1 Tfi« Woath»r U.l, W«tlh«r Iwrviy Ptrtctii Hhowm IDtlilll !>••« II THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL, I2.n NO. Hn ★ ★ ★ ★ rON'riAC. MI( irtoAN. rilKSDAV, MAY IK. MMiA 2H rA(;KS LBJ Urges Repeal of Right-to-Work' Section U S R6SUniGS Million in Senate Air Attacks on N. Viet Nam Spending Bills OK'd of final on wliicli not one dlNNenl was reeonled, it IHiNoed tliene n|i|tro|)rlntioiis hilh: l.ANSINC 1/11 The Senate ' f higher ednca- ^ lion by tile new Stale lloard of South of Capital c!ity Education before rejecting it. * $20,4:11,547 for publi Tlien, in a rapid-fire aeries » $I(II,IUU,1I59 ■nlal health. • $20,1011,829 for corrections • $2.8 million for study and lirellmlnary planning ol cupilal outlay project,s • $2 million for .scllolarships to college students • $67:1,480 for |(M'al air|M»rl deveiopment. Asks Congress to Boost Wage Floor Coverage Labor Message Seeks Increase in Overtime Rate to Double Time SAICON, .South Viol Nam (/I'l The United Stiite.s re.sumed air strikes against *North Viet Nam today, a US. military spokesman said. The sjKikesman said :t0 U S. Navy planes from the 7th Fleet carrier Coral Sen attacked a WASHINGTON (AI*) - A spokesman said today the United States was "disappointed” at the failure of North Viet Nam tp resp«md in any way to the siispension of air strikes against North Vietnamese targets. State Department press officer Koliert J. McCloskey said; “We must assume that the other side was aware that the strikes had not been carried out for a number of days, and we have seen no reaction to that fact.” Romney Raps Budget Cuts The those WASH 1 NT, TON l/P) Pi c.sidcnl .1 o h n .s o n figures were do recommended iiy v<»v. Uomiiey in his’Imdgel Oon^ro.s.s today to n'peal S(‘<-lion NB of flu* Tiiff llarllcy Act, which i,s ase in (ho hasi.s for .so-callcd righl-to-work laws in 19 sdiool aid lull moved without debate info position for final •'’liiU'S. message, NOT IN housf; Hut that wasn't the c I 1 A li pa.ssage Tliat immsure is i Says Important Items „ ^ ... ...... ............................... ,.l(ihiisoii also askt'd Congrei Removed by Dems suggestion. The House also moved a flock of oilier spending *" bills lip to the final vote post- worker tlon. 1 a(l(lilional 4 5 million f.ANSINC (At*) Gov, George Romney criticized Democrats Th(> Senate put over until to-today for kiUK-king $554,000 out morrow preliminary debate BRUCE J. ANNETT petroleum storage area at Phu Qui, 125 miles south of Hanoi. of budget hills re|)orted f committees. The seven items, he said, are more important Ilian some olh er filings left in the hudgel Romney would not pinpoint the budget items he doesh’t like but Indicated he may exercise his item veto on some of them. Tlie ap|)roprtafions be s n i d should have been left in were: • $125,000 for the work of a blue ribbon task force on water rights and pollution which would have earned 50-50 matching fed eral funds. • $100,000 for a State Boaril of Pontiac realtor Bruce J. An- Education study of higher cdu- scluHil aid proposal wlileh is $82 million less than Hie House The Seiiale ran out of lime before it could vole on a $185,9- lle did not recommend an Increase in the (iresent federal inliiliniiin of $1.25 an hour, u iniijor goal of ialior leaders. "The i|ueslion is not whelhei the minimum wage should he inereased ))u| when and by how FOB SAFETY’S SAKE Mrs T W .lack •son, presidcnl of the Traffic Safely division of Ihc Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, sponsors of Itie city’s vehicle inspeclioii program, gives .lames F, I’owers, snf(;ly director for i’oiiliac Motor Division and cfiairman of flic program, tfie first “Safety Chei;ked ” sticker for the program which opened liHlay and will run through Saturday. million liiglier education bill. It tmich,” .)olm.son said in liis la-was firi/t on (lie agenda for lo- hoi' message to Congress, ★ Vehicle Safety Checks Start at Area Locations Threaten Drive to Crush Rebels City Realtor to Head UF Committee Osteopathic College Study Added to Bill cation needs througliout The Slate Senate Initial pilot reports said severe damage was inflicted on the target, which was reported burning. , , ... nett has been named chairman 'loIi'L A ^ • $67,000 for night staffing of approvixl a study of the pro- lime work in order lo .spread aeamsl the CanamunW North In ,,r the 196.1 Pontlae Area UMed f,.,, ' sir days. There »as n„ ex- fund campaign Calvin J. Wer- teopathle Medirinc, lo he local. planation here for their resump- general chairman of this ed in Pontiac. P ^ ^ ^ year’s drive, announced today. .$100,000 for continuation of The action came after ‘ . * * * the two-year-old expenditure a lengthy debate in the upper Twenty propeller-driycn Sky- nparof ATneu’ In? 28 F force, which Hou.se. The vote was 17-11 in While .lohnson’s message urtr 01 Annul, me., m Ca. Romney said has saved the favor of appropriating funds for did not spell out the details, accompanying legislation "Tlie Congress sliould consid- Annual voluul.uy motor veer emefully the effects of high- hide ins|H'clions are being held er minimum wage rates on the ihi.s week in Pontiac and Water-incomes of tlio.se employesl, and ford 'I’ownsliii) also on costs nnel prices, and on * * * job opportunities partieularly Tlie Pontiac inspection p r o- number of for tile flood of teen-agers now gram, sponsored by the I’onliae entering our labor force” Area Chamber of Commerce, be OVEUTIMEi MESSAGE gan this morning at five loca- Johnson also recommended lions, ye.slcrday legislation lo discourage over- Waterford Township Junior nals, exhaust systems, tires, windshield wipers, and rear view mirrors will,be cheeked, according to Powers. Records will be kept of the equippi;d with Dominican Junta: No to U. S. Peace Plan tion, Chamber of Commerce members will conduct township inspections Friday and Saturday at three locations: The MS9 Plaza. Dt-ayton Shopping Center and the Ponflac Mall. SANTO DOMINGO, Dominl-snl bells, and motorists will be cn Republic (AIM — The Do-asked how much they use this minican junta today poised the safety precaution. threat of an all-out drive against * * * the rebels after rejecting a new peace plan offered by Washington. would require double-time pay only after 48 hours of work in a given week. This would drop one hour £ week over a „.three-year period UNITED NATIONS, N. Y, (AP) — Secretary-General U Thant made, a personal appeal todgy to the warring factions in the Dominican Republic for an immediate halt in hostilities. urer of Annett, Inc., 28 raiders and jet Skyhawks, sup- Huron, has be6n active in Unit- ^tate $5 million by promoting the study: ported by 10 Crusader jets, ed Fund work since 1952. efficiency. hammered the target with 25 He was general chairman of . $100,000 to study executive would have pro- ions ol bombs, ZunI rockets and year's campaign and twice reUrganlxallon, XL" |or''Ihe Tcbrt „ . . , ... sefvcd as chairman of the fund’s • $42,000 to provide bicillin, a """^e lunas tor inc scnooi Bullpup air-to-ground missiles ^n^^ercial division. drug for treatment of rheumatic in a 30-minute assault, the * w w heart victims, to persons who appropriations committee. ---- --------------- ....... spokesman said. The more than 50 rpembers cannot afford its purchase. Sen. Carl O’Brien, D-Pontiac, .to 45 hours a week for workers EAR STICKLR8 IICHT FIRF advance gifts corhmittee • $25,000 for a state cultural and Sen. Raymond Dzendzel, D- now covered by Ihi; law. .lames H Powers, 4255 Lan- .p ^ p .. will begin their acLi^ties in commission. This appropriation Detroit, tacked the study amend- * ★ * etlc, Waterford Township, chair- “wnship is ary f obin.son, the planes encountered light September, a month b^re the was cut to $5,000. ment onto a $2.8-million project -phe double-time nrovision an- the Pontiac car inspec- . ground .re and all relurnrt Aguiar campaign openaA *, , * h „ '‘S„ , , , , Partly would notippirio Ibe scbSui?FrS, 6 m 9 aurgenls drop lheir ''al»urd and safely, the spokesman said. No , 0700 c i cu Romney declared that the leg- Despite the fact that our os- 4 5 million additional workers s I i c k e r s will be given those and Saturdav from noon unacceptable pretensions.” enemy aircraft were reported. Annett, of 2799 Sylvan Shores, islature was short - sigh ed in, provide the ba^ic „hich the legislation seeks to whose cars pa.ss the test. m o „ m trihp ^hrerwX . J Waterford Township, has been failing to report 6ut bills for health care for one-third of our ^ r. o r. • - u, u . . • - ; Water- In the meantime, the ground professional groups. Mackinac Bridge refinancing state’.s oonulation there ha.s (Continued on Page 2, Col, 3) Lights, brakes, turning sig- ford locations, war picked lip. 1 he i^ontiac safely checks are evard. Mount Clemens near conducted by volunteers from Peatherstone; North Johnson, local civic and service clubs. ^he Grand Trunk Railroad * * ♦ C'V.ssing west of Cass, Montcalm Check points will be open ev- at Pingree and on Orchard Ave-cry day through Saturday from niie east of Telegraph. 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. * * ★ Chairman of the safety inspection program in Waterford Approximately 6,000 cars were tested last year, and the committee is hoping they reach at least 10,000 this year. fresh troops with mortars and CHECK,POINTS artillery against rebel holdouts Check points will be located 'u .northern Santo Domingo, on West liuron at Franklin Boiil- P’oreign Minister Horacio V i-ciosa warned that all resistance would be crushed unless the in- active in professional groups, Mackinac Bridge refinancing state’s population, there has holding both the presidency of and reorganization of the stale’s never been a college in our Vietnamese troops and U. S. the Pontiac Real Estate Board military organization. state,” Dzendzel said, helicopters killed 128 Viet Cong and the Michigan Real Estate Tbe governor said he was glad present, the Michigan- As-troops and captured 31 in three Association. that \he House recognized the gorpiahon of Osteopathic Physi- operations today and yesterday. * ★ * need to retain this state’s fiscal gnd Surgeons is at work But ll government troops were He is also past president of integrity” by sending out bills raising funds to construct the killed and 58 were missing in a the Pontiac City Club and is for increaXed taxes along with college. Viet Cong attack on a hamlet active in the Pontiac Area a proposalNvhich would add -phe federal government will Mayor for Day’ lauds City's Progress unacceptably pretensions.” The junta president, Brig. Gen. Antonio Imbert Barrera, rejected a U.S. proposal reportedly calling for a coalition, saying it would open the way to a Citmmunist takeover. 100 miles east of Saigon. Chamber of Commerce. about $90 miljion to Romney’s school aid rec^mendations. Roin May V/s/f in Area Tonight, Early Tomorrow Visiting Pontiac in yester- had made few trips back since ______________ funding the con- ^ ' struction. program was like a reunion At a dinner at Kingsley Inn . The state would participate by !!'L ^ Fd *" Bloomfield Hills last night, providing funds for operation of ^ sSSke he said by was amazed at the the school and by organizing a r 10 - man college authority to Schimke lived in Pontiac for progress Pontiac has been oversee and operate the college, a brief time 30 years ago and making. The plan offered by presidential assistant McGeorge ful to us mayor on d<|wn,” he said. by Antonio Guzman, agriculture minister under exiled President “R’s been an exciting day and Juan Bosch, a meniorablq one. * ★ ★ MUST HAVE MONEY Guzman was’known to be ac-* Showers or thundershowers may visit the Pontiac area tonight and again early tomorrow morning. Temperatures will fall into the high 50s tonight and edge up to 65 to 72 tomorrow. Sunny and cool is the outlook for Thurs- Forty-six. was the low recording in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. The mercury reading at 2 p.m. ijas 72. Steel Negotiations Will Be Resumed CHALLENGES STUDENTS — Gov. George Romney stressed the importance of doing, a given job well and using knowledge Wisely in his address that closed the third annual Governor’s Conference on Student Leadership yesterday at Oakland University. After his 45-minute ,;talk,xoTtie of. thy 472 students and 53 faculty advisers from’all over southern l^^chi-■ gan moved up for a closer look and tips on how to suweed from one who has. \^ . PITTSBURGH fw-The United Steelworkers Union and the basic steel industry announced today their oft-interrupted contract talks will resume immediately. Announcement was made by steelworkers President David J. McDonald and chief industry negotiator R. Conrad Cooper after the first meeting of tojf level bargainers in three weeks. “Wide Track Drive, all those buildings (both municipal offices tContinued on Page 2, Col. 3) and the county service center were on his itinerary^ -are amazing. You must have money in Pontiac.” Greeted at the city limits by a police escort, Pontiac’s mayor-for-a-day and his wife arrived at City Hall about 10 a.m. Coffee and donuts refreshed the Schimkes for their busy day. ’ ^ Thqy were guided by Mayor Pro Tern and Mrs. Leslie H.. Hudson. In Today's Press ★ -k At midday, Pontiac Motor Division hosted, a' luncheon for the visitors. Representatives of the city’s three auto plants attended. An auto plant tour followed. In the evening, the Schimkes Liuzzo File Detroit police inspector | admits he- gaye out report | - PAGE^2. • I Voting Bill Senate leaders trying to- J unite backers,^ to hurry I okay PAGE 5. ^ Soviet Agents Pose growing menace,, | Hoover warns Congress— i PAGE 4. . I Area News ........... 8 | - Astrology 14 i Bridge ..............14 s Pontiac Press Photo SURROUNDED — Mayor-for-a-day Edward A. Schimke of the Village of Pentwater won- ; Federation of Women’s Clubs (the group giv-dered why he should be in the picture with^ ,^ing the dinner ^Schimke attended yesterday all the pretty women. He seems toT)e enjoying evening at Kingsley, Inn); Mrs. William H. the experience,, surounded by (f,rom ‘left) Mrs. . Taylor Jr.; and Mrs. Schimke. (Other dinner David Saks, president of the Pontiac pictures on Page 11): and members of the Pontiac ^ Crossword Puzzle.............27 City Commission attended the t Comics ........... ........14 | Heritage Day dinner. | Editorials ....; . 6 Meantime, Mayor William H. ;' Taylor Jr., in a switch from i normal happenings, will fulfill ' his end pf the Mayors Exchange : Day on Friday, visiting the Vil- : lage bn the Lake Michigan shore | about 15 miles south of Luding- | ton.' Markets..... 20 ^ Obituaries .... 21 « i Sports 17-19 i Theaters .............15 | TV & Radio Prograi&s 27 .i Wilshn, Earl ..... . . . 27 | I * Women’s Pages ....11-13 | ■ i- .j,.- 11, TWO TNK IH)N'I‘IA( IH. lOOrt Detroit Police Officer Threaten Drive Who Gave Liuzzo to Crush Rebels Data Gets Transfer (CoiiliiUR'd I'Yotn riiK«‘ One) DI'ITIIOI’I' 'Al‘i A lie liM'llvp iimiM'i loi ilhirliised Mon i|ny he unve onl lti<’ imiIIit lllrfi infomiHlion on Nlain i ivil i ImIiIm woikiT Mrs \’ioln l.in/./o onil wiiN |ii’oiii|illv K'lnoved Iron) his ' liiHimi'ldi Kail (' Milli i, head ol Uh' Criminal lnh'lli|.:i'n(T Ihi frini, said till gave llie Inlorma lion lo rollce Comiillssionn Marvin l.anc ol sninirhan War ri'ii, who ri“layi‘ in Koml lallh " lie said Mlllei lell Cane needed II in his prolessional po hee |•ollce Commissioner lta\ Cli ardin, whih- delending Miller s inolives, removed him aS head ol Ihe bnreaii Me was assigned ' Insjieclor Miller had no idea lhai this inlormalion would go am Ini lliei " (.iiraidni said moihe when Miller's molives bill his judgmenl (lirardin said ■ good, noC" live, was shot lo dea|h March 2U near Sidma alh'r aiding in a Ireeihan mareh” on MonI gomery which demanded voling lights lor Negroes, Hosni I'liri'KT' I III li e r I called (In/nian a 'llosch jinjipel" lie said he re minded Ihe U S, envoys lhal a jirlme 11 S a'im wiis lo prevent Ihe Dominican Kepnhilc Irom lalliiig under Hed dominallon, I'.S. s|Mikesiiien have begun relrealing (rum Waslibigloii's iirigiiial eoiilentioii lliat Coiii-munists were ilumiiialiiig Ihe reliel iniiveipeiK. I'lu- leadn ol Ihe peace niak lug leani sent lo Sanlo Domingo by Ihe Organl/alion of AmoiT < an Stales' returned lo Washing Ion Iasi nigbl and said bis group ' had made no progress Anthropologist I Praises OU ' Birmingham Area News Stress on Continuing Education Lauded Problems Still Unseffled on Driver License Setup I Noted untbropologtst, Dr I Mai garet Mem| coin luilwl Oak land liniveralty's current aym poHlum Hiu'les on eonlinuing education last night llefore an audience of over ■^IKI alumni, students, faculty, adminisiralors and guests. Dr. Mead complimented the university lor Its innovative stress on education as a lltelong process. I “We miisl eliange the Idea,” said l>r. Mead, ‘That a college I or university cdiieatloii Is a lerinhial slate. MIUMlNCiHAM The prob crease in rebates paid to cities lems ol time, space and money tor providing Ihe service in Ihe laHuIng of drivers licenses ' It was noted that there Is with photographs remain ume laesently a bill being . onsldere.l solved (or tlie city <’()sl The (Jlly Commission last of a license, but most of the in niglil directed Ihe admlnlslra crease would be earmarked for (Ion to continue talks with the driver training, secretary of slate In an effort lo reach a muluid agnminenl ('IIANCKI.M)U (iftKKTS ^West (Jerman Chan cellor l.iplwig Krbard bows as he welcomes Britain’s Queen I'dizabelh II upon her arrival at the Bonn airport today, “Degrees no longer can "be lliougbl of us Ihe end I'eople must continue to learn all tbrougb their lives." m;m ro ( i.ABK The inlormalion was seal lo Clark at .Selma, Ala tlllimalcly, d lound its way into Ihe bands ol the K.U Klux Klan Inve.sligalions fidlowed in Mdlet commenled only briidly I am a |sillee oil leer and I live been Iranslerred and lal s all I want to .say." he said. Zoning Report Due on Project Has Tentative Okay of Pontiac Planners Al*0I,0(;i/.KI) TO I.ANK Sherilf Clark a|)ologi/ed to l.anc l)v l(degram Irom .Sidma for gelling Ihe laller involved Clark said In Ihe lidegram lie had received a IhrcalCning lele |)hone call less than three hour.s after Mrs, l.iuzzo's killing and this was why lie asked for Ihe report on the Detroit woman. “Dnies's and iinlil Itie Domin lean factions d e c i d e lo trust ' each other, it is hard lo figure how |M>ace cap be accbmplislied ^ in the. Dominican Bepublic," I said Ambassador Bicardo C u- i lombo of Argentina. wmi Mr.s,sB)N Accompanying the OA.S mis Sion was .lack llood Vaughn, an assistant secretary of stale for inter-American affairs w h o went lo Sanlo Domingo w i I ,i Bundy. Queen in Germany for 10-Day State Visit She pointed out that a love of learning should he inslilled early, saying, "'rhe procesfi of leariung when begun at Ihe age of two is easy. Hlrinliigham has Iteeii se leeted us one of U exaiiilniiig ! slalloiis III Oukhiiid County that will receive camera i e<|iiipmeii( necessary iindcr the new drivers licencing pro cediire. Police (llilef Balph W Mox ley, ill a reiKirl to (lie commis slon, recommended, that , be 1 caiiHe of the llmitutloim on avail | able space, Birmingham .should j continue as a licensing bureau only if Beverly Hills is permit ted to continue the service i City commissioners tonight are expected lo receive a report on a rezoning proposal for a 90-acre site on Pontiac’s east side for development of a multiple housing-shopping center complex. The commission will receive the recommendation of Ihe (sly Planning Commission ' City • planners considered the rezoning at their meeting earlier this month and gave it a tentative affirmative recommendation. However, (he City Planning Commission gave its recommendation with the understanding that the developer would present a plot plan of the proposed project. Final approval of the multiple housihg and commercial zoning rests with the City Commission. OTHER ACTION In other action tonight, the commission is scheduled to consider appointments to the City Planning Commission and the Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees. The lclc|)h()iic opciiilor told liiiii the call' was Irom Detroit Irom a per.son'idcnldying him-.sclf as an olficerpif llu> Team slers Union. Clark said Ihe caller “threat- ^ ened the lives of my wife, my children,and myself ’ The call never has been traced. BUSINESS A(;ENT Mrs. Idu'zzo’s husband, Anthony, is a business agent of Ihe Teamsters Union 1 'Ilie information on Mrs Uuz-[ 7.6 sent to Clark reportedly included details o( the Uiuzzo family background. It came from confidential file.s. of the police. (iiiiifire echoed for nearly an hour last night iiorlli of Ihe D.S - patrolled e o r r I d o r llirocgh the capital as junta forces waged a liousc-to-hoiise battle agairsi rebels outside the 20-block rebel area inside the U.S. lines. BONN, (lermiuiy (APi Queen Kll/ahelh II iiiid Prince Philip arrived in West (Icrmahy today lor a historic 10day stale visit and a .speclaciilac demon St rat ion of Britain’s dee|H'iuug Iriendshii) with its foe in Iwo she goes lo Wolfsgailen Ca.slle near Darrn.sfadf for dinner witti J’rince Uiidwig of Hesse and his wife. Princess Margaref. The prince is a bro'ther-in-law of Prince Philip's late sister, Princess Cecilia. POINT OF I,EVEIIA(;E , “It Is hard to begin at six, harder at 12 and grim at lit But Itie middle point .jan be a point of leverage, and any change, If made with sufficient vlgoi', will change Ihe rest also.” Many (aeuKles In the United Stales, she said, arc uiircccp-tive to tlir Idea of continuing education. B«‘verly Hills Is lufiong 10 examining stotlons in Ihe counly scheduled to he eliminated. Al.l, BEQUESTS “If the Beverly Hills examin Ing station is elo.std,” said Mox-ley, “we will gel practically all of lh<‘ 2,000 reouesl.s they received lasl'year ’ (JEOBGE A. CHAM Death Claims >rld V Bolstered hy about :)(M) fresh soldiers from Ihe armed forces training center at San Isidro air base, the junta claimed i t s forces had advanced five or six blocks in ibe norlbern suburbs in 24 hours. Kliziihelli was llie tirsl British sovereign lo .step on (lerman soil in f)2 years, since her grandfather King Coorge V came lo the wedding of Kaiser Wilhelm ILs daughter Victoria Loui.se in May lOl.'t. Fifleen months later Woi'ld War I broke out. In addition, a letter is to be presented from Oakland Community College officials requesting that the college’s one-mill tax levy go on city tax bills this year. (’lirardin said earlier the file was prepared as a matter of police routine and for the protec tion of the Liuzzo family in view of the public attention aroused by her slaying. Meanwhile, Ihe name of a third police officer came into the picture. PUT IN TOUCH The Detroit News said in a dispatch from Washington that former Sheriff Ferris Lucas of Michigan’s St. Clair County declared he had put Clark in touch with Lane. Asks Repeal of 'Right to Work' Section (Continued From Page One) Lucas is executive director of the National Sheriffs’ Association. The association has offices in Washington. bring under provisions of present law. The additional workers to be covered by the $1.25 minimum wage and the present time and one-half for overtime past 40 hours a week would he largely in retail trade, laundries and dry cleaning establishments, hotels and motels, restaurants, hospitals and some other industries, President Heinrich Liiebke, ('hancellor Ludwig Erhard and all E(hard’s Cabinet were on hand at Bonn's Wahn Airport ! for Ihe royal arrival. ! For many Germans, partieu-larly the youngsters who know World War II only from their history books, the royal visit was an exciting spectacle, a colorful moment in the otherwise drab piiblie life of West Germany. ROYAL SEAL I’rince Philip, who spent much of his childhood in Germany, has long urged his wife lo make the trip and thus .set the royal seal on the two nations’ po.^twar reconciliation. Thousands of officials have worked since before Christmas to prepare for the occasion. Tlie olher Iwo private visits also are with Philip's "rebdives. The (pieen'will spend Ihe weekend with her sisler-in-law, the Margravine of Baden, at Salem Castle in .southern Germany, The third private occasion will he a dinner at Langenburg (.'astle as the guest of Philip’s sisler Margarita, widow of Prince Gottfried of Hohenlohe-Langenburg. They are eontenl lo .serve as degree* machines, and it is up to Oakland to. goad tlu*m to ae cepl this eliallenging new role in systernalie education, Moxley said (hat a serluii!i crowding eondUioii and hard- ! ship will result If the state’s plan for dropping Beverly Hills is earried out. Local Attorney L Dr. Mead adviHialed the mix-1 ing of generations in Hie classroom. Each has something lo ' give' the other, and it will set a pattern for the younger students lo follow. “We can probably absorb Ihe anticipated increase in license demand from the olher adjacent areas if Beverly Hills is perniil twi to continue, ” said Moxley, He .said that Beverly Hills officials have indicated a willipg-ness to continue its [icogram. Order Foster to Stand Trial Charged with first degree murder in the death of his first wife, Carl F. Foster of Pontiac today was ordered to stand trial in Oakland County Circuit Court. Foster, 29, is accused of strangling hjs wife, Angela, Feb. 24. 1964, and then making it appear as a suicide. MAKE COURSES INTERESTINt; She urged Hie faculty to make their courses so interesting that undergraduates will learn to like learning and want more of it. “Don’t put the emphasis mi the number of Ph. D’s you have on your faculty,’’ she said. MAY BE DROPPED Otlier licensing bureaus that tpay be drop|)cd are in Roches ter, Bloomfield Hills, Hunting-Ion WoikIs, Keego Harbor, Orchard Lake, Lathrup Village, Pleasant Ridge, Milford and Ox ford. “Rather emphasi'/.c how many people you have who are so good, they got ou your faculty without it. “Unfortunately, these work-^ ers are generally in the lowest wage groups and most in need of wage and hour protection,’’ Johnson said. The Weather On the provision to require j double overtime pay for the approximately 28 million Americans now covered by the law, I Johnson, said: The queen’s scheduli includes visits to every major West (5er-man city and a five-hour .stay in 1 West Berlin May 27„ The queen and Philip are : staying at the hill-top Petersberg Hotel near Bonn for the three days they are in the capital. The German government requisitioned the entire hotel. It will be British territory until the queen leaves Thursday for a boat trip down the Rhine. The factory worker already has been ' sentenced to 10-15 years in the State Prison at Jackson in the strangulation of a Bloomfield Township divorcee last December. Pon-fiae police reopened the case into his first wife’s death at that time. “Help your students become mildly addicted to learning so they won’t say as a young in-i terviewer said to me earlier this afternoon, ‘But education is so painful, I don’t know why anyone would want to go back and get any more of it’. "Oakland University,’’ she concluded, “is to be commended for attempting to innovate, The slate proposes to authorize ihe remaining bureaus to issue licenses to any person in (he state, except (hose from Wayne and Macomb counties, according to Moxley. The bureaus that are to be retained are the sheriff’s department, Pontiac, Berkley, Farmington, Ferndale, Madison Heights, Oak Park, Royal Oak, Southfield, South Lyon, Clawson, Troy and Hazel Park. George A. (Iratn, of 15 Miami, a promineni Pontiac attorney, died yesterday after a long illness. He was 75. Service will he L.'IO p. m. V h II r s d a y in Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial following in Oak Hill Cemetery. Surviving are his wife, Lela; a son, (Jeorge K. of Pontiac; two daughters, Mrs. Donald R. Cooper of Ghitfwyne, Pa.; and Mrs. John Brown of Wheaton, III.; and seven grandchildren. After completing the literary course at the University of Michigan, (.’rarn was graduated in I9L) from the university law .school. RETURNED TO CITY After his admission to the bar, (Yam spent one year in practice in Detroit, then returned to Pontiac lo form a law partnership with the late Circuit Clourt Judge Frank I.. Doty. This continued until Doty went to the bench. Later Cram was a member of the firm of Cram^ Zimmerman and Fallon. I without any alumni to speak of, and care for' all other alumni in this country and the world,” Foster stood mute at his arraignment this morning and a I plt'a of innocent was entered in his behalf by Judge Frederick C. Ziem. 2 Groups Sponsoring Community Meeting Foster was returned to the county jail to await trial. No trial date was set. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Increasing cloudiness and warmer today, high 73 to 80. Mostly cloudy and warmer with showers or thundershowers tonight and early Wednesday, low 55 to 62. Decreasing cloudiness and turning cooler Wednesday, high 65 to 72. Southerly winds. Outlook for Thursday: supny and cool. “A significant increa.se in employment can be obtained by distributing to new employes work which is presently per-forrr|ed through excessive overtime. This can be done without impairment of operating efficiency.” Sun sets Tuesday at 7: Sun rises Wednesday a Moon sets Wednesday i Moon rises Tuesday at Monday in Pontiac (as recorded downto| Highest temperature Mean te...,_________ Weather; Sunny. Mlghaat and Lowest Temperal Houghton ^ Marquette Muskegon ni Beach 78 75 INSURANCE SYSTEM j In another recommendation, ! Johnson asked Congress to overhaul the federal-state unemploy-rnent insurance system and its present patchwork of varying jobless benefits. ^ “No major improvements have been made since its original enactrnent 30 years ago,’! Johnson said of the jobless aid program. BY TRAIN j From the boat she goe.s by' ' special train to Munich. The royal couple will spend seven nights in Germany aboard this train, 'On Thursday, the tliird day of her visit, the queen has the first of three private interludes in her heavy program. That night 1 §^urt in Mine Blast TOKYO (AP) — A gas explosion ripped throjjgh a small coal mine in Fukuoka, Japan’s southernmost Kyushu” Island, I today injuring 18 miners, six ! seriously, police reported. The Pontiac Area Urban League and the National association for the Advanement of Colored People, under the direction of Clarence E. Barnes and Charles M. Tucker Jr., respectively, are sponsoring a community meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. at Lakeside Community building, 535 Branch. Purpose of the meeting is to inform the public of available jobs, training and retrain-ing programs through the antipoverty program. In addition to Moxley's recommendation, City Manager Robert S. Kenning proposed that Birmingham accept original license applications only from city residents. SERIOUS PROBLEM Moxley said thpt the most serious problem facing Birmingham will be the irnmediate increase in the number of original licenses that will be requested if they are obtainable anywhere in the county. When Pontiac abandoned the aldermanic form of government in 1911, Cram acted as secretary of the charter commission that drafted a three-man commission plan of government used until 1921. No action was taken on Mox-ley’s request for the commission to go on record favoring an in- He was also a charter member of the charter commission which drafted the city’s present commission-managerial charter. . FIRST PRESIDENT Cram was first president of the Pontiac Lions Club, and served as governor of the 11th district of Lions’ Clubs comprising the Lower Peninsula. Plane Missing Over N. Korea Senate Passes Bill on Exhaust Fumes NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers‘and thundershowers are expec^ from the middle Mississippi-Valley to the Ohio' Valley tonight with otxasional rain and showers in the Pacifid Northwest. It wiH be warmer in the Pacific Northwe.sl and cooler in the central part of the natioiL" i _______ WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Senate without objection today pa.ssed and .sent to the House a bill designed to reduce the air pollution from car exhausts. The program would take effect starting with the 1968 model domestic and imported autos but would not affect used cars. The bill would provide that the Health, Education, and Welfare ‘Department determine what amount of hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide could be ejected through car exhausts. , The’car manufacturers ^ then Would decide how to reduce this, either through engine modifica-lions or an exhaust device. HAVE GAVEL, WILL TRAVEL - Justices of the Peace Robert F. Scott of West Biloom-, field Township (center) and John E. McGrath of Waterford'Township (right)'accept a gavel from Prosecutor-S. Jerhme Bronson, marking the opening of a central Justice Court ih downtown Pontiac yesterday. Justices Pontiac Prats Photo north of 14 Mile Road will use the courtroom in the old Boartj of'Supervisors Auditorium, 1 Lafayette, on a rotating Originlated by Bronson to save time and money, the court will be used only for preliminary examinations and trials in state law bases. SEOUL, Korea (UPIi-A South Korean-manned L19 reconnaissance plane which strayed into Communist air space yesterday is missing and presumed dowp in North Korea, the United Na-' tions Command (UNC) r^rted today. I . A UNC spokesman said the fate of the South Korean' pilot was not known and it had not yet'teen definitely determined whether the light S.