AUGUST MICRO PHOTO INC. CLEVELAND, OHIO AB Tf» Wterffiet, Edition ' k' y1 VOL. 12d NO. 150 PoifTIACl MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY AUGUST 1. 1962^WtAOES . v*vmxApSSt'%™?no»Ai Faubus Victory Narrow Squeak fey S Per Cent Safe Nomination He. Soft-Pedaled Racial issue to Win Fifth Bid in Arkansas LITTJJE ROCK, ATk. »— Gov. Orval E. Pa'llbus claimed victory today in his rah for re-election as he held an even 52 per cent of the vote with only 115 precincts unreported from yes* terday’s Democratic; primary. Faubus issued a'victory state' .went saying the sag hft< dented not wish to wander in ot extremism to either the right or the left.” - TOght of a South Side market-owner quertioned-to an attempt to get Ito-Boutewwi^—- He claimed victory about lO hours after it became apparent he had defeated five opponents without a runoff Ipr the Democratic Faubus had portrayed himself die ground between the segregationist and Integra tionlst ex- —DurinSTTltol937-58 Little Rock integration crisis he became a symbol of' resistance to the U.S. Supreme Court’s desegregation decision." Delegates Vote 98-43 to Okay Constitution Faubus appeared to have won by a sizable majority early in the counting, but his lead dwindled at urban precincts reported. Sen. ,J. William Fftlbrlgh!, . D-A'rk.. " " i fob rth term aver Winston Chandler, a Little ftoick businessman, 209,722 to 110,002 with 1M - precincts -out. U.S. jteps. Wilbur Mills, Oren Harris, E. C. Gathings and James Trimble were Unopposed. With '2J235 of 2,360 precincts reported, Faubus had 190,533 votes to 74,871 for Rep. Dale Alford, .71* -795 for former Gov. Sid McMath, 20,001 fdf Vernon Whitten, 5,044 for Kenneth Coffelt and 2,024 for David Cox. h.ile three Republicans voted, against the convention's product. Delegates had only to approve an 'address to the people” explaining their work and some routine busi-mat ters to clear up this afternoon before voting the convention out of business. __ The role of moderate was a new one tor Faubus who courted segregationist votes and got them In waves In 19M Snd 190ft News Flash SPRINGFIELD, 111. I* — Killer Paul Crump, who laced the electric chair through nine years and But even as the delegates wound up their work, moot Re' publican* and Democrats already were lined up In opposite camps tor and agatost adoption a fieice- -struggle with his assailants. From $1,300 to $1,500 is believed missing from the store, £ A pair of women’s stockings, the type worn by bandits in three earlier armed robberies, were found behind the store. Stocking-masked bandits hit the Orchard. Lake Tavern, 404 Orchard Lake Ave., a week previous to the killing. The tavern is only a short distance from the Boulevard. Mar- Last Saturday men answering the same general description beat and robbed an elderly man and woman in their home at 637^Ccn-tral Ave., also on the city’s South .Side,-- . ........— On July 21, ^stocking bandits” robbed the owner of a South Hide bar as he and his wife were-entering their West Bloomfield Township home. Aluminum Co. of America plants and 12 Reynolds Aluminum' Co. plants at about 12:30 a,m. In Detroii the auto Industry which consumes about 10-per cent of the nation’s aluminum output, expressed little immediate concern over the strike. The automakers either arq near the end of their 1962 model run have* already finished. Thus they already have on. hand the aluminum necessary for current models. this, goes on two three weeks it would be a different matter," said a spokesman for Chevrolet. His feel i n g s were echped by most of the other com- | vote followed mainly along party lines. Although locrats broke ranks*-toted with the majority WASHINGTON «l - President Kennedy signed today the $4.6-bil-Foreign Aid Authorization and said he phasize too strongly how important Among other things, the measure permits Kennedy to continue limited aid to communist countries -h point disputed bitterly in Congress. Kennedy signed the measure large bipartisan 'congressional delegation looked on. He thanked the congress members for the bipartisan support the bill received, islative apportionment. Tw.o Detroit Democrats, ”T o m Downs and -Adelaide- Hart, urged the c/iotay on grounds the convention’s* proposal for Senate districting based on.s formula allowing 80 per cent for population factors and 20 per cent for area might not conform to the high court’s yet to-be-announced standards.. They said in.a joint statement: “There is considerable evidence to sqpport the premise that .the proposed apportionment formula for our state legislature will not meet even minimal requirements of the federal Constitution, not to mention fundamental expectations o( fairness. DETROIT (UPI) - The pilot of British freighter said today he didn't see the barge which hit his ship until a second before the collision. No Rain, No Hail No Sleet or Snow Ahead, Just Sun Sunny summer weather continue with mostly cloudless skies for the next few days. NO rainfall is predicted before Monday. Signs Farefgii Aid Authorization Bill n anticipation of the Police said „the stockings found near the murder scene represented the dri|y" due in the slaying of VasUlou, a Greek immigrant who operated his store' here for 15 years. The major problem would develop If the strike delayed the light metal planned tor IMS models which are due to go on production lines late this month. tlon and conciliation service ilth mediately began a survey for the DWens The 1962 model - cars used average of about 66 pounds of jalti-milium each. Individual usage varied, from about 21 pounds by Stude-baker'to more than 150 pounds in Qidsmobile F8.v ** F85 and the Chevrolet Cor-■*!«»** ™ |V?lr ,u£ Slumihum engines eXelft- ^ chtsjvely. Alumihum engines have Negotiators tor the two fee^ Va"anl and at midnight. - * I + * * j The latest tabulation shows slightly losA than 10 per' cent of all 1962 model cars were equipped As the strike beganf^Robcit W, Donnahoo of Philadelphia, region- mi Ami4 oLthe Federal Medl-l^to^umhmmTm^i^.’ ation Service/ said the Union r--1 jeeted the companies' proposal. No further, contract talks were •lioduh Negotiators declined lo say what issues remained unresolved. Reynolds began /shutting its plants n few hours before the strike began. The union agreed lo help with an orderly shutdown. Alcoa begun tapping" smeltering furnaces Among the plants struck are Reynold* at MasSCua, N.Y., and Sheffield, Ala. These two Mipply (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3l Thor Misutes Going LONDON aUPJ) — Britain announced today it will repjace U.S.-built T.hpr missiles based in England beginning next year with Skybolt air • to - ground missiles whose delivery and* nuclear wi heads wilt be British-controlled. freighter Pilot 'Never Saw the Barge “I knew (here was a vessel, but didn’t know what kind it was. I thought it might be a mall boat. George E. Beatty, Sarnia, Ont. testified at a Coast Guard.inquiry into the sinking of , the motorshlp 'Montrose" Monday night in a col listen with the tug tiMT. Becker and the barge It feMHbing. Beatty, who (lrstHJ|red working i the Great Lakes in 1925, detailed events leading up to the collision beneath ‘ the " Ambassador Bridge in the Detroit River as the Montrose was getting under way uppen Great Lakes ports. Beatty said that before getting under way,, lie. radioed ail ships that the Montrose was leaving port, but received no answers. He Mid he noticed ah upbeund ear-carrying freighter and called again on the marine radio. The car lorry answered arx agreed to let thto Montrose oroceed moving bor terminals to site if (her coming down t ONE LIGHT, THEN 2________ Beatty Mid he adw nothing eept a large number of pleasure craft --‘/It seemed Hite there 1 more than usual that night.” Then ;isei moved into the river. tar-* "Bol seconds before the Impact, Mg craft blew the danger whistle, we blew one back and .went hardNto starboard. ‘.'The craft also Pu* on I** searchlight and then and only then did I recognize a barge. Just a few feet away from us. Then the impact Righto’-Way Ruling Waits One Week Forging a weapon to force build-•s’ adherence to regular set-back lines last night ran ftp a snag before the City Commission. The Commpioti '#as with an Ordtnanch proposaT t o' prevent future "saW-tooth" type oUtt struct am of homes on East Colum-bin between Joslyn and Arlene — where three, homes already are placed within 25 foot of the Drive Will Op Oct. 16;"0oa1ls llPct. Over '61 Plans Announced' .at Meeting of Executives —©fl-Boqrd of, Trustees Unemployment Skids45,000 ’ This Pontiac Area United Fund campaign will be shooting at a goal of $706,-12flbWiis year, a 5 perinsnt Increase over the 1961 target. -r' The 1962 goal and' campaign dates, Oct. 16 - Nov; 9. were an-nouncetl' ypsterday at a meeting of the executive committee of the United Fund board Of trustees at fhe VValdroh Hotel.'. : ~V > ' The target (K $33,625 over last July Pats Lowest in Over 2 Years; May Halt Tax Cut Campaign WASHINGTON UH -Unemployment fell 'by 445.000 in July, and the idle rate dropped to its lowest point in more than two ye The job improvement may take some of the steam out of the drive some quarters for an immediate tax cut tfeJunprove the, economy Secretary iff Labor Arthur JL Coidberg said In announclng' fhe July Job figures today that the employment situation is only one of a mlxeg bag ot atatlatlea^the administration is scanning seeking a .tax cut decision. . Goldberg called the new job figures .encouraging and Bald it always welcome news when unem-ploytoent declines. •-Goldberg announced these job foals tor July; „ Unemployment rate — "declined o 5.3' per cent of the labor force ’ompared with 5.5 per cent in June and.5.4 per cent in. Mpy. These figures are adjusted lor tjpasonal iHiul goal inrrense In three years. "Although it is the largest in-' rease .in one year since 1958.” :ai Louis; Bellwood, Va.; Louisville, puKburih *m SlKy.; Richmond, Va.; Massena, f; ST ft N.Y.; and Sheffield, Ala. Five of L fti “*rl* I? the Reynolds plant* are at Louis-“ * ville/two at Richmond and two at Sheffield. . av hmmu ENTERS COURTHOUSE — Police Chief Laurie Pritchett enters federal courthouse in Albany, Ga,, yesterday far second day of testimony on whether federal injunction against .Negroes demonstrating against segregation should be made'permanent. Pritchett' told the court he favors the injunction. with that of FDA George p. Larrlck, gesttons from senators tabHshment of machinery for International exchange drag Information. Sen, Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Mlnn^ chairman of the Government Operations subcommittee, said “surface evidence indicates a tag in, if riot a total lack of, communication” about the side effects of tlw Goman Terision Is Key Issue BLAMED FOR DEFORMITIES The tranquilizer has ALBANY, Ga. (AP) - boycotting and similar protest ac- tivity in this racial test spot. SO MORE JAILED Pritchett is a principal witness in the city’s attempt to enjoin permanently several Negro lead-enrijhd groups from staging or promoting marches, picketing, Bids All in M Shun Katanga Thant Urges 104. Lands to Bar Relations if Ties to Congo Not Rejoined UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (API - Acting Secretary General U Thant urged all ,104 U.N. member countries ..tpday to bar trade and financial relations with secessionist Katanga Province if it fails to rejoin the Congo. . I He dispatched an appeal to member countries to use their influence to persuade principal par-: ties in the Congo that a peaceful solution is in their own interests. "If such persuasion should finally prove' ineffective, I would ask them, jb consider seriously what further measures may be taken/’ he skid- 'In* this context, I have in mind economic pressure upon tbe-Ka tangese authorities of.such a kind that will b/lng home to them the “alities of their situation and the fact, that Katanga is not a sovereign state and is not recognized by any goyemnfeni in the world such. 'In the last resort, and if all other efforts fail, this could justifiably go to the extent of barring all trade and financial relations." mass demonstrations against seg> „*^)e case i* being heard by U:S. regation. ^ fcJWst. Judge J. Robert Elliott. Even as the legal battle went i, 39 .more Negroes were jailed for prayer-singing demonstrations at the library and city hall Tuesday and"Tuesday night.' The demonstrators, mostly teenagers, pushed to more thfcn 300 the number of arrests in the current series of, protests. Stace December, more than 1,100 arrests have .been made as a result of demonstrations, yesterday’) ______ Judge Elliott was kept busy refr ereeing between lawyer Donald HollpWell, representing Negro leaders, and Asst. State Atty. Gen. E. Freeman Leveritt, counsel for city officials. URGES INJUNCTION Pritchett, on the .stand for about six hours, testified he firmly believed an injunction was necessary to prevent serious disorder and possible bloodshed. Under cross-examination by Hollowell, Pritchett conceded that the first mass march of 267 persons in December did not evoke threats of violence from onlook- ‘There was. no violence/’ Pritchett 'said, "because law enforcement officers were assigned - to keep people moving and to prevent disorder.” The attorney also got from Pritchett a statement that he did not Consider-(our pickets- were a p rade, although four wcre.-arresti BfSeiKTifieon a charge of parading without a permit. *|!he same c l cl Veteran Congressman ieen by tnanceto Speakaf GOP Dinner BIRMINGHAM — Veteran crift-gressman. Dr. Walter H. Judd of ttidomide by totter Mtonesota^ ^wfil^ be the keynote speaker at. the. Aug. 20 Oakland County Republican Fund Raising Dinner in Bioomlield Township. NGTON (AP)-4)r. Fran-y of the Food and tration testified to- blamed for the birth of' several thousand , malformed babies in West Germany and other countries after being taken by pregnant women. T . However, Larrlck testified that the FDA has not found “any deformed Infants associated with, the testing programs sponsored by U.S. firms.” 