 — Parcel 113
1024 Brlnston, Troy. Mich. Igan.
NB — 1 story frame house modern, with ' attached .breezeway and garage <18’*20’1.
Former Krsll property.
Former Horner property. Item No. 10—Parcel lOY
Court,
OL — 1 .s'tory frame bouse — Full; basement, 1 frame shed'ip X av, 1 oudtone.
IMMKDIATK POSSESSION.
4750 down on this hmne just jRated, On large comer lot-.
basement, on bear -----
carpet, targe room-. _________
combination porclt 1% ' car garage. Fenced yard,
r mii-to-wan
SKKINa IS BKLIKVIHO. Va btM a real sharp 0 bedroom coM^ we would be happy to show. Wait "Suburban location with lar|je 132x
Also garage; Priced for quick gale. Coll for appointment. ;
$72 MONTH—$589 DOWN 3 large bedrooms 14x12 kitchen. Pull basement. Corner lot, gas heat. Seward near Auburn. Poii-
PACE
REALTOR OR 4-0436 BUILDER
.AKEFRONT -- (
e Oakland. $12,000 to
I'Mciyd Kent liic., Realtor
TRADE \ TRADE
3-BBDROOM HOME -
WRIGHT
732 OAKLAND	FE 6-
CLARK
AYS "SELL PAST, res west of Pontiac on ,d. 3-bedroom home on h part ba.sement. Three - -‘ — r of property
LARGE FAMILY. SMALL BU! OETTi Conrfortabte 7-room'hoti with loads of bedrooms. Close schools and west of Pontiac Pine Lake area. Only 44.4t “	■ rranged If yo'
credit-la gt
ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD, QUICK POSSESSION. |Neaf 2-bedroom
car garage.' 411,900, terms.
Multiple Listing Service
KAMPSEN
R.I-:ALTOR - BUII.DER Let’s Trade Houses
Seldom
foo we have the bpportun-• itv to offer such a well kept home as'this three bedroom
aluminum siding, full basement. gas beat, carpeting, drapes, water softener. 1'4 car garage. Corner lot,— Only 41,200 down pUis costs.
Near Sylvan Lake
Four bedroom brick, gas garage with screened
porch, beautiful 1......
All vitv conveniences, privilege's 'bn Sylvan Lake. $1,400
conveniences.
down plus costs. W|^ trade.
Hot VV’ater Heat
....- _________jis.. and -I
basement two lots. North side location. 4400 down ou
MLS MEMBER
GILES
LEVEL HOME. Featuring large Roman brick fireplace In 14xl0’ Irving room. 4 beorooms. 2 ceramic tile baths, hardwood floors. Dishwasher. Full basement, reo-
----1. Garage. Large
Owner trfnsferred,
giving speclaf price.
Located on outskirts of Waterford. Village. Practically new 3-bed-ro^	*—"■ *—••<1^
sHopplnfe XmniMlft^ puocs«sslon. Only I10.950* $1,000 down, ii per
ANNETT
Wisner School Area
decorat^^^S^rm. bjim
^oors, glassed and screened porch. Basement, HA heat. Vacant FulJ price 46,900. low dn. pvint.
SaitMotfiir _..J*'
CARPORT
HOUSE
READY SOONI
3-ne(h'ooi« Runch
FAOB »ftja»tr«ONT GAS HHAT ^ lAKOm LOTS
Otlier tyiics available.
NO DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS
MODEL OFl’N 706 CORWIN
ft block east of Oakland. I bloc north of Montcalm.I
FE 0-1701 or FE 8-1701 r L*VHh7® af

NEW HOUSES
$00
Down
$75
Par month Includes everything
Visit 3 bedroom modole on Carlisle Just off West Kennetl, 3 blocks from Flgher Body.
OPEN 11 TO a DAILY 8POTLITE BUILDINO CO.
$9300
J uDuiouu’i full basement, oak floors, gas heat, copper plumbing. NO MONEY DOWN, On youp lot. We arrange flnaiiolng.
iiiu-Bilt Hoine.s"
REALLY mean BETTER BUILT Russell Young ,

SCHRAM
Make A Date
To Inspect this 3-bedroom bungalow -with 11x17 living r0oni_ and a 22x24 attached garage. The corner lot Is 87x227. Price reduced to 84.900 for quick sale, l.ocated on Crooks Road south
4 Hetlrooms

IVAN W. SCHRAM ealtor	Fk: 5-9471
M2 JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
HAYDEN
WA'TKINS LAKE FRONT E*ce>lr 08, ^°red'^'*blrch 'paneled *d(
LOON LAKE SHORES. 3-bedroor ranch home. Lot 86x338. Kltchei with bullt-lns. 12X24 Tt.- llvlni nom, 2 fireplaces. w«lx"but base ment overlooking water. 2-car gs rage. 42},500. Terms.
terms for this
PONTIAC mall area. W^OO w
-------------rnace.
HAYDEN. Realtor
'BUD"
d bath!
twees. 2-car att. garage ___
2-car separate garage. Low dn. pmt. $0,000 full price.
Near Northern High
Attractive 3-bedrm. bungalow in excellent condition. Carpeted llv. rm.. complete-
nance), mqtal awnings storms and screens - Ful basement, rec. rm., gas fur ---- garage ■ and fenced
yard'. 413,050. t
5 Bedrooms
Lake Privileges
Home in excellent cqndltlon and completely Insulated. Full basement divided Into rec. rm. oil heat. 2-car —
WE	WILL	TRADE
ANNETT INC. Realtors
28 B Huron St.
Open Evenings and Sunday
FE 8-0466
ham^Lake; WrTasement. 'oil
Large
1 Aluminum s d\t'only*4i
oak floors, oil furnace.
47.450. SELL OR ’EBADJfcrLargeJl —- modem home In need of “■—" repairs. 3 large ' ’
. Basement. Gas
near WILUAMS LAKE—Just like new. Modem bungslow. built In 1052. Wall to wall carpeting. Tiled-bath. Rec. room. 2-car ga-

only $12,500.
lELL .OR TRADE—Another one lust like new. Brick and frame rancher. Large two-car garage. Family room. Wall to wall ear-peUng. Gas beat. Large 100x150’ Jot. Privileges on Maeeday and Williams ... “....." -----
Leaved
LIST WITH UB-^We buy. sell and trade. 23 years experience. Open 0-0:30. Multiple Listing Service.
L. H. BROWN, Realtor
800 BUsaboth Lake Road Ph. FB W564 or FE 2-4010
lower level with f extra fireplace
fype living *ioom.'kitchen”'
built-lns. New carpeting - -	- you’ll want t
ft t—— -
Quick Possession
op this clean, neat 2-bedrm. north one floor' gas
eat and hot water, aluminum torms and screens, awnings, ea-sge Only 41.485 down, balance t 466 per month. HURRY I
We.st Side 2-Fami!y
Good home and Income In first class condition; S-room owner unit downstairs; 4-room rental unit up, full bath each unit, separate dining room each unit, spotless basemeat, automatic heat and hot “ -.... ------ garage. Priced lat
softener.
812.400 put you. snare aonars to work, today I
“B«d”*Nicholie, Realtor
40 Mt. Clemens St.
,FE 5-1201 .
After 6 ji.m. FE 4-8773
STOUTS
Best Buys Today
Delightful
— -----jm homes,
^Pontiac ^ shopping
attached 2-car garage, living roc with natural fireplace, oil fore atr heat, king size one-acre 1 Privileges on Silver Lake. Prlc tor quick sale at 014.400 w
. gleaming ^ite aluminum siding. a»mJMrpeted Mvlng room wim vestuitilo entrance and cl' ' ‘ "
-J-.	workable kltch-
<bn, 3 large bedrooms, basement wfth oil heat, shower. T decorated throughout. cuu»™i ly located. Only 410.000
BAST SUBURBAN — Attractive
— ----------- -jjing rench
of Auburn
Helglits. near Adams Rd. Features large paneled living r
----- dlnfng room, aie bith
residential area
large
heA.

DAVISBURO VILLAOB — new ^Mroom Cape Cod with 2 compiqle baths, custom kitchen —“h-bullt-tn oven and ranee »»I4 _ basement	—
radiant heat. _________
age on Davlsburg Pond' Trout It mS*	1»<* ^Iborr Only —
or trade
^or smaller home.
Warren Stout, Realtor
77 N- Saginaw St.... . . .fb. o-oios
Open Evei. Tm'"8. p.m.
many bull Really a ft
It today? Be-
PARTRIftbE
10 ACRES
Near Waterford — this Itrke 4-uedrooin home has gas neat
S‘pS'.dTy"r;??e* “S?e‘’‘tm' •
more v«cttt acres available.
CRAWFORD AGENCY
■ly.'

HIITER
!.Q
DORRIS
fi
riwTiw’nonj* ukr fhost -
i%\±-
tn.*Lr.rissva.i‘"v
you,will sdmlro. RMl o
'”y*s»-u«.“J?icVi:.s
(r»m» nom« wlUi,(uU bM«roi!nt •nd ? lidgtrMl flrtplKoci. lo> o»t«d In (xoallent »r»n - We«t Sulmrbnn. AttMliad lartit, ''' lloors kud i^uUrad wklU,
idb Hmmww	ju
tAWLr-
BATEMAN
Trading I« Our Business Extra Value
twrs thaMi
Luke k'ront
Ill.MOi A|id A (ummar of con-Uidmant. Oui» »nd cokyi i»-riti», gM li««t and isrMMd
apps-M's
UiU prloa. liven nuto—“-wiieher And dryer oonibl Included At tide price. lUOO down And only $7 monUi. CALL NOW.
UCT'8 TRAOB
I (live HouSc—
Must Sell Today
B|(irbii le Juet Around Ui
NoW%M* ef^	Ai
Aluminum lidlni. Coiy, om.. fort Able, And oilrA nice condition. Jui{ in,too with only 1710 down And no mortgage ooeta.
THK PONTIAC PEE3S. WEDNJ^^SIMY, MARCH I t. l»Bi
yOUTY
?Xo.?fminA««lobC
■•'“Ii’t need a oAr If Weher I. Oonelder oar a* down
heat; Vou,^— employe. PAyment,
liBT’S TRADB
Trade
Your emAller home on thi ■ ■	. buogAlpw liigood
end laoAUon. VAOAnt llAte poeteaejon. CM v..,._ ----------- leiT'Only
HOYT
"For UiAt perionAl interetC’ Ml BRI8COB
6-room ranch, 1 extra large bet rooma, living room, dining rooit gitchen, hafdwoOd iloore, oIai tered wMe. full baeemont, 3-oi aarAge. Full price 10.000 with lo' ^«40Wk#A»<AA»lU««»-—
Val-U-Way
We Trade On Any Home
$450 DOWN, FHA
TRIPP
Seminole Hills
Four-bedroom home In excellent condition. New carpeting.
NICHOLIE
THRBB BBDROOMS Full baaement, hardwood floore, oil heat, ]uat decorated. U'e and the paymenta----------------
Bath and one halt. Decorated. Youngatown kitchen, oil h e a t. paved street, large lot. low paymenta per month. It'a vacant.
Eves. Call Mr. Castell, FB 3-7373.
Nlcholle-Harger Co.
03W. Huron Bt._____________FE t-01g3
—------ Oleaming''oalc %wiril
family slse kitchen, full baaement. attached garage, Truly a wonderful buy. will trade.
WILL TRADE
A rgal cute, clean, iharp, ranch type bungalow In top oondlUon. Has 3 large berooms, custom built bath, large family kltohen, plus attached garage. A Wue-
Lr^o?«!id;.‘-COLORED $65 PER MONTH
Newly decorated 3-bedroom __
galow. auto, heat, aluminum storms and screeiu. Will help responsible party with down pay-
R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor	FE 4-3531
346 OAKLAND AYE,
GAYLORD
room home north of Pontiac. Excellent kitchen that Includes washer and dryer. lO-ft. lot gives you plenty of room. Call FB 8-9893 and lY won't cost you a thing to go see It today.
PRIVATE LAKE with 359-foot frontage. Very beautiful 8-room Itb-story home. Excellent wood panel-
SSci” inp'aclour^'rrrS:
Two screened- porches. 'iF-car g*-rage, oil heat. Beautiful carpeting upstairs and down. This '- "
home of quality and worth ..
ing at and priced at 131.000, Call MY 3-3821 to make appointment ,.to aeo.
WANT TO BDILDf Wo have excellent building program with a quality home buRder. Call FE 8-9803 or MY 3-3821 and get all , details.
Lawrence W. Gaylord
38 E. Pike St.	ihl 8-9693
Broadway and Flint	MY ~
WEST SIDE INCOME:
3 roomy warm apartments. Each apartment consists of living r'-'"”
bedroom, kitchen and bath. ------
apartments on the first floor -one apartment up. Basement, ol' heat, garage and many extras Good central rental location -Priced at; $11,800,00, any terms Make us ah offer.
EXCLUSIVE SEMINOLE! Hft,LS; Brick ranch home-at a real good buy >- Large living room with fireplace, dining room. Kitchen with eating space, three bedrooms 1 two baths, carpeted through-
__ - s baths, family
. i porches, two-oar-garage -Large lot: 140x300, well landscaped and more space available. Priced at: $32,800.00. Shown by appointment.
JOHN K. IRWIN
ft SONS -T REALTORS
Look! $3,800, $500 Down
Elisabeth. 18-ft.
I months to lake
Reduced From $7,500 To $5,600, W. Maple Rd.
Nice modest homo with 38-ft-1™,8
- Bass & Whitgomb
.Want Ads Do the Job The More You Tell ' The Quicker You Sell! ' . Try them!
Dial €E 2-81SI . Today!
Diiviabiiro; Village
ahirms. scrosiig and awnlnis -
Fenton Area
asKSSvtSir
forooi sal* holow eoxt.
Rolfe IL Smith, Realtor
bedrm.
north on.. --------
linmedlato possossjon out any reasoiutbic $9,900 with reasonabi
Let’s Trade
FE 4 0628	^ PE 8-7I6
^^UL-nPLE* LtS'^NO »BR^6i^'*
ARRO
LAKBJFRONT - Lovely 3-bedroom brick ranch, bullt-lns In kitchen. 3 fireplaces, 2 baths, walk-out basement, recreation room, 3-car ^rage, excellent neighborhood.
INCOME - 4-famlly w
Wit
ly insulated, garage. 1 need garden spot, t shade trees, lake pr
iieui, s-oar garage. \ furnished. Close to bus. sell.
BE'nREMENT HOME-Small cosy.
Hr.*.’,	«»«?•. tool
jawn I
OOgY 2-BEDROOM BUNGALOW -mrsplAco In cheery living roqm.
KX’$»Crrfy‘m*S2i:
opsm 0-0	Sunday U-8
PHONE 682.2211
BUDGET MATCHER!
Brick 3-bedroom. All fully carpeted. In quiet nelghborhoM. Paved street. On large IBO-ft. lot. Built hr 1988. Has- largo- rooms. }
C. SCMUETT
O'NEIL
MULTIPLE USTLNO SERVI'Ce,
bath down, recreailon room In basenaent, 20-foot garage and cornef lot with cyclone fencing. $18^. Use our trad^-ln;plan for your down payment.
SIX-ROOM BRICK AND ALUMINUM ranch located In Drayton Woods. Featuring kitchen with bullt-lns,
separate ‘------------- —
peted 13xi
yard for the children plus many other lovely features. Only $2,300 down plus cost.
tine 3-bodroom ranch home near Drayton iMains. It's the first time offered and you can buy it for $10,300 with $1,800 odwn. Out-of-town
LIVE LIKE A COUNTRY nUngSSt ^'oetroltTT*acre beautifully landscaped hlll-site. Rambling brick ranch-style home> 3* master slse bedrooms. Large: activities room for your entertaining. The view alone 1 Is worth a mtIUon, but for YOU It can all be yours for only $23,-900. call FE 3-7103.
G.l.
No Money
BYLVAN t A K E pRIVl-
CLOSING COSTS PAID. Off Hospital Road Is this large 3-bedroom bungalow. Has part basement for utility -breexeway and Itb-car garage. large lot. $9,980. Get
RAY O’NEIU Realtor
363 S- Telegraph-Open I 9-9 p.m F* 3-7103	OR 3-303
wWlW iPwW^wPP W l^F$P8wW ' IP*
’ ■ arillnt
A Tremendouii Buy I Ranch Home on Acre
garaas, full htisamant, log burn-fiig flraplao*, oli ft^ooe, lovely balli. If ton *«fk frMb country air. privacy, a lovely yard and
fflrrmTSm’'.: Dray I on Plains
3-bedroom, living room, dining
rr.3»±"«u:rX
Priced at $13,800.
West Suburban
3-bedrooin. Neal bungalpw with 1%-C8r gftr»8t. Lgrff corntr lol.
2 Acres
l-bedroom with f^ull basement, -3-ear garage. I
heme tor rontal. Ikwated on 3
S^‘fX * si S-A
S."lt
unalle heat ami
r^viSf.
:tdeat for home i
1-ET’S BUH.D
Tour PiMi, get our bid or, ee( our tri-levol deal.
ONLY $9,962 TOTAL
Hai 3 bedroome and fintehed rec reatlon room. On your lot or ours Call FB 1-048$ for details.
C. SCHUETT
1034 W. Huron	Open 'til
ClARKSTON
419 PBR CENT MORTOAQB Brick ranch In an excellent arc Paved etreet. 3 bedroome, fi beiament, recreation apooe, wl< lot. Priced right	$10,$00.
REPAiRS NEEDED
ON THIS DUCK LAKB PRIVI-LBGBD HOUSB 0-room houee on 3 lots. Fix up and be ready to enjoy 1 summer months. MAKB US j OFFER.
OAKLAND LAKE
FRONTAOB With sendy beach plus 0 rooms, 3 bedrooms. Welk-out basement, oil foroed air beat. Good price - $9,000. HURRY 6N THIS ONEI
SMITH WIDEMAN
MILLER
tl-LETVEL Drayton Woods s
Id«
Ik floors.
William Miller Realtor	FE 2-0263
Open 9 to 9	Open 9
Income Property
AN EXCBLLKNT INVKSTMBNT. ------	-------- 2 ro«
$180 monthly. Out-of-says sell. Price $10.80 Bor down. Bern now.
118 W. University, OL 1
Perry Street Duplex
dlplng I
_____ full bs(
........... Excellent Income
„ln return for small Investment. Full price,- $10,800 on E-Z terms. This will pay for Itself.
H. R. HAGSTROM
REALTOR
80X100 BUnjDINO SITES- PRIVI-'--ts on beautiful Walter's Lake, idy beaches, good fishing. I^w m payment, easy terms. MY
excellent fishiho. swim-mtng. boat docks, to minutes Pontiac. Large lake $796. $10 dor-$10 mo. ra 4-450*. oh 3-129$ Dale Brian Corp.	, . .
WEBSTER
JtKB. ORIpN . OXTORD 6>A Acrea. Helth forces sale of attractive brick ranch home. Full baaement, 3 bedrooms and IVa baths. Largo living room, F brick flreplacf.- Smart m— kitchen with loads <d cupboards and dlnl^ space. Attached M-
Lvts-Acren^
119 ACRE NEAR I
____MAYBEE RD.
______ Baldwin. 300 evergreens.
FE 8-9987.
8 ACRES Rochester Area
A beautiful hilltop building site. - Ip a good area with a view for
F^»Vr^gr3.ISl"Steyy:30
DRAYTON WOMM 129 X ISO. Excellent trl-level H. R. HAGSTROM. Realtor. Highland Rd. (M-B9). OR 4-after 0. FE 4-7006.
____ Plan Now
''°cherMee“hills 1
0 GAS HBATED MOTBL UNITS
fc.'W7Vttw?5lliifc

FR 3-
AVAILAHLR	______ ,
isaso, xervice slallan doing good business. Prominent hMatfoA, tna-
ill ITB 4-lBlt,
Ann sijii A vsnuviAin im
a person tired of lay-offs or of being bossed around and looking for the OPPORTUNITY to have a store of your own plus 6 nice airnrt-maiits to supplement
tej'of
CARNIVAL
By IMck Tum«r

iiiventori' ' $(
2rf'o*rYSr."pf3k.«^
Ray O’Neil, Realtor
Super Market
Long establlshod grooory, meet and llqUor bualntss. Big volume
gr*?Ms^ai.i.'”i?r‘nT3,'ia Class “C”
Large liquor bar and louhge, established for years, excellent lo-esUon. Includes business equipment, real estate and plenty of parking facilities.
Brewer Real Estate
OSEIPH F. BEIBZ. SALES MGR. •E 4-Mgl	Eves, rS *4iB3
A-1 Sunoco
Be ready to go I Spring Is Just around the corner. Make more profit selling sunooo's exclusive 8 custom blended gasolines, including new 190. priced below regular priced gasoline, enroll now In our new dealer training center. School starts March it. Requirements 1-Complote 6-wsek paid training course. 3-Moderate Investment for merchandise only.
East Side >
Mr. Crawford TR 3-BIOO PR 7-9434 Eves.
Call 8:30 to 8
SMALL WELL-BOUI^PETD PRttft shop. Good business, well stocked. Priced reasonabU for
Sals Land Contracts 60
IMMEDIATE SALE FOR YOUR
Land Contracts
you deal. Warren h N. Saglnasr St. WUI8_______
NEW CONTRACT C
BY OWNER
Nice restaurant on busy highway
In busy area, showing nice -
St present. Unlimited-
Includes building ant SO^tj^r cent down.
les'lblfiues'
A Nice Little Business MAN OR WOMAN Full or Part Time
Representing a national advertised product in your area. We will appoint a qualified person to super-..... -elected Boyer As-3unts and expand, .jence necessary as ______.1 you and your Income starts Immediately. Investment required Is $1,-*f you have —"
ad If you do not have all the above qualifications. Write Pontlao Press Box 3, giving name age, address and phone number and our region supervisor will grant you a personal Interview.
DUE TO ILL HEALTH I MUST my new beauty shop. Real fill 8-44S7, FE 4-8833, shop.
CITY WIDE REALTY
Phone Flint 238-7893. EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUlfiTY PART TIME
Need reliable man or woman tt service local area. Nationally ad vertlsed AAA-1 packaged products. No selling. No experience necessary. Furnish own car, references and $l,438-$3.g70 cash for Inventory and equipment. Write today to National Confectioners, Inc., 1985 Unlver.stly Avenue, St.
liquor bar. Lc------—.........
inchlgan. $8,000 down. Low Illness responsible for this bargain, statewide Real Estate Service. 1717 8. Telegrai*., Pontiac. FB^ 4d>831.
ahocERir store, beer, Wine
and meat. Doing good bus'-----
In nlco location. Must bo Priced below *10.000. Reply ITae Press, Box 04.
In Thumb area with- Uvhjgvduar-ters and rental Income. OMy^38,-200. Will take Pontiac area homo in trade.
Peterson Real Estate MY 3-1681
BARBER SHOP FOR RENT OR sale. 6870 Bllxabetb Lake Rd. Call
547-0016, after 7.___
DEPARTMENT AVAIL-
W'’&gh1
Ing. EM 3-0333.
lercial buUd-
SPORTING GOODS
Northern Michigan In heart hunting and fishing area. Ms street location. Modem equl^ ment. Exc. opportunity — good income.	.
H. R. HAGSTROM
REALTOR
4900 Highland Rd.	(M-..
Pontlao	OR 4-035$
with buildings. H( ;^^wood_real^estate
only $30.0
PARTRIDGE
$> ASSOCIATES. REALTORS “usinosses Utrr—-.
S-1241 1080 W.' Huron
Sak HoutskaM Oaadt_^jl - AIM'UANCKS—
Wringvr washers, rebuilt . .{41. Heltlgaralurs, renewed . . I4f
fe:: Ut:riMW.'
"good houbekkeping shop
$1 Dveet Huron Bt.
“So Freddy Mason Is back! Tell him It’s to hear his hom again! ’’
S9r
SMALL R]';STAURANT
Good looBtldir.' Btalnleke ctcel ^lament. « n I y *3,000 down.
MICIHGAN BUSINESS SALl'3 CORPORATION
JOHN A. LANDBIESSBR. BROKER
m,	M..____.yg *:.»w
"AVIHO TROUPt » iTfNrViiiJS TMB right - ----
res'taurant. property ANb ^equlpme^i^^^oxqollent . logatlon.


*olo down, goj per month, per cent Intereet. Big 3o per c discount. Valuet Really. 348 O
land, FE- 4-3531, _____________
TO SETTLE ESATE
tract - Property sol Payment! up to dal jears. Write Pontlao
WEST SIDE - 10 YEaKis^D -
I, disoount *320. MI
Wanted Contracts-Wltg. 60-A
•ELY 7 your 1
--±m:
ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST Action on your land contract. Cash
ARB---------------- -----
Your contract can bo traded face value on the. business .. real estate of your choice, K handled by a specialist In this field. Call today and five me the facts about your contract.
I CAN BELP. LEW HILEMAN »-.7«» FOR
u deal! 7
CASH FOR land CONTRACTS. H. J. van Welt. 4040 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1388.	.y-*
ACTION
25ar.“«r.«rW«
FAST SERVieg And low dib-COUNTS ON LAND CONTRACTS. J. C. HAYDEN. REAL'TOR. FE 0444L
IMMEDIATE ACTION
On any good land contracts, or seasoned. Your cash upoi
^l^dera)^^
WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500
We will be glad to help you
STATE FINANCE CO.
608 Pontiac State Rank Bldg.
FE 4-1574
BUCKNER
FINANCE company
WHERE YOU CAN ,
BORROW UP TO $500
OFFICES IN
ntlao - Drayton Plains - Utica iltod Lk„ Birmingham, Plymouth
$25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE
FAST, CONVENIENT 34 monOis to repay
EOA^^
**coMMiSmTy~ U3AN~ca®® 30 E. LAWRENCE FE 0-04!
Need $25 to $500? See
Seaboard Phone FE 3-7617 1185 N. Perry St.
PARKING MO PROBLEM
Seaboard Finance Co.
Sigriature
Up to 24 months to repay.
PHONE FE 2-9206
OAKLAND
-TaOan Ceimpany-----
33 Pontlao Stete t
202 N. MAIN ,
214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO
HOUSEHOLD GOODS OL 6r0711	OL 1-9701
PL 2-3510	'	PL 3-3610
• friendly ^SERVICE"
A Moirtgape Problem?
We make mortgage loans to moot your requirements. Any propsriy, any amount. Prompt dspendabis service. Remodeling and —
a'a‘iraX.'-
Cheff Mortg. and Realty 303-0033 or 003-0710
...MortgageXo
V Terms FE 3-1...
mortgage,
£"a!lkV
r land «i providing you of homo rmpi..
•0803. Mr. Ross
^ORjraAGE ON ONE ACRE UP.
J'r'a'iiart^n. ..............
t ftnd Ui do

$750 to $2,000
CASH LOANS
ucDie imo one aooouni with only me place to pay.
Family Acceptance Corn.
317 National Bldg.
m-n, TV * iadia*_______Jt
iMtRAL REF6ld%filTbR. APT. ils,' 14 eu. ft daap trssis, bal. 4,ier wk/B.ddok's^My l-l^fll, HOIIT ANYTHING VOII WANT FOh Tltn IIOUH CAN HE FOUND AT I. A B BAtilh
».i,Tt'o«n1?.dr'5vx
^e*‘hSr*J^dr trade Co.
)ohiisoii l^.tdio A TV
tleefed Michigan 'fiSA
Salt Mlusllaiitaai
lng'*'c*,“6B”j'-4jj4***"*
em.ra.s
i^l540,_____
Lshers Dryers^-Rsfrlgerators Gas and ^eotrlo ranges
cWv«^J5»*ll(t''sW^
.10 B. Cass Ave.	FB 5.0133
tables. TV _______
tion, Reae. OR_3J41'J___..-^ .. _ iND~ DINETTE, {.IKE NEW. and bed, complete. UL 1-1057. brand new RCA wJbV^PooL
gee range. 35" Imperlel. 1 ovene. *0 per cent off, HiUfaIr 61740.
DR'Altb Nfcw HX blond and wrought Iron, 10 complete; also trundle beds
CEILINO TI
ALCOA-RBYNOLDBKAIBBR
aluminum BIDINO
SAVE *100 TO 0400
dripping windowi with ftlum. fldln And Dftkid inAmil Alum, ilterm has
...■■‘“•''jSsr“vTL»"*
rile old Rollable Pioneer" Cell FE 5-084I Now 34 Hour Phone gerVlO* D«llY
WALL 7
FACTORY RECONDITIONED
-REFRIGERATORS—
Admlrol, Phllo^Norie
rtjwie-^oicE***!’?^*^^
WKC 108 N. Saginaw
"FIRST -HME IN MICHIOAN"
wholesale
meats AND OROOERIBS -free HOME DELIVERY-All Netlonelly edvertleod brsnds. Buy with lavlngi up to 40 per cent. Soep, euger, —-
butter, oeko mix, ------ —
dim food, vegotablos, Irulte, lulcoe; Kleenex, pet milk, beby foode, frosen mode end peper foodi. Not neoeseary to own -freeier. Call tor tree catalog an 3-3330. 0 to 0.