-made plane was Yhot down as claimed by North Korea’s official news agency. According to reports, two pilots of the 25th South Korean Army Division flew to Wonju, about 50 miles east of here, to pick up a plane that had been repaired in tha^ city. Wonju is headquarters of the First South Korean Army. When the planes to()k off from Wonju, one pilot headed south but the other apparently lost his bearings and headed north toward the Demilitarized Zone (DM^) which separates South and North Korea. As the single-engined plane crossed into the DMZ, friencily g r 0 u n d f i c, e froni ^he “south opened up to warn the pilot that he was crossing into Communist territory. , He has also been active in the Knights of Pythias Lodge, serving as chancellor^ commander of Pontiac Lodge Nb. 19, and past grand chancellor commander in the Grand Lodge of Michigan. Cram was a member of First Presbyterian Church, and a life member of Pine Lake Country Club-. New Safety Film Features Sights, Sound of Tragedy Waterford Township police will use a new tool — a color movie that vividly portrays the sights and sounds of highway tragedy — ih its campaign to curb auto accidents. Patrolman Raymond Wilhelm who showed the 28-minute film to the township board last night, said that the police department plans maxitnurn exposure of the film in the htipe it will make motorists fully aware of their" responsibilities. Produced by the Ohio State Highway Patrol, the film is entitled', “Mechanized Death.”' It was purchased for . the police department by the ^ke-; land Optimist Club of Waterford. ‘ Plans are to show the film to various township organizations, • to a pbhposed class in. traffic safety for flagrant offenders and possibly to high school students; Wilhelm said. 4^1 'r^'r V' I'HK I’ONTIAC rUKSS. rUKSDAV. MA^ Ift, M»(l5 rniiKK. School Bill Among 42 Set for Final House Vote Shop Simms Tomorrow 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. For Bigger I.ANSINC (AP) A $f)44 mil Hot) Hchool Hid bill and n |7(l million tcuohcrB rellrcmiml fund bill headed the list of 42 measures that passed preliminary debate in the House Mon day. l« a 4*/ii hour session, Hie Fear Epidemics in E. Pakistan Cyclone-Tidal Wave Toll Stands at 5,531 House moved 42 measui't many of them .approprlallona bill,s,, into |M)sillon for a final vole When the smoke from a Friday fim ry of eommillee activity cleai'ed Monday, House mem hers lound they had 2ilV hills on I lie acllve cal.. and IV min e on the table, mosl of them fiscal refiiiin hills. Some (12:> of the 1,001) liills In Iroduci'd were left In committee for Hie Hexl legislallve .session. MFAT INSI*F-lomats, hijsincssmen, scientists, students and niltyral exi’hanBe missions What's more, lloovei piciliet e(t, ' there Is every liKHiliood (hat Chinese Coimmml.st intelli (,'enre acllvllies in Ihis comitry will mcreiiMe In Ihe next lew years particularly it Comimi Hist China Is rceoKUlml hy Hie United Notions and is Ihereliy able to estahlish a diplomatle mission in Ihis eounlrj .” I.ATKST IIKPOIIT Hoover delivered his lalesl reporl on the espionage threat in lesliinony lieiore a House Ap pii>piiid|(am (luheommillee Miireh i It was made puhlle Monday iiij^hl "In rei^ard to Ihe Commmdsl hloe espionage allaeli at'Olnst (his eounlry, there has heen no h'lup whidsoever," he said. "Our government Is about to allow (hem to establish eonsiir lates in many parts of the enun try whieh, of eourse, will make oUi work iiKire dlifu ull ’’ A growing prohlem, he said, "i,H the exlenl lo whieh Ihe So-viel inlelllgenee services are dispalching undercover spies into Ihe United Stales They are well trained, prole,sslonal Intelli genee offieeis and usually hear assunusi identities and are supplied with expertly fabricaIrHl documents and unlimited funds "Their detection among Ihe more Hum HMl million people in Ihis •Country Is a eoimlerintelli genre prohlem of great rnagni tilde " Asked wliellier udvimlages of cultural exchange would hal anee a possible Inlelllgenee ills advantage of liavliig Soviet eon sulates ariaind the country, IliKiver repliiHl: "We have found In practically every cultural exchange group or sliident group lhal has come lo lids country, theie is always a memlier of the K(!H, the Itdel-tigeiice service of the Itusslan governnieni They are called sliidenis, hut some are ltd, It? or nil years old " RESERVE SPACE NOW! ^ i \ Circle Tour || of Lake Superior 7 / '-s' I V I I Oourmd Maill • OulStS ll|hlllim| CAM- FOR RtSfRVATIONS NOWI 1tu( Soll tax In state and hand elections was Irealen hy a 40 4n vote last week. FINE WHISKEY ON THE M]m SIDE ^ OAL. i/% QUART Pll It No. 90tt Codo No. 194 Codo N :LU0ES A% MICHIGAN SALES 1 BLENDt^D WHISKEY-Se PROOF-68.4% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS-JAS, BARCLAY & CO. LTD.. PEORIA. ILL. 'I'lie adminislrallou opposed Including a flat ban In the bill, claiming it would be of doubtful con.stilnlionallty. This -Hirllt the bill's backers. Today's amendment would Insert In the measure a congres .sional declaration that the light to vote In certain stales Is denied or abridged by making poll taxes a prerequisite to voting. STItENdTHKN HAND Losers in last yveek’s battle have urgelatantly uiu-onsll-tulamal,” but Sen.»,losepli I) Tydlngs, D Md,, said It was vital lo prevent sona* slates from devising new barriers against Ihe right lo vole. WAI>I.I>AI>EII 7,000 ROLLS IN STOCK SPECIAL SURPLUS SALE R^g. 89c Reg. 1.39 49 - 69 WALLPAPER BARGAIN CENTER I02H W. Huron . . . I */| Bloeki W. of T«l«|r«ph Opon Monday and Friday TUI 9 liB-.B9R| NEW! EAT cind LOSE UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSUl LS' busier to take and rraii* elfeclive Iharr tiie powdered and liquid food supplement, and costs less UK luding Capsules suited lo you individually by Lie. Physiciarr, M D No Gastritis or Irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DIfc f —JUSI LAI' As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP If OFF! MEDICWAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 Id Wayii* CountlM — Ona In MIricIa M Need work'! Use i'ontlac I're.s.s Clnsslfled Ads. Low in cost. East in netion. Phone :t:i'2-Bini. JEEVES-TAKE ME TO MY GAS APPLIANCE DEALER EVEN WHEN IS NO OBJECT... GAS is stili a wise choice! NOTHING COOKS FASTER! NOTHING COOKS BETTER! All the new gas ranges offer amazing automatic liming devices... new, low temperature oven control... automatic meat thermometer... speedy top burners with automatic controls that hold heat where you want if... plus many other features you’ll enjoy. ‘^ee them today. Gas Ranges offer ALL the most modern features... and styling that is second^to-none ENJOY ALLTHE HOTMfATER YOU WANT... AT LOW COST! Today’s automatic GAS water heaters meet every demand for hot water needs in the modern home. With GAS you can depend on plenty of clean hot water for all the family... in thd kitchen, i,n the laundry and in the bath.’That’s the jpy of owning a GAS water heater. if economy is important YOU SAVE when you buy, install and operate a Gas Watef* Heater SEE YOUR GAS APPLIANCE DEALER T,.: ANNIVERSARY SALE Shop liiurs., Pri. and Sat Mil 9 P.M. Slub Weave Lined Draperies Fully Lined with 100% Cotton Ro.jul.ir R.99 and 10.99 Sinnle widlli X- ^/~87 63" or 84" C-) Regular 18.99 .ind 94 97 l)ouhls,Widlh X $1287 Rr-rjulor 29.99 (ind 36,99 Triple Width x-^"| Q87 63" or 84" | / lowly snow wl,i(» blnntl of rayon c Fully lined with 100% cotton llninr) (o ond durabllily. Cliarge Yours. t)ro|>eries . . . Fouill. floor Carved Kodel" and Nylon Rugs Reg. 5.99, 24x42-incli $4.97 Reg. 8.99, 27x48-inch $7.97 Rey. 1.99, Lid Cover .$1.57 Kodnl " riud 50% Nylon rugs In a ossorlinenl of colon. Machin. ible and dryoble. Charge Yours. 100% White Down PILLOWS Mcinufacturer's Close out RUGS 100% Cotton Plisse FABRIC ^ Pink or Blue Stripe Ticking Regular 12.99 $1697 Assorted Rayon and Nylons Regular 2.99 to 14.99 for 40% OFF ’ Assorted ^Solids and Prints Reg. 49c and 59c 3.cr$l orted V i by DuP. t00% cotton for children's playwear ond sleeping attire. Machine wosh-al)le ond dryoble.' Little or no ironinj. AMBASSADOR .-•3 ALL CHANNEL 11-Inch Portable .TV-” ■ Formerly 119.95 No Money Down Front projected FH high fidelity sound ■system.. Up-front one k-nob tuning, sriups VHf picture and sound simultaneously. Aluminized safety-typo picture ' tube. Personal- listening- jock allows private'listening pleasure with-, distprbjng oihirs:' •_ ■ g' THE PONTIAC PRESS a WMt thirwt street Pontler, Mlchl|{nn 'nllCSDAY, MAY 111, HAHOU) A m'/.tlKHAl.K Clmtltitlon MHUigrr Michigan Week IJeaiiis (ilobal linage for Slate Keyed to tlie theme: ‘'MlcliliJ;im Dynamic In World l’ro|.',reH.s," the Htate thlfi w(M k oh.serve.s Its twclllh annual MU hlk.an Week The only state in I lie Union Hint slt-nali/.es its attrihutes in such manner, the period Is hi(;hli(;hl('(l hy sevi'n significant Days, each reflect ing a phase of the program',-; iotal concept. 'I’liese are Spiritual Foundations, Our Government, Hospitality, Our Livelihood, Education, Our Hei'itnge and Our Youth. ★ ★ ★ Ueneral Chairinaii of Ihe HMJr) Week is WoiMlward (’. Sniilh, vice |ne.Hieration it is estimated that 5,000 to 6,000 additional workers wilL,be required to operate it. " In aerospace, militant uniortr spokesmen predict a crisis if their demands for a union shop — plus a big wage hike — aren’t met. COVERS 400,000 The steel talks cover more than 400,000 members of the United Steelworkers Union, AFL-CIO. Talks in the aerospace industry involve some 150,000 members of the AFL-CIO United Auto Workers and the AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists. The earliest new steel strike deadline is Sept. 1, with Aug. 1 the date for serving notice to the 10 major firms involved. Aerospace contracts with Douglas, Lockh^d, Boeing and North American expire at various dates from July to September but Auto Worker's Vice Pi-esident Leonard Woodcock views August as the critical month. LEADERS COMPLAIN Steel and aerospace union leaders complain recent contracts have not kept pace with White House guidelines, which judge noninflationary wage hikes on the basis of man-hour productivity increases. For industry as a whole, the figure suggested by the President’s Council of Economic Advisers'is 3.3 per cent. In a special report on steel, the council suggested 3 per cent as the guidelines. This nettled steel industry officials, who contend it gave union negotiators extra ammunition to carry back to the bargaining table. But the Steelworkers Union says the guidelines figure is too low — it wants 17 or 18'cents an hour. Wages and fringe benefits now average $4.40 an hour. LAG behind The auto wofrkers say aerospace production and maintenance workers" at $2.95 an hour lag behind average w^ges of $3.07 in the auto industry. The machinists have already laid down a demand fqr 57 cents an hour spread over three years. In both steel and aerospace, any strike would shut down the entire industry — not just a few firms. Verbal Orchids to- Estimated costs of. Medicare adr . Nathan P. Warrener of 77 Foster; 84th birthday. Mrs. Martha Robare - of Drayton Plains; 80th birthday. : I I. H ’ f ' Voice of the People: niliilatiwl.lnii arc hrokni down lnl,(> two imrtfi. Tlir cxprnfio rrlatcd to lio.s|)ltal bcnefltH, which arc fU niiiu’cd by u payroll tax. Is pegged hi the nclghhorhood of $6.5 million a year or about 6 i)(‘r cent of bcn»'-ni.s But Uit> voliintiiry, mipplemcntal pliin tliiit covi'i's doctor blits, f o r which bcncflclurics pay a small monthly premium, will carry a much lu'avlcr annual cost tag from $62 $102 million. This approx! mates about 1(1 jicr cent of benefits. ★ ★ ★ All (ms, of courac, 1h predicated on Mtedioare’s becoming rcnl-ily. Hid we think Hint finding aN .soothsayer wbo’d soolli to the coidrary would make finding the proverbial needle in a haystack a itree/.c. Demonstrations Do Much •to Undermine Freeditm I api disturbed over the deep-thinking collegians who do not have the strength of character to live in acceptance of the world today. The sit-ins, teach-ins and other demon.strations protesting the war in Viet Nam are doing as nuicli to undermine treedom iWi the Viet Cong. A ★ A We can no longer he iitieoneiuned tlial men are denied human rights in Selma or Saigon. The Communists liave one elear objective — to eon-liol tile world. We must Intervene. We must take the offensive. It we can tight llicm off in Asia, wc may not have to fight them in America. If young Americans will start hi'iiig citizens more and existentialists less, we will he able to guarantee Ihem the freedom to think. ItlCIIAKI) F. SIES W ATERFOlU) T() WNSII I F Russian astronomcis say somebody in deep outer siiaco is trying to comimmlcatc with eartli people. If so, perhaps a lone survivor of an atomic war on some distance planet Is trying to tell us .something, It's Not All Kid Stuff David Lgwrence , Says: (fIvch .Siiggeslioiis for (’ily Dump Site City officialH .Nhoulil be complimented for cleaning up mid cleai liig off that unslghlly mes,>i lhal was the former cily dump on orchard Lake Avenue A A At It .should be permaiieiilly closed to dumping of all kinds or a buffer zone crealed and no dumping allowed wllliin 3(H) feel of the road. To complele tlie jol), tliey should cut down Ihe dead trees on Ihe property and llien we will have one less permanent eyesore in our town SEMINOl.E HILLS UESIDENT Excise Tax Cut Plan Big Gamble l.rrH r.leaii Up Kergo liarliOr C.o eir Believe it or don’t, last evening wc saw a television eoniuncrdal in which the ilroduet advertised was not referred to as, “N c w,” ‘‘Improved,’’ or “New and Imimived.” WA.SIIINCTON - Evidently the “big cut" in inconu'-lax rales for individuals and corporations enact moval of excise taxes is po|)u-lar. And indeed lliere is pressure I nun Imsinesses of various kinds to have all such levies repealed. The theory is that .sales wdl immedialelv increase. So President ,1 0 h 11 s 0 n now has decided on| another cut this time in ex- LAWRENCE eise taxes which he liopes will stimulate a further expansion of business and result in increased income for busincss- Biit the real Issue is how long the benefits will eontinne and what will happen when it is apparent that government receipts are iiiudeqiiate niid more luxes are needeil. Tax cuts in tliernselves are not a panacea While liiisine.ss appears to be improved for a while, there are other develop- ments wliieh tend to pnxliice a dise(|udil)rium. \ The irresponsible way in wlih'h first wages and then prices rise in the national economy is perhaps more than any other factor the influence that affects the ups and dirwns of sales. It is to he noted that the pressure for repeal of Ihe excise taxes has come at I lie very llnu' wtien business is tliriving and natipnal income is at a record high. (Copyriqhl, nil, N*w York Harold Tribune Syndicato, Inc.) I.et’s band together and clean up the city council of Keego Harbor so there will be laws passed to get fhe kids off tlie streets by ten o’clock at night. We don’t n<>ed someone silting around planning ways to spend our money or how to gc't'more out of us. WILLIAM H. MASON KEEGO HAHHOK ‘Variimniiig DinliirliH Quid of lyiliniry’ The new Waterford Township Public Library is very attractive and seems well on its way to being a success. Sorhe portions of the library have light-colored carpeting on the floor which requires frequent vacuuming. The sound of the vaeuiim cleaner can be very disliirliing wluai people are trying to read or study. A ★ Ar 1 suggest ttiat either tlie carpet be cleaned while the library is not in use or get rid of the carpet. PEItltlE DEI- MONTIEIl .STUDENT, J. I) I’lEHCE JR. HIGH WATEHFOUI) TOWNSHIP es. Bob Considine Says: The Belter Half The record thus fur shows that for fiscal year 1965, ending on June 30, individual income taxes will bring in a total of Xlightly less than was collected in fiscal year 1964. Corporation taxes have licen estimated at $1.8 billion more, and the federal deficit was figured la.st January as likely to be $6.3 billion. HST Told Georgie Jessel: Phy Down Sentimentality The President in his message to Congress this week indicated, however, that receipts now are at a rate of $92.6 billion instead of the $91.2 billion in the January estimate. But even this improvement still means a ^ief-icit of approximately $4 billion. CUT IN TAXES Now the President is proposing a cut in excise taxes which will reduce Treasury receipts by approximately $4 billion. Will expansion of business bring in an increase in receipts of around $8 billion to offset the deficit? It's a big gamble. If it doesn’t succeed, the administration will find itself compelled to restore some of the income-tax rates for both individuals and corporations that have been reduced. Already it is planned to raise Social Security taxes to meet medical costs for the elderly. NEW YORK -- People. , . places . . . and Jessel. . . Toastmaster general George Jessel, who has known every president since Woodrow Wilson with the exception of President E i s e n-hower, introduced Harry S. Truman at the latter’s 81st birthday luncheon in Kansas City. "He asked me a favor before I stood up,” Jessel was saying the other night in Chez Shor. “He said, ‘Georgie, don’t gel too sentimental about me. Every time you do I think I’m dead.’ ’’ George met his first president, ^Wilson, under curious circumstances. lino to other knots of blokes who can use a laugh. Last year he worked the Black Forest in Germany. The trip this year will take him to Amer lean outposts in Thailand and the Philippines, after Viet Nam. He’ll wind up in Bathymon, just south of Tel-aviv, to break ground for a new hotel that will bear his name. “Boy, they sure didn’t make ’em like THIS when I n younger!” I’ONSIDINE In Washington: Facts Led LBJ Action in Crisis LARGER DEFICITS The alternative, of course, to a raising of income-tax rates generally is to continue larger and larger deficits. This involves a trend toward inflation, which means higher and higher prices due to the decrease in the purchasing “power of the dollar. Reliance on the removal of certain excise taxes and the enactment of increases ifi others is, however, the new policy of the administration which Congress is being asked to approve. Everybody dislikes excise taxes,'and hence there is apparently a wave of approval for President Johnson’s proposal that such levies be removed in the next few years. Politically, pf course, the re- “I got booked into B. F. Keith’s in Washington in 1918,” he said. “I couldn’t wait to get to the theater on opening night. I knew that the President always caught the first show of each week’s bill and I wanfed to be there, and hot. I was 18. The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all local news printed in The Pontiac Press is delivered by carrier for SO cents a week; where mailed in Oakland, Genesee, Livingston, Macomb, Lapeer and Washtenaw Counties it is $18.00 a year: elsewhere in Michigan and all other places in tl)e United States $26.00 a year. All mail subscriptions payabla in Advance. Postage has been paid at the 2nd class rate at Pontiac, Michigan. r of ABC. SUCH A DISAPPOINTMENT “Well, he wasn’t there. It was such a disappointment that when I did my bit I went right-back to my hotel — the Washington, just down the street from the theater — and headed for bjgd. “Some time later the phone rang. It was niiy friend George Preston Marshall calling. He said that Rql^pd Robbins, who was managing Keith’s, wanted me to dress and hurry back to the theater. “I went back. The show had ended and the joint was empty, except for President Wilson and his little party. They had come in late and missed my act: the thing I did about a phone call to my mother. , By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA)-Pres-idcht Johnson is being poftrayed in so.me influential quarters as having handled the Dominican crisik with kind of trigger-happy impul-l s i V e n ess. The * charge is grave and deserves to . be weighed with! great care. When \yeighed, the" charge does not stand up. White House — with Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Undersecretary George Ball, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, McGeorge Bundy. At the other end of a telephone line, in constant contact, was Thomas Mann, undersecretary of state for economic affairs and Johnson’s favorite on Latin-American matters. Aside from the State Department’s “Dominican unit,” Mann has had a special la.sk force in operation since late last year — its purpose to keep tight watch on Red subversive activities in the menaced Caribbean area. BIOSSAT “So Robbins turned on the footlights and I did it all over again for just the little party in the last row of the orchestra.” ABOUT TO GO Jessel is about to go fb Viet Nam for, the USO. His method differs from Bob Hope’s. George plays to groups as small as 30. or 40,. then moves on down the Already the President’s vehement foreign policy critics here and abroad have accepted the charge as valid and are enlarging upon it. Should this be widely taken as* fact, the result could be to build huge fears of Johnson’s stewardship in this tremulous nuclear age. The President’s style is partly to blame. He works so hard and talks so much on television and elsewhere in public that he appears to be Tunning a one-man show. But this is far from true, A careful examination of the facts offers proof. One much-quoted judgment suggests that Johnson rashly thrust the Marines onto Dominican soil almost without seeking advice. . On Sunday, April 25, the “Dominican task force” was set up in the State Department and began nearly round the clock operations — which of course are still going on. Some working members were back in the operations center next morning after little sleep. As a “normal precaution,” U. S. fleet units carrying “Marines moved out of basq early in the rpvolt period and took up station near the Dominican shore but they were under orders to stay out of slight over the horizon. This allowed their ready response when the situa-. tion on the island deteriorated rapidly on April 28. From the beginning, U. S. alarm represented in fact far more than “normal” concern over threatened American lives. lb fact is that from the time, the jKvolt erupted, several days before he sent in the Marines on April 28, the President was in steady consultation — • in the The revolt itself was not unexpected in this country. More' than that, strong vindications were at hand that any rebellion, if not quickly crushed, might , see an attempt by skilled Com-i m u rr i s t subversives, newly trained in Havana and Prague, to grab the reins. The force was created after Latin-American Reds, conferring in Havana last November in a stormy, historic meeting, were given a green light by their Soviet sponsors . — who won the day over the Chinese — to step up subversion and terrorism all around the Caribbean basin. The Dominican Republic was on the list of targets, of course. Venezuela’s spectacular arrest a month ago of three Red money couriers, an Italian, a Spanish woman and an Argentine woman of Yugoslav extraction, exposed the scale of Red plans.Didden in the man’s vest and the women’s girdles was $330,000 in hard U. S. cash to finance terrorism in Venezuela and perhaps elsewhere. j - V' *' * Mann’s watchdog task force obviously is but ^ne element contributing to an unquestionably heavy flow of information and advice to the President on the Dominican affair from the outset. However else his actions are to be judged, and more needs to be said on this score, it seems, hard from this record to sustain the charge that, acting on impulse with insufficient or inadequate counsel, he .made, paniclcy use of American powei*. ■;-'W hi> 1.;.* vl'/.l r i-l. I'111 '//'D* TIIK I'UN'riAC ri KSDAV, WAX IH. lOn.^ SMVKX Man in Detroit Gunfight Freed Unable to Determine Extent of Involvement DETtfOIT (AP) ^ Mo/.|inii, who o»<‘N|)o(J wtihoul it scnili h lioiii jt (lowiilowii Dc troll KUII ImiIIIo III wlilcli polln-klllwl two mini, whh frco lodiiy lull undrr ordor to ii|»|)(«nr iih u poller wiliieHH If wmiled Mo/.hiin, 2;i, of Driroil whh relriiHed Monday when police Muld they could not delerinliie Ihe exieni of his InvolveinenI Mo/.han was a| a har In which an aiKiiinenl broke oiil ht'lween Dennis Jones, 21), and Willimn Merry, 24, shorlly after mid nidht Monday, Police said Itei ry aiid Jones went hi (he bar's rest room and Jones was falally shot. Molh had rt'cenlly been re leased from .Southern Michifjan Prison, Wllnes.ses said .limmy Chavis, 23, and Mozhan helped Merry carry .loiies' body out of the har and pul il into a car. A police cruiser s|H)IIisI Ihe car a lew blocks away and inilled it Ip, Ihe curl). Police U. SehasUiln Kifred said Merry bcftan hi fire at the four officers in the car. The police shot hack, killing Chavis and wounding Merry who died a few hours .later. ‘HACK TO WOltK IN YKAIC AcIre.s.S Patricia Neal, who suffered Ihree massive strokes just ihree months ago yesterday, tells a press conference in Cos Angeles she expects to return to work in a year, after the birth of her hahy. .Sht‘ lelt will) her family tor l,ondon to continue her recuperation People in the News Avoid Bias, NY Jury Told lly The AsNiH-hited Press President Johnson will he the conunencenient speaker June I when his daughter I.uci, 17, IS graduated from National Cathedral .School for Girls. VVilh a smile, l)e continued the reports al a While House stale dinner last night. Asked what he planned to speak about, Ihe President said "(live to the world the best .you have, and the best will come back to you." That happens to he tl)e motlo of his own high school grad uating class at Johnson (!lty, 'l ex The Presidtml also spoke al Ihe cot)unencemenl ol his older daughter, l.ynda, t)ow 21, when she completed tier high school course at National Ciilhedtid .ScIkm)! seveiid years ago liUcl pliins lo go on lo Georgetown University .School of Nursing in the fall. Strict Security Imposed as Hubert Visits Dallas Gen. Clark to Be Honored at Dinner (ten. Murk Clark, 611, who retires us president of Hie Citadel, Charleston, S.C., .lime .30, will be honored ai a dinner tonight. (tens. Lucius I). (Jay, Albert C. Wudemyer and Laiiris Norstud will help puy tribute to Clark, who led Allied Armies in Italy in World War II and United Nations troops In the Korean War. Mozhen, ,<-rouchcd on the floor ol the car, escafied injury. One of ev(‘ry Ihree American workns is a woman, and nearly three of every five women workers are married. DALLA.S, Tex, (AIM The i an assassin’s bullets killed public was affoidixl only a fleet- President John K. Kennedy, ing glimpse of Vice President I .Several hundred people had Iluhert II. Humphrey us police | gathered for a look at the vice imposed strict security for his president, Humphrey waved Dallas visit Monday. and .smiled at the crowd. Be modem with ‘ llumphi'ey came to s|)cak i)l a luncheon nu'cting of financial supporters of Ihe Democndic parly. He briefed contributors on a wide r.inge of subjects, including Viet Nam and the Dominican Hepublic. Police met Humphrey's commercial airline flight and (piick-ly transferred him to a limousine. K N O B . M.I. The viite president was driven I a downtown hotel for the luncheon, from which the public and pre.ss werebarred. Police were stationed on nearby rooftops and in office building dows. .Some officers in Ihe torcade carried shotguns. AGMOSS CONtMtUHSK The vice president’s plane landed acro.ss the concourse from where Air Force 1 landed Nov. 22, 1963. Humphrey’s motorcade bypassed the triple underpass and the Texas School Book Depository building where In Fort Woi'lh, .’lO miles away, police pul Marguerite Oswald,; mother of president ud assjissm Lee Harvey Oswald, under sur-‘ veillance until Hum|)hrey left I Dallas. j ! Humphrey s.iid at a news conference that the United States wotdd have to he the "workl’s policeman" until such agencies as the United Nations and the (Organization of American Slates could do the job. He also said recent events in Vi(‘t Nam gave cau.se for oi)ti- j mism for Ihe United States, and I that U S. forcTs would stay in ! the Dominican Republic until the OAS could insure peace I Imre. , Actor's Son Faces Brain Surgery Actor-singer Harold Lloyd Jr.. 34, is reported resting quietly in St. John’s Hospital in Santa Monica, Calif., while awaiting results of tests of a brain hemorrhage. Lloyd’s father, former film star Harold Lloyd, said his son t j nalional abrlnoa .liidgo William M llorlanilM, in I Hchodiilliig opening HlalemontH tor liMlay, called on tlie juror.N lo I bclp dcmonalrille a "model of ! AimAii an jimtice In opeiiillon " 0i:.IIIIMI!IC0„N.Y.R, j A lory of II men and one j woman wa.s chofien Monday I Aulliorille.s have charged Ibal I ibe .Slaliic ol Libeily, Ihe Wash I ingloii MonumenI iiml Ibe Liber ly Mell III Philadelphia wer<' marked lor dynamiling in a pro Ic.sl ol Ibe irealmeni of Nc grm ’I'bc dcleodaiilM iire Robcil .SIcele CollIc)', 211, named ;c. leader of Jlie alleged plot; Wal ler A Mowo, 32; and Khaleel .Siillarn Sayyed, ’22 All are New York Cily residents. (’onviellon could bring a max iiniiin senleiiee of 10 years In prlsiai and a $I0.IH)II line. U. S. Envoy Walks Out of Moscow Party U.S. Amba.ssador lo Russia Foy D Kohler, who has re-eenlly boyeolled a numbi'r ol oltleial funellons lieeause ol al laek.s on U .S. policies in Viet Nanf, walked oul of oia* for (be first lime last nigbl. Kohler walked out of a Mulgarian rei'eplion in Mo.seow when visiting Mulgarian President Georgi ’I’raikov aeeu.sed Ihe United Stales of criminal actions in Viet Nam "He walked oul" beeau.se he didn’t like wluil wa.s being said," an American official said l.aler. AssI US Ally Slephen Iv Kaufman has d(‘elituil to It* wli*M lli*i« il a man wlio can li*lo you btiiia • niii.iOy lo on iniutnnc* ptogiam. A local, lnd*p*nd*nl nganl mil lml|i you nil giipi and pi*v*nt ov«llop b*caui* h* handl** all IlM*. ol piot.cllon. In ill* proc*M li* will lay* you mon*y. W* would nil* lo b* youf ag*nll Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE Coll FE 4 8284 185 Elizabeth Lake Road Trading boals is easy wilb a f’ontiHe Press Cla.s.sificd Ad. JusI pbone 3:12-81111. eEtnciff ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY ^ Shop Ponhoy’s''^,.,^, ;. MIracleyvillio fdf ypui^ Boys’ Walking Shorts SIZES 6 to 18 Fine quality cotton walking shorts for boys. Belt-loop or slim adjustable-tab styles. Wide range of summer colors iq plaids or solids. All ore sanforized, machine washable. Hurry in and save. SORRY: NO TELEPHONE ORDERS I dt Renney*s This little Card does the triek! PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE OPEN MONDAY thru SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. ■7 *. JEl'OJI'!' ■niK, I’ON'IIAC 1‘IIKSS, rilKSIIAV. MAY IH. IDcW Funds Okayed to Study Avon Sewer Project AVON TOWNSHIP Town-nhl|) offlcliili'wi're riollliwi ye«-• Icrday IhnI the ft^dfrid Conimii tdly l''ii(-dlli<‘M Adinl*iHlndioii has li|)|ii(iv<'d Ihrir tr(|in".l lui II loan Tile inoiiry will !)<• usnl to 11' iiaiu’i' nigiiK'i'img mIikIii'h for a atmn Piilrlf’k V. Mi'Niimnrii iiixl Plilll|i A. Hurt. Till' inllini m)itral for llie loan wii'. liihl Nulimillod lo WaHliiiig-lon olflcialN In Orlolin UN14 by Sii|K'mMii Cvrll K Milln', wim waN clalod lo Irani llial Ihr rr (jur'il had a|i|iKivrd Ma NEWS Wr'\'(! I'rally firm swrallng lliis onr out," Miller .said, '‘and l in delighted lhal It finally c ame Ihriiugli " lowiihliip .sewer project which v,ill eo.si an esliinaled $7 2 million Aiiiioiincement of approvul of (he loai» wan made by Srti- IOltMAI. Of I i:i( Till' next step in Itie pnx ediirc will lie lor the g o v e r n m e n I agency lo submit a formal offer Ilf the loan and the terms under which it will be granled to the j lownsliip board iiu* offer is ex-1 peeled lo lie made in aboiil Ibri'e Unit Awards Contract on Park Project Actual eoiiNtruetliMi on t li r j project won’t get under way, however, for about two yrarx, I according lo Miller, j Planning for the project was slaiTtvf over a year ago. Preliminary .sludie.s have been made liy .lohnson & Anderson ■oii.sulliiig engineers for the Preliminary Allocation Millage Rates Are Set Oakland County governmenl and Oakland Schools both received slight Increases as Ihe County Allocation fioard yesler day set preliminary millage nyes. Oakland County's presenl r).2ll mill share of the total Ifnnlll tax apiM^rtloned to county and township governments and school systems was lifted to 5 lit) in Ibe preliminary allm’ation. Oiikliiiid Schunls’ sliiire was raised from the present .11 to 8..I0; nimimlield Hills, 8 .'III; Brandon, 9.70; Clurkston, 8.:i8; and Clawson, 9.70. Others were Dublin, 8,70; Far mington, 8 ,i0; I'erndale, 8 70, lln/.el Park, 9 70; llolly and Hu roll Valley. 