'He drug was not released by " Hie FPA fdr coinWerciaT dtatrtbd- A graduate of the University of Nebraska MdSical School, Judd served as a medical missionary in South China ziijjder the Foreign Mission B&ard of the Congregational Chtlnji. Re returned- to this country • six years In China and fe-' 1 a Fellowship tat surgery It at the Mayo Clinic. later he retwned to « to North China, superintendent bf a for four years, in 193$ he spoke 9 audiencegjn two b of communism itartsm. He was first elected to Congress tion in this country, but Larrlck said it was supplied by tour subsidiaries of Richardson, Merrell, Inc., NeW York, to experts for use ih studying its safety for man. The number of such doctors has been reported as about 1,200, Present law, Larrlck noted, permits a manufacturer to supply doctors with new drugs for use in such investigations. Dr. Kelsey, s gray-hatred medical officer for the FDA, testified that the American firm applied to the FDA for approval of the. drag in September i960, and that me was assigned to study the application. She said that after looking over the application, she fe|t more information ' wag required about whether it would be safe and t the company to submit further data.. CHANCED ON LETTER While this material was. being assembled, Dr. Kelsey said, she chanced” to read a letter to the editor of a British medical journal that indicated the German drug was associated with peripheral neuritis. That led her to further inquiry. Much Of her testimony had been outlined by Humphrey. The Day in Birmingham m Judd, a recognized authority United State Foreign Policy, serving his 10th two-year form as congressman from the Fifth District In Minneapolis and is currently campaigning for reflection. Service for former Bbfmingham -resident, Emerson J.. Bowemu 60, e Civil Aeronautics Board said today. -----“7“..W~1T * /.:• The three women who' perished in the crash neatXaGuardia Airport on July 18, 1*1, were: Mrs. , Angier Biddle Duke,-Spanish-born beauty who was: the wife of the State J'Vparimgnty rhiaf nf pppfr.- • col';' Mrs. Arthur Altschul, wiie of a Wall Street broker, and Mrs. Stanley Warren Metcalf, wife of an .Auburn, N.’Y., business executive. Killed with the women was Paul A. Dubuke, 29, pilot of the, "7 Beechcraft Bonanza bound from LaOuardla to- East Hampton, Long bland. Shortly after taking off, Dubuke reported by radio that he was returning to the airport to shut an* open cabin door. Minutes later, the plane fell Into a vacant lot between two homes in Jackson Heights, N. Y. WEATHER PERFECT ' Finding that the plane was in good condition, the pilot competent and the, weather “virtually perfect,’* the CAB said the reasons why Dubuke lost control of the plane "remain obscure.’’ It added: “Possibly there was interference - with the controls or with the pilot by one or more of the passengers. This Interference could have been induced by fright caused by the 'nbise of the open door. Possibly the pilot,< without this interference, had his attention diverted in some other manner. He may have been trying to' dose the door . . . and while so engaged allowed his speed to become dangeiTjusly slow.1' ■■ . ★ ★ ‘ ★ •' ■ ' . Whatever the reason, the CAB found that the tragedy was unnecessary and stemmed from the fact that the pilot’s attention wa diverted “during crucial seconds' while returning to LaGuardia. ----- ★ * ★ The report noted that one of the three women, was seated beside the ' pilot in the cockpit, presumably within reach of the controls. However, it said "there were no wit —rwfei1 a* to wh|ch of the three women sat up front.” SIMMS Thursday Store Hours 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. 9 lllirf™ p,i«, Old Fashion Bargain Bazaar Phis - • Here Are the Worthwhile Gifts for You •, SS.SS Rylon Blanket ■ $5.55 Wading Fool (I ft.) $5.95 Shoe-Shine Outfit S1.09 JSJ First-Aid Kit $9.55 Bor-B-Q Grill Soldier Rushed Home (or Eye Treatment ■ SHANNON, Ireland (UPI)'-American -SA16 Amphibian picked up Pvt. John A. Hodgkins at sea today 'affiPyushed him here for treatment of ap/ffye disease. k k k Hodgkins was aboard the U.S.-bound naval transport Dari) y when the ship's doctor discovered he was suffering from glaucoma, , aedisease that could, cause blind-\hess. \Because urgent treatment vyns needed, the rescue amphibian was dlspatbhed from the airhase at Prestwick, Scotland, to pick up the soldier\Tltc plane braved a'seven-foot swell to mukc tjhc pickup. Couldn't Insert Coin LONDON (UP!) - Myer Lich-man won his cdsc for a parking meter violation wben his lawyer told the fcourt the meter was frozen up arid Lichman couldn’t inset-coin. ' ■ . •' \ ANN ARBOIJ tfft - Americ cities of the future may be built down — rather than up, says William A. Paton, professor emeritus i of. accounting and economics at the University of Michigan. ... , Underground cities may be necessary for survival in nuclear War, Paton sald in an article in the latest issue of tlie Michigan Quarterly Review. “It is not too difficult," he said, Dies After Long Illness LOS ANGELES (API—George Pepperdine, 76, founder of Pep-perdine College, businessman and philanthropist, died Tuesday-after an illness of several years, Pepperdine built the Western Auto Supply chain Into a multimillion dollar business but he lost a personal fortune estimated at S10 million. He was bom in Mound Valley, Kan. •\ , AP Phntofx GIRLS ATOP A SMOKESTACK-Two girl inmates of the federal correctional Institution at Terminal Island in Los Angeles perch qu a narrow ledge atop a 553S5t stwakbstack. One of the girls staged the sltdown because she wanted to go back to a reformatory in Utah from, which she had escaped a year ago. Cities to Go Downward ? ‘to dhvisage an ehtire city area, including transportation approaches and the necessary standing, he said, ‘ many intrinsic advantages, of residence.” SELLING OUT ODD LOTS CLOTHESLINE T-POST - -- Volute -' 4Q^crft<< bor with [Jj. 4 hooks. V" tubing, green eipSJIett-: ,-rT 2" I ALUMINUM STEPLADDER 098* ladder*, full 27-itjch iieiyht. limit -1 . i■.... , - C Ill SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS! 6-Ft. Air Mattress $3 00 value— king six© 72x28*ioth. ' mattress wjt'h pillow, limit 1 |99 Stainless Pancake Turner ’ $1.00 Volue -First quality stainless |,e»l handle. Limit 1 17' OCEAN UNER^i^X/- ^ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8 TWO SPECIAL CRUISES To tho cool waters of Lako St. Clair" MOR'NlNO SAILING—Lv. 9,30 AM—Return 3,00 PM ADULTS $5.50—CHILDREN (5-11) $2.75 EVENING MOONLIGHT — tv. 6,30 PM—Ret. IliOO PM ADULT PARE $3.50 ( , TICKETS—for .then memorable extra value, entertainment packed 5 sailings--NOW ON SALE THE AQUARAMA LINE 1141 Pint NaHanal Mda. CALL WO 2-6911—DOCKt FOOT OP WEST GRAND M.VD. , Pock Ticket Office epen betere oil •allu.o* TICKETS AT REDUCED RATES IT ADVANCE SALE 0N|TH Pleeie Send Hie Polewinf Ticket*: - Morning Crulie: Adults'W $5.00.... .Qtlld (5-11 > O' $2.75 Moonlight Crulie: Adults $ $5 25.Child (3-11> 0 $2.75. A chaps or money /order for $ .payable to the AQUARAMA LINE I ■ t 1 ' \i “ (AMreet Ahece t Neme...................... ..... Pbone.. v ...... L.. ■ - .\„‘ ■ ,; Addreis........... M ,y. Qty. s»• • Zone.1 Oval Glothesbaaket $ 1 79 Value Woven willow with .Sturdy carrying handle. About 27" lengll, . . 1°8 Steel Rubbish Burner 3* $4.95 Value—Completely perforated burner. With cover, limit 1 burner........ Genuine Eveready Tomato Dust 38* Protects tomato .plants against bugs and insects... Plastic Squeeze: container. Limit 2.. Ul| Approved Electric Extension Cords 3 “ 78* Regular $1.50 Value -Set Iny 6-ft., 9-ft, 12-It. epreb. 3-ray_tap outlet. To rid house and garden of bugs md insects. Aerosol spray can of ''Raid". Limit 2 cans por person. $1.49 Plastic Wastebasket BIRTHDAY BARGAIN Box 600 Sheets Kleenex Tissue! 2-8? Rngulur 39c packs of 600 slitels of Kleenex-- washing, etc. Choice of ai* pan for roosting and baking sbrted colon. Limit 4. purposes. BIRTHDAY BARGAIN Kotpx-Fsmi-Slandprlina Sanitary Napkins 2-58! Regular 436 packs of 12 lahtfafy napkins. Your choice. Limit 2. 0’Cedar ‘Endust’ Spray $ 1.00 Value—Treat dust- e loth. -— and mops. Stop dust scattering. 61/? 07s. V.... 67' Table Tennis Balls—12 for SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS Office and Nome Stapler 58; 28* BIRTHDAY BARGAIN Evphing In Paris Lipsticks 2 49° ‘Smooth. creamy lipsticks In 7 popular shades. Regular 75c' values. Hair Clipper Guides—3 for ' $|.49 Value—For electric dippers.-1 Fbr tapering find crew-cuts, limit 1 59* Flashlight Battery 1 Regular 10c Man-Sun Imported batteries In sizes "D" or "C". limit.', 5* Tampa Cub Bo Cigars 4 . $2.50 Value—Box of 50 smooth ■ - , i , ‘ smokers! limit 1 box per customer | 189 Deschlers Cigars 6fl| j . $3,00 Volue-‘Poek pf iq "5 Pocks" of 6c Deschlers Monogram smokens, -Umit I,,,,,,, l<#rl ^29 BIRTHDAY BARGAIN Johnsons Famous GLADE Air Mitt Freshener Regular 98c Seller 44 New modern scents In new modern spray cans. .Kills room odors, freshens up, any rooM. limit 2, Ladies’ Sleeveless Blouses .$1.59 Value—Assorted styles In wash V wear coi is 30 to 38. Assorted colors and whiles. Children’s Anklets - Pr. Slight Irregulars of values up to 39c. Whites, .stripes, culled and ribbed. Sizes4'A to 10,... It Wash 'n' Wpar Cotton Ladies’ Shorts »,.w 77c Value 'MM Nifiptfi, solidn, checks. Belts to match. Silts. 10‘to 16. AmerTcun niads.^ Ladltn Smart Stylo Pedal Pushers Value* to $2.49 M M ann«t rayon and ac.tal.1 111 stripes, $ aiit V wear in brown and grey, n-J, V wedr cottons In blue. Sins Family Owned and Qperotedf Since 1934 by SIMMS Bros. 98 N. SAfilRAW I ' Pay Checks GASHEfy FREE No Purchatb Necessary ' Children’s Polo Shirts jyglues to 59c — Cotton and ocetate, knit < | shoulder. Assorted stripes In sites 1 to 3 .. >. OQc collar, button # Kfk9. • Children’s Playwear • To $1.50 Value—Pushers, shorts, dresses; c 77® ■ SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS! Spray Deodorant $1.39 Value —Famous Odorono in . hundy sprdy container. Limit 2 .... i........ 44* Hair Rollers Regular $1.00 package of 8 rollers In day or night style. Limit 4 packs 8 for49e "PRO” Hair Spray 3i Regular 99e Value —14 ounces of "Professional'' hair-spray i,... i Lady Esther Cream Regu)or $ 1,49 Value—famous 4 . purpose cream for the skin >•• •■•(•■■ •«•••! 66* Kranks Shave Bomb 411161 Regular-59c »lze—Super Shave Instant ^ i lather In 6V4 -ounce can. Limit -2.... ...........,,,,,. MM$ WPr ,, | Lanolin Plus Nail Polish $1,00 Value—"Cdlbr Plus" nail polish by Lanolln ^us. Limit 2............ 59° Rubber Gloves Regular 39c Value—Gloves for ( >49! tHE yONTIAC PRESS, WEbKRSjPAY, AUQUST 1, 1062 ■>. ■' krfsy Stewart tor J964 Detroit to Be Cited ’Safest'for Walking WjUBHNGTOffP The Republican big “ifs” attached' to tlitir candi-y may be overipoldftga terrific r the pres- t be toreripeklAgi i candidate for t fWim ’the next - to - the - newest - and- of the Supreme Courf-“ |*• t, *' Potter . Stewart, appointee whose vot-fing record on controversial tfcaes ' beginning- to attract biparokan 1 the three most likely lential contenders have GOP f* stand a chance ter the nomination, Nelson Rockefeller most be reelected governor et New York this fall, George Romney mast capture the governorship et Democratic held htlchigan,. and Biehard M. Nixon must detest gubernatorial Pat Brown in Gshfornla. Even if all three should succeed in'these contests,, what is one’s political future running again: John F. Kennedy in ‘64, when the TiticaH odds are always on first-term president seeking ; election? County Supervisors Wont Action on Curbing of Airfo Exhaust Stewart himself would undoubtedly have to be drafted, but here precedent for it. The Republicans drafted Justice Charles Evans Hughes for the bench in 1916, and Woodrow Wilson barely defeated him for a second term. iNGELES (UPI) - The au-e industry ran into renewed i yesterday -at a meeting MICHIGAN MAN IS 47 Hughes at the tinje was bfetter known than Stewart is today, but the 47-year-old Michigan Republican is coming up fast. A lew y supervisors, with the of-Ig pressing the state for action i n device- to curb automobile t emissions. iover what was termed as ’’buck between manufacturers e board s and the state on approving devices curb smog-causing emissions. ' asked Chief Clerk Gar-to write the state mo. . control board California expedite ap-air pollution control de-though they may not jbe perfectV / * The boarasindicated concern that exhaust devices may not be ready | in time to. putNon 1963 cars. tproyal « i vices r* Supervisor Kenheth Hahn rend •letters.from John FYGordon, presi-’dent of General Motors, and E. M. J Chandler, manager oK the vehicle •safety and exhaust emission department of Ford MotoiVCo.. » .Gordon said no devices have yet Jmet technical standards sets|»y the "Pollution Control Board and •an adequate inspection system ‘would be needed’lo protect •ists. He said about 300,000 cars *Los Angeles Ooujity have devk •to ‘control crankcase fumes that •nccount for about 30 per cent of {automotive hyditoenrbon emissions, i .