'00 ford WITH (S3 A MONTH ‘’*ra‘'3?0047”^	^
BUY - sra-L — trade Sweepers -^uns—Mowers „	sporting Goode
Bernes 5> Hargravoe, 743 W, Huriw NEW, CARPETED 3-BBDROOM home. Will trade anything for down payment and assume psy-”*"**-ff .	Avsllable
£“2?...!?= »-367e. 13 to 9. 8. B. S.
rausc. exooUent condiUon, $100.
FE 4-0563.______________
(AHOGANY BEDROOM B U I i' bookcase bed, dresser, chest
KELVINATOR REFrIoBRATOE '56 model. Good eondlUon. *75. Call after 4 p m. FB 4-0271.
kOOM pYrOTTURK
------------ AKC PEKINOBBE,
trade for encyolopodias or a good bike, MA g-1780.
___ OR TRADE:
wblte nylon butyl
Market Tire Co., i__________
'S3 BTilWARD
caS 'ofer*r”-
TRADE 3-Fi.._
— m.
LIQUIDATING
ENTIRE STOCK Bedroom sets, box- springs Xnd mattress, living room sets, chairs, ockeri, lamps and tables, odd hests, dressers, beds, bt"' " ‘ EVERYTHING MUST
ARGB CRIB AND . MATTRESS,
housetraller.
LOVELY WHITE LACE WEDDING -leyn, slse 13; Ilka nep. FB 8-0694
NECCRT AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG
SOFA BED. NAUOARYDE COVER. 939. 7-Plece bronxe-tone dinette, like new, $30. Kenmore electric Ironer, $39. TVs, $14. up. OXs space heater, $8. I^frlgerators, $10, up. Oas and electric stoves. , $10. Trunk. $4. 5-plece' chrome dinette, $15. Wringer washers,
PEARaON'S PURNITURE 43 Orthard Lake Ave. FE 4-7881
SINGER ^ANT .NEEDLE DELUXE, Zlg ZagU£, blond sewing table. Take oiTRMance of $61 or payments of $7 per month. Universal " ~E 4-0905.
I BABY’S DRESSER. $10: NICE desk, $22; stove and refrlger-tor bargains, all brands, a., sixes. III to $100; Maytag and Speed Oueen washers, t33 up. 3-montb-«Id bedroom suite, *60; roll-a-Way beda, $14 up. Bloc; dryer,
rooms, 30; Living rooms, *10; odd wrings, beds, chests, dresr— TV’s and ruga. Everything In 1 fumlsture at bargain pnees. NEW, LWINO HOOMS, B ROOMS, dlnettoi, ruga and mat-treseea. Factory lecondi, about " price. E-Z .termi.
T	p2«	«9 ««J6k	j-9~ —
LXIoyette, PE' 3'-6843‘. Open
0 Monday and Friday. ______________
3 pmCE LIVING ROOM SUITE. Good condition. OR 3-23$7 after 5.
-PIEfiE uvniQ Rooir^
• corner table, l drum ti wd condition. FB 4-7005. y^JH^lfcREBa COMPLETE . *4 Wtfager Washer ........• *3
RecUner chair •... .. *1
buY-sell-trade
AIRWAY FURNITURE M59, corner of Airport, OR 3-

l 3-0677.
e wi(|i, 0 chairs, 1
*4.00 MONTHLY WILL TAKE over almost new Singer xlg-xag equipped cabinet model sewing machine. Makes button boles. " signs, etc. Balance due on n
------- ^j33	]
Sewing Center.
' contract ' 5-MOrCa
AUTOMATIC WA£
_____________ROOM SI.______,
brand new X99 to 03*0; (1.56 weekly. Pearson's. 43 Orchard
Lake Are,"------------
CE OININO ROOM.'
43(0 Moorpe ■“	'
I?" P^abte'
60 other - set
.„.We Buy, Sell and Trade Wolton TV, PE 3-3357 Open 0-0 515 E. Walton, corner ot Joslyn(^
____ UPRIGHT, FAMOUS
„ame brands. Scratched, 'rerrlflo values-$148.09, while-" - • ■ Michigan Fluorescent, chard Lake.
■“ lU;
t, “*373 “
Ml 6-5656 alter 8 p



fppTtisAifliir'r*:
Jrt|^04*0, MOO Commeraa Hd.
r;n5“»
I CUBIC FOOT deepfreeze display oabliiet with 3 slldins glass doors, remota low tsmpara-fure, 330 volt compressor. Very good eondltlon, 0178, FB $-4083,
i SUNBEAM GAl
AS Ft
$ad. :
UDIO TONE hearing
ALL kl
tt" ..-
$13.08; marred tube. $10 up: gal. glaee-ltned heaMr, $47.M; po. White or oolor bath '** ■ [rim, $70 98; Now eur $33.98. Copper, eteej. plastic |dlpe and fittinge SAVE SftuMBINO CO. FB 8-1100 iil&mfWWORT^^
U
$70 ea. .194 Alberta. PE MtlM. iANii"WsfROMHH'r«ia^Tr^
\	O Ml
eeuiiSu' Vmn
Morrte Muila
.. . Tsiegraph Hd. FB t-0017 (Acroes from Ttl-Huronj
aiir.i."ro.

_____ TRADE ALLOWANCE
,.Av“imR*?m>*AAN
EDWARD'S	1* g, SAGINAW
fender bass GUITAR, new IN '63 - 8-nio. old. bard sholT oast. $160, FB 4-1365____ -
ao6u used' wd&b CLA'RiHB'f
A-t condition. 159.60.
Uted Biienleli guitar, 930.
GRINNELL’S
37 8. Saginaw_______FE 3-71M
GIBSON ELiOTRltf dlitn'l'iltll.
Sy‘3?j§?5""’
>, BIxby bar, saerifloa.
epmi
-■team boiler. Automatic water heater. Hardward, eleot. lupoUet, crock and blpo and flttlngj. Mwe ----- - ftlnt. Super Ttornt—
excellent mahogany dindio
'wr*'
JANSSEN tlPINET ^ANG. Mob-am Danleh Walnut tlnleh. iMract blow action. Matching bonoh, tunod^ and dollvored. Only *16 per Yw'll' Do Better At Bottojrly'e LEW BETTERLY music CO. g;rLm??n»^ TILL?
PRACTICE organ
relocAticSTsalE r
All morohandlsa at tromasdoua
«wt iSiTionVCaUSl
let. Thit It whan wo move to our new location, 400 Elisabeth Laka Road, directly aoroes from Poo-tUo Mall.
Weigand Music Center
Mlraolo Villa	FB S-4IM
TEACHING______FIANO TUNING t
Pianos and Organs at Gallagher's
^goW^^raotlea piano. *30 down
Ohlckerlng Grand piano In flno oon-dltlon.
used Baby Grand piano wdy *3M. Blonde Spinet- piano. Rotutned from
; oonsqlo Orlnnoll ptano, lOhki 0X0. buy.
new Kimball aplnot piano In itUul abony finish. *545 with
Ohemtstry lat. *30.
Sf
Loos* Rock Wool, boi; !!^!‘#.!oi 4x8 V.O. mogogany Plywood
lumber company
0940 Cooley Lake Rd. EM M17
ORMIOA. PLUMBINa,
Olau, Hard war#. Wh*>0
5-4713, MW
w. MooUmUbi.________-- .......
HOT WAtYr OTATBR. 3*4ML gas. consumers approved, *10.60
gas. consumers approved, *10.50
ar-isa.r“xi!i2!ssa
gas beater. Mloblgan Ffnore^
SEWING MACHINES. WHOLB-sale to all,. New, used and repossessed. Over 75 models to choose from. Prices start Singer portables, *11.50, xlg xag equipment. Curt’s AppUances, 0401 Hatchery Rd. OR 4-1101.
8101 Commeree Rd, EM 3-4U4.
trie range. B. B. Munro Electric Co., 1000 W. Huron. rSED TVs, gU.OO AND UP. USED Frlgldalre refrigerator, *30.05 -Sweets Radio and Appl., 433 W. Huron. FE 4-1133.	"
LOVELY siNOSR SXWINO
»iSSc.“**!r;r'p^n
ments ^M6^or month. Universal
LAVATORIES, CO*m.ETE. ( value, *14.05, also bathtubs, lets, shower stalls. terrific values. MW rescent, 303 Orehard MODEVM bulldoxer. •«
MA 4-3073 after 4^..	,
MEDICINE CABINETS, LARGE
VACUUM CLEANER — A BRAND new 1001 tank type with all aV tachments. Close-outs.. *15. Vac-center. call FB..................

Used Maytag gas dryer 'Mbson refrigerator, freeser across top ...
Used electric range ..
Frlgldalre refrigerator, *
Used FrlgldaD* Washer .....
Crump. Electric, Inc.
1455 Auburn Rd. ■	FE 4-3
WYMAN'S
USED TRADE-IN DEPT, j-burner Apt. gas stove .... *19.88
36'' -Ohs stove ....
r. Elec. Refill. .. r Wringer washer ..
Electric range............
___^lo couch ........... *18.05
3-Pc. Llv. room suite ...... *13.05
Living room chairs -. ... ♦ 4.08
WYMAN'S
IS IS IT, BARGAINS, GALORE!
MATCHING BOX SPRINGS *40 00 TABLE and boudoir LAMPS
SfETAL W&DROBE'
!'
..	Ijfe' AND
^^Tf4»0L TO MIM
MAN'S.
USED B Odd chr Used' to
Foam jiattrets mnd box
Full oI,t|rin
WKC -108 N. Saginaw
doors. Teirlflc but. Fluorescent, 303 Orchard Lake
each. FB 3-0U3.	*
OPEN ’TIL 3 A.M.-WB OeIiVEK
John’s Party Store
039 Baldwin	”” *'
ROMEX WITH GROUND WIRE, (5.75 tor 350 R, coll. No^ 3 service entrance oablo, O. Thompson, 7006 MM West.
SAVE. SAVE. SAVE with {round,
sou
(ammond organ, only *40*.
'std Oulbraosen trainalitor organ In beautiful mahogany flmth with --------------or *1,7* BOW »1,«5.
chimes,
Brand new Lowrey
ray organ. 3 kOy-
__________
Private laisona ineludad.
Sava *100 on purobaio of new Low-ray organ used In our teaobuig
tee?**' lS^S^olrm.*ikS»!n and oak flnlab.
Wa teach both ptano and organ In our atudloa - why not glvo your oblld a laxtlng oduoatlonf
GALLAGHER’S
11 B. Huron	TO 4*501
Open Mon. and Frl. tlU 0
PIANOS
JANSSEN
PIANOS Exclusive Dealer
’ totia quaUty and oondlUon. 4 Hopklna, Ponttao. _________
Qfflct
Pontiac Cash Registe
69c lenffth;
la
gal.; for real
- -- 3%'^olchaTd~Lake' IM'.
*3.85
Store bivipiiMiil73
PRACTICALL'Y new COMPLWS

I CABINET macblne. --------
IMPS *3*.00 *10.00

VORTVSIX
TH K^>0NT1AC PRESS. WKltNKSDAV, .MAH( II H, 1008
r
i i-n«i 79
('m* TimmiciMi. *»
/iifcc OAeHiinjHETHn'Jw**
.®Tiai«iPiS!jra
Up^WTSSSirTidHrTm:*
blomj^^iWk»r, p*p«n, » »t«i»
“lBho
' YiilVriiii klUtii. rw H»«,
i4A>aitiBW]r^^
monthi oia, ♦10. W ____
SicNAHY B TAlLWAOdiiT'k K N-ntl«.	IrAlnInc, trim-
»M*i^KM:'Aurmons.
K«j>	••ryiod. ""
p66'Dj	“
Hou.
IM lil8Li_B2£h«»t»ta_OiLli3B-
PUPiPfiEB - RABBm. AIX PET
Miop, M Wmi»m*_J'lL.'‘«i» _
ilXUKiiS KITKNB. STOD 8ERV-
lo“ iSf »	Ml^en..n..
■TOlfiiiftVlC* lOtb DEEP Ap. rU'Ot; aUo blmek 13”. po«ll«i, EM
TAl-KINO STRAIN PARAKEETB.
-----«• And troplOAl fl»h.	■
llAUihery. 3411 •■
- Winter K*tP8 —
I*', E. llowlaiul, Kenfdls
»»4A DIkU MtltlRW OR 3 MM
jk«t« Acc«u«rioi	91
QUAD BKTUP rOR. A
■KTl .	..
____F» 4-3MB.
tlr#i-ABfo-Tnicli
it CHEVjir.
----^
JIl'c#. '*flA0A or" wh'lMwiS*'
ED W.'.LLIAMS
4tl ■, BASlnAV ..	,
Niw WMl IlMtl Can
1961 MODEL
Late Model BUICKS
USED CARS
IMettSP See AE HAUI'K
Matthews-
Hargreaves
"Chevy-Land"
Huiiks Are Our Husiness! H tltiit i.s wliut you have iniud, come iu to see us.
IMW KlUHMn'RA imdAii.
6-tl Oukluiid at ( _ EE 4-454/ N«w «mI UMuTh^t
i03
TON PICRUP,
Tir* ..£°
EW WHITE WAU- TIRM. BET Ol 4 low ^ M	,*•*
CRANEBHArr ORINDINO IN THE oar. Cylindort robored. Jnclt Ma-oblne ^op. 13 Hood. Phono. PE
Motor $(ooton
NEW
conaivion. FIG >-»3^7.
IM PORO 1-TON CAB AND chAula. long wheelboao. Only IMS Eoay Urnii. PATTBItBON CHBV. «01.ET CO, 1600 0, WOODWAM AVB.. BIRMINUIIAM. Ml 4-lWl. JEEFb Mo BROTHER. MUfBlIit ' ' ■	" iyUnrt«r Dodfft H“toi9
II modal, mlltUry, “
OPEN 7 DAYB week »;}_ buy—BEUr-RETAIL DAILY DOOR PRIZES every AUCTION •"*» DIXIE HIGHWAY
Livoitock
83
HHy-Graiii/-Fooc
HORSE R log No I
color hay —. ------
nodding. Jtm WUMR Ml
COW AND HORSE HAY. 1ST AND 3nd cutting No rain, crimped. Also oil color by Jor^cheA|

BOATERS NOTICE
timothy hay for HOR8E8. no
■rain, com. OA M131._______
fiMOTHY HAY. NO RAIN. OA * MIPS. 5604 Metamora Road.
lariR ProdacB
CHOICE CRISPY ^APPLES.
1 ...IS.4..A4M ai ftA KllHh«l M
vaJletiea: »1.80 buahcl and i Preah egga. 40c. SAbago potato DeConlck Broa.	*
:hard Lake Rood. Open 10 tc
tRESH CIDER AND APPLES. Me-
■!afnffi'b«Si£'.S
* iBlvd.

bSed irooda. 0/UO.ANO
MARKET. J3S0 PoDtlj-v Road, open SoWnlAya 7:M to 1:00 p.m. ,PE 3-W71. fOTATOES - $1 BUSHEL. 3j
PER CENT DOWN ^ 60 MONTIffi TRADES WELCOME-EASY TERMS SEE WALT TODAY
Maziirek Marine
McCulloch
CHAIN 8AWS -	NEW AND USED
■ USED CHAIN SAWS LOW AS
, ^	y**- —	WK^TTT .T Antl
4 mSTRE AM
I M ST ..
A dcmonatratlojo
----^^r Trall-
„„„ Huron. (Plan to
______)l WoUf Byam’a exciting
t cAravanaL_________
' A MESSAGE
#BOM us ^ Which we feel will be ‘ Intereat And Impo^ee.
_	_ jmplete5°fuml8hed
DETROIT MOBILE HOME for aa Bttle aa »1»S down. Wa .....
' equAlled In the wide field of in-
*	atalltoeht buying. Inreatlgate “
•	da? I Over 30 dlHr—* --------
It floor pUna ' to aeieci irom. rusu. many eicel-. lent need mobile homes at re . duced prleea. Stop out aooni Toi . wiu be ^ you did.
t Bob Hutchinson ‘Mobile Home Sales, Inc.
1301 Dixie Hwy.	OR 3-lM
^ OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
|y)B sale—’
• Ar -	—
1962 CREES
••ARE NOW ON DISPLAY"
Truck Campers
and Travel Coaches
STOP, OUT TODAY
Holly Marine *& O
■“•"'%W!%naS*iCtZ!
GRUMMAN CANOE, PADDLES. ' tboard mounl. 3 lUe pre-
______ $106. PE 3AiPt.
aluminum STABCRAj^f 'jiBt,
ALL TYPES
SAVE DRIVER-MERIT RATED
driver
COVERAOB
_____and trailer. 36 b.p. 3i
oxcellent emdltkm^7eo. Ci
»U JOHNSON 36 H^SE. E lant condition. FE 6-0634.
Oamer Rd. Mlllord. 1

YOUNG DRIVER PAYMENT PLANS
CMl Today FE 4-3536
Vliilt our booth. No. 6. at the attlrford Home and Sport Shot I March 33. 34. 35.
PRAHK A. ANDERSON AOENCY 1044 doal^n
BAROAIN THIS
New 16’ flberglaa__________
ihleld. atecring. lights, hardware, well drain, upbolatery. 6606 value
BTO^TT^WEST BEND MOTORS BoaU - Trallera - Acceaaorlaa CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES t E. WAltor	-----
forsigH Cars
6-0 Dally
WATCH

thia column tor announcement ol
---	------^	ptotlly
w to bo held
___________________plenty of big
bargatna. Open 7 dayi —' nights every week. 10(
Boats and M^ra. 1 mill
^VINRUDE MOTORS Boats "and Accessories Wood, alunitnum, flberglaa "HARD TO PIND"
BUT
EASY TO DEAL WITH DAWSON'S 8ALEI$ lalco Lake ,___MAln A3
"Get Aboard"
__________D DEALER
Cruisers. Century, Skee-Owens flbarglaa. Oator
, Evinrude and 'Mercury
JOHNSON MOTORS
SEA RAY BOATS ;__
AER&CRAFT •ALUMINDM
iiorZe
Wricome Ttade-taa
AccesadHes wd' SefvKe
KESSLER’S MARINA
0 N.. Washington	OA 8-1400
Better
Used Trucks
CMC
Factory Bihinch
OAKLAND^ OASa
Reinembtjr, we em-uuraii'e you to check bur cars with •chanic you know and tru.st.
PE 4-3636
105
60 MOA. WIRE WHEELS 1^
cellent condition. Beasonabie.
WARD-McELROY, INC.
NEW 456 W. Huron TRUCKS OB 4-0400	____OB^..
dCors
106
’62 CORVAIR
■VALUE RATED" MONZA 4 Door with radio, heater, whitewalls. * speed transmission, and on 1,800 miles on this honey!
$2295
JEROME
'Bright
Spot'
MUST GO!
.. and -OS Bulck $6 •83 Chevy sUUon wagon ... (Sara
BUICK 3-DOOB HARDTOP. Ksdlo and heater, stick •-■'-mission. Exc. mechanical
_____ _ _ heater, full
power, whitewall tire
down or trade and payr.------- ..
667.46 per month. LLOYD MOTORS Lincoln, Mercury, Comet.

cTChlt’ewa'll
3jliMir likidlup, Hi
turqu^i»»
t»i,‘‘i
whii«
D ^LaSABHE	J
ow.^Power sleeiliig and' Power rakes and whitewall Urea 63»6
, heater. DynafloW. Power
d Power brakea. 1
________ ham
MI
ACROSS ' PROM OBEENF1ELD 8 1666 CHEVROLET IMPALA 3-door hardtop. V6 engine, standard shift. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Red and white finish. Only 61.436. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIR-MINOHAM, Ml 4-3736.
NEW '63 CORVAIR, 700. BY OWN-
er. PE 8 1768 after 6:30	_
CHEVY8 AND PORDITSEDANS and wagons. '84 to 'f“ *'“* "" Economy Cars. 33 Ai
EXCEPTIONAL NICE •88CH]CTY 6336. JAP MTR. CO. PE A3803
or OB 3-6333.____________
•61 CORVAIR WAGON, DELUXE, low mileage. gM economy. sharp.
e. gas ec<
_______^'833;__________
J1 CHEVROLET IMPALA (
Standard transmission down and 1» w monthly ments LLOYD MOTORS
wuii auiomatic transmission. rA dlo and healer, whitewall tires sparkling red and white anc rtady to go SHARP. Psymenti of $37.40 per month, with lov cash down or old trade. BIR MINOHAM RAMBLER. Woodr-—
I, MI 6-3600,
shift. Radio and heater,
'LLOYb"®MO'TO^8!'*Lln-coln. Mercury Comet. Meteor. 633 8. Saginaw. FE 2-6131,
■66 CHEVY. $360. PE 8-3331 AFTER
660 CHEVROLET PARKWOOD station wagon, 6 cylinder. Power-glide. Sun tan copper flnlah. ITJDM actual miles. PA'TTBRSN CHBV-ROLE CO.	" •—----
1661 CORVAIR 3-DOOB SEDAN, standard shift, heater, whitewalls, light blue finish. Only 61666.
1856 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-vertlble. V* engine. Powergllde, power steering, solid red finish. 21.000 actual miles. Only $1,636. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEV-BOM CO., 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE,, BIRVINOHAM, Ml 4-2735. '66 CHEVY, $180
.......... WOODWARD
AVE., BIRMINGHAM, MI 4-3735. CHEVY, STICK.
Only $SW;30. J* ,ft-	Ji]
^y^ (
, lioeiaias ruir-*«splAy*'^2 3665 Orchard
Wanted Cars-Trdcks 101
ANY cim THAT NZH^ IjEPAm.
‘^^^B^^^UTO PARTS
GUT-STATE MARKETS Extra Top Dollar
FOB SHARP CARS
M&M
2827 DIXIE HWY.
PRIVATE PARTY DEBIBEB T-owner car from elderly Individual. 1958 or older In good eon-, ditlon. CaU alter 4 p.m. FS
iUAAJb.-JlCVM/&iJ VAnO
Averrll's'
........ ...... Interior,
blue and white finish. Only $!.«« Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO , 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM, MI 4-2735.
’61 CADILLAC
■SAFETY TESTED" COUPE De-Vllle with radio, heater, auto-maUO tranamlsalon, 4jray g®*r-
‘,*2e%SlyTA^^oJi'e*ffiiri;
• $4395
JEROME
"Bright .Spot'
Orchard Lake afCai
FE 8-0488
•66 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE.
Black, power, like new. FE 2-4436. 1686 CHEVY 6. 3-DOOH, NICE. — 3-7542, H. Riggins, dealer.
Chevy.
I BEL AIR. 4-DOOR,
V8, automatic, radio and heater.
Low mileage. FE 6-2191.____________
656 CHEVROUBT BEL AIR 4-• T hardtop. V8 engine Power-e, radio, hMter, whft«w,*l!»-
glide, radio, beater, whitewalls. ROLE CO. ------------ ------
Hy And«rmia. a« IdMiminv
■59 Ford 4-Door
Five left to Id loadei
$2395
While They LasM
’60 Ford 2-Door
gl.............
" $1495
Thtep on my hniid imd’ I’ll give you a boothl!
N«w and Uitd Cart
I88ION, JRAD I WHI'TEWAI rELY NO
LL tires.
___________ MONEY
DOWN. Assume paymonta ol |331'3^par mo.
Turner. Ford._______________
iOxJlXlB'”r)AR'T PHOBHIX 3-
..... dlop, Jrlue
matidilug trim, radio, heater, nil, tomalle Iranimiaalon, powoe ataer. o'lSy'eVew* Oiio*^year warraiilyI BOB BOR8T, Llneoln-MerciUry. One hlwk S, of 16 Mile on US 10. BIRMINUH^ Ml 6 4636^ l'e67 DODOE il-DdbB. RADIOl Heater. Automatic shift, Oold and white color. Good shape, $466.
Privau owner. 363-3433,_________
HARDTOP RADIO,
_______ ABSOLUTELY
MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of 636 76 per mo. Call Credit Mgr., Mr, Parloi at MI 4-7600 Harold Turner, Ford.
1660 FORD convertible. SELL
•rnilPV Pnm- .asa •n-.-a -a.ai
1601 TORD OALAXIB 3-DOOR, RA-dlo and healer, power brakes and DOwer steering Factory official car TWO TO CHOOSE from Full price. 62,066. LICYD MOTORS. Lincoln Mer-