8 70; Cake Orion, It,.ill, Lamphere, l..yon and Mad Ison, 9,70; Norlh Oxford, fH7; Novi, 8 09, and Oak Park. 8 '/II .Still olhers were Oxford and Itochester, lir>9; Koyal Oak. l)'/0; .Soulhfleld, in'/, Troy, 9 70; and WalUsl l.akc and West Hloomflcl^l 8 ;i0 land, Bose, Iloyal Oak, Waterford and Wliite Lake. Lyon and Springfield I 0 w n-ships re()uesled no millage and received none .Southfield Town ship was allocaled d;i mills All other lownsldps received over one mill Addison was allocated 1.29 mills; Avon and Independence, I ,12; Itrandon, I 20; Commerce and Milford 1 .'18, Farmington, llloomfleld ami West Bloom Held, I '10 The ir>-mill limltalion Includes Ihe tolal of the county governmenl and county school system levy Ihroughout Ihe counly plus lownship and local school sys Icm levies Within Ihcir specillc boundaries. The preliminary rates were .set lollowing a series of hearings on Imdget.s submitted by the governmental units A new series of bearings is slalcd lo begin May '2f> with linal millage rates scheduled to lie sel May 21. Townships allocaled one mill Olhers were Novi, I 01; Oak-in I li e preliminary schtxiule i land and Oxford, Til; Orion, were Croveland, Holly, II I g h ' 1 11, and Pontiac, 1 liri. HOMK AWAV FIIOM ItOMK - DaVid Homan (left) and Don Seelbinder of Ortonville 'I'roop 1,'lh demonsiralc .some ol Ihe camping skills they will ti.si' Saturday al Ihe Manito Hoy .Seoul Disiricl’s ".Sliow-o-rec" al Me l'’cely's Itcsorl, I'i‘miles .south of Ortonville on Ml!). Upwards of (Hit) .Scouts, Fxijlorers and (lobs will |)arlicipatc in Ihe scouting demon-sir,alion Irom I lo I) p.m. The board of commissioners of the lluron-Clinton Metropolitan Autbority has awarded a contract lor i'lfi,92.T for the con-.struction of three new parking lots and adjoining entrance roads at Stony Creek Metropolitan Park, norlh of Utica, The contract was awarded lo the L. Loycr Construction Co. of Taylor. Two of Ihe parking lots which will be near additional picnic areas and ;i shore fishing site, both of which arc presently under development, are expected to be available for use sometime this summer. The five-county regional park agency serve.s the counties of Livingston, Macomb, Oakland, Washtenaw and Wayne. lownship Tlfo lechnical name of Ihe .system is "sanitary .sewer lateral system lor the develo|M‘d portion of the town.ship." I'O SKHVK 117.000 Don Keylon of .lohnson & An-denson said it will be designed lo serve a population of 117,000. The township’s estimated population is now 20,000, which is served mostly by septic tanks and the Oakland University system, wiiich fmis into a treatment plant built in I960 by the Oakland Counly Department of Public Works. Farm Experts in State Request 5,000 Migrants tor Cucumbers I Troy OKs Increase Variiible millage was allocat- ^ cd lo four sch(M)l systems, including Pontiac, which received 140 mills lo be levied in the (hly of Pontiac; only. 'I'hc Pan. line schools’ base allocation vyas set at 8.,'10 mills. Waterford Township .Schools received tlie same ba.se allcK'a-tion plus a variable of .40 mills; lo be levied in Waterfoid Town shij) only. Commerce Twp. GOP Club to Meet Tonight COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -The Commerce Township Republican Club will meet at 8 tonight at the town.ship fire hall, 605 Commerce. The meeting is open to the public. A report on the recent Oakland County Home Rule forum will be given by Mrs, Ruth M. Kadella. Keylon said laterals from the new township system will feed into the Clinton-Oakland trunk line which is now being planned by the county DPW. The county trunk will serve Independence, Waterford. Pontiac and Avon townships, emptying into the Dequindre Interceptor which feeds into the Detroit system. DUTHOIT (AIM A panel of Michigan farm experts Monday prcscnlccl a request to U.S. Secretary of Labor Willard Wirtz asking him t(> be ready to sliip 5,000 Mexican farm hands to Michlgiin to help harvest (lie cucumber crop. The panel said Hie figure was lentalive, depeudent on the availability of local labor and the number of acres planted. Growers already have signed up 8,500 American migrant workers and Wirtz said additional hejp may come through recruitment of high school students. aid cniry pcrmils would he issued only after local labor sources have been exhausted. in Budget Wirtz .said ‘ Ihere will be an intensive effort to recruit teen-agers tliis summer as half of our unemployed workers will be youths from 16 to 21 years old." ‘Tve been astounded at how enthusiastically our high schools liave accepted the idea of using young men as summer farm workers,” he said, "but we feel that at best their contribution will be modcsl” THOY A liHMi'hudgcl which increases taxes by $1 10 I per $1,000 of assessed valuation was aivproved by the City (,'om-mission Iasi night. l.ake Orion Schools received a variable of .18 mills and Southfield .5!1 mills, The preliminary base alloca-lion to other school systems was i as follows: Avondale, 8.30 mills; | Berkley, 8,70; Birmingham, The engineer said plans are to finance the township project with revenue and special as.sess-ment bonds. WATER SYSTEM Miller said plans are also underway fpr a township water system which will cost around $7.5 million. NEW YORK’S WORLDS FAIR I The township has submitted a I request for a similar loan to fi-I nance engineering studies for 1 the water system. • Charles Killings worth, chairmen of the panel, said Congres.s is restricting entry of foreign workers because of the domestic unemployment problem. He Fete to Honor Area Teacher Mother-Daughter Fete Is Thursday in Troy TROY — The Troy Assembly of God will hold its annual Mother and Daughter Banquet at 6 p.m. Thursday at the church at 3200 Livernois. A special program will be presented under the direction of Mrs. June Smith. ORION TOWNSHIP - Mrs. Mildred Underwood, a teacher at Proper School, Gingellville, for the past 20 years, will be honored at an 8 p.m. program Thursday at the school. The affair planned by the Proper PTA preceeds her retirement on June 9. The $1,766,780 budget is based on a tax rate of 8.40 mills of assessed valuation. It represeiils a $306,000 increase over Ihe current budget. City Manager Paul York said the increase is a result of several things including five additional patrolmen, a fire marshall, a fire truck, a building and a plumbing inspector, a full-time city planner, a fulltime parks and recreation director, purchase of four park sites, improvements at the civic center and diverting the existing city hall for use as a library. Man Is Bound Over in Troy Aufo Deaths All students of Mrs. Under-w 0 0 d, their parents, fellow teachers and staff memljers, and PTA members are invited to attend. The budget includes the following amounts for the various accounts: legislative, $12,.350; city manager, $36,812; finance, $47,320; assessor, $42,610; city clerk, $31,560; judicial, $21,660; legal, $17,520; police, $259,970. and enjoy all the other sights of the city . . . transportation to the Fair . . . close to Times Square, Empire State Bldg., Theatres, boat tours, etc. . . . 1,000 rooms, restaurants, lounges, sWimming pool, ample parking, reasonable rales, family and group plans ... singles from $S doubles from $12 Club's Fashion Show Has others are fire, $47,060, civil defense, $164,000; building department, $60,733; engineering, $94,490: planning, $12,150; public works, $309,790; parks and recreation, $30,740; library, $23.-400; and miscellaneous, $17,620. THOY — A .36-ycar-old Owos-so man was bound over for arraignment in Oakland County Circuit Court on Juno 4 yesterday on a charge of negligent homicide in connection with an ' auto accident that took the lives j of a Troy mother and two of hqr daughters. ' Erwin F. Meiers, who was released on $1,500 bond, is accused of running flashing slop lights at Long Lake and Crooks in Troy April 5 and striking ti car, driven by Mrs. Warren F. Da-! vid, 42, of 825 E. Square Lake. He appeared before Municipal Jud^e Charles Losey. Mrs. David and her six-year-old daughter, Melody, died shortly after the crash. Another daughter, Carmen Tami, 18 months, died of injuries the fol-j lowing morning. ’ ) Are you cut out for the Peace Corps? All il lakes is gills, oiiiage. Deiemtinalion. Imaginaiiim. KcMniiccliiIncss. Uiuliislaiuling. Ill lad, il lakes jiisl aboiil evciyiliing you tan give, (iol much ,’ Scud Ihis toupon lo: 'I he Peace Wasliinglon, I). ( . I I Please send me intormalnm I I Please send me «ti npplicalion pi. I THE PONTIAC PRESS PUVATE lETECTNES HAIOLD L SaiTH WVESTIIIATIOIIS 1302 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 5-4222 — 24 Hour Number OFFICES IN FLINT — PONTIAC — SAGINAW 353 West 57th Street NEW YORK 19. N.Y. 'Something for Everyone' Mrs. Hackett Seeks Avondale School Post MILFORD — Styles for high s c f1 0 01 girls, young married women and mature matrons — as well as for the men in their lives — will be shown in the Town and Country Fashion Show tonight. The 8 p.m. event, sponsored by the Milford Business and Professional Women’s Club, will be held at the Alpine Inn on M59 in White Lake Township. , Outfits to be shown afe from the Wee-Knit Shop, Arms Brothers Store for Men and Suzzelle Drgss Shop of M i I- fprd and the RB Shop and Os-mjin’s of Pontiac. Milford High School students will mode! Simplicity Patterns fashions from Andrews Fabrics of Mflford. which are a national scholarship fund and financial assistance to local high school students. Tickets will be available at the i door. Mrs. Marion A. Hackett, 1380 Ruby, Rochester, Is a candidate for a four-y car term on the Avondale School Board in the June 14 election. Her name was accidentally omitted from the list of schpol board candidates yesterday. Other ferriale models will be from the sponsoring organization and the Milford Jayceltes. Providing t h e commentary will be cochairmen Mrs. Charles Andrews, 353 N.- Mairtv and Mrs. Donald Speck, Southfield. Proceeds from the show will be used in the club’s educational fund, major projects of TYPEWRITER ■rr^ EAT BETTER FOR hESS li^per week Includes 723 Poinds of Qanlilir Fiiizon Foods •f ywr clwlM, Otitvtrsd to jf»ur .ininf iiioiiry lo lnm,lrrcls of i.roplr in , I’miliii.' .Iiirini llir pa>| 10 y.-ars. All l,.,rrow-rr> will Irslily l„ rrroiNinn lair. Imiir-I. ami rouHooiis Irealmrnl. (|)„ m.l lakr a rhame dealing with sli angn s ,.r riy-ln-nigln Imrlers.). MON l vn A ^ pavmems-★ CREDI ^\tlen yon deal lina-. you icrlxe I'lie I'nll. amount of your loan in r,asli at onre.^ Ao' >o charge for abstrael. lille srairli or tide 1NsLRA>CV at no EXIR^ COS 11 Roi-i-Vny from rrs to ron-olidale your dehif. lo ).iay. off the l)alanre >ou owe on >our ron-liatl. lo pay laxe^. to make home repair?, or iniprovetnenis. or lor any oilier good pur-po,-e. .See u.? today. Free Parking on county lot corner N. Sag-inow and W. Huron Sts. "each time you bring to our office a full monthly payment. SPECIAL Free Parking whenever you apply for an approved loan or renewal. Bring us your parking ticket to. be stathped. VOSS and BUCKNER 209 NATIONAL BUILDING - FE 4-4729 I 1 If. r71UA7.tr-- 1; iTrl':!' • YMMOID.IHHOIItllHirtOnU KlIlM IV NIMM WMItl IMPOKttll INO OtllOII.MIUII. HMI'i(IOV^IltNOtllO«NllllMIWIII|IKy Canadian Club is distilled and bottled in Canada. Here are three ethjr reasons 1. It has the lightness of Scotch 2. Tlio smooth satisfaction of Bourbon IIIIIAMWAIKIIUmiMlIfU WAIKIItVIlll.UNMIA 3. No other whisky in ttie world tastes quite like it How light is Canadian Club? 'f / , ' , r ' MAV IK. MMJ.I NINE Welch Mining Town Mourns Lost Men TONYI’ANDY, WhIcm (AIM Blinds were drawn today in Ihe terraepd baek-lo-back bouses marching up the grim Rhondda Valley hillside as Ihe lamilies of Tonypandy mourned the death of ;tl coal miners in a Hash ex l>hmion IKK) feel ladow ground An electric spark l)i a pocket of gas was blamed tentatively for the blast Monday at IIk' gov eminentowinsi Oambrian Col llery I'oWer Minister Kred Lee orderi'd a public liu|ulry tiose 111 there," one said "The air was so thick you couldn’t breathe." Rescue crews went down with gas masks FACT: It’s the lightest $636 $399 whisky in <' «• esa the world! *o.’uhi.. SON IS SI’AlllOI) Mrs. L Lewis, (if), of Clydach Vale, Wales, learned yesterday her son was not in the mine when an explosion killed 31 men. She lost her father in the mines in 1005, her brother in 1013 and her husband in 1051. Her son bad changed shifts to play in a rugby game. 'Free Moments Precious' Bottled in Canada About 30(1 men were below ground when Ihi' gas exploded. Those who perished wne work ing in a narrow slu)lt, only 2 teet II inches high in places, 2'*^ miles inside the mountain The dead Included mine man agi‘r Krnest Hree/.e and Ids as sislaid, Lc'slie Williams They bad gone down on a rouliiK* inspection. MINKS CLOSK There was no work at Ihe mines today. Miners stood in ■e groups in the misty rain as in I vestigators went underground, I I’oiice gatbeiTd fingerprints I from the dead miners’ homes in an effort to identify buriusl ! bodies. On the kurlace, the women walled with blank, dead eyes. The bodies were brought up two at a lime In Ihe cage, wrapped in blown blankids .secured with rope They were taken to an assembly ball where the miners have choir practice .Some we|c ld('nlitle<| by Ihe niimbi'is on lamps found near their bodies. .Widow of Aide Dies WKd.LKSLKY, Mass. (AIM Harriet Blake Aker.son, VL wid ow at Oeorge I'i, Akerson, secre lary to l‘residenl Herbert Hoov er iron) Itl2ll to 11)31. diisl Mon day. GRADUATION SPECIAL 37 Yean in Pontiac Limt MOMn f, ♦ OFFICE SIZE KEYBOARD ♦ pre-set uiuutor aiiiliMMOll>«rfull-*l»>M‘“f“'"’^* - SMITH-CORONA^ G or sail* Unllloil Rise and CamlnB Ca»e *49” LOW, LOW PRICE Liberal Trade-1 Allowance laiy Tamil IZlNirfhSiginiwSI. p>«rtM|SI "The Best In The House"' in 87 Lands HAIRCUTS GOING UP ... BUT . . . lo ii »he quality of Mr. G'«. Is your hair too thin, too straight or too kinky ... I con solve your problem. Coll tor dn appointment, it you wish, but it isn't necessary. Come in for custom hair stylivig or just o good hoircut. Manicures on Fridayal ... 9 A. M. 'til 6 P. M. CLEVELAND, Ohio (AIM "Every minute we have free is fi Joyous thing. We can’t let our-.sclyes spoil today worrying about tomorrow” 'riiat is Dr. Siun Shepiiard, 42, talking about the possibility of a return lo prison to complete the life sentence given him over 10 yc'ars ago in the liludgeon slay-I ing of his iHognjml wife, Mari-I lyn. peals ruled two wegks ago In a 2-1 decision tbaf Sheppard should go buck to prison. Mr. G's Oakland County's First Hair Stylist tor Men 5275 Dixie Hwy. . . . The Bright Red Barber Shop I Block North ot Drayton Shopping Center—Phone OR 3-8957 "We realize we may only have a few days together," I Sheppard said from his home in suburban Rocky River in a telephone interview with the Dayton Daily News. - I “The important thing is lo I stay at home and g.0.10....I may nlto W*.' 'v'' The gas yard light is decorative . . . it sheds its golden light over lawns, patios and pools for nighttime relaxing or entertaining. It helps guard against unwelconie intruders. In addition to being highly, decorative, useful, and dependable; gas yard lights are economical to operate and simple to maintain., SEE YOUR GAS YARD LIGHT DEALER or Consumers Power Company pa-o-*i*t .4« I H PERRY PHARMACY E PRiSCRIPTIONS — PiOfiSSiONAUY pirhct PROPfPir P»IC!D mi laldwin I m Imt Blvii. I 611 U Mmt I 3411 fill. Lk. itar Oolumbui nl Perry N««l lo AIP Hd. at’M^6B Ft 1-1061 FE 3 1162 Ml l'^4410 FF 6 3246 Ponllec I Pontine | Biritilnehom | Walertord YOU TOO CAN HAVE A TOP QUALITY Gas or Oil FURNACE With ihe Wonderful BM 4(11 DISTRIBUTING SYSTEM Installed by Dependable GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. rilK pON I’IAC’ IfJIKSS. ;m>rSI)AV. MAY IH. IIHl.1 Rating Change OK'd for Blue' I.AN.S1NG (AIM Michigan niiit* Shield will he allnwed In arid a iinMllll<-<| exjieiience (ill tng iiyhliMli lo Hit coiiimiuiily rilling ayalem .Inly I, liiHiinince CniitmiKHloner Allen Mayer,Non annoiinred Monday. The rating change |h a com panlon lo one ;i|)|>rov(Nl In March for Michigan llospilal Snvlc(> (Hide (’ro.s,‘,i Molh are di'slgiicd lo col down Ihc loss of snhscrilH'rs hy per imlling the ((o((prol(l plans lo oiler lower rales lo low risk gi()(ip.s j(nd lake pr(>mi(iins lor 111** Ingh risk groups The cliange will have ao Hl<*cl on lolid Ifhir Shlefil Income or the over-idi rale,level, since "II ' d(M*s not ap|H*ar any change in , Ihe general level of inc'ome will I he neee.ssary in liMi.*) and pos.si. ! hly not In HMMi,” Miiyerson said, i There will be ao chiinge in j Ihe premiums ol senior eon i Iraets, under whicli special hen- efils are offered lo ixirsons over lif» No ehange will he made in Ihe rides ol groups with lower Ihiin I fill memliers, iioogronp Hiilmeriliera and Ihoae who have lefi Iheir gronpH heemiNe of lay-oil, relliement or lllneHN, he iidded Tile ehiinges are aimed at slopping till* (li'iiin of low cost gKinps lo privale lii.siiranee lirms, whieh are atili* lo offer lowei rales MOVE YOUR LIVING OUTDOORS! POOLE LUMBER'S Jim McNeil can help you do it. Just call this week and he'll come to your home and give you an estimate on building a fun-filled patio. We can handle the complete job, tor we otter 1 -Stop Service! LUMBER & HARDWARE 151 OAKLAND AVE. - PONTIAC Phone FE 4-1594 At Ihe odlset, llie new rales will (ise tin* pri‘sent eomnumily rates as a base limiliag in-((Ciises lo a maximnm of 20 per (•(‘ill a year and lo 120 per eenl ol llie hiise nile Iheo io efiecl. Aulomidic increases will he prohibited iiiid large groups will h(* encouraged (o carry retirees al standard group rales, Th(* new ride.s will fake effect .liily 1, Miiycrson Haid, In a giiidiiiil process under whicli one (piarler of Ihe affected groups would ex|H'iTence rate clianges every tliree nionlhs, (mill the Iasi change is mnde .lune TO, lOOfi. Under llie comminiitv ralitig pliiii in use since Ihe jilans' he-giiiniiig ill 10:t0, iill suhscrilxTH eiililled 1,0 the same coiilraci lienefi|s iire chiirged Ihe Siime moiilhly ride, regardless of the fr(‘(|iiency wilh which Ihc group members used their insurance. In Ihc past four years 35 gr iiip.s wild fiiid h(*(*n using only 11.5 per ccnl of Ihcir premiums ill llospilal licncflls left Ihc pliiii,", Mayi-rson said. "These* groups iiccoimli'd for over :i7.000 subscribers,'’ lie iiddcd "Wcll-documcnicd ^infor-imilion indiciiles aiiolhcr .50 groups with 1)0,000 conttiicfs may he lost in the near future unless lliey iire given some r(*-turn in lower premiums for Iheir low inediciil care ufih/;i-lion." HI'IADY l-’0|{ TI*:ST A lesf model of tlie A|iollo space capsule .sits ready for hiiinehing on a Utile .foe If roekel al Whll(* .Sands, N M The rocket and cap,side will he fired to lesf Ihe escape meclwmlsm, designed to propel llie space erafl ioid its crew lo solely In Ihe eveni of fidliire oil Ihe pad or Ik flight OU HICKORY AMKRtCA I MOHT MAOmrieBHT STRAKIIIT HOHIIBOB WHI6KY Hnhies can he horn with drugs or having a dlsense hlinding ealaracis as a result' .such as mumps or mea.sles of Iheir mothers' taking certain | during pregnuiiey. Need a erlli'' ll.se a I’oiilliic I’ress (Classified Ad. Kasy lo do just plioiie 332-01111. BUDMAN’S In l!)l)3, he said, 242 groupT! wilh 100 or more .subscribers I used less I ban 00 per cent of Iheir premiums in medical ben-1 efits, while 99 groups had med-1 ical bills amounting lo more' than 120 per eenl of llieir premiums. Explosion and Fire Destroy State Firm HOTHBURY (API - Fire blamed on an unexplained alcohol explosion Monday destroyed the Kysor Corp. plant, largest employer in this Oceana County community. A loss estimate was not immediately available. Employe Henry Schmidt, about 40. reportedly suffered the only injury in a work force i of approximately 49 persons, most of them women. He was I reported in critical condition. “Guess who. just bought a "You know...big, ".Go on,” guess new strong, nattily . which shrewd, smart Dodge Polara? attired, lots of extfas, guy bought really a beautiful going places.,:like me! Dodge Polara?" - The way everybody's going for Polara, like this 500, it's hard to guess who’ll be next...maybe you? Popular Polara: nearly 4000 pounds of solidly built b/auty. 121 inch wheelbase. 383 cu. in. V8. Big car. Big performance. Unwrap a special package. Polara 500. Center console, ^ket seats, choice of transrhissions..Polara's popularity is easy lo understand. I DOOOE DIVISION \ 'GS Dodge Polara PAUL NEWMAN'S SPARTAN DODGE 211 SOUTH SAGINAW ST.« PONTIAC - FE 8-9222 hCHRYSLER MOTORS CORPOnAKON Dqjlge .Comes on Big on TV. Bob Hope Sh(3w—-Friday at 8:30 Channel 4 Masterpiece Mov(e~5unday at 5 lOO Chlnnel l' — —Sunday at ' ivl 1^1 L (1.. U ' 1 ,\ 1,1 1 i .'i blrlriv i'fe . '}- '-L vi-V; laK laiNiiAc I'HKHS ’nii';si)AV,ih, hmw KUCVIfiN Federation Has Annual Dinner Tma Dioi/erm, North Midland Street, dressed in her native Creek eostnine, is a decorative part of the Creek booth. There were M ethnic dis plays at the dinner, dejnctiny the heritage of Pontiac residents. '■ ft R, Installed as officers of the Pontiac Federation of Women's Clubs Monday evening at the annual Colden Cavel dinner were these three. Pie sc ending the stairs at Kingsley Inn are (from left) Miss Lillian Davidson, Carnley Stre e t : Mrs. Adrian Ish, Woodbine Street and Mrs. Robert Lego, Hickory Crove Road. Miss Davidson and Mrs. Repo are vice presidents; Mrs. Ish is treasurer. 'f Women's Section Seems They Agree With You; Could Be That's the Trouble f^rs. Capsalis Installed as Town Hall Head Mrs. Aleck Capsalis was installed as president of I’ontiac-Oakland Town Hail, Inc. at the annual meeting on Monday. nett. Mrs. Kendrick, Mrs. C. A. Sanford, Mrs. Louis H. Schimmel, Mrs. Taylor and Mrs. C. Cl. IJligian. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I wish people would quit feeling sorry for a woman j u s 11 because she’s not married. I am 36, unmarried and ’ intend to stay this way. have been married (twice) so it J isn’t like I ■ don’t know ABBY what I’m missing. I earn my own living, pay my own bills and don’t have to nag a man to give me a dollar every time I need one. I come and go as I please and don’t have to worry about a two-timing, lying husband who thinks he’s doing me a favor by living with me. Don’t think I’m lonesome because I’m far from it. I have four steady boy friends and I see them as much as I want to. And, believe me, I like it better this way. INDEPENDENT doctor offered the best sug- has to take the child back to gcstion, Urge your neighbor to him with a more serious prob- follow his orders before she lem. Calendar of Events Mrs. J. R. Slav.sky, Orchard Lake, was hostess for the afternoon affair with Mrs. William 11. Taylor Jr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Bennett assisting. DEAR INDEPENDENT: I’m sure your “boy friends” like it better this way, too. So what’s the problem? TUESDAY Pontiac Business and Professional Women’s Clubs, 6 p.m., Devon Gables.. Dinner an delection of officers. Oakland County PBX Operators, 7 p.m., Pontiac General Hospital. Oakland County Dental Hygienists Society, 7:30 p.m.. Aunt Fanny’s Restaurant. Dinner meeting. WEDNESDAY Woman’s World Series, 10 a.m., Pontiac Mall Community Room. “The Pleasures of Reading” program by Helen S. Williams of the Book Stall, Rochester. Ladies Day Out, noon, YWCA. Program on “Teaching Johnnie to Swim” by the American Red Cross. Veterans of Foreign Wars, No. 1008 Auxiliary, 1 p.m., American Legion Hall on Auburn Road, Installation of officers. Pontiac Chapter No. 7, American Association of Retired Persons. 5:30 p.m.. Community Services Building. Tour of Detroit bakery. Xi Gamma Delta chapter, ^ta Sigma Phi. 8 p.m.. Clai^?itfln>home of Mrs. Philip Stomberg. Installation of officers, i North Oakland County Association for Retarded Children, 8 p.m., Community Services Building. Mrs. Frank Zuzich is guest speaker. Delta chapter. Beta Theta sorority. 7:30 p.m sumers Power Company. Cooking demonstration. Other officers ar^ Mrs. S. V. Sekles and Mrs. Lyman Hedden, vice presidents: Mrs. Keith Leak, secretary; Mrs. William Brace, treasurer; Mrs, Robert E. Nienstedt, corresponding secretary and Mrs. Harold Kendrick assistant treasurer. DIRECTORS New directors elected for a three-year term are Mrs. Ben- Name Mrs. Grimm Mrs. Lewis Grimm was named delegate to the district convention, Detroit, from the Fannie E. Tompkins Temple No. 41. Pythian Sisters at the Monday evening meeting. DEAR ABBY: I first became acquainted with the woman across the hall when I heard a child screaming so loud I thought someone was killing her. I later learned it was the usual mealtime battle. Penny is four years old and the way her mother explained it, she’s always been a very poor eat- Fashions Set for Club # It was announced that two Con » new members would be in- itiated at the convention May 26. The mother said she took the child to the doctor and he said there was nothing wrong With her they should put the food in fronts of her and if she didn’t eat it, take it away. And when Penny got hungry enough, she’d eat. The women of Orchard Lake Country Club and their guests will view the latest summer fashions at a luncheon in the The mother said she tried it once but it didn’t work, and she couldn’t stand to see the child “starve,” so now she holdis the kid’s nose and forces the food down her. The child gets nervous and upset and gives the food back afte.r-wards, so I can’t see where this method is any good. Have you- or any of. your •readers any Suggestions f o f making a child eat? FRIENDLY NEIGHBOR DEAR NEIGHBOR: The Don Thomas’ Sporthaus will prei^t the fashions with club meilibers^ doing the modeling. Displaying seasonal modes will be Mrs. William Bachman, Mrs. Thomas Bramson, Mrs. Joseph Conway, Mrs. Richard Darragh, Mrs. Ralph Fox and Mrs. C.^ B. Harman. Others will include Mrs. Richard • Hartle, Mrs. Harry Lichtwardt, Mrs. Nicholas Martin Jr., Mrs. Frederick Matthaei Jr., Mrs. Henry Nolte Jr. and Mrs. Richard O’Reilly. . - . Co^airmen for the, event are Mrs" Stephen Booth and Mrs. Lawrence Finn. Mrs. H, F. Kendrick, Cherokee Road, and EtheJ Kiogima, Norton Street, arrive at the annual meeting't,-of Pontiac-Oakland Town Hall, Inc. together. Ethel, who is the recipient - of a scholarship froiu, this, organization, attends Pontiac Business Institute. At Golden Gavel Dinner New Clubs Welcomed By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Women’s Editor nounced, and again all sum- George Shearer and Vera Bassett. Two mayors and tlie city commission as special guests a gain of 1722 members at one time and a talk on our heritage wgre tiighlighls of the ninth annual Golden Gavel dinner of the Pontiac Federation of Women’s (Jubs Monday evening. She said the historical society is anxious to have more children come to visit and to see and feel tangible evidences of the "good old days.” They will appreciate their heritage and the present more by doing .so. Mrs. Saks announced that the Federation will sponsor an international market some time in November. A special guest at Monday’s meeting was Ethel Kogima who is attending Pontiac Business In.stitute as a scholarship s Indent of the Town Hall group. A full-blooded Indian (Ottawa and Chippewa), Mi.ss Kogima comes from Petoskey. She is editor of thtf school paper at PBI. Town Hall has also c o n tributed to the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra, the Lita 0. Kern scholarship at Oakland University, St. Joseph Mercy Hospital School of Nursing, Pontiac General Hospital and the Citizens Committee on Youth of the City of Pontiac. STARTS IN OCTOBER The 196.5-66 program of Town Hall will start Oct. 13 with Dwight Cooke, foreign correspondent, author, news analyst and commentator. Mayor-for-a-day, Edward A. Schimke of the Village of Pentwater, Pontiac Mayor, William H. Taylor Jr., plus their wives and the city commissioners’ wives, swelled the guest list at the dinner in Kingsley Inn. About 225 were prc.sent. NEW CLUBS Six new clubs were welcomed, raising the membership list to over 4,000 women. Newcomers are Womens’ Division, United Fund; General Motors Girls’ Club; St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Auxiliary; Land-D-Oaks chapter, American Business Women’s Association; St. Maria’s So-city of St. George Rumanian Church and Pontiac-Oakland Town Hall, Inc. Golden gavel awards for the best attendance went to Omega Mu Sigma sorority and the Pontiac League of Women Voters. Mrs. Paul Gorman installed the officers for 1965-66. Mrs. David Saks who was chairman of the dinner is the president. OFFICERS She will be assisted by vice presidents, Lillian Davidson, Mrs. Robert Bego and Mrs. William Dean. Secretaries are Mrs. Milton Hathaway and Mrs. Paul Spadafore; treasurer, Mrs. Adrian Ish. UF to Have Training for Visitors The Friendly Visitor committee of the Pontiac Area United Fund Women’s division, offers a combined orientation and refresher program Wednesday at 10 a.m. in the Community Services Building. “There are currently some 40 men and women visiting lonely elderly people in the area through this program,” says Mrs. John Bills, chair- Mrs. Gorman is parliamentarian with Mrs. Joseph J. Panter, parliamentarian em- eritus. Mrs. Raymond Peterson is auditor. Others to appear are Willie Snow Ethridge, Bob Wright, Vincent Price and Ulick O’Connor. Tickets may be purchased from Mrs. Andrew Gulacsik, Mohawk Road, who is ticket chairman; or by mail from Pontiac-Oakland Town Hall, 830-840 Riker Bldg., Pontiac.” Mrs. Donald E. Adams, state chairman of Heritage Day for Michigan Week and president of the Oakland County Pioneer and Historical Society, told the audience they have a right to be proud of their state. She lauded the 14 ethnic displays, saying that we mustn’t lose our individual characteristics in the mob. It is important, Mrs. Adams said, to keep in mind what America stands for, what the early settlers came here for and what later immigrants have contributed. These are the things we must pass on to our children. She paid tribute to the women’s groups that have helped restore the Moses Wisner home on Oakllhd Avertue.and who contribute time and money to ifs upkeep. HOME OPEN The home will be open all this week, Mrs. Adams an- Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Charles Barrett, Mrs. Fritzi Stoddard, Mrs. NEED GREAT “Many lonely people are waiting for a friendly chat to ease the drab hours of advanced years, and anyone interested in becoming a visitor should attend Wendesday’s meeting.” Mrs. Hill Installed as President At the Monday luncheon meeting of the Pontiac Woman’s Club, Mrs. Lee Hill, new president, received the gavel from Mrs. Herbert Learned. A slate of new officers was presented at this time. Elected were Mrs. Turris McCully, first vice president; Mrs. W. E. C. Huthwaite, second vice president; Mrs. H. F. Simihons, Mrs. Frank Sparks, and Mrs, Grace Steeves, secretaries; and Mrs. Earle Haskins, treasurer. Rev. Theodore R. Allebach, pastor of the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church, will present the film “This Is My Friend.” Members of the advisory board will perform a skit emphasizing the right and wrong approach to visiting. Mary Pauli, advisory board chairman and executive director, Pontiac Visiting Nurse Association, will be the moderator. Appearing in the cast will be Mrs. Bills, Mrs. Jacob L. VanWagoner and Mrs. Alice Stone, nursing home coordinator, Oakland County Health Department. ★ ★ selected include Mrs. William Coulacps, chairman, Mrs. James, R. Fleming, Mrs. Anna Gibbs arid) Mrs. Evelyn Viemba. They Will Afbpear at the Gonvention. At a meeting Sunday, delegates of Oakland County No. 49, Veterans of World War I Auxiliary were named to attend the state convention in Sault Ste. M.arie. Mrs. Ayers Miller, MrS. Leo Mineweaser, Mrs. Guy Poppy and Mrs. Otto Zander will go. • Others were Mrs. H. N. Watson, Mrs. Florence May White Mrs. Fred Gottschalk', Mrs. C. W. M 0 s s e y, and Mrsi Joseph J. Panter. Miss Stiller Given Shower Alternates include Mrs. Lor-eW Beach, Mrs. William Carls, Mrs. Emmett Murphy and Mrs. Alan Hersee. Other members attendirig will be Mrs. Harold Schin-geck, Mrs. George Ault and Mrs. John 0. Cries. Mrs. Hill was named as delegate to the state convention along with alternate, Mrs. McCully. SUMMER PARTY Projects chairman, Mr s. Haskins, announced party scheduled for July Id at 7:30 p.m. in the First Federal Savings of Oakland building. Proceeds will benefit “Girls Town” at Belleville. A picnic on June 12 will "con-vene at 12:30 p.mrin the Adah Shelly Library. Mary Bernadine Stiller of Valencia Drive was hpnored at a recent bridal shower in the home of Mrs. Bert Stuart ,, on Stout Street. She is the daughter of the Lawrence Stillers and will wed Roger Terry Hopewell, son of the John Hopewells of Cooley Lake Road, on June 19. Among some 24 guests were mothers of the honoree and her fiance, also Mrs. Bainey. Odoerfer, Mrs. Robert Stuart « and Helen Lark, all of Royal TWKLVifi JHeunt -SMAKT CIRV Plain or Micro with nude hecii and demi'tori. OfiiitAi, 44^, 2 pain 85c Ar all Naumodm Haxipry 5>hnpf 82 N. Saginaw St. f iiF. i*oN'nA<: riiiftss. tiiksday, M/,Vv ih, m\n Yarn Trim for Sweater l‘or itin lovcIIONl nwouIi'i of Uio yoiii', Ih'KIii with n wlilto Jnckot-lyiM'! aw««f«^. If yoii'ro not II knittor, you niny bi'Kin with a purchased sweater. Take four long strands of mohair yarn in three of your favorite i-olors mid hiatd Iheiii together very loosely ('I’hey will lie iiImiuI I''ll Inehes wide when hraided Moot Friends tor BREAKFAST and LUNCH Always Good Coffee RIKER FOUNTAIN Hiker Bids. Lobby Turk this hi aid lightly to the ouliT (slges and nei'k edge (i| your .Mwealer and you’ll tind tlial this one .vWimfer eali cooidinale with your entire simiinei wardrohe Alaml ;i million color TV .sets were in use Iasi year 'I’lie total is expected to increa.se to S million In the end of l!Hir> Dont Thnnv It (iifn REBUILD ITi TODAY! i Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Mir hr I of Linn an noiinrc Ihr rnga^ienirnl oj their dauf/hter, Jndji Mail to David (> Stetler, son (>l the ('ml .Sirtlers of Milford. Her fianre attended the llniversity of Michman. Mrs. ^proull Honored for Service Mrs, Wllllain C. Hpriaill of North Adiitns Itoad, Itirrnlng hum, was honored at a “Woni-eii Who Cure" hrunch at Uu!i Stntler-I niton Hotel today in recognition of her 24 years of volunteer service for the Oakland County Chapter of the American Ueijl Cross. Mrs. Sproiill wad chosen one of this year's top five women volunteers In the Melro|Milltan Detroit area hy a (lanel of judges of* the Women’s Advertising Cliih of IMrolt. During most of her 24 years In volunteer service, she has tieeii chairman of Hospital Voluiileers of the American ItiYl Cross who, until a recent change in namL*, were callwl Cray Ladies. ItllltlNti WAR Mrs. Siiroiill entered Iteil Cross service in Detroit in 11)41 when she tisik her Gray p»tli will railor* n»w comfort, Oiiolily tnlo your pr*i«ttl mo(-lr»«i Of boK tpring . . . comporo bolot* you buyl (iiiarafitred in II ritin/r 7 1c OXFORD MAHRESS CO. 497 North Perry St., Pontiac FE 2-1711 | SERVING THE PONTIAC AREA OVER 41 YEARS i The MORTAR CORNER "Dallnr f iihir — 1‘Iiih” In on omargancy, lha volua of mad-icina con hardly ba rackonad in dol-ktri. AAadicIna It pricalaii whan naadad. Whan you purchata o pra-•criplion, you ara sharing in lha fruits of sciantific rasaarch. You ara gatting today's bast boy. LET US FILL YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION ’/'barnTv- Plazp Pharmocy Jerry A Joanne Dunimore, RPH 3554 Pontiac Lk. Rd., Pontiac, Mich. Phone 873-1267 :! I U„„r» ,1 Ihty .Sert icn FREE DELIVERY Planned Parenthood Unit to Meet at Luncheon A noon luncheon mid hoiird meeting will Im' jdlended l»y members of llie Planned Paii enlho(Kl League of Wayne and Oakland Coiirdies al the llltHimfield Oiren lluni (.Till) on Wednesdiiy, erny, Mrs, Robert McLean, and Mrs. William Bullock. Others will include, Mrs. Leroy Bornhauser, Mrs, Merrill B.iles, Mrs liilbert Delawler, Mrs Roltert Brown and Cred Mnllendei II. Robert II. Kan/.lcr, chair-mjin, will give the most recent figures oti Hie league’s fundraising campiiign now underway. lie will speak about tlie pro po.sed clinics being establlslied for the indigent Kx[H'cted to altoiul from this area are Mrs. Samuel Lang, Mrs. Norman Weston, Mrs. Homer Sale, Mrs. William WofKlside, Mrs. Arthur K. Moore, Mrs. Fraser Pom- Didn't Get Her License Sorority Has Meeting to Moke Plans Mrs. Ciirl L. (Foster of Birmingham entertained m c in-bers of Omega Mu Sigma so-ority at a recent meeting. She was assisted by I.ola Strom. Plans in the near future for this grou|) include the annual Breakfast on .June fi at Pine Lake (.’oimtry Club and a hus-b.and and wife picnic on July 10 at the Troy home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rranstner. New Fabrics to Dress Your Furniture! Only at Elliott's will you find tlieh.seloction of fabrics to give your furniture ll\e exoct look tliol you desire. Hundreds of tlie latest modern moterinls, nylons, friezes, plastic, leathers, tweeds, metollics, all in the complete color range of the rainbow. Fiiniiliirtr und Oriulity Cur|icliri|' Since 1024” WYOMING, Mich. liD-Mrs. Rosena Kremers, 56, was taking her driver’s lest, with George Isler as the testing of-{ ficial. She put the car in drive instead of rever.se, jumped a concrete bumper and rammed a police station. Damage was slight. Mrs. Kremer’s learner’s permit was renewed for two months. 