* ★ ★ ' v" », Chandler, in a similar vein, also 2said his company, would be inter* tested hi seeing several devices accepted for initial testing by the ^California Board which could operate the minimum requirement'of £12,000 miles. more decisions like- the one on prayer in schools, and "Potsy" Stewart’s name wifi'be on .every-tqngue. The tix-to-one Supreme Court decision outlawing prayer in New York public schools evoked-a-roar of indignation throughout nation. Senators a n d represenatives blasted tee ruling from both sides of the political aislerand promptly introduced legislation to reverse the action. igan SupremeCourt that wot^|fa>tep conservatives. have required an immediate portionment of the State Senate. IN 4 TO S VOTE The Michigan high, court deci- Potter Stewart, however, was the Jfjratest with the mosteat. He was the lone dissenter; the unewwati oluntarlly about children voluntai lug their school day with prayer, if they More recently, Stewart-^ handed down a ruling that will probably save sotne Republican heads from the political ax in his native Michigan this fail. Interrupting his vacation to hold a three-hour .hearing in -the little at Littleton, N. H, he suspended a ruling by the Mich- sfam, reached on a straight party-line vote of four-to-three, required that the Michigan Senate immdiately redistricted according to population, without regard to geography, or that ^aU senators run at-large. This could'only have benefited the Democrats, who are strongest in the cities. Stwsrt’ victory although a temporary it only delays the reapportlon-roeat order until the: Supreme The youthful jurist is obviously 3t lacking -in courage. The 1961 court session made history by<.its unprecedented number of 5-to-4 decisions,* and “Potsy” usually played modern Solomon, even though he was then the baby of the court. -— :...........• ■ '* ' * AP Ph.tof.x TRAIN SMASHES HOflSES—Derailed cars of the Pennsylvania Railroad express mail and freight train are scattered along tracks\after derailment early Tuesday at Vandalia, 111., in which six persons were injured. none seriously. Note bars against houses at lower light and upper center. Smoke at lower right is from & railroad crane clearing wreckage. ;— ______ I but Stewart was still attracting Tiie idhism feha 1e» dramatic attention, during • the '62 session, since Make no mistake . about It, Frankfurter was sick and JusticerPotay’* is a young man worth Chariea E. Whittaker had resigned, I watching. DETROIT (UPI) J* The dty 6t Detroit wiffreceive official recognition tomorrow as the worid*a safest for pedestrians.. receive a banns? and plaque from the Automobile Chib of Michigan ipteng Detroit fur an uupreceddiited sixth straight year as tfce safest dty in the nation to walk in. Detroit won top honors among Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh will cities over one million population pedestrian safety from the Automobile Association. Americir^A The population of Mtodto at the end of 190. was 34,923,129. ‘ The court at the time was divided into two warring camps, with Chief Justice Earl Warren leading the liberal flank, and Justice Felix Frankfurter the conservative. Stewart cast the deciding Vote jin 19 of the 25 five-to-lour decisions,; and usually sided with the Frank- French Ambassador Rumored to Resign PARIS (UPI) - UA Ambassador to France James M. Gavin has offered his resignation to President John F. Kennedy, reliable diplomatic sources said today. His resignation is likely to be announced in Washington in the very new future, possibly even today, the sources said. Gavin, has been Ambassador to r France since March, 1961. •Diplomatic reports have said for some time that Gavih planned to quit, mainly for personal financial reasons. Gavin does not have a large personal fortune and Paris, Embassy normally is given to a wealthy man. Choose the grown-in-Michigan, Processed-in Death Takes Professor NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP)—The Rev. Georgq Dahl, 81, professor emeritus ’’of Hebrew language lif-erature at Yale divinity school, died Tuesday. He joined the Yale faculty In 1912endserved for 37 years. He was -born in Chicago. Michigan, sold-in-Michigan Sugar... Pionaor and Big Chief are ae fine and white and sweet a sugar as there ie in theVorld! YOU’RE! RIGHT TO USB MORE i MICHIGAN MADE! PUKE SUGAR1 grown and processed in Michigan by Michigan people. You're in the good company of countless other cdb com- CHIEF CAB COMPANY ponies who realize the importance of keeping4 their cars rplling on the job with a minimum of time in the shop for service. The roomy comfort and smooth, easy riding qualities of all Ponfiacs plus their pbved toerating economies more than justify your decisionj And we thank you. ’-v ^ vr' On Selecting Pontiac Cars for Your v Taxi Cqb Fleet 65 ML Clemens St. FE 3-7954 / w TttE PjoWlAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1,, >962 "* ' F1VK AP Photofax TRICK OF THE WEEK—The photofax givegl the illusion that Pvt. Donald MaCDanlel of the Washington, D.C., /Fire Department is being sent aloft by a stream of staler from a fire hose. Actually, he is .making, a practice Jump from a tower into a net while ' others train with hoses and fire fighting equipment at the department’s training center.- Ike Schedules Lunch With King ol Sweden Today HAPLSINGBORG, Sweden (UPI) —Former President . Dwight Di Eisenhower arrived from Stockholm for a lunch date with King Gupttv AdolLbf Sweden today before embarking with his wife and two grandchildren for Germany. Eisenhower will wind,,up a four-day viiait to Sweden , as guest of the Swedish monarch at his summer residence in nearby Sofiero. * . * - ★ Yesterday, Eisenhower and Swedish Prime Minister Tage Et lander appeared on a transatlantic television program beamed to the < United States by the Telstar communications satellite.. Both made 'Eisenhower was applauded another address, to the World Confederation of Organizations of ‘. the Teaching Profession, when he said educators should “promote a universal attack on the enemies t)f truth.’’ Execution Decision May Be Oiven Today ' spRmGFrtOT, m.. (UPi)-Gov. Otto Kerner, a longtime foe of capital punishment, may anhounce his, decision today on- whether to allow condemned slayer Paul , Crump to die in the electric chair Friday morning. Both Crump and the man who wilj decide his fate spent most of yesterday ip seclusion—the gover-nor Studying recommendations of the Illinois Pardon and Parole Board and reading appeals for clemency, the slayer-praying and listening to. radio, and television news bulletins. Boys Dead in Blaze, Police Book Mother SAN FRANCISCO up - -Two young brothers, severely beaten, were found dead in their glazing home last night and their mother was booked on suspicion of mur-der. Police Inspector Edward Huegle said, the woman, Mrs. Geo Balsa, S3, had apparently struck the children. Alan 8, and Paul, 3. with a blunt instrument, then set - the house on fire and attempted suicide. The dead boys were found In an upstairs bedroom. Their mother, a divorcee, was discovered lying, unconscious in the kitchen below, bqth her wrists slashed superficially' She was—io, condition today. 'Loafers Rail' Got Heave in Kentucky Capitol FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP)-A new loafers’ rail’’ got the heave-ho and the loafers are staying at, the old Capitol grounds. '★ * A The rail—a spiked strip of iron on the new front wall—is being removed and a flagstone patio and benches will be instailwl"Uir'the lawn, by\ order of Gov, Bert Combs. Oldtimers complained to Combs they had no place, to sit since a 16w wall was replaced in a renovation project. ★ ★ ★ When someone remarked (hat some of the Regulars had been sitting around the grounds for 30 years,-Combs retorted, “so what? Let them sit here another Sp years.” *• EARN MORE ON SAVINGS . SAVINGS IN BY THr TOTH OF THj: MONTH EARN FROM THE 1ST AT ft Advanced Payment A . Shares'Certificates A1/a % Current Rat* # me # w Established in 1890—Never missed paying a dividends Over 12 years of sdund management—you? assurance I ofsecurity. Amts now over 74 fnilllbn dollars, CAPITOL SAVINGS A LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 W«ot Huron”' - Downtgwn Detroit Office: Woihington Blvd. Bid fa. Corner Stote Street W0 2-I07I Ft 4-0561 SoutMield Offltst 27213 Southfield Home Office: Laming \ Member Federal Home Loan Bank System THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1,1962 driver, along with passengers, or other motorists on the highways unaware of the danger threaten* \ ing them. That, driving at such maniacal speeds , does not always end in tragedy, can in no way be adduced to tlie credit of the driver, but rather to the fortunate dispensation of fate-We think that the courts have a responsibility to’ impose maximum ' sentences ion those who recklessly en d a ng er life and • property. .. ... / Government Promise' pikes a Reverse -1 The promise that governments live ■fn can get a little bewildering at tidies. The recent jigamaree involving ppcetary of Commerce Luther H. pifon« fa an example. ♦ ^ Coincidentally with House deliberations resulting in passage of a bill tof raise the national debt limit fromx $285-to-$308 billion, he. blurted out 'before a House Committee on Post QfTice and Ctvu Service that about 10 per cent of the 29,734 Commerce employes throughout the United States Let’s make the.wages of seeding and possessions could be eliminated so high that flouters of public safety —that any number were performing will be brought to j^ee the light . And obsolete functions established 40 call a halt to their excesses, years ago. - ^ ' : .. . • <-*" •' - ; ._____ - ■ Well! This sounded pretty promising for the taxpayers.' When you consider that there are 2'/}-million civilian employea in the executive branch alone of the Federal fovmjmtht, with an annual payroll of 114 billion, the savings potential/is easily figured out. And it might have been wondered whether in light of this saving, plus some others doubt-less lying around loose, it would even be necessary to rail* the . debt limit! ★ The Man Afeout Town Reports on Trip Press/Man Covers Fair but on His Own Time! By HOWARD V. HELDENBRAND Taking a busman’s holiday recently, Richard (Dick) Birth Press telegraph, editor, gave Rattle’s World Pair a looking over (or more accurately, an up and' down) and, betraying his csuihg, filed an oral, not a I "iiegrapn, report. He did try sending by ■ ■ ■..... ........../ aren’t ready lor press copy yet—things shock and consternation (later ex4. are 8tlll pretty muCh up in the Hr. perienced -by editorialists and servers who had too quickly hailed the dawn of,a new governmental concept),•bureaucratic Washington quickly threw, an admonitory though klncuy arm across the shoulders of their errant stray and led hijn firmly back into thd fold. - / Soon things were back to the status quo. In fact, the /status was more than “quoed,” because it now appears that instead of Hodges’ tentative promise of a 10 per cent reduction in his department’s personnel, his request now before the gome highlights: Eye of the Needle Restaurant atop the Space Needle, the structure la .the highest west of the Mississippi, with three elevators traveling 4M feet per minute trying tq keep np with the traffic . .., there wae on hour’s wait fsr the trip to the ebeervatton tower, and at times a wait of ■ four hours for the trip to and service In the restaurant, which seats IN . . . Shucks! the HAT'S waited that long in seme pretty good beaneries before they even gave him a, glass of water! The Pair site covers 78 acres and will Appropriation subcommittee for fis- become Seattle's Civic ^Center when it . .._______ , closes October Xl (opened April 21) with cal 1962-63 calls for an Increase of m(J8t of tha bulMUng8 already earmarked 2,229 permanent positions, of approx- jor eventual use. imately the same 10 per cent—in reverse! ★ ★ ★ The secretary’s boss, though, does much better In the promise department—probably that’s why he’s boss. In campaigning for election In 1960, JFKhald in Hoanoke, Va.: ’They (the Republicans) have added 106,000- new -Federal cna-........ ployes. I think it b about time thh American people knew.** He promised to reverse this trend. But during the first year of. the Kennedy administration, 76,900 more employes were added to the Federal contributes .this under heading “Nightly Battle : In view of how they fret and fuss In looking around the huge Boeing aircraft plant, south of. goattlo, the editor saw a 707 Boeing, given a baby blue treatment — an Incongruously delicate motif for a pretty ragged piece af machinery—for deUvery to tha Washington Kennedy*. Incidentally, assembly-line time for this typo of aircraft is about B days, but this one may taka a little longer..oossps one and all want to bo pretty sure all thf nuts and bolts are In place when It fOM out! ★ ★ ★ Hal Chadwick payroll, and present plans will further increase it by 100,000 by July 1 of next year. ★ , ★ , ★ And for the benefit of those who came In late, one of Franklin d. Roosevelt’s main campaign issues in 1932 was tne inflation of government payrolls under Republican administrations and his promise of a 25 per cent slash in the cost of government, quickly .disowned by New Deal blue-sky economics. Tilings have never been, more .promising in Washington. And try to stall their mom It seems the children’s bedtime Is the storm before the' calm. The annual plenle of Clinton Valley Barracks No. SMI Veterans World War I U. S.fA. was hold at pavisburg Park last Saturday. As usual, It was a. smash hit, with .tho potlucfcers storming tho plenle grounds from all directions, says Commander vemon A. Ridgeway of 8630 ciamdge, Glarkaton -★ ★ Courts Should Impose Stiff Fine on Speeders Came a call from Mrs. I* H. Cola of 37 Ottawa Drive, heartbroken because vandals had'brokeng off their magnolia tree growing in tho lot at Iroquois and ★ ★ Police report (hat in both in* tho cars were traveling i close to 1QQ miles per A* such speed, any Stitoft the hands of any driver, mllal killer—of either Its .. Verbal Orchids to-' Remember These Fads TFften Writing fo Colunsr At general darificatlbn of the Voice t yield to the tenfptatibn to drink alcoholic beverages If you know that you will have to walk acroos intersections on your way i to wherever you are going. Or, it “Most of tha men I’ve seen In trouble didn’t get Into It with-out the help ef nemo undesirable of Ms psnrty. 1 / - The last tow Democratic Coo- Robert Welch (head of the John Birch society) la no conscious supporter of .communism, needless, to say. However, by his Incredibly . absurd denunciation of everybody wwho disagrees with him as an Idiot, a *'conMQnnp” or an out-' right Communist, he has done great harm to the entire conserva-tive J movement In. the United States. Anybody who seriously rolls. Dwight Elsenhower. 