i1m' FORD~TdWN	Nj,u‘'
W*a*l'i' tires?	n^^and
LLOYI? MS¥oBs!*'Llnroln. Mer.
ZL' ...........*
I FORD CONVERTIBLE, BLUE
tranamlsalon, power i d power brakes, one ,	-
sy! 166 down I BOB BORST , ti.e...iry. One block 8. of 9 10. BIRMINGHAM.
*6-*46’?8"
I FORD 2-DOOB. CRAKE MO-
0 FALCON 4-DOOR, SOLID RBD finish with automatic transmission. radio, heater, $1,306. One year warranty I BOB BORST. Llncoln-Mkrcyry. One block 8. of 16 Mile on US 10, BIRMINGHAM.
’56 FORD WAGON
lood 'clean, V8,	0 possenge
ountry sedan, radio, heater, aut ixcellent rubber. Just the thh
1861 FORD 2-DOOR. V8 ENGINE with automatic transmlaalon, radio and heater, whitewall tires,
^''Paprof*’
V.0.1 Jfown or old trade. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER, 680 ", Woodward. MI fl-3000.
FORD 2 DOOR RADIO.
HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY MONEY DOWN. Assume "•1.75 per mo.
______ Sfgr........ _ - „
4-7500, Harold Turner. Ford.
50 FORD FAIRLANE W1 green finish, radio, heater, ai jnatlc trarmmlsslon. Full price
only $675."fiOB BORST. Llncoln-Mercury. One block 8. of IS Mile on US 10, BIRMINGHAM, MI 6-4538.
FALCON 1960
N«w and Und Can 10(
'57 FORD
2-DOOR RANCH
WAOON, with radio, windshield washers, fresh air heater, and automatic traiismlsslun I
I’l'icctl to Sdl!
BEATTIE
"Your FORD DEALER Since 16.30" ON DIXIE HWY IN WATERFORD AT THE SrOPLIUHT
OR 3-1291
17 FORD 3-DOOR. STANDARD
down! Buy here! pay hero. hlAR-VEL MOTORS, *61 OAKLAND AVE. FE 0-4076._________
gUALlTY SPKAKS
■S
'68 Find” atatlon wagon.
Money down Neoeflaary
i|)(‘rior Auto Sales
thorlaed Triumph Dealer. 660 Oakland /	-
FORD. LOW-COST BANK LOAN lor your new or used oar, see _Poptlao_ Btato Bank. FE 4-3691. 1666 FORD CUSTOMLINE 3-DOpR radio and heater. V8 engl— with automatic transmlsslc ZERO down and monthly ps ments of $27.42 LLOYD M-TOR8, Lincoln, Mercury. Comet Meteor, 333 S. Saginaw, FE
BIRMINGHAM Cliryslcr - Plymouth 013 S-JWnodward_______MI 7-3211
’59 FORD
■VALUE BATED" 2-DOOR Oalaxle With radio, heater, ^hitewalls. -Fordomatlr. Transmission. Very
$1395
JEROME
'Bright
Spot'
1386 FORD 4 DOOR. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. RADIO. HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY
$32.16
Mr. Parks
Turner, Ford,
t 'MI 4-7600. Harold
LIKE NEW
1962 FORD DEMO'S Priced to sell NOW Nothing Down TOM BOHR INC.
684-1715__________Mlllord; MIefa.
4958 FORD STATION WAOON. I rfuV
8 en*lne, powergllde t:
....	........ whitewAll tires
Mechanically A-OKI 61.366. See this one today CRIBSMAN CHEVROLET. ROCHESTER. OL 2-6721.
1987 CHEVROLET raLBAY. Excellent condition. Take over pay-menta M 66.88 per week to pay oft talance due of 8667. ABSO-LirfeY NO MONEY DOWN. King Auto Sales. 3275 W. Huron at, iaixabeth Lake. FE 8 '—
look:
1667 Chevrolet 2-door, V8 engine with automatic, full price 6495, No money down, no payment till
LUCKY AUTO SALES
16y 8; Saginaw
CHRYSLER SEDAN, LIKE —	$6 down. Buy here,
MOTORS.
•"E 8-4079.
here. MARVEL
oaklanQIave. I
»> DODOE, Standard shift. radio heater, good running ~
dltloh. $250 or *-•- -----
mentx of $17.45 5-0617.
:.Te
I DOOR,
DODOE LANCER.
high performance en„.......—,
equiped. 1,700 mllee. priced for qulA sale by owner. Ml 7-1764.
600 VAUlhfT’. CLEAN STATION wagon one owner. PE 2-1043.
■60 THUNDERRIR'D
•VALUE BATKD^'- 2-Door Jhat
"b epotlesa Interior, radRr," ......v. erulaematie tranamlaalon,
whltewslla, 3 way power, like
$2495
JEROME
'Bright
Spot"
■WA> AUTO. RADIO HEATER
NICE!
FULL
PRICE
$1495
Suburbaa-Olds
555 S. WOODWARD MI 4-4485
I960 FORD (XINVERTIBLE GAL-axle,- radio add heater, powe-brakes and powe.r iteerln( TWO TO CHOOSE FROM, fu price $1,865. LLOYD MOTORj Lincoln. Mercury, Comet, Mi teor. 232 S. Saginaw, FE-2-9121 •'68 .ENGLISH FORD ANGELA }( door, black', radio,, heater. Fu price $49$. No money down! BOB BORST, Llncoln-Mercury. ^
heater. WHITEWALL TIRES AND POWER STEERING._ ABSOLUTELY NO MONETY DOWN. Assume__ payments of 832.16 per
Harold Turner,
This’Week’s Special
FIA7'MOljfir
W58 PJLTMOUTW
Wagon. V-8 aport aubutban. aut«-matlc, power atferlng and brakea, . electric rear window, motor completely
t'RANBPOBTATION SPECIALS 1656 Olds '— automatic 1966 Plymouth, V8, overdrive
See us Jiefore you deal
R&R MOTORS
Imperial Chrysler .^/Plymouth
724 OA^AHD AVE.
jerome-Ferguson
Rochester Ford Degler _______OL 1-9711	___
Mtte gjwl
SHARP CARS
«t ■ ^
lohn
McAuIiffe
weiie, and automatio f
$1195
61 Demos
from I All I ONLY
_____,____ tranamleetoii. power
steering and whllewalle, beaulltui --------flniehl
John
McAuIiffe
luml Sale.s
636 OAKLAND AV
FE 5-4101 ... TsoBD coRntry wagon'. Orey egterlcr, re;. ....
IfOBb. BOLLBD AND PI-EATC
1668 PYiRB^TirerSlCli^Air CAB
NO MONEY DOWN. Aseume payments of $16.75 per mo. Call Credit Mgr., Mr. Parks at MI ‘ "““I. Harold Turner, Ford.
ansmliisian. power aleering and
Ill-Mercury. One block 8, of 15 lie on US 10. BIRMINDHAM. MI 6-4535.
658' Mncmn ""KfolSimA'iBT
________
___r. hardtop, radio ai
power brakes and power si Ing, epa--‘— —■ —- -•
RCURY M-PABSENOBB
WAOON
ileerlng and brakes. One yee warranty I $1,075. BOB BOR8' ■ -Mercury. One block 8. -
I on US 10. BIRMINGHAM,
COMET CUSTOM ^DOOB
M 4-L_______
___________________0 antf heater
— Big engine, automatic transmission, power brakea, ateering. Full price 82.605. LLOYD MO-
1658 MERCURY CLUB fcOUPE. RADIO HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Assume pay-
52 tempest coupe DEMO^
WITH LOW MILEAGE, AU'T with low mileage, automatic transmission, —■”'s whitewalls, if
walls. If you V sec tfits Ol
.HAUPT PONTIAC
CLARKSTON	MA 5-591
One Mile North of U S. 10 on Ml "“len Mon.. Tues., and Thurs.
55 MERCURY, 6 - PASSeNOER station wagon, 85 down. Buy here pay here. MAbVEL MOTORS. 261 OAKLAND AVE. FE 8-4076.
steering, radio and ------
whitewall tires, black and ready to go. Nice, Full price $495, BIBMINQHAIM rambler. 066 S. Woodward Ave. MI 6-3900.
cylinder, standard, extra sharp and a iu-tone green finish. A real mile maker. $150 down and assume monthly payments of $3716. LLOYD MOTORS, Lln-
’58 RAMBLER
‘VALUE RATED" REBEL Station Wagon. This Car le terrific with radio, heater, automatic transmission! "•"'* ■■ ' —' —
$995
JEROME
'Bright
Spot'
Nfw tiM Um4 Cm 101
OLIVER
BUltK
Ntw iM UM tm 10*
DEMO
SALE
Fvery Two Months-Demos Offered
■62 RUICK
.,.$2445
,,ij&^'auto sales
183 a. i6iu>»*„—
^ig Interior.
'62 HUICK...............$33.50
Lasabra 8-door Hardtop yltli
f«rtm*^«’-iua%:ir.i.-
cuslllona, delux# whael oovara and whUewalla. tu-iona., fawn mist with matching Interior, automatio traiismlailon. Was
■62 HUICK..................$.3475
LeSabre 4-door Hardtop wiBt automatic transmission, radio - -	— power ateerjng.
We Have luntr Otlier
'62-MODELS TO SELECT FROM
OLIVER
BUICK.,
210 Orchard Lake
FE 2-9101
I960 PLYMOUTH CUSTOM SUB-
HOUa.. ----------
_____ ..atlon, wagon. V8
automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls. $1,865 Easy terms. ^ATTERSON IniieVDrvj,Ex CO, 1000 8. WOOD-VE., BIRMINOHAM. MI
WARD
4-M36;__________________
ii056 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR CUSTOM
gine With automallo transmis Sion. Power brakes and fowe steering, red and white. A ree
8A^,
.Stark Hickey, Clawson
Jain, a
■67 PLYMOUTH. BTA'HON WAGON — $405 No money down, f” -month. Superior Auto,. 660
land.
1058 PLYMOUTH STATION -------
ON. RADIO. HEATER ,_AND WHiniWALL VIRES^ ABSOLUTELY NO money _ DOWN. Assume payments of $28,76 per mo. Call Credit Mgr...Mr,_Parks at MI 4-7600.
Ford,
Bob Hart Motors
Is Still in Business We . have moved one block closer to town.
1 New Address:
603 .Orchard Lake Ave.
Celebratl
Voorhels
. ating our new location with following specials:
1657 Ford Falrlane, 2-door hardtop auto. V-8 2-tone, radio, heater. Added dash, only $460.
1967 Che-
dlo.
1 the 0
looLng for,
1650 Ford, 2-door hardtop, V-8, 2-tone, radio, heater, whitewalls, extra sharp I This one will make a good FIRST car.
1065 Chevrolet. 2-door, Bel I auto., 6. radio, heater, beaut 2-tone blue. Good tires, m o t just overhauled. Clean.
BOB HART MOTORS 603 Orchard Lake Ave.
PE 4-8$30________
■88 PLYMOUTH --------- -
stick; • sharp. Patterson. FB 5-3937.
1656 PLYMOUTH BELVEOl
.1—. XIO	will, ail
---------Lincoln, —
____ Comet Meteor. 232 8.'
Saginaw, FE * *•■“
1961 PONT]
6-PAS8ENOER SAP^I	-
wagon. Solid whjte with a spotless all vinyl nSd Interior. Powe-steertng and ^wer brakes, radk heater and whitewall •‘™	“*"
Is truly a fine family
1959 FORD
2-door sedan V8 €
Frank Schuck, Ford
M24 at Buckborn Lake Lake Orion_____ MY 3-3011
.4th:
Anniversary Sale!
. SHELTON
PONTIAC - BUICK ROCHESTER OL 1-8133
THUNDERbIrD HARDTOP.
161 THUNDERBIRD HARDTOP, Burgundy finish power steering, brakes and wlndws. Leather interior. Only $3,165. Easy terms. PATTERSCDN CHEVROLET CO., - WOODWARD AVE., BIR-
MINOHAM, MI 4-27
4-CedlUacs '63 to '55,
'54 Dodge and Plymouth, $125. up. 100 others, very reasonable.
"•"•■	22 AUBURljl
ECONOMY CARS
DEMONSTRATORS
1662 Pontiac Bodneville .. Save $800
1662 Grand Prlx.. Sake $850
1662 Rambler sedan .  $1686
1662 Rambler Wagon	$2688
1662 RambIer-,Classic ... "
wagon SALE
mSlert^'er
USED CAR BARGAINS
Otevjr Impala 4-door... $1885 Pontiac, bydramatlo-.-:... $1065
hydram*tnr-.-;
i>«i uBoiUae.hardtop ....
1861 Thunderblrd- hardtop
PICKUP SPECIALS
150 Chevrolet pickup :. $ 1,-
640 Chevy-%-tO»-pl(ikiffi. l_ » ??*
RUSS
JOHNSON
"7 “*•««„
[655 OLI Hydra,
)r.r232 S. Saginaw. FE 2-6131.
66 OLDSMOBILE 2-DOOR HARD-top. power brakes and power steering, $200 down and monthly payments of $69.40 per month.” LLOYD MOTORS. Ltn-coln-Mercury-Comet-Meteor, 233 S. Saginaw. FE 3-3131.
•58 OLDSMOBILE LUXURY "SS" 4-door Holiday In spotless condition, excellent tires, lull power, outstanding value at
.BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth
812 8. Woodward
'68 PLYMOUTH 8. RADIO AND heater.' A-1 running. $165. Economy Cars_____M
PLYMOUTH 4-DOOb’'^STAND: ard, all white, radio, heater, new tires. A-1. Private owner. $1,160. ir.vr Liaov	*'
I Lake. FE~ 8-4088.
HASKINS
Used Car
SPECIALS
hydramattc transmission, radio.
6 CHEVROLET BEL. AIR 4
CHEVROLirr BIS'CATNB door, with gee saving 8 cyl.
PEUOEOT Miior gas saving
overdrive trans^ieslon, radio,
Eoof,	----■	■
Solid
HASKINS
Ch'evrolet-OIds
wuii.cwf.1.	sharp
1-owner Birmingham trade. Pay. ments $20.82 per month with low cash down or old trade BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER. 088 S Woodward. Ml 6-3600.
"Family Car"
. Here
$2695
LOOK
mtATioH
-Special-
19.59 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE VISTA, W«h dlo and heater, .P»»'e''..br«keV and powar eteerlng. whitewall liras and Hydramatio transmU-alon. Here le Juet Uie car lor St Petrlok'e Day because Its
,rtiws
PONTIAC
RETAIL
STORE
65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954
wa‘y7'bValer."iM__3-0001^---
1666 PONTIAC 6 PpSENGRR STA-
..... ----- uydramatic. power
PATTERSON' tSlEVROLir W . 1000 C WOODWARD AVE,. BIR-
MINOHAM,_Mr;!l-$738. OM PONTIAC O’’ Pf wofon; exo. o 8-8843.
'58 PONTIAC. 2-DOOR HARDTOP.
Crake Motors, FE 8-8822,__ _
>6NTiAC BOkNKVlUjl . 2-
door hardtop. Full
■8822.. Crake Motor Sales.
BUY YOUR new OLDSMOBILE
‘TOUGIlfS^STtON””
REPO’S
o^Payments till Ajirll
6	Pontiac Hardtop .
7	Olds Convert.....
4 Bulck Hardtop ..
•68 Bulck Hardtop . 8265 $17 mo. '66 Pontiac Hardtop $288 $17 mo.
LAKESIDE MOTORS
312 W. Montcalm____338-6171
n atuomatlc ti JB 1-owner, BIrmInghai Payments of $33 43 P" with 1 -	----
...™. -...1 low cash down or ..d trade BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward. MI 8-3600.	_____________
MONEY DOWN, ments of 820.7s per mo Credit Mgr., Mr. Parks i 4-7500. Haroid Turner, Foi
FINE
USED CARS
’58 A. H. 100
ROADSTER, 3 tops
’58 TBfiUMPH
ROADSTER. I^adlo
35 More Imports To Choose From
AUTOMOBILE IMPORT CO.
■•AUTHORIZED BMP DEALER” SALES SERVICa:	PARTS
311 S. Saginaw	FE 3-7043
whitewall tires. Want
WILSON
PONTIAC - CADILLAC
automatic transmission, power steering, epotless In and outi Good tires I Compare at only $545.
BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth
012 8 Woodward	MI 7-3211
Y
MO UT , real n
PONTIAC. SAVE a Pontlae State
Pro^e Vale Bankr"yE'~«-3M’fc
•68, 3-IXX)R. 6. ■ Ma 5-1775. MQNEY' WITH Bank loan when
Spot"Be^Hv©ry
No Cash Necessary Assume Payments
1656 Ford  .....Full pr‘-‘
$187 .......... $U.46 J
1855 Olds- CSmvetUble
•61 CHEVROLET IMPALA 3-DOOR ..^rdtop with radio, heater, white-^lls. safety belts. Solid white -‘“1 red trim! Like new; $3,106.
A"-
Full price $11.46 Mo.
. $5.73 Mo.
. Pull price . $11.46 Mo.
1955 Rambler Wagon-.
1855 Plymouth .
1658 Ford wagon .
LIQUIDATION
N B. Saginaw
[8 Club Couim 4-door wagon i
•64 Pontlae'mar Chief, power $148.
..j Money Down Necessary
Superior Auto Sales > 0»kTa	------
FE 4-7500
USED CARS
J1 PORD OALAXIB •‘500" hardtop with power steering, sutomatie traiismlfslon. rkdlo. heater, whlte-spare, sparkling dark blue'flnishl $2,344.
RAMBLER. SUPER 4-DOOR nth radio, heater Individual ront seats, beautiful maroon
i_i.K	jijpi $1,286.
34,000 actual miles I $
■60 RAMBLER AMERICAN 2-door sedan with heater, recllnlrig seats, whlUwalls, all blue and In per-lect running condition I $777.	'
running condition I $777.’
•58 RAMBLER AMERICAN S-DOOR
vX"waiu?’$$3r"' ***-‘" “<*
*lft'.5'eyl. engine, standard tri
BILL SPENCE
RAl
CLAR^^
RAMBLER i»
.MB. MAW BTIllEET *"™*-	MA $-5$61



- T Today's Television Progranis •
,	-“P	'
THE AiON'llAC PKESS, WEONESEAY. MARCH U, lB«a
E0(R3Cy-SBVaiL
1961-62 Winter One of 'Moit^Miyerftbie in Record Book
«h»M«	(MmMIMI «w«WJ.TV Oh»WM«	«N«Ml
Itii (3> Mqvit (coot.)
’	(4) Wy»tt larp	*
(7) lUvcrbMt (rant.)
(9) lH)p«y« (rant.)
(K) (3«iflr»l CiMmtitry «iS« (3) WMthtr (4) WMthir
(7) IfalMiUa Jukion Slnii ttN (3)N*wn : (4) Naws (7) N«wi (9) Vogt B«Hr
tiM (2)
(4) Sport!
4i4S (2) New*
(4) New*
(7) New*. W«ather, Sport* (56) American* ft Work 7i00 (2) Mlater Ed
(4) Beat ol Groucho (7) Dragnet (9) Pioneer*
(56) Potential Unlimited 7tS0 (2) Alvin
(4) (Color) Wagon Train (7) Howard K. Smith (9) Movie: "The Cro** of Lorraine" (1943). A of French aoldlers, alck of fighting, lay down their arm*. Jeon Pierre Aumont, Gene, Kelly.
(56) Keynote*
SiOO (2) Beal of the Poal (4) Wagon Train (cont.)
(7) Slralghlaway (9) Movie (coni.)
(56) Showcaae Si SO (2) Checkmate
(4) (Color) Joey Bishop
(7) Top Cat
(9) Movie (cont.)
(56) America Looks at Books •iOO (2) Checkmate (cont.)
(4) (Color) PeiTy Conw (7) Hawaiian Eye (9) Man Without A Gun (56) Goal* for American* fiSO (2) Dick Van Dyke
(4) Perry COmo (cont.)
(7) Hawaiian Eye (c<mt.)
(9) International Detective (56) Playwright at WOrk 10:00 (2) Circle Theater
(4) (Color) Bob Newhart (7) Naked City (9) News Magazine 10:30 (2) Circle Theater (cont.)
(4) (Color) Brinkley’s Jour-
iiiio (4) (Color) Jack Piuir
(7) M 0 V10! "River Lady" (1948). Owner of MIssIsrippI gambling boat ra(ii»plre* With t»nfidenc« man. Tvonne 0o> Carlo, Dan Duryea.
(W Muvloi "Red DuOt" (1932). On
0:0(1 (4) (Cplor)’'Contlnental (3aa*r(H>m—Statistics OiM (2) Meditations Oils (2) On the Farm Front OtSO (2) College of the Air-
nal
(7) Naked City (cont.)
(9) Camera 9 11:00 (2) News (4) News (7) News (9) News
11:10 (7) News, Sports 11:10 (2) Weather (4) Weather 11:20 (2) imports (4) Sports (9) Telescope UAW 11:28 (2) Movie: “Rachel and the .Stranger” (1948). Man and his bride settle in Ohio frontier. Loretta Young, William
n FrcTlout runt*
(7)
I, Robert MItohum.
. harsh surrounding*. Clark Gable, Jean Harlow.
(91) Our getentitio World lOtOO (7) TIpa V Iricka 10:18 (7) Now*
UtlO (2) 1 Love Lucy
(4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Lite of Riley (9) Cties Helene (89) English VI lOiU (9) Numtry School Time lliOQ (2) December Brida
(4) (Color) Price le Right (7) Token "
Sorrowing Midwest Finds White Stuff Still Around
THUpdlDAV MORNitNG
(4) (Colo r) Continental (3aaaroom->-€lovarnment 7iM (2) B’wana Don (4) Today (7) Kunew*
7:00 (7) Johnny Ginger 0:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo
(98) Arithmetic for Teachers OiOO (7) Jack La Lanne (56) Dr. Posin'* Giants (2) Movie: "Double Dynamite"
(4) Living
(7) Movie; "Louisiana Hay-ride’’
(56) Mathematics for You 0:30 (56) Tomorrow’s Homemak-
» (4) Say When (9) To Be Announced
TV
Features
By United Preaa International
HOWARD K. SMITH, 7:30 p. m.
)). Commentator Smith will discus* "Why Disarmament Talk Don’t Succeed." HI* guest will be Harold £. Stassen, former U. S. disarmament negotiator.
CHECKMATE, 8:30 p.m. (2). Brooding Fixation.” Guest stars Mary Astor and Scott Marlowe portray mother and son whose love for one another is shattered by gunshot death of head of family.
BOB NETTHABT SHOW, 10 p. m. (4). Bob presets his version-of Kremlin tour with Mrs. Khrushchev. Jim Backus guests. ((2olpr).
CIRCLE THEATER, 10 p.m. (2).
'The Man Who Refused to Die." Alexander Scourby stars in dramatized true story of Pole who caped Nazis by living for almost two years In cave under farm family’s home.
NAKED CITY, 10 p.m. (7)
Run for the Money.” Eli Wallach and Keenan Wynn appear in drama in which gunman, sought by police and underworld, tries to earn enough money to flee country by hiring professional dice player.
DAVID BRINKLEY. 10:30 p. m. (4.) Brinkley interviews Venezuela’s former president, MarCos Perez Jimenez, and probes election campaign of Indian Defense Minister Krishna Menon. (Color).
t Iprofound
3» CUf
iO dant container 41 French .
revolutionist 44 Food server ■ 4* Landed 4( Eggs" pi 50 Parnful
r												
					•							
IT	r	IT								is	IS	IT
nr									u.			
IT									B			
tr					■				II			
supermsrket
vehicle
4	Jewel
5	ElabOret* , * Freneied
CHICAGO (AP) - Those Mid-eaterners who were delighted lien enough snow fell to make a white Christmas miaealculated winter’s whim, Tliat snow Is still ariNind, only now It forms i that bottom layer of a grayish ice
(86) fhwniBh Lesson 11:18 (96) German Lesson 11:3(1 (2) Clear Horizon (4) Concentration ' (7) Yours for a Song (9) Movie: "H ’ ‘ ~
ter,"
(56) Ticker Tap* 11:88 (2) News
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
11:00 (2) Love of UfO
(4) Your First Impression (7) Camouflago (96) Whai’s NewT 11:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Oonseguences (7) Make a Face 18:40 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 18:48 (24 Guiding Utdit 18:80 (9) News 18:88 (4) News
(56) German Lesson (2) Star Performance (4) Best of Groucho (7) Day In Court (9) Moyle: "Romance of Rosy Ridge" (1)
1:10 (56) French Lesson 1:28 (7) News
(2) As the World Turns (4) People Are Funny.
(7) How to Marry a Million alre
J.§6) AVp.r!ltastory
(4) Faye Elizabeth-------
(2) Password (4) (Color) Jan Murray (7) Jane Wyman (56) Adventure in Science 2:28 (4) News 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keys (56) World In Focus (2) San Francl^ Beat (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen For a Day (9) Movie: “The Band Playtd On"
(56) Concept 3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours (4) Our Five Daughters (7) Who Do You Trust?
8:88 (2) News 4:99 (2) Brighter Day
(4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstand (56) Camera on the Teacher 4:18 (2) Secret Storm 4:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:80 (7) American Newsstand 4:88 (4) News
8:00 (2) Movie: "The Set Up”
(4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) 3 Stooges and Ginger (9) Popeye and Pals (56) What’s New?
8:80 (7) Hong ^ng
(56) Indushy pn Parade 8:46 (96) News Magazine 6:88 (4) Kukla and OUie
pack that covers much of iho Mld-
The winter of 1961.62 will go down as one of the most concentrated mixtures of snow, cold and itoom In the Mldwesi'i reran! books,
One Chicago television weather commentator remarked the other night in forecasting more snow; “I wish I could see the sun. Not so much Mr myself, lieoause l have seen it. Bui | have a 12-yeaiMild son.’’
R hasn't been that bail, of course, but, February sot ,an all-time Record for any month In Chicago foi' (he least amount of sunshine—only 2l iwr cent of the amouiil possible.
January and March so far- -** with spi-lng's arrival a waek away -haven’t been much belter.
This winter has bran marlMd by a sieaity procession of snow storms moving eastward from (he Ruckles, usually followed by •
5 of arctic raid and oocarion-al brlfd perksts of thawing.
'nils has ci'euted a winter-long luw and ice cover that bu ranged from n few Inches In soma . sections (0 3 foot In northern Michigan.
II ismos (he danger of sertOUS floisls If mild weather arrives suddenly.
Blizzards In tiorlhern areas stranded (ravelcrs, «’Iosed thousands of rural and city schools, isolated wIkiIc townit. blocked main highways, disrupted sports ‘h('diili-s and |irevented pubikt gatherings.
The suh-ziTO cold created ffee worst commiuna (or cattle feeding In a quarter cenluiy. Zero tens-peralures usuaUy hold weight gains of feeding cattle to half thg normal rate.
OLD-FASHIONED WAY - This old-fashioned school bus was put Into use this week by Lester Dornberger of Route 3, Peoria, 111. The tractor and wagon were the only way to and from Hollis School In Bartonville for these 10 children due to Impas-
AP PSsMsi
sable counti'y roads usually used by the school's bus. Dornberger hauls the children one and a half mile* eai^j,^ way twice
a day.
Must Wait for Legislature’s Next Session
State Gw/fiighfs low
LANSING (Jh — Proposed expansion of Michigan’s civil rights law to include housing, education public accommodations ls"dead for this legislative session.
The death blow was given by a vote in the Republican-dominated Senate State Affairs Committee.
been given jurisdiction over hous-education and public accommodations as well as employment.
The senate committee action came late Tuesday after spokea-men for church, labor, civic and minority groups appeared before Greene and his group to make a
Skjn. Perry W. Greene, R-Grand Rapids, the committee chairman, said the principal ob-jeottoR wan the bills "would deprive the property owner of the right to control his own
Dramatic Move Floors 2 Cast in Heavy Roles
The package of bills was one of the key features of Gov. Swain-son’s 1962 legislative program. Swainson reacted angrily.
Republican members of the committee, he complained, not only killed the civil rights legislation “but have compounded the injustice by reporting out two bills (hat would establish a public policy „ Michigan for people to discriminate against other citizens.”
TULSA, Okla. (AP)-Salva(ore Baccaloni and William Wllder-man, bass singers for the Metropolitan Opera, were slightly injured Tuesday night wheif a stairway set collapsed while they rehearsed “The Barber of Seville."
Battle Mobs of Teens in Guatemala City
GUATEMALA CITY -tUPl) -Military poUce battled teen-age
mobs here Tuesday and Tuesday night in a day of wild street Bght-ing In which at least 80 person* * •	• more than 100
Swainson said Republicans, their party platform, advocated a dvil rights commission and protection against discrimination in housing, duration, public accommodations and employment.
'The Republicans have, by their actions, niade a He of thelf own platform,” the governor said. “They have, as usual, given only Up service to human rights."
A similar civil rights package previously was ki
Affairs Committee hrac Lloyd Gibbs, R-Portland.
KEYED AROUND MEASURE The bills were kej«d, around a m e a s u r e which would have changed the name of the present^ Fair Employrnent Practicea Com* misaion to civil rights commission. The new commission would have
riving In Nicaragua said "several" persons were killed In the day’s riots, during which the
fire to trucks and automobiles.
(An official Guatemalan radio broadcast heard Tuesday night in Managua appealed to the parents of unruly Guatemalan teen-agers not to let the Communists ’ them for cannon foddjSr”) ’
' ★ ★ ★
The thud of terror bombs and the craclde of pi^ce gunfire resounded through tte city all day long and into night. It was i»t immediately certain whether the government would impose the recently lifted curfew.
-Today's Rado Programs--
c*tw (IM) WWI im) WKTZ (it») WC4» <118»> WWW (IWS) win
.* TONiaBT S:S*-Wm. N*v* wxrz."H»rv«r. winter '
WJUK. Kennedy CKLW, New*
WCAR. P. P*nlto . WPON, New*. SpoKe
SiSO—WJK auitnen
WXYZ; A'e* Dreler
t:KLW, B. D»vle» WJBK. Robt. E. Le, WCAR, P. Sheridan WW)N. Bob oreene