5390-5400 DIXIE HWY. OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 OR 3-1225 EASY BUDGET TERMS Wrap Eggs in Foil To safely boil a cracked egg, wrap it in aluminum foil. HEARING AIDS NERVE DEAFNBS Behind the Ear or in Glasses! Designed for FOR PEOPLE THAT HEAR buf DO NOT UNDERSTAND Special Close-Out of 7964 Model Aids REGULAR ^369 at V2 REDUCTION Sale Ends Friday, May 21 *90-Doy exchange privilege *5-yeor replacement warranty *Audiometic Test •k BETTER HEARING SERVICE A 103 N. Saginaw St.; Pontiac FE 2-0292 Art Students Exhibit Oils Members of the Zoner Studio of Art will exhibit to the public some .300 oil paintings, Sunday, from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m., in the Westacres Clubhouse. Mrs. John Oslin, chairman of the show which will include landscapes, seascapes, portraits, flowers and animals, is assisted by fellow-artists from Pontiac, Detroit, Rochester, Brighton, Farmington, Novi, Wixom, Walled Lake, Union Lake, Milford aVid Commerce. On Saturday evening, Mrs. John Zoner will receive her students at a previewing. About 300 are expected at the reception. Richard Is Here Mr. and Mrs. John R. Main of St. Clair Shores announce the birth of a son, Richard John on May 13. The John S. Mains of South Pemberton Road, are the paternal grandparents. EXCELLENT SALARIES AND OPPORTUNITY FOR ADVANCEMENT IN ACCOUNTING One of die jiircsl roiilcs to a Miccessfiil liiisiiie'!i!! earepr in die broad av of Aeeoiiiiliiin. As a modern acroiiiilaiil sou will file an executive ii of the liesi paid fields. Y ou «ill enjoy inlerestin;: work, witli seeiiril; opporliiiiily yours. BI offers IVofcssion iL'Iiide fitiaiieial, adiii , liiplier iiid .liiiiior Ai'ioiinliii)' ei lid iieileral business snbjer PBI itradiiales in iiccoiinliii)! are corporation officers, partners and pro. prietors in every field of business, and in every type of profession. SUMMER TERM STARTS JUNE 14 (Day School —Evening Division) For complete information, write, call, or visit • FEtleral 3-T028 Breakfast chairman, Mrs. Branstner, will be assisted by Mrs. Coster, Mrs. Patrick Cullen and Mrs Kuga Kojima. Planning the picnic with the hostess are Mrs. Ray Peterson, Mrs. Russell Giratavson and Mrs. Merritt A. Snyder. I.ally training for aervice In Gi'iictt Hoitpllal In 1942 ah« h«d|HKl organl/.e and train the first class of American Red Crass hospital volunteers In'Oakland County to serve in Pontiac General Hospital. He/ activities later broad eneened the door and showed him Into the living niorn and told him I would he ready shortly. .She then left. I thought she was very rude. I Lliought she should have sat and talked with him until I was ready. May I please have your opinion’' A: Unless your sister was in the midst of doing something which slie could not leave, it as not very polite h) leave him alone and slie stiould have gone in and sat and talked with him until you were ready. SCHOOL DANCE Q: When a girl invites a 4)oy to her school [irom, is she expected to pay all the expenses, such as transportation, rcfresliments, etc., in addition to paying for Uie tickets? A: She pays for the tickets and he provides for the transportation and pays for any refreslirnenls he may invite lier to have afli'Ctlie dance. Q: My wife and I live in a large apartment building. - Wlien guests leave, do we say goixlbye at our door, or dot's courtesy exact that I walk to the elevator with them? A: You should see them into the elevator. The Emily Post Institute offers readers booklets on a variety of subjects concerning etiquette. v SCISSORS NAIRCUTTMO Spring Specialtl Pormanant Wavit Mon.-TuM.-Wtd. Req, $'22,50 |li R«q, $17.50 its Req. $15.00 $12,50 I cJOrtiitvw Ltd y biauty shop Rlktr Bldg.. 15 w. Huron FI S-7IB6 Planning a July 30 wedding are Loretta Mary St. Pierre, (laugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Raymond St. Pierre of East Walled Lake Drive, Commerce Township, and Robert Lee Carter, son of the William A. Carters of Gladys Street, Commerce Township, He attended Flint Junior College. In Iho Draylon-Wnttrloril Aren Call 673-5825 or 674-1533 FOR FAST, GUARANTEED TV SERVICE Hampton Electric Co. Bake Sale and Party to Help Raise Funds Qiuilily Traininir hy Lope/ Sl4TllIlli I^Qiiily Scliool Wulluii lllvd. Ill Olxin iiwy. Drayton Plains OR 3-0222 M e m I) e r s of the Italian American Club (lAC) have mode a pledge to the Pontiac Central (^alholie High School Fund. To help raise this money, the g r 0 u p has scheduled a lunelu'on card party and hake sale on Wednesday in the club hall. Chairmen include Mrs. Albert DeSantis and Mrs. Robert Gaines, Mrs. Frank Amnn-tea and Mrs. John Grego and Mrs. Joseph Spadafore, \s m\ II \ IH STYnSTS ---SIYUSTS------- • \lurilyn Di-«‘)«t • Itiiiidy Wi'tsl Call D«2-9«6« .i.ir.o ) Pliont 332-0500 ^ Good Cleaning Aid Visi’l The HEARINfJ CENTER in the MAIiL • TESTS • AIDS •BATTERIES (in with Pontiac Mall Optical Center) Open Evenings til t:30 dMIIl Thos. B. Appleton, Consultant Pontiac Press Photo Mrs. Richard Jorgensen (left), Sylvan Lake and Mrs. Clyle Haskill, Woodbine Stfeet, pack the car before setting off for the Jaycee State convention in Grand Rapids this past weekend. They took along blouses the local Jaycee Auxiliary sells to raise money for its Junior Miss scholarship fund. Mrs. Jorgensen whose husband is executive di- . rector of the state J uni or MiSs pageant accompanies the state winner on her travels. Because Patrice Gaunder, the Michigan Junior Miss became America’s Junior Miss in March, Mrs. Jorgensen’s duties will be assumed by a national chaperone this year. She was with Patrice in Grand Rapids WALLPAPER Over 2500 Patterns in Stock CLOSE OUT SPECIALS Birge Prepasted . . 39e and up Imperial Fabric .... 79c s. r. Varlar StainprooE . $1.59 t. r. Birge Flocks .......$2^8 t. r. ACME FAINT 3 N. Saginaijv Cor. Pike FE 2-3308 Open Fri. 'til 9 Parents! !s Your Child Taking Band Next Term? A TRUMPET, CORNET, TROMBONE. CLARINET or FLUTE ' Rent for as long as you wish! Unlimited return privilege! If you buy, a!! rental payments apply! Conn, Olds and other fine makes!* WHY BUY UNTIL YOU’ARE SUREf Call Grihnell's ScFiool Music Representative: Mr. Jim Burrows at Grin-nell’s Pontiac Mall. 682-0422. Open Nitely 'til 9 p.m. riiK rx)N Carpet Care Books Ready Two now rurpol niro mfd iimlntonniH-o biH^klolN iiro Hvnllublt) from ChoinHlriind "How to Caro for Your Car lud Made With Acrllan," and "How to Care for Your f;ur’ pel of Cumuloft Pile." Doth b(M)kleta deal wllh general maintenance, dally care and . einorgeney apol rtMnoval Cariwting la' one of ibe hotne’H moat Imporlanl fur nlNhitign . . and one of the largeat InveatmentN. C(khI a(;nae In «-are and inalnlen iince will prolong carpel life and keep It new looking for yeara lo come CopicH are available from Carpet Care Deparlmcnl, Clieinsinind Company, :il>0 I'lfth Avenue, New York, New York lOIMII. A Mild AsIringenI to Condition Skin UnlcH.s ,skln Is unusually oily, a mild astringent Is effective as skin conditioner and Ionic before applying makeup. Cood fpialily wilcli luizel makes on ideal ndid astringent because it is pure herbal extract. If contains no chemicals and l.s safe even for so-r ailed problem skin. ItiinfpUtm in flic Oa/r/mid CoUnf)/ SjHirlnntuii'H Cluh /of ' Idiiml Ihd riu diil voivu of lUn burn Kllen I'airmll am/ /tanlel tV/l/tmn (.'/imnl)crlani m f/ie /)nif//oa ritiiiis Coiled tnliiii Church. IhiirnlH arc Ihc ^■^rc))li(/uc enhanced Ihe bride‘.s nhealh i/own 0/ deluntered white mlin with court train. Attendanln were the Michael Cowella, the Kciwff Morgans, the Harold TifwllH, the Robert OlHabecks, Karen Morgan, lUane Hoberl.'i, Hernadelle and llelh (biaoi herlain and Sherri Olmheck: David and Hanifg C/iarnber lain. Hoy Harris, Rob Living slon ami Mark Morgan. Rev. Wdffcr ,/. Tccmamen Jr. per formed the candlelight rite. Zonta Club to Have Tea The Zonta (?lub of Ponjiac I Is making plans for a benefit lea on June (I. The country 1 home of Dr. Sarah Van lloos | en Jones and Miss Alice Ser- j rell on Homeo Hoad will be j oi)ened during the iifteri Helen Travis, are chairman and iissisliint of Ihe committee working on arrangemenis. * A A !'’unds from Ihe lea will be given lo Ihe YWCA building fund, as pari of Zonia': ti|M:iii'U uiiiiii^ III!' Mwmi. | iiiiiu> nT\ p«ii i < Mrs, Neal Scolt and Mi.ss s pledge lo lhal fund New Duties for These Members Mrs. William McMlIlln will be installed as new president of Ihe Woman's Society of Christian Service (WSCS) of T I I n 11 y Methodist Cliurcli, Thursday, In Maurice's Caler-log Hall Also Inking office will be Mrs Alger Chumlans, vice president; Mrs. Marl Camp iadl, IreaHufer; Mrs. J a m e s Malteson, secrelary; Mrs. Stewerl Tunier and Mrs. Not Commillee hnid.s Include Mrs Kuga Kojima, Mrs. (Jiarles Thomas, Mrs. Homer Feneley, Mrs. Itoss l.amb, Mrs Jame.s llaslock, and Mrs. Charles Tuson Ollier chairmen are Mrs Sldrley McClenahen, Mrs. William Mert-er, Mrs. William Newhall, Mrs Arthur Burleson and Mrs. II T, Amos, A A A liev John Hayes of St Mi clwiers Catholic Church will tie guesl spciiker and Ihe Rev Ronald Thompson, pastor at Trinity, will conduci Ihe inslal lation. Mrs. Amos is general chairman of Ihe ban()uet. Hooded Parkas High for Spring Dniined hoodt'd parkas in bleeding atfd non - bleeding madras rale high on ihe boy's wear froni for spring, The zipper modtd predominates. AAA Second on liie list: a pop-over kangaroo pockel model THIHTKKiN Enjoy thti Hmpitality ^ of I ho laltUcm I nmans I'or Our I' iiii' Ituflvl ', lliTaklasI • Liiiidi • iliiiiirr *' •tlso .tin O.nrir Meini Srrrirc I ’ U I'll II rillN .\l'll 1: I nil ,|\ iiii'iiil'm’f .iwiinmiivvr • llWpt I Is* Ml I I IM.M • III t in lO.NS Sy ( orio r „i r,!.,- „n,i r< > , y :tir,hU,7 /** Wigimii' at. lulerlorlmi . . . ’ lurallt.es aUnided. the dHlIi. HDittun (>1 the Mirhii/an Fedei I oj Music ('luf)s over the week-In I rout IS Mrs. V,eorjjk I*ut-, Sylvan Lake. Standing are, left, Mrs. Victor Lind-, Ottawa Drive; Mrs. Kalph L. ('iirtis, O.rlord. past president of Ihc l''edcratinii. ahd Mrs IV .d SchnnI . West Keniiett Hoad. Mrs. t,nid.l„l,m,lfln,„ • JUICE PITCHER . . 4.00 • JUICE GLASS . 60c ► 14 01. TUMBLER 85c • PLATE ..... 1.75 CLASSIC GOLD 3.75 / IF" 3.00 (colors slighlly more) MUSETTE BY LENOX ■ A mist-green garlond, occenled with, gray ond burgundy flowers in raised enamel. Platinum outlines the fluted edge. . See our entire collection of Lenox China. 5 PC. PLACE SEHING 26’- ■ DOWNTOWN PONTIAC . 24 WEST HURON ST. OPEN-MONDAY & FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ' " fE 4-1234 BRASS CANDELABRAS 3 to 8 inches high-r made to hold one candle. Many'to choose from. Priced in pairs .oL $6.95, $10 and $15 N The "Fireman Swimsuit by $24 The niidciy silhouelle o( double knit llelencd, (eotured by ti button Iriin. Certain to be a beach charmer. Sizes 8 to 16. BLOOMFIELD HILLS 4080 Telegraph Rood eft Long Lake R' Open Mon., Thurs. ond.Tri. 'lil 9 Her Sleeveless ^ Dress ^23 One-piece Mcitelasse. double' brecisfed coat; dress. Rhinestone button, sleeveless, notched - lapel collar. White or black. 5 to 15. SUMMERETTES -Qqy Timers Slim, trim far hours of sun-filled fun. Shqdow fanes ta flatter yaur every castume ... on the beach, at home o'r away. *3 99 Sizes 4 to TO, N and M widths. Choose from White, . Black, Mori-gojcl Orange, HURON at T^LEiSRAPH J •KOIJRTKEK U.S. Army Team Sets Up 'LBJ Ranch' IIK, l‘()N'nAC fMESH, 'I’llKSDAV, MAY IH. HMJ.'V Hv IIAI. IIOYLI^: (;IA VUC. Soulli VIH Nnin (AI’l As you liind on llio Ntnall runwHV in n plane lhal contains nalive soldiers, some chlekens and ducks, live squeal HIM Pik- «f><* il'i''''' Jiniall .sleers, llii- liisl lltlUM you sec Is a siMO MIS HIM • Tlic lJU Hi.ncl! " Hull slpn li llic VMi\ a I S Aiinv Spccuil I'01 ll is lypicid ot many Special squaii I'oiees liaslloiis liuoiiMlund Soulli Viel Nam w|iich seek |o proleci villiiMers Irom Ihe Viel ConM : miles lhal learn Iuin America Is larMi' wlilch 3,(HKI MonlaMiiards, or inounlain Iribespeople, lill Iheir larma and dwell In a dozen closely R"oupivl hamlels of llmiclied huts. The Rroup of a dozen IN A VAU.I'.V , Americans is led by f'api Wil Ida Via lies in a valley Imi iiam A lliiks ol l.indcii, N<‘ (Icrcil liy 1 UMMcil and lovely hills I A * a n:i miles soulh •.oiilhweal o| Da II i» his job lo work closely ■ I.IU liaim illei liyhi I Ihe coiiMli y'ii mccoikI with a Hlrike lorce of :i7!i nalive clU It rs asirlde Ihe li'oops who make up a mlnialure lie Chi Miiih Hall, Ihe Cnlle<| Nalioiis IhemHelves, hiel iioilh and ,soulh palhway I'hcy con.-iisl of Ihe hillbilly 01 mlllliiiloi', MonlaMiiards and Vielnamese The 'Tmirh"' covei-. soiiie Ml and ',T> Nuii|.;s, who are Chinese mercenary soldier'. Under I licks, no American here ba.s been killed, bul a iium Ik'i of Viel (Tiiir have Jacoby on Bridge ‘‘We run conlinuouH hral patrols. Air strikes have been a real help lo us in these hills," Hicks said Z COMI'ANIKS "We e.sllmale lhal Ihere are I wo companleii ol enemy in the area, and we leel lhal our presence here has lon'ed Ihem lo deloiir a lol of Ihe infillralors iisinR Ihe Ihi Chi Mlnh Hall" These US Army Special l''orces teams work alniosl a.s bard lielpinR Ihe villiiMeiM as in IlMblinR Ihe enemy Sy;! Chuck liarllcy o| l''ayellevllle, N(', senior mysileal advisi-r, lia.s sel u|) a clinic When vihlled hi-. NORTH A K 7 4 V K 0 R ti S(M Til (D) 4QJ0 ¥ A gj 10 4 7 opemllp, Wcsl i|Ullc when ir bidding and H\ .lACOHV AND SON As Kdsar Kaplan points out in Compelilive IfiddinR In .Modern Hridgc" the main pur- makes Ihe 1)1(1 Ix'cause he may go (Imui lour Iricks il he rcIs (loiihled Kill no one can double him Hus lime and lib. pariner has enuu),;h slreiiMlh to make Ihree diamonds il he idoyu i'l ' Kvcii II Wesi goes down one he has bon ors lo comiM'iisale. If North tries a three heart hid over three diamonds South won't know how much he has pushed and will almost sundy continue to lour hearts. Or it North passes. South mav compete to three hearts whereupon North may raise to four. $ttl V MONIII The Nimgs gel roughly $10 a ' mi.mlh each, jiald lor hv Uncle Sam Thai is almiit three times vvhal Ihe oilier nalive Iroops earn Itiil lliey win high praise Irom Ihe American,s here ■’Thev are real good Iroops alxiul Ihe best you could ask solllv Irom Ihe pain (d a bullel lot , " said I'l Charle.s A Carroll hole in her calf .Ir , of Ihdmar, N Y Sgl. Dorn "As no bone was broken I can imek Tanfalo ol Waterloo, NY, lake care of il here," said Harl-added ' Il we run inlo an.v real ley "'nie.se people liaven'l had Iroiihle, Ihe HrsI Ihoiighl of Ihe iiuu h done for l|a‘ni in Iheir Nuiigs is lo cover Ihe AmeiT lives They appreciate any ludp cans" von give Ihem ' Ily .lim Herrv ak (I e p r i V e your o p p 0 s i I ion of V a 111 a hie bid-ding space. Sometimes Ibis lactic winds up badly whmi you get (l(ml.)le(J: on ()l.he Kllher wav Ihc |ump over all has made il mighty hard or North and Soulh lo gel lo one good conlrac l. South U>Nl .IA(‘OHY asions Ihe opponents go on lo their normal successful contract, but once in a while Ihe hid upsets Iheir lines of communication and gets them inlo the wrong contract. If West passes or bids two diamonds over South’s one heart opening, North will raise to two hearts. If West had bid two diamonds, h'^ast will probably gel into the act and bid three clubs. In either case Soulh is likely to try a Ihree heart hid and will play the hand at that contract. AK (J..I 2 VA 10 4 ♦.! 2 A —- I’aiwi. Your partnrr has made l«o bids but nrithrr has shown any rrni slrrnelh and your hand is rlosr to a mlni- TOHAY S giTTSTION In.stcad of bifidmg two .spades your pariner bid.s two hearts over your one .spade. What do Answ'er Tonsorrow e 1965 by NtA. Ik. "Lislen, (Tiarlie, just becau.se you've been kickin' us tourists around, don't think you can gel awav with il withl-M.I!" IlOAKDINf; HOI Sl<: There is no problem to the play at three hearts. South has to lose four tricks and there is no way for him to do any better or worse. He collects 140 below the line and 100 poipts for honors. , Now let’s see what happens if West bids three diamonds ■ ,T}- * "}• ' Astrological ♦ . * *\ Forecast If . By Charles Kuhn jniK PONTIAC PUiK.SS. 'niP.HOAY.MAV (H, \um FIPTKKN I>0|il|l0’l POrUlAR THIATin iMitirlAwNtmiMti II k.M.lt II ki«. EAGLE MOW SHOWINQl SOPHIA LOREN Sira m NEC GHS jAMtiiMASoiTrjiirjopieniiMMiiR S[ANC0NNERr.voo7^| .IMIUMMTS “GOLOFINGER’' mCOLM M UMTEO ARTIIIII /’ir.s ■coLUMBii ncTonrs IHUKEEGO TlllE ROUNDERS TOPKAPI Ml COLOR starts WEDNESDAY JAMES BOND IS BACK INACTION! S(UIOIIEIfA. ' f THF. rONTIAC 1*HKHS. TUKSDAY, MAY 'Le Grand Charles' Throws Weight Around U.S. Busy Defending Policies From French Attack Ily PHIL NEWSOM DPI Eorelgn News Analyst For most of the last week, the United States has been defend tii|{ |M>|l('leN whidi (he adinlni Stratton of I‘resident Lyndon II JohiiNon fe< with affairs far outside the sphere of Freiidi Influeiiee, the de (faulle iroveriiineiit hud let It 0" 1 J ^^tS^WATtS WCMMR Mar. ^ CONSUMERS POWER CO. y 28 W. Lawrence m Appll«m» Onpurtmtnt y Oawnlown Slora 0|mh. roil.y m tvanlng Unlll f y . Phona )JJ 7iU Discover Trjbe in New Guinea lie known thiit “France disapproved and wants the withdrawal of troops who hav« landed In Hanto noitiingo,’’ Aualnsl this, the French Pres tdent Inid .lohnson's own sum malion of the II ,S. position in the Dominican lt(‘publlc It was; 'A * * ^ . the people of that conn try must be permitted to frerdy choo.H(' the path of |)olltlcal d(« mocracy, social Justice and eeo manic progress ... we Intend to carry on the struKKh' against tyranny, no matt(‘r in what Ide olony It cloaks' it.self,” AtiAINST U.S. POSITION Ap;amsl the Aima li'an poNilton snppialed by most U S. NATO allies, lind c.scjdjition ol tlie war in Viet Niun is morally, politically and militarily justified, was the already well ^ n o w n French defniittd for Vietnamese neutrality and withdrawal of foreign forces, specifically the United States. lAo taNiille already had un-derlinnl his op|H>Slllon to D.S. Iiivolvinenf In Viet N«(n by a V I r I u 0 I withdrawal from SEATtr, the fkmtheMNt AnIo 1‘reaty Organization which among other things guaranteed the integrity of South VIel Nnm. The.se were not the only areas in whh'h “lai (irmul Charles" was throwing his weight around ll(' had vel(H‘d a move sup |)oiled by France’s partners in the F.nropean Common Market lo ti‘iit‘w eX|)lorations toward Kompean |M>llllcal unity. APPALLED W. (iEilMANS lie hud appalled West German sup|)orters by the fanfare with which he had entertained Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and G e r m a n apprehensions were heightened when Gromyko Implied that Fraiu^e accepted the existence of two Germnnys. A lukewarm French denial did little lo quell German fears. Nor did the Germans take any more kindly to a Gaullist suggestion that the reuidfhratlon of Germany should he left |>rlinar Ily to a Euro|M'an solution, with l'’ranc<)() New Guinea people has been discovered in a remote corner of New Guinea's; .Sepik District. The tribe was ' sighted from a helicopter by James Wcarnc, as.sistanl district officer. A report to administration j headquarters from WjirnC said large villages were built on mountainsides in the Ml. Stoll | area .tO miles north of the gov- j ernment patrol post at Telefom ! ml par ). Insis DcWilt's Over 1 r/s inillron OeWitt's Pills are »old by (Iruggists day aflcr day after (lay, the world over-a tribute lo their amu/ing action! Complete Repair Service Mimeograph and Duplicating Machines New and R*condltion«d AAachinvi CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 (Atlvertlsement) PRIVATE to Women Thouaanda,of women find speedy re-Uef frbm the phyileal distress of Irregular. acanty. or painful menses due to functional dleordere by taking KUMPHRBY8 ‘ U"-a gentle, nr monal, homeopathic remedy, at an drug stores. No prescription needed. ^ BUY, SELL, TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. In Port Moresby, the acting director of district administration, T Aieheson, said the gov-crnrticnt had been aware there were some people living in the Ml. Stoll area,,but had no idea they were in such numbers. Patrols often skirted the area, fit said, but never had been able to penetrate and make contact. Aieheson said a patrol would be .sent as soon as possible to contacY the tribe. He said he expected\the people would be* similar to T;^lefomin tribes people. Telefomin menxare infamous for savagery. Th^ have attacked several goyernrwMt«l One-year warranty for repair of tiny defect without charge, plus four-year Protection Non for furnishing replacement for any defective po,rt iii the transmission drive motor, ’ or large capacity water pump. **where quality i» priced right'' CIAYTOl^’S Fri. I - Tuas., Watf. and Thurs. til 6 - Sat. ’til 5:311 P.M. Zm ORCHARD LAKE ROAD PHONE: 333-7052 The largest yearly gain In | nonfarm payroll employment since 1959, 1,5 million, was re-! corded last year. • I lljjf Kwjoy A stereo and W NO MONEY DOWN AM/FM Radios . . . Stereo Phono . • . 23” Toloviilon Model DD 300W 2 $299.96 w/frade. Genuine veneers ond hardwbod iolidi. "The Greensboro" is a handsome Home EntertolmnenI Center of Contemporary design. The CM Special 32 chassis leafores new wide band and defec-- -..coif and Mf ampliiier lot fhe linesf distortion-free reception In both AM and fM The Slereo I'hono hoi the 4 speed Super CM Record Changer with sapphire stylus. Outstanding TV performance comes from the CM Custom 1 9 TV chassis with 23,000 volts of picture power, 3-stage IF and power transformer, Brilliant hi-fi sound comes from two fl" woofers and fwo 6" x 4" tweeters. SYLVAN STEREO & TV Sales Open Monday, Wednesday, Friday Evenings ’til 9 2363 Orchard Lk. Rd. (Sylvan Center) Phone 662-0199 \ Ashland vitalized Gasoline makes your engine come ALIVE! Dissolves harmful deposits... your engine runs clean! You feel the extra surge of power! Your car sluggish? No zi^ Carburetor and combustion chamber deposits have no doubt done their oirt, if you have been using ordinary gasoline. It’s easy to change all that!"feu can release all the hustle that’s hidden under your hood, by using As^nd A-Plus Super Gasoline or Ashland Regular—both are Vitalized witlMG-105. Vitalized gasoline cleans your carburetor and keeps it clean, re Wes combustion chamber deposits, increases horsepower. Just a touch oj^your toe—and you feel that extra surge of power! So get Vitalized Gasoline—Ashland A-Mus or Ashland Regular—and get up to 10% more miles per gallon! Available only at your Good Neighbor Ashland Oil Dealer . . Ahe friendly irmn with the better brand! ASHLAND OIL A REFININO COMPANY THE PONTIAC PRESS TIJKSUAY. MAY l»()NTlA(', MU IIKMN SKVWNTRBN ce American League, 10 Games Ahead of Yankees Chicago Gains in Race With Win Over A's New York Continues Floundering Ways in 9-2 Loss By The AfiRodated PresH A year ago today, the New York Yankees were 10 percentage points behind the Clilcago White iSox. Today, the Yankees are 10 gatYies behind. The White Sox are in llie same position they were in IWi'l first plac'e In the Ann^rlcan Leagtie. But tlie Yankwis are nowhere near the second s|)ot they held down at that time. They are in eighth place. , Chicago continued its torrid play by clobl)ering Kansas City i:i-2 Monday night for its eighth consecutive victory. The Yankees, on the other hand, continued along their floundering way, dropping a 0-2 dcoision to Balti-tnore. ITie pitchers for tlie Yanke<*8 and White Sox more or less typified the teams’ 1965 fortunes. FORI) ROUTED New York’s Whitey Ford lasted only four innings against tlie Orioles en route to his fourth straight defeat. At this time in 1964, the 36-year-old left-hander had started eight games, completing five for a 4-1 record and a 1.66 earned run average. Ford currently has completed only one of eight starts and owns a 2-5 mark with a 6.07 ERA. Gary Peters, however, is slightly ahead of his pace of a year ago after going the distance for the first time in seven starts. The victory againsi tlie Athletics brought his record to 4-2 and 3.60., In 1964, the 28-year-old southpaw had not completed a game in seven starts while posting a 3-2 mark and a 3.73 ERA. NEED TIME The Yankees wound up winning their fifth straight pennant last season, and it certainly is too early to say they won’t make it a sixth time this year. Ten percentage points, though, can be wiped out in one night. It takes a little longer to erase 10 games. In the only other AL game Monday night, Los Angeles edged , Minnesota 5-4 in 10 innings. [ Tigers Back Home Happy With Horton DKTHOIT (An Bursting willi pri(l(‘ ail<‘r a second con seciillve successful road trip, (lie Dididll Tigers open a lengthy home sland lonlglil^Wilh iiopes of atoning lor a so so r(‘e Old the last time tliey were In town. Washington, vlcllms of the Tigers’ surge and Willie Horton’s tliunderous hat In Ihe nation's eapllal Iasi we<^k, helps open lla^ home slay PLEASANT NIGHT’S WORK --- Baltimore Oriole .laekie Brandt slides past the straining tag of New York Yankee, catcher Doc Edwards for tlie first run In a 9-2 victory by the Orioles last night. Brandt was driven in by Boh Johnson, ex-lhdrolt 'I'iger farmliand 'I’lu' Iwo eomhined for seven of Baltimore’s 14 hits and six of (he nine runs. Jolinson liad four hits (including a douhli;), two runs liatted In and Iwo runs .scored. Hunk Aguirre and Phil Orte ga are llu' |irohal)le starting pilehers The Tigers' sliowtsl a lot of prortiise in llieir, first series i Tiger Stadium hul failed'mise ahly In the end of il and left (own willi a five game I o s si leak. Unlia|)pily the Tigers, llieir worst 'performances of (he year came hetore Ihe second largesi crowd of Ihe young sea-Thal happisusi when Ihey I Itoslon II game lost a douhleheade atler (aking Ihe first I' of tlie .series. .SOME CHANGES There liave heen' a few clianges .since tlie Tiger.s lust appeared hefore the lioiiie fans, Pllclier .hillo Navarro, first tiasniian Bill Itoman and ralch er Jolin Sullivan liiive depart (>d. They were optioned lo Syi i acii.se when all teams liad lo Irim their rostc'is lo 25 men. Dressen's Set to Watch Team Tiger Skipper Says He'll Return May 26 .loe Sparina has moved up as I lie No. 5 starting pitcher and Pliil Regan lias lieen returned to tlie hiillpen after losing t li r e e (lines as a starler Willie Morton has emerged tlie victor in the game of musical clialrs played In left field for the first three weeks of the season. Morton won out tlie only way lie knew how with his hat. ANOTHER MOVE Anollier cliange .soon to Im made will lie tlie return of Manager (Iiarlie Dre.s.sen lo full lime duties. Dressen, sidelined hy a minor heart attack during spring training, arrived in Detroit Monday and will act as an observer until he feels he’s ready to lake conunand. Boll .Swift, wlio continued his record a.s a winning Interim manager while at the helm, will return hi his coaching joh, The Tigers’ liorne stay will be interrupted liy a two-game series in Chicago next Monday and Tue.sday, Belinsky Wins First NL AP PhotoUx BIRD IN FLIGHT — Luis Aparicio, Baltimore Oriole shortstop, soars over the hard slide by New York Yankees’ Phil Linz during the seventh inning of last night’s game. Aparicio completed the double play with a throw to first to nip Doc Edwards who had grounded to pitcher Milt Pappas. Peters scattered eight hits in handing the Athletics their first loss after two triumphs under their new manager, Haywood Sullivan. Floyd Robinson, Pete Ward and Ken Berry led the White Sox 16-hit attack, each slamming a home run. RObinson and Berry also singled in a run apiece in the six-run seventh inning while Bill Skowrpn knocked in a pair with a single. Milt Pappas limited the Yankees to five hits, one. of them doe Pepitone’s two-run single in the first inning. Sports Calendar BaMball Milford «f Walled Lake Cranbrook at Farmlnoton ^ Birmingham Groves at North Farmlng- Llvonla Franklin »*.Wayne J^ohn Glenn Buena Vista at Saginaw fUthur Hill Detroit Thurston at Oak Park Wayne John Glwin at Birmingham ^tJorth Farmington at Oak Park Rochester at warren Cousino Pontiac Northern at Kettering West Bloomfield at Waterford Southfield at Bentley Clarkston at Rochester Norfhville at Walled’Lake Waterford at Pontiac Central l.lvonla Franklin at Wayne- John Gleni Anchor Bay at Richmond Bentley at Southfield Detroit Thurston at Oak Park PONTIAC RECREATION SOFTBALL 7 p.m,—Pontiac BEPSL vs At Northsldt 7 p.m.—Idle Time Bar vs. Francis Coal & Dll; t:3S^Pontiac Merchants vs. LAS Standard. WATERFORD tOWNSHIP SOFTBALL 7 p.m.