'John Fhster Dulles and ethers af similar beliefs Communists —. os Welch hit done-ls too lacking In bah a nee to- provide affective leadership for anythin# ' • The Times goes on to say — “read the record of Magistrate’ votes in proceedings that Involved matters of communism or subversion, stating that: This tabulation Is the feomputattap of votes against the Interests of the Communists or their sympStMzere and also thosa cast in their favor by the Magistrates o( the Supreme Court of our nation.”^ f Sr dr In »*T*r of MsalstMts* On----Rg Carl Wsitmi Huso U Block, np VronifurUr , wufttnt^NMce Sr, * jj chtriss Srsas . Whitaker • rSTOfSf Asolocl gjns *1 FavorTteds? The duban ffwi Institutional Defense ' *....... . limee i The New York “Senator Eastland denounced that tha President of The First Lady loves it, and you'll be wild about it, tool Federal's interpretation of a look you'll see lots of .... come fall. It's high spirited, vivacious and so luxurious. Of course, the coat you'll find at Federal's was born in a lab, not on a mountain top, which accounts for the amaz-ing low price. But/ FASHION is a LOOK not a price tag... and Federal's is famous for bringing you constant peoof of that. f\ Note the high-fashion, flared silhouette... the over-size pock- Ik ets .. . the big, jet-black buttons. AND, smart sophistica- tion is only half the story... this grrr-eat pretender is laminated for weightless warmth and insulated with famous Temp-Resisto lining for Coldest winter weather. Sizes 8-16. Remember,, just $1 holds your selection in layaway at Federal' 's... or simply sayt 'CHARGE IT', and take up to 10 long months to pay. Fabulous fake hat shown €.99 SRSSnF S?&b^^PHBK DOWNTOWN AND .DRAYTON1 PI OPEN EVERY NIGHT Monday through Saturday jPOKTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST SRVfek.. at* 35 and another is fepry and active at 80. LOUISVILLE, Ky. tflN.pr; 'Cal-the University of to use mosquitoes out why mett grow old. Lang is doing basic research into biochemlstryof growth and ag-with one goal being to determine why one person is burned out Why mosquitoes? Although they iive only about 30 idays, tbpy have precise and sha^yly divided periods of development. They grow rapidly, age rapidiy and have nutritional; requirements similar to humans. Half of Couple Dies -Malle or Femble? of Florida auditorium Saturday aft- Italy's population .of. 49 million occupies an, area only three fourths | thg slse of California. GAINESVILLE. FlarfAP)-One half pf the Univerdty of Florida’s alligator mascot couple is, dead, but'nobody's sure which half. Accounts of the death gave readier*. the choice: "Albert IJ (Or Alberta 1» died near ..-the University r a brief illness. The two alligators ^replaced Albert I last summer. University of* ficlals figured the two "could pro-themselves, better .against He Can Take H at Home but, Please, Not in Court LEXtNGTON, Ky. W — Atty. Robert M. Odear objected to a prospective juror in a phrfl case/ ...... . . . . JJudge Joseph J. Bradley smiled pranksters,, who often tormented-,^ excused the lawyer’s wife. .the late Albert I in his campus front jury duly. cage. - y' r-4 Odear told th«'Judge: Mt haven’t jwooan argument with her since The "Sun gives us 6 million timesl we were married. And . I^fon’t much light as all the, other want\ to take a chance in this stars do. " ' • • 1 Jea».’\.:- SHOP IN COOL AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT r 'fj • • • RECOVER OLD CANNON — Two voting skin divers Rom Massachusetts are shown With ■ bid cannon they located inTBTfefflrbf water off . Hampton Beach, N.H„ and hauled to shore. ^ Sr Photo!ns The lads are Walter Hird Jr., 15 ileft) .. of Methuen, Mass., and David Conrad,-15. ol. .Lawrence. They.say they also located some old stone wheels and, cannon balls in the same area. Fayette in UP to Bless Fleet at Snailshell Harbor FAYETTE MB—The unique blessing of the fleet ceremony here Sunday will have something nev the public this year. Historic Fayette on Snailshell Harbor' on the “Garden Peninsula is now a state, park and all the buildings o^ the ghost community that .survived the charcoal iron industry have been marked and their history, recorded on plaques. A museum now Is open to viet-" and preservation and region work on the structures pf the Iron smelting village is (under way by the Conservation /a de Noc and Lake Michigan waters go for the blessing of the fleet. While the ceremony Is a very old one performed, for the shrimp and sponge fleets on the nation's coast and gulf Waters, this Is the only such ceremony on the Great Lakes... ... .... With decline of commercial fishing the fleet has trended from fish boats to yachts, but both participate. • - • \nte charcoal iron furnaces at Fajyetl yette smelted iron from the Jackson Mine at Negaunee, fjirst iron mine in the Upper Peninsula, fr"; — Acting Secretary General U ........................IhN. Thant appealed to all 10l members .Tuesday night to "bend every effort to assist the United Nations in fulfilling its 6bjec\ives in tne Congo." A spokesman announced Thant took the step after meeting with the 19-nation Congo advisory committee. . The spokesman explained that Thant’s message essentially was "for all U.N. members to help get the Congo crisis settled," He declined to say wMat specific U.N. objectives were mentioned. Backache relief pffls bring mild diuretic, action through the'' kidneys The parish of St. Peter, the fisherman, at Fayette sponsors the blessing of- the fleet, andConser-1 vation Department personnel at th park will work with the parish committee this year to expedite The program begins with crowning of the queen of the fleet, followed by a field mass at "the Fatima Grotto at St. Peter’s Church. A dinner will be served to the public by the St- Peter’s Altar Society at the harbor. Then there will be a parade from the parish grounds to the harbor that will be followed by a concert by the Es-canaba City Band. The fleet blessing ceremonies, will be held at 3 p.m. * ", Fayette State Park is IT miles from ,Garden Corners on U.S. 21 tween Manistique and Rapid River. FALL'S RICH 'GOLDEN GIRL' LOOK thousands of highlights glisten to sheath you in shimmering gold 99 tHABdi ir Look like a" golden goddess-in .’d2's most glamorous fashions. "Spare" look, scoop-neck sheathsof lures® metallic threads woven through finest rayon in green . gold or yellow goid. Both are fully lined for a smooth, slip-less fit. Sizes 7-15. Just two from a stunning collection of glittering styles. Choose one today—or put it ,jn layaway for your most festive Fall everl Free Alterations on all fashions 10.99 nnd up! FEDERAL'S SPOTS THE FASHION NEWS i m*: ottldEat HerCak^, ■PP..... ;.THE POffTlAfTPRESS, WEDNESDAY, . 'ttctI U 1962 rfr Have It Too Sweden's Problem: How to Join Common Market - - By PHIL NEWSOM ' ITI Foreign News Analyst ' STOCKHOLM—In the prosperous shops, hotels atid department ■ stores along Stockholm’s tree-lined streets and in the canals pHed by Sightseeing and pleasure craft, the /Chief concern these days is the . For this is vacation time and the summer has been late. , But in the ancient, tile>roofed foreign office near the royal palace “ there is a greater. Concern. : It Is how to And a meeting ground between Sweden'* traditional neutrality and policy of neoallgnment .and her desire | Common Market whose goal in political anion and whose members are among Sweden’s best r customers. - Sweden regards both as essen-2 flail to her future but if one must be sacrificed it will be her association with the Common Market; For hi Sweden for a man to suggest abandonment of neutrality would be', to commit political suicide. Last week at Brussels, Swedish minister of commerce, Gunnar Lange, presented—Mr case. Summed up, it was this: Sweden recognizes that file ultimate goal of the six—France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg — is political unity. which ultimately would include military,, unity as well. /• \ . She also recognise* that under the treaty of Rome, Cent, mon Market nation# are banned But Sweden believes there should be exceptions. . . Sweden camenter no agreement which endangers her neutrality. Sweden must be given the light Anti-Red Protests Continue in Finland HELSINKI, Finland (API -Thousands of anti-Communists demonstrated for the fifth straight night Tuesday night against the Red-dominated eighth World’ Youth.Festival here. Police squads broke up the demonstration as ...usual with tear gas afj^JheMtjnfatedj 4.000 - persons ignored- loudspeaker appeals to disperse..No serious injuries-were reported."' The demonstrations started Friday, two days before the festival opened. '• v About 10,000 youths from 144 countries are attending the week-long festival. In case of war, Sweden must be - given the right to withdraw .from the association and the right to - acquire vital supplies, economy today booming. . She not only has fall etn- . bring In 1M thousand foreign tha greatest present threat to her continued economic growth whlcb' UM year #hawed a healthy inerease of 4.S per cent. Her annual gross national . product amounts to $15 billion, which, with a population of only 7.5 mil-Hon, ranks her among th£ most ^aUonSorEufope. ■ She feels that association with the Common Market will enable her to : make a real contribution to the economic development of Europe. , • v. ★ jt n: Wlthput.it. she fears.a. declining rate" 6f~ growth Tor“ herself and subsequent barnrfe" her .pwh'tmH-tary program and her welfare which plow covers Swedes from the cradle to the grave. ★ * "1f She anticipates Russian apposition to her association with the Market but ITprepared fa deal with it . From the Halted State*, a Common Market boaeter, the Swedish proposals have received a eool reaefioa. . The l/ntted States has passed the-time when It can dictate the policies of Western Europe. But its position is that the neutrals are asking to eat their cake .and have it, too. And that, to be al Saskatchewan to Aid Thalidomide Babies REGINA, Sasic (AH) -Health Minister W. 6. Davies says the provincial government will care fear any Reformed babies bora fa Saskatchewan as a result of the mother’s use of the drag thalidomide. ' * ★ He .said Tuesday (hat H the baby is listed as a dependent with file Medical Cure Insurance Com-mission, both baby and mother will be rated for under the act. The province’s compulsory medical insurance program recently led to a doctors' strike. J to jbi the Common Market without assuming political responsibilities, simply adds to U.S. competition ■without other compensations. About 27 million. Americans can play some kind of musfoal instrument, most of them the piapo. CelebiezzeUses His Own Bible* tor faking Oath WASHWGTON (AP)' -Anthony J. Celebrezze brought his own Bible. one plainly showing the wear and tear of use, for ids swearing in Tuesday as Secretary of Welfare. Cdebrcnetold Carson Howell, White House administrative offl- flfty-twoof the nation’s 12 larg-cer, that it was an old Celebrezze family Bible. Howell administered the oath to Cdebrezze, fahtfer Cleveland mayor. Davies said the 13 .regional health officers in the province deformed babies. None has been *'on'1 reported to elate. _ Perth, the capital of Western Atfotralia, is the continent’s niest city, with an average 'Of eight sunny hours a day—even winter. • . Priest Succumbs at 102; Believed Oldest in U.S. CHICAGO tUPD—Funeral service will be. held today fur Rev. . Thomas J. McCormick, believed to he the ofaest-Rpman Catholic priest fa - the United States,. who died Monday fa Holy Family Hospital on his 102nd birthday. Father McCormick, fawn July 30, i860, Ot Manchester, N.H., was the oldest priest hi the order of St VJator, officials said. est airports are aip^ooditioned. To Resettle in Formosa 'TAEPEI, Formosa .7-* » down to qet our big carload discount price—All you need Is the time to stop in! 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' ^mmwt m porida Hassles Over Reshuffle Small County Group in House Fights Urban ?Population Control i^AIiAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) Florida legislators assemble today fat a hurry-up apodal reapportion-ment session in which the House ' likely will prove'the major battlefield. - " /y:- it ★ ★- • - • The chief obstacle to ad early ‘ settlement of the troublesome is-" »«*e appeared to be in convincing a balky small county group in the House to surrender control of that. Body to the populous urban areas. ” The powerful Senate' majority -bloc gave conditional backing Tues. . day to a plan' advanced by Gov. “Terris Bryant which would increase the size of the Senate from 38 to 45 Ind the House from 95 to 144. Bryant’i plan would leave control of-the Senate in the small and medium size countieg but Would tfansfer control ’of the House, from the rural areas to the 10 biggest counties wfilch would get half of the 144 representatives. Florida has 6? counties. Some key members of the House small-county bloc announced they were prepared to fight 4o the last .ditch to defeat any plan which - would give big cities outright tret of that body. A three-judge federal court aj Miami last week ordered Florida to -provide fair representation in the legislature or the court itself would do the job. -. ment credit provision, designed as an incentive to American business modernize its machinery and equipment I ★ h ★ Byrd plans to use as (me of his main arguments the. contention that the bill as it cfeaned'the mittee will cost the Treasury an cStiidated.