1:W-WJB, Hoekey, Ost-K.T. 1:*0^-CKLW, Bbb Staton
WZTZ SciMttaS
Sios-i-wjR, Hortey ( WPON Bob efreene »;:w—WJR, Hockey ( WXYZ. Kennedy
l*:nn—WJR. Kennedy-WXYZ. Alei JOreier WWJ, Interlocbss WPON, Hsu*. Otsw*
worw »
WXYZ,"
'WWJ. iwwa, MOilo CKLW, Bopveod WCAR B. Morris _ WPON, News. Bob Oreene
l:*a.:-WJR, Mosle WWJ, Mono CKLW. B ——
WCAR.' cbttCon Report
«:(»-WJR, Yotee oCApl. WWJ. News. Roberta WXYZ. Wolf. News
WJBK. Marc Ayery ^ WCAR. News. Sherldi WPON News, Arts, t
WJBK, New*. Av»»y.
WPON, Bport* l!*#-WJ*. Kesta. Mjjde B •VWJ. New*. Roberta
Reiil AW
wcaR New*	-
*:*»-WJR. News. B Quest WWJ News. Roberts WXYZ, W«H,------
WCAR News	„	^
WPON, News, Don Mejtaed 8:M-WJB. tfusta |taU_
WCAR, Hews, Martyn
»:»—WJR, Jack Harris WXYZ, Bresklsst CJubr CKLW. Joe -Vanh WJBK. News, A»ery WCAR, Newa
l):es-WJR, Karl Haas WPON News, J. Olsen WJBK. Newa. Reid
l-.OS-WJR. News, HealUi WWJ,_ News, Lynker WXYk. McNeeiey
Urtys B Bbow
WWJ. tophasla. L WZtZ, Powers. Hew
WJBK,; News Reid WCAR, Hews Puree _	__
WPOH.-News. Olsen Show
WWJ, smpnasiB, uynaer CKLW. News. David WCAR. Htmt. Purs* WXYZ, Keitesiey, Hews
e:ew—WJK. news, onow
BNews, tbzwell McNeeiey. Newa Jo* Van
WJBK, News Iw*
WCAR, New*. Purse WPON. Hews, Lee Lyons
CKLW, Davisi WJBK. News,! M ---■-	—-y. SI
WCAR. Hews] Shsrldan tisS-WJR. Hajws. Shewcae*
S:*S-WJR, Mtste Ha WW^ Kmpiiaita Ma WXVZ. Hewsi Wlntei CKLW, Hewsi pa vie* WJBK, NewslLe*
WWJr Mews Bonpei
Greene held the hearing In a small Committee room and limited the number of speakers, saying he didn't want any demonstrations.
Discrimination "is a sin In God’s eyey-because he created us all cqilar’ said Mrs. Dorothy TracF, vice president of the United Church Women in Michigan.
Arthur Ctowlos, dii’ector of (he Grand Rapids human relations commission, said discrimination in housing is causing ’'ghetto-like conditions" Iq Grand Rapids public schools.
Thirteen elementary schools In Grand Rapids, Cowles said, have 90 per cent or more nonwhite students.
Baccaloni, a 300-pounder, was sitting on the stairway and Wlk derman, a trimmer 200, was standing on it singing an aria. The set coUapsed when Wilder-man stomped hi* foot to emphasize a note.
They fell about 10 feet. Both were bruised but X rays showed no broken bones.
JFK Invited to Speak to California Assembly
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)
The Assembly unanimously in-■nt Kennedy..’Diesday.
to address the legislature when he visits CaUfomia late this month.
The President will receive an honorary degree from the University of California March 23, then visit Vandenberg Air Force Base and Palm Springs in Southern California.
Darryl, Doll Out of Sight Following 'Longest Day
Albert R. Saundeis, executive vice president of the Michigan Real Eslate ANSodation, protested In opposition that the bills wc take away any civil rights homeowners.
Sets $1500 Bail for Alleged Red
Warren Says Appea May Nof Come Up for Six Months
WASHmGTON (AP) — A New Yorker identified by the government as the (Mganizational secretary of the U.S. Communist party has been ordered freed from jail on bond by Chief Justice E a r ' Warren.
$1,500 batt
It would delete the phrase "unfair dealing" from punishable acts. It also would provide agents could make decisions on the acceptability or eligibility of any offer to purchase, rent, lease or mortgage when instructed to make Buch'de-cisionh by his principal.
These bills, eivll right* proponents claim, would have the eifect of nullifying the rule forbidding discrimination in real estate tiensactlons braiura of
for phUlp Bart, jaUedlair week on a contempt of court citation for fusing to answer the questions of a federal grand jury about U.S. Com-ftmlst party activities.
Early this morning Bart was sti in the District of Columbia jail.
By EARL WILSON
PARIS — Darryl Zanuck dropped out of sight here after he finished “The Longest Day”—but nobody got too worried because Irina Demlch, the 25-year-old beauty he Introduces In the movie, also disappeared, and some peo-^ pie are putting one and one together and get- ; ting a big romance.
However, Zanuck is slightly wonled about being “plastlqnated” b^use he liveB in the same'apartment buUdlag, In the Rue de Bac as Foreign Minister d’Mur-vilie, a likely candidate for a plastic mes-
■ .we-	:
Edward G. Robinson won’t be able to make it here for the big benefit, the Union WILSON Oala — but it’s not really his fault. It appears of the secretaries gof confused and sent the Edward
' Warren ruled that unless Bart were granted ball, he might serve hto six month sentence before the U.S. Court of Appeals could get around to ruling on his appeal from the sentence.
Both the Court of Appeals and U.S. District Judge Alexander Holtzoff,, who cited Bart for contempt and sentenced him to months in jail, had refused to : the 'sentence. Bart’s attorney appealed to Warren.
The Court of ^peals last week et Mach 31 for a hearing (»i Bart’s appeal. Bart, who says he Ui a Brooklyn, N.Y., printer, refused to answer more than 40 questions put to him by the grand jury. Government attorneys contend he the Communist pairty’s-organizational secretary.
Romney Schedules Talk
tr. Robinson Invitation to Sugar Ray Robinson. And by the time ... but you know how it is . . ,
★ ★ ” ■ ★
THE MIDNIGHT EARL IKI NEW YORK
Carol Bnmetrand Julie Andrews were asked to repeat their Carnegie Hall two-woman show at the London Palladium . . Marlene Dietrich’s so pleased about,her Las Vegas show with Louis Armstrong that she wants to do a European tour with him ... The Henry Fonda-OUvia DeHavilland Broadway drama, 'A Gift of Time,’' will be f|,li^ in N.Y. this summer ...
The owner of a maJoi;'dafe hired a big jazz group, and com-
«:S#-tWJR. MjjSlC H
WJ, .Hew*. BUI KYk Wtntav, H [1 iV 8por,ta, t
WJBK,-Jtewa, ,.** WGAR. Ne»* Bherti WFON, Hew*, -U* ]
- CSiW. Bpotta.-DrvTe* ■
to lose money with them, too—that’s too mudiI’’
★ ★ ★
TODAT8 BEST LAUGH: A proud father borated that, his 3>-year«old son shows signs of becoming an executive: “Already he takes two hours to eat lunidi.’’	^
WISH TD Sil|D THAT: Some of those new automated ma-ehineg aro aitertlshinkly human»^ne of them takes coffee
breaks.—OUnWper _	______ ____ -7^------—
r “ lARt’S PEARLS: The real super-saleshian Is the fellow [who can sell American-made transistor radios in Tokyo. — [Kenny Bennett. -
I Comic Pat Henry, working in Las Vegas, told a friend he a week. “After taxes?" the pal asked. "No,” said Pat, ir -gambling.’’... That's earl, brother.
(Cepyriifht, 1969)
MIDLAND (UPD-George Romney, Republican gubernatorial candidate, will address a nonpolitical open meeting here March 23. The meeting is sponsored by the Midland Exchange Club^__^—-
Two bills on the same Issue were reported out by the committee with recommendation for passage.
Sen. Basil W. Brown, D-Detrolt, sponsor of .several civil rights bills, referred to (he measures allowed out as "anti-civil rights bills.”
NEAR RECORD Mlnncatmlls-St. Paul, Minn.,
hud 77.2 Indie* of snow so far this winler—only 10.8 inches shy of the record—and 48 days of zero or below compared with the reo-ord 50 days in 1935-36 and one prior winter.
Chicago ha* had S7.1 Inches of snow—9.3 inches shy of the rets
Old.
Omaha, Neb., ho* had subnormal temperatures and above nois mal moisture from November to March.
The northern tier of counties in Missouri report the mo(R snow and coldest December Jab-uafy temperatures since the mid 1930s.
Mich., where the snow cover is 3 feet deep and drifts 6 feet high, have solved their snow problems the easy way. They have stairs lead to their second-floor windows.
Reuther to Aid Dedication
Son. CIihHon R.
Grand Rspldsi Is the sponsor and Greene the cosponsor of the two
One would declare the right to acquire and own property a^ civil right.	^
CINCINNATI (IB - Walter P. Reuther, president of the Untied Auto Workers Union, will be principal speaker Sunday at dedicatton of the new headqiuurten building of UAW Ford Local 863 at suburban Evendale.
This would include the rigi refuse lo sell, rent or lease such property to any person, irrespective of (he reason therefore .
The second would amend the law regulating leal estate brokers and salesmen.
• RENTAL • SOFT WATER
Unlimited QuanHtlos
Senators didn’t pass :	« bUMn-;^, A
as all effort was concentiffiS^ on
sifting through the stacks of measures still in committee.
Today-is the deadline for bbth houses to report out all but tax or appropriations bills originating in their own houses.
0-'^ ^3
LINDSAY ; SOFT WATER CO.
gg Nowberty St. Plt-«62t
P(HTti*c'i Only luthomad TV SALES and SERVICE
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8 Ooklond Ave. FF 4-1515
RCA COLOR TV
Sweet’s Radio TV

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9 Cii. Ft. Refrigerators : ,$151.00 with Trade
Electric Dryers.......	......$132.00
Got Dryers .	. ......... ....$148.00
11 Gu. Ft. Upright Freezers........$175.00
13 Cu. Ft. 2-Door
Refrigerotbrs...... $208.00 with Trade
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YElGm*
Waterford to End School Millage Talks
Walerfonl TownKhip School Board mombei-* tomorrow will cH-mtyt a six-week series of speak-iitf engaitententN advtwallnK pas-lafo of the pro|!oaed five-mill tax inepeaae,
The iiroposal will be on a special tchool election ballot March io.
favor of the mlllii|(e bwMt, have made several appearances be^ fO|re Parent-Tt-acher aisitclallen iiicctlnKs since F«ih. i.
Ilv'.v ai'Kiie that llu' sclu«)| dls-lrli;l, which offers siuilInK leach-ers wllli a Imclielor'fi (leni'ce $1, .VXI. IS Iwlow most Ollier Oakland Counly schiK)l dlNlricis In ihal i-e-spect. Olher reasons died are Inc costs and Ihc m'cd In ni tain a desiralile (eacher pupil I in.
Edmond I,, Wlndclcr. a schreil Imaixl nienilHT and tdinirman of Ihc personnel commilli'c, said the school disi riel'■ loses nearly 100 teachers each year, ('onstanl re-cnillinc of n'placemenis is nt'cdeil and this is mil an easy task when Ihe pay level is Ixdow averace, he •aid.
Of Ihe VO schiKil districl.s in Ihe county, Ihree have a lower begin-ning rale, seven have Ihe same figure as Walerford Township and the remaininc dislricls offer from S4,600 lo Jl,80(» lo slarlinc
KIKST CONSIDERATION School board members who ap-, pearl'd al a lown hall tyfie meel-Inc l«-'it w(>ek sponsored by the Croater Waterford Community Council Indicated that a JlOO in-
crease (ot- tesduus uoiuld bc.Uie.I)diU!lson,
first consideration of Ihe board if the millage profiosal passes.
If the full five mills were npread over the next seven years ns protNaMMl. approximately tM26.WMI in additional funds would Im' available to the school district at the start of the first fls-cal year duly 1. The school district is presently operating under a total budget of approximately $1,711,185.
The proposed 1962-6;! school budget will be submitted to the County Allocation Board the third Monday in AprU. Two unknown factors, the amount of state aid forthcoming and the new property valuations, must be estimated in the proposed budget.
To the average taxpayer in the school district, passage of the pix)-posal would add some $25 to his tax bill based on an average sessed valuation of $2,500 in township.
Street, Waterford Townsliip: Waterford Center .School, 1021 Airport Road, Waterfoi-d I'ownship; Walei--foid Village School, -1211 Steffens Stiwt, Walerfoi'd Township and Pontiac laike .School, 2.515 Williams Lake Road, Walerford Township.
President Signs Bill Boosting Debt^imit
WASHINGTON (APt-Prosident Kennedy has signed a bill increasing Ihe lemimrary national debi iTiling lo $.500 billion, a lioost of $2 billion.
The increase is-effective only through June 30. The administra-has said it will ask another temporary $8 billion incn'asi' liy that date.
Won't Seek Re-Election
PETOSKEY (ffi — Veteran Emmet County Treasurer Lewis White has announced he w'ill not seek' The five-mill increase, in effect, (re-election to the ix)St he has held would allow the school district loj for all but four of the last 49 years, increase the tax rate for .school VVhile will be 88 in May. He w^s operating purposes $3 per $1,000' first elected to office in 1912.

PAINT SALE
AT BOTH LOCATIONS
. INTERIOR SHELF
STOCK of COLORS 0IIU! jp"f„
Machine Mokes the '^ LStocking of Shelf Stock in Colors Obsolete . . . i
SO WE OFFER Famous
PRAH & LAMBERT Interior Paint
l'"\	'	'	■	■	-	I '	1
' yjiK TontUc 1‘RKsa. vvki)nk.si)av. march i«. ima
on.fihe equali«'d valualiuh. Because Ihe equalized valuation slightly more than double the as-teiwHl valuation in the district, •»le of $.5 per $1,1100 on Ihe equal-Ized vuhmtion Is npproxlmnlely the i>qulva|ent of ItO per H.flOo asseiwod valuation.
Passage of Ihe |>n>|MMal would allow Hm-whool board lo spread up lo five mills hut. at Its discretion, the hoiird could spread less limn the allowed maximum. AVI^AOK RATIO Tlie prew'nl average of puptlit IT elassroom Is 27.4. acemxllng to Mrs. Ikirolhy Itnmlngham, seere-lary of the lioarxi.
"ITie propirpd oilllnge Is needed to maintain or Imfirove this ratio. Mrs. Harningham said. The ratio in Walerford Townahip sdiools is about avT'iage for (he i-ouiity, liOHnl IniHlee Fisnlerlek Poole sabL >a talks In II Kroiqm and al tlie <tW<Xl town meeting, that with (■onllnually rising easts In the over all operation of the N<‘hiHtl disirlel a relative steady level of slate aid liinds, more help Is i Ihe local level.
If Ihe mllingi' pro|H>sal is approved at the polls, the presi'iil total millage of 25,5 would be in-reased lo :{0.5 with 23.49 mills for Ihe oficrating budget and 7.01 for debt ihc first Polls will h<‘ open 7 a m. lo 8
Precincts 1 through 5 n‘S|>cclive-ly art' Iwalcd at ilu' following
Drayton plains Si'hool. Snkhnbaw Road, Drayton Plains;;
Sill iMriicl ioit <iiiiiriinl('i'<l oi- \ onr Mon<>v l!iu-k
AT .SEARS NOW.,, Timely ffUffST SPUBVG \
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|,» lo I’.M, Mon.. I litii ''..
I I I. ainl S VI,
,'^ho|i *1; I.» III on I in ", ami \\ I (lm'"(lai
Harmony House Dinettes on Sale!
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Sale! Harmony House Odd Dinette Chairs
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l/i» VVoo/Zitti'
ii.H. Wnailitr KuttmH »'««««••( ClMiiM’t< (riT H|(ht Niiow, rMlil (0*MI» on l«*g« «>
THE PONTIAC
(Mam
VO I.. 120. xo: ;to
Arms
F0NTIA^	SaIU Vl
Marking Automotive Milestone
Twq Units Take Actiortigainst Tax PropK^sals
Oakland Sup^visors Seek to Nullify Levy on County Resident!
ASTllO \0!VII('AI-	- Thill's wliiil CM chic'fs cullc'd the 7r>-
niilhon-fm' liKuro iidiiovod todiiy l).v CM i)lmits. And so Ihi'.v tJol 2 y<'iir-ol(l "iistronnur’ Hu/ .Jackson to liiunch the Honime Honni'-ville syrnholic of all Ihc other ears. Bu/ is the son of GM Detroit Central Office employe Harold .Jiickson. liehind Bu/ are
Ihe CM vice president in chai'se of car and truck group, ISdwurd N. Col(‘; .lames M. Roche, vice president of distribution staff; K. M. Ksles, GM vice president and Pontiac Reneral manager, and Anthony G. De Lorenzo, CM vice president in charge of public relations st.'iff.
GM's 75 Millionth a Pontiac
II nciuly was .lohn Clemi all
In an atmosphere of bright camel a,lights and a sea of smiling ex-I'cuuves a 2-year-old boy clad in a blue space suit this morning “pb loled" General Wtetoi's’ 75-millionth car oft a Pontiac Motor Division pianl assembly line.
Kuz Jackson, son of a (<IVI eni-jiloye, nearly stole tlie show from Ihe sleek, pearl-ivory Pontiac IS.iimeville eoiivertible symbolic of all the <;M ears produced shiee 1908.
Bu/'s dad, Harold .fackson ol ■'ll!,) .Semmole Drive. Royal Oak, veiled to hi.s sori: -
Buz/y waved . . . for nearly at hour.
* * '■ *
"We are tremendously proud,’ Pontiac General Manager E. Estes said, "and honored to hav^ thm historic" event occuh plant. Of course, this car is only symbolic of many built in other plants acros> the nation."
Estes handed the keys to the 75 millionlh ear to Edward |^N. Cole, GM vice presidnet in charge, of the car and truck group. rilANKS I'MU.IC
Cole, speaking for tJM Chairman- Fredi'rie G. Donner and
President .lohn F. Gordon, i gratulated "all the people who had anything to do with the production, our shareholders and especially the public who have made this achievement possible."
Donner aird flordon h V d earlier Issued a Joint statement hailing “this milestone’' as having “a much broader significance than this production achievement.”
"To the consumer, it has meant more than lialf a century of ex-rcising his own purchase choice. ‘They said." In this sense, it is a record.
Just seven years ago, GM cele-
Collej?iate Ornslaught to Be Met by Strategy
lauderdale Girds Loins for Invasion
»;.N l-TJNK
DERDALE, Fla, ' coming again, s from East. Mid-i, college students
to the beach at
Uiuaeififile. \
They're on spring vacalioii. . Ttiey'rc Jed. up lo -I and snow and c:mn regulations.
They’re coming to I'ough it on the licacli at Lauderdale, under flic romantic palms, the hot sun ami Ihe cool nioo.n, far from the watchful f^-cs of pau'iits and profc.s.sor.
The aiiniml invasion began Monday, wlieii the first wave, of Sno liit the beach. Sotni their miml)(-rs will rcaidi 40,001) or
mpiis rules
I In Today's I Press
:J Big Challenge
.^dnllnl5,^rulton faces chai-j h'cgo of providing jobs for ‘'I fast-growing work force — P\(iIC4T.-------	^
■1	It's. There
si But Cuba- won’t import silli-available-U. S. foods — I P.VffE 26.
i	Not Quite
~ Economy healthy but not up to early e.xpectatiofis — fAOEffl.
Quiz-Test__________
Check YES
p.slions — PAGE
I Wilson, Earl.................47
! Women’s Pages ...,...*.18-16
Whal will they bring? More beer and'sC’-k riots like those that shook i,auderdale last year?.
Not if a committee headed by Dr. Clem Bininger, First Pres-livK'rian church pastor, can pre-vi-nt il.
V^KK.S A YE.VK This committee-was torn in Ihe yiots of last spring. II has worked hard for a year. Its goal IS iri previ'nt riots and make an arlistic. as well as commer-ci.'il suc'cesis of the annual student invi'sions.
T'n- (ollcgi Ills saw the first I V h-ic • of this work today.
\t thie<“ places along the beach, "H c I I o’’ hospitality booths aiipcared. Here, students who could .offer Identifi- , cation cards from their cani-Iinses were given |)lastie fags. These tags will admit them to .1 huge recreation aiea to he opened Friday. In this area, there will be dancing every night. Students may biuld bonfires, sing- and hnve-.43arbecues.
........—......★-----★ ......
Athletic, talent and beauty con-Ic’sis have been arranged for the college Joes and Janes. More events will be offered later.
"We 11 just play.it by dan. at the start." Bininger savs.
11n- (ilastic identification tags not only will admit the students to entertainments, but will screen out toughs who invaded the area last spring, Th(-y |t[)sed as -students and were largely responsible for In-eiting the riots. Many of the .“lOO jailed wore thrHI_
who _______
feT "
Jn a way. Bininger's committee is L.iuderd.ile’.s conscience. Many believe the riots grevr out of the city’s failure to .live up to Its responsibilities to the young visitors:
A MILLION DOLLARS Although many of the collegians come on a shoestring, ,ind have to live on hamburgers
the student army Jion dollars in a few days.
' Last spring, the” studenfs~v^re
50,000 strong. No entertainment was provided for them. There were 10 to.v-s to one girl. Out of the shortage of feminine company grow boro'dom, excessive drinking and finally three days of riots.
---------^
Many believe^ the c;ollegians drank, caroused and,-- finally rioted simply because tliey had nothing better to occupy them.
brated Ihe assembly of its .50 millionlh car. The intervening seven years has meant a period of celerated progress^ for General Motors, our employes, our suppliers and stockholders public generally*’’
A production achieve matched anywhere in the industry, GM’s 75 millionth ear represents 54 years of auto making, ii ;'rruptcd only by World War II. The total includes U.S. produc-on of Chevrolets, Pontiacs, Olds-mohiles, Buieks, Cadillacs and GMC Truck and Coach divisions, the limited mumbers of other vehicles no lodger (iroduced.
EXPIIES.SES\PRIDE Estes added’
“We at PontiV' take great pride the role we htVe played through Ihe years in heTmng the automobile industry grow and prosper. We look forward l(\the challenges of tomorrow with-
I,of even greater ehanV.s and more opportunities of everAkind."
The first 25 milliOT vehicles were produced by GM m 32 years (1908-1940). The pace Vuiekened and GM celebrated it-s NIth millionth vehicle in Novemh\*r 1945.
Two committees of ’ Oakland County Board Supervisors yesterday took action to keep county residents who are emnloyed in Detroit and elsewhere in Wayne County from paying an income tax where they work.
They agl'c'Cd to .seek an meni to the (ax plan proposed by Detroit Mayor J(“ronii‘ Cavanagli when it is introduced in the state l,Cgi.slature. ..
.The ^decision to ai^icud ,«ucb- a ill so Hint il would pprmit a <;oun-ty to lax only its own residents reaelied unanimously duHng a .joint session of the Ways and Mean.s Committee -and the Legislative Committee of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors.
T h e coiiiinItteeN aiitliuriised Li-gistative Cummitlee Chalriiia.n •luliii (>. ,s|enianii to take the amendment Immivdlately to Laiis-ing.
With no Board of Supervisors -neeting scheduled, there was nc time lo recommend its action, Board Chairman Delos Hamlin explained.
EXPEtrrs AtiRKKMEN'T He fell ecriain that the hoard would be of the same opinion as Ihe members of both committees in this matter, he said.
Mayor CavanaglTa tax plan, as explained by Oakland County eurporatlon eounHejl Nornian R-Barnard, would enable Imth Detroit and Wayne County each to levy a i per cent Income tax on toth residents and nonresidents working either In Detroit or Wa.vne (tonnty.
The Macomb County Board of Supervisors has, submitted a, counter bill to the state legislature which would prevent Detroit from taxing all nonresidents of the city.
Hamlin saw a weakness in Macomb's action, since it would pre-Detroit from drawing faxes from Wayne County as well ai from other counties.
, . The state is bound to -ecognlze Detroit’s problem,’’ he laid, “and Is not going to let Ihe^ T4f,v glThroke.’’' '
Hospital Threatened After 6 Babies Die
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. l-I’l - Police pairollcd Bingham ton General Hospital today because of bomb threaLsI after the death of six babies, apparently from .saltl poisoning, at the hospital.
Floodlights were beamed on the hospital grounds Tuesday night after a male caller, believed to be an operator everybody would be dead in the hospital because of a bomb that would ^xplode.
\Pollce Huid they found no evi-di'pee of II homi), liui eontlniKxl lo cheek vifilloi'K iiiid the building, six bullies, wlio riiiiged In ;< days to 8 inonths.
Kennedy to Try for Senate Seat |
Young Ted Up Againsl'i Kin of House Speaker! John McCormack t
BOSTON (AP) -Elwai-d (Ted) Kennedy stepped into the hatfle today with State AUy, Gen Edward J. McCormack Jr. for die ' Democratic nomination for the .Senate seal once held by his brother. President John F. Ken-iiedy. " :
Kennedy made his expected announcement at a news conference his home.
all furniture had t moved. His blonde wile Joan stood at his side.
-Kennedy -is facing"a double test = with McCormack, a • nephew of iFS.” HeHse^ Speaker Johaz?W^ Me-Cormack. Kennedy said he will go to Ihe party. eovenUon in June and also enter the primacy m September as McCormack has indi-tember as McCormack has indicated he plans Jo do.'
*■„ *■ *
McCormack was not immediately available for comment.
The Kennedy-McCormack con-fe.st foreshadows one of the most intensive Demig’T’aTlf!~~BonvptmoiT and-primai^tUafttes”ln years. Both the- JCem^jcr	McCormack
forces Tiav^ sfrohg ot^anlzations.
Flash
WASHINtJTON (AP)—The Defense Department today Issued a draft call for 6,000 May for the Army.
"Wayne County certainly has responsibility to Detroit,” Hamlin added, but explained that he wants the line drawn at Oakland County.
We're here to protect Oakland County taxpayers,” Hamlin told the committees.
■REDICTS MOVES "Watch the people flock out here from Detroit if that would save them from paying an income tax declared Avon Township Supervisor Cyril Miller, member of the Legislative Committee.
If an income tax ever is needed here, Oakland County slionld (Continued on Page 2, ('ol! 3)
ige Ikom lied dpriii liter beiu)|
One Infant reniiiliied in erltleal eoiiditlon ui^l anather was In serious, eoiiditlon. Eight oilu-rs have heeii miule III. In all, :t0 Infants were fedv the formula.
tries speeialisi called in from Bnl-limore, said some m tlie babies had received as muenvas a table-spoonful 6( salt iif onit day. He said it was Ihe equivulimt of an adult swallowing four (i^unds of one day and is iV Iclhul
amount.
WASN’T POISONED
hospital spokesman sak determined Tuesday that seventh child had died of earlii complications and had not suffered salt poisoning.
The liomh threats hegnii before dawn Tuesday.
A caller phoned Dr. Jason K. Moyer, the hospital’s medical director, at his home and told him he would be bombed and poispned.
Late in the afternoon a man made Ihe first of foUr calls to the, hospital, threatening a tombing.
Hospital authorities ruled
ilk it al\a irlier
Examination Set
UdmOtleied TouroiDunes^
by Park Critics
GLEN ARBOR (AP) — The I e e p i n g Bear Dunes Citizens’ Council wants to take Secretary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall for ride.
Opponents of a Senate bill to coi vert portions of Leelandu and Ben-counties into Sleeping B6ar Dunes National Recreation Area, the council has invited UdaH for n auto tour of the region.
★ *• ★
A letter from the council todf^y urged Udall to visit the region before Senate committee hearings on the matter le.sume.
Honors Gandhi
ispect Charged With Kidnaping, Robbery of Supermarket Owner
A FlinK man being held today in the kidmpihg and $9,.500 armed i-obbery otW owner of two Pon-thV”|^ssrbility thnl’thc pi^"otg«C supermVkets^lasr^ will any of the babies were involved in the bomb threats.
A practical nurse, IJIIIe Colvin, who filled the formula sugar can Tuesday, said she did so from a larger can labeled as sugar. She has been suspended from her Job, pending iiivestlga.
plaeed
against her.
There ha.s been a mixed reaction to Ihe deaths among the 76,000 re.sidents of this cily. Sol-row has been tinged with toth anger and sympathy.
Charles R. Thomas, 26, manded examirlation yesterday afternoon before Municipal Judge Maurice E. Finnegan. Thomas is being held Iti lieu of $.50,000 bond.
Two other men W' e r e being questioned in the robbery today by Pontiac i>oliee. They are Robert E, Murphy, 2:t, 4S1 S. Telegraph Road, and Jack V. Young, .11, formerly Of Auburn Heights and Keego llarbor--Toun^"Hny Thomas were picked up by state police last Friday trailer they shared at Girand Blanc. A pistol Similar .to--th<kon» " m the supermarket i-obboj-y found in the trailer.
Rusk-Gromyko Talks Offer No Hope of Treafy
U. S. Officials Believe Poet to Check Spread of N-Weapons Possible
GENEVA l/P) — Foreign ministers from 17 natiouf today opened their disarmament conference in Geneva’s Palace of Nations.
Exploratory talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko in advance of the conference failed to open up any real hope of ‘ concluding a nuclear weapons test ban treaty now, U.S. sources said.
They expressed belief, however, that il may be possible to negofi'
Union to block the spread of nuclear weapons in the world and thus make a beginning in bringing the atomic arms race under some conirol.
Keeretary of State Dean Rusk. liulleNM in the biting cold wind, gave photographers a small smile before entering Ihe palace with William C. Fosti'r, director of the U.S. Arms Control and DIsarihameiit agency, and Arthur H. Dean, Chief ILK. delegate to the iiuelear talks.
Jromyko in the prellmiruu'V ks was repArted to have stuck to the line that Western proposals n iniemational inspection sys-lo verify disarmament measures amouhls to a demand foi ■spionage rights within the Soviet Union,
* 4r A
However, > American„sources said they believe it tnay be possible through long negotiations to worl out an injli^ion system acceptable to the Uussinns.
The present prosptict, however, Is that President Kennedy’s proposal for a lest ban treaty with controls will fall through and that the United States will go forwawl, as ^Kennedy has an-iiouiieed, with its series of nii-•■lear tests in the atmosphere beginning In lute April.
Rusk and British Foreign Secretary Loi-d Home, in several sessions with Gromyko, have made no progress toward opening «p real negotiations on Berlin either. But parallel talks on the Berlin crisis will continue outside the disarmament meetings, it was learned. _ _	.......
IDENTIFIED BY VICTIM Thomas was identified in i
line-
up Monday at the Flint Police Station by Joseph 0. Gagne, 40, owner of the People's Food Market, 263 Auburn Avc., and Peo-lie's Food-O-Mal. 465 E. Pike St Gagne, 4976 W. Ullea Road, Shelby Township, told iKillee
Rusk and Gromyko will make major policy statements on disarmament tomorrow in the first working sessions of the 17-natlOn conference following today’s ceremonial opening.
him from his home at gunpoint Feb. 25 and forced him to hand over the money from safes in the two markets.
A second bandit held Gagne’s -wife Guida and her two young .sons captive while the market owner was being taken to tlie stores. - The gunmen escaped in Gagne’
Policf believe a third man drove the two bandits to the Gagne home that mght.
★ * *
Young was '‘sought foi .jumping ,3 bond alter failing ta appear ini : Circuit Court for sentencing on a 1 > breaking and entering eonvieUon Pontiac. He also is being held on that charge, ■	| i
Snow's Just a Bluff; | Spring's On Its Wayi'
■ ]«l
Blustery snow sloinis blowing in] with a fury may look winter isjj here Mgain hut don’t ho fooled..--climbing temperatures are causing the snow to melt al-
200 Die on State Roads
EAST LANSING (AP) - Tra^e accidents have killed 200 persons in Michigan so far this year, provisional figures compiled by state police showed today. The toll at this date last year was 246.
bouquet of white roses on the memori.^ to MphandasJC Gandhi iaJNew Delhi. India. Behind iher isTr.’S^f^Ambassador to India
Hindu leader. .A*guard stdndk at the kft*^(Story.-	^ paBrThr therntfiin^efH

Each weekday during Lent a prominent Ameri- S can invites you to Join 1| tcith Mm in his favorite f prayer. Today, foin withi.'%
CLIFFORD P. CASE , .Senator from New Jersey *1 “tord, make me an Im § strument of your peace; ^ where there 1*	fet	' v
ihve; whife Kierf- i
most before it hits the ground.
—'
-Tfi^-wt9tTRerriiifm^said temperatures will average near the normal high of 44 and normal low of 27 for the next few days
The weekend will be somewhat colder but Monday will be wann-
Snow flurries are forecast lor Saturday and ram Monday with precipitatiop totaling less than
despidr, "Hope; where thens Ii * daidaieas; aUlMilfelh '«»W> l||
:a>bmu. Jfff.
1.
I thi
4 to
feeding 8 aTBi. The thermp.nietef‘ -.leading at 1 t>.ni. was 37.
that I may not so much • be consoled as to eo sdtotw to bj» pp4pC8!tMdU to naderstaijCi-# iWi ^
as to love; lor it is tog that we receive; it la Itt-pardoning fhat'we ai»l^Mif‘ doned. and It ia in dying ' Aar we are hon ta- afanal ‘



THE rONTlAC PHKS$. WEDNESDAY, MARCH U, 1068
New Storm Brings County Survey
More Plains Snow
May Hit Snag
iy lltMtsd ProtM InUnriMlIomi of five Midweal atatea re miiined walled off behind 10-foot •fWw drifla today, and a new aloi m wm toollinK up In New Mexico.
' the Northeaat continued to dig Mt from under aa much aa 2 feet' »( new anow,
Iowa. Rcfli'ca of achnola cloaed. Small towns were running out of food. Sti'tindod motorials sought refuge in farma. ISvo trains stalled In deep drift! in Iowa Tuewiny, A rallixHid snow plow junuMHl the track near Huron, s.D.
TKAVKI.KKH 8TKAM>KI) Stranded travelers ovt>rflow('d liotels in Miiiden, Neb., and fount! rt'fugt' in private homes. Thirteen children and a driver Spent five A reeord heat wave toasted Flor- hours In a stalled school bus near Ida. where Miami reported 89 de- Clnrion, low-a. greea Tuesday, highest ever on ^	«.|d,i,|p<i into
March 13.	i • ditch along a Hlush-covered
Rialng streams caused eoncern ginhwav near sagtaaw Tuesday In parts of Iowa, Illinois, Michigan „vertiimed. but the l« ehli and Ohio.	dren alMmrd were unhurt.
The Oakhnid ('ounty I’lannlng Commission’s effort* to obtain a $192,16.'l federal grant for an economic suiwy of ^he tHMinly are being .ieo|MUtii/cd by the .'south-n Michigan Melroiwlttan Community Research ('orp., com-miaaion din'clor Ceorge Skrubb said yt'sicrday.
Canadian cold sifting smithwnrd| Northern New England rersirtt>d Iwhind the Midwest storm ais-a scores of schools and bnslne
dropped the temperature to 5 Iw-low zero at Evanston, Wyo., shoi t-ly after midnight today. C.laagow, Mont., reported 2 below.
The new storm dropiiod 6 inches of snow at Corona, N.M., and 25-mile winds fanned 6-foot drifts. Socorro, K.M.. had 4 inches of snow.
Highway travel was virtually at » standstill in sections of the Dakotas. Minnesota. Nebraska and
•shut down. Up to 2 fei-fell in Vermont and New Hampshire, and Maine had as much as 14 inches Tuesday. Upstate New York got as much 111 inches.
At Cleveland, Ohio, the Coast Guard reported Ice conditions the Great Lakes were the worst in many years and predicted the upper lakes may not open to shipping until rald-Aprll.