—Dixie Bar vs. Lakeland Pharmacy; 8:3B—Bob & Larry's Bar vs. Day's Sanitary Service. Iowa Gridder Drowns Tire Problems Hit '500' Race Entries INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Tire experts and i;ace officials struggle today with problems of rubber and rules that might keep several already-qualified cars from starting the 500-mile race May 31. Cars that might be affected include the No. 1 Sheraton-Thompson Lotus-Ford, which defending.500-mile champion A. J. Foyt of Houston qualified Saturday at a . record 161.233 miles an hour. IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) ivory W. McDowell Jr., 21, a defensive starter for the Univer-, Sity of Iowa football team, drown^ Monday when he tired to swim across an inlet in Coral-ville Resa:voir, north of here. The trouble started Monday when the tires on Foyt’s car threw chunks of tread during an endurance run at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Rookie Billy Foster of Victoria, B.C., and Don Branson of Champaign, 111., had similar experiences. All were running, on Goodyear tires. Rules require that a car must run in the race on tires of the same make and specifications as those used Hi qualification. , Bill Neely, spokesman for Goodyear’s racing division, said, “If we can’t find the answer, we’ll have no choice but to ask that our tires be withdrawn from the race.’’ NO COMMENT The U.S. Auto Club had no immediate comment on the situation. Harlan Fengler, chief steward for the race, said, “We’ll have to take a closer look at the problem before we can make any' kind of a decision.’’ - Ei^t of the 21 cars already qualifi^ Jor the race ran on Goodyear tires. race, but they would have to find other cars and go through the qualification prdiceds again next weekend. Foyt was running on new tires with stiffer springs and a heavier load than he carried on his qualification run. By United Press International One really could not expect Bo Belinsky, one-time playboy of the Los Angeles Angels, to win his first game in the National League in the tranquility that marks most contests in tradition-bound baseball. One would suppose that a Belinsky victory for the Philadelphia Phillies would be heralded by something extraordinary, like a far attacking an umpire during a rhul^arb on the field. Xeague contest, Sandy Koufax struck out 13 Astros for the second time in succession and the Dodgers bested Houston 5-3 in 11 innings. No other teams were scheduled. Bone Pro-Am Winner at Tam O'Shartter CC Pontiac’s Gene Bone, Lancaster Hills pro and Merle Osborn, won the weekly pro-am tournament yesterday at Tam O’Shanter by firing a best ball 62. Bone and A1 Serra teamed for a 63, tying them for second with Walt Laskey and Dick Wibel, and Walt Burkemo and Tom Lowry. Bone and Tom Shannon of Orchard Lake took pro - pro honors, each firing best ball 64’s Tony Taylor’s second home run of the season in the top of eighth inning gave the Phils what proved to be the winning run in their 2-1 victory over the Cardinals Monday night. In the bottom of the eighth, Phil Gagliano led off with a pinch single. He advanced to second on a passed ball and scored on Lou Brock’s single. Curt Flood followed with a double and Brock was thrown out at the plate trying to score the tying run. The rhubarb started. Cardinal tliird base Coach Joe Schultz came roaring down the baseline to protest to plate umpire Shag Crawford. Manager Red Schoen-dienst dashed out of the dug-out to join the protest and wound up holding Schultz away from Crawford Schultz was ejected. Fans threw debris onto the field and one spectator left the grandstand and charged Crawford, who pushed him away. FAN EJECTED Stadium guanas escorted the unidentified fan from the ball park. Auggie Busch, owner of the stadium, did not press charges, his policy being merely to eject such fans. AMERICAN LBAOUB Won Lot! Pci. Bolilnil Chicago ......... JJ S .733 - Minnesota ....... 18 11 .471 3'/a Baltimora ...... 17 13 .547 5 Detroit ......... 14 13 .552 5'/i Los Angeles .. 17 15 .531 4 Cleveland ....... 13 13 .500 7 Boston 13 15 .444 8* New York 13 18 .400 10 Weshlnglon ...... 12 19 .387 lO'/V Kanses City ..... 7 22 .241 14Vi Mondty'i Ratullt Baltimore 9, New York 2 Chicago 13, Kansas City 2 Los Angeles 5, Minnesota 4, 10 Innings Only games Scheduled. Today's Games Minnesota (Kaal 3-2) at Los Angeles (Lopez 4-3), night Chicego (Horlen 3-3) at Kansas City (Pena 0-5 or O'Donoghue 1-5), night Washington (Ortega -3-4) at Detroit (Aguirre 4-0), night Baltimore (Robert* 4-2) at Cleveland (Kralick 0-2), night Boston (Morehead 2-3) at New Yprk (Stafford 1-1), night Widnotday'* Oamo* Baltimore at Cleveland, night Washington at Detroit, night Chicago at Kansas City, night Boston at New York, twilight Minnesota at Los Angeles, 2, fwl-night NAT'ONAL LEAGUE Won Lost Pet. Behind Los Angeles 22 10 .488 — Cincinnati 17 13 .547 4 San Fr4nclsco .17 14 .548 4'/i Philadelphia .14 14 .533 5 St. Louis ....... 15 15 .500, 4 Milwaukee ....... 13 13 .500 4 Houston ...... 14 18 .471 7 Chicago ......... 14 14 .447 7 New York ....... 13 17 .433 8 Pittsburgh ...... 9 22 .290 12Vs Monday'* Rd*ull* Philadelphia 2, St. Louis 1 Los Angeles 5, Houston 3, 11 Innings Only games scheduled. Today'* Oamo* Sep Francisco (Sanford 3-1) at Chicago (Buhl 4-2) , Pfttsburgh (Frlehd 3-2) of Cincinnati (Malonei/4-0), night New York (Jackson 2-4 or Kroll 2-1) at Milwaukee (Cloninger 4-2), night Philadelphia (Mahatfey 2-0 or Herbert 1-2) at St. Louis (SadeckI 04), night Los Angeles (Brewer 1-0) at Houston (Johnson 2-)), night weiinesday's Gailse* San Francisco at Chicago Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, night New York at Milwaukee, night, Philadelphia at St. Louis, night Los Angeles at Houston, night The ihctory pulled Belinsky’ record lo 1-2. The loser was (,’url Simm«n.s, the former Phil-lie whiz kid, whose record is now 1-5. Simmons is 16-3 against PhiL adelphia since leaving the club in 1960. DETROIT (AP) - Detroit Tiger Manager Charlie Drc.ssen arrivt'd here Monday aflei cupc'i ating in (lalifornia from a I heart attack lie suffi'iijd during | spring training. | Dressen said he will be a | .spectator until May 26. That’s tile day the Yankees come to town and Dressen .said lie would then resume his chores at the helm of the Tigers. Nicklaus Still Holds Lead in Golf Winnings The Dodger.s scored four runs ip the top of the 11th with Houston second baseman Joe Morgan committing two errors. Up to then, Koufax and Bob Bruce went 10 innings locked in a duel. Koufax is now 5-2 and Bruce is 1-5. “1 feci good. I’ve heen walk ing three miles a day,’’ he told newsmen. He had nothing but prai.se for the team, interim manager Bob Swift, and Coach Frank Skaff. “Bob’s done a darn , fine job and I really appreciate it,” he said. “And they tell me, Skaff is one of the best third base coaches in the business, so I’m going to leave him right there.” And what about Willie Horton, the league’s leading hitter? “Jiminy! That boy must be really something. And he’s going to get even better.” PA1,M BEACH GARDENS, Elji. (Al’) - Jack .Nicklaus is still tlie top money winner in professional golf this year, with $49,688 in official and unofficial Carning.s. The Professional Golfers’ As-.sociation in a report Monday credited Nicklaus with $38,906 in official PGA .sanctioned. Tournament carning.s, followed by Doug Sanders with $37,166 official and a $47,115 total. Nicklaus has won one of nine tournaments he entered and Sanders won two of the 17 he started. Dick Mayer, winner of $20,562 in the Greater New Orleans Open Sunday, was ninth on the list. His total winnings are $21,-462. Bruce Devlin was listed third, with $31,695 in official and $24,-339 in unofficial earnings. In the only other National Elimination of the cars would not bar the drivers I from the' Ponfiac Press Hole-in-One Club lis hereby, admitted to The Pontiac [Press Hole-In-Ohe Club on this day ..for having aced his^-.-^^fP^Shot on hole 4 on the day of /.7.w.. His score was attested as...for the .. 9. ... holes. Spartan Bats Notre Dame 9 SOUTH BEND, Ind. ®-John Biedenbach rapped out five hits and five Michigan State pitchers helped the Spartans score an 8-6 baseball victory over Notre Dame Tuesday. . Michigan State now has a 26-8 record and Notre Dame is 15-15. Konney, Holmes- (3), 000 003- 4 8 3 Devereox (4)', and Kllbourn, W4kott (8), Collins ' ...... (4), Lytle .................. I, Bentley (7) and Harsha. DawJi Doiniis 804 NOR' Pontiac, Michigan PERRY Phone 334-9041 Every Sunrke Everywhere THIS WEEK’S SPECIAL! ALL-FRIED CINNAMON ROLLS Deliciously Different Variety Frostin/ss m This If eefc’a Added Feature; FRENCH DONUTS Light Al nd Fluffy Chocolate And Vanilla Frosted On The Way to Work Or Home From A Party, You'll Enjoy Dawn's Famous Flavor Brewed Coffee Dana Doans h, .1 KIOHTKKN TUI£l*<>N'riA(: I'llKSS. TlJlHlSDAV.MvW 18. HXW Major League Boxes MINNft%OTA IQI ANOlEie% CHICAGO KANkAt CITY lo'lMn"*'!ib** 4 0 I 0 P*«r»on' r*' 4 J I 0 Bulurd"3b 4 3 3 0 Lwidl/ct ** i 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 Fr«oo»l h' 3 I I 0 Roblnwn r( 5 3 3 3 GbnIII* lb 4 0 13 4 M 0 Smith II 4 0 0 0 Ward 3b 4 3 3 1 Olckton p 0 0 0 0 <;ivTS AWAY CiiUluT Karl Malloy of an apimroiil mil In yoalerday’H Kann*. Mut tho Miniu'sola Twins makes conlacl wilh Los ball popped mil of Bailey’s mitt and I'YcKosl Angeles’ Jim I' leKosl eomlnf> In from third for seonal The AiiKels won, 5-4. 17 Years in Baseball Ohio U. Coach in '300' Club ATIIKNS, Ohio (UPI) - Genial Boh Wren of Ohio Ulversi-ly is eollege hasehall's newest member of llie elite "300 vic-lory club." The bespectacled Wren, who looks like hi* should be playing instead of coachini,’, nolclied his 3(M)lh win last wcekmul wilh Ohio’s 10 3 decision over Miami of Ohio. pro ball, playing mostly with the Toledo Mwdhens, then in t h e Atnerican AssiMdation, STAIITKI) COACHING After six years. Wren decided he would never make the big lcagii(‘s and r(‘lurncd to his alina mater to assist in coaching football, hasketliall and baseball. “Some of those long road trips were brutal,” Wren re- called of hla pro baseball days. “When I would wake up In tlie morning In a hotel rtwm and have to think about what town 1 was in, I decided it was time to quit.” So far this spring. Wren’s Bobcats are ‘22-1, the only defeat a 21 decision at Western Michigan 'I’lie two learns are lied for first place in the MidAmerican (,'onference. UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. 1 Mm. From Downtown fontme The A.s.scord. Wren began playing baseball on Cleveland’s lower East Side and later played baseball and ba.sketball at Ohio University. After graduation, he entered Ponfiac Press i Hole-in-One Club 1' * ^ % , , , ♦ 3 lis hereby admitted to The Pontiac , X , , . |Pres.s Holc-In-One Club on this day ' ’ * ■ . 7 for having aced • • . lii.s'^^L/^^^i^FF.shot on hole . 1 on the day of His 1 .score was allcstcd as.Z^. for llio holc.s. Bruton Happy With Family DETHOIT (^ - While he readily admits lie misses base-hall, Billy Bruton says lie hniks forward tci the weekends and the liours be cun spenc) with Ids family. Bruton retired lust OeUibiU' after s|)endlng 12 years ns a major league outfielder — eight with Milwaukee and the last four with the Detroit Tigers. Bruton finished with a .273 career hatting average. He hit 241 doubles. 102 triples uihI 04 home runs oiul batteil In 545 niiis. Me pinyeil hi the lOldl World Series with the Braves. When he retired, he said he left the game with two dlsap-polidliienla; Me never hit and never played In an All Star ' game An offer from the Chrysler Coip., where he Is now employed In the merehiiiidlsing department, prompte N|)eclalois Injured in a Fel). 2ft dragslrip accldnit. Tilt* accident at Soutlu'aslern international Dragway in D.'il-las, Ga. Petty’S OJiryslcr-built Plymouth Barracuda went out of control and crashed Ihrougli a f(>nce. Seven peisons were injurtsl and an ft year-old hoy was killed Mrs. Irene Allen, the mother of Emery L. Allen, 24, of Atlan-tti, filed suit in Eederal Court for $1 million on behalf of her As for his last team, the Tigers, Bruton would only say that the attitude as a whole and for a number of individuals has changed “and It’s all for the better.” ^'No matter what make or model American made car you're now driving, you can rely o of expert mechanics to keep your car in true running condition all year 'round. We shall c< our pledge to you to offer only the linest quality, guaranteed workmanship at the lowest p HEAVY-DUTY NEW TREAD New, Better Stronger-Than-Ever SUPER SERVICE turnpike tread With 5,520 Extra-Deep Gripping Edges Mrs. Allen claims her .son i.s totally disabled both mentally and physically and has been confined to an institution where he is listed as incompetent. BEAD INJURIES Jay Douglas Birdwell, 22, of Grectu* County, Tenn,, seeks $‘2.55,(HK) for disabilities resulting from ii broken back and head injuries. Cliff M. Mclnlruff Jr , 21, of Atlantii asks $135,000 for dilmagcs antrplastic surgery to partially correct facial .scars re.sulting from the accident. The ttiree suits allege the Pettys, of Ftandleman, N.C., were agents of Chrysler and operating the car. The suits charge the Pettys atui the company with negligence in the modification and operation of the car, including failure to brake when it began to run out of control. Rangers Give Four for Young Goalie NEW YORK (UPI) - The New York Rangers surrendered four players, including veteran goalie Marcel Paille, to the Providence Reds ttxlay for Ed Giacomin, considered one of the most promising netminders in the American Hockey League. In addition to Paille, the Reds will receive defenseman A 1 d o Guidolin, forward Don McGreg-OF and a player to be named later. Giacomin, a 25-year-old native of Sudbury, Ontario, played the last five seasons with Providence. He finished the 1964-65 campaign with an ayerage of 3.84 goals allowed per game. Wheel ALicNMEijt i«nfifically meatur«d it (th« chief Cl si- F 0 R IV Tubtlcts anti rt’Irratlablf! etisinfi! WHITES $1 EHRA 8:00x14 Full Rond Hazard fiunrnntpr * MUFFLERS $015 O MOST • we CARS U e Honor All Approved ' Major Credit Cards 1.0 AArVKITU TCDAAC MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER 12 MONTH TERMS 30 DAY CHARGE Mr. Pearsall welcomes his many friends and acquaintances to stop in and say hello at.his new loca- -iiC.iiiL.jL.... Li. -rr. ,i - .4.1,! -+-‘ JOHN McAULIFFE ANNOUNCES SHELDON PEARSALL JR. As a New Member 0! Our Sales Staff Sheldon has recently joined the new car sales staff of )ohn McAuliffe Ford, Inc. Mr. Pearsall is a lifetime resident of Pon- After Serving in the U.S. Marines in WW II. Pearsall spent ,many years in the personnel dept, of Fisher Body Division and was formerly Personnel Director of Baldwin Rubber Company, He has been active in the Pontiac Coin Club: BPOE No. 810 Elks, United Fund junior Achievement, industrial Fire safety and the Pontiac Manufacturers Asso- TIIK riAl N(KSS. ’l l I'oSiJ.VN , MAN IH, liniA NINKIKKN How Fast Can Hills' Ace Run Mile? MM H, ( Oi l ICONUBOANO ctnlml Ml(lila«n 0 ?CS.il Kearney Eyes State Record JHUISi SI (PUS Two Prop Ninos NGar Birmingham Auto Dealer Ron 4:13,8 Regional Meet Standard Mow riiNl cmv KliMimfIrtd IIIIIm' Tom KrariM'y run llii* mllo? NoIxMly milly i knowH bocaiiso the Hi'iilo' l(,a(*k Mlar Iuimu'I lli'on |iiisli(‘,| sinco Ilia MaiiHlIold Kr lays and llial was i rally loo car ly in Ihr sprin){ In Irll ri.YINC; HAHON Ton: lavorrd In win ttir mile run i day at Kasl hansiii)/, Thr srii I lowrrint! when Niirlhville ovi'icame a sevni run sixth inning hy llloomlield Mills lor a wild tilt win Moth Mills and the Musliings aiY 11-4 and Milford is II .’I. Heavyweights 'Spar' I'lIIMADKM’IIIA i/l'i Ileayweight hoxing champion (.'assiiis Muhammad Ali Clay, and chiilh'iiger Sonny l.iston, spiirred (verhallyi at a lele-phone-luMikup news conference Monday night, holh predicting they would win next week’s championship hout al Lewiton, Miiine, hy a knockout. The pair spoke from their re spective training camps to an audience which included three former heavyweight cham|)s -J(M- l,ouis, Jersey Joe Walcott and Jim Hraddock and the Olympic title holdi'r, Joe Kra- "We've had to run Tom in the shorter distances or he would have heen running hy lum.self,’’ said Bloomfield coach Don Hoff. Kearney had the re-gionai mile all to hirn.self Me won hy (M) yards. PRE-SEASON SALE on ^ IkcDoU Mimg Famous Quality Auto Air Conditioners NOW ^199®® MASTER RADIATOR " ^ 2293 Eliz. Lk. Rd. '"poV'mm' The former hoxing greats and fans jammed a downtown restaurant for the piped-in news conferenc«‘. Clay, his usual ehiillic'nl self, told newsmen. 'Tin going to win hy a knockdown, hut I’m not picking the round, hecause (hen no one would c(ime to see the fight.” SONNY DISACKKKI) Moff made lh<‘ d(‘cision for Kearney to run the mile instead of the IIIIO hecause "he has a good chance to hreak tin* record and besides he placc'd in the half mile al (he state meet last year.” The smooth striding Kearney has already Ix'cn cl(Mk(>d in 1 :f)4 for the (tao riM-: OPPOSITION A check on comparative times indicates Kearney may have the stale finals pretty much to himself at the finish hut not hy iiO yards. ClurkKioii {7-SI kept its slim hopes alive with an ll-O roirip over Clareiieeville, and Midly downed Hriglilmi, 11 I. In the SKMA, lln/.el Park moved wilhin two wins ol clinch ing the title hy downing .South field, :i 1, heliind Cary Kddings |{unner up Birmingham Sea-holm Iripjied Boyal Oak Kimball, 7-4, with three runs in the sixth inning STIUKiCIliS TriCounty Peiigiie action saw Walerlord Kettering nip I, An.se (’reuse al Mount Clemens, 1-0, in eight iiiiiiiig.s and Koiiksi edged Oxford, 11^, in another tense struggle Bolli winners are fighting to catch league leading La|M-er In Catholic I.eagiic games. Orchard Bake .SI, Mary modi' SI. Michael its fourth .straight victim, 3-1, Boyal Oak Shrine nipped Bedford SI Miiry, 3 2, and Detroit Austin ri|)ped Bir mingham Brother Bice, 11 1 Milford used (our hits, two walks and (wo errors for Its six run rally over West Bloom field, Mike Palnehmiil fanned to to gel the win. Bloomll<‘ld Mills look an 113 lead at Norlhvllle aided hy two run singles hy Creg Anderson and Dave Bohillard in the .sev en-run sixth, Iml the Mustangs lirsI live haliers reacheil lia.se and .scored with only one out in the hollom ol the Irame to lie while Komeo’s Boggs singled hoine the winning marker at Oxford Looking for: Mechanics, Body Repairmen, and Painters 'Excellent Rates Income Potcn'.ial Over $10,000 Annually Call Mldwe:,.'^ 4-4776 After 7 P. M. — A^k for Nancy (IMPIOYMINI MANAGER) winning An error h'l in the run in the seventh Molly’s Dick Kroiise iKMiiered with a man on in the first inning and blanked Brighton In relief lor the Broiicos’ win: while Ciiry Pearson’s three hitler and strong hilling hy Tpm Allen, Chris Paladliio and Steve Bar iielt paced Clarkslon Kddings doiihh'il in the two 'cded and lanned 13 lor lla/el Park An erroi' opened the gales lor Scaholm's winning rally .igainsl Kuiihall Denny Camphell’s triple and Dale Manning’s 17 strikeouts featured Kefleriiig’s vietory; IJ.ston his usual taciturn self, al.so saw a knockout in his future, hut disagreed with ('lay as to who would be the one standing up: Mis clost'st rivals are expect-1 ed to he Ben Madera, Wyandotte (4:23.21; Bon Nehring, Kalama/oo Central'(4:'24 8i, and Brian Moore, Detroit Cass Tech (4:26.41 Waterford ran away from 1 Bochester 98-11 and k'itzgerald (leB'aled Bake Orion, (l2'/-,;-36'i;, yesterday. Legislators Shelve Greyhound Racing W«l«rU)rd 9g, Roch«>l*r 1 ^680 Wat >11^- _ ConpMt Un« Olhtr RibuiK Unlit in Stnok ABLE Transmission , Nelson (W es Rutledoe ( (R), 16.0. (Wl, Day (Wl, 756 N. Perry St. FE 4-0701 roTTroTTYTTirinnnfTTTfTrirrinfTifTirTinnfTirTT^^ 220-patton (wi, 1 BANSINC (API A greyliound racing bill was seralehed in llie Mouse Monday alter il got turlli ' er than any oddsmaker would have predicted. The bill was reported out k’ri-day without reeommeiidalion by the Stale Affairs Committee. The lack of a r('commenda(ion usually means Ihc measure is tabled. Through a technical slip, however, the bill made it to llie active calendar. Hep. John Fitzpatrick, D-De-troit, chairman of the committee, asked that the bill be moved | to the head of the calendar. The M()use membership approved, ] voted on one iimendment, and i then voted to shelve the bill. It will take a majority vole ! now even to bring the controversial measure to a vote. j Pontiac Press Hole-in-One Club is liereby admilleH to ’I’lie Ponliiic Pn'ss Mole In One (’luh on lliis day foi- luiving need lu'r5^,<^(Wslu)t on the/^/'^'^^ liole 111 the (lay of .MnY l7... core was al tested as .. u. ..for he ____0 .. holes. WILLIAM M. GOSSEH DELIVERY SERVICE .irlitni H ilh Ih’itendithilily ■ PP A C 1 C O I 91 FAIRGROVE. PONTIAC Tt | Success is a beautiful automobile Success is twice as many buyers Success is winning the year’s top honor Top AHL Defenseman Shot f )n (Lui, iioCHESTEB, N. Y, (UPIl-ls*”(Lo‘i! Al Arbour of the Rochester Americans, one of a handful of , Brophy (LO), 880 Relay—FItigerald (Krasicky, Manning, Eckert, Bills). 1:39.8. Mile Run-Wrobel (F), Walter (LO), Ddziana (F). 4:69. High Hurdles--Wilson (LO), Hoyt (F), Dobberrsllen (F). 17.0. 880-Hlcks (F), Bulla (LO), Mitchell lk). 2:11. 440-Horner (LO), Mooney (F), Cieslak IF). 56, 100-Kras(cky (F): Hollens (LO), Man. ling (F). 10.6, Low Hurdles-Hartzig (F), lie between Wilson (LO) and Dbbbersllen (F). 22.6 1 hockey players who wears glasses while playing, today I was named the American Hockey League’s outstanding de-! fenseman for the 1964-65 .season. The 185-pound forme^r Detroit : Red Wing from Sudbury, Ont., received 38 out of a possible 45 j points In the balloting of the Success is Mercury in the Lincoln Continental tradition I (F) 23.5. . OdzI- league’s press, radio and television representatives. ^ Now's The Time To Get All The Facts On Oor New HOMEOWNER'S LOAN PLAN! 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Experience Mercury's luxurious ride. Sample its big V-8 performance. The fist of fine-car,options.. Mercury's knack for building a car -in the Lincoln Continental tradition makes a difference. To you. LLOYD MOTORS LI NCOLN — MERCURY — COMET 1250 OAKLAND AVE 333-7863 RIDC WALT- piSNLY S MAG'C .SKYWAy' AT .THt FORD MOTOR,COMPANY PiVUlQ.N. NEW YORK WORLD’S FAIR G i'Yi i S;i]t ^ T\VK\ I'Y TWV. I'ON'I’IAC' riiKSS. 'I’I'KSI)/VV. may IH, ♦ Markets, Jpusmess an ' , i-n', '‘?i* ' MARKETS Losses in Key Stocks Mostly Slight Copter Is Top llir |{ill(iWliig fil« I(I|I |Mln*?s covrrlnK <>l locnlly mown pimliict* by growers HtuI hoIiI l»y IlK'tn III wIioli-Niili* luicluim' lnl'< QiioInllonN iiin- liirnlslwd by llif IXMniil HiiiciMi III Miii'kfls i(fi III Miinilny, Market Sags as Trading Lags i State Product Produce A|i|ile^. OeiH N M)V, Omuiu, gri Onton%, Piir%niph, ' Prtrbmpb, 1 NI'IW VOIIK (AIM I'lKTS wiTf ii lilllr lower iiM (iloek iinirkel Iniilin)^ liir'k'^d (Ills nlleinoiin l.iiMiie;.) Ill niiisl key sliiek.'t were Inii'liiiiiiil, ii lew |.miiii(-; In .ilioiii ,1 |iiiinl I'lie lisl ileilmeil liom llie sliirl, hill llie loss w;is nut |irii Hres.MM' I’riies sliiliili,'eil nl the lower liwels In some eiises lhe\ iiii|iro\eil over llie o|ieninn Tie, woe, ef,|ierliilly (rile lor Diiroill wliiili lilKKereil ii Urciil lie,'ll III vesleCiliiv s weiik , nes.s. .Selecleil tiliie chi|is Hiivy Mi'iiiiiiil tiillilly bill Miiiiiy lil|rh i|iuillly iN.'iiiefi hlioweil llllle or no (•bi(iij;e Seleileil i.iNiieM liiiekiil the iliiwiilrellil The new.'i hiiek^roiiiiil w;i;i lairly eiieoiirn),|lii|' ilespile the ilei line in sleel |iroiliii'lion lor Ihe t'liiril ,slriiir;lil week .Steel iinehanr’ed In n III lie The A'lsoi'inted l'rei,s nveriine III lid sloi ks ill noon w'iis ofl I id Till 1 Willi indinilriidji oil V, nills up I iinil idilille.s oil ;i Ainonr; Ihe hlulier pricerl ■slock.s, HIM slumped more than II poinl while Xerox wins more Ibiin ii poinl hi|{her MonI of Ihe lop steels .showed llllle ehanne An exeepllon was .limes Xi l.mii>hlln, oif I (lenend Miilors was oil ahoiit a poinl and l''ord a Iraellon ('hry.sler lex dividend) ea,sed American Molor.s was steady I’rices were mixed m miKler ale Iradiiin on Ihe Americiiii Slock Kxchani^e Up idioul :t were Zale .lewelry, API Inslrii menis iind a (' Ullherl Uorporale iind U S. (Jovertu -miml Ixmds were mostly im-chaiiRed TradinK was quiet Built With Backing of I 6,200 U, P. Residents The New York Stock Exchange UKTHOIT I AIM A uniqiie tlir<>e placi> hellcopler, bulll with Ihe flnaticlid hacklii|{ of soiiie 0,200 residenis of Noifheiii Michigan's Menominee area, wiis named Moiiday as Mich iKiin Week I’rodiicl of the Year The crall, known a.'i Ihe K 211, wa.s shown IH) leader.s of Ihe biiHlnes.s, labor and eivie eommunily al Uoho Hall I "Some peo|)le nuiy Ihink lhal Ihe Upper I’enlnsiila was ii j Hlranm* place lo develop a hell copter maiiufiicturiii^ firm, hul ! don’t forgel' ihal in an earlier I day, many people reminded I)e I trod as a slninm' pliice in which j lo starl Ihe aiilo hiisiness," said Homney Three of Ihe helicopters luive been hiii|l iis experimental mod els and luive. lotttted more than 700 hours flyiiiK lime wilhoiil incidenl. president of Ihe Knsirom Uo which is hiiildini^ Ihe tielicop-ters, sfiid 110 firm orders luive been rweived and that Ihe first two craft will be delivered next SeptemlK'r. "We arc deli(Jhled to gel award and it is a source of Rreal .satisfaction lo all of us | who have been working on Ibis helicopter project since lilf)?," I’"' (Tiristensen said More Ground Lost in Grain Dealings NKW STOIlI't lion Krayer Home Furnish-iii|.;s, Inc , recenlly opened this .store at 11011 W Huron, Waterford Township. The local firm Is a division of l.akeland Sales, a Michl Itan wludesale dlsliibullntj company, of which Flayer is president. The store, which former Penlliic Prttt Pliole ly housed Trade Fair, has lO.tKMI sepiare feel of display area and a paved lol in front. Fray er, of :illllt> Itrcidier, Walerford Township, has lu'cn in Ihe furniliiri- and appliance field for 1(1 years. Prosperity Stretch: A Tax Mans Dream :i;i year old Hy SAM DAWSON AT Kiisiness News Analyst NKW YORK There’s nothiiiK like a 1)1-month stretch of prosperity to gladden the heart of a federal tax collector. Record c o r-profits 'ord per- i;j/ ’ * and 1 of Monday, .sonal inconu's .some (),217 residi'iils, virlually | all of them from Ihe Upper Ren V I insula, had invested $1 ,i million windlall ol $1..') in Ihe helicopter lirm’s slock, A I'ilhon this lis-further public .stock offering is, <'.d year. It an-i due later in the year, he .said, j tieipales a like DaW.SON I Wallace Machesney of Detroit, [ amouni in the fiscal year start j chairman of the state product int> .July I. and agricultural awards com , * * * ' rnittw', said the finalists includ-1 The $2 billion is revenue lhal than ex[)ecled profits and led Ford’s Mu.stang car; Ihe j Ihe Tre.isury hadn't lore.seen | comes. lax rates both for individual; lhal corporale gro.ss profits are incomes and corporate earnings running ;d a record annual rate are now being offset in sizable of $112 (i billion The increase of amounts by the increa.sed totals $r).(i billion in Hiese pretax earn-on which lo levy (he new, if low- ings from Ihe annual rate of $57 er, rates. billion in Ihe final three month.s And the windfall has led the of 1‘Mi'l Is pure gravy for Ihe Treasury to agree lo share Treasury. of its good fortune with * * * the individual and corporate; Kven wilh corporale income taxpayers. The share will be in pix rah's dropped this year the form of a greater Hum pre- from .50 per ceni lo ■111 per cent, vioiisly planned cut in exci.se |he Treasury will lake in a si/.a-laxes, jiaid al retail by custom ble hunk of'money, close lo $:tl ers, or levied al manufaclurers’ billion. level of .some items. ^ 'I'l,,. corporalions anm'l com- FUOWFRKD ! plaining because Ihey're glad The 51-m(Mith busine.ss expan- *^'***' **'*' lower rate and for sion, which this month is .setting I '‘‘“vord profits. Part of a peacetime record of its own, j alter taxes will be has flowered Ibis year in higher *»'" 'o dividends to ■ ■ I lO-'-H'-aa-. increasing per and part will I stockholder; I .sonal incomes Comfort Air Conditioner built i wlien it drew up its budget last Right now, for instance, the; used to finance new plants by Heat Control, Inc. of .lack- .January, Cuts in federal income ('ommerce Department fjf/ures ^ equipment, .son and How Chemical Co.’s MAPI* gas, which replaces ilylene. Successful ^Investing movinc along (amfidcnily, the Treasury ex-:0 iH'cls that this business spend- * I mg, along wilh increa.sed out-■M. lays by individuals with larger I incomes, will keep the busine.ss [expansion going far pa.st thi.x 51st month. CHICAGO lAPl-A few contracts held onto a fairly steady range in early dealings in the grain futures market today but prices generally lost further ground. Shortly before the end of the first hour May .soybeans had rallied well and at that time were up about three cents from the early lows. The range wa.s VA cents higher to 'A lower, By ROfiFR K. SPKAR | protection as he can afford. For And with the expansion should Qi "We are a couple in our 'f’ve.stments with potential; come still higher corporate late 30’s and are interested in J, General Tele-1 profits and larger totals of per- investing in stocks. We have |^ Bfislol- sonal income. The lower tax : children, our home is paid for and we have .$6,000 in the savings hank. Do you think we have enough in sayings or should we add more? What stocks would you suggest for the education of our children and for future retirement?” M. R. 1 Myers and Corn Products. (Copyright, 1965) Income Sets New Record at Area Firm A) There is no absolute rule-i May $2.84A:"wheat ¥/ lower to of-thumb as to the amount of , Vk higher. May $1.45-*k; corn '/t savings required before an in-j : lower lo '« higher. May $1..3:Pk; i vestment program is begun. The: Carlton ,M. Higbie Jr. presi- ' oats unchanged lo % lower. May ; amount depends on the perma- .(jpai |.pj,bie Manufacturing Co. I 70’h cents; r.ye 'h lower to '/t ■ J*'*’; Roche.ster, has announced that higher. May $1.17. hwlth of yourselves and , net consolidated income of $881 - .your children. | 307 after taxes for the n i n e 1. April .30.I965, was highest for any nine-month Declare Bank Dividend ; 'a probably an adequate reserve, particularly since your home is paid for. However, you do not mention insurance, and in your situation, the head of the family should buy as much TTie board of directors of the Pontiac State Bank at a meeting last night declared the regular semiannual dividend of 50 cents per share payable June 1, 1965 to stockholders of record May 18, 1965, according to Milo J. Cross, president. period in the company’s history. Net consolidated income for the same period of 1964 amounted to $700,604. 90.T5+0.01 Troy Office for Osteopath Per share earnings for the period were equivalent' to $1.77 per share of common stock as compared to $1.44 for the same period of the previous year. . Per share earning.^ .are based on the average number of $hares outstanding during each period and adjusted in 1964 and prior years for the five for four .stock split in July of 1964. A license agreemlfent for the manufacture of brazed steel tub-I»lhic Hospital, .ind RrailualiPB .’h'J,™” Tn"’'? f“" SB m iW Si jin 1*2. he has been in pri.al^ S'', ."f S:! m m S:!,P«i«inBerh,o,-„„,i, Dr, Wa.vne A. Arnef has opened offices in Ihe Square Lake Clinic, .5940 Livernois., Troy. Interning at Detroit Osleo- rates will be applied lo that still expanding volume ef taxable profits and income. Things could go wrong with all the.se fine hopes. The expansion rate probably will slow during the traditional .summer lull. Overconfidence could lead both individuals and corporale executives into successes that could undermine Ihe so far .sober and steady growth. But right now the news is all reassuring; records falling month by month, the chance that this .summer’s slowdown will be’le.ss marked than average, the probability that the momentum of the long expansion will keep things going for some time. NEW STIMULANTS , And then there are the new stimulants now taking form: the cut in excise taxes that could spur private and corporate .spending; the increased government outlays, that projects of the "Great Society” imply. ' -. .The Treasury is still running a deficit, and expects to keep on doing,so for awhile. But the $3-billion windfall is keepiiTg fevCR that deficit lower thari once was ", feared. ' News in BrieT 505 2 177 8 176 2 lllS nPW location. n j , r' u II J u 165,2 167 2 322.81 Dr Amei' is bn active* staff ^ ^ 475.8 189.6 167.2 332.6 1 h' ' ' ‘^TUVe Sldlt 406.6 150.7 148.9 286.7., member at Pontiac Osteopathic ! Hospitel.' 5lf........................ Rills Ind. Util. Fgn. L.Yd change -t-.l —.1 Tues. 83.1 t01,5 88.6 94.1 93.9 . .... Day 83.1 101.4 88.6 94,1 94 0 Week Ago 83.3 102.0 88.6 94.5 Month Ago 83.4 102.2 .......... 94,5 93.8 90.6 93.1 102.4 88.9 95.0 94.3- 82.2 101.0 88.3 92.6 93.6 82,9 103.5 88.6 - 92.2 94.2 80.5 100.8 87.2 90.1 92.9 Treasufy Position WASHINGTON (AP)_The pash position sponding date* .sidiary, has obtained orders {r e m several automotive customers for tubular companenls to be used in smog control devices in some 1966 model cars. Dividend Announced Tuesday's 1st Dividends Oenlirtd Pe- Stk. ot Pay-Rate riod Record abli OMITTED kIsI&PaC RR INCREASED Balance- ' .......... ............. . board of directors of Al- 9;998,196,061.93 $ 7,337,533;934.23 i Supermarkets, Inc., parent ! x^Totai Debt - - quarterly dividend of 15 cents Ghid « 229.981 per -sha to -be paid June 30, .6 301 to stockholders of record .....