$750 million a year. As it passed the House, the Bill' State Airports Get Aid for Fiscal Year WASHINGTON > i-Atter weeks of hearings, the/Senate finance Committee has approved a maided version pf President Kenner’s tax revision bill. Rut Chairman Harry F. Byrd, D-Va,, said e would carry to the' floor his ght against its key. provision. The Virginian said today he would try to ktv^k out ffrA invpgt. was figured to provide a $120-mil-Uon surplus. V ; I Byrd passed his - vote committee approved the bill >2 Tuesday after struggling with it through hearings, and- executive sessions, since April 2. MIGHT WAIT Byrd said the tag bill might not up until aftef Kennedy’s trade expansion bill on which the committee- now js conducting public hearings. Administration Senate leaders have said they may hold tip the tax measure- until the President decides whether to seek a cut in personal income tax rates this essioft. ;• .■■■■/■ Byrd succeeded during his com-1 mittee’s consideration of the bill in knocking out .the biggest revenue-, producing provision in it—a tax withholding plan on dividends and Interest. The Treasury hail estimated this would pick up at least $650 million in taxes. The administration’s chances of restoringthison the floor appeared slim. . PROPOSALS SOFTENED committee also softened die ent’s proposals to tighten up on the expense account deductions and to increase ievies sharply on foreign-incomes of U.S. corporations. Kennedy’s backers believe they have a chance, to win stitfer provisions in a floOr fight. l^e Senate put back into the a/modified version of a loophole-closing provision on figuring corporate taxes-on foreign.income which previously it had. knocked it entirely/ As this computation works now, a U.S. company which, returns foreign income to this country and " fakes credit for levies abroad be-fore paying U.S, taxes may wind up with an ■ over-all rate of 45 per cent. This compares with the 52 per cent it would have to pay on domestic profits, . / The Hotfse had agreed to the provision, sought by the Treasury, to require' the combined effective rale on such foreign income be 52 per cent. The Senate committee voted Tuesday to apply the provision to profits earned in advanced countries but not in less-developed na-, ont. The committee also reversed itr self and junked language on expense account* to which the Treasury strongly objected. This provided that entertainment and travel expenses could be deducted if-they were the kind that a. “prudent man”„ would make, y Instead, it went along with the House, voting#, to permit deductions if they were directly associated with a trade d business. But it made, clear that, goodwill entertaining would be- deductible; the House had frowned on this. Romney Likes Sees New Document as Remedy for State Reapportidnment MUSKEGON (D-George Rqmney yesterday saw in the constitutional convention a source of remedy tor Michigan’s senatorial apportionment problems. Campaigning item, he told reporters the convention has proposed a sound solution, taking into account area as well as pop-ulattonr^- He predicted the formula In the proposed constitution will be acceptable to the United Stale# Suprcne Court on the basis of that court’s own precedents. The former automaker termed the lawsuit attacking the existing tenatorial districts “one of the nost-brazen efforts to steamroller this state line into a false representation system that has ever been attempted. We have just been saved from a political power blits, and we can be thankful that a United' States Supreme Court justice put an endlo-thls.” Romney fefernra'to-t^cpling that the coming elections needlM be conducted on . an at-large basil Romney breakfasted with 26 volunteers_ for___work : on hi gubernatorial campaign, visited industrial plants and .chatted with labor .leadei-s yesterday. ________&—-*■—— "TOF"completed a two-day canf paign swing through Osceola, Lake, Mecosta and Muskegon counties. Old Report Card Lists Subject of Orthoepy WAUSAUKEE, Wis. «t - Milo Howarth recently found a high school report card pa*e^ ^897-while tearing down'a building once used as a school. ★ . W Among subjects listed were' constitution, physical geography, bookkeeping, algebra, rehtoric,. physics-and .orthoepy: Orthoepy? That's the pronunciation. Square D Signs Antitrust Decree Agrees Not to Rig Bids, Fix Prices With Other Electrical Firms Deformed Baby Died in Texas Case Reported of Child Born Without . Limbs to Woman Who Took Drug SAN ANTONIO (UPI) —. The Bexar County Medical Society said [yesterday a woman who took the tranquillzing drug thalidomide during pregnancy gave birth to a baby who had no arms or legs and died later. I understand this woman received the drug thalidomide in Germany," said Dr. Nina Sisley, acting city health officer. Shu wai married to a man in the Air Force and they came to the United States where she had-the baby -lieve at Lackland Hospital. ■ * , ★ . Of ‘The baby was born without limbs — neither arms nor legs and died soon after birth; Since n, the woman has returned to ’many." j,„Mortv than six million poplar ' trette-taaVe been planted in Turkey recent\yea#t for windbreaks, timber, andjtael. PHILADELPHIA' UR -D Co. of Detroit yesterday sighed Conset decree in U.S. District' Court against future violatiohs of antitrust laws. . . ★ •* ★ The firm and three’other electrical equipment manufacturing companies agreed in the decrees not to fix prices; rig bids or allocate markets' among themselves. * The four are among 29 companies which ■ earlier pleaded guilty, or no defense, to the jov--emment charges In an aritttrust case. Tines against defendants total $1,926,000. Another. Michigan firm, Kuhl-mann Electric Co. of Troy, previously had signed a conset decree. A flood of civil damage suits followed the criminal phase of the case; The first settlement was.last when General Electric Co. agreed to pay the federal government $7,470,000, GL ha* not yet signed axonsent decree. State Highway* Department Out oi Free Mbps LANSING (B The State High-way Department reports it has run out of free highway maps of Michigan. . v- “ . More than 600,000 maps. have, b^en distributed since they arrived [rom the printer last June: The department said it stopped filling requests Jot bulk shipment»j'ln 6uenog Aire> ^day Nab 3 W. Reich Hikers Near Red Zone; 2 Flee TANN, Germany (UPI) — Communist border guards yesterday arrested three West Gorman hikers — a youth and two girls. — who ventured too near tTiiT Soviet zone border, authorities here said today. . Two other members of the party, a boy and a girl, escaped by fleeing into the wood*. Caused by Government E co no m i cv Policies; Riot Police Deployed BtfENOS AIRES (AP) - Thousands of riot police were deployed on July .15 and -had been answering only individual queries. Individual requests accounted tor the largest increase in the demand over last .year, the department said,, with more than 2,000 coming in daily. One of the most popular features of the 1962 map; the department freeway, system showing all points of entrance and exit. ’State Senators and Representatives were allowed up to 1,000 maps each. More than half of the lawmakers asked tof-thbir full quota tq distribute to constituents. Copjes of the map, the department said, may still be available from travel agencies, chambers of commerce and Tegfonal tourists centers but are going rapidly. uled 48-hour .general strike against government economic policies be- State Treasury in Black LANSING UP) — The state treasury income during the past, week was $61.1 million and outgo was $32.5 million. The treasury balance at the end of the week was $127.79 million. She'd Know Birthday SHARON, Pa. m — When Mr. and Mrs. Albert First became the parents- of a baby girl on April 1, they gave- the. infant a timely name -r April First. Pontiac City Affairs Planners Squelch Site for school Board Building ■ City planners last squelched an architect's Ide integrating the future Pon Board of Education building into a campus-tupe' layout and. placing the structure in the' parking area opfxwite City Hall. In a report to the City Commission, the City Plan Commission '-'OTged'-'that'-'tiM*' existing parking space be retained. The board could jdarc its new City Hall near Auburn, the p ■era suggested. Consulting 'architects for the ic center development had cated the Auburn-Perimeter Road site — being on a hillside — was ideal for an.auditorium with multilevel parking built into the side of the hill. - MUST MOVE OFFICES The board must move its 40 Patterson Street facilities sometime ' in IBB.'MM tb make way tor urban , renewal.- The planning commission had two choices to review. 'One would have placed the new board building oppoalte City Hall and would have- allowed for expansion of parking facilities to the east' of these buildings. In order to get to City Hall, citizens would have to park their cars east of the board building, pass by the board building and then cross a mair fo the' Ctty nttii. The plan commission concluded that if would be “4JPJI gppd to interpose the board of education building between the City Hall and the parking area." ' . The planners felt that this would produce "adverse public ! "MjCHMjN WATWMPAIR • Crystals Fitted Whilo You Walt • WATCH BANDS *1.95 Up NEISNER’S Watch Repait 42 N. Saginaw FI I-359S Park. The land is at the rear or lot fronting on Douglas Street d is owned by Mrs. SadieNA. Hulin. \ The Commission also author- ' iced the advertising for bids on fouiv lots along the west aide of bourn Saginaw about 300 feet south of Franklin and bordered on the west by the Grand Trunk JHailrew# frtthti) A number of businesses d$> placed by urban renewal have applied for the property, .commissioners were told. Preparing tor the Aug. 7 primary, City Cleric Olga Barkeley will be doing business with City Hall than with the Board of Education.” The second alternative, to the south of City HaU, was more ceptable,, the planners said. The Ctiy Commission , accepted and filed the report. No definite proposal has yet been mAdc by the board tor a new building site. In other business last nlgbt, City Manager Robert A. Stlerer request ed and was granted determent of a request to add more land to the new site of Newman AME Church; displaced from Auburn Avenue by urban renewals.... Stlerer asked time to study the IMHNdblllly of giving the church more land than originally Intended since more had become available since earlier negotiations. The City Commission unanlmoqi-iy approved purchase for, 8275 of a 59- by 120-foot parcel of land for the expansion of Richardson ■ M-™- COUPON •*—r-r—— Thun., FrL, Sot., Mon* and Tues. WITH THIS COUPON MEN'S was granted a request to change location of polls in Precinct 20 from the' YMCA building at 131 Mount Clemens St. tp the Seventh-Day Adventist Church, 356 Mount Clemens. The YMCA is undergoing alterations and additions work. it it it Ip street construction plaps, the Commission set tor Aug, 8; 1—A public hearing ~wran engl-»er’a estimate tor construction of a sidewalk and related work on-th^ south side of Borenoe 'Street from Cass Avenue to Close Street, nt a total cost of 8841, all school front- „2—A public hearing on an engineer’s estimate for construction of curb, gutter, grade, gravel and related work on Stanley Avenue from Chicago Avenue to Walton Boulevard, at a total cost of $2,830 or $200 Per 40-foot lot. 3—Presentation of special assessment rolls lor sidewalk construc-tion orolecta on portions of Alton and Lull streets ' and Northway Drive, and for ptirtoj and gutters, on a part of Tbieti Avenue . No objections Iwere raised last night at public hearings op plans tor the sidewalk and curb projects- State Sees Hike inlaxReyenue Collections in July on June Retail Salas Find 7.9 Pet. Rise Qyeif #61 Lansing .« - Sales and use tax collections to July on June re-tefljales showed* 7£ per rent increase over the same month last year, the State Revenue Department imported. ! 4t was the seventh streigM month the tax collections were up over Inst year, . ; July collections totaled $41.-898,220; an . increase of 83,077,703 Over last yeaf*.. Automobile sales led in the gain General Strike Scattered acts of sabotage were reported, but the,capital generally quiet after the strike began at midnight. The .extent of the walkout was not to become apparent until normal working hours. The strike was. called by the powerful General Confederation of Labor, dominated by followers of ousted dictator Juan D. Peron. ★ it ^ Or Economy Minister Alvaro Also-garay warned that picketing was banned by the nation’s security law. He said any. pickets caught would get 25 years in jail. ' Private buslihes were the strikes’ chief target, and in the two days before the strike more than 60 buses were burned, smashed or damaged. The .private' bus operators said they would operate despite the strike. Similar defi> helped break previous CGT strikes in May and Jqly. ... it Or $ nationwide radio-television speech Tuesday night, Alsogary warned that the strike threatened Argentina’s last chance for nomic recovery. He said he had great difficulty during the recent trip to the United States in getting xJ.S. and International (Monetary' Fund officials to grant Argentina 8500 million in credits. The minister warned that the U.S. taxpayer is tired of paying out money for aid progrants only it wasted by strikes and revolutions. Finds Cadhe > di Gold Piecek in Cabin JLog ' HILLSBORO. /Ohio (AP)-4!ow« an) Hodge struck gold Tuesday. The semiretired farmer found ic gold—15 gold coina—in a log from! a -rabbi in wfdch he was born in nearby Rainsboro in southwestern Ohio. it . ♦ . ■ Hodge said ifl of the gold pieces ..re United States 820 coins, dating from 1795 to 1805. The other five appear to be foreign, he said. with 86,566,520 in Itax revenue against 84,732.430 f6r the same month last year, ran increase of 38 per cent. - Clarence W, Lock, state revenue commissioner, said it was too ly to evaluate the Impact of the additional two-cent tax on cigarettes. “There was a lot of advance buying in June,” Lbck said, “and it will take a couple* of months be-' fore the market returns Ttr conditions." le logs to tup-ling equipment1 Hodge needed some h port a piece of farming equipment in his barn- He chose a log from among those which he had piled Up Several years ago whgn he tore- down' the log cabin. , Ho sawpi) through what peared to -be a knot but if was a plug. Whetf the saw cut through, the gold pieces tumbled out of a hoto. Ecorse Reverses Vote ECORSE UP) — ThO Ecorse City Council has reversed its vote favoring. a. city income tax and approved instead a motion to jx>ll residents of the suburb on whether they wantr the new tax. The council also decided to. place the Issue on. the November ballot. Admissions, Costs Up for State Hospitals LANSING W — Operating costs and patients admissions tor the state’s 248 hospitals both were up ln.1961 ,over l960, the Michigan Hospital * Association reports. Patient Admission totaled 1,145,-355 last year. an increaso of 12,857 from the previous yean Costs last year were 8443 .million, an increase of 832 million. Admissions averaged one for every £2 persons. JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED -HIGHEST PRICES PAID- We Pick Vp FE 2-0200 | PONTIAC SCRAP H| Fall Term, 1962 Institute Building Pontiac Business Institute is accredited by the Accrediting Commission for Business Schools in Washington, D.C. PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTING — HIGHER ACCOUNTING JUNIOR ACCOUNTING — SPfcEDWRITING SHORTHAND BUSIESS ADMINISTRATION — SECRETARIAL __ STENOGRAPHIC - OFFICE MACHINES Ponuac Business Institute 18-24 W., Lawrence St.