Area Planning Group Opposes Broader Probe by Reseorch Group
c rcs(>areh cor|S)ratlon is seeking $.'l million of fiHlcral funds for general survey of the metropolitan mt'a, Skrubb said.
Ill- laid the leglHluIhe and ways and means coiiiinltlees of the tiakland ('aunty Hoard at 8u|M-rvlsarM yeslurday It wasn’t llhely that the federal gavern-incnl wwdd approve two surveys In the county.
The committees agreed that the planning commission's r e q u would pixwe more beneficial to the County, if approved.
inktrueted .Skrubb to vigorously oppose the research corporation’s program, saying it was an 'fforl to make work to justify its xisleiuH'. having no p r a e t I c a application to Oakland County’! needs.
These needs at the eaiK't'rn of the inlssian, eaniiultte,
He Was *Told* to Resign
Skrubb said the research corpo-ition was initially financed by the Eprd Foundation to explore ways to QCiji)onti/.e in local government and has no business in the planning field.
The Coiiniy Planning Commission having submitted its application for the funds at the heginhing of year, is expecting a ' reply 'time Ibis month. “
NEW YORK (API-Richard M. Nixon says he was advistxl just before he went on nationwide lelevisiop in 1952 to defend his much-debated political fund that he wasn’t wanfe3 iis fieri."Dwight Eisenhower’s tunning mate in I year's presideniial <
palgii.
TRUCKS IN TROUBLE — This was Ihc^'ene east oUGrand Island, Neb., as ice on thg Mgbways’Ttarted traffic of big transports headed casT during the storm that swept the Midwest this week. 1216 scene is on Highway aO, roads across Nebraska. _
’ of I he main easl-w
GM’S 75th Millionth iCubcrn Exiles Say
fCtonlinued From Page One produced the ears Is an Increase in OM's payroll from $2.6 billion in 19S4 to $3.2 billion last year.
Considerations of the survey include county popuialipn, 1 a b or
force and employmeni....industrial
composition, industriaT“land Tl5e, market structure and wholesale markets.
MIAMI, Ela. (St — Some impatient Cuban exiles say they want guns from the United States -not relief checks—to try to fore Etdel Castro out of Cuba.
is aimed at developing ter understanding of the county’s economic potential, said Skrubb.
The S5 itiiUioriih car is scheduled for display for a week at the GM Main Ciffice Building in Detroit | A crowd of more than J..M starting tomorrow. Then, it will be'cheered speakers clamoring for
exhibited at the Steel Pier in Atlantic Oty for a month.
“After Ifiat.' said Estes, “I think we’ll keep it around for display. purposes.’’
He said it wouldn’t be sold. Even as he was speaking two other assembly lines in Pontiac’s Plant 16 w’ere sleadily turning out a colorful procession of Ponliacs — already passing the 75 million ......mark,  ——~—
tion Tuesday night. Applau.se heavy when rally spokesmen offered to return U. S- relief checks ,, if this country would arm Cuban exiles against the man who rules their homeland.
They Whine for Wine
NEVl' YORK (UPn - Wine sumption in the United Stales has increased 51 per cent since World War II, the Wine Institute reports.
The rally at Bayfront Park Amphitheater was orderly in contrast to the breakup of a sitdown strike Tuesday morning. Police lugged 152 men and women to paddy wag-
orderly conduct.
The money would be used to help underwrite the cost of an economic survey currently being conducted by the coinminsion and also to enable its faster eomple-Ron. according to Sknibi>.
He says he was told that Ei-■senhower and his toa advisers wanted him to announc^ on the air his resignation ns the Repub-ilcan vice presidential eandi^te.
Supervisofs Trying to Halt Tax Plans
two-time vice president adds that a subsequent misunderstanding with Eisenhower made him so angry that he actually dictated a telegram of resignation to the Republican national chairman, The lelpgram was destroyed by an aide, he say.s.
“Eisenhower;
ment, is on a fishing trip Baja California region of Mexico and won’t be back before next weekend, his secretary at Palm Springs, Cdif., said.
Nixon. said the political fund as "set up by my supporters California to pay expenses for
(Continued From Page Onel collect It," said SpiUlgfleM Townie ship Superx’isor John Carey, a member of the Ways and Means Committee.
‘How could you justify a county income tax here?” Semann asked.
You are possibly going to need it sometime in the future,” Carey replied.
The sitdown began as a hunger strike four, days earlier to dramatize .some Cubans’ sentiments for
"You could cut real estate taxes and <:ollecf“^" local TSx“^Ifi! said Hamlin.'.
The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy with occasional Rght snow or rain today ending tonight. Thursday partly cloudy. Little change in temperature. High today 38, low tonight 30. High Thrursday 40. West to northwest winds Utoirtniies.
Plrtcagn.^
I. Highest temperature I.tiwest temperature i.jMean temperature .. 1 Weather^^nunlea-
An p a k I a n d County reiddent working in Detroit at some time in the future conceivably could be payir^ an income tax to the t ty and city in which he lives, the county and city where he works, and to the state, in addition to th£ fedcrar government, they said.
Doubts state tax
Tueailay’a Temperature t
36 32 1-.........
3S 30 LosAngelea 65 . 39 24 Miami Beach 84 34. 26 Milwaukee 36
36 38 New York > 34 24 Omaha 58 35 Phoenix 2t 2 Pltteburgh
il;
4aa r«Mr/ed Sowntewn) Hlfhcat tamperature
lioweat temperature ........
Uean temperature
Waather-«BPw nurrlea
Marquette 3.1 tncht_ Pellston 20 tnehea Tra. City 13 Inches
-^TTWlll tfr-coerterTonighfin-The
_	_ iiahtee, "the Plains States and in fhe South^n
PJaletuL MoM ^ the Northern Plains-and NorthOTn Plateau will
" tkive	wei^ier. fihwtv is expec^ 4n ' Wisconsin and
kL-l	w«h thoWevs lorecaM' on the North Pacific.
"That’s a darn poor argument.
If W'ayne County’s proposal from Mayor Cavanagh wCre to pass through the state Icgisla-tu^, commiMee members said
County residents RUIng out ttorms and paying Income taxes as much as six Rmes a year.
'You’re not going state-income "tax this year," said Semann, who is legislative com-
mittee chairman and keeps a close ear to events in Lansing.
"What we need is not 'more taxes but a cutback in civil service,” declared Han^ Hoirton, supervisor from Royal Oak and a member of Ways and Means.
‘There’s no need for an income tax. here, because we liave OUr feet on the ground," he said.
He blamed Michigan financial oes on a "weak-kneed" legislative swayed by pressure groups into "setting up new empires- that continue to grow, but are not neeff^ ^ ed nor wanted by the majority of taxpayers.”
Boy, 9, Saves Friend> 6, When Tot Foils In Drain
LIVONIA IB - A nine-year-old boy was credited with rescuing a six-year-old companion here Tuesk day when the younger boy tell into “ ir-ndn rf^ftllr* **^”»^'** Drain.
Police said- Daiiis
jumped in the large drainage ditch
aid idl. off a foMbridge on which
—Hswept thenv to-a jtearb^
the Day in Birmingham
BIRMINGHAM t the Birmingham YMCA Mil brou^t up to the figur* In ine hlMory of the local orgnnUiation as a result of It drive.
Campaign ehalrmon Robert Snllon announced today that a 20 t»er cent Increase in memberships enrolled during the flve-week campaign brought the total to 4.278.
He said that ISO volunteer work-
Re^ Schedule Berlin Trouble
PAST MILESTONE — When General Motors’ lac’s Don Ahrens,	Track’s PW|ljp J^
») millionth car (a 19.55 ChevixiU't) rollt’d off Monaghan, Pontiac's Robert M. Critchfield, the assembly line in 1954. Harlow H. Oirllce Bulck’s Ivan L. Wiles, Oldsmoblle’s Jack F. (hand on fender) was president of the company.
Other GM officials then were (from left) Cadil-
Wolfram and Chevrolet’s Thomas H. Keating.
BERLIN (UPD—The scheduling of night-time military flights by the Soviets to coincide with those of Weatern aircraft posed a new today to the Western allied
Nixon Book Out This Month
li-avel, printing and mulling speeches^ and extra clerical help
TALKED WITH PAT '
Nixon wrote that jvhen newspapers editorially urged him to submit his resignation as the vice presidential aspirant, he got no direct expression from Elen-hower and considered resigning at one i>oint. But he said his wife, Pal, talked him out of it.
Nixon said that former New York Gov. .Thomas E. Dewey and his own advisers suegested he take the siliialion to the American p«'ople via television. On the Sunday before the Tuesdfiy telecast, he added, Eisenhower phoned him and said: “Good luck iind keep your chin up”
ing of all of Eisenhowers lop ad-vlers,’ he (Dewey) said. ‘They have asked me to tell you that it is their opinion that at the conclusion of the broadcasj tonight yourahottld sulmdP"ytttr''T^
Ron to Elsenhower. As you know, have not shared this point of view, but it is my respoiwlbUity to pass this recommendation on to you’”
NIXON SHOCKED Nixon said he was shocked and asked: " 'What does Eisenhower want me to do’?’’
'Dewey hedged at this point,’ Nixon added. "He said he did riot want to give the impression that
Bui, said Nixon, “barely fwmghP-Top eom-hoe^—hefot-c' I was scheduled
leave Mr the TV studio a call from Dewey) came through to my suite. From the lone of his voice, I could sense immediately that Dewey did not have his heart what he had to lell me.
' 'There has just been a meet-
been approved by Eisenhower. Bui he went on to say he was sure that, in view of the “close relationship between those whom he had talked and Eisenhower, they would not have asked him to call unless this represented Eisenhow-view as well as their own." spokesman for Dewey said Tuesday Dewey had not read the Nixon remarks and could not ment.

Young 'Republicans fo Hear Democrat
The Young Republicans have decided they can learn something from a young Democrat.
They’ve even gone so far as to ask him" to address a meeting of their Oakland Courtly club.
And the young Democrat has
•John J. (.Toe) Collins, 27-year-old state chairman of the Democratic party, relayed word yesterday that he would be on hand for the Young Republicans’ March 20 meeting at 8:30 p.m. in Grove High School, Birmingham.
^understand - Coilrns—"was
hesitant to accept at first," said Bofis .Sellers, the Young Republican who arranged for Collins’ appearance.
"But he accepted on the basis that he would be our sole sipeak-er and that we are gentlemen and he is a gentleman. "
Sellers said there would be no “mud-slinging" at the meeting, which might causse some to wonder why they’re taking all the “onroT the- alfgif:
Jackie Attends Fashion Show in Indian Capital
NEW DELHI (UPD Jacqueline Kennedy, her car dodging sacred cows in the city streets, went to an Indian fashion show today and exclaimed in delight over handloomed silk saris of pretty models.
was such an attraction that crowds through police lines and peered through the glass windows ■ ■ limousine. Be-turbaned, black-bearded Sikhs seemed pleased with what they saw.
It was another whirlwind day
for Jackie. She made friends wltii a baby elephant on the grounds of Premier Jawaharlal
of COStttf
/ when she
Bkstin grabbed, the wunger boy .. ________
■ -held him tintil lhie'“SaTaJt Sheatirrhifh^iHh^nt with low oval ti^^


It was an apricot-colored cotton teatl back.
Sellers explained:
“We want to hear an objective, constructive talk by a Democrat—and Collins is the top.’’
Another big reason for thc_
speech, Sellers said, is publicity.
"We need publicity, so we have to do something the Young Republicans haven't done before," sellers said. ' "It will mean lots of publicity for both parties.”
Actually, Democrats have par-tripatpd
lar Oakland County Young Republicans’ meetings in the past. Bui Sellers stressed that those appearances were’’debates” and'
this i
not.
Coliins*^ formal speech, ribt.yet announced, will be followed by a question-answer period. The meeting is open to the public.
Soviet flights at night three 20-mlle-wlde corrido ing to the divided city could be the most dangerous tactic yet in the Kremlin’s current campaign of harassment, an informed source said.
The RuMdnn controller at the four-power Berlin Air Safety
. Eis(
I had
At the end of his broadcast, Nixon told his listeners that he felt he should not quit but that he would leave the decision to the Republican National Committee. He urged his audience to wire., or write the committee as to what it should do.
Nixon said he did not learn immediately that Eisenhower had praised him for his performance and that the general wanted to meet him the next night in West Virginia. It was in the absence of this knowledge- that he dictated the telegram which the aide destroyed, he said.
^oon afterward, friends calmed doVvn and he flew to Wheeling, W.Va., where Eisenhower greeted him with the now famous endorsement: "You’re my boy."
Australian Ex-Loborife Forced to Take 'Resf
.SYDNEY, Australia «P)-Herberl ____Evatt. former leader of Australia’ " ^	^	'
Labor party, is sufferlTig from high blood pressure and will have to rest for the next two months, his wife said today.
EvatL a former president of the .N. General Assembly, is now chief justice of New South Wales. He became ill Friday just before starting, on a world tour.
Membeimip Hit? Tops tor YMCA Campaign
MeiDb«rship 1 YMCA has
era reached their goal by iigning '2,423 new or renewing mem-400 more than last year’*
m
Emphaids was placed on the sale of $100 civic memberships, Sollon said, through a division by Dr. Hany C. Lleht-

wardt. The division sold 32 civic memberships to Individuals and service clubs.
About one-fourth of the local Y’s operating budget is financed by the United Foundation, Salton said.
Soviet Fighters Plan Conflicting Flights at Night in Air Corridors
Top membership salesman In the campaign was Mrs, James T. Wilson of 1627 Maiylund Road, with 121 to her cre^t. Next highest Was her twin sister, Mrs. Edward Volkman of 399 S. Cranbrook Cross Road, with 90.
1 routes to West Berlin.
Mrs. Thomas R. Cassell of 1609 Maryland Road, a neighbor of Mrs. Wilson, was third highest In membership sales.
In the
Parking has been, prohibited along both sides of a three-quarter mile stretch of Lone Pine Road in , Bloomfield Hills.
Center told his allied parts yesterday that four Soviet military planes would fly Iri lKe
The city commission Imposed the ban last night on the section between Cranbrook and Lahser roads on the recommendation of City Clerk-Public Safety Direct or Robert J. Stadler.
corridors befeVeen Tirm. (l (kimr would reduce heavy trafne
Pontiac time) and 8:20 p.m. day.
Nine passenger planes of the three Western airlines on the Berlin run — Pan American Airways, British European Airways and Air France — were scheduled to fly in the corridors during that period. FUGHTS CONFLICT
The source said (he Russian flights conflicted with four of these We.stern flights.
darkness. Western planes would be more dependent than ever on radar to avoid collisions. Only Tuesday, the Russians again seeded the Berlin-Frankfurt and Berlinahannover corridors with small metal '‘chaff" flakes which blur radar screens.
No chaff was reported In the third corridor, fo Hamburg, but the metal flakes did fall near Berlin outside the air corridors in East Germany.
The Russian night flights were announced even after Secretary of State Dean Rusk and British Foreign Secretary Lord Home repeated earlier warnings that continued interference with isolated Berlin's Vital awial" Miiksr "with the West would provoke stern counter-measures.
On Ixtne Pine but the c<»ngeslloii it(ll exists, making It necessary to eliminate all parking-In the past there had been limited parking in the area and no parking on one side of the road in several stretches.
The commission, in. another action. accepted the low bid for fleet insurance from the J. L. VanWag-oner Agency in Pontiac.
The policy, to cost $875, will give complete coverage to all city-owned vehicles.
Charges UAW Used State Fund in Strike
LANSING W — General Motors Corp. charged today that the United Auto Workers used the state unemployment compensation fund to finance a strike against GM last September.
The two-week strike bore out fears that the 1959 “Ford Canton" decision of the state supreme court would force employers to help pay strikes against themselves through their contributions to the jobless pay fund, said Louis G. Seaton. GM vice president for in-
Seaton. writing to Colin L. Smith, manager of the Michigan Employers’ Unemployment Compensation Bureau, said the potential drain n the fund from slich factiqs is ‘staggering.’’ He called for enactment of legislation to cancel the ffect of the decision.
Crucial Points Block Cease-Fire
ALGIERS (4?—Secret Army ter-
rorists 'attacked a French riot_ jto'em-*a-€ease"'tlTe and" full inc police bafXtudw-m AlgterS' at'dawn today, firing rockets and machine guns for 15 minutes at the big building.
Riot police quartered in' the building returned the European terrorists’ fire. Hundreds of resi-^	dents of the area watche^frotn
Jlie_AinMcan fit^ady herself tf5efi-=winaows-ffrfocRe^^^^^^^
and guns cracked.
There was no immediate information on casualties in the attack.
Elsewhere In Algiers terrorists had killed four Moslems, including a major in the French army, and wounded five before noon. Three Kliropeans were wo^ed
by gunfire.	.....
French and Algerian rebel officials went into their second week iwmal. peace, tallfs at Evian, on the Freneh-Swtaa borda!'.'Imp
portable American schoolroom ildren interested In art.
Accompanied by Mr*.
Gahdhl, Nehru’s daughter* Mrs. - - - - ^	...... - -	- —
-	■ ■	• ■ third	portant hurdles wtate reported still nolice at hia disnosaUta-back up
■	- ~ ^BlbcIRng a cease fire in Alger^	..
After nearly nine hours of discussion Tuesday, the two delega-stllhat odd* over. tjb.e - inafe^“pf a+proyisidi^iiovern-
ment to administer Algeria be-|
barren interjlor, should Tar support roie^nn-
H sp h-	I z
pendencc. and on the role of Al-i	^
gerian rebel troops in future ac-; Other unsettled questions re tion against-the Secret ArmrOr-!P«''««.v i»<;>ude on ^nesty for ganizatiori terrorist organization! Algerian refugees •“ of right-wing Europeans.	--------- ‘
reach full agreement.	,	.
" Informants said the conference spent much time in a discussion of the persons to fill, the seats on a 12-ltian provisional executive commission. Several names were advanced from both sides without winning approval.
The French and the Algerians have agreed that the provisional should have a Moslem local force at its disposal to maintain public order.
TTiey have also agreed that the French high commissioner will have- Feendv-Aoldiers, _and riot
Tunisia and Morocco and the establishment of c.aurJls_ io- -handle-^^(es arising imdW“ffie general afreementT ^ . One .informant reported the con-fer<>nee made considerable progress Tue.sday but warned against what he called undue optimism.
Warships of the French Mediterranean fleet patrolled Algerian waters in readi.a;ss for any majeir action by the secret army to" sabotage the peace agreement it is arinounced.
gena
cities." A *■	^
The rebel natlonall^^._.^_______
..hwhitiiW thaU	troop*,
moot of them guerrUld	land wounded 58.
In Algiers, housewives stocked supplies in pr :..>arotlon Mr a threatewi’d general strike.
The secret army, violently opposed to Algerian independence, has ordered a str|ke..for . the day. of a ced8e fire.
take over essential services during the strike. -r Terrorist attack*/. tn'"the "North African territory killed 29, persons
Through tho safe « ships, the drive rulsod $I4,4$8. Tho amount was silghlly more Ilian the goal set for the 1M9I
Stadler said thaf it was expected f hat the- paving pf Ouartoii
•ommission also agreed to have the city participate in May-Exehnnge Day to be held May '
21.
Mrs. James-*F. Miller Jr. Service for Mrs. James F. (Jeannette E.) Miller'Jr., 50, of 999 Top View Road, Bloomfield Township, will be 3 p.m. Friday at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy.
Mrs. Miller died today following several months illness.
Her husband is an executive of the Detroit Stamp and Stencil Co. Surviving besides her husband re a daughter, Anne Margaret, son, James F. Ill, both at home; and a half sister, M r s. James Barber of Detroit.
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Sailing Aboard the USS Hope’to Peru
BV l*AT KVAN8
When «h»? SS Hope deiuirts from Its Sun Frundsco dock Tuesduy en route to Peru, nmong the ship's stuff und .15 U.S. nurses wuvlng lion voy-uge will be Curolyn Stoll of Stirling Rottd.
Chosen for the mission from 1,000 uppllcunts, Miss Stoll duughler of Mr. und Mrs. Hon Stoll, is u grudtiul(> of I’onlluc ('cntrul High .Sch(K)l und the University of Mlchlgun School of Nursing. She re<?eived her B.S. degree In nui-sing from Wayne Stole University in Detroit, where she also beemme uffiliut^i witii Sigma Theta Tuu mitionul honorary nuis-ing sorority.
The voyage, though Miss Stoll's first, will mark the second for ifie Hope. Thi* Hope sailed from Sun Francisco on her maiden voyage in Seplem-Ih'I- 1960; Indonesia, where the ship spent Vk months, was the fit's! stop.
On June 15, the Hope began a slay at Saigon, .South Viet Nam, where staff members worked In six local hospitals and held clinics in villages in
other areas, treating irntre than 2H,000 |)Ullents. The maiden voyage in Southeast
Asia ended Sei>t. 14 last fall when Hope returned to the (5illforniu dock.
The SS Hope, former Navy ship on loan to the private People-to-People Herilth Foundation, supported hy public contributions, will anchor at Sala-verry, Peru, April I to bef’in its second mission in shariiiff this nation’s modern medical linowledj>e with newly developing countries.
Womens Section
I>on’t Fool Self, Abby Says
‘Other Woman’ Is Upset
By ABKiAIL VAN BURKN DEAR ABBY; The"o1her woman" doesn't have a chance with you. You con-
jiijiB, I have never Tied to my mtin or cheated on him, which is more than soma»MARRlED
wife.
1 say.
[Ti n he
before knowing of I h e facts. Well, I know more about it than you, Abby,
Yes, 1 am waiting faithfully for him because, one day, I know that he will be my husband. What do you say to that?
THE OTHER WOMAN
DEAR OTHER: 1 say, quit kidding yourself. YOU may be honest, faithful and loyal to him--bul he is lying, cheating and two-timing his wife.
If you should realize your dream—what Will you have? A man who is well-trained in
BAR Members Attend Annual State Conclave
the art.QLcheft|j.!>Ji ! Congi'.alulutions!
DEAR ABBY:	1 am ten
years old and have a proli-lem. My grandparents always talk Italian and I can’t understand them. They have been in this country for about 25 years and it's about time they learned English. 1 guess maybe they cun. but they don't. How can I gel my grandparents to talk English? They KISS me in Italian, too. which is Very rough.
TROUBLED BOY
DEAR TROUBLED:	You
are passing up a wonderful opfwrtUnity to learn Italian. Ask them to leach you! And when they kiss you in Italian, .say, "Grazie, e basta!”
Perhaps the most, vahmlile Item Miss Stoll will take, but which cannot be fittt'd Into a suitcase, Is her medical ex-perience chlellv In iHHilairlcN Her last tull-tlme ixisltion was as head nurse in pediatrics at University Hospital, Ann Arbor,
Prior to this lime, while still attending Wayne State Unlvei-slly, slie worked part lime at the Childr(>n’s Hospital in Detroit. Last summer was sp<'iit in pediatries at Wlllliim, Beaumont Hospital,
As a m«>mb(’r of iiro.ieet Hope, a privately siwnsored program, Miss .Stoll with Hie others alKiard, will share modern medical knowh'dge and skills with newly developing nations via the primary vi'hi-cle, the .SS Hope.
The Hope, formerly the U.S. Navy hospital ship Consol-ation, on loan from the govei n-menl to the private People-lo-Peoplc Health Foundation, and supported by pulilie contributions, will anchor at Sula-verry, Peru, on April 1, Salaverry, JOO miles north of Lima, i,s the port for Tru,jullo, site of the new medical school at the lamed Univpji-sity of Liberty, founded by- .Simon Bolivar. It is sortie 50 miles horn the scene of the recent disastrous avalanche at Ml. Iluascaran.
The ship and its staff will augment the facilities and faculty of the medical schcKil, designed to train physicians for all of Northern Peru. TKAClIINfJ PROJErT Since Hope is primarily a leaching project. Miss Stoll will be working as a leach-. ing mirse, giving on-the-spot instruction to Peruvian nur.ses while working with Peruvian iwrtients in the ship's liosplial While in Peru, Hope staff
Anxiously awaiting the SS Hope mission to Pern. Carolyn Stoll packs her trunk for a one-year slay. Chosen froni 1.000 applicanls for the mission. Miss Sl(dl will be anionSo C.S. nnr.'ics on the
PonU«< Pr»»» Photo
.ship's .stall. A Pontiac Central High School and Uni-versily oj Michigan graduate, .she received her B. S. degree in nursing from Wayne State University. Her parents are the Don Stolls of Stirling Road.
Class Reunions Wonderful . - . for MEN
By «AY
NEW YORK fill’ll ~ Dear alma tpaler. Never mind.
Never mind reminding me thal now is the lime lor planning tile class reunion. When you mention reunion at our lious(' you just create disunion.
1 have many lender thoughts a’ooul my campus years, but . ,
Every mail, la'ings reminders that the years arc passing and no mailer how many coals of cream wHh which I grea.se my chin every uighi, nature still r.«ache.s up and grabs us itonu n liy the thionl: Your i,
members will use	the ship as	Moiinccmcnls of .hinc gi
a base for trips to	other Peru-	gi'lhcrs help ii()l at all.
vian cities wlierr	• they • will	* * *
hold .seminars and	work in !()•	Thjs, dear alma malcr.
cal bospilals, on	a iiregram	f (' in a 1 c lalking. Men
geared to t h e	country’s	seem to worry about di
specific needs.		chins and middle age
i-lo-
It is iMissible lhat the Hope staff members will also tier-form field missions in. neighboring countries while the ship is based at Salaverry, bt'fore marking their journey homeward.
ickening including my liusband, seem to o|ien mail announcing class reunions with t h e whoop-li do
comment "Hey, g<xid old Charlie, Isiy, it'll lie good to see, him again!"
The respt'lling of reunion into disunion begins when he reminds that he hasn't set'n "good ole Charlie" for 15 years. Then I remind him that "g<K)d ole Charlie’’ was the one who blew into town und announced, "Hey, I’m class of —, end would you sort of stand back of tills ctw'ck for me?"
Anyway, "good ole Charlie" with his third wife and check that Iwunced don’t rt-ully matter in this over-all look at the reunion business.
' ivo REMINDERS, l»I,EASE What I’m talking about, dear university, is that in this world of females, 1 don’t think, we want to be reminded about the good old days. I don’t.
What woman wants to face a l(K)k homeward when some-lx)dy will remark casually, “Gee, 1 remember you . .
.you HAVE pul on a ft'w IKHinds, haven't you, my dear?"
And Ihere you are, thinking that fmm a size 10 to a size 14 through several years of "growth” only indicate you’re backing up all those durned life insurance statistics about the average.
My husband can’t understand this line of thinking. He is geared to return to his dear halls of iv^, to dump whatever clothes are clean into an over! night case, and take off like a teen-ager embarking for college.
ela.ssmates you haven’t seen in—years."
My answer is, "Buster, remember thal on YOUR -Ih, you took a week past the official scheduled adjournment to get Iwme and in WHAT condition, might I ask?”
His answer was, “Well, there "was- that roommate who had h e 1 p e d me through-cak)ulu&., _
This is when the household tiegins really to change the spelling of reunion into disunion.
Ho urges that, "Dear, a few days back on the campus in June will do you a world of good . , . there are a lot of
WONDERFUL FOB MEN
I’m sure reunions are won-der(iil—191- men.
But as for me, permit me not to look back to grim reminders that;
"Well, my goodness, you haven’t changed a bit, but
"Now, let’s see, what year were YOU president of . . .
"Well, I always thought he , was a jerk, even when you 'Were dating him, but look where he is now . . . ”
Plans Annual Card Party
Eleven membensof the local General Richardson Chapter, Daughters of th(^ American Revolution, are attending the annual Michigan DAR state convention today through Friday in Detroit's Statler-Hilton Hotel.
Representatixes from Pontiac are Regent Mrs. Frank Allen, former Regent Mrs. Lisle Echtinaw uho is stale
. chairman._.for DAR______schools,
Mrs. T. W, Jackson, Mrs. W.' H. 0‘Laughlin, ' Mrs. A. H. Monroe, Mrs. II. F. Going and Mrs. E. G. Cliirk, Others iire Mrs.-B. D. Scott, Mrs. Harvey Bidstrup, Mrs. Marian Benlqi' and Mrs. H. C. Bales.
Principal convention speakers will be Mrs, Ashmead White, president-general, and W. Ned Cary, e.xecutive see-relary of Kate Duncan Smith School in Grant, Ala., one, of the major DAR projects.
Presiding at the conference will be Mrs. Qare E. Wiedlea of Sturgis. General chariman is Mrs. Walter Kleinert of Birmingham.
WednesJday’s program will include ti memorial service. On Friday DAR Good Citizens, 402 high school seniors chosen to represent outstanding qualities of character, citizenship and leadership, will be featured, Following an impressive processional, Itn- girls will b(' guests of the ntitional or-giini/.iilion at a luncheon during which the slate winner will be named. She will receive a U.S. Savings Bond and compete for national honors.
Good Citizens sponsored liy General Richardson Chtipler include j Judith Run.ser, Avondale High School; Marilyn Cof-ting, Pontiac Central: Paula Parker. Clarksion High; and Sandra llucrih. Lake Orion Community High.
Others : are Linda Larson, Pontiac Northern High School; .lean Wohlgehagen, Waterford Kettering; Judi Ely. West Bloomfield: and Susan Sutton, Rochester High. The girls will be accompanied by their moth-
DFTAR ABBY. I just can’t understand my husband. Due to strikes, lay-offs and sickness he hasn’t worked steady in two years, but he is so self-conscious about going bald that he goes to a hair place for treatments twice a week.
I have had to go to work nights to help out. The kids even put cardboard in their shoes, but that didn’t Ixilher their father. I told him to quit worrying about his hair and to feed the kids, but it was like talking to the wall.
I think there must lx> another woman he’s trying to please because I’ve made it plain i don't care if he has hair or not. What makes a 52-vear-old man act like this?
HIS WIFE
DEAR WIRE: Vanity. The kind he must''\jeed at the expense of his fahiily.
CONFIDENTIALX TO "01.-LIE": You made a,bad deal.
'*So far, alj you’-Ve\ lost is .money Pull out before you lose your mind.	V
w w \
Sylvan Lake Branch of Hie Woman’s National Farm and Garden A.ssociation plans its annual scholai'ship card party in the Oakland County Boat Club, Thursday at 8 p.m. Light refreshments,, table and door prizes are being offered.
Chairman Mrs. Lola King is assisted by Mrs. Wayne Smith, Mrs. Raymond Dombrowski and Mrs. Albert Kohn.
jMso assisting are Mrs. Robert Felt, Mrs. Richard'Jarvis, Mrs. Paul Antilla, Mrs. John Roi'ix'r, Mrs. Willis Brewer. Mrs. B. A. TePoorten and Mrs. Richard Gavelte,
Will Review Book
The Waterford Book Review C.roup will meet Monday in Wate-rford Corpmunity Center at 1:00 p.m.
Mrs. Eugene T^CIcland will review "Journey Into Summer,” by Edwin Way Teale, Mrs. William Shunck and M^s-Harley Stephens are to be the hostesses.
Luncheon Slated
For Abby’s booklet, "How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” s<^d .50 rents to Abby, care of The Ponljiac Press.
Mrs. Harry Slriffler of Ea.st Iroquois Road will open her home to members of the Fireside CTub for a lunchton Fn-
Betty Lou to Robert
J.	Kes.sel, son of the Bertrajn L. Kessels of Dehwepre
BEftY bOU APIfdAN
You are l^ordially invited to attend our 48th anniversary celebration
OPEN worse
FURNITURE SHOW
3 DAYS ONLY
TONIGHT, THURS.—MARCH 14-1.)
7 to 9 p.ni.
REFRESHMENTS! GIFTS! DEMONSTRATORS!
This is a Show . . . Nota Sale! Come . . . Join in the Fun and Festivities . . . Help "	- Us Celebrate Our Anniversary . . . At Either Store!
f■urrd.tu.re
SXJBXJI5JB-A.N' ^ furmxxxr®
itjoA9])m
■,	, ■, ' 'I ' •> '::s^,A-........
......	_ t T
THE PONTIAC fR»$S, WEbNB$PAY> MAyfa U, tjggj
Be Objectivi'When Comforting Children
Ky MUKIKL LAWRKNOK
ii brtiMvIi	h(*r oihI Ii
B«cauM what another penwm’t hlld wants, when he complaina > us about his pai'cm is only SUBSTITUTE attention. Thp at> tention he hungers for is that of his father or mother.
When It Is denied him, the^dts* appoint men! Is so overwhelming that he may be compelled to ntn She nags her daughter alKHitito a neighbor, his street gang, a •very little thing until the girl friend or a relative like you to can't take any more. 1 know she I express his hurt and confusion, hates me for letting my niece |	„„	symimlhy ex-
bring troubUw to me. but for thej „^,|y	, traveler In dew'rl
country uses his eante«m’s stale 'Pid
Dear Mn. Lawrence;
You recently wrote about a girl who was. always running to a neighbor aftfr trouble with' her paiwnts, My niece does this with me. My slstwdndaw is a lenw, Irrilablr woman who Is never pleased with anything.
child’s
ANSWER:	For the ehlld’s
sake, you will be wlye not to use her troubled state fn widen
lo Iry
his thirst.
What (he travelc
Is the hesh and apmkiing water of the brook ho hopes to find— and what your niece wants Is I'ecbndliatlon with her mother. Her complaints are appeals foi^ your direction on how to accomplish this end.
ISH11KM WARNING
,*tomeilmes the ho|>o of Ihe child who complains lo us ahout a pai'-ent Is never satisfied. Rwause wo have no ix'rtaln way of knowing this, we take great responsibility when we destroy this hope by our own antagonistic criticism of the paivnl,
The great nrltlsh psychiatrist, Dr. Ian D. Suttle, has written these most important woixis for you:
roally wants
Early Week Special!
BUDGET WAVE
We help by listening to your niece’s angry accusations of her mother—but we do not join her In them, Instead, we remind her that parents also suffer when children show no interest in them. We say;
“You're hurl because your mother won't he Interested In what you want. What about herT Do you think ahe’s feeling hill of beans right nowt
Isn't It possible that she is feeling Just ns hurt at your retuanl to show any tntereat In ’ wants? Parents and children arc' not so different you know. Par-enl? need children lo show Interest In them Just as you want us to show interest tn you."
miind (or love."
If we know these words to be
CALLIE-.S BEAUTY SHOP
116 North Perry	FE 2-6.H61 ||edly to us with dlHapiwinled hun-
__    ... -----------------------------------^— ----g [tn- for his parent's love.
Though we may fall In helping the child to a reconciliation with his parent, he needs to become aware lhal he wants it. For this i» the truth. Elven if he doesn' get what he wants, It Is still the truth that he wants it.
SINCE 1917
^oc
^^CM(V\t-Q(e4
vows are planned by Marilyn Louise
Mr./and ^ Latlie P/irsons of J^ast
Hopkins Street announce the engagemerU of their daughter Janet Louise to Pvt. Wilbur F. ParrLA “ son of Mr\ and Mrs. Rule