^une 9,1965. !’ A total of $1,242 in cash was repoiTed .Stolen yesterday from . a cash drawer at Rudy Mazza's Mobil Service, 457 Elizabeth Lake, ac^rding to township police. Rummage: Wed.<-Thurs., Fri. 10-2 p.m. 142 Perkins. —adv. Pontiac Branch of AAUW used book sale. The Mall, May 20, 21, 22, 9:30- 9 p m. -adv. Rummage: 112 W. New York, 9-5 p.m., 'Tues. thru Sat. —adv. MOM’S Rummage: Thursday, 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. —adv. (i- , ' ! ■ V niK poNriAc FHKss. inF^sH/VV. may ih. hhw Confab Sought by Argentina Want Latin Meeting on Dominican Crisis BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (Al‘1 ArgenlliiH trying t« pul togetlier u (ronference of seven South Amerlciin foreign mlnlsUirN to (IIncuhs the Domln loan crlslH and bolster the Inter-Amerloiin system. Eoreign Minister Miguel An gel Zaviilu Ortiz minounced Monday night he hiid InvIUnl his colleagueH from Brazil, t'hlle, I’eru, Bolivia, Uruguay niui Paraguay to Buenos Aires to seek a solution to the Dominican problem threatening hemispheric solidarity and consultation. * A A Whether the ministers can come “will depeml on their present commitments and obligations,’’ Zavala Ortiz said. Chile’s Gabriel Valdes at once said he couldn’t, that his schedule was too full, and that he couldn’t brief a representative “on such short notice” BY TELEi>ilONE Zavala Ortiz said consultations could be held by telephone If some of the ministers could not make it to Buenos Aires. ’File invitations were Issued last wc(‘k. Those asked to (!ome are from South Ameri(;a’s “southern cone” of countries. They are sharply split on the Oomlnfcan civil war and U,S. intervention in it. Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay generally back the landing of U.S. troops in Santo Domingo; Chile, Peru and Uruguay bitterly oppose it. AAA Uruguay spearheaded an anll-U.S. drive In the U.N. Security Council debate on the Dominican situation. Argentina reportedly feels disunity among the South American countries is hampering peace efforts by the Organization of American States and is weakening the whole inter-American system. HOPED TO CONVENE Ucliable sources said Zavala Ortiz hoped to convene the meeting by Thursday or Friday. Uruguayan Foreign Minister Luis Vidal arrived unexpectedly Monday night and hict with Zavala Ortiz. He told newsmen: “I understand other foreign ministers will come.” Informed sources said Paraguayan Foreign Minister Raul Sapena Pastor was expected here today. Arts-Craits Confab to Hear Architect Bengt L. Swenson, architect and interior designer, 4079 W. Maple, Bloomfield Township, will be a featured speaker at a two-day Arts-Crafts Conference to be held in Traverse City Saturday and Sunday as a climax to Michigan Week Cultural Activities. A A ■ A Subject of Swenson’s talk will be—“What Can Arts and Crafts Do to a More.Enlightened Public?” Mr. and Mrs. William Nich-olai, 4045 Sashabaw, Waterford Township, will show color films of Michigan artists and craftsmen at work in their studios and shops, Saturday evening. Deaths in Pontiac Area MlUi. (TIEHYEIl HAM. Horvlce for Mrs. ChoMier (Con ntniice) ihdl, 90, of m2 Cm limd, Sylvan Lake, will la) at 3:30 p.m. 'Hiursday at Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Hall, a memlier of All Saints Eplsc«>i>n| Chui<-h, died this morning. Hurvlvlng ore tier huNhond; ami a brother. , MRS. CIIAIII.ES BEAGLE WALLED LAKE .Service for Mrs. (.'IuuIch (Mary .Jane) Beagle, 75, of 529 Pontiac Trail will he It a.Ill Thursday at the Richardson Bird Funeral Home. Burial will he In Oak Grove Cemetery, Milford. Memorial siTvicc will be II |).m. tomorrow at tlie funeral home under the auspices of the l.awrence A. Simms VFW Post No. .m2. Mrs. Beagle died yesterday Waterford Agrees to Aid Study After some sharp exchanges lu'tweni Waterford Township Supervisor .James E. .SiH'terlin and Trustee I,oren Anderson, the township board last night agreed to cooperate on a proposed six-county area transportation and land u.se study. Tile |3.6-million study wliich is expected to take about three years to complete would Include Oakland, Wayne, Macomb, Washtenaw, St. Clair and Monroes Counties. James Miller of the Detroit Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Commission, one of the proponents of the study, last night asked the board to agree to a memorandum of understanding for the program. He pointed out that this preliminary action would not obligate the lowiKship financially since tlie cost of the program would be borne at the county level, by the city of Detroit and with matching federal funds. AAA The memo of understanding is being sought from all communities in the six-county area so that an application for federal aid can be filed by the July 1 deadline. Miller said. TAKES ISSUE Anderson took issue with the lengthy description of the proposed study which he de.scribed as vague from cover to cover as far as expenditures are concerned. Also stating that it appeared to be a study of a previous study, Anderson said he was unwilling to sign a blank check for anything. Seelerlin accused Anderson of attacking the principle of federal funds rather than the specific study proposal. AAA Joining Anderson in opposition td the memo of understanding was Trustee Frank Richard- Trustee Rudy Mansfield, supported the motion of Clerk Elmer Fangboner to approve the memo. The doors of ouKestoblishment are always open to those seeking advice or counsel pertaining to • funeral matters. Outstanding in Pontiac for Service and Facilities 46 Williams St. ' FE 8-9288 after a long lllnesH. Hlic waa a mcnibcr of the Benton Ihirkway Aiixlllaiy BarrackN N(t. 2117 of IMymiHith and the .SlmriiN VFW iJidicH Auxiliary, Wlx(ui) and Walled Lake. MRS. LELAND CONIJfiV mN'l’tAt; TOWNSHH* Mrs I/eland (Anne) Conley, '75, of 71 Hillfleld died yesterday after a Hhort lllnoBB. Her laxly la at tlie liui'(dd II. DovIh Fuiieral Home, Aubiirn Holghta. Hurvlvlng la one brother, W. E. Cole of ClarkHton. MRS. CHARLES I” KINCtSTON TROY . Mrs. Char lea h'. KingNton, li:i. of ItliM) John It died this morning idtcr a long Illness. Her body is at tiie I’rice Funeral Home. CIIARLE/S A. KREIDLER BI,()()MFIELD I’OWNSHII' Service foi Charles A. KreUller, 72, of 175« Yorksliire will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at St. James Episcopal Church, Birmingliam. Place of burial will be an-lioiinced. r. Kreidler died suddenly yesterday. He was associated with Schmldl-Ellls Investment B r 0 k e r s, Detroit. He was a member of llio Detroit Slock Exchange and a memlH*r of St. JumCi. Episcopal Church. Surviving arc his wife. Hazel W.; one daughter, Mrs, Floyd R. (iriffith of Birmingham: one son, William W. of Orla.tdo, Fla : and six griindchildren. Arrangements are being handled by th(! Bell Chapel of the William It. Hamilton Funeral Home, Birmingham. MRS. WALTER MAGEL HADLEY - Service for Mrs. Waller (Emma A.) Magel, 80, of 9058 Davenport will be 1:.30 p tn. 'Tliursday at the Baird-Newton Funeral Home, Lapeer. Burial will be in Farmer’s Creek Cemetery. Mrs. Magel died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving besides lier husband are three sons, Roy and Wallaci of Hadley and Irwin of Pontiac six grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. (JRANT C. iniOADS WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP -Service for Grant C. Rhoads, 46, of 58370 Romeo Plank were held ye.sterday at Roth’s Home for Funerals, Romeo, with burial following in the Romeo Cemetery. Mr. Rhoads died Friday. He was a member of Davis Lodge, F’&AM, and the Davis Grange. Surviving are his wife, Betty two daughters, Susan at St. Joseph Academy, Adrian, and Mary Jeanne, at home; two sons, Gerard and John, both at home; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rhoads of Pontiac and two sisters. MRS. WILUAM C. THOM ROCHESTER ~ Service for Mrs. William C. (Elizabeth A. Thom, 83, of 2627 Norton Lawn will be 11 a.m. Thursday at the William R. Potere Funeral Home. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery. Mrs. Thom died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Alen?,, Dykes of Columbiaville and Mrs. Fred Lowrie of Wayne; two sons, Roland J. and William P., both of Rochester; two sisters; 10 grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. MRS. THEODORE WEDYKE TROY — Mrs. Theodore (Dorothy) Wedyke, 49, of 876 Robin-'wo^ died this morning after a short illness. Her body is at the Price Funeral Home. WAYNE N. McCANDLESS I City Merchant Lions Official At the slate convention of /Ions International in Detroit this week, Wayne N. McCand-less, owner of McCandle,ss Car-I>els, II N. Perry, was elected di.slrict governor for 56 Lions Clubs in Oakland, Macomb and ,Sl. Clair counties McCandless, of 4'255 L»k e-w(mk1, Waterford Township, is a former zone chairman, sergeant-at-arms, committee chairman and deputy district governor. He is also a past president of the Lions Club of Pontiac. Ljons international now I) a s ■liibs in 1‘29 countries, with 18,-99 clubs and 741,075 members. Son of Polish Envoy Flees to W. Berlin SuicideThreaf Made by Girl A 15-year-old Waterford Township girl last night threatened to jump from atop the water tower on Maceday Drive but later heeded the pleas of police and her boyfriend and climbed down. The girl said she was despondent b e c a u s e her parents had forbidden her to see her boy friend, according to township police. Waterford patrolmen Donald Bailey and Richard Gilchrist climbed the tower to talk to the girl, who sat at the summit with her boyfriend for about 15 minutes. Dies in 2-Cqr Crash GREENVILLEE (AP)-Her-bert F. Lyon, 78, of Belding, was killed Monday in a two-car crash at an M91 intersection near here. State police said Lyon apparently ran a stop sign. Selma Sheriff Not Expected to Take Stand SELMA, Ahi (AP) DtTcnsc nttnrncys fighting a contempt of court complaint against Sheriff James G, Clark were expeeted to wind up their case without culling the sheriff ns a Witness. Clark said he did not expect to lake the stand AAA A symbol (»f segregallonlHt n'Mlslam’e to the ••ivll rights movement, Clark Is ac»-usey Dr, Rohi'rl R, T^j)in and Mrs Lucille I), Mardjall in the contest tor tlie po.slUws ■rwwrfy.owB • Pontiac /don New Leader of Guard Unit Tlie i’onllac National Guard unit, Company A, 2nd Battalion of the 12.5th Infantry, has a new commander. First Lt, David W MaeGillis, 94, of 259 W Coliimlita hXik cominmid of file company Sat- Cntp. Robert G. Garland ol Mount ('leineiiN, former eoni-maiider, Iiiin lieeii named ln-lelligeiu-e officer lor the 2nd Battalion In Flint. (iarlaiid Joined Ha< I’onllae iinil In 1947 Hi> was a videran of Ha- American Division In llie I’acifie 'Fla'aler during World War II M a c G i 11 i s, I’onllac dog warden, joined Hu! National Guard in l!)4li III' iccelved lii.s commission in I9.59 and Joinisl Hie Rontlac unit as execuHve officer in 1962. 93rd Birthday Today for Bertrand Russell PEN RHYNDEUDRAE'FII. Wiiles (Al>)" Berirand IlnsHell, Hie plilloso|)her and a han-lhi'-lioini) campaigner, observed Ids 99rd hirlliday liere today. I.ord Russell, wlio is an e.’irl and giandsoii of a prime min-islcr, was spending Hie day qidi'Hy at ids Widsli liome overlooking the Glaslyn River WlHi 1dm was llii' Anu'rican liorn I Couiiless Rus.sell. 'Friars Aided in Smuggling' Clerics Incriininated in Rome- Operation ROME (UPI) - Police said today Capuchin friars at a monastery near Rome played a role in a large cigarette smuggling operation. Two of the six friars at the convent of Albano, in the “Roman Castle” hills just south of Rome, were incriminated by police but have not yet been charged. At the same time, the man police believed to be the brains of the gang was arrested in Lugano, Switzerland, and extradited to Italy. The strange case, called the ',‘Case of the Capuchin Smugglers” by the Italian press, started a week ago when one of the Albano friars, Antonio Corsi, turned up at a Rome hospital with a man he said had been injured in an auto accident. AAA The next morning Friar Corsi told police he had found the body of another man apparently injured in the same accident. GATEWAY SMASHED Although Corsi said he had found them on a highway, a full - scale police investigation showed that the gateway into the jnonastery had been smashed and, the injured man and the dead man had beei) involved. The case took another turn when police discovered 30 cases of contraband cigarettes worth about $48,000 inside the monas-tery. After a wee^f checking, police saiffThey^ad what they th()U|ht were complete details. FREE prospectus-booklet? Learn the facts about the CHANNING '3P MUTUAL FUNDS I n Ch.nnmg C I I Ch.nninfl 0 LI Channlng Balanoad [ I Channlng Spaclal fi □ Channlng Inlarnaliof Without obllgntlon, |unt Inrllcntd your cholc# ot lh*i fr«« fund proBpeotuH bool no Ironlno. 43S Housewives ARE YOU BETWEEN , 25 AND 45? Yoiir of li kmii. Your ililiriY Kt lt«rn U «) lit |i«nh. wo h«v« )ull Aiul iiatl lima o|i«n Tel'Huron Shopping Center Please Apply at Winkel man's "Work Near Home" ll(M)SeKeiiHt3K. I IVI; IN SAI HOOSBkBN'UR H)R WIOOWRr ">'r HOUSEKEEPER IN CHRISTIAN nant ponitinn ni caihlar nnil onn-«r«l olllta. Tvpino and mallis-mnllcal aptlluda raqulrad. 25 - 45. Eacallanl worKIng rRnrillInnt, r.om-maniurala salary, ( all PE 2 2224, ‘ OfwTdl **tluSwi(l^ M^ANAOJgH FJ'm ?5*'tii*"* tSia****^*"**"' I aDV FOe WAITINli ON CU|T6M ^rSy^^jTiarKIng. Ogo Ciaanprl, i>* l AOV POR CI BANINO OFFICES; \ avanlMH work, apply 4A4 HIkei '■ftidy fall Pit j.J/51 UKE MONEY? I IKE jewel I Join lha nallont faa parly plan. KI/vineRl » - 12"a.nn.'*f?E"2*2224. *" MANICURIST, SATURDAYS, CAt.L »4 p.m., a/aiivs;, PI-EASING ^BliirdiiUlia^in^ Mpohai assistant w i T ii eX par lam a Ipr madli al rllnli;, nmal Iw nvar 25, pari lima, 4 nlolda, 4 .Ill 10 p.m, and Sat. ID a.ni, 2 P in. MA «7S44. MIDRI BAOED MARHIiD WOMAN Rfti'lAni E WOMAN TO irABY SIT, ALTERATION LADY SAlfiSl-AOY DIXIE CREAM DO nuts OR :i .54IO SALESPEOPLE FOR NEW HOMES MODELS TO SELL FROM I FULL FLOOR TIME TRADE IN PROGRAMI Taylor Agency OR 4 0306 SHIRT FINISHERS. shirt FlNIiMBR FOR 2 0IRL CAB- Inal imll, tS par 100, paid hnllilaya, Plymmilli, 01. 2 5420. SPENCER'S TRAININO C B N T Bl liaia h Fpplla*: arw| •urroilpdino Iralnlng. Car^aaaenflal. Aoa ouar TYPIST CLERICAL FOR GENERAL OFFICE WORK IN FINANCE COMPANY. SEE MR. LEE, 30 EAST LAWRENCE ST., CORNER OF PERRY. FE 8 0421. vacation fiaNS aKBaD? Barn a ippxl Inroma rliiia In liiima. Filamlly plaaaanl and prnlllalila woik tpiUkly .pull It IP ymir pm.k all tapiaaaiillnu^ AVON Cpirnalli *. WAIlRBsS, MUST en FxFFri am ad Ap^rl^^n^parmn. Jallary'. W A I I R P S S FOR CHINA CITY WaNIPI) PART TIME EXPERT WAITRESS; Nights, howaro Iftlin... n ReUamanl, O.aylot; WAITRESS, NifjHts Also PART Advertising Specialties Aluminum Bldg. Item* 1A ALUMINUM SIDING STORMS PB 5»545. Joa Vallely, OL TM23. KAISER ALCOA ALUMINUM SID ING, (iUTTBRS, STORM WINDOWS - DOORS, CBILINOS, WAIL PANBLLINO. SUPERIOR FE 43I7T. SHERRIFF-GOSLIN SIDING ROOFING 34 S. Cast Lake FB 2-3231 Aluminum Door Repair ALUMINUM STORM DOOR Aluminum Services UMINUM-SIDED HOUSES Architectural Drawing ARCHITECTURAL WATER COLOR drawn^ M3 4508. Asphalt Paving DRIVES, PARKING LOTS, WHAT? Reliable ConIracIs, Inc. FE 2-2414. DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST, FE, 5-J»80. Free Esllmales.________ Basement Waterproofing Block Laying Eavestroughing DRAYTON FENCE CO. Floor Sanding CARL L. BILLS Old floor sAnding. JOHN TAYLOrt. f .OOR LAYING. Boats—Accessories STOP DREAMING Let Us Help You Save BOATS-MOTORS-TRAILERS , DOCKS Harrington Boat Works Building Mudernization 2-CAR GARAGE, I8W Alum, windows, doors, siding. ADDITIONS GRAVES CONTRACTING Free ^llmales _ _ OR 4-I5H BRICK, Block; CEMENT WORK, _ L 1-6255 HOUSE R4 SING AND MOVING, cement work. R. McCallum, FE _ 5-4543 or^FE 3-7450. ■ /MASTER ENOllSH CRAFTS/MEN Specializing In all types of carpentry. \ Remodeling a specialty. Custom work. Price Impossible to beat. 334-8571. experience. 332-4975. R, G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING sanding and llnlihlng. F FE 5-0592 Floor Tile INSTALl.ATKJN. E 33.5^IB4V Furnace Repair Garden Plowing General Maintenonce INTERIOR EXTERIOR Home Improvement AAA-1 LOCAL COMPANY lon'l experiment with the unknown. Big Bear does the whole |ob and does It best. Licensed and bonded. 25 years experience. 739 N. Perry St. FE 3-7633. Ask for "Sunshine" Bill. FOR GARAGES . . . KITCHENS ATTICS . . . ROOM “ . REC. ROOMS DITIONS BATHROOMS ROOMS . . . DORMERS ALUM. SIDING ---------- reasonable p PATIOS. ces. We consolidate your bill with payments of as low as $3 per week. We build QUALITY, not quantity. MICHa GARAGE BUILDERS 23600 W. 7 Mile Rd.. Detroit KE 4-7080 Pontiac: FE 4-UOO WiMNEY Re1?AIR, SCREE^N, RED leading. Water proofing basements, porches, steps. Anderson Home Improvement, 335-2348. RICHWAY BUILDING SERVICE Complete rough — " ' " 4-2292 or 338-9908. Carpentry Heljand;__ CARPENTRY, NEW AN()'r1paIR; Free estimates. 335-9981_________ CARPENTRY WORK, NEW AND remodeling. 482-0105. INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHENS, paneling, 40 years experience. — FE 2-1235._________________________ CEMENT CONTRACTOR, CITY LI c.ense, FE 5-3349. __ CEMENT WORK - FREE~TSTI-— ------------3^ call anytime. CEMENT WORK Licensed Cement Contractor FE 5-9122 Commlns, FE 8-0245 Dry Walling Electrical Services LondsM^g ___ A-l COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, sodding, seeding, discing, plowing, grading, back hoe and front end loading, retaining walls. Broken 4-Inch sidewalk, sold by ___loa^Free estimates. FE 4-3371. A-l MARION OR KENTUCKY SOD laid or delivered. Seeding or redressing old lawns. Free estimates. No money down. Breece Landscaping, FE 2-OUl or FE_5^3302. A-V DOZING earth” REMOVAL, basement digging. Tree trimming, removal. FE 4-4588 BLACK DIRT, TOP, SOIL, LAND-scaplng, grading. OR 4-1944. BROKEN 4" CONCRETE - PAV-Ing brick, tor patios or fireplaces. OAKLAND FUEL 8. PAINT. 45 Thomas SI FE 5-4159. TiAERION BLUE SOD. PICK UP OR delivered. 2401 Crooks. UL 2-4443. SODDING, AN6~GRASlTNa“cbM^^ plete landscaping. 424-4871. TONY'S CO/iTpLETE LANDSCAP-ing. Merlon blue or Kentucky sod, laid or. delivered, iitop soli, peat, till. 334-4924. ' ____________ Lawn Mower Repairing TALBOTT LUMBER T025 Oakland A Moving and Storage SEE FOR YOURSELF! ” LITTLE COST, ^IRtSULTS WITH PRE^WANT ADSI Painting and Decorating A1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR palming, I r e a esMmales, work guaranteed. Reasonable rales. 482 3420, ALL. AROUND PAINTING AND pairerhanging, l-fc 2-24/9. PAIN I ING INTERIOR EX-lerlur FE 5-5734. PAINTING AND CAULKING Inlerlor, exierlor, reas. rales, SPRAY, BRUSH, OR HOLI PH RB sidentlal or coml. Kan, 852'7940. Piano Tuning A-l TUNING AND REPAIRING Oscar Schmidt FE 2-5217 WIEGAND PIANO TUNING “ 30 years In Pontiac, FE 2-4924._ Plastering Service A-l PLASIERING AND REPAIR. Reasonable. Georg# Lee. FE 2 7922 PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES. D. Moyers, 343 9595 FE 4 8444 Plumbing and Heating Supplies ^KSS 'I'n KSI)A Y. MAY 1H, jl 7 Canvnleicent-Nurslng VOMAN OVBH 21 POR COUNTER ana marking. Bfaady job. Good Ciy. Apply Pox Dry Claanara. 219 . llAton. K, deTiimlanI iqinn qualltlca anil aKiiarlanca Apply nr aaiHl ratumn to HiKhastal Vlllaue Iifllca, 400 Sixth Sliaat, Rmhasler, Mlihlgan. WOMAN TO LIVE IN 5 DAYS A Wk. waakenda tree. pE 2-1W7. Woman FOR light housework Mm WOMAN FOR KITCHEN. APPLY Bk^ Bny Driva In, 2490 Dlxla Hwy wFlMEN 18 40 MUST have BREN laiToiy wo'rk. Apply Iwlwean “I'o a in, 4 p III. only. Nnrihland Indus trial Plasllcs, 19.55 Slavarisun Hwy., Tipy. WOMAN, Fill I OR PART TIME, ^WQMEN YOUNG WOMAN ^ TO W(5RK^ IN Help Wanted 8 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED RH Pnsllva t 4.00 RH Nag 57.00, 510.00 8, 512 DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE III Ponllac FE 49947 Ml; ALIY NBBOS AGENTS, JIION COILRGB AND HIGH il sludenis; Summer employ Now leKIng applications. Ins., 20 S. Telegraph and 2400 DIRECT SALES PEOPLE NEEDED lor Watkins Quality Products. Call Mr Logoell, FE 2-30.53 6 10, 3 5. EXPERIENCED COUNTER AND grill. 5^125 an hpur.^^apply In |i«i EXPERIENCED TEIEPHONE SO liberal payment plan. Start at once Reply Ponllac Press, Box 27. FULL AND PART TIME HEl P FURNITURE AND 7 wonted, Blye Sky Drlve-ln Theolie, I P Male and lemale, 18 ,55, Contact »«« »•'E 4 7881. Mr. Redo, eves. 332-3200, HEAR OUR PRICE BEFORE 5 MAN OR WOMAN amfllamrs'and wnrhav^X^^^ ROOM FOR FAriRNT. 43/ Humnl«r I ak« H««i lu...... STONEYCROFT NURSING HOMES 45F0092 JI51-43F? Moving and Trucking AA MOVING Apnrt.nvnti, FurnlMiad 17 ROOMS, NBAR OMC, PRIVATB. 279 8. Edllh. FE 29434. ROOMS, privatb entrance, 2V, ROOMS._ PRIVATE BATH, EN 5INOI E r 420 BOB'S VAH ^fRVICE MOVING AND DELIVERY FREB BSTIMAtBS ROBERT TOMPKINS 64^3 7121 KEN'S DELIVERY MOVING, I TO ? ITEMS KEN TOMPKINS 335 77.51 l-kTHT MAUI ING. Cl EANING grass lulling. 33,5 1922. LIGHT '^AUl^ING ^MtTviNG Painting & Decorating 23 Al PAIN I ING AND PAPER HANGING IHOMPSON FE A laity iniErior OBcoma F'AOAr'mg. f f; HO'MJ. ' WA-IlHNO, 'mINOh'^rIiPa'hI REAnONAMLE PR.CFS I I 5 PAINTING AND PAPERING SMALL ihely I Mil ImKX illllllox Apartments, Unlurnished 38 ISO Orchard Lake Avn. Television-Radio Service 24 HAVE YOUR RADIO AND I El E VISION REPAIR Wl/RK^DONE WHU N prlc«». MYttfl lulw laaflng Mohlgonmrv Ward PonllAC M«l Upholstering 24-t SLIP COVERS rlal.TET 7,54*6. Transportation 2! NFI O HIDF PROM ADAMS ROAD « WOitK. in. 2 3AlflV RIDK! ( ROM VICINITY OF WEM MttplD Mnlhl^ml Rdn. ot Fontln< HOMEOWNERS I N S U R A ^ Scrtl^. FE 2 son or FE 4 3403 Wanted Children to Board 28 REL IABI E, 1 IC6NSFD DAY^ CARIl Wanted Household Goods 29 BROWNIES HARDWARE TOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS G CLEANER POWER SAWS Oakland Fuel & Paint, 434 Or Restaurants BIG BOY DRIVE-IN, DIXIE Al Sliver Lake-Telegraph al Huron. SOUTHERN COOKED FOOD. SUN day, Frankenmulh Dinner Family^ NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS, INSURED _atm guaranteed. Call Tom, 482-4543. ROOFING AND””RE>‘^rT Sand, Gravel and Dirt EXPERT TYPING OF TERM PA-pers. Theses, Statistical, etc. Eh-lers' Business^ervices, FE 5-2244. Tree Trimming Service A-l TREE SERVICE OF ANY KIND. DAN AND LARRY'S Tree Trimming and Removal, free estimates. FE 2-8449 or_473-8534. TREE TRIAAMING" AND REMOV-Ing. Free estimates. UL 2-4848. T R E e~Tr1 maaTng ‘ an b” rTmovaT Trucking V E N E R A L MOVING/ HAULING furniture, trailers, trash 24 hr service. Also Sun. 334-8795. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING rubbish, fill dirt, grading and gravel and tront-end loading. FE 2-0403. lkjht ’hauling, garages and basements cleaned. 474-1242._______ Trucks to Rent W-Ton pickups m-Ton Staka TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT . Dump Trucks - Seml-Tralleri Pontiac Fanii and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD __ ..... pg ___Open Dally Including-Sunday ^ ^^WolljCleaMrs_________________ BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS Walls and windows. Reas. Sati» taction guaranteed. FE 2-1431. Well Drilling OUT OF WATER? Pump Repair. R. Tabor, 673-2: APPLY TO: H, M. STI6R CIRCULATION DEPT. THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICH. MIRACLE MILE ^ THEATEj? ^1 ). Apply in person, I- Wantua Mitcellaneoui 3(1 BULLDOZER WITH 10' BLADE 3230 Pine Lake Road. ONB WITH KNOWLEDGe AND EX rno,*!o*lake (wer "ihe^kltchen'l™ a growing business. Call alter II am. at 887-4169, ask lor Mrs. TITLE INSURANCE Applications now being accepted tor all departments. Experienced only. Send resume to. Box No. 83, Pontiac Press. All replies strictly conlldenllal. Salei Heip, Male-Femaie 8-A A RESPONSIBLE MAN OR LADY lor retail route work. Regular customers ot old established local firm. 1.0 7-4940. SALESWb/IAAN, PART” TIME. Apply Youngland's Childrens Shop. Miracle Mile Shopping Center. 2141 S. Telegraph Rd. '____ Employment Agencies 9 EVELYN EDWARDS "VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE" TELEPHONE FE 4-0584 ______ 904 RIker Building____ INTERNATIONAL “ PERSONNEL SERVICE 490 E. MAPLE BIRMINGHA.M „ MM-3692^__^______ Initructions-Schooli 10 ACT NOW. SEMI - DIESEL T-R^UtK DRIVERS TRAIN WITH THE WORLD'S LARGEST TRADE SCHOOL ON ALL NEW DIESEL TRACTORS. UN 4-4406 _ GREER C R AN E OPERATORS; TR AININO bREER. UN 4^-4404. _ FINISH HIGH SCHObl AT HOME, Diploma awarded. Write or phono tor FREE booklet. National School ot Home Study, 27743 Mound Rood, Dept. PP, Warren, Michigan. Phone_SL 7-3420. D IE’SE L .E NGIN E ” ■ MEC HAN ICS Leafn overhaul, electric, fuel In (JFFICE CLARKSTON LAKBVIBW Al'AM menis. Modern 3hedinnm. Sliiu ratrlgeralnr, air rnndlllaning. Be orchard COURI APARIMBNT! MDDB.RN in tVBKY lit-. I All Idulls Only ThB4vi»;' THIRD LiDUR siHDio. H|-MNl-ii| Rent Houses, Furnished 39 ^ bIIjROOM. I mi OCX OI F It'NO IHUTROOM, AUTOMAtIC GAsJ SMI^FURNISHltD 2 B F D R O () m| OR 4-34114lor 4pm*' " , ' Rent Houses, Unlurnished 4C IIHOOM HOMF, (.1 OHI- III serurlly depotll. 2485 Auhuri Pontine. ftlOOMf-IFID TBRRACIi, 2 IlFD BOm EVARD HBKSHTS ConlacT RenIdenI Manager 544 Fat! Blvd. al Valencia 'LEX, 7 ROOMS. BASEMEN! me furniture. 17 Slelnbaugh, 335 Rent Lake Cottages 41 BEDROOM COTTAGE ( HANDICAPPED PERSON STANDING HARDWOOD TREE, 10 hold or per piece. FE 4-5267. Wanted to Rent 32 2 BEDROOM HOME, REASONABLE, young couple I child, away Irom town, FE 4-7714. 2 OR 3 ROOMS AND BATH, 1ST Wiwk Won^djlaje ________11 CARPENTER WORK. ___FE 8-2198. bEPENDABLE SOBER /iAaRRIED man. Past 50 In good health, desires carefaking lob. Can do most any kind of work. Must be year 3BEDROOM HOME BY THE 1ST ot June In the Kettering School DIsIrtef. Call OR 3-7218. B L bOMF IE L b HIL L S R E SIDE N T of 15 years wants 2 or 3-bedrooi Bloomfield Township or Squart Lk Rd. area. Phone 446-4937. NEWLY MARRIEb cOLLEGE”couple need apartment for summer. Call FE 4-2125. R ETI R ED ” COUPLE WANTS UN furnished 2-bedroom apartment or house, no children or pets. Can furnish best ot references. Have lived In Pontiac since 1927, Phone 332-5223, TVVb- OR THREE-BEORObM HOME, Manager ot Monigomary Idren. 383- LIGHT HAULING ______ 334-3046_________ LIGHT HAULING,"”HAND DIGGING . an;! lawn work. FE 4-7344^ : RESibENTiAL” bRAWINGS ANb designs. OR 3-2271._____ YOU CALL -WE COME - WALLS, ' floors, aluminum siding. Curlev'-Wlndow Cleaning. FE 8-3203. Work Wanted Female 12 ELDERLY LADY WANTS LI G housework. No children. R e Pontiac Press Box 16.__________ flENAGE GIRL WANTS SUMMER employment, In Auburn Heights area. Ph, UL 2-2950. Business Service Dressmaking & Tailoring 17 LAWN MOWERS, SAWS, AND ALL hand tools sharpened, retoothed and reset. 435 Mf. Clemens. FE 4-1294. Landscoping COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, RE-talning walls and 4-Inch broken sidewalk sold by load, Frae estl- COMPLETE TRACTOR WORK, TOP soil, 'sand, gravel, manure, tree removal, fireplace wood, nursery stock, seeding sodding, grading. FREE ESTIMATES. TELEPHONE -■ M2Q7. PAVING BRICK FOR PATIOS AND fireplaces, 4" broken concrete. OAKLAND FUEL AND PAINT. 45 Thomas St. FE 5-4159. SPRING CLtAN-UP Complete lawn cuttjng, waed spray Ing and maintenance. Dan's Landscape, EM 3-2888, Share Living Quarters 33 ROOM WITH KITCHEN USE, FOR lady. 335-4207, 174 E. Pike. WILL RENT ROOM IN COTTAGE, or will share cottage, year round. 674-1620. Wanted Real Estate 36 ITOSO” HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE. PAR cels; farms, business prop ERTIES AND LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed tor immedlete WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd FE 5-8145 Dally 'III 8 ; MULTIPLE LISTING SER^CE ALL CASH ^ FHA and Gl EQUITY All homes anywhere, even If I hind In payments. No listing, red tape, no delays. Cash li mediately. DETROIT. BR 2-0440. BUILDER NEEDS LANoTlDitRbrt and Pontiac area. CashI Also ' property. Michaels Really. 3-4200, 356-9121, or 427-4685. equities WRIGHT ! OAKLAND AVE. Elwood Realty HAVE BUYERS FOR ANY KIND of property for quick sale, call: Paul Jones Realty - FE 4-8550. liSTINGSWANTED Immediate ACTION will be given to produce the sale ot your residential or business property. Call Joe ’^J'Y'jOLL REALTY = E 2-3844 Ml 6-5573___482-0282 NOTICE! It you have acreage parcels tor sale—small or large - we l)sva the buyers, call usifodayl Clarkston Real Estate VACANT LOTS WANTED In Pontiac. Wa pay more. I mm dlate closing. REAL. VALU REALTY. 426-9575. Mr. Davis. Apartments, Furnished 37 2 ROOMS AND BATH, 524 PER weiek with $50 deposit, ‘ 273 Baldwin Ave, Call 2 - ROOM APARTMEIjlT, COUPLE or single. —'• ROOMS, r."'%2 ROOMS ANO ItATII. PfeR. RKphRENtfiS. and BATH, CHIIO ROOMS Deposit. 9U LolMga sire ROOMS and BAT I welcome, $25 per wee $75 deposit, inquire al 2 Avenue. Ohll 338 4054. ROOMS ANO BATH, I (uuple only, 95 Hwighi. ROOMS ANO Bath, fHll 0 WEI IIITIES, HOH9P, I BhOROOM, iiiel, line neigh kliinil Uni, all SniB Houiai 49 BCDROOMS Lify *lnh'ure\*''tioin'7".5 \h"l'*ne^ $175 DOWN MOVtS YOU IN ■'"v; rWF.NTY-'fi’JlltUK ■ I lake Uichnril I ak tiiana Hit , lake ( fiiminaiie Hil., tin Ril, III t orn Anioritaiio Hoiiibs B24 4?.nn $1,000 DOWN S’ES I ' CLAREt9Crc'"RlDGEWAY BEI. VISTA APTS. ;22h w wAl''1'(jN"’^ jhhiw/ $9,990 WE TRADE YOUNG Bll,r HOMES REAl I Y means be I l ER Hll III5SEII YOUNli, 5|l', W. HUN III I'FR U NI DOWN Al. MARTIN, Realtor S Oroailway, Ui Inn 493 4 BARGAIN Sale Houses 49 El IZABEril I AKB Rl> I At RE fllA Re|)()ssesionsi (WAIERH)HH lOWNaiHP) North Point Roalfy 5904 S. Main Clarkston MA 5 2341 II no an;. MA 5,1582 GAYI,ORD UWRFNCE W. GAYIORI) 'nAYI)RN' TRi i,r:vE[,s I J. T^iirYDEN,"'‘Realtor j EM 3 4404 10735 Highland Rd (M 5( " HIITER ti0,750 to 511,950, CAl L 70DAYI n C. HIIILW, Rftnifor :i7V2 Fill rthflh 2 01/Vj ftMtsr INCOMf with Innimn nl ('luced''wlUi iroflo'd^^ brti flntf' morlQiiutt. Your In^tpecllon ’"ll Mle&tinaun. WILLIS M. BREWER Birmingham! 5TER FRONT 2 3951. MODERN^ clean $45*wee'kly'*UL'2 Rent Rooms Y KITCHEN PRIVILEGES, rage opilonal, FF 3 7733. room" and or board Rent Offico Space 47 3-ROOM Office for Rent CALL TOM BATFMAN -- FE 8-7141 4 NEWLY DECORATED OFFICES. Hgron. FE 8 9801. Rent Business Property 47-A x 40 BUILDING FOR 8A ]om office or store. Near 1C Stale Bank In Drayton Plal AL PAULY, Realtor 4514 DIXIE HWY., REAR 3-3800 Eves. FE 3 20x40 Store for Rent l^TOM BAT£MAN - FE 8-7141 20x40 BUSINESS OR PROFESSlbN-al building—600 sq. ft. In lha Fon-talnblaau Plaza, dall OR 4-2222. “CENTRAr BU'SrNESS DISYRICT 40 W. Pike St. 21,500 sq. It. - 2 floors. Ramp to second tioor. Former Oliver Motor sales and service building. Long term lease avail- HOMES ON BEAUTIFULLY aded 3 acras. Call FE 4 9347. 2 BEDROOMST 2 ACRES bN BALD-win, $9,300, $1,450 down, FE 2-5998. BlDROO/iTl" RANCH, 2V7' ACRES with stream, DA 8-2013. A. Sanders, Rep, H. Wilson. 3-BEDRbOM, BATH AND HALF -•* T^conlract — 4130 Wilson, Dray.- 3“BEbRbb/iA BRICK, jvi BAT H S, tIrMace, garage, 334-1407. i-‘BEDROOM BRjCK~ "C6LONlAL, IV1 baths, rec. room, 2-car garage. I acre. Lake privileges. 338-8150. l-BEbRbbM~"BRTCK.....1'/j BATHS. Attached 2-car garage. Large lot. Watkins Lake privileges. OR 3-4424 after 5:30. country kitchen, living lly room and utility. I-/, oains, x-car garage, UOO yds. to subdl- $24,000, *F E*T22'cS. *" " ’■ BY OWNER - PERFECT HOMl for raising a tamlly. Ranch typo, 4 bi'drooms with 5th bedroom or den, custom built cupboards, carpeting, finished walk-out basement with Sauna bath and shower, 2-car attached garage, lot 140x340. $34,400. 4MjM20. Y OWNER, BRICKT YBEbRbOAA, garage, fenced, mixed area, FE 5-8410. BLOOMFIELD HILLS SCHbOLS, ■ droom, 2 baths, brick ranch, ihed recreation room, 2-car BEDROOMS, Dullt-lns, hat $12,500. FE 5- 3-BEDROOM RANCHES, YOUR I OT 3-BEDROOM BRICK built In 1960. 'Large tot, pav street, tuU price $14,000. Gl It closing costs down, others only per cent plus closing costs down. WARDEN HEALTY W. Huron, Pontiac J337157 •BEbRObM FARM" "HOME on’""2 DRAYTON PL.AINS - Very well keptsoS-room I home — ^arpe lot, shopping area — lake privileges —22x40 work shop. $14,200. LAKE FRONT HOME on Big Lake Underwood Real Estate 8445 Dixie Hwy., (ilarkston 625-2415 ■^--- 4-BEDROOM In the Village of Oxford — Older home, completely remodeled, 2 full baths, large living room, nice dln- 4-BEDROOM RANCH -arge living room, dining (Itcnen area, aluminum sldlu. itormj and screens. Waterford jchool district.. $11,450, 10 per 2 LARGE ROOMS, TILED BATH private entrance, 1 lady, 2800 Sylvan Shores. WANT ADS Reach the Most Responsive Buyers e"*;Tv«l^ WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE al, 350' Ironlaga In Jayno ghls. Hot water toned heal, xn. Carpeting and drapes In dad. O^ien dally. WE TRADE ER LAKE CONSTRUCTION CO. 473-9531 _ 2909 Shawnee Lane OWNER, BEAUTIFUL 3-BED >m bi level, carpeted living room nlly room, large kitchen, pan-d dining area, snack bar, IV> ihs b e a u I 11 u 1.1 y landscaped. BY OWNER, RANCH, CLARKSTON. "“"xl49' lol, fenced, IVa baths, spacious living room, 3 bed-ns, large kitchen and utlllly. r I 75, $1,400 down. OR 3-1004. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY 228 W, Wallon 338-4064 Mulllnle Llnllng Service Mixeci Neiqhborhood No down paymont Paymanti Ilka rant DEI OPEN Af-TEHNOONS 15 AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY cor. Bloomfield and Luther 8i2763 etlornoons. LI 2 4477 Evas FIRST IN VALUE D E R N 2 OR 3-BEDROOM uses, Ponllac Arei - \. As lo JACK PRESTON BUILT HOMES 4175 Midland, north ot Wallor Open Thurs., Frl. 4-8 p.m.. Sot. 4-4, Sun. 2-4. Shown by appointment. OR 3-88H. MIXED AREA TUCKER REALTY MR. EXECUTIVE BY OWNER - Hills, I ranch, 21' ’9 mornings, 9 BEAUTIFUL ms, 1 lull basement. BRICK RANCH wooded area, bath plus 2 Va-t 2-^ar attached garage wiin top drive on a black lop modern tamlly kitchen with Ins and built-in barbecue. BUILD BRICK 3-bedroom, full basement, ONLY $11,990. On your lol or on# ot ours, very large suburban and lake area sites, (at Brendel, Lake-wood Village, Commerce, While SEE MODEL HOME On Crescent Lake Rd., Vi mile north of M59. We also offer free custom designing service (gel details) tor any plan you desire Near Kattering High 4 BaOifioms, IW lialhs. walkout haiamanl. Infmadlala iMissaaskin. Hilltop HfcAl tv northern HIGH AREA uinsliier a (raila on Ihls'o^ ^al! Mr. Elsala FB 4 1704 or OR 4^2222. NO DOWN payment NO mortoaob costs NO PAYMENT THB 1ST MONTH Temporary localad at l-ii UtlAIRE HOME BUILDERS raai. Inipiha '7115 Dlxla Hwy. PLEASANT DALE $7,900 ^ 1300 ^own - ^ W a oniej 4 riMims, hath and ulllllp l^RApIO Rent Beaters GIROUX REAL ESTATE Atler 5 FE 2 950'7 or PE 4 5039 4511 Hlyhland Rd IM59) 473 7837 NoEHESTIR AREA Wit L TRAtiB SDhDUtiAN haN< HER ^ Wiyi^^lJJW DOWN PAYMENT w.'Tl bass , SUBURBAN HOME C. PANGUS, REALTOR I MI5 Orlonvilla Call CollacI NA 7 2115 TO BUY OR TO SfLl Call Paul Jones Realty FB 4 6550 TOMMY'S lakh In LAKi SRIon. VACANT, 9 ROOMS, $9,995, 500 (town. 52 Florenca. FE 4 4995. WATTS REALYY NA 7-2950 1954 MI5 Bl Bald Eagla Laka 7ALDON AT ALMOND , L A N E, CLARKSTON. Brick, 1,350 Ml. If. $I8,49Q. ARISTOCRAT BUILDERS. YOUR CHOICE OF 2 houses on W. Howard St. Lika , new, 2T)edroom, lull basement. Cnrpeted living room, fencad yard, garege. Exc. condition throughoul. Only $1500 down. Land contract. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 2319 Orchard I Rd, 662 0900 SCHRAM Brick Colonial Exceptionally nice 4-bedroom homa wlln carpeted living room and dining room. Full basement, tamlly room and 2-car garage. Situated lol Ve«y desirable I by anpolniment )4 0700 For deluxe 3-bodroom with view. Phono OL 1-8580. FRANK SHEPARD 439 Main Rochester NEAR OAKLAND UNIVERSITY 2-bedroom with attractive kitchen with built-in oven / ' ---- Large living room, automatic oil heat, p location. Only 18,950 o REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2551 N. Opdyke ___^__ 5 F E 2-0154_____ NEW GROWTH Of spring sprouting on avargreans that surround this palace ot luxury. You'll enloy yourself here In this almost maintenance-tree brick and stone ranch on the water. Friends will OHI and AH I at the Tennessee marble fireplace Curley maple trim, the- -- foyer, the aroma ot cedar lined entrance closet, the Marllte bath, the built-in stainless steel cooking 1 spacious bed-irlck garage, the .one plllard en-9 gate. Price, $21,750. $5,000 lusvn on land contract. HAGSTROM REALTOR 0 W. HURON OR 4-0358 Evenings, OR 3-4229 3 Bedrooms With carpeted living room and Ing area, modern kitchen built-in electric itova, full I meni with gas heat, on a I fancqd-ln lot. .Priced at $l1,9.5i FHA terms, with $400 down closing costs. WHY NOT LET Ivan W. Schram L ESTATE MAN FE 5-94 A-l BUYS 3-BEDROOM RANCHER Brand new and ready for Imiliadl-ata occupancy. Full baiament, oak Excellent location. $1500 d’own on land contract. $SS per month. Call today. 2 bedrooms, large kitchen and living room, basement. Very nice condition throughout. Qnly $9,400. Terms. See It WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson, Realtor OR 3-1271 4540 Dixie Hwy. Van Welt Bldg. Schuett ----- - -..........-J, 2Va baths, large recreation room with fireplace. Some carpeting and many large closets. Lawn and some landscaping In. Open Sunday 2-6 p.m. $29,900 Real value, 90% mortp^age__^vaJlable 4-7422 - evenings /yys evjzi________ CALL PAUL (TjONES REALYY ' ■ FE 4-8550 TO BUY OR TO SELL $15,700, s. ^tually I... If thit in Crescent ---- _.......... .... full basement, attached 2-car oversized rage, on 75' wide lot. Paved sfr solid cement drive, city water paid) and 5 minutes to Pontiac near Waterford schools. We're 11 to 8 p:m. daily. C. SClTuETT FE 3-7 2-bedroom and bath. Lot Priced at only $8,000-term! H. e. NEWINGHAM REALTOR UL 2-3310 DO YOU HAVE $300? That's about all you'll neet . move" In this freshly decorated 3-bedroom ranch, basemenflesS — no steps to climb, electric stove, refrigerator and d'ryer Included In $9,400 price *$53.02 mo. plus tax and Ins. HAGSTROM REALTOR, 4900 W. HURON OR S-0359, Evenings 682-0435. mmMMF GUARANTEED . HOME TRADE-IN PLAN NEARLY NEW THREE-BEDROOM brick rancher In beautiful Lake Braemar Estates near Davisbura. Custom quality throughout, family room with Va bath oversize garage and many extras. Owner transferred and must sell A new home that you don't have to wait for to be built In a wonderful lake and country setting. Yours for lust $26,500 with as little as $2,650 down plus costs^ CITY RANCHER VERY ATTRACTIVE 3be«room brick rancher with basement, recre^ tion room, good city location within walking distance to school. Brick living room with studio celling and real nice. Inclner- II basement, oak floors. NEAR ST. MIKE'S FOR LARGE FAMILY-4 bedroom brick 3-car garage and beautifully landscaped .. . _ . Wonderful condition and a real bargain at $12,950 with terms. QUALITY plus HAMMOND LAKE ESTATES—the area that has everything you want. Brick and aluminum tri-level built In 1959 and custom quality throughout. Duo-pane windows, beautiful family room with fireplace and extra large corner lot, wonderfully landscaped. For the most exacting buyer—$34,950 with as little as $2,800 down plus costs. Shown by appointment only. NO MORTGAGE COSTS. SELLER will pay Op to $500 of (riortgage and closing costs on this brand new 3-bedroom, full basement rencher. Brick and aluminum, excellent Jake privileges and Immediate possession on closing. Only $12,500 and just $1,250 down it your credit Is good. CALL NOW. ' . MODEL HOMES WITH "THE 1964 LOOK"-Colonlal, tri-level and rancher, all beautifully furnished. Scenic, rolling building sites from ttSOO. Other models as low as $12,500. Open DAILY 5-7, SATURDAY 2-4 and SUNDAY 2-7 p.m. M-24 to Orlop, right on Flint St., right on Orldii Rd. approximately 1 mile to Bateman sign. TRADING IS OUR BUSINESS * S. Telegraph- Realtor . FE 8-7161 Open Daily 9-9 M.L.S. Sunday 1-5 ■X Jl'VVJvA I filtllMm 4f I RENTING $S9 Mo. rin<; l•oN'iiAt:/i*ll^;ss.;i maV ik. io GILES f’rushour *» WOMV t» lM« $10 Deposit WITH APPUCATION wfmVbCr''' wmI-'w* KAMPSEN .rl„,™di,„.AcMo„Call “'KTS ir" ft 5 3676 626-9575 SHARP!!! ASAl V'All/fc- HPAl lY G!LtS RtAITY CO, times ’ acri farm $500^ DOWN NIAR LINCOLN JR. HIGH ,oo^iNv.sTMON, am ' ipirrESiHl oHr, w. Y.III .on.i,(., hn„» ^ NORyHLRN HrA^ "«.T r"' "' TIMES REALTY KENT :'BUD" LOANS TO ....... ft 2 9206^^^^ oAvrANir'roAN"( o, “Dofl ond S»(U" Drive l.i ‘yZZnT''f^"TL!'^ r,vr'-‘ ^^ymr AFTER 6 P.M. EE 5 01911 MOTHS C. 11. CHAPIN, Motel Broker IHINKING OF SELLING? WANT CASH? .... 7,;,vri,5’ j j'™r! p^^r;’o‘rre%!o A::r;..... s;5:=?5ls'11= ... ... ... iTBE«frRHoiiri.E lp'p?i CLARK '|5|:|||'™K“ --no n,-w ,„.yh S-u,r?i;SiS ;E-=;=i'HrS:, ................ •^FMiMnir UII K uTA :?rouTS mSi cS’“S-. sw rS 111:1.“ f iliiilif "ipSii e«yA..v„.OR..«. ... . " . Best Buys , Today LAKEVILLE AREA sssss ! THAT COUNTRY FEELING :;s' “iwMiuiiin'' :'=Tis^£sr-:: roR S278 (Good) $2,50 Wookly " ' $378 ^Unllnr) tT Wnnklu 0..., E'A*!!" . ... Hius. !,r ;.r »............. =G£''^z;''ZS;“. iissLA:?•??''' *'■* ?=€'Ei§:?S:|-ac:.r^^ sM;..e,., t..o Rs,.,» . avontwp. ■ L«"™"»rc’“ >,,(> 11, L. H. Brown, Realtor | ;U'''LLrEw?,rlrd$c';t^ MILLERS3URG '»!r.,'.sr;r — ^r,-.or*-- SMITH <5. O'NFIT WIDEMAN iVal-U-Wav' ' ■ i.« co.,r « iTnpc FF A/moA' way TvAr^tHMi riooK,L"rcKTA°AUF/^,o° i "£s:sss C. PANGUS, REALTOR WATKINS LAKE «7.fn.I.ror^ ... WYMAN JuwTponst oLLnL'’5oV Gov^nmenLReprLLtmi^e MODEL 'HrRoTD r' FRANKTRealty'' perry park ^ B <> OFF OAKLAND §mmm Drive MIXED AREA i WHOLE HOUSEFUL FURNITURE CO. FARM 35 ACRES -jy?' BATEMAN FARM ~ 25 ACRES °^E.r. "Vr*"'., lO-'ACRE PARCELS RrrlSh.'^'.dTob’j R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 ^Aftfr*Hou"rs FE 4-6-1': s,: ' ■I, V, ,'I,.■ l',r ,, \ il L'- . ;,v.:'.'',::''-.,,,- I. .y.V,,,-..........'. H....■.....L'd.„c .'/’Yi.' ' J ,i.' Vi',; ,), li ,..)‘.|| -V'.' iL TWKNTYSIX 1962 Irfess $'^,4:>:) Rr^R RHRRT lohnsoD 1962 Chevrolet SS! ' “S- -S=i:;=!~ 9*ili9.H^Er' Tiirnof I'cTfci ; o7'»VH.llh»r*'lir"^rf./*l!!« i ^ ( MfiVY, W, . <.ni f, ../»4 W«Miri^ 0. , Olfm l«l.r l''I',?''A''r,hy'('i'!lr rri'\h, m?ulOT,0 ''’|'m, \'7'i77'7„1 ‘ 7,'7 j o^fi!^ imi'ai a^ i.i^a ivy^ ,, , i I IlKi l’(,)NTIA(: l‘HKSS. H ^'4S^)A^ . MAY |H. N.W and UHd C.ri 106jMAHMAIMIKK lly Ambr«oii mid Umtxinu N.w «nd Ui«d Con 106 •’X«.. ....' Wihoon'r, VVookly Special fA0IUA( M^lXlV Ntw and Ul«d Con 106 N.w and Ui*d tan 10» mi fill) Vm Rurnl: DEMO SALE Up lo $u ”££r;r,.r'v,r:5,i*r. MONtiAf ( Aiaiima. i honu [ IILLTOP ‘ •r ,,r v=^:5' I :<£ Jh! “i,.:: ^ ROSE pPw; i R A MBLER STATION HARDTOPS i,.=;::ir::j:::u... OLIVER S2tn:K';v:;r . RUICK 1961s PONTIAC CADIllAC ..V'!;:;::':!:0' ■ 'VASisfpir't'I'S;;. Muatnna«! ?=-""■■"■*" ,.r;;:;ns;-r, , „:-,;p;;'pS£:;Sric:'== '"" "E^k'EifZOVrnLOVuS V ir .„M„r,p;cCV!wr' HARDTOPS I i,„„i., w,J,..«i, ,m„ 1962 Pontiac i T ,v« m.u k s.yi..kM„.m,p 3LETS S;r:,£“ rivoioi'"'^"'bob borst LwLJiv ................. ^ ggr'"" Volk S WCTCien * lmv hum k i .sai„. 4 .mm ner k'ord : Russ |ohnson :............ iva; Miri-NHM,^ milppuH Mrl.Ail iluhl A/4J//I IVAI OlilMmihllA «,Iai, I „ll pnwfi , 1963s “Ov; =fSr s sSiss^= .: ...'......... '“s,«!K!'\Kis..siK' w«mo„ ci,.vroi,„ s "h^°:PS}~ ’bob borst “€s«?"ayL-: i Z LLOYD'S i": 1»AI CHEVROLETS ' Fe'^SaL®"" ' ' I f'' CREST W«rr«nty u.rd , . . : lOAi rwpv/v. \/.u .TOC nonvi/c I .V.''»'X''C‘a ( rssi =sss-~ Turner RM INGHAM A fORD M BOB wo s, PA .TTERSON ^ j-..................... t«,..,„p;....„, ;’s,.'rr',...‘.*'.r;r.;r.,".^ ■"."■. ■-■.-■ ................ MARKDOWN DAYS" ;.vIJUmes-^umans, vo, -r.i-V ......... JEEPLAND ; "MAY MARKDOWN DAYS" !mRuMr-EsiioMANs, SiKK“Sl£r“Si Srsi^-S r-SiSsS Si!’*'":" sTsS^ II '’;;,;'r.,.,:r. zr,z "";;;;" “;;; ;~;" $1097’ i:^ FE 2-9165 855 ’SJxS—-is BOB BORST MAY SPECIALS 1959 Pontiac Hardtop Catalina 2door with radio, heati 1964 PONTIAC ESTA storag: Capitol Auto l964lAEFtCURY ' ... Turner Ford 'bobborst fizis-sfip 312 W. M0NTCAI.M FE 8-4071 ITesL.. Turner Ford TuG^rFord HAUPT PONTIAC vi".. IF YOU HAVE A JOB, WE CAN GIVE YOU BOBBORST llotd's , =S;SS.-- STS T-iHSI ESTATE ■i5iS--r=..a'^y,oU u ULlVhK .■Ti6Kv-==f5~“— is=«iSTORAGE!,=^“=.- mSo°““ BUICK ...... , :.... S£r Mill sSSrSs!£>roRAGE:.,„ .... ■.. . ^ iMlS;.: ’«!r'j3L?«vs6l«!wDONS I■Tiwr.rifewi, , "^r'‘83' igATFAirON SMALL AD-BIG LOT ^ Repossession : Convart,b,a w,th 4.spaad tranAn„.,on 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM Walk in—Drive Out AUTO . ESTATE CARS NO APPLICATION REFUSED 1960 T-Bird 1957 Ford 1960 Olds "TdVL' ConvoHibia ConvPHmiP 1959 Ford 1959 Pontiac Automatic 1958 Chevy "S7 , ssT?' 1960 Chevy BpI Air $797 1960 Pontiac sTpT MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM CREDIT OK'D BY PHONE NO MONEY DOWN AUTO SALES PHONE FE 2-9214 125 OAKLAND AT WIDE ITRACK 635 S., Woodward Ave. BirininQlicini '• 647-5111 : MmmEKmm IF YOU ARE HAVING TROUBLE GETTING YOUR CREDIT RE-ESTABLISHED - NOW YOU CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE W(f mm ALL Yoir NEED IS A STEADY JOB. $5.00"d6WN PAYMENT AND A DESIRE TO IHELP YOURSELF CALL MR. WHITE: FE 8-40S8’ 'TcLi7^r^dV Kl;r:-'l"'^" . ”?n“Vh°r^I^^.CrrticTd7o V/a7 '■ ..................lopV SELL-A-THON DURING THE WEEK OF MAY 17, boTborst: ltd...............................'u'£,,Fx.,L':!Il.A.,i j,i.,L 1965 BARRACUDA 1964 FURYS 1964 RAMBLER :r;’,rs's"or“.-“•'■ pVtrTc^dLr’SmV—-' lt^7o!“bPateV''po"wpI' stetTnr' $2495 $2195 $1895 1964 DODGE 1964 CADILLAC 1964 RAMBLER a.S,'.';,ri.rrTS.tr" «r“7s StaTonly- $2395 “ $3899 $1499 1961 PLYMOUTH 1962 PLYMOUTH 1962 CHEVY $795 $895 $1095 OVER 50 SHARP LATE MODEL CARS TO CHOOSE FROM . OAKLAND CHRYSLER 724 Oakland , fe 2-9i5q l'' [I .''‘l-.I ,. .1.' I .1, \ .! .;LvCi:: II Tim PONTIAC PHKHH^ TOK^IDAV. MAV IH. MMW “Television Programs- Proorpmi furn|th«d by idatlont lUtMl in thii column or* tubioct to chango without notico. ChannaUi 'J -Wi*K-Tvi 4 VVWJ-TV, 7-WXVZ TV, V CKtW TV, SO-WKib-tV, 56 WTVI TUESDAY EVENINU 6:00(2) (4) News, Weather, (7) Movie: “Hie Glory UrlKode" (In I’iokichh) (0) W0CKET RADIO Tarritli llltl. patfum Dnai and batlsfii $1:99 188 LiWTT VAC. CLEANER owailul motor light *19 188 4-SPEED Racord Player *11 88 CORDLESS Record Pleyer 7" thin, eoffy ovory- $|gs8 TOP BRAND AIR CONDI lONERS WELBILT PLUG IN Cool comfort plui quiot oporotionl Intloll it yourtoK intlonlly with • nprind o-mouni tide ponoli. Juit plug in 1 1 5 volt. 7'/a ompt. WESTINGHOUSE Poworful 5,000 BTU for comfort-obU cooling. Zip-kit mokat inilallo- 20" PORTABLE WINDOW FAN *97 *119 ' PHILCO 6,300 BTU's Poworful 6,300 BTU/HR. Cooli largo aroat. Putb-bgtton controli. 2 tot-tlngi. Adjuitablo air-flow grilloi. With inttullation kit, H 5 V. Jutt plug in. Modal 7AC40. RCA WHIRLPOOL DEHUMIDIFIER 77 OP BRAND AIR CONDITIONERS! GIBSON 2-SPEED Powerful room cooling. 6,000 BTU'i. With inila-mount. Inttall it your-•ell in minutei. Ju*t plug in to 11 5 volt. Ready to work. WELBILT CASEMENT The "Mighty-Mita." flt» any (iia window in minutei . . . Caiement or double hung. 6,000 BTU/HR. 2-•peed fan with tharmoitat and quiet guard. 1 1 S volt. Juit plug in. WELBILT 14,700 BTU's Cool your entire home with 14,700 BTU'i. Super power maiter model. Beautiful decorator ityled front. With eirpand o-mount for initont initallalion. , '149 188 *197 CDtC ELECTRIC ICE CREAM MAKER rnCC oh 25 HALF-GALLONS ICE CREAM 2-DOOR REFRIGERATORS with Freezer on Top NORGE 1 5 CU. FT. roitUii relrlgirator ■•< dallvwrvr ••rvkw. •rs *268 rondjiid... HOTPOINT CU. FT. ifrigerator Mction nivir niidi difraiting Frailer iid ddi giont 90-lb lupply Iroiin food. Full width ctiii ■"*™“ 788 » HOTPOINT 15 CU. FT. i Bottom Iraiior holdi I 58. Ibi. Slidi-out itMl thilvoi. Twin WITH GIFTS WESTINGHOUSE i 2vi cU^. WKTINGHOUSE 14 CU. FT. * FroBtUu Mfrigwrotbr swctiori. $wing to|) spot, ★ ★ ★ This woiihl const it tile very diiliious iudgmeiil. 'I'he picture (iin I'haiige in the interim, hut l.tndon It. .lohnson is (he wheel horse with all I he face cards slacked in his own hands. Itohlo . Inis his fidlowers aiul he ctnild solidif> wind opposition there is lo .hdinson. Hut LUJ's Deino-cralic opponenis will he swept under a ver> small rug when a showdown conies, unless he commits a inoniimental party faux pas hetween now and (he summer of HtiH. And in ('onclusion ... These are days i»f desegrega-tiim. The country is striving al great length to bring ahoul justice and equality. This court was considering murder. Ctdor had no place at all. .Several times the prosecuting attorney made the point that the case concerned a hrutal slaying. Sentiment, personal preferences and past practices were unimportant. ★ ★ ★ Alabama juries mu,sl taco lh(> facts of today and do .so now. Tli(> Nation, the law and the courts have spoken. We can’t have a separate ■set of circumstances govering a lew areas that still bow before tradition and the prejudices of a century. A desperate attempt was made to discredit the name aiTd memory of the murdered Detroit woman. Whether she was as weak as painted —or whether she was an angel— isn’t the point. ★ ★ ★ She wasn’t on trial. She’d been hrufally slain. This jury came very close to conviction. It: was a step in the right direction, hut a step isn’t sufficient. Nothing less than one hundred per cent justice should prevail. There will he a re-trial. That’s as it should he. “Bobby'" Kennedy . . . . Before the last Democratic convention, opponents of “Bobby” Kkn-NEny were afraid he might crash the gate on the strength of his family name and become the Vice-Presidential nominee. The loyal and veryv vocal Kennedy contingent was ready to supp^ort him, but Lyndon B. Johnson tossed the official nod to Minnesota’s Humphrey. Johnson'was the Big Boss. Kennedy didn’t even rank as a pal. - ★ ★ ★ When Bobby’s older brolluT -wielded the magic wand. Bobby snubbed the T^xaiuand it wasn’t done behind a veil of secrecy. LBJ stood up “and took it.’’ He didn’t demur.’ But the schism was app^ent and Washingtonians understood it fully. Hence Kennedy’s defiance of the head man in the pasf few days oc-casidned no great surprise: A . big handful of Senators went along with Bobby and dispassionate news dispatches said his open opposition on the Domini- * can Republic crisis actually-strengthened his position in the District of Columbia, i Bobby did his part skillfully. I Some coibrnentators suggest now ml^t not wait ufitil 1972 to toss Jottlng.s from Uh‘ w(‘ll-tluimbc(l iioU'book of your pcri|)Ht('tic ri'-porU'i-: — Ha.soball aU.c'nduncc and game TV vi(?wing aie .slumping and they will (‘onfiiUK' to do .so, until they speed up the game. 'I’lie grole.sque spec lade of a three dollar pitdK'r posing for 40 .seconds before delivm ing '‘ball two” is sending thousands of fans home for good and turning off TV ■sets all over the.land............ Overheard: “He invented a dgareUe with ear plugs. You can’t hear the advice of friends Ihal suggest you stop”..............In the last ten days, the leaves have simply popped and nature is especially lovely everywhere. if ★ ★ There are only, 12,000 people in (he whole 11. S. 100 years old — and up.................Over- heard; “My dog never barks but he’s (he most wonderful watchdog you ever .saw. His bite’s so much worse than his hark.’’ . . . .............How many Oakland County residents know that one of Jerome Bronson’s very capable young assistants is a grandson of former CM [’resident William S. Knudsen?............ . . . The latest in Cofham is panhandling in groups of three to five. Stan Swin- ton. Director of A.P. World Services, has had liy-lines on news dispatches in more than 100 different countries. ★ if if One of Michigan’s best established and most honorable firms brought 27 indigents up from Appalachia to help the GovernmentAyattle. Within three weeks, every one returned—to live in leisure on the taxpayers .............Overheard: “When people tell you something ‘for your own good,’ ft’s usually for their own satisfaction.’’.............LBJ is tendering the olive branch to TV and radio. He ought to. He gave them, raw, rough deals the last few time s out................Dept, of Cheers-and Jeers: the C’s — Holland’s tulip festival; the J’s—That Alabama jury. ' • —Harold A. Fitzgerald ^ Now and then all^f.fic laws and regulations should bes1Sipend€d.;,fq|> a weekend, during which sensible people would, of course, stay out of „ traffic, and reckless drivers would scratch off. and go hurtling along thie highways, kining oIT'arcbnsid-erable number of one another. ( Voice pf the People: Header Soundu Praised for British Enlerlainerif 'I’he Hrili.sli mu.sicid groups are mueh betler than any Ameriean group. The unkempt ones are American. Maybe some of the English groujis aren't the most liandsome men in tlx* world, Iml al leasl they <‘aii sing and play their iiifilnimenlfi, ■AAA 'I'he Eiiglisli groitpN nho art^iri afi'tiitl of Haying and doing wlial Uiey like even llioiigli it may hurt their popularity. If they waul to dale or get married, they do. They admit they want money, hut tliey want to enjoy it, so they do. AN KNCUSII UKVOLimoNIST \\iiloiiiohile liisiiram-e BaleH Are lligir When In NoincIliiMH going In he (Inin* nhniil (he high cost of nnlomolille iiiNinniire'’ Whal doeN a iieiNOn pay a<'cl(lenl itianr-ance lorV Afi hOon aa an an iy had not had any political talks here, devoting the time instead lo seeing Kosygin's old home town. UNUSUAL Such a personally escorted visit to lliis former ezarist capital is unuvsual. Diplomats In M o s c o w considered Kosygin’s presence here a sign ot special Soviet attention to India. Shastri and Kosygin visited the Leningrad metal works whore turbines are made for Indian power plants, "Can we gel HAVE TO PAY “Yes, but you will h; mier replied. ol I hem’.’” .Sha.stri asked Kosygin. Shastri said lie was very impres.sed wilh Ihe factory. He thanked the workers for sending equipment to India. Eisenhower argued that there is no analogy between the present situation and the revolt in Hungary in 1956. He declared that ariy action by the United States in Hungary would have meant that the United States would have had to send its military forces through other countries, for which it probably could not have gotten permission, and that the only effective military way would have been lo “go directly to Russia with our bombs" — something that would have brought on a major war. By incredible chance, it sailed thousands of miles across the Faelfic, prodded along by the jet stream that prevails at heights , between 25,000 and 40,000 feel, and came to rest on some naked power lines leading from Bonneville Dam to the Hanford, Wash, plutonium plant. The lines were short-circuited. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Save a Buck The Dallas Morning News LB.1 says he eliminated three White House, jobs and saved $40,000 a yeqr. Frobahly they' were two Eisenhower caddies and a Truman piano tuner. When Soviet missiles; were discovered in Cuba in 1962, the Kennedy administration mobilized American military power and demanded that the missiles be removed. NOT KNOWN To this day, it is not known whether the missile bases have been rendered completely useless or whether the trained JElqssian technicians who remain The essence of the bomb that eventually fell on Nagasaki and broke the spine of Japan’s resistance was being refined at Hanford that day. It was a zillion to one shot, i'f course, and never made the newspapers because of cen.spr-ship. But the whole adventure was spooky, as the U.S, Naval Academy’s Clark G. Reynolds, PhD., relates in the current is.sue of “The Airpower Historian,” a fa.scinating journal put out by the Air Force Historical Foundation, Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgomery, Ala. In all, 9,000 balloons were launched before the campaign against the U.S. was dropped late in June 1945. No Policy Genius and sub.sequent encounters with the enemy there entrenched - -whose subversive operations, military and otherwise, are conditioned on hemispheric defense forces standing still. Senator Kennedy’s formula didn’t ayeumplish any secur- ' ity when — riding the official tandem family saddle — he helped make policy. And it won’t now. Organization of American States to act. Meanwhile, the OAS has indeed acted, voting by a bare two-thirds majority to send a peace force to the Dominican Republic. Nashville Banner Thousands fell harmlessly in the Pacific, miles short of their objectives. Interceptors at Hawaii and in the Aleutians shot down many more as they drifted by. A Montana sheriff plugged one with a rifle bullet. in Cuba can still activate such bases in a short time. “Russian is not a difficult Ian-,-guage to learn.” says a professor.* At any rate, it is doubtless much easier to learn to Understand Russrah than Russians. But, just as Eisenhower .says that the people of the United States would not have sanctioned intervention in Cuba dwing his adminl^ation, so Jt may be argued that public |T opinion woulfl not have fav-’ ored more drastic steps than They came down in areas as widely separated as Alaska ^nd Oxnard, Calif., antf drifted as far east as Nebraska. Some 230 of them were accounted for by authorities. But the lid ivas kept on the story to a remarkable degree. What pried it loose was the tragedy of May 5, 1945, at Lake-view, Ore. Hippilyjipp comes Sen. Robert F. Kennedy to yap at President Johnson’s heels for sending the Marines into the Dominican Itepublic without consulting the OAS for advice and consent. It wasn’t, he said, the way his brother would have done it. Hardly can Senator Kennedy lay claim to genius in this field of policy operations. F’or America has not forgotten (he Bay of Pigs debacle and the presidential bungling that led to Jhat military disaster. The Senator, then attorney general and brotherly team advisor, sat in on the decisions and the switching of signals that turned prospects of victory into overwhelming defeat. On the Latin front their way was to first deny that sparks were flying or fire i*aging, then when the evidence was in beyond all refutation, call ,^a cap-fereneg, polL the internatiohal assembly on what policy should be, and proceed from there according to whether , it came up heads, or tails. It was the latter more frequently’ than the former. That’s the way we lost Cuba, President Johnson is in charge of policy, and executing il with courage. He should be spared the kibitzing of hacks who.se needling can only give aid and comfort to divisioni.sts in the OAS. Senator Bobby should go j'Climb another mountain. Too Many... The Atlanta Constitution Nevertheless, the vSecurity Council debate has provided the world with the unappetizing spectacle of diplomats calling each other dirty names, with no visible good coming out of it. The debate once again points up the crisis which faces the United Nations, an organization which has peace as its goal but is at war within itself; an agency split by many blocs, factions and coalitions. Actions, it is often said, speak Jouder than words. If this is true, the United Nations --w h c r e words are flung with abandon but there is little action — is indeed a small voice in a troubled world. Praying is an art. Too many oj us ask the Lord to-guide us, then grab the steering wheel ourselves. Smaller Stock The Local Gov’t Newsletter ' lhaefivify The., pecatur Review The. average wornan has a smaller stock of words than the ordinary man, but the turnover is greater. ' ' The United, Nations Security Council hearings on the crisis, in the Dominican Republic seemingly have turned into a “talkathon” of inactivity. In one way^ this is fortunate. The Security Council did not rush headlong into passing a resolution sponsored by t h e Soviet Union condemning the United States’ action in the Dominican Republic. The CouhcH wait-. ed, at the Iji.S* request, for the The Associated Press I: exclusively to the use, to) cation of all local news i 1 in Oakland, ( Washtenaw Counties It is SU.00 i year; elsewhere in Michigan anc all other places in -the UnItec States $26.00 a year. AH mail sub scriptions payable in advance Postage has been paid at the 2n< class rate at Pontiac, Member of ABC. ‘I -T ■ I" - 'i ■ » ' i Th» Weather U,l. Wcathtr Hur«iu PirMtil THE PONTIAC PRE f't. \ » mpm Cl y 'j VOL. 12a NO. HO ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ rONTIAC, MICIIKJAN, 'I'HLSDAV, MA\ IH, Itio,'^ l’A(0’,S 10« Repeal Taft- Section $147.7 Million in Senate Spending Bills OK'd I.ANSINC (;i1 The Sentile fi|)jii‘ove^| $147.7 inlllioii In slale ajHauling lor DMlItiid hml niglil .SeniilorN ilehaleit at h'ngth a $I(KMMK) Kludy of higher eduia , , lion by the now State Board of ' Education before rejeefing it. ol final votcK on wliieli not one dlaaent wun recorded, it pa^iied llieae U|i|)ro|trlu(loiis Then, In a rupld-tlre aerleH health. $20,441,547 for public • $20,10(1,(121) for correclloriH • $2II niillion lor aludy aiid lirclinilnary plaiitiiiig ol < a|iilal outlay projeriH • $2 inlllion l(M HcholaiHhipK to college HtudentN. • $07.4,480 for local airporl (levelopmeni U.S. Resumes Air Attacks on N. Viet Nam Carrier-Based Planes Blast Storage Area South of Capital City The figurea were c IhoHC recommctided by (jov/’ (ieorge Komney jti hia Kiidgcl nu'HHagc NOT IN HOUSE But that wasn’t the SAICON, ,Soulh V i M Nam (/I'l The. United Slalo.s rosunmd air slrikos aitainsl Norlli ViH Nam today, a U.S. m i 1 i t a r y the House where a $.544 million sttoko.smail .Silid school aid hill moved wilhoul , debate into po.sllion f..r final J'“‘ « passage Thai nu-asure is near- ly $110 million above llomney's * '*'‘tl .Seji allacked a. suggestion. 'Hie House jilso <"'‘o ft I'hu moved a flock of other .s|M‘ndlng "f bills uj) to tlie final vote iM>si Initial pilot reports said > Skirts Minimum Wage Boost in Labor Message Urges an Extenfsion of Coverage; Seeks Hike in Overtime Pay tion. The .Scaiate pul over until to morrow preliminary debaU- on a .school aid proposal which is $82 million less liian Hie House measure Th(> Senate ran oul of lime before it could vote on a $185.!)-million higher (“ducuiion bill. II was first on the agenda for to day. vere damage was inflicted on the target, wliieli was reported Iniriiing. Tlie strikes were the firs! against Hie Uommunisl North in six days There was no explanation liere for Hieir resumption. .SUHKOUNDEI) Miiyoi (oi ;i day Edward A .Scliimke ol Hie Village of I’enlw.'iler won deri'd why he should he in Hie .picture with all (he pretty women He seems lo be enjoying Hie experienci'. surounded by (friiin left) Mrs, lijivid .Saks, president ol (he Oakland (!ounly W A S 11 1 N t ; 'V 0 N (/II l’|•<^sldPF)”rlunitles particularly like a reunion Iciidcd. An auto plant lour fol- Pontiac cars and a stuffed toy b'r the flood of teen-agers now wilti ail old friend lor Pent- lowed aler Village President Ed ard A. Scliimke , , .Scliimke lived in t’ontiac lor ground fire and all returned p,-ief ii„,e 30 years ago and No few trips back since then. tiger; all lo remind Hicm of ontering our labor force Hieir visit to f’oritiac. OVERTIME MESSAGE Mayor Willla.n II laylor Jr . a Iroin u.„i.,|„,i„„ |,i „„er. The Stale Senate yesterday approved a study of the proposed Michigan (’ollego of Os- cnemy aircraft were reported. Ill the meantime, the Kroiiiul 'ar picked up. Vietnamese troops and U. S, Threaten Drive Was Snot Down Over N. Korea to Crush Rebels tcopathic Medicine, to be local- helicopters killed 128 Viet Cong ed in Pontiac. troops and captured 31 in three The action came after operations today and yesterday, a lengthy debhte in the upper Ib't 11 government troops were Hdusc. The vote was 17-11 in killed and .58 were missing in a favor of appropriating funds for '"'‘‘‘t Cong attack on a hamlet At u dinner at Kingsley Inn ill Bloointield Hills lust night, he said he was uma/.ed at Hie progress Pontiac has been making. The Oakland (tmmly Service Center was loured in the afternoon. In the evening the Sehimkes work 'in order' to spread and members of Hie Pontiac Da^'o^iv day employment by boosting the Chv CommiMuii.n >.ii..n,i,wi ii.„ 0”viMUng the Vil- overtime pay r.wynir..m««.o 1 . iP riUv loKC on the Lake Michigan shore from time and , ‘ ‘ about 15 miles south of Uiding- hie lime I.eavuig for ITntwater this ton. (!-half to dou- the study. 100 miles east of Saigon. "We’ve lu'en royally trc'ated. Tlie jieoplc have been wonder-fhl lo us - everyone from the mayor on down,” he .said. A bill Which would have provided operating and maintenance funds for the }(chool “It’s been an exciting day and memorable one. TOKYO (AP(-Pyongyang radio said a light U.S. Li!) re-connais.sancc plane was shot down today over Communist North Korea. In Seoul the United Nations Command reported announcement that a South Korean L19 aircraft was reported missing and presumed down in North Korea after it strayed across the demilitarized armistice zone. Dominican Junta: No to U. S. Peace Plan More than a battalion of South ^vM.,0, Vietnamese troops hit a Viet was killed last Friday in the framing camp .’iO miles MUST HAVE MONEY •pproprlatas emmUte. ^ »“ Sen. Carl O’Brien (D-Ponliac) of fighting th(‘y killed at least 40 municipal offices Sen. Raymond Dzendzel (D-De- guerrillas and captured six county.sorvice center Vehicle Safety Checks Start Rain May Visits in Area Tonight, Early Tomorrow While .luhii.soii’.s message did not spell out the details, a e c 0 m p a n ying legislation would require double-time pay only after 48 hours of work in a given week. Inspections Are Held at Area Locations Showers or thundershowers may visit the Pontiac area to- This would drop one hour a week over a three-year period to 45 hours a week for workers now covered by the law. The double-time provision ap- The U.M. Command said the plane belonged to the Republic of Korea Army. The fate of its Korean pilot was not immediately known. An announcment said it still was not definitely determined if the L19 plane had been shot down as claimed by a/North Korean radio broadcast. The broadcast monitored in Tokyo claimed the U.S. reconnaissance plane “illegally i ntruded into the territorial air” of North Korea at “2:42 p.m.” SANTO DOMINGO* Dominican Republic (AP) — The Dominican junta today poised the Hfleat of an all-out drive against the rebels after rejecting a new peace plan, offered by Washihg-ton. As the junta sent tanks and fresh troops with mortars and artillery against rebel holdouts in northern Santo Domingo, Foreign Minister Horacio V i-ciosa wanted that all resistance would be crushed unless the insurgents drop their “absurd and unacceptable pretensions.” The junta president, Brig. Gen. Antonio Imbert Barrera, rejected a U.S. proposal reportedly calling for a coalition, saying it would open the way to a Communist takeover. troll, tacked the study amend- along with a number of wean- >liix-'rary) are Annual voluntary motor ve- men; onlo u *‘5 R.miHw.r, „„„ __________i,._ ___1 ___ ,, I, amazinc. You mii.st hav(> mon- :___________ ____ . ment onto a $2.8-million project ons, grenades and mines, U.S. You must have mori- inspections are being held stuily bill. officials reported after a body ‘ Despite the fact that our os- count of the dead, teopaths provide the basic health care for one-third of our There was no immediate re- In Binh Tuy Province, two companies of Viet Cong attacked a village 65 miles east of Saigon Monday. Four U. S. helicopters battered the Communists while ground troops reinforced a regional forces ey in Pontiac. Greeted at the city limits by.a police escort, INmtiac’s mayor-for-#ttay and hh wife arrived at Cily Hall about 10 a.m. ('offee and donuts refreshed the Sehimkes for their busy day. They were guided'by Mayor Pro Tern and Mrs. Leslie H. Hudson. night and again early tomor- parently would not apply to the row morning. 