-—Phone 333-7028 wmmmimmm founded in ’8,000,000.00 AVAILABLE FOR MORTGAGE LOANS HALF SOLES v e Mm'l WmRM’I, Chlldrsn'i U«»h>r ft CwUROlitian RUBBER l HEELS Come in and take some home ... Enjoy lower than ever payments and new longer terms on Home Ownership Loans and Commercial Mortgage Loans— See us soon- if you'd like to -snare In the more thanU million now available for Home Loans. 79* I NEISNER’S SHOE REPAIR ! ,, WHILE U WAIT*or SHOP SERVICE » MAIM FLOOR—REAR CMFW J Come In... the Honey’s Fine! Bank OFFICES O ih"vr ■ • O KJK JHemhor FoionH Deposit IniuraHcolCorporattoi ELEVEN THE PONTIAC PHESS WEDNESDAY. AUftrtST IOP EARIY HM BIST Si $ Your chofep of style «id colorl • Jaunty Capri types, Hi-riie and regular waistband stylet, belt treatments • Some' nave handy pockets • In cottons, corduroys, and novelty blends • Assorted colors • Sixes 10-11 LADIES' CAMPOS CLASSIC SKIRTS COTTON SLACKS DUNGAREES | Compare AT 10.99 COMPARII] * For fashionable Pall appearances encamps or off, wear the • ever popular 'Ivy* *tyled slack I • Easy- -^orrpothfifjtcofTon Tailored for that *llm, trim look Reinforced, at points of strain for long lasting wear • As-sorted colors Rough 'n ready, double knee 10 ox. blue denim dunga* reetl • Perfect for summer-lnto-fatt "OctTve"wear * Reinforced at points of strain • Completely wqshable cotton • Sixes d-12, GIRLS' POPLIN JACKETS GIRLS' gACK-TO-SCHOOl dresses ns shots r vf IcOMPtni . JE| knitback BOBS wamg SHOP SPARTAN ANY DAY EVERY DAY LOWEST GUARANTEED DISCOUNT PRICES ALWAYS! shop spartan 9:30 CORNER of DIXIE HIGHWAY & TELEGRAPH ROAD YOU'LL ALWAYS FIND SUPER DISCOUNTS AT SPARTAN IN PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1902 SH» EMILY FOR BEST SELECTIONS COMPARE AT 1.99 CHENILLE m> BED SPREAD 3MUR-CAULK 9Va OUNCE CLEAR GLASS TUMBLERS CORNER OF DIXIE H'WAY AND TELEGRAPH ROAD IN PONTIAC SHOP SPARTAN'S LOWEST DISCOUNT PRICES FOR HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS SHOP SPARTAN 9:30A M T°10P M DAILYSUNDAY 12 noon to ^ CORNER of DIXIE HIGHWAY & TELEGRAPH ROAD YOU'LL ALWAYS FIND SUPER DISCOUNTS AT SPARTAN IN PONTIAC v , THE PONTIAC PRESS,WEDNESDAY, AUGtfST 1/1962 '} ■■ vt -S J •' ■■■■. i:/v " -• '■. I*'-- ' SHOP EARLY FOR BEST SjELECTIOHS i % SUPER DISCOUNT DEPT. STORES SELLING FIRST QUAUTYONLY SHOPPER STOPPERS CORNER OF DIXIE H’WAY AND TELEGRAPH ROAD IN PONTIAC , 50 pc. SERVICE \T FOR 8 have i.rat.d blade... Will COMPARE AT $Mf OUR“ LOW. _ , low pr,ce You'ra fight. • . with t' . EVERSHARP \ D.lux. Ball Point Pan' with 1 Cxtra Refill .». *2.08 Valval I OUR LOW, LOW PRICE ^Doafill" Cartridge Foun-tain Pan loadi with handy cartridge or fill It from an ink boltla. Compare at 12.98 DIAMOND & PEARL PENDANT * You gat tamaro, tlipan OUR LOW MICE flaih holder, fla.h guard, m| bulb., battarlai, 81m and nock itrap. Mfg. lilt <9.95. AIREQUIPT SUBERBA 44 'x SLIDE PROJECTOR Shows color-p.rl.ct cornar-to . finger-tip ill changing. Mfri. original IIit $69.95 OUR i.OWrtOW PRKf SYLVANIA SUN GUN. • Ui.i only V» the electricity. inyitandard a lang life bulb. OUR LOW PRICE $3.9$ Value OUR LOW, LOW PRICE t Low Discount Price f On Natlonplly Famous Waltham WATCHES FOR Ml*... the 17-Jowel "Jessica." Yellow top with non-corroslvo back. Expansion bracelet. I FOR HIM... tho 17-Jewel [ "Sea Brian",-Water-proof*, luminous dial with sweep second. Expansion band. SHKK 10-66 Three shaving speeds provide a perfect shave fair every type beard' everytlmel 3- If FIELD GLASSES COMPASS AT *U|95 J OUR LOW PRICI wpy adjustable head. Shatterproof nylon case. Mfgi i “ Ffln. Hit $31.30. REMINGTON LEKTRONIC CORDLESS SHAVER fewer supply built Ini Re. .harfa* an AC ■ wOT;!iJ CROWN JEWEL SHAVER . FOR THE GIRL Came,lately: Oaldanf heed it:rbte Jewelrylex et $17.50 .OUR LOW, ' LOW PRICI s SHOP SPARTAN 9l30A M -10 p m. daily...SUNDAY 12 noon to 7 RES OF FREE PARKING! YOU'LL ALWAYS FIND SUPER DISCOUNTS AT SPARTAN CORNER of DIXIE HIGHWAY & TELEGRAPH ROAD IP Vi r*V '• THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESD^ AUGUST 1, 1862 ;J' mm m W. L H 1 ■■ ■ ; ff*§J| % M§mmi '711 MB 1 ■ ilFi, H O UpR N M ^wmi 1 ~js s I mmm MBS®! I vSmtmm MBfUacuk !■ tt at H SR I I Cinderella HI firettfl-print cottons. back-to-school belles ' Tlie smartest students in town are skipping | . back to school in Gin--V^derella 'styles;' These ^clever cottons are as ^X-prett/' as cart - be, "color bright anti easy. ,, v, ■ ' W' i!hsizM3-6x$4.99 ' r 7-14 $5.99 Xk childrens * Use Your Security Charts - / Many other style*. from $3.99 to $8.99 SECURITY CHARGE ACCOUNT SERVICE Tel-Huron Shopping Center f E ‘ 'Oakland County’s Largest Shoe Store’ SPECIAL PURCHASE Men’s BERMUDA SHDRTS —Fa/ite* to $6.9.1 Checks, Plaids, ^ulids, Cottons, Dacron and . Colton Blends. <3 ,rt FOR BACK TO SCHOOL SEWING Sliagbark A carefree combed cotton by Galey & Lord 45 inches wide—wash and wear Needs littje or no ironing : . Residual shrinkage 1% A wide assortment of patterns to choose from yd. SMUN’S Tel-Huron Store Open STORES FOR MIN Every Nito 'til 9 P.M. Do-It-Yourself Dolls PANTS SLACKS THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ONLY 49' ★ Fun for Everyone • ★ No Patterns Needed ★ Easy to Make ★ Variety of Pitterha ’ 49 It SfTme Day Dry Cleaning Until *2 P. M." A ....• ....... -.......t-ft Stuff them with Shredded Foam Polyurethane, 57" lb. bag m pry Cleaners and Shirt" launderers Both Locations-—Tel-Huron ohd Z6‘iE. Huron Rinwale Corduroy All Cotton E*0i Washable' 90 20 Color* to Chooso From Security Charge Honored Here. TH WONDER OF THE WORLD FORMERLY Sekonlc DUAL RUN Dramotlc Zoem affectci test, ultra-sharp fl.S Z-O-O-M lent whh taltpholo, wide angle end. normal positioning. Son exact picture camera THE EASIEST MOST SENSITIVE FASTEST OPERATING Movie Camera ever! viewing, adiustablo ova ploco Plus MORI VAIUI Features! with plitol-prlp—l.ii than $190 SOI the excising DUAl RUN Try it you naif — TODAY I Come In h Amazing "Flip-Action” slmpllftas roll film, you flip "rotating" film CAMERA MART 55 S. Telegraph Rd. PMtiac, Mich. FE 4-9567 *‘Tel-Huton Shopping Center** Kodachrome 11 Film 8mm Roll........$1.99 35mm 20 Exp......1.50 15mm 35 Exp...... 2.15 15mm Roll........6.02 KODAK MAILERS Imm Roll........$1.15 35fnm 20 Exp.... v 1.15 39mh 36 txprnrrrlfrr^f* 16mm Roll.;....., 3.40* SPECIALS! Wou NOW FU4HQUNS.... S9.95 $4,95 uiataiiiar .149 1.39 and C.......It ,49 «M’R .............It ,69 YltlF0DS....v. U.M 11,50 EVERYTHING on SALE! Jayson Jewelers if Friendly Jewelry Store’* Open Evening* ’til 9 ■ FK 4-JI3S7..... Broken Sizes Ladies* Ladles* All Cotton • sleeveless shirtwaist DRESSES SKIRTS ★ WasK 'n JWpar 1 100% Cotton ★ Pleated and Ruffled • $|9» $|33 fashionset SLEEVELESS JACKET ’★ 100% Cotton ★ Drip Dry) iili^ ★ Wrinklo Roslstoht, h --r^y-r Girl i" JENNIS DRESSES Vs* 100%.Cotton / 9 Ladies* and Girls* LIZ TAYLOR BLOUSES ★ 100% Cotton C ★ Wash 'n Wear "CHAMC tv at msecs .starting thursday! ,| A hurry ! quantities «. are limited! summer dresses *5 formerly *8.98414.98 summer suits, rain-shine coats formerly *14.98 to *25 .... ... .. $990 costume coordinates *3” and $5” ' formerly $5.98 to $10.98 blouses and tee tops 99 *o *2M ' formerly *1.98 to *3.98 jamaicas and surfers *r»to $3w formerly $2.98 to $5.98 gowns, pi’s, slips, pettislips $y>9m formerly *2.?8-*3.98 famous bras tind girdles *1" to $8" formerly *2.50 ta *10.95 summer htindbags formerly *2’8 to *7*' Prices plus 10% Federal Tax summer skirts formerly *3.98-$5.98 Slim, ond pleated stylos in cotton solids and novelties. Misses' sizes. TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER shop every night tew p.m. monday thru Saturday T OPEN EVERY NIGHT ’TIL 9 P.M. • FREE PARKING! )Thb Pontiac press: wepne&day, ,Aubusx- i, m2 Herd they go! Our huge stock of summer suits has just been counted and is being , sold in order to make way for entirely new fall and winter shipments. It’s an OsmUn’s policy •, . and you reap the reward. All suits are X902, first-quality models that have been selling for far more. Don't miss this marvelous chance to otto one or more of America’s finest suits at this immense saving. But hurry . V'. the best selection goes, to the first-comers. CHOOSE FROM: Tropicals . . .Worsteds.. . Dacron-Wool Blends . v. Wash & Wear Models . * . Cool Cords . . . rich colorings in solids... muted plaids & checks. '. Many Suits With 2 Pants (2nd Pair for Only $10) SALE STARTS TOMORROW, THURSDAY, AUGUST 2nd TEL-HURON STORE ONLY * CUFF ALTERATIONS FREE! one alterations AT COST! a part of Pontiac since 1931 SMUN’S ■ STORES FOR MEty Mi,:..a USE ONE OF OSMUN’S SEVERAL CHARGE PLANS! LONG X-LONG SHORT PORTLY PORTLY SHORT SUITS All Nationally Famous Names Tow' Instantly REGULAR SIZES oar THURSDAY MORNING ONLY! So wt («n accommodate tM extra crowd* whe with to take advantage of thlf record-breaking sale. Excellent Selection • • • Choose Your Siie From This Chart i t........;-f T TBE PONTIAO PRESS, Center ROASTS to Please Quick to yuivn . ■ | _ Beef SleoUettes Trimmed Naturally Tender liurony -vv. ' : ' ■ Rib Steaks TOP FROSf or pAfrfiiAOUTH Lean Boston Butt PORK ROASTS ~is,k”2i79 SPARE MBS ■89! Country Stylo ..J Practically Mixed Si: STOKELY SALE! Stokely’s Finest Sweet PEAS 5303 400 Cans H Whole Kernel or Cr.eam Style CORN 6303 400 Cant ■ Boneless HILLS BROS Etna FLAVOR AGED IN WOOD ViRNORS $-89* • 59* 49i Loaded" with Meat Skinless Franks Hvgrode Michigan Grade 1 ' ] Ball Park Franks ' Glendale Fresh or Smoked Liver Sausage Price* effective thru Saturday, Aufusf 4. We reserve the right to limit Quantifies. VHM* VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON 1 Mb. ™ “4 ^ Gan MdP VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON j$l$g3 | Tor fl*8 * Van. ^,|f lee Cream Niop. ' ' M Coupon flood thru Saturday, Aug. 4 Limit flM Coupon Per Cuitomor. « Salad Dressing Welch’s . Grape Juice With Coupon Pure Vegetabl# Shortening Snowdrift Dartmouth Troxen Stokely’s Catsup.. Stokely’s Tamatoas . Frail Cocktail . . . Park ( Beans vr crp.’ Hi-C Drinks 346„noo Cam J Orange or Grap* Lemonade Mel-o-Crust • . • ■ Vienna Bread SL 89’ 89* GRAPES California U.S. No. 1 3 100 24-ox. Btl». 3-lb. Special Con Label 6-ox. Can 20-ox. Loaf ^targe Clusters Made For Automatics Fluffo Shortening £79' Dash Detergent •sr 41* Camay Soap 4 {£53* Salada Tea, Gipnt Site Draft Giant Q Ja Site 03 Feel Reolly Cleon ^ Zest Soap 2 •e»h ACt Ben Bake or Fry With ' *■ Crisco *2 89. Sunshine Hydrox Cookies Kind To Hands Fab lOe Off .. 69" For Grimy Honds Lava Soap 2 •era * 1 Full Flavored Salada Tea ’£ 89- Floyor Kist Wagon Wheel Cookies For A Cteoner Wish Oxydol Giant “T 3 a Slse » J It Fleotp Ivory Soap a 2 L*t*r37« Ben 3 ‘ Wax^etf < ' ' Sandwich Bags T$2 Maple Leaf Cremes 49* f-f. VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON ■H-ffDjl# VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON $j| j IAVI WITH THIS COUPON VERNORS 6 - 89‘ inaftl 25 Extra Stamps With Thlp Coupon ond Purehose of * Any Pfckuee ef Boot for Stow !#»t VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON ||§f| ^gjggj VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON j|p t Stamps | GOLD BILL With Jhlf Coupon ond Purehose of $1.00 er Mere ef Froth Produce Hll Stamps With This Coupon and Purehose of One 3Wlb. Jar Elna Strawberry Preserves ■nutree eetwrUey, auc. . VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON Stamp! Purehose of Charcoal Briquettes GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL. GIFT STAMPS TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER , Monday, Thursday, Friday 9 to 9— « A. M. t. » f. M. dmmLiiim - PLENTY OF FREE] PARKING T 1495 NORTH MAIN - ROCHESTER Monday, Tuesday, Saturday ,9, to ! ■i | ;• 'Ot^ri'' D«yi*9'JI)0 9'' Don't Miss The Great Savings at T Stores BARNETTS MEN’S STOQE f 150 M. Saginaw St. THRIFTY DRUG STORE ---148 N. Saginaw St.- - WKC, Inc. 108 N. Saginaw St, MCNALLY’S MEN’S STORE ' 106 N. Saginaw St. , FEDERAL DEPARTMENT STORE ‘" N. Saginaw St. at Warrsn DIEM’S l’onlSrtc’t Pnpulnr Shot- Store -87 N. Saginaw St. PRIII Pla.tic Li»t«r Bag with Purcha*» PONTIAC ENG6ASS JEWELRY 25 N. Saginaw SI. . * SHAW’S Michigan*! l 7 $. S. KRESGE GO. Downtown Star* GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE ; 30 S. Cals Avo. * . B. F. GOODRICH ' ' • 11] N. Pwiy DICKINSON’S MEN’S WEAR 31 N. Saginaw PONTIAC GLASS CO. 23 W. Lawroneo St. TASTY BAKERY —“SQNsSaglnow—*—t~----- OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR JT W. Saginaw St. ” ' CONNOLLY’S JEWELERS 16 W. Huron St. The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP * 51 W. Huron St. V- S. c. ROGERS SPORTING GOODS 34 E. L«Wr.nc. Sf. joe’s army navy Surplus 19 tj|./Saginaw St. -SAT. FRI. __THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ' 3GreatDaysof supar savings in Downtown Pontiac where you will find hundreds and hundreds of truly worth while bargains especially selected for thrifty shoppers who wish better quality at greater savings •.. Every-store in Pontiac's big downtown shopping center is cooperating to make ~ we*" these three days of savings most profitable. FndPShnif .