Parrish of		
Baldwin Road,		
Gingellvilli. A spring wedding is planned.	^i, ••	
MARILYN 1. SCARBOROUGH
JANET L. J>ARSONS
Tuesday Musicale Draws Bravos
Hand-Decorated Styles in Maple, Antique White or Williamsburg Blue With Hand-Striping . . .
The SALEM
Ladder-back style with two-tone seat available In Amesbury teherry finish I Maple with hand-decoration! Black lacquer with gold or An-Uque White with hand-decoration. All designs are lacquered to preserve colors.
---Amesbury-Mople, $49.50 ^ Biack-JGold^$5S.0Q^
Antique White, $55.00
SETTLE BENCH
Northern hard rock Maple in Antique White or~Blftek and OoUl. 41” wide by 33” high by 17” deep. Beautifully hand-decorated.
Black-Gold, $66.00 Antique White, $69.00
The
Provincetown
Solid hard rock maple rocker in Salem maple 'finish. Very specially priced.
$29.95
whole family will enjoy the relaxing comfort and warihth of these beautifully styled rockers, grafted of solid Northern hard rock Maple, they are heantifuBy-hand.-_decora>_ed and haiL4--StrlpeA--^Dec«#^ons^ are clear-lacquered for preservation of color.
-.Oi.',.-:-,'' . :	,, Opibn Thursday, Fridoy, Monday Evenings 'til 9
The CHATHAM
Handsomely hand-decorated style in Amesbury Cherry-finish maple. Authentic styling details.
$39.50
By BERNK E ROSENTHAL
The annual spring concert of the Pontiac Tuesday Musicale Chorus, with guest artist Mary Bartlett, harpist, was heard Tuesday afternoon at Ihe Fellowship Hall of Grace Lutheran Church.
The program was introduced by Mrs, Doia Dawson, whose appropriate comments were a delight to the audience.
Under Ihe sensitive and accomplished baton of its director, Mrs. Fei-dlnand Gaensbauer, the ^7-Voice chorus displayed professional nmsiciansWp in an unusual program, broad in scope, of seldom-heard but very appealing music.
The chorus has a lull rich i|uallty, with a line blend ot voices, which Mrs. Oaensbuuer plays upon with color and with dramatic Intensity. Her control of the chorus, w'lth its clear-cut attacks and releases, excellent
'Fashion Pages \Theme tor Style Show Thursday
Psi Chapter, .Sigma Bela Soror-will presoni "Page.s of/Fash-jon,' at the. annual style show and card party Thursday evening I the First Federal Savings and I Loan Association of Oakland building.
Chairman of the affair to begin at 8 p. ni. Is Mrs. Wayne Booth. Heading various coimnit-lees are Mrs. Norman Auer, refreshments; Mrs. John Spragg, decorations; Shakey Oodoshlan, door prises; Mrs. Janies De-Flnrio, tickets; Mrs. Marilyn KiM-h, publicity.
Mrs. Ezio Bisogni will comment on fashions presented- by the Phyllis Lee Shop, Union Lake. Models ■ will be Mrs. Thomas Thornberry, Mrs. Wallace Williams, Mrs. Jack Kudray, 'Mrs. Charles Fournier, Mrs. Frank Phelps, Mrs; Morgan Siple and Mrs. Matthew Ahern,
diction and wide range ot shading, makes for the rare kind of IH^rformanoe which should be heard by a large public audience, Thd program featured compositions by contemporary composer William Schuman, and contrasted his three canons oh Health. Beauty and Thrift with his Prelude, based on Thomas Wolfe’s prologue concerning Ihe loneliness of man, from "Look Homewaid, Angel.” Tills was the highlight of llie program, particularly in the solo portion, sung with maturity and understanding by Mrs. Victor Lindquist, with the introspective background of Ihe chorus givliig her both supfwrl and contrast.
★	★ A
"Old Shoe Bools and Leggin's," southern folk song, was charmingly sung with solos by Mrs. L. G. Cox and Mrs. J. B. Nicolls Jr. The first portion of (he program concluded with Davis’ ecstatic song, T Am Joy."
The chorus’ second group was composed of three songs by Brahms, accompanied by harp, and (eiiturlng (he French horn ucconipaiiiiiumts ot William Brown and Pastor Guy Smith, who played with artistry and un-derslateil simplleity.
The program concluded with Ihc :'liarmihgly sentimental "A Dream Ls a Wish Your Heart Makes" by David, Hoffman and Livingston. Mrs. Walter Schmitz accompanied tlie group at the piano, and showed at all times a keen underotanding of the changing moods and intuitive response to the conductor's needs.
TALK ON HARP Between choral groups, Mary Bartlett presented a fine and illuminating talk^ on the harp, its mechanism, background and technical difflculties:_and:S' complete nmtefy and affinity for .the instrument by playing four selections which demonstrated the wide range of color and virtuosity, audience and chorus as tfie meet-Muslc Clubs’ choice of the hymn of the month was from Haydn’s Creation” and was sung by
Benson, lyric satirist. Procwxls go to the scholarship fund. Auditions for scholarships will be Sunday afternoon at Grace Lutheran Church, S p. m.
Ejection of officers followed, and Ihe slate submitted by the nominating committee, Mrs. Dawson, Mrs. E. C. Russell and Mrs. W. H. Sink, was unanimously elected. The
(or the April 10 men’s night program, at Pontiac Northern High School, featuring B o • a a r t and
Dr, Fink Will Talk for Waterford Club
An instructor of mental heullh at the University of Michigan ad-dres.sed members of the Teachers Exchange Club recently.
Dr. Jerome Fink spoke on "Creativity versus Conformity" alter the dinner meeting at Bethany Baptist Church. The speaker Is consulting psychiatrist for the City of Pontiac and (he Oakland County chapter of the Children’s Aid Society. Dr, Fink is also a staff member at Pontiac General Hospital and The Haven Sanitarium, Rochester.
Hostesses for the evening wore Lonore Cornell, Hazel MacGirr and Geneva Forslund. Guests were Mrs. Gilbert Collins and Lulu McGregor.
officers are Mrs, George Putnam, president; Mrs. Victor Lindquist, first vice president; Mrs. James Rosenthal, second vice president; Mrs. 0. W. Schmidt, recording secretary; Mrs. A. B. Essler, corresponding secretary; Mrs. M. F. Hathaway, treasurer; Mrs. R. H. Austin, assistant treasurer; and Mrs. P. A. Vleiiech, historian.
A	★
Social committee for the afternoon consisted of Mrs. W. J. Wharton and Mrs. H. <Steinbaugh, cochairmen. assistedJby % L Coleman, Mrs. C. E. Armstrong, Mrs. W. E. Brace, Mrs. H. V. Phipps and Mrs. H. C. Carroll.
, *	★....f
Floral arrangements were by Mrs. F. A. Voelkcr and Mrs. J. C. Covert. At (he tea table were Mrs. Putnam and Mrs. C. A. Benton. Greeting guests at the door were hostesses Mrs. P. R. Carr and Margaret Steward.
Bikini Shelters
(UPI) — Beach shelters are short little dresses to be worn over swim suits. They appear as narrow, knee-length shifts or tent silhouettes. Many have a brief, Jumpsuit effect with a front zipper for a quick wrapping after a swim. The brighter the color the better for these whimsical outfits.
Have You Tried This?
Hearty Chicken Salad Spiced With Curry
Is
Interior Decorating Counsel ot

Jutf South of Orchard Loke Rood—Free Pdrkli^^
By JANET ODEUi Pontiac Press Home Editor If you are entertaining your bridge club and want to serve something that isn’t sweet, here is a good recipe to try, Curried Chicken Salad.
Mrs. Roger Berlin, our cook today, is a young homemaker. She enjoys some hand work. CURRIED CHICKEN SALAD By Mrs. Roger Berlin 2 cups cubed chicken c,ups cooked rice cup drained crushed pineapple
1 tablespoon red wine vine-
gar
2 tablespoons salad oil 1 teaspoon salt % teaspoon curry powder 1 cup diced celery % cup chopped green pepper % cup broken pecans Mayonnaise to moisten Lettuce
Additional pecans
Mix chicken, rice, pineapple, vinegar, oil, salt and curry powder. Let chill 2 hours. Just before serving time, fold in celery, green pepper and pecans. Add enough mayonnaise to moisten.
Serve on lettuce, garnkshed with whole pecans. Makes 6-8 servings._________^___
vrosomc
By Baldwin
DETROIT BUILDERS’ SHOW SAMPLES OF NATIONALLY FAMOUS BALDWIN PIANOS
Act Promptlyl Substantial savings on a select but limited group pf world-famous Baldwin pianos displayed only at the Builder’s Show . . SALE PRICED for this once-a-year event! Your chance to own a really fine piano for less than iu’4 pay for many ordinary kinds on the mar-ketrt3ioiee-«l,n|^t styles and finishes.
(^PIN PRIBAYanTlgDWPAl^m^ TIL 9
tALKMUMUm
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. MARCir U. llioa
SEW 5IMPL-E
By Eunice Fliirmer
Thl« week'i Tailor THx winner i« Mri. David L. DeWolto, Palin Village, Conn., wllh thin suggestion:
’ Altar making a cotton print dress tor my small school child, 1 nearly always have enough material tett lor a rullle Idr a petticoat. It taken laactloally no extra time and what a pretty ‘enselttble* thla makea., I find your column a gold mine oi good help, and your Intor* motion has gotten me ‘oil theiiook' so often.”
it ik if '
OANT MB DONH . "Dear Mm. Farmer;
"Mow do you line a one-piece skirt in the back only?"
Mm.R.T.
This Is one ol the disadvantages pi a skirt that Is cut In ONE piece, by this we mean, without side seams. You must either line the skirt completely or not at all, since there am no side scan attich'B partial llnliw to. You must also be sure to measure the skirt at your hip line and then measwe yoursOll, the skirt must beH” larger than your own measurement. This Is very Important to do betors cutting your skirt because a one-piece skirt cannot be let out or taken in lifter It has been cut.
★ ★ ★
TO REMOVE RIDOE
"Dear Eunice:
"I put a hem in a satin sheath dress and used hem binding oi cut edge. When I pressed the hem with a steam Iron on the wrong side of the skirt, there was a ridge showing on the right side. Is It the material, or do all materials make a ridge when pressed?"
,	Mrs. P. W.
After the hemline has been accurately marked on you, turn up the hem on this line and baste through both thicknesses of fabric, then press. After the hem has been pressed, lift the loose edge of fabric up and press under the hem, this will remoiw any ridge that has ‘ pressed In. After the width-of the hem has wen cut evenly, apply hem tape, and loosely slip-sUtch the edge of the hem tape to your garment. It is not necessary to press this hem again.
★ ★ ★
PirririNBY HAND
"Dear Eunice:
"The dress I am making has a blouson bodice with a zipper down the center back. The zipper has made the bodice back appear very stiff apd I think It has ruined the soft, appearance It should have ~
Is It too late to do anything about It?"
Mrs. P. E. S.
In most blouson dresses, you will find that buttons are used for the closing instead of the zipper, in order to achieve-thaf^ "soft” look. Since you have already cut your garment and must use a zipper, try putting It In by hand instead of machine. It will be much more fie and you will Juive more of the blouson effect to your bodice.
if
SEND IN QUESTIONS
"Dear Mrs. Farmer:
"We are a group of teen-age girls who would like to know how to sew but aren't offered such a course ip school. Couldn’t you please make youa column a little easier to understand for ‘beginners’?”
I have tried to vary the questions used each week hoping that at least one question would be helpful to everyone. It’s up to you to send me the guestions, I’U do my best to answer them. I’m pleased as punch about the interest from girls your age. Having two teen-agers myself, we keep our sewing machine humming ill the time.
★ ★ ★
-It you want sewing help with the 20 most common problems, send your request with 25 cents and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Eunice Farmer in care of The Pontiac Press.
Age Doesn't Receive Much Respect Today
By RUTH MIIXETT Newspaper Enterprise Assn,
One of theiworst things about being old, says a man who is young for his years, is knowing that younger people are going to blame everything about you that does not please them on your ir ' .ir it ■ ^
Are some of the neighborhood children brats? If you’re old you don’t dare say so — or you’ll be marked down as an "old grouch’ by all the young parents in the neighborhood.
Are yon honestly appalled at teen-age vandalism? Vou had bettw not voice your feelings too strongly or parents of teen-agers will think your age is nmking you overly critical of the young.
■k -k -k
Are you pessimistic about the state the world is in? It’s all right for "angry young men” to voice their dissatisfaction with things as they are, but the
must BE BRIEF Do you wish to have your say In C9mmunity affairs? Then keep your remarks brief or you’ll be
Characteristic of Irish Hospitality
Meet Our
LEPRECHAUN, Sean, Master of Kitchen Magic
IRISH
STEW
si
CANNON
regarded as a garrulous old bore no matter how much sense your words make.
Do you see In the past lessons for the future? Point them out and you will sorely/be accused of living in the past,
TeH a story more than ened —• vlych anyone might do at any age - and you’re getting so did you repeat yourself.
★ * * „
Turn down a new idea because you think It doesn’t make sense and you’re too old to diange with the changing times.
Are we really that quick to discredit ttie old on tip basis df age? It’s a pity if we are for we can only	to be treated In the
same fashion some day, having our age regarded as a sign of foolishness, rather than of wisdom bom of experience
For a new look at the other the age spectrum, see Ruth
______'s hfl^let, "Ups an Teen-
Agers,” Mail 2§ cents to Ruth Millet Reader Service, care of T|ie Pontiac Fress.
Church Women Planning Benefit
June Group of the First Presbyterian Church were guests of Mrs. A. L. Drury, Bltmlnfijtamr for their luncheon meeting lYi-day.
A report on Rational Masonic was given by Mrs. William Beat-tie and Mrs. Leo Donaldson outlined the Bible study^
Plans were also announced tar boiefit sale at the church April 6 and 7.
★ ★
Assisting the hostess were John Maginnis, Mrs. Hugh Archer and Mrs. Ericson Lewis. Group Giairman Mrs. E, G. Winn co» ducted the meeting.
k k k Marbach Group of the First Pfesbyterlan Church met at the |bome--uf MT^." RTchard Keift on Wenonah Drive Monday. Devotions were led by Mrs. Robert' Irwin and Mrs. Elmer Barker gave the Bible study.
Cohostess Mrs. , Jerry White served refreshments after the
Color Television MEADQUAKTERS
New Accents in Color, Fabrics
Some to PiscRBS Millage\
Men s Clothes Go ‘Happy'
PTA Meetings Set
This pretty wife looks over one of the new shades now available in men’s clothing. Men are more fashiorifconscious today—that’s a break for the little woman. Men are also more interested in their figures than they once were.
Exchange Student Addresses Group
Holland exchange student, John Simon, was speaker at St. Stephen Lufoeran Ladies Guild, Drayton Plains, meeting Monday. A student at Waterford Kettering High School, John spoke of hte native land and played several selections on his guitar.
JANICE A. SMITH Janioe A. Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Smith, of South Marshall Street has graduated as an air lines Stewardess. After completing training in Chicago, 111., she now serves aboard mainliners flying from Washington, D.C. Prior to serving aloft she was a dental assistant.
Local Chapter Hears Speaker
. Alpha Omlcron Chapter Ddl-ta Kappa Gamma Society” heard Capt. 111a St. Johns of the United States Recruitment Service, at an executive board meeting and luncheon in Royal Oak’s Howard Johnson’s Restaurant.
Charlotte Richards presented the speaker whose topic was ‘‘Women in the Service ,of the United States.”
Hostesses were Mrs. Vem R. Richards and Faith Alway.
Members will attend the hit comedy ‘‘Do Re Ml” in Detroit Saturday.
State President Mrs. FlorinC Hall will speak at the sodety’s April 7 meeting In Devon Gables, Guest chapters for the occasion will be Alpha Beta, Kappa, Alpha Gamma and Lambda.
Officers Selected by Church Women
' Berean Class of Memorial Bi tist Church held elections Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Jack Anctosem. r":
Members chose the following as Class officers for this year: Mrs, Cecil Lankford, president; Mrs. Lewis Gillett, vice president; Mrs. August Erickson, secretaiy; Mrs. Harlan MUliman, asrtstant secretary: Mrs. Charles Morarlty, treasurer; Mrs. Kyle Wharff, assistant treasurer; and Mrs. Frank Lai^n, publicity chairman.
Riefreshments were ?e^ed by Cora Backus and Mra. James Schram.
Dance Theme Iriih
A St. Patrick’s Day dinner dance will open the spring social season at the Bloam-fteld Hills Country Oub with an internationally famous orchestra playing lor dancing.
Member hosts and hostesses
for the dance which will feature a "Wearing of the Green" theme will be the Worth Kramers, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Jones, the Howard Keatings, the Gail Smiths and the Robert VmiderKloots.
ice
Stefatuki
1157 W. Huron
TELEVISION antfTUmO , SALES and SERVICE Mich. TESA No. IIM FE 2-6967
^ By gOainDHINE IJIWMAN
Men, God bless them, are be-
other words, they are becoming more interested to the way they look, and, therefore, In (he clothes they wear.
1 ivUt let you in oh a lltUe s«-oret- They are also more Interested in their figures than they once ere.
I think this is partly due to the emphasis which is being placed on the dangers of overweii^t, but also (he Intelligent r realizes that the way he looks Is Important In business as well as in love.
Thday the successful man is well groom^ and his clothes are attractive and In good condition. This is a mark of self-respect. HAPPV TREND In Washington last month nt the annual nieeting of the American Institute of Men's and Boy's Wear, in conjunction with the convention of the National Association ol Retail Clothiers and Furnishers, the famous designer Ully Dache gave a fascinating talk. She suggested that this Increase In masculine interest in clothes is a happy trend for women. I think most women agree.
Miss Daohe does feel that men are not taking advantage of (he colors now nvailable in men’s clothing. She said, “I am nbt apealiing of sportswear, but for businem (here are new, subtle shades In suit fabrics, new ac-cents In neckwear, socks and othor nocessorico which could be tastefully coordinated with new suits.”
1 certainly agree! mi) not see whV men have tolerated those never changing blues and browns and grays for so long. No variety whatever! Today, there is great variety in choice.
If a man is going to buy some Bw clothes, why shouldn’t he buy those which flatter him? Why sltotfldH’f he taker Into ehnsldcfit-tion the color of his hair and skin? SOME EXCEPTIONS I believe that most women like to see their husbands well turned out, with well-matched accessories. I think they like to see them in bec«^(ltt,c^ia, to happy However, there are some exceptions I suppose.
Some women become jumpy and insecure If their' husbauds look too nttractlve. I know one woman who deliberately fattened up her spouse so that he would be unattractive to other females. What a life!
So if you are going to try to jog your hubby out of dothes-wise, and if he comes home a green suit, don’t let your eyes turn green. Give hint a pat on the. bat^, not a veibal whack on the bead.
Also, if you are not fattening him up, perhaps you would like to send for nty Tubby Hubby Diet if he needs to lose some wieght. This wiU give him a loss of from seven to 12 pounds in 12 days.
AAA
If you would like to have the Tubby Hubby Diet booklet^ send 10 cents and a stamped, splf-addressed «nvelope^Tvith,your re-to Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press.
Members of the Waterford Township School Board will be making
.........appearamx: at Parent.
Association ’ meetings
All fish but the walleye eat heavily on water fleas, but the walleye eats only other fish. The cat-
will precede an election of officers tor the coming year. Refreshments win be .served by the home room
'Ilmrsday speaking on the proposed five-mill increase tliat will be vot-Tuesday.
EIJZA l^iOOETT Following a half hour 0|>en house I the Eliza Seaman I.«ggett S<'hoo|, school board president Eldon C. Rosegart will discuss the aspeds o( the mlUage proposal.
Mrs. Veda V. Monlgomery'i sixth grade class will present several musical numb«>rs at the 8 p.m. meeting. The busim*ss program
Women:
Do Plan Shopping
' By the Emily I’est InMlItulo
Q: I use the subway every day to go back and forth to business and notliing irritates me more than to see women who are apparently housewives out on a shopping spree, enter the train at the height of the rush hour laden down with packages, thus adding to the transportation problem.
I think it is very inconsiderate and thoughtless on their parts not to set aside specific hours for their shopping and to avoid using the transportation systems during the rush hours. ,
They would be doing the worHgrs a great .xeoflce, I would appreciate your commenting on this in your column.
A Not only would they be doing (he workers a service but they would add greatly to their own comfort as well. It .is very inconsiderate qn, the "part of those who are free to go to the stores at any time they please, not to arrange to take the subway after the commuting rush hours in the morning and early enough to get to the stores in time to do shopping and^ to go ttonie
again before the.returning
crowd gets on its way.
AAA
Q: At a dinner party that is served by a maid, shouldn’t all the women be served first and then the gentlemen? .
A: No, Skipping around the table serving the womerf and then going around it a second time and serving the skipped gentlemen is undoubtedly polite in its intention but it would be needlessly timetaking and dish-cooling. Serv-. jce begins with the wtnnen seated-on the.host’s right and~ proceeds around the table to the right, each one—lady and gentleman — being served in turn,
AAA
Q; Is it true, as a friend of mine says it is, that if two people are walking together on the street and they are engrossed In conversation, that a friend passing by should ignore them and not even say “hello”?
A: If they are so engrossed that they do not notice her, the passing friend should ignore them and not interrupt their conversation.
HOUaHTON
Frederick J. Poole, board of education trustee,' will be the featured speaker at the Douglass Noug School PTA meeting scheduled for ‘ p.m. A business meeting will precede his talk on the mlllage proposal.
Refreshments will be served by the third grade mothers whose chairman Is Mrs. Hoyt Penland. HUKT
The Waterford Boys’ Choins, comprised of 68 youngsters from 24 iichools, will sing at the William Austin Burt PTA meeting. Mrs, Janet Grimes Is the director of the group" and Miss Judith Dunn accompanist.	^
Mrs. Duane llain-inond will conduct a short l>usl-ncMs meeting at which time the election of officers (or the coming year will bo held. The meeting will Iwgin at 8 p.m.
A pancake supper has been scheduled from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Monday at the school by the PTA. Tickets may be obtained from fourth, fifth or sixth graders at the school or at the door. ANDER80NVILLE A ‘Back to School Night’ is the theme of the Andersonville School PTA program featuring a 6:30 p.m. dinner served by the cafeteria employes at the school.
HUDSON CXIVEBT "What is Special Education in Waterford," will be discussed at the 7:30 p.m. meeting at the Covert school. A panel, including .Mrs. Ruth Migheli, dldginm^ Mn Marjorie Walters, Haviland School Special Education teacher; James Jeniiwine, Special Education teacher at Crary; and Frieda Hug-gett, supervisor of visiting teach-Mrs. Victor Babka, mental health chairman is in charge of the-'fiseetlngr'^'‘"“'.......r""
STAPP S- • .'Introduce the Boys to Hush Puppies
CLEANING....
Made nigged for active boys HudiPkiiiliies’
$799
from f ■.V-
Even the most active teenager finds it mighty hard to mif* treat a pair of Hush Puppies. Steel shanks not only give the right support but keep the shoes in shape. And, they’rd triple Hell-Cat tanned. A brisk brushing removes any surface soil. Ground-in jtains disappear with suds and water. Choose from styles, sizes and widths for eveiyone.
Availoble ot Downtown Store
fx A n n^r ■'ovENitTBoomif
I ZA	28 E. Lawrance St,; Oqwntbwq
^ I / \I I s-/ tOp»m ttoh.. to 8:39^obS Fiu. U>S
Hears Talk an Geagraphy
A dlscuasion-nt 4he i|to08^»phy-«md people of the Netherlands was the topic of guest speaker Carla Teunissen before the Frttew-ship Class ot Baldwin Evangelical United Brethren Church Saturday evening. A native of the Netherlands, Miss Teunissen is a nurse anesthetist at Ptwrtiac General Hospital.	\
President Roy Ritter presided and devotions were led by Lovse.
Next month's meeting will be in the qflurch parlor with the Leslie Bells as host and hostess.
Shaws Slides^ ta Federaatian
City Federation of Women’s Clubs met at the home of Mrs.^ Howard Powers of Cherokee Road Monday* Members enjoyed a talk and slides of her native New Zealand shown by Diane Vlchie, an exchange student living at the home of Mrs. Charles McLughlin.
Hostesses from the City Pan-heiienic Association were: Mrs. William Belaney, Mrs: William Freyermuth, Mrs. Robinson Bronol and JoAnn Van Tassel.
Mrs. Fritzl Stoddard presided at the tea table.
It costs mor# than laoo to creiaic (acuities to make ons ton pf steel year, including finishing faciil-
The
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W«r)Nl'!$HAY. MARCH
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mnmsM
4M';p.'^h I