4 5 tnijlion additional workers * * * which the legislation seeks to Temperatures will fall into the bring under provisions of pres-high 50s tonight and edge up to ent law. IN retail TRADE never been a college in our state,” Dzendzel said. At present, the Michigan Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons is at work raising funds to construct the college.» The federal government will . , . also assist in funding the con- defending the vil- struction. '®8e. The state would participate by A U.S. spokesman said 50 Viet off the Mayors Exchange Day providing funds for operation of Cong were killed — 30 of them visit, the school and by organizing a by fire from the helicopters — * * * 10-man college authority to while five of the defenders were , At midday, Pontiac Motor Di-oversee and operate the college, killed and four were wounded, vision hosted a luncheon for ford Township. The Pontiac inspection pro- day. gram, sponsored by the Pontiac Area Charnher of Commerce, began this morning at five locations. , A motor tour hf the city’s loop road — Wide Track — led Waterford Township Junior I P m. was 70. Chamber of Commerce members will conduct township inspections Friday and Saturday at three locations: The M59 Plaza, Drayton Shopping Center and the Pontiac Mall. cool is the outlook for Thurs- 1 1 I he additional workers to be covered by the $1.25 minimum (he present time and I’orty-six.was tlie low record- one-half for overtime past 40 ing in downtown Pontiac before hours a week would be largely 1 f I?' reading at in retail trade, laundries and (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) For Advanced Gifts Realtor to Head UF Unit In Today's Press Liuzzo File Detroit police inspector admits he gave out report I- PAGE 2. Voting Bill Senate leaders trying to-unite backers to hurry okay — PAGE 5. Soviet Agents Pose growing menace. Hoover warns Congress— PAGE 4. Area News ........... 8 Astrology ...........14 Bridge ............ .14 Crossword Puzzle Comics., . ... Editorials Markets ........ Obituaries .... Sports . ....... Tbeaters ....... TV & Radio Programs 27 Wilson, Earl ..... . 27 Women’s Pages .... .11-13 The plan offered by presidential assistant McG e o r g e Bundy and three other officials ; from Washington reportedly : called for a government headed ! by Antonio Guzman, agriculture I minister under exiled President Juan Bosch. Guzman was known to be acceptable to the rebel regime headed by Col. Francisco Caa-„mano Deno. The rebels originally sought the j^etum of Bosch ' and of the constitution which was junked when the military overthrew him. BOSCH PUPPET’ Imbert called Guzman 27 .. 6 ...20 .. 21 17-19 1 puppet.” He said he reminded the U.S. envoys that a prime U.S. aim was to prevent the Dominican Republic from , falling under Red domination. „ U»S. spokesmen have begun ' retreating from Washington’s original contention that Com- . munists were dominating the rebel movement. The Pontiac safety checks-are conducted by volunteers - from local civic and service clubs. Check points will be open every day through Saturday from ^ Pontiac realtor Bruce J. Annett has been named (!\R'sTirKFR< chairman of the advance gifts committee of the 1965 jIT e pLrs, 425S LaA- w " “Calvin J. cite, Waterford Township, chair- general chairman of this year’s drive, an- man of the Pontiac car inspec- HOUnced today. tions this year, reports that Annett, president and treasurer of Annett Inc 28 f -"anagement firm, nas been active in United Fund work since 1952. He was chairman of last year’s campaign and in 1952 and 1962 served a chairman of the fund’s commercial ' - ___ division Lights, brakes, turning signals, exhaust systems, tires, windshield wipers, and rear view mirrors will be checked, according to Powers. Approximately 6,000 cars were The more than 50 members tested last year, and the com- of the advance gifts committee nnttee rs hoping they reach at will begin their activities in least 10,000 this year. September, a month before the CHECK POINTS regular campaign opens. Check points will be loca\ed They wilj solicit funds from on West Huron at Franklin Boul- the more than 300 individuals evard. Mount Clemens near and companies whose contri-Featherstone; North Johnson, buttons top $100. near the Grand Trunk Railroad Annett, of 2799 Sylvan Shores, The leader of the peace-mak-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) FOR SAFETY’S SAKE - Mrs. T. W. Jack-son, president of the Traffic Safety division of. the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, sponsors of the city’s vehicle inspection program, gives James E. Powers,^ safety director , Press Photo for Pontiac Motor Division and chairman of the program, the first •.“Safety Checked” sticker for the program which opened today and will run through Saturday. .-ossing west of Cass, Montcalm Waterford Township, has been at Pingree and on Orchard Ave- active in professional groups, niie east of,Telegraph. holding both the presidency of | , -Ch^man of the safety inspec- the Pontiac Real Estate Board j tion program in Waterfiird and the Michigan Real-Estate j Township is Gary Robinson. Association. Car and • tcuck chec:ks are * *, ★ ' scheduled Friday from 5 to' 9 He. is also past president of p.m. and Saturday from.noon the Pontiac City Clyb and is ' to 9 p.m. at the three Water- active in the: Area ford locations. , Chamber of Coffimerce BRUCE J, i i:- niF. I*()NTIA(! IMIK.SS, 'I'lIKShAY, MAY IH. lUOA Detroit Police Officer! Threaten Drive Who Gave Liuzzo < to Crush Rebels Data Gets Transfer DCTHOIT (AIM A police (Ic j leclive liiHpcclor dlsclofied Mon ' dfiy he Kovc oid the (Millce 111cm | Inronniiiloii on shiln civil iIkIiIn worker Mrs Violii Llir/./.o nod wag |inimpllv leinoved Iroin he; |>ogl Mlclil){iin Ihntlde.'i a police In (piiry, Ihc mallei has heen made a Miih|ecl loi InveMlii^aliiai hy I he Sliilc hepiMlalurc (Continued From Page One) ing learn geni to 8anlo Domingo hy the Oigani/allon ot Ameri < an .Slalea relumed lo Waahing Ion hml nighi and aaid hia group had made no progrcMM, lieipccloi I'.lilh' Mlllci', licml ol Ihe Criminal mil,•lllgcnce Uu rcau, said he gave Ihe, Inlorniit lion lo Police CoinmisMionci Marvin Lane ol .suhurhan War ren, who relayed il lo Ala hama Sherill .lames C Clark Miller iiuuh' his diselo* superior,■( upon his reliii lurlough (drardiii said Miller gave Ihe j inlormallpn lo Lane in good | lailh Me said Miller lell Lane | needed il in his proli'sslonal po ' hee Poliic ('ominl.'.siooei l(a\ (-li ardlri, while deleiidliig Miller's mollves, removed him as head of the hiireau. lie was assigned ' elsewhen* "Miller’s molives were good, hill his indgUK'iil was iiol," Cirardin said "Inspeelor Miller had no idea lhal lids inlomiallon would go iuiy lurlher," Cirardin said. Mrs. l.luz/o, :i!l, molher of live, was shol lo death March 2ri near Selmii after aiding in a '■(reedom mareh" im MouL goiina y which demaiideii viding rights for Negna-s. SFNT TO ( LAUK The inloriiialion was sent lo Clark al Selma, Ala Ullimalely, II found ils way mio Ihe hands of Ihc Ku Klux Klan Invesligalloiis lollowisl in Zoning Report Due on Project Miller eomiiieiiled only hrielly lo lu'wsmen "I am a |Milie(> olllen iiiid I have tieen Iranslerred and that’s all I want lo say," he said. APOL(ICI7,F,l) TO I.ANF Sheriff Clark apologi/ed lo Lane hy lelegrain Irom Sehna ' lor gelling llie laller iiivolved Clark said iii Ihe lelegram he had rel elved a Ihrealeiiing tele phone call less than lhr<‘e houi s , -........................ ,/i 'Uiiles,i and litilil Ihe Domln-li Oil faelloiis (I e e i d e lo trust each other, Il is hal'd lo figure how |K*aee ean he aeeompllshed in Ihe Dominican lte|iulille," said Amliassadoi' Itieardo Co lomho of Argr'iillna. WITH MISSION Aeeompanying Hie OAS mission was Jack Mood Vaughn, an assislani secretary id sliil<‘ (or inter Ameriean idlairs w li o weal lo Santo Domingo w I | .1 Hiimly, (;nnf|re echoed for nearly an hour last night north of the UiS • patrolled corridor through the rapital as jiiiila forces waged a house-lo-housr battle against rebels outside the Ztl-hloch rebel area Inshle Ihe ll.S. lines, Itolslered by alaail .'100 fresh soldiers from Ihe armed forces training center al San Isidro air hase, Ihe junta claimed i I s (orce.s had adviineed five or six hloeks in Ihe norlhern siihiirhs in 24 hours Anthropologist I Praises OU Birmingham Area News Stress on Continuing Education Lauded Problems Still Unsettled on Driver License Setup CIIANCF.I.LOH (illF.FTS laiHlum series on eonllnuing ediicallon last night Before an aiidleiice (d ovei' 20(1 alumiii. sliideiitH. laeiilly, adinliilsIralorM imd guesls, Dr Mead complimented Ihe iiniver slly lor Its Iniiovallvi^ slress on ediicallon as a lifelong prisess "We imist change the Idea,” said Dr. Mead, “that a college or university edueation is a terniinal state. "Degrees no longer ean he IlKaighl of us the end People miisl eontinue to learn all Ihroiigh their lives." BlItMINiillAM The piob 1 <-rease in reliate» paid to l ities lems of time, s|»aee and money for providing the service In the Issuing of drivers licenses It was noted that there is with photograplm reMiain iiiire j prostmtly a hill heitig eonsldertul solvtai for the city. In the Moust‘ lo Increase the cost The (Ity (hmmisslon last j of a license, tail nutsl ol Ihe In niglit directed Hie admlnlslra crease would he earmarked for Hon lo continue talks with Ihe | driver tialnhig, .Heerelary of slate In an effort lo reach a mutual agreement lllriiiinghaiii has been selected as one ol M exuiiilnliig slatioiiH III Oiiklaiid ('oniily (hat will receive camera e(|iilpinenl neeessury iiiulei Ihe new drivers lii-enslng procedure. Queen in Germany for 10-Day State Visit Has Tentative Okay ot Pontiac Planners af|(‘r Mrs, Liiizzo's killing and (his was why he asked for (he reppri on (he Delroil woman. ('ity eornmi.ssioncrs Imiiglil are expected to rc(!eive a report on a rezoning proposal for a flO-acre site on Pontiac’s cast side for developnu'nl of a multiple housing-.shofiping center complex. The commission will receive the recommendation of the (.’ity Planning Commission. City planners considered the rezoning at their meeting earlier this month and gave It a tentative affirmative recommendation. However, the City Planning Commission gave its r,ecommen-dation with the understanding that the developer would present a plot plan of the proposed project. Final approval of the multiple housihg and commercial zoning rests with the City Commission. OTHER ACTION In other action tonight, the commission is scheduled to consider appointments to the ('ity Planning Commission and the Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees. 'I'hc (eleplione operalor lold him the call was Irom Detroit Irom a person identifying him-.self as an olfieer of Ihe Teamsters Union. Clark said (he caller "Ihreal-ened the lives of my wife, my children and myself. ” The call never has hei'ti (raced IUJ.SINES.S AGF.N'I Mrs. Liuzzo’s husband, Anthony, is a business agent of the Teamsters Union. The information on Mrs, Liuzzo sent to Clark reportedly included details of the Liuzzo family background. H came from confidential files of Ihe police. II i.s estimated lhal :i(H) rebels wtTC making a stand against more than I,h00 junta soldiers. cii()s.si:i) Bitii)(;E The junta force moved into Ihe rebel area from Ihe norih, cro.ssiiig Ihe PresidenI Peynado Bridge over (he Isabella River They set up a line west of the rehels near tlie (iuiscpieya baseball stadiuih and began pressing eastward BONN, (icrmaiiy (APi tjiu'cii Kliz.aheth II and I’rince j I'hilip arrived In Wi'sl Cerinany I today for a historic 10-day slate 1 visit and a sfiectacular demon-slralion of Britain’s deepening (rl«;iidship wilh It.s foe in two world wars Asks Repeal of 'Right to Work' Section FlizahcHi was Ihe lirsi British sovereign lo step on (ierman .soil in Wi years, since her grandfather King George V came to Ihe wedding of Kai.ser Wilhelm IPs daughter Victoria Loui.se in May 101:1. Fifteen months later World War 1 broke mil PresidenI Heinrich Luebki‘, Chancellor Ludwig Erhard and , In addition, a letter is to be presented from Oakland Community College officials requesting that the college’s one-mill tax levy go on city tax bills this year. Cirardin said earlier the tile was prepared as a matter of police routine and for the protection of the Liuzzo family in view of the public attention aroused by her slaying. Meanwhile, the name of a third police officer came into the picture. PUT IN TOUCH The Detroit News said in a dispatch from Wa.shington that former Sheriff Ferris Lucas of Michigan’s St. Clair County declared he had put Clark in touch with Lane. (Continued From Page One) dry cleaning establishments, hotels and motels, restaurants, hospitals and .some other industries. “Unfortunately, these workers are generally in the lowest wage groups and most in need of wage and hour protection," .Ibhnson said. Order Foster to Stand Trial all Kriiard's CaliincI were (m hand al Bonn's Wahii Airport for Ihe royal arrival For many Germans, particularly Ihe yourtgsters who know World War II otdy from their history books, the royal visit was iui exciting speclach*, a colorful momcnl in Ihe otherwise drah public life of West Germany. ROYAL SEAL Prince Philip, who spent much of his childhood in Germany, has long urged his wife lo make Hu‘ (rip and thus set Ihe royal .seal on (he two na Hons’ postwar reconciliation. Thousands ()f officials have worked since before Christmas lo pr<>()an‘ for the occasion. She polnl(ul oid that fj, love of learning shuU^d jjC: / InsHlled 3'/«-l- f 136. 13V4 136* Mackey Ah-McCrory wl Mead John .48 Mich Sugar ,lOg Molybdan 5 52Vj 52'/j 52'/*^ '. 8 7'/* 76* 76*- ' 52 22V4 22'/4 22V4- ' 4 56* 5Vj 56* .... » WV4 8864 8864- Vj 7 J2W 21'/* 226*-!- V4 Stocks of Local Interest OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations Irom the NASD are representative inter-dealer prices ol approximately 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices do not Include retail markup, markdown or commission. AMT .......................... Associated Truck ............ 17-4 18 Braun Engineering ............ 21.4 22.2 CIMiens UtHItles Class A 31.2 31.4 Diamond Crystal . ............ 15-4 14 Ethyl Corp.................... 41.2 41.6 Mohawk Rubber Co...............jO.i 23.2 Michigan Seaaiiess Tube Co. . 26.4 27 Pioneer FlnaEir ............... 8.3 8.4 Salran Printing .............. 17.4 18 Vernor's Ginger Ale 8.5 8.7 Wehr Corp..................... 15-4 14 Wolverine Shoe ............... 32.4 33.2 Wyandotte Chemical .......... -35.4 34.2 .Quotations compiled by the NASD at approximaaely 11 a.m. Bids are repre* sentative inter-dealer prices and do not Include retail markdown or commission. Asked prices have been adiusted upward to Include approximate markup. WInkelman's .................. 14.] 15.1 Vessely Co.................... 10-* l'-» MUTUAL FUNDS Bid Asked Attiliated Fund ............. 9.31 10,07 Chemical Fund .............. 15.29 14.72 Commonwealth Stock ........ 9.81 10.72 Keystone Income K-1 ........ 10.09 H.Ol Keystone Growth K-2 ......... 4.42 7.01 Mass. Investors Growth ...... 9.90 10.82 Mass. Investors Trust....... 17.95-19.41 Putnam Growth . .....10.74 11.74 Television Electronics ...... 8.97 9.78 Wellington Fund ........... 15.55 14.95 Windsor Fund .............. 17.34 18.87 'Nominal Quotations.. Blue Chips Still Show Softness NKW YOItK (AP) Bhiti dilpa (■ontiiuKxl to kIiow aoflnehH early ItHluy lint loRhea were limited. Trading waa miHlerately active. Detdinea were mainly frac-llonal. I[)u Pont, n big laclor In Moii-st In the cash divideml. 'I'he slock rose 2V* to 78 on an initial transaction of 2,000 shares. Hails slutyved some signs of steadying as Pennsylvania Hail-road aiKl New York Central IKisled plus signs. Many (carriers were unchanged. Spiegel was off '4i at .'15'/h i a block of 14,100 shares. 0|)enlng bliN-ks Included: Spitrry Hand, untdianged at in on 5,500 shares; HHaiKlard Oil (New Jersey), off Vs at 7*Vi 4,100; and Sears, Hoebuck, ‘4 at 70Y6 on 3,500. Monday the Assotdated Press Average of 60 sbM'ks fell 2.7 to 340.8. Prices were mixed on American StiNik Flxcbange. The New York Stock Exchange iMhACtlOfU Of TaJI ABC Con 70 I Sow ! i.40 x2 54'4 54'/* 54W Anneon .fig AnktnCh 03P 3 43V< 43'/* * 13 32'/i 326* 3 Bru^*swlck Bucy Erie 2 21 536* 53'/* 53'/4 , 35'/* 356* 356* Colum H .80 Camp Sp .90 C«n Dry 1 CdnPac 1.50a Carrier 1.30 Cartr Pd .40a Casa Jl 8 356* 35'/j 35'/i - '. 176* 17'/j 17'/j - '. 18'/< 18'/4 18'/4 CessnaA 1.20 1 346* 346* 346* -1- Checker, Mot x29 53'/j 536* ; CocaCola 1.70 CoIgPal 1.20 CoMInRad .40 ConsPov Contain; . 35'/j 35'/a 35'/j - , 52'/. 526* 526* - 3 436* 436* ; Dan RIv DaycoCp .40b Day PL 1 Deere 1.40a Del Hud .3Pg DelteAlr 1.40 DetEdls 1.30 Det Steel .40 Diem Aik 2 Dtntey .40b DorneMn .80e DougAIr ,30d —D— 24 296* 29'/4 296* -4 22% 22% 22% -t I 33'/4 33'/4 33'/4 - '. I %'/* -,' DowCh duPon/ L25d 19 2516/4 2506* 251 I tV/2 82'/* 82'/j - '. irwrRad .40 12 14 13% 13% - V rIeLack RR vantPd .30d versharp 1 FaIrCam .50e Fairch Hiller Fansteet Mel Fedd Corp 1 FedDStr 1.50 FedMog xd1.80 FerroCorp " 18 14'/) 14% 16'/J -f- Flltrol Cp 2 Firestne 1.20 Foote M .20e Forem 0 .40 Freept S 1.40 Frito Lay .84 FruehCp 1.50 5064 5064 5064 » 34% 34'/* 34'/4 -I- Gen Cig 1.20 GenDynaiT. . GenElec 2.20 Gen Foods 2 GenMills 1.40 GenMot 2.25d GpibSw '6enTel8.EI 1 GenTIre .40 GaPacIfIc 1b GerberPd .90 GettyOM .lOg Gillette 1.10a 17 104% 104/i Long III Lt 1 3AV*. 36»/i 3A»/b LuckySI 1.20b ' 5 ^ 70'/a 70Vi 70'/a -t — I 38'/i 38'/i 38'/« MayDSIr 1 McCall .401 McDonAIr McKess I.) 5464 5464 - 6* Monsan I.. A/tontWard Morrei Co Motor^a I NatOalry 2.40 Nat Olst 1.40 NalFUel 1.40 4 2464 2464 2V/a 3 85'A 85'Z 95'/4 - 4 95'/* 95'/* 95% - 5 33% 33% 33% OenI .14 NatGyps 2b NatLead .75g 35 12'/* 12% .12’/) Nat Steel 2 NYCent 1.30( 3 59'/* 59'/) 59'/) -f 4 50 5 I tS'.* 1 9 114% 11 Pec G El 1.20 Pac Petrol POcTliT 1.20 1 29% ,29% + ' * 31% 31% -F ' t 42% 4214 . ParkeDav la Peab Coal 1 Penn Dixie 1 Penney MOe Penn RR la 13 32% 3 39% 3 15% 13 77% 32% 32% 39% 39% 1564 1564 77% 77% 43% 43% + % 54% 54% -F'- PhllMgr 3.40 PhlliIMPet 2 Pitney Bow I PitPlate 2.40 Polaroid .10 Proct&G 1.85 PuUklhd ,34t Pullman 2a Pureon 1.40, RalstonPur 1 Rayette .48 Rayonler 1.40 Reading Co ReichCh .20a Repub Aviat RepubSteel 2 Revlon 1.30 RexallDr Mb ReynAtel .40 ReyTob 1.80 14 37% 29 45 14 • 41% RIchfOII 1.80 . Robr Corp 1 RoyCCola .48 RoyOut I.OIg Ryder Syel 3964 3964 43% 43% 93% 93% + % Sr/t 527/* - % 47 47 - % 81 81 — % 14'/4 18'/4 ■ ‘ 41% 41% 7364 7364 -764..N764 52 52 59% ’ 59Z/S 35% 35% — % 39 39 .... 4064 4064 - % 4164 4164 - % 24% 25 -F % 19% 19% -F % 12% 12% ....... 16% 14%-% 43% 43% — % 5% 49% -F % % 37% -F % 44?i 44% -F % 41% 41% -F % 23% 23»A -F % 59% 59% Safeway St 1 5 34'/* 34% 34% - % SOoa^-laOd 2 3 42% 42% 42% - % SL SanFOO"-' 3-^ 31% 37% - H StRegP 1.40b 7 3^38% 37% -F % SanOImp .441 Schmiey I Sear* Roe I Seeburg ,40 Shell Gil I 70 Sher Wm i,70 ! 70'/s 70% 706* : l9'/» i I 54 ImgerCo 2.20 Smithk l.40e Mo'iTS, SouPaC 1.40 South Ry 2.80 Sparry Rand Spiegel, 1.50 Sid KolUmen sISDIKJh 'i jS 9 57% 57% xll 7] 14 73% 15 82% 82’/* 4 85'/i 85'/* 12 40% 40% 3 49 48V. 19 37% 37% I 13'/* )i 13’/* I '‘1 ^ I SI Peckaging »\i 9 521* 5r/* I 21 5% 5'/* 2 426* 42% I ».'t ' Timk RB 1 Trens w A ?,.Sf : T. - State Product Built With Backing of 6,200 U. P. Residents IWTHOIT (Al*» A uni(|U(i IhrcB itince lirdlcoplcr, IhiIH with tbp flniincial bucHing of some 8,200 resldcntfl of Nortliern Michigan’s Menominee area, was named Monday as Micb-Igiin Week l*reople may think tbal the UpiTer I'eninsula was a .strange place to develop a hell-copter manufacturing firm, but don't forget that in an earlier day, many people regarded Detroit as a strange place In which to start the auto business," said Romney, Hiree of the lielicoplcrs liavc liccn built as ex|)crimental mod els and have logged more than 700 hours flying time without incident. NKW .STOftK Don Krayer Home I'Urnish-Ings, Inc., recTutly o|Nuicd this store at 1100 W. Huron, Waterford Township The local firm Is a division of l.akeland Sales, a MIehl gan wholesale dlsliihutlng eompauv, of whieh Fruyer Is president. The store, whieh lormor- PMII4C Pr**i P ly hoiLsed Trade Fair, has 10,000 square (eel of display area ami a paved lot In front. Fray-er, of :m0f> Hreaker, Waterford Township, has been in the furnllure and appllanee field (or 10 years. 30 OIU>F.ltS Jack Chrlslcnscn, .IJ-ycar old president of the En.strom Co. which is building the helicopters, .said 30 firm orders have been received and that the first two craft will be delivered next September. “We are delighted to get this award and It Is a source of great satisfaction to all of us who have been working on this helicopter project since 1957,” Christensen said. Prosperity Stretch: A Tax Man's Dream 7 49% 49 10 306* 3( —u— UG»*^pJ.70 USBorax .80a USGypam 3a I 21'/. 21'/* 2I’4 US I USPlywd 1.20 US Rub 2.20 US Small 3 US Stocl 2 Unit Whelan UnMalch .50 5 70% 70 70 - 2 113% 113% 113% 34 51% 51'/) 51% I UnIvO Upjohn 1.20 Varlan As VendoCo .40 VaEIPw 1.12 103 14 1564 14 3 23’/) 236* 23'/) 19 49% 49% 49% _w— Whirpool 2.40 Whirlpool wl WhIteM 1.40 Wilson Co 2 WInnDIx 1.20 Woolwprth I Worthing ' " I 33% 33% 1 34 34'/. - "4 45 45 - '/. I 44% 44V. -F /. 135 + I 12% 82% Sales figures are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates of dlvl-ends In the foregoing table are annual laburiements based on the last quartarly r semi-annual daclaratlon. Special or axtra dividends or payments not designated as regular are Identified In- TKO' a—Also ( d—Declared c—Liquidating paid In 19M or pal. ........... e—Paid last year. ■■'3, estimated ex-dlstrlbu- I value on ex-^lvIdend date, g—Declared or paid so ta; h—Declared or paid after stock I or split up. k—Declared or paU an accumulative Issue with Is In arrears, p—Paid this year, __ J omitted, deferred or no action ... at last dividend meeting, r—Declared stock during 1944, estimated cash !x dividend, y— ---------------full. x-dl»-Ex tioo. xr—Ex rights, xw—Wlfho.. .... rants, ww—With warrants, wd—Whan dlt-trlbutad. - ■ ■—- — v|—In bankruptcy or rocelvershlp or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act. or aecurllles assumed by such cr-panles. fn—Foreign Issue eublect to terest oquallzatlon tax. Treasury Petition tpondktg date a year ago. May II, I9U May IV i*«4 . 9,9n,I94,041.93 t 7,337,533,934.23 Deposits FIkoI Year July t— 102^89,714,914.33 N,91V13I,«67.23 108,577,111,7I2.«5 101,315,971,722.47 X-TotOI Dabt- 31«,459,41V149J2 309,II3,7I5,2».9I Gold Assets— 14,350,910)047.44 15,442,142,095.90 (X) - includes $203,903,040.24 debt not DOW-JONES NOON AVERAGES STOCKS 30 Indus ..................... 935.52-4.10 20 Ralls .................... 209.05-0.45 15 Utils ................... 14t.00-0.07 65 Stocks ................. 321.43-1.00 •ONOS ............... ........ 40 Bonds ....... 90.21-F0.02 10 Higher grade rails ....... 04.00 . 10 Second grade rails ....... 93.12-F0.04 10 Public Utilities ........... 00.77-F0.05 10 Industrials .......... 94.07 STOCK AVERAGES CamplM by The Aaseclated Press 30 IS IS 40 tnd. Rant UtH. Stacks Net change ....... -1.4 —.3 -.1 -.7 Noon Mon. ......503.0 U7.3 178.1 342.8 Prev. Day .......505.2'1«7.4 170.2. 343.5 Weak Ago .......501.1 m.9 174.7. 342.7 Month Ago ...490.4 173.7 177.3 339.7 Year Ago ..... 434.9 149.2 152.4 305.9 1945 High .505.2 177.0 170.2. 344.7 1945 Low 442.0 147.4 147.2 322.8 1944 High .475.1 189A 147.2 332.4 1944 LOW ...... 406.4 150.7 144.9 284.7 He said that as of Monday, some 6,217 residents, virtually all of them from the Upper Peninsula, had invested $1.3 million in the helicopter firm's stock. A further public stock offering is due later in the year, he said. Christensen and Erik Jones, his general manager, said their helicopter has many advantages over its four U.S. competing companies. He said these include ease of handling, a 115-miles-per-hour top speed-which he said was about 15 miles faster than any competitor in the small helicopter field —and ease of maintenance. $30,00a PRICE TAG New Zealand firms have ordered seven of the craft, which sell for about $30 thousand None has been used by U.S. military forces as yet but they have shown some interest in the craft, Christensen said. The Enstrom helicopter won its top honors in finals competition with products from 14 other counties. By SAM DAWSON AP BiisinrNs News Analyst NEW YORK -'nicre's iiolliiiig like a 51-ni()nUi stretch of prosperity lo gladden the heart of a federal tax cdl-lector. Record c o r-p 0 rate profits and record personal incomes are bringing the I U.S. Treasury a windfall of $1.5 billion this fis-l cal year. It ticipates a like UAW'SON amount in the fiscal year starting July I. Wallace Machesney of Detroit, chairman of the state product and agricultural awards committee, said the finalists included Ford’s Mustang car; the tomfort Air Conditioner built by Heat Control, Inc. of Jack-son and Dow Chemical Co.’s new MAPP gas, which replaces acetylene. The helicopter was the sixth annual winner of the Michigan Week award. Declare Bank Dividend The board of directors of the Pontiac State Bank at a meet ing last night declared the regu lar semiannual dividend of 50 cents per share payable June 1, 1965 to stogkhpiders of record May 18, 1965, according to Milo J. Cross, president. Dividend Announced The board of directors of Al-lid Superniarkets, Inc., parent company of Wrigley and Packer stores, has announced a regular quarterly dividend of 15 cents per share to be paid June 30, 1965, to stockholders of record June 9,1965. Ralls ma. UNI. Pgn. L. 11.3 101.3 07.3 90.4 03.7 102.4 00.9 95.0 02.2 101.0 08.3 92.4 82:9 103.5 08.4 92.2 10.5 100J 07.2 90.1 *9^1 Monday's Isl DIvMaiMs t REGULAR fa § The $3 billion Is revenue that the Treasury hadn’t foreseen when it drew up its budget last January. Cuts in federal income tax rates both lor individual Incomes and corporate earnings are now being offset in sizable amounts by Hie increas<*d totals on which lo levy the new, if lower, rates. And the windfall has led the Treasury lo agree to share some of Its giMx! fortune with the individual and corporate taxpayers. Tlie share wili be in the form of u greater than pre-vlou.sly planned cut in excise taxes, paid at retail by customers, or levied ,al manufacturers' level of some items. that corporate gross profits are running at a record annual rate of $62.6 billion. The increase of $5.8 billion in these pretax earnings from the annual rate of $57 billion in the final three months 1964 is pure gravy for the Treasury. FLOWERED I'he 51-month business expan- sion, which this month is setting a peacetime re<;ord of its own, has floWered this year in higher than expected profits and incomes. Right now, for instance, the Commerce Department figures * Siiccessfuhlnvesttr, By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “We are a couple in our late 30’s and arc interested in investing in stocks. We have six children, our home is paid for and we have $6,000 in the savings bank. Do you think we have enough in savings or should we add more? What stocks would you suggest for the education of our children and for future retirement?’’ M. R. A) There is no absolute rule-of-thumb as to the amount of savings required before an investment program is begun. The amount depends on the permanent nature of your job and the good health of yourselves and your children. I would consider that $6,000 is probably an adequate reserve, particularly since your honle is paid for. However, you do not mention insurance, and in your situation, the head of the femily. should buy as much protection as he can afford. For investments with potential growth, I suggest General Telephone & Electronics, Bristol-Myers and Corn Products. Q) “I am 70 years old and have a life^xpectancy of ten more years based on family records of longevity. As a hedge against inflation, I am holding some well-located land which is snitable for subdivision. My savings account pays me Vk per cent and income Troy Office for Osteopath Dr. Wayne A. Arner has opened offices in the Square Lake Clinic, '5949 Livertiois, ’Troy. Interning at Detroit Osteopathic Hospital, and graduating in 1962, he has been in private practice in Berkley until moving to his new location. Dr. Arner is an active staff at Pontiac OsteopaUiic Hospital. from use of the land more than pays the taxes. Would It be wise for me to buy 8|ocks? I don’t want to adopt a more severe living standard than the present one.!’ R. E. A) There are very few stocks I today’s market which pay much more than a 4 Vi: per cent yield with any degree in safety. In your position, I’d leave my money in the savings institution where it is secure and earns wd return. You are quite correct in regarding your land as a hedge against inflation. (Copyright, 1965) Income Sets New Record at Area Firm Carlton M. Higbie Jr., president, Higbie Manufacturing Co., Rochester, has announced that net consolidated income of $881,-307 after taxes for the nine months ended April 30,1965, was the highest for any nine-month period in the company’s history. Net consolidated income for the same period of 1964 amounted to $700,604. Per share earnings for the period were equivalent to $1.77 per share of common stock as compared to $1.44 for the same period of the previous year. Per share earnings are based on the average number of shares outstanding during each period and adjusted in 1^ and prior years for the five for four stock split in July of 1964. A license agreement for the manufacture of brazqd steel tubing in Mexico was recently concluded with Nacional De Cobre, S.A. of Mexico City, Higbie said. He also stated that Franklin Products Co., wholly owned subsidiary, has obtained wders irpm several automotive cus-tom^forjubular components to be used hTsmog ctmtroi devices in some 1966 model cars. Even with corporate income tax rales dropped this year from 50 per cent to 48 per cent, the Treasury will take in a sizable hunk of money, close to $31 billion. The corporations aren’t complaining because they’re glad both for the lower rate and (or the record profits. Part of what’s left after taxes will be handed out in dividends to stockholders increasing personal incomes — and part will be used to finance new plants ■ equipment. MOVING ALONG Confidently, the Treasury expects that this business spending, along with increased outlays by individuals with larger incomes, will keep the business expansion going far past this 51st month. And with the expansion should come still higher corporate profits and larger totals of personal income. The lower tax rates will be applied to that still expanding volume of taxable profits and income. Things could go wrong with all these fine hopes. The expansion rate probably will slow during the traditional summer lull. Overconfidence could lead both individuals and corporate executives into successes that could undermine the so far sober and steady growth. But right now the news is all reassuring: records falling month by month, the chance that this summer’s slowdown will be less marked than average, the probability that the momentum of the long expansion will keep things going for some time. NEW STIMULANTS And then there are the new stimulants now taking form: the cut in excise taxes~that couli^ spur private and corporate spending; the increased goveriK ment outlays that projects dt the “Great Society’’ imply. The 'Treasury is still running a deficit, and expects to keep on doing so for awhile. But the $3-billion windfall is keeping even that deficit lower than once was feared. News in Brief A total of $1,242 iiT cash was reported stolen yesterday from a cash drawer at Rudy Mazza’s Mobil Service, 457 Elizabeth Lake, according to township police. Rummage: Wed., Thurs., Frf. 10-2 p.m. 142 Perkins. —adv. Pontiac Branch of AAlIt^ used book sale. The Mall, May 20, 21, 22,9:30 - 9 p.m —adv. Rummage: 112 W. New York, 9-5 p.m., Tues. thru Sht. —adv- MOM’&i Rummage: ’rhursday* 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwiii. rt"' I '1. ;i.