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HYORADI'S POINT CUT
niVKfiVE^ rwM^i vyI
Corned Beef
ST. PATRICK'S SPECIAL
riB.
FLAT gut69^18.
Leg O' Lamb
^B.
LENTEN SPECIALS!
' FROZEN BIRDS EYE
Perch Fillets’ss'
29'
PRESN FRaZCN	_____
Whitefish Fillets»69°
OOV«N»Wt	I
Chuck Steak
,CHO.««NO»AY	Mn<
Fully Cookud Whol* or Half * California Glondala
Boneless Ham,
U.
lbJ
SAVE UP TO ie‘-KROOIR SARU6TT PEAR HALVES
Fruit Cocktail 4-89
SAVE 7«-SWEET AVONDALE	3„ ^ —
Apricot Halves r: 15
15< OFF LABEL	f A(
Giant Size Surf««55
Rifeii^^
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LB.1
BORDEfi'S SHERBET OR COUNTRY CLUB
FIRST HALF GALLON
Ice Cream
SAVE SECOND
3QC V2 GALLON
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Spotlight
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^ lbV save $1 yiu J-BAG 14« ^1 .45
49
PORK and TOMATO SAUCE or PORK and MOLASSES
Deep Brown ~Beans
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WITH MAILED DAILY DOUBLE COUPON NO. 14 AND PURCHASE Of ONE AT REGULAR PRICE...37«
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LUX FLAKES.......... large size pko. 34^
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'-r:, "'A I'}

THE PONTIAC PllESS, WKDNEJiJDAY, MARCH U, 1062
liillllillllilWiMlillilllilWIIIliWIliWilllllllMWiillliWIi^^
\Spiit Between Algerian Settters, Soldiers Grows
Mr ANoiumr bobowieo
ALGIERS (AP)->A French eddler in a crowded Algiers itreet stared grinUy as passersbjr. Ihe butt of his rifle was chained to hii Wrist.
,	★ -Ar ★
‘Ihey won't get my Hfle easily, even if they Knock me out." he said.
★ ★ ★
By "they" he meant members of the Secret Army Organization of European terrorists struggling to bar Algeria's Independence. Tp many draftees from France, the mass of European, settlers in Algeria and secret army killers are the same.
After a series of surprise attacks on French patrols by Europeans seeking arms, some unit commanders in Algiers ordered their men to chain Weapons to their wrists.
The gulf which lias always separated the draftees from
Franco and ttio European settlers in Algeria has reached the stage of open hosUllty.
In barracks and camps around Algiers, tempers against the settlers are rising.
BABRACKg BOMBEO
"We dragged ourselves through the mountains for seven years while in Algiers Europeans in fancy blazers drove their girl friends in sports cars," one soldier said.
Last week a plastic bomb exploded in a barracks of the 0th Zouave Regiment, killing one soldier and wounding two. Two days later a ball of bullets met a French batrol in the Bab el Oued district of Algiers. .Two soldiers were wounded: In recent months six French officers have been slain in Algeria by secret army terrerists. The rightist under-them of treason.
There have never been any close bonds between soldiers from France and the settlers. To most of the million French
draftees who have passed through Algeria in recent years, this has been | "dirty warJ'
The settlers for their part have been accusing the troops of being devoid of patriotism and a sense of duty.
"No wonder they can’t win this war," said a European bitterly." All they think about are women and the day they can get out of here.” -
The gulf between .the soldiers and settlers started widening after last April's abortive putsch by lour retired generals. The putsch collapsed largely because draftees pressured their officers not to support it.
The settlers accused the soldiers of treason and of being Communists.
★ ★ ★
In the days that followed European settlers bombarded troop convoys with empty bottles. In recent days, however, the settlers have been using machine guns and grenades.
About .19	deaths I l ewiltlng hum motor v
nd K» per cent of the liijurtcs| dents o<!cur on
Latfi Bulletin
ETIDEMICHESE OF VIRUS COLDS THAT HANG ON
Here’s What To Do
Find Compromise on Election of Supreme Court
Con-Con Ends Judicial Branch Fight; Executive Next
LANSING w—Constitutional ventlon delegates, weary from nearly three weeks of debate on Michigan’s court system, temed their attention today to anot"*” subject expected to touch off other oratorical wrangle ~ the executive branch.
Exhaustive discussion on the Judicial bmnoh dfas completed In commlttee-of-the-whole Tuesday with a tentative compromise agreement on the controversial matter of how to elect supreme court Justices.
Bacteria Count HoUSC Unit AppfOVeS on Lake Michigan jg pgg^g Qgjpj Beaches Highest
WASHINGTON (AP) a to expatid the Peace Corps to
arcus wherc treated sewage ft abi^d has been approved by the
CHICAGO w — The bacteria
I lake di-
flushed Into Lake Michigan is higher than In other areas, attorneys said Tuesday.
The attorneys, the state of Illinois and the Metropolitan sanitary district of Greater Chicago, produced doeii-ments at a hearing version which they saw Hated their assertion.
They questioned Loring F. Oem-ing, chief engineer of the Michigan Water Resources Commission. Oeming testified at a hearing in November that Michigan’s practice of returning treated sewage to Lake Michigan is justified because it is treated sufficiently to Pfotpct public health.
Oeming said the bacteria levels quoted by the two attorneys ail; not harmful.
NASA Delighted by Observatory
New Satellite Giving Scientists Data Never Before Attainable
WASHINGTON UP) - Delighted space officials say the orbiting solar observatory is sending back information scientists have always sought about the sun’s rays and waVe lengths. The data could provide clues about the origin of the universe.
And, they say, the spacecraft called OSO I is transmitting the best radio signals yet received from a satellite.
OfUcials of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration reported at a neWs conference Tuesday on the satellite, launched from Cape Canaveral. Fla., March 7.
By noon Tuesday it had completed 90 orbits at 96.15 minutes., per orbit on the most circular path yet achieved by a U.S, spacecraft, ranging firom 3431^ to 3f0
DIFFICULT TARGET John C. Lindsay, OSO project director at NASA’s Goddard Space night Center in Greenbelt, Md., likened the satellite’s performance in pointing toward the center of the sun to aiming at a pie pt-*-from a hall mile distance.
John Clark, director of NASA Geophysical and Astronomical Programs, cald ttiwo^liaa Wot been time to digest and aiudyie the Information which OSO t haa been tranamitting on IS different experiments.
But he said the findings are sure to be impressive because OSO I is providing scientists with their first recorded emissions in the gamma ray, X ray and ultra-vtolent spectrums of the sun.
They have never been captured in this manner because the earth’s atmos^ere filters out these emis-
Mackie Choo^ 5 as 'Successors'
LANSING on State Highway Gommftsioner John C. Maride Tuesday announced the names ttf five ngineers to succeed Um if he is killed or disabled ifo an enemy attack on the United States.
Those named, and their order
House Foreign Affairs Committee.
The measure approved Thursday authorizes an appropriation of 163,750,000 for the year starting next July 1. That’s the full amount asked by President Kennedy.
All proposals must be ap-. roved on at least two more roll eall ballots before they will be the propoMid new
As finally adopted, the supreme court plan calls for election of nine Justices on a non-partisan state-wide basis.
The present court has eight members.
★ ★ ★
Candidates would be nominated at political parly conventions present, but in addition any incumbent justice could nominate himself by filing notice of his Intention. ,	....
any person Otherwise qualified to supreme court Justice to be-a candidate by filing nominating petitions containing at least three per cent of the total vote cast for the office ol governor at the last election.
Proponents argued that this provision would free the Judge from dependence upon a political party to ke<;p his Job.
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REJECTED OTHERS Acceptance of the compromise settlement came only after delegates rejected several other- proposals, including one by which justices would be elected from Individual districts rather than on a statewide basis.
.....
Proponents of the district plan Indicated they have not yet given up the fight, however, and begun laying plans for renewing the battle when the provlaion Is
fnnn the style and drafting oommlttee for another vote. Other judicial provisions tentatively approved by the delegates included;
★ ★ ★
-Election of judges to fill vacancies in all courts of record, eliminating the governor’s right to appoint Judges. The supreme court would be allowed to fill vacancies temporarily with retired judges.
—Elimination ol the Justice of the peaift system by tliy legislature wUnln five years after the new constitution goes Into ctti'ct. —Establishment of a new sUlita df judges ^th a eoan ur appealr handling cases appealed from the lower courts under rules to be established by the supreme court. PREPARE FOR MORE Delegates were prepared Iqr an-
other long stretch of debate on the recommendations of the executive branch committee.
The most c<mtrovcrslal pro-p<»Nul culls for appointment of mcinlH'rs of th<^ administrative boani rather than election, us at present.
Most of the ad board members would be named by the governor, with the audiloi' general to become a legislative auditoi-.
★ ★ ★
Another proposed change in lliejj executive brunch calls for four-ij year terms for the governor andU lieutenant governor in. place of ihe J |. present two years, with the twolo running as a leain like ibe presl-lj dent and vice presidenl.	lo
The governor would continue toIj i)e nominmed in a primary, while |o the lieutenant ■ governor would be J chosen in a parly convention, jo,
NSW Verk, N.Y.-An alarming increase has been reported In this urea of virua colds that seem to
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Tournament
Host Bentley 62-52 Winner Over Huskies
Bulldogs Meet Victor of PCH-Redford Gome at Livonia
By aiUOK ABAIIl lloHt Uvonia Bonlley oornbined some slzslins shooUng wllh I’onliac Noi'llu'in’s worsl peiformanec In several weeks lo elirnlnale the Huskies In the opening i-ouikI of Class A regional basketball play last night.
Deadeye Lannie Carrier pumped in 28 points to spark a 62-52 triumph and send the Bulldogs into Friday’s eham(»ionship game against tonight’s Pontiac Central-Detroit Hedford vletor. The latter battle is set for 7;.10 at Bentley.
I'orl Huron, the only other an'B "A” <|uliilet In action Monday, also fell by the wayside bowing to Detroit Kastern 75-64 at Fast Didrolt.
Besides the big PCH contest, other largo schools will be busy around the area. A doubl(-head«'r at Ferndale will match Royal Oak Kimball and Detroit Northern at 7 with Fitzgerald meeting Detroit Pershing in the nightcap. Saginaw Arfflfir HilfTangh-aftt' and host Fast Detroit faces Grosso Pointe at 7:30. Troy and Farming-, ton go the post Thursday.
Fenton was dumped from Clnss B ('ontentlon while unbeaten Capac was squeaking by in Class C on the oprmlng night of regional basketball play Monday.
,St. Michael Iw'gins “C” action tonight at 9 at Eastern Michigan University in Ypsllanti against Ann Arbor University High.
Fenton Eliminated; Squeaker by Capac
i’latoonliig Marysville finished
strong lo take Fenton tta-55 at I'ontlae Northern, f^apae nlplHal Detroit Anninu^iatlon, 7U-6H.
Coach U-Uoy Decker’s FH.S quintet took a 12-9 1st p*»rlod lead but fell behind by two at halftime. Fenton got going tigaln and was in front 42-16 midway in the Ird quarter. It was cut to 44-42 by lh<‘ end of th(‘ session and stayed close

Regional Cage Pairings
Tonight's Games
CLASS A
AT LIVONIA Pontiac Central vs. Reclford, 7:30 p.m.
AT EAST DETROIT.....-East Detroit vs. Grosse Pointe,
7:30 p.m.
AT FERNDALE- Detroit Northern vs. Royal Oak Kimball, 7 p.m.; Detroit Perishing vs. Fitzgerald, 8:30 p.m.
AT TRENTON—Detroit Northwestern vs. Allen Park, 7:30 p.m.
AT FLINT—Saginaw vs. Saginaw Arthur Hill, 9 p.m.
CLASS B
AT BATTLE CREEK -Mason vs. Rockford, 7 p.m ; Albion vs. Beldlng, 8:30 p.rr
p.m.
Standlsh-Ster-
Benttey, unable lo find the range very often in struggling lo its dis-Iricl title last week, was .just the opposite last night. The Bulldogs| bit a red-hot 47.7 per cent on field | goal attempts with 5-for-11 the “off” quarter.
Northern made a good r cent and 12 of 14 free thn>ws but the shooting could not make up for loose defensive play, a sliorl-
AT MOUNT PLEASANT-Ludlngton ling, 8 p.m.
CLASS C
AT YPSILANTI—Grass Lake vs. Addison, 6 p.m.; Dundee vs. Detroit All Saints, 7:30 p.m.; Pontiac St. Michael vs. Ann Arbor University High, 9 p.m,
AT BAY CITY—Deckerville vs. Marlctte, 7 p.rn. Saginaw St. Mary vs. Bay City St. Stani^aus. 8:30 p.m,
AT LANSING—Jackson St. Mary vs. Hickory Corners, 7, p.m.; Byron Center vs, PewamO-Westphalla; 8:30
until Frank Polk’s two free Ihmwa put Marysville In command for good at M-52.
Polk garnered 14 - and G a r y Hiirnes 12 to head a balanced al-laclt. Al Leuneberg of Fenton won game lionors wllh 22. Dick Bachtel added 12.
Mary.svllle will go against unbeaten Wayne-Oakland champion Northville Thursday al PNH following a Clarkston-Clawson duel wlilch starts at 7.
ilAWKH HERO
Rick Hawks, Capac's only senior was Ihe Chief hero. His field goal with just thpee seconds to play produjccd a 70-68 triumph. Dan Petz h('Hd«!d the scoring with 19.
Defending a 1 a ( e champion tiroNSe I’oiiite HI. Paul kepi alive hopes for u re|>eut by belting Delroil SI. Iltslwlg, 67-5H
The two Class C powers will be involved in another twin-bill Thursday at F’erndnle wllh Delroi Cyril clashing with St. Paul and then Capac against Ml. Clci St. Mary.
I disiri
accompbshmenis with one regional gam<> win and set a record by taking a pair. I’hc 1955 and 1956 iShamrock.s' each won onc('. /
I Arlior will be a flight favorili' ills IxMler (12-5) record,
I Memphis swings into Cl,ass I regional competition tluirsday lavonta Bentley against Detroit
HOMER IIAPi’Y rookie Purnal Goldy gratulalions from
p.m.
)ige of r<‘l>ouiulN and »
AT PORTAGE—Benton Harbor St, John f's. New Buffalo. 7 p.m.; Centrevllle vs. Wayland, 7:30 p.m.
rugged ball handling.
PNH kept it close for but Bentley pulled away and stayed well in front on an l8-5 Ird period edge. A 24-polnl Huskie finish gave a good Pontiac following som('lhin(J to cheer about but failed to ever tighten Ihe score again. COLD START
After missing its 1st live floor shots and trailing 1-0, Northern stole Ihe play the rest of the opening quarter to, lead 14-11 after eight minutes.
fJary Hayward and Carrier kept trading baskets in Ihe 2nd period. Carrier’s 6fh of It fielders broke a lie midway in that round and Bentley started to show who was boss. The home team left at half-time in Ihe van 2S-2.1.
CLASS I)
,. Mary vs. Ruth SS Peter and Paul,
AT FLINT—Flint £
6 p,m.
AT MOUNT PLEASANT—Saginaw Sacred Heart vs. Beal City, 7 p.m,; Au Gres vs. Ve^aburg, 8:45 p.m.
AT PICKFORD—Gaylord St. Ma*y vs. Nahama, 7 p.m,;
Boyne Falls vs. Falrview, 8:30 p.m.
AT TRAVERSE CITY-r-Manton vs. Suttons Bay 7 p.m.; Onekama vs. Hannah St. Mary, 8:30 p.m.
Local Quintets Fall at Detroit
Buckner, Tripp Ousted in Inter-City Tourney on ,,Losky Court
< n e r Finance ol Ihe Ci' and Tripp Conir.'ieiors I h e Waterford Recreation 1 o o champions of Iheir respeelivo ei euits, were eliminaled Tu(;jd; night in the Class B Inter-City Ret-realion Association ba.sketbidl tournament al Detroit's Lasky gymnasium.
Buckner lost a 76-68 decision to Dearborn Township and Tripp was handed a 48-39 defeat by Trenton, Its first setback of the sea.son.
A quick (wo pomlei appear g('l the Huskies off lo a good after llie ivsl bul the Livonia Iwys swished their isl four shots lo gel their momentum again.
The Buckner cagers fell behind at halftime, :<2-3;t. and never could make up the deficit. Jerry Paul scored 22 pointa for Buckner. Bill York tallied 15 points In
■ ■ T( was 46-28 slaving (he (juurler. Ed Wasik, who m.airhedj Gary Hayward with 18 points, (ah lied 12 of his total in tlic closing session making 6-for-8, bul Bentley | was able to prevent any real conu'-back threat nio.slly on lh(- stri-ngth of 12 foul toss convi'isions in 11
Currier look the winners’ only three shots of the 4th (|iiiirler and clicked on two lo finish It-foi-2(1.
Bill Bollin, 6-7, recently proniot-(’d jayvi’c. .scored 12.
•Pori Huron gfive Ea.siern i tune, Delroil was ahead by (lie initial quarter hut Port Huron went in front 12-29 at haif-lime, Ka.stern went back up by two at (lie Ird quarter and then appealI'll fo gain a safe edge. Port Huron got back within two with four minutes lo play bul could nol slay
Hiililia Morton" ( shim reee homers y
against tlie St. I,outs Cardinals m .SI. I’eteishurg, Fla. Tlie Tigers di'feated the Card.s, 7-1, for their third win in four slart.s of the Grapefruit Clreuil and Goldy continued as the hatting star.
Trim Cards, 7-1
Experience for Freehan
Tigers Must Protect $100,000 Investment
s D ehanip,
a sky
Jo-Jo’s. Pontiac's Cla leels Livonia tonight Inter-City tourney on the f, court at 9 o’clock.
Town & Country rrioved into the finals of the City League's Class C playoffs tvifh a 36-32 victory over Colonial Lumber. T&C faces the Wallace Cutters tonight for the •C” title on the PCH floor al 8:.30. Gary Acker rifled .15 points lo feature Beardslee’s 75-72 triumph
Ai* rh«ior»<
CHAMPS MEET — Norm Casli Hefti of the Delmit Tigers and Sian Musial^ .star of Ihe St. Louis Cardinals compared their big lials yesterday prior to the exiiihition game of the two teams. Cash won Ihe Amencan League liatting title with a ..161 aveiage last >eai. Musial is a seven lijw halting < hampion ..oOhe National League.	^
Bill Ycurby toppivi four Ea.slein boys in double figures with 22. Charley Ingram canned 25, Tom F’raser 17 .and Erie Price 14 in de-
Ransom of PCH Named to All-Valley Quintet
RikH R,in.som, Pontiac CYntral’s /ersatlle and talented forwai-d, has been named to the 1962 All-Sagi-Valley Conference basketball team announced today.
Joining Ransom on the elite honor squad selerded by coaches-
ing marks and .swept the backboards. Thompson tallied 314 points for a 26.2 average. Best.,,bis 6-4 teamniate, averaged 17 per con-
PRESS BOX
Jim Robbins of Ro.val Oak has signed Dearborn’s Tiw Ruttman to drive one of the flobbins Specials in the 500-mile test at Indiem-hpolts Memorial Day.
Dennis 'Hchuinacher of Arthur Hill, Jim Yuille of Flint Southwestern, and Ernie, Thompson and Brian Best of Saginaw’s title-winning club.
Ransom, who boasts a variety of shots, was the ’Valley’s 4th best scorer this season with 199 points in 12 loop games for a 16.5 average a.^ he paced the Chiefs to a 2nd-“plaee fmish.
The National Boxing Association _ ]&. aolling-its members to determine whether Floyd Patterson’s ,-^vyweight championsh^ should be _y8catfid,------	------- —
The 6-2 PCH star had the maneuverability to play anywhere on the court. He has been most lef-fective in the pivot, but also scored well from the outside and deliv-rered at all times plus doing some key rebounding: He shot well with either hand.
Thompsem, Saginaw’s tinlitant‘6-1(901-3 center, broke all circuit scor-
BKi ( ATCII — Bill Fret'hiin, the Delroil Tigers' $100,000 m-, ve.stment is willing to play in the minors so that he can catch every d;iy. The Tigers wanUiim
LAKS2UAND, Fla. — The Detroit Tigers hkve a $100,000 investment ~ imssibly more — in Bill Freehan The large outlay of money for the giant collegian has created some interesting questions and problems.
The Tigers must decide the best way lo protect their investment.
Do fhe^ risk keeping Freehan-witli the majoFlrague eluB STsea-son in a year they feel they have Iheir best shot at the pennant since 1950? Or does he go to the minors where he can. catch every day? Will Freehan absorb more experience moiv quickly sitting on a major league bench under the guidance of Bob Schefling, an ex-catch-
can catch every day,” said Scheffing. “He doesn’t have much to learn, but there’s no way to team like catching every day. 1 Wouldn’t want lo keep him up here on the bench, so that I can teach him personally.’’ "There’s slHl a chance he’ll make the Tigers (his season. I havea’t.jieltkcL..lhaL definitely on the club yet. And if ho does go down, hc^ might bo back up by July AugUsKand I wouldn’t hesitate "'e’him.^
a the r
The chances are more than likely Freehan will go to Denver possibly even to a minor league lower than the American Associa-
!cnd him to Denver.
“Freehan will go
DeBussdiere Pro Baseball
Offered
Contract
DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Tigers reiiorledly tuive offered Universily of Delroil baseball and haskilliall sUi Dave .Dehussdic a $65,000 iionus coniracl.
ball contract within a week or two, Init won’t report anywhere until June,
Olfers have been pouting into he U-D athli'lp s htinds since Titan haskclhi'H team was ousted fiom the M’{\A plavoffs Momi; night thus ending Dt'hu.sschert’
i-oUege cai«>r,... .....
Debusschere indicatt'd Tuesdity night that he might sign a t
WANTS DIPI.OMA “I’m definitely going lo finish juliool," he said, ‘Tve gone loo long to throw it away now. "Two ' months and f have my de
Yuille, Southwestern's 5-fo«it-9 guard, and Schumacher, the HiR-
both deadly from the outside, Yuille averaged 21.1 points per game and Schumacher 15.9.
All members-of thp-firtrt team are seniors.
Selected to the 2nd unit were Jim Toles of Flint Central, Keith Kundinger of Arthur’ Hill. l.«vell Humes of Saginaw, Larry Jaster of Midland and Charlie Haynes _of Fliqt Northern.
Otto Kennedy and Clarence Douglas of PCH received honorable mention.	,
Others include Bob Barnett, Flint Central; Clayton Wilhite, Bay City Handy; Bob Schafer, Bay City Central; Bruce LaBreche, Saginaw; Bob Speer, Saginaw; Craig Dill, Arthur Hill: Don Bach, Bay City: Handy: ICaicI X^ejrelt, THnf Southwestern.
Chicago lAj D, PhUsdelphia 2^ NOW yori (N) 4, Pittsburgh 0 '-------------------------'*
•z. cieveiana 1	,
1, Los Angeles (Al 2
lAY’s””cHKDc£e‘..
I .'Washington at Poinuuuuj^
os Angeles (N) vs-New York (N) al! Bt. Petcr-sburg ■
The Tigra’s are believed on the Inside track witli Dehussdicre be cause of a reported agreement to let him also play professronal biisketball. The Detroit Pistons of lh(>. National Basketball Association reportedly will make Debusschere their fitst draft choice and will offer him a $20,000 contract.
Ttie 6-((X)i-5 pilcher said he also h.-ts talked to the Chietigo While iimong other plofessiona) baseliall teams. Diamond scouts followed him closely sine rs graduated from Detroit’ Austin High School m 19,58. The Tigers offered him a $45,000 bonus to sign then, and Cleveland offered $65,000. The new Houston CoU.S- offered hiin $80,000 ■ -last
Milwaukee Pittsburgh St.'Louis V Chicago (1
s Cltv '«
Lauderdale cveland vs G Los Mgeles
t Port
(N) playing with spill
THURSDAY'S SCHEDULE cinnatl vs New York- (A) at Port Lauderdale
i Angeles (N) vs Washington at Pom-pnao Beach
Philadelphia vs Milwaukee at. Branden-.-york <N)-'at-St. -Pet-
■'I

summer.
Debusschere twice pitched the Titans into NCAA baseball play-^ offs and'JiUTled two -sandltrt teams . itt national titles during his coj-lege yearsT*'
zz
Pietz, Langan Hit 256
PRO BID—U. of D. star Dave DeBusschere is now ready to make his bid m the pro ranks "afleif a sensatioi}^ (ipilege ca-
Pielz and Tom Langan ed high game honors at 256, Dave Karaska rolled 255-664, Ron Coiner 244-660 and Jack Ttealor 245-669 in the Farmington dassic this week. Clearwater Pools hit 1,07.3-1,038-3,102, Hagerty Lumber 1,063-3,081 and Cameo Jewelry 1 061-2,994______^____________________
reer m basketball and baseball DeBussehere reportedly Is being offered $65,000 by theJ Detroit Tigers. •	■
Los Angeles’ 128. ClnCinhatl 1
Rookie Goldy Continues His Hitting Spree.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - The Detroit Tigers’ top spring training development so far is the un-Wng kids— those not even on the major league roster.
And Purnal Goldy, a 24-ycar-old slasher starting only his fourth season of organized baseball has_Jjc— come the most devastating hitter of the young Grapefruit L e ague season.
Goldy did it again yesterday. He smacked a tremendous line drive
The strapping youth from Royal Oak, still a junior at Michigan, is •omplete agreement with the Tigers’ program for his progress.
“I don’t care where I go as long as 1 play every day,’’ said (he blond athlete who's played less than a season of pro hall. "It’s the only way to learn when you’re 20. If I Were 26, It'd be different. I’d like to stny In. (he majors right now.
"If they send me all the way back to Class D, f wouldn’t care. Just so that I can play every day. Experience is one thing I don't liave.
1 don’t-feel-I’ve done very well spring training, but I sure have learned a lot in just a few weeks.” The 6-3 Freehan has hit well ii ■very league he's played. Sent to Duluth in Ihe Class C Noi'thcrn League, he barted .343. Promoted to Knoxville of the Class A Sally League, he batted -‘289. Brought up lo the Tigers at the tail end of last season, he dazzled Siiheffing batting .400 in his first four mafor league games.
Tiger Box Score
Wood 2b Breton c
:otalB 34 7 # 6 Totals 35 18 A—Hit-home run lor Dutal In 7th B—Singled inr. Oregury In 7th C—Hit Into-Torce ptay lor Huges
Big Outfielder Blasts 2-Run Homer to Pace Detroit's 3rd Win
420 feel from tlw plate at Al Lang tilt'd. His twd^^fuh homer was the big blow as the Tigers licked the St. Louis cardinals 7 to 1 and ran their exhibition record to 3-1.
Goldy, after fout» ^ames, is hitting .5()0 with seven hit? in 14 at bats! Two of his hits have been homers and one was a triple.
Manager Bob Scheffing shook his head in disbelief.
"I've iievi'r had a lanikle like thiN one before,” said Scheffing, who is in his fifth season as a big league pilot. “He can hit and hit and hit and his fielding has been okay, too.”
Only Al Kaline could shove Goldy -nut of right field at this stage. Kaline has recovered from bis sore left shoulder. Scheffing said he’d make his first spring appearance in today's rematch wHh-the Cards._ at Lakeland. ^	^
rn moving Goldy over to center and giving BHfy -Bruton ~-a restr-' ’-Seheff ing-said.
Boh Dustal, a right hander of the Denver roster along with (iojdy, was the most iihpre^iye of the three Tiger hurlers who stifled the Cards.
Dustal faced the minimum of nine batters in three innings of work his fii-st time against a major league lineup.
The Tigers now have scored 33 runs in their four games. They belted St..Louis pitching for five
........ ..	- . - nins„in_lhe. seventb-iBBing yester-
rj	it was the fourth time
they’ve had a rally of five runs more.
„ - WoiKl 2. Landrum, Boros.' PO-A. Detroit 27-18; 8t. Louis 27-6. B-P Boros, W()od. Cash: Boros-Cash; Left—Detroit 5. 8t. Louis 8. THSisBruton, Wood. Javier, HRr-Morton. Goldy. BP—Colavlto.
two-run blast by Buba Morton featured the uprising, after the Tigers entered the sevenMt-protectiiig -a two-run lead. Morton’s homer came« as a pinch hitter. The ball cleared the center fjeld wall at the 410 mark and struck a palm tree.
Ilank Aguirre, the starting pitch-r, received the victory alt^agh he surrendered the lone Cardinal run.-The, tally was helped around by two scratch hits off Aguirre's glove.
4	-5' 3	1-3
1 » 0 -1
>—Wttllams, Drummon'd, Barllck •
Hillsdale Tcrckld Signed
OrrAWA (APj-Siialng ^ Jim
^OWlS '.
Aguirre, Dustal .....
Freehan: BrogUo, Anderson (3). Gregory (8), Hughes .(8) snd GUver. W—Aguirre. L—BrogUo..
HLcliei  __________—.------
from Hillsdale College, was' an-, nounced today by the Ot^wa Rpugh Riders of the Canaan F^tball League.


THE PONTIAC PRES3. wfePNESDAY, MARCH 14, 106g
MARKETS
Tradlmr l8 yatrly Aettvr
eovering wde* ol locully grown praduca by grnwem and «old by tb«m to wholwwle padwgn lot*. Quotatiom *» fumlahed by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of TuMdhy.
Stocks Continue to Advance
NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market continued to advance early today in fairly active trading.
Datroit Produce
Steels, motors, drugs and select* ed chemicals were among the gain*
appiM, MioIpm, as. . AppUi. Clilvr, c gM. . Appiti. Jonsthw .. .
a,»«Sapp
*ts
•js
Cabbage, «nirly, bu..........
Cabbage, red, bu............
Cabbage, aiandard vartelg
Carrott, tnnniul bu........
Celerg, I
Horeeradleh. pk-
doa*‘bcbt. :
!:S
Radtebaa. bomouee ^
Poultry and Eggs
DETROIT rOULTRY


Most key stock* made narrow gains. An exception was Du Pont, rising around 4 points and giving a suKstantial lift' to the averages.
8 I g a b I e blocks In hlgh^pial-ity issues reflected a (wntlnaa-llon of Tuesday’s demand by Institutional Investors. The news
background continued fairly o|i*
Increases in factory employment were cited by the government as evidence that the job picture I;aa ■ iprov^ sharply.
UP A POINT Union Carbide rose more than a point. Royal Dutch continued ai investment favorite, adding other fraction. General Motors recovered from a spell of profit taking and moved fractionally higher. Magnavox was active and up
Bond Market Starts Mixed
> Istr dsmsnd.
DETEOIT EGOS DETROIT. March 13 (API grlc» paid par ^doam at
.-ro.t*g?
NEW YORK iy» - The Ixmd mar kels .were mixed at the start of trading today. Prices have been rising for more than a month.
Over the counter dealers in U.S. government securllies quoted long issues off 1/32 to 2/32 and Intermediates mostly unchanged. Volume was at a minimum.
There were spotty advances among corporates traded on the New York Slock Exchange. Most were centered in the rail and ulil-ily sections. Industrials were no iK'tler than irregular.
There were few changes amounting to a full point or more- An exception were New York, Lackawanna & Wester Railroad 4s. off I'-i at 4Ui.
ROND AVERAGES
R*Ui lad. lltUa. Fga. L.Vd.

isi] Si |i
miHU f«gh 78 7 103 7	88.2	87.3 n*
U61-82 Low	75.8	05.5	84 8	83 0	«flU
l«8« High	78.J	06 3	jra	88 4	MY
1080 Low	75.2	91 4	81 0	83 7	87.3
biotic to a point.
General Steel Industries ad-nnead mcira than a point, If awarded a contract of about .1^ millldn dollars to buUd New vlrk City subway can published report.
Merck and Pfizer each added about a point. Building inaterialt I fracttoifally lower. Oils mixed. Ralls moved a bit high balance.
Four employes of Ford Motor Co.'a Ford Tractor Division have ‘ d to receive Ford (*ommunity service awards lor their outstanding contributions to community betterment during 1961.
To be honored with mounted silver scrolls bearing and an engraved commenddtlon of Henry Fbrd If are Robert J. Allison, Ktl Chapin, Birmingham; Bu^ dette W. Dzendzel, 20750 Shenr
Prices were mostly higher on the American Stock Exchange, Mode^ ate gains were made by Anken Chemical, General Development, Edo Corp. “A," Holiinger, Kaweeki Chemical and Insurance Co. North America. Sherwln-WlUlam* and Mead Jolinson lost more than IKiint each.
Southfield; Vernon E. Nickel, 5065 Middlebelt, Birmingham; and Richard R. Rogers, 2302 Lloyd, Royal Oak.	•
The awards will be presented by R. i. Hampaou, Ford vice
American Stock Exch.
Figure* gfter declm*l point* a
....
In> N Am .. Kaiser Indue
NJ Zinc P»cl7lc Pet LI
102 Technico .

CHICAGO FOVLTRT CHICAGO, March 13 (AP|—(U8DA)-
»r„.r, *30; apeefal led WhlU Rock 1 20><|-21:	roaster* 28-31mo*Uy
-	'— •“;..,(mekl|ng» 21;
Exchatige™
Main speaker will be Dr. D. Varner, chancellor of Michigan State University Oakland, whose subject will be “A New Look at Old Fi-ontler.”
NEW YORK (API—Following

™ 2M?M
CHICAGO PRODVCE CHICAGO. March U (API^USDAI-
Potatoer ..... "	"®-
demand
r”u”s. "shipment*
I »jr^hilrti3mger.
_ North Dakota, Red Rlrer Valley round red* 2.58-2.78; n«w-track trading Insufficient to quote.
CHICAGO BUTTER AND *008 CHICAGO. Mjrch 12 mercaaUte egehange — buttar eU^y,
88 C 8644; care 88 B 88^ 88 C 87V*.
Egg* eteady; wholasale bny^ unchMsed; 70 per cent or better Or^e A wWte* 33V4: mlaed 32%: etandard* 30; dlrttee 28%; check* 28%.
Livestock

B 17.00-17.80. around JO head i mixed 1-3 l»o;i
2-3 480-578 Cattle 3,«	.
prime slaughter
Activities used as the basis for F'ord’s cominunlly service awards among its employes include public service in elected or appointed capacities, participation in political activities, work with civic groupik direction for youth or reoreation programs, seivice for fund raising campaigns and unselfish effort in the Interest of special projects by clubs, societies or churches.
PTA in Avon to Hear Slate of Officers
,	(U8DA>-
n slaughter ileei Bnd helfeVi Bteady ; eowi uneven, tleM
r. Choice
ip to 17.00; csnni
AVON TOWNSHIP-A slate of officers to - serve On the 1962-63 executive committee of the Brook-lands-Avon Parent-Teacher Association will be presented at the 8 p.m. PTA meeting today.
A plea also will be made for parents to help with the basketball program at Brooklands School. James Smith is the supervisor.
Girl Scouts and Brownies will provide entertainment for the ning. Fourth-grade mothers will serve Tefireshments.
Vealers	38-40, good
aiid	30-T«:	25-30; CUl!
*"sheep*1800*”Not enough done to quotations.
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO. March 13	(API—Hog*
6 BOO; moderately active, butcher* opened ateady to 28 higher with advance lower on all, weights; sow* weights under 230
none; choice and rr* fairly acUvr
_____ grade* alow, ateady to 2
lower; heifers steady; cow* steady to 25 lower; other classes about steady: few sales ibtgh choice and mixed choice prime 1.180-1,325 lb. slaughter *1 28.78-28.75; most choice 850-1,389 Iba. 28.00-28.80; mixed good and choice 28.28-28 00; most good 2Z80-2S.OO; load standard 1.028 lb. Holstein steers 21.10; loa^l mixed utility and standard 1.078 lb. Holstelns 20.50; few loads and lota high choice and mixed choice and prim* heifers 27.00-27.80: most choice heifna 28.80-26.78; good and low choice 12.00-25.80; utility' and commercial cow* .larsely 18.80-17.50; canners and cutter* 13.75-16.80: utility and commercial bulls 18.80-21.80; few head choice vealet*
- ------ choice 078-800 Ib. feeding ateerj,
Leaf .40	18	18
__________ : ..
Lehman l.SOe 17 3314 33% liOF Olaas 2.40	29	61	60V«
Lib McNAL .2St 39 17% 17 Llgg A My 8	.........
26 38; good 780 Rig. 2S.(
' Sheep 800; moderately active, slaughter lamb* and ewea ateady; chelce and prime 85-108 lb. wooled slaughter lambg
t fleeces 18.00-18.28: good and
ehoioe 18.00-17.78: cull - ----------- --------
alaughter ewes 6.00-6.80.
5.80.
Toledo
, .	~,4+ %
19 21% 21% 21%- % 29 99% 97% 98%+ 2% 22 41% 41V, 41‘/,— •' ~ 18% 18% ..
1? ^
46 38% „
3 21	21	21
16. 33'/, 32'% 32Vv—" 20 33*4 33% 33%....
—u—
8 33’/* 33% 33%-'
Stocks of Local Interest
Flgurea alter decimal points are eighths
'2 43% 43%
- ~i '24% 22%'f '%
.	t:::
19 61% 60% 61'%4 l%
3	62'% 62	62%+ %
■M—
4	42*4 42»,i 42% +
II 26% 26'% 28'/# ..
‘ 33*4 33% 33%+ * im 16>4 1«V4— 26% 26 *
0n Pgc 1,20ft .
5 66% 66vJ 66i5 + T4
32 33	32'%	32'%—.*%
.b 9 35	34%	34%.,.
10 47V, 46'% 48'/»-,
US Rub 2.20
3 52% 52% 52%
US Smelt .28*
US Steel 3
.	51% 81*/*—'/,
18 , S8'.% 881% 58%,
16 42'/, 41%	■
44 72% 72'%
i 41%+ V,
I 12'/,
Allied Supermatketi
Aeroquip Gorp..............
Arkansas Louisiana Ga.s Co.
Federal Mogul-Bower	Bearings 42 1	43.3
Harvey Aluminum .......... 26.8	37
Hoover Ball A, Bearing .....34	34.2;
Leonard Mflnlng ............12 _	M.2
. 36% 36% 36%,.
2 23% 23% 23% .. " 128% 127'% 128%+ 1 —V, 68'% +
OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS	? ms "l W ’ 56 ' 56 + t
The following quotations do not neces-16 20V, 20‘% M%— ! aai^ represent actual transaction* but]S my* my! S%— i
..RMt* trading range of the	Jcurtise wr i 3 17V, 17	17—1
____	—D—.
....	..11.6 13.4 Den Riv M ,80*d 2 14% 14% Jl%+. J
1 ...................................

..........»i. -s *|uen a ROW 1
an BeamicH Tube Co. ...242 2<1^» xt ....................??■*
.	45%	45%	45%—
2	24%	24%.	24%+	\
...... 17 31% 31% 31%- 1
-	Chem	1.80	43	65%	64¥,	64%+	^
i2-5	h>d	lYO	9	31%	"	” ■	'
•!»-< !!■« Du Pont 1A8*	........
......... . 33%-
20 17% 17'% 17'/,— 6 85% 84% 85% +
—N—................
NAPI CP	49	31%	30’i	31 ,+
Nat Blsc	3	2	87%	87%	87% ..
Nat Can .87t	.	16	15	14%
“	20	28%	28t
■ Match	22	23%	23',-----...
' Oil Pd	.60	12	60%	58'%	60% +2'%
ihn .80	6	50%	50%	50'%+ %
—V—
...JMl CP .40	2	23'%	234
, Varlan As	13	41%	401
[	Va	Caro Ch	1	38%	38'/.	  .
*	■■	,	ElAPow	1.40	30	03%	63%	63Ve+ %
—
4 Walworth	3	7%	7%	7%...
*	warn B Pic .507	7	19'/,	19%	19'/,-
Warn Lam 1.50a	9	90'/*	8944	90'/,+
*	- -mcorp I	34	34 %	34%	34% +
.1 Tef	1.40	5	38%	38%	38% ..
*	Westg A, Bk _^l.r...... “
wmrf S' l.W	*1 S 3
' White Mot 2 S 50V, 5
4 55% 55	55 -1
YaleATow .50r	15 28% 28% 28V+- '
■ ShAT 5	6 102% 102	102 -
Nat Lead .75*
Steel 1.60 ....Eng El 1.1 NY Central^
1?Y “ra^ATSft f i% Shl^ ^
•—vB—■
Bid Asked Cast Air h "	W	»4% '	am	H%-
.. .. 8.84	8.24 Baat O A F 1.88	7	82%	52	52 +
----12.20 13.30 East Ked 28 M 114% 114% 114% +
....17J8 18.Bl|BaUn Mfg 1J8	3	38%	38%	38% + ,
1.60 16.38|ei A Hue .lie 1*	9%	' S% 8%..;
.....».8t	6.Mlimcr El .88 '	4	31%	30%	39%...
.	IBmef Rad 3Wt	*	S	13%	U%	13>% .
Nor N Gas 1.50
4 107'% 107	...
35	65'/,	64%	64%.
6	43%	43%	43%
4...41%	41'/,	41'/,-.	..
32	34'%	34%	34%+	%
17	26	25%	■“
... ___________serot-annusl declara-
Unless oUterwls* noted** sped"' “
____dividends are not included..
a—Also extra or extr+s.. b—Annual rat* ■	‘ -Ivjdend. d—Declared or paU
. il^k dividend. '^--Declared ............. f—Payable In
Cr..........................
of paid ,so far this year. f-Payal stock during 1961, estimated cash .. . qq ex-dividenit or ex-dlstrlbutlon dal*, g—Paid last year, h—Declared
... Mar . 38
Owens m XH 2.50 Oxford Pap 1
... k-De-
oinltted. defe^ or
____ _. .asi dividend meeting.
or paid m 1982 plus Stock -Paywle In stock during
Edison Reports Gains in Production, Sales
DETROIT (UPI) — The annual shareholder’s report issued-by the o„iy Detroit Edison -Co. showed gains
ffilai.-
l.gn 12	^ M%—
1%
32% 33%+ % PsnAWAIr .80	14
—.........■'Parke DA-la	2*
jL
4 in Area to Get Service Awards
Ford Tractor Ptiviiion to Cite Employes for Roles in Community
By BAM DAWaOM AP BiwUmibr N«mw AnalyMt
NEW YORK-CGnaumo aran’t *pcndinK m niuob as some tconontic planneiw had hOlM. And businessmen aran't laying out as much for expansion as had been counted upon when the economic plans for 1962 were drawn.
But the chided parties may re-_jnt theow coiflplaints a little, They may think they’re spending ipilte a lot under the . circumstances.
Many a conaumer struggling with the month’s bills and his income tax forms may wonder how anyone could figure , he could
And business spending has been going up steadily since the second quarter of 1961, The government says this advance should continue
R banquet March M Rt~the Fold office, 9000 E. Maple. T. A. Brnaver, dlvtoloflal
serve as toastmaster. ’The banquet will be attended by civic
Collision Impact Point Worst at Front of Car
Paper-Making Facility Planned in Ohio City
WAUSEON, Ohio UTi - Globe-Wemicke Industries, Inc., have announced plans to produce paper t a new facility here.
The new paper-making facility, which will require approxlately 100 employes, will be installed in building constructed, two years
v Ohio liidustrtat Park, Inc., said
Grain Prices
;	3%^
Treasury Position
WASHINGTON (AP) ...............
-.tlon of the Treasury compared corresponding date a year ago.
aiaroh 8, 1882
Balance .............. 8 4.113,781.112.25
Deposit* ’---------
.......................  80;827,/ll»;217;8«
Withdrawal*	fiscel	year	87,388,381,073.(M
Total debt ........... (X) 300,638,133,075.43
Gold assets	............ 17,372,080,046.25
(X) Includes	8438,630,047.15	*
• k,..,	W_,|J
subject to statutory i
IS
Ind. RsUt E
h Ago ArS
. . 371.8 123.6 142.4 259. ...371.6 123.9 142.1 259.
., 368.4 124.0 140.1 257.
. . 374.9 126.8 140.9 281. ....345.3 12U 122.2 237.. ... 384,1 130.5 148.9 289.0 ....319.5 112.2 111.8 218.'* ... 354.9 136.2 112.7 233-... 206.4 103.0	96.6	202.6
1*4 DlvUtead* Declared
Rste. ried Beeerd BEOVLAR
......09 Q 4-10 M
TTTT7“.«r Q	S® L3T
.... .575 Q	•••
•:S,8 a m
10 Higher grade rails-. 10 Second grade raUs 10 Public uUUties .. .
Economy a 0it Shy -oLth^ High Hopes
jhjvmgh 1962, and pick uplThia Wt a reewd *37 blHlon in
congiderably in this year,
IMFKDfUUVB OAlNfi Considering the excess production capAcIfy In some Industries, such gains are viewed by maiQt as
I last half of
IW. In the recession year of 1958 it slid to $30.5 btitlon, climbed to $35.7 Milton.In 1900, and slumped to $34.4 billion,
In any case, the high volume of
spells anything but recession, seems to add up, on the contrai^, to steady growth. ‘
The trouble seems to He In the great expectations and high goals for the economy set forth at the start of the year. Government of-ficiats insist these goals can still be met, despite a rough winter’s onslaught.
Take business spending for new equipment and plant expansion.
Bnt In the last three months of 1961 the annudi rate was $35.4 billion, and In the first three months of 1962 it is estimated at $36.1 billion.
Both these figtires v/buid be reassuring except that in' each Instance the government had previously predicted spending would be higher.
DETROIT (AP) — Chances of severe head and chest Injuries in auto collisions are greatest when cars hit at points ahead of the front door, a team of researchers told a national meeting of the Society of Automotive Engineers.
..QtifjliiQnS. »t Ijig centqr d.oa c post can be slightly less dangerous and collisions in the rear or on the rear side are the least serloua of the three. 'These and other conclusions were contained In a report oii the latest series of collision studies by D. M. Severy, J. H. Malhewson and A. W. Sle^l of UCLA.
Using adult, child and babysized dummies, the UCLA team staged a series of 12 fully-instrumented Inlerseclton - type collisions. They sought to find out what happened to the cars, and to the passengers.
Today’s report was one of at least eight planned this year on results of the studies which were conducted with 1960 model cars. Collisions were staged at 10, 20, 30 and 40-mile per hour impact speeds.
Some of the obsen/ations:
Area Residents Among Founders oi New Firm
Three area residents are among the founders of Omni Spectra, Inc., newly established electronics firm in Detroit.
The first president of the company, which specializes in design and manufacture of microwave components for radar, missiles and sp^ce exploration equipment, is John H. Bryant, 423 Berwyn Road, Birmingham.
Occupants are injured when they are thrown about insdie the car, ^>r are ejected through open doors. Immediately following a crash the occupants in the striking car are thrown forward and shift their positions rather violently toward the direction from which the struck car had approached.
Motorists in the struck car also are thrown forward and toward the striking car. Then the inside of their own car hits them.
B passen-.
In a struck car ger (or driver) « point of impact is in the great-est danger. He may be phys-
Ically Wt by the other ear, then pinned by what the team called
Suggests Detroit Set Up Commerce Department
DETROIT (UPI) - A department of commerce for the city of Detroit was recommended Tuesday to Mayor Jerome P. Cava-nagh.________
The recommendation was made by Albert K. Jacoby who heads the city’s Industrial and commercial development committee.
other passenger In the se
“His chances of survival at speeds of 30 mph and above are questionable,’’ they reported.
The team said the use of safety belts reduces the chances of latcArttfoveffiast— •"
Oiticat neaa blows may be sustained at impact epeeds as low as 20 mph, the team reported.
Tlie latest prediction, based on ii survey by the Department of Commerce .and the Securities and •hnnge CommlsHlon, says that the annual rate will rlije to $38 billion In the second halt of this year, to give 1962 as a whole a record $37.2 billion.
Some industrial ecqnomists doubt this goal can lie reached unless consumer spending lakes up the slack in exi'oss production capacity.
a>N8UMEH LEVEL Consumer spending also contin-BS at a high level, well ahead of this lime last year. 'Ilie trouble is that consumers aren’t spending at the record rate they set in November and December.
And they will have to spend even more than that from now on if the administration’s goal ol $570-billion total volume of national production is reached.
Total conaumer incomes are up and so are their holdings of liquid . assrtir pw»vWtog”fliF"WhCTuwttfint"“ for Incroased lotuT outlays.
BRYANT	CHEAL
Vice president and director of engineering is James Cheal, 7857 Biscayne Road, White Lake Township. Director of manufacturing is Rodney E. Christian, 2780 Middle-
bury ]
Bloomfield Township.
Cheal formerly ^hdd executive po-isitions with the Bendix Corp. Re-^ search Laboratories in Southfield. :(3irlstlan pre-iviously was gen-|eral manager of Internation-|al Of Detroit.
„ H. Bar-CHRISTIAN rett, 3664 Middle-buiyTSineT^lbomfield Township, retired controller of the Murray Corp. of America, serves as financial consultant to the new firm.
Many consumers may think lliey f-e spending as much as they possibly can, or as they safely can. But businessmen think others are holding back. And that’s what is worrying industrial economists as they wait for spring lo settle tlie question; Will the consumer spend more, and take on njore instalment debt, when good weather arrives?
WAIT AND 8KK
And if the consumer docs, will the buslhessman decide lo go ahead with orders for new ma-^ chinery or another branch plant?
Washington innlinucs to, think that both the consumer and businessman will. And Wall Street continues lo wail and sec.
Steel Talks Slated to Resume Today
PITTSBURGH (AP)-The basic steel Tridustiry and the United Steelworkers Union resume contract talks today after an Il-dSy" layoff,
Both sides were reported far from agreement when negotiations collapsed on March 2 and observ-feel neither is likely to budge easily nOw.
It was believed the companies were willing to grant a 6-to-8 cents-an-hour increase, but the USW was holding out^or a43-cent pack- —
The quick resumption of talks came about through pressure by President Kennedy who is hopeful of seeing a noninflationary contract signed as soon as possible.
News in Brief
A phonograph valued at $110 was taken by thieves who broke into his home between 5:45 a.m.^nd p.m. yesterday, Jack Davis of 306 Ferry St. told Pontiac police yesterday evening.
Eye Off-Rail County Plant Sites
Jy DICK HANSON _____________
Changing trends in transporta-tion can^Hring new industry, with Increasing job oppoirtunittes, into Oakland County.
Industry’s reqilirement to locate plants along rail lines will lessen as more super highways are built and methods of interchanging carriers from highways to railroads are perfected.
projections used by the Metropolitan Planning Ctm-mission as a basis for its 10-year program for the development pf off-rail industrial sites in Oakland, Wayne and Macomb coun-
cation of industry, providing other facilities such as water, power and adequate sewage ai’e available.
Heavier industries will be able to follow the trend as tractor-hauled trailers become suited for transferring onto railroad tracks, Skrubb said.
This could be done either by fitting trailers with both rubber or nylon tires and railroad wheels which could be alternately raised and lowered, or perteidiiig a method of easily
ties.
FOR INDUSTRY
An existing labor force was a third factor favoring new industry
6,680 acres of land-r-two thirds, of it-ln:Oridand County—for indus-triar expafision Tie® treeways.— Already many light industries rely heavily on trucks to transport goods to market, according to George Skrubb, Oakland (Ynibty Planning Commission director.
,★ + ★
As light industries expand opera* tions, they tend to decentralize into cstabHshed market areas, planners agree. tAnd rail isn't need^ when the factory is located only a hop and skip from market via fast-flowing roads_with
(Continued expansion of freeway systems away from the dty will open new_countrysi(de“ to the h)»|r
for new off-rail industrial sites.
aspects were considered, the commission reported: Suitability
and availability of land. ---------
me of the factors pertaining to suitability of sites are adequate drainage, ability of soil to support buildings, a water supply, electrical and gas power, good sewage removal, environment asd major highways.
In judging the availability of land, the type of present development, proximity to ei(isting indus-
M nader-cairiiige onto another.
type tries,’zoning and planning of local
It calls^Wr the seWhg Wde^	here, the commission pro-
gram stated.
in a 4,630,000 population, according to the .commission’s report. At present, it estimated nonfarm employment at 1,435,000 with approximately 10 per cent of the labor force unemployed.
Hie commission
the
alpag wtth the ofteel industry, as forming a nucleus tor further devdopment in the ' area.
Aim, rubber and glass show a accord-
,ipg fo the commission, since the ^antity now produced liere is only a minor part of that which goes into the. finished-automobile.
IN SOUTH OAKLAND Deemed meeting the criteria at the present time in South Oakland County are the north side of
By 1970 the -metropolitan area Eight Mile Road from Hazel Park labor force “lB“ expected to“Teaclr to\FanTiington_ Township; along
Nine and 10-Mile roads in Hazel Park; adjacent to Stephenson Highway, 12-Mile and 14-Mile roads in Madison Heights; a large industrial district in Oak Park; along Maple anil^ocherier roads, in’Troy; “and" along Telegraph Road in Southfield.
Proposed- of f - r a i 1 industrial areas elsewhere in tiie county are 200 acres North of'Rochester on , Ro<^esteE-Road; .240 acrefi at. the ' fiiu Chrysler free- -
way and (^idjdte Road in Bloomfield Township and 40' acres near Clarkston at the‘Chrysler-freeway .and Or-' Road irtoseetion;