*%NilHFIhoiJ s p.m. wggNWIE SHOES HwWmHoil.lhcb Mtttt ||P| | p ■■■ EIGHTEEN Focus on Health loiod ITll THls feNJIAC PBESS. WEpifgSDAYrAUGUST r, 19«2 frik&tg&L. %' .S^rJlLa Todays Medical t^wsincludesCancerandGlue Medical news include* a study of possible causes of cancer, dangers in sniffing glue fuines, and harm to children "growing up" too last: CANCER SUSPECTS Do the wrraflB^S^ffwScS phlcaUy, live give people a higher risk of getting cancer? “ For live years, the National Cancer Institute has been conducting such a study ot pot vironmental causes of cancer in the Hagerstown, Md., area, Laboratory analyses of water, soils, rooks, air and vegetation were combined with a review of country health records for several decades past, plus new data were due to chance and hi connected with nay specific cause in the surroundings. With fife sflidy-completed, th* institute says It will continue observing any clustering of cancer cakes among families, or phicaily, for “ dues. Experts found variations in cancer rates in the 20 districts studied, but conclude that these differences to potentially very berm, fid to adotoaoents, yet this practice seems to be becoming two Denver physicians caution. Youngsters can become "high" from .the vapors. The solvents in the gluef could be harmful to the QUIVER , Next timeyour eyeUd begin* twitching or quivering, you could * tell friends you are suffering from cilkwis, or from nictitatio. These impressive mSdical descriptive terms are suggested by Dr. J. E. Schmidt, a medical lexicographer, writing in Modem Medicine Magazine. Cillosts comes from the Latin dliqm, for eyelid. Nictitatio is front-the Latin nictitate,, to wink. , GLUE-SNIFFING Sniffing airplane glue or plastic liver, kidneys, brain and bom marrow, although * there ' is no documented evidence yet of any serious physical harm, write Drs. Helen Glaser and Oliver N. Masa-engale Of the University of Cdorado Medical Genter. , ~ YOUNG STEADY DATING Too many adults today ... are immature because parents forced them to -grow up before, they had a chance to develop their talents, abilities and capacity for achieving. happiness, declares Dr. William Beach Jr., a California psychiatrist., .. \ • He says an example is regular dating between' boys and girls. •at ye* to tbeir teens, which femite mey think Is cute. And parents err, he adds,- in Medical Times Magazine, when "w» accept an individual bacause he is able to do this or that rather than for what he is q* an individual. And we transmit this to our children." | AVOIDING* q|eAT STROKES In hot weather, heat strokes come about^ when sweat glands normally conqerne<^ ;with cooling the body become exhausted by prolonged use. prevent serious physical effects, University of Michigan authorities recommend avoiding heavy work or cutting down the speed of present work during hot weather; sleeping In a cod place allow sweat glands to rest, and Governor's WifeStumping, Attends Money-Raising Tea GRAND RAPIDS (UP!) - Mrs. John B. Swainson, wife of Michigan^ incumbent Democratic governor, says one of her, husband’s biggest stumbling blocks to re-election may be the ‘/long memories" of advocates of the vetoed Bowman bill. of my husband’s news releases itake the person’s name and send sent to the house," she'said. like information by mail when 1 "’If I can’t answer a question, lido find out the answer," she said. But she said her yesterday that the furor over Swainson’s rejection of the bill to prohibit taxation of a community by another was dying down even in Wayne and Macomb county areas where residents were affected, by ' Detroit’s income levy. th£ governor’s lady Was the guest of honor at a "tea for TV" sponsored by the Kent County branch of the Michigan Federation of Democratic Women. —The tea netted nearly$900, most of which was scheduled for use ' Swainson’s television campaign. About 273 persons, all but a few of them women, exchanged:their 7 $1 tickets for a cup of tea or coffee and the opportunity to chat with the state’s attractive blonde, blue-eyed first lady, who was dressed in p royal blue suit. Some of the guests were among 67 tea patrons who previously pledged $10 each to .the cause. STRONG FEELINGS Alice Swainson, 35-year-old mother of three, said she could not be a stay-at-home Candidate’s wife because she "feel* so strongly about John’s program.” "Every willing voire is neec she said. With the primary-less than week away, Mrs. Swainson said she will be finishing her personal tour of the state to join her. husband in a swing through the metropolitan Detroit area. "To keep informed or what going on and to answer questions Of the people I meet, I read all of the major state papers, 'course, and also have copies q continuing hjbrmtl intake of salt during tegular meals. Drink fluids as’thirst dictates. SCREENING LEOPROSY DRUGS Scientists recently dlcovered thht the. germ* causing human »y can - be cultivated grown in the foot pads of mice. And that provides, a promising system, at least, of testing new leoprosy drugs, reports Dr. Charles Shepard of toe Communicable isease Center, Atlanta, Ga. Cases of leoprosy can occur most anywhere in the United States, he say*. The disease ls endemic in Southern fflorida, southern Louis-iana, southeast Texas, New York City, am California. Most cases in NSW York and the West Coast are thought to have been imported fropa other parts of the world, Dr. Sheppard says. HmuIii SURVIVES UNDERWATER ORDEAL — Lifeguard Garrett Glberson, 20, is visited by fellow lifeguards Bill Knight (left), and Ray Schprf in hospital yesterday at Asbury Park, N.J. Rescue efforts by the latter pair freed,piberson from suction of a drain in the city pool. Glberson was submerged from six to Sight minutes- MSI SIDEWALK DAYS ONE LOT ' _ WOMEN’S SUMMER $1 00 DRESS-PLAY I SHOES I ONE iOT MEN’S - BOYS’ SHOES OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY 'TIL 9 73 NORTH SAGINAW shoe STREET One Fish Leads to Improvements atHighJSchool: Super Special for Downtown Sidewalk Days . Thursday - Friday - Saturday — August 2, 3 and 4 ALL-PURPOSE CABINET DECORATOR STYLEP...FULL40WL0NQ MANY VERSATILE USES. • RECORD CABINET • HI-PISTEREO TABU . TV TABU • eR> TABLE WESTON, Mass. (B - "Get net and scoop out that fish." The order was issued by Irving Keene, biology instructor at Weston High School, to students on field trip. The students scooped the fish “ a trout - from a stream • CHINA, OlASS or UNIN CABINET • ROOM DIVIDlt .NIGHT TABU • SERVING TABU • COFFil TABU •CRIDINZA •CIUARITTI ■ The fish captured the fancy of Irene MacLeod, who decided to study it as a biology project. She other students to help her build a trout pool in front of the school. The state chipped in trout. Now the pool Is going to become the centerpiece for improvements in the area. Weston's Country Garden Club has donated $200 to improve the pool area. ----------------i-—— And Irene knows enough about trout now to speak at a sporti men’s club which has donated an additional $50. DOWNTOWN SIDEWALK DAYS BIG—40" LONG, ID* DEEP, 26" HIGH Free Demonstration LUSTROUS MAR IISISTANT Vfl B STAIN RESISTANT FINISHES XL Door Prl*e» and Gilt* JEWELRY Ref. to $5.00 10° FREE RING (lw> CLEANING Nusunr ca INSPECTION PURSES ana JEWELRY 40% OFF PARKING BUS RIDES IDEAL ROOM DIVIDER bsrautt H Is flubbed on «ll bSmSE r~"Tr:" ■ ! ' . , mi *J SCJTS. 'HI • P.M. 9K South Sooin Saginaw Stroot A telephone exchange has been installed in Carmacks, Yukon Territory, the frontier town namedi for George Carmack, whose gold! discovery marked the Yukon gold rush. ’ • ■ . Barnetts WIG DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Hustle to Barnett's first thing . . .T^rybody knows always havq great sidewalk specials V. . on the sidewalk , and' inside the store! BARGAINS FOR MIN ON tHl SIDEWALK $3.99 Famons Brand Sport Shirts \.. .$1.98'8^ $2.95 and $3.99 Knit Shirts .. .. \. $1.00 1 55 Famons Brand Dress 0p to $19.98 _ V 1 Fall and Winter jackets ... $4.98 and 5&f8 3 Up to $15.95 Fall Pants .... $4.98 $3.95 Dress and Sport Shirts ...... . . 2 lor $5 rum MEN (429-million mineral industry (the 'salt and concrete, industries downstate are Talks Satisfy Premier America” of 1966, has entered Chicago’s .Wesley Memorial Hos- pital for- surgery to correct her left eye, which was injured slightly to a childhood _auto accident. The 25-year-old beauty from Grand Island, Neb.,- is expected to be released, from the- hospital later this week She has been acting in a summer theatre in a, Chicago suburb. Important moneywise than the Upper Fenmsula’s copper and Iron industries), said Pehroon, is not a giant mineral industry states, but ranked- 13th .among the 50 to *m . ■ . - >; In Iron It ranked second and in copper sixth. It was down 18 per cent from Its iron production peak and 41 per cent below its copper production peak. v Michigan’s mineral 1 n d u s t r y decline is part of a general trend in the U.S. since World War II. said Peherson, and our State Department appears to accept the shift to foreign sources as inevi-table. - The- waning virility of capital-im and the gain in socialism add the increasing * interference government and labor in business management had left Industrial discipline weak. (The Communist countries, however, keep a discipline, said Pheraon. Russian’s Iron ore resources are not unlike those of the U.8. where reserves of high grade ore are Insufficient to take care of oping Its lower grade «ny like those similar to the Lake Saper-lor area’s taconite and Jasper. “A realistic United States policy for-minerals requires a reversal of recent trends in metal production and a stimulation of the^ development of the mlneTral deposits of Michigan and all Other states, even though by conventional measures of today they may be' classified as marginal resources,” said Pehroon. ft,” ' •* Or ""k. j lie said the U.S. has lost first1 but the USSR* wisely is devel- place in iron ore production to Russ^“ahd'its share of world output dropped from 55to 18 per cent since 1945. • I Nothing New to Thom OAKFIELD, N. Y. UB-Oakfield-Alabama Central School, to the heart of one of Upstate New York’s richest truck and daily, farm areas, has decided to discontinue agriculture coursesdue to 'lack of interest among pupils. / An air conditionor will help You Beat The Heat. Place a low' cost Pontiac Press Want Ad to help You Buy or Sell. ~ Fast Results-FE 2-8181 ®I "SIDEWALK DAYS" SP [ August 2nd, 3rd ond 1 I FREE — 1 Gallon Pure Gum Turpontiifc I With Purchase of One Gallon or More ofl | PITTSBURGH SUN-PROOF House Point. | fUinit — One Gal. per Customer! PONTIAC CLASS CO. 2| Wfft Lowranca Street ' FE 5-6441 (Free Customer Parking at Rear Entrsncel Theic pro 16 passes over the Alps. All but the Brenner Pass between Bolzano, Italy, fansbruck,- Austria, are dosed by ice and snow almost half the year.. ....... Winter road truffle has had to rely on low-altitude passes Dear the French-Itmllan Riviera, a long and circuitous route, or the lofty Brenner Pass far fo the east. The only other routes for motorists have been four-railway tunnels through which cars and trucks are carried piggy-back on railroad flatcars. * * * • The new tunnel through 15,781-foot Mont Blanc will reduce the driving distance between Turin, Italy and Geneva, Switzerland, to 167 miles, from 196 miles in summer and 490 in winter. ★ ★ ★ 23-foot road " will stretch through the mountain peak under '8-foot roof vault. Alternating from side to side every fifth of mile will be repair garages, emergency refueling stations, tety phones and turn-arounds. .. Announce Road Plans ,ST. JOSEPH (AP) — Plans for (6-million highway construction development for St. Joseph have beensannounced by the State Highway Department. The Department said thevobjective is to provide a highway system, Including a pene-tratqr tntoNst.' Joseph from Interstate 94, th&tWill adequately-carry present and eidsting traffic vol-lumes. \ $W$Ayj$AVE i On Diem’s Better Quality Shoes THURSDAY—FRIDAY—SATURDAY—AUGUST 2, 3 AND 4 ONI TAIL* OF WOMEN'S PUTS aiur CASUAtS-iValues to ■ $8.95 $2 pair SIDEWALK SPECIAL ONE RACK OP WOMEN'S NOVELTY SHOES 0 High and Medium sj Heels v O Assorted Colors • Values to $15.95 3 NATIONALLY FAMOUS TRAMPEZE FLATS (Broken Sixes) .Value. J Ajj „ ll Pair to $735 each purchase pair 2 PAIR Iw IS FREE! One pair of famous Mojud Hosiery with purchase of $10 or Woman's Batter Quality I Trampaxi Miracle Tread anton 17J Expansion Bracelet .. 39.50 Bulova Sport Watch .........49.60 Hamilton Fashion WWh....... 66.00 Many many others to select from in all price ranges 65.95 59.98 43.98 39.80 43.98 49.50 24.88, 21A8 31.66 Men’s y.g. Elk Ring .... 33.00 10.95 Men’s y.g. Masonic Ring . .40.00 17.88 ‘ Men’s y.g. Elk Ring .... 40.00 12.77 Men’s y.g. BI. Onyx Ring 82.50 14.30 Men’s y.g. Zircon Ring .. 87.50 17.60 Men’s y.g. Hemititie Cameo Ring.................... 45.00 16.95 Men’s y.g. Army Ring .. 45.00 16.95 Ladies’ y.g. Twin Garnet Ring ................... 40.00 18.70 *f^ll^^pf^nuThe Jade 60.00 26.40'’ Ladies’ y.grTiger Eye Cameo ................... 85.00 9.98 Ladies’ y.g. Shake Ring Ruby Eyes ............., 60.00 13.20 Ladies’ y.g. Rink Sapphire 35.00** 9.89 Ladies’ y,g. Syn. Emerald, 37.50 12.98 Ladies’ w.g. 2 Diamond Genuine Emerald ..... 125.00 77.00 Ladies’ y.g. Pearl, Onyx 50.00 21.95 Ladies’- y.g. Pearl, Onyx 35.0Q 9,98 WATCH BANDS Spfcidel—Krelsler and Flexlet Watch Bracelets All types and styles ...........Reduced 50% CLOSE OUT of Leather Watch Straps ............ .49c Ea. CLOCKS Res. Gen. Electric Kitchen ........ 9.98 3.85 Schatz Battery Dome .........44.95 22.50 300 Day Transistor.......... .29.95 16.50 Sunbeam Alarm ............. 9.90 5.10 G. E. Red Kitchen ........... 5.50 2.95 Desk Sun Burst............. 9.50 5.49 Sunbeam Wink Awake ..........13.20 7.69 Assorted Battery Wall Clocks .. 22.50 16.49 CHINA AND CRYSTAL All crystal sugar and creamers — Bowls Trays — Candle Sticks —- 1 Odds and Ends ......... .Reduced 50% China — Cups — Saucers — Broken Sets — Platters — Bowls and Dis-. continued Patterns.........Reduced 50% Sterling Picture Frames ........50% Off Sterling Dresser Sets........ .33% Off Sterling Misc. Hoiloware .......25% Off Silverplate Misc. Hoiloware ..... . 20% Off Brass and Copper Hoiloware .....50% Off Wm. Rogers Sandwich-Trays —-Bowls Etc................... 6.95 3.88 International — Banana Leaf Relish Tray ................. 9,90 5.95 Odds and'Ends of Sterling : FlatwaVe ................. .Reduced 50% We have combed our stocks for these selective values. We cannot guarantee’each Item to be in each store but they are In one or the other. Why not shop in both stores! SALE WILL CONTINUE FOR 10 DAYS BUT COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION! SUPER SIDEWALK SPECIALS Wm. Rogers • Servers — I Silverplate Cold Meat Forks — Pierced Pastry Wm. Rogers 6” Petite Party Trays or lnd. Butter Dishes with Your Engraved;Initial ........................... 50-Pc. (Service of 8) Beacon Hill International Stainless Steel m Walnut Table Chest ..................... .;.ti.. Centennial Billfold Card Cases .................. Silv« Plate Pierced Nut Spoon and Leaf Crystal Dish , Sunbeam* Electric ity Alarm Clock Wbod Case ..... 45-Pc. (Service for Iroquois Impromptu Carefree ......59.95 98-Pc, (Service for 12) Imported China—Plain White Coupe Shape................... Reg. Sale .35 ..89.95 16,49 .99 .. .49.95 34.98 .22 .59 5i49 29.98 39.95 SORRY, NO LAYAWAYS . . , But You Can Charge All You Wish and Take 10 Months to Pay! JEWttEAti DOWNTOWN -Opts MaMir Mi flMir Nlgkti M W. Hur.a , -F* MW . • T.I.iripk Opw | n HNi If It’s on Sale It Has a Sale Pripe Ticket ob it w- SfeMfe' 1 ' /“fi Igl --; TWENTY pmm §; THE PONTIAC EftBSS. ^WEPyESbXY, ATTCKffiT i imL Reds Using Finland for: Rig, Propaganda m- t. By WIUUAM L. RYAN AP Special Correapoadent The Pinna asked the Soviet hut die Russians said, in effect, '‘Look, lwb, we need ywr country ,.v ■ »f you UIWV, MHW, # for a propaganda* show. If you don't like it, that's Juat too bad.*1 And so, in trooped the Communists, using Finland as if it were the ftremUnls private colony. They did die same thing two years ago to Austria. ^ -.»• It the situations had been reversed and the United States had acted that way toward- its neigh- seem to shrug it all off, as if to say, "Well, the Soviets are like that—why fight It?" BLACK RUBBER HIP BOOTS PLASTIC RAIHOOATS . . .. ‘77 Assorted Assorted—-Army CAPS.. 10' HATS 59' tmkVHKn *.. ...... . SWIM VESTS .. MM »ATaaiBELTS...‘l" NATO SKIS...... Ml" STRAW NATS. $|49 JOE’S irn 19 N. Saginaw When the world Communist high command decided hf Moscow last year it would stage the "eighth World Festival of Youth* | Helsinki, the Finns shuddered. They recalled that the Communists stag'd the seventh one in Vienna in 1959, aifer the RussiatislN. Shelepio, once Hollywood's Crimson Eirwi overrode' official .Austrian objec-ttoft* with leas than polite thieaisj Previously the festivals were But the damocratic countries held . in Communist capitals— bon, the Communists’ propaganda roars would have echoed around Finland today ts-air obviously wist prop- unwilling host to » Soviet ( Prague, Budapest, Cast Beilin, Bucharest, Warsaw, Moscow. OOn ENORMOUS These did not pay off sufficiently to warrant the enormous cost. The Institute- for International Youth Attain in New York estimates the 1957. Moscow ieRtivai cost $100 Sdviet Young ,, Communist league and since 1958 the head at the Soviet Secret Police system. Tsuag pes|A stoaaawlag Like ffie others, it had been suspect because of the location. Moreover, it had been organized under the generalship of Alexander States is imperialist and colonialist, to indicate to young men socialism {Soviet style, of course) are peace and national develop- Aastrta, within easy rosea sf toe heaps claws, were elected. Two Finnish youth organizations, representing the vast majority of Finland’s youth, hotly, protested a festival in their country u Red auspices, and refused to part to the preparations. The festival's aim IS to turn the. United There meat he w to warrant toe high cost, The mastennind Jbfhlnd shows may figure .this way: The laid Out for Savior Zanuck By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - Darryi Ztouick, who never laid any claim to modesty;'might well be amazed at »$y some folks in Hollywood are hailihg him* messiah to save the bruised and battered movie industry. buck’s .as- i to i idency of 20th Century-Fox is seen as a boon tor the whole movie Jbusiness. 'N o w we’ll start 'rolling , again,"- enthused one film producer. . Tlw huge investment. to”"Cteo-patra”—Itself dogged by bad luck and human .failures—precluded a normal program of production at the honie studio. Talent and pic* ire deals drifted elsewhere.; Sudden death of. Jerry4Vald was another hard blow. His films * been the backbone of toe 20th-Fox product.. ■ • Now Zanuck has moved .to to Thursday Only-Shaw’s Diamond Day - PpPP ________1.Cleaning and I nt poet ion r l\CC of Your Diamond FRIDAY ONLY UmRos' or Mm's 17-Jtwsl • Waterproof—Shockproof Nationally Advertised $I288 Saturday Only 70 Piece Oneida Stainless Steel SILVERWARE WATCH Only 10 $| Q88 at This I [Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Charge Hoffa With Conspiracy Indeed there is much to rolj. For in the past months the wheels of the film industry have, come perilously dose to grinding to\tr ; Carpet , Samples! 40* Samples of quality carpets In patterns that are discontinued! Wide choice of heavy qualities ! Good for mqny household areas. Check Oar Sidewalk tar Friday and Saturday Specials! Survey Shows Average 14-Month Wait TWENTY-ONE A. M Photof»i RAYBURN STAMP - This is file design of the 4-cent Commemorative stamp late Rep. Sam Rsybuhr D-Tex., who for 17 years w ved Speaker of the House sentatives. ,1 r NEW.YORK (AP)-Are you still waiting for that personal injury case of yours to be settled in court? I, you've probably had, or will have, a long wait, according national spumy by the Institute of Judicial Administration. The institute, ina report issued Monday, * said personal injury cases reaching the jum..^td^l stage during the first half of this year took an average of 14 nonths to get there. .. This is the fourth straight year that the wheels of justice continue to roil oven slower, the Institute noted. Last year the delay in question averaged!3.3 months; in I960 it was M.1 monttu; in 1959, it 101, and in 1958, it was 9.4. The institute, a nonprofit organization connected with New; York University law school, said personrff" injury cases were selected as On example of the de- Latin America, 1 n d i a, Tanganyika, West Indies to Benefit NEW YORK (UPD-The Ford Foundation today a n n grants totaling. $6,216,050. The grants included' two for million each. One of the $l*mlllion grants goes to the ' Social Science Research Council for a program to strength-the nation's research and training sources on contemporary Latin America. 8lx tchools-Columbia and Harvard universities and the universities-of California (at Berkeley and Texas—will cooperate In studying Latin-American economic, social rad 12 Aboard Plane Forced to Land in EirexMost GIs The other Sl-mlilion grant goes i Franklin Publications, a nonprofit organization that assists the growth of book-publishing in ' developed countries, the foundation awarded a 192,750 grunt to the University College of the West Indies for the establishment of an institute of education to serve thfc English-speaking islands of West Indies. The- government of Tanganyika receives a $490,000 grant for the training center In Dar Ea Salaam to offer courses for executive officers, clerical ofifoea and assistants. A $350,000 grant was awarded for the establishment of the institute of applied manpower research by the Indian-government to study India’s human resources and their relation to the growth and stability of the Indian economy. British Right Winger Beaten Up af Rally LONDON (UPD-Extreme right wing leader Sir Oswald Mooley was knocked down, punched and kicked last night for the second lime in three days while attempting to hold a rally of his National Union movement. The violence erupted jn London’s East End, where he and his Blackshirt followers ' had bloody clashes vylth Communist groups In the S.SAGINAW 5T, AT ORCHARD LAKE AVE. > FI 5-RI74 PONTIAC The.crowd surged in on Mosley |aS he Was preparing to speak and went down amid snouts of ‘‘Down with M.o s I e y,” “Sleg Hell!,” and "Fascist scum!” Personal Injury Cases Grow Mildew in!Court Files la» because they represent file, bulk of litigation. \ The institute- Believes such delays indicate that lawsuits other types also are taking longer to get before juries. m, , The report noted that the larger the population of aajureo, the longer It took for a personal .injury case to reach the trial, atage. ~....... - Hie institute’s survey was based on reports from 116 principal state courts of general jurisdiction throughout the nation^ -It found that in 12 courts, counties with populations above 500,000, the average delay was 25 months. i- DELAY INCREASES The least delay—7.1 months— was found in counties of less than 500,000 population. . The delay jumped, to 15.1 months in counties With 500,000 to 750,000 people, and to 23J months, in counties having more than 750,000, . The circuit And superior, courts of- Grok County (Chicago) faTllfi-nois. serving an area wit’ population of five million, had the worst record with ah"average delay of nearly six years, Next were the state supreme t cgurt branches in. Nassau and Suffolk counties on Long Island near New York aty-Nassau with delays averaging five years Also listed among the nation’s 12 counties having delays of more than two years were Westchester Cotmty, ~N.Y.,44. months; and three In New’ York City-Queens, 35; the Bronx, .27; and Kings, (Brooklyn), 26. Among other cities ebvere^ in the slavery Nero Philadelphia, 45 Detroit, Indianapolis and & Frindsee, each 24; Cleveland, 2 Boston and Los Angeles, each 1 intents, 12; end Miami, 6. (UPI) — A carry-f them landing hero forced to turn hack: over the Atlantic. Airport officials tlonal .Overseas , had gone about 800 Gsnder, Nfld., when developed in on fines. y Fire engines and equipment stood by ’ ing but East Germans Stop More^Food Parcels BONN (UPI) — Communist authorities, forced to ration butter and meat in East Germany; also' have increased their seizures of food packages from West Germany, it was reportedtoday. The , West German post office said Communist seizure of. food packages has increased sharply in the last six months, when Western officials ask what, happens to the confiscated food they are told only that "it can no longer be located.''. ★ ★ ★ Communist postal authorities, West Germans said, confiscate if they are as little as overweight. Anew \ kind of porous ceiling tile makes it possible to eliminate overhead ate conditioning duct work. K is also fire proof and! sound--absorblhg7 I What? this season’s shoes so little priced! regular to *8.99 LARKS CASUALS *1199 to ’14.99 JACQUELINE and CORELLI DRESS SHOES 5 7 Don't mlu wonderful values In, caress - toft leathers, gleaming patents, rich silks, and tricky fabrics, just pick your heal heights, toe - treatments and scintillating colors or blonde tones! Marveleut chanca W"1dritcfi your shoe • wardrobe f a®D ssiB j | THE BARGAIN SPREE OF THE YEAR ... SHARE IN THE BIG, BID SAVINGS! THIS IS THE TIME L I OF THE YEAR WE REALLY CLEAN HOUSE TO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW FALL FASHIONS ARRIVINQ| I DAILY... CLOSING OUT j>UR ENTHjE SPRING AND SUMMER STOCKS AT FABULOUS SAVINGS!1 SPECIALS-1^ or Mora OffI SPECIALS-1^ or Mow Off! Boy’s Sport Shirts ASSORTMENT SPORTCOAT SALE *9* $J59 for $1.00.% —“■■‘wka,, _r All-Weather JACKETS SAM Excellent Quality £ lYT Gli CtaliOiitel Shirt! S2.S9 CaaHi-tol SUcb 13.99 to <5.99 Zip-Lioed Coets ...... .MM Mm’s Sport Shirts ASSORTMENT BOYS'** MEN5S SLACKS all Wool SWEATERS MEN'S SUITS 15" ALL-WEATHER COATS Y ,88 DRESS PANTS T DRESS SHIRTS SALE . ir for Young Students CONN’S CLOTHES 71 N.Saginaw iioxriiMi SEW 30c TO ....;SOc FT7 loiing Folks swimsuits Reg. 2.98 NOW 2*00 pre-teen co-ordinate sets Reg. 10.98 NOW 8.88 o girls1 shorts Reg.,T .98 NOW 1*59 infants' sun suits Reg. 1.98 NOW 1.49 girls'slacks ‘ Reg. 3.98 NOW 2*90 * infants’ summer sleepers Reg. 2.75 NOW 1.90 infants' terry sun suit Reg. 2.50 NOW 1.69 Entire Stock Sommer Dresses Including Pastels and Darks wera fa 14.98 NOW •# Wjra ta 19.98 NOW *11 were to 24.98 NOW SlntiriSte^^Suinffle^-[Coats and Suits [ 33—summer toppers were t© 29.98 NOW *7 247-rainCOats were to 17.98 NOW *7 28—summer suits y were to 22.98 NOW *7 ' 15-spring coats wa/e to 69.98 NOW ♦19 35—cashmere coats Were 79.98 NOW *49 / Complete Summer / Hat Clearance / were to 10.98 .were to 12.98 sy #2 * Straws, organzas, ,: lac* and holrbralds ' Millinery Salon-Second Floor MSI Sale Lingerie fufTsfip fR*«- 5.98 NOW 3.89 V»slip I R«9. 3.98 NOW 2.88 -* • Nylon Loce Trim White—-All Sizes • . sweaters Jitr blend I Values to T 4.98 NOW *5 I ond Cfaiite Styles in a S5* «f colors. Bulky v- I Neck—Turtle Neck, • hose MFoshlon and Sndmleu •n broken sizes and colors. summer cottons 2-pc. co-ordinates Values from 10.98 to 17,98 *5. *9 *u summer blouses Values from 3.98 ta 5,98 v *z f3 sutnmer hand bags Valuos fo 5.98 *2 StraWs and Baskets • •., 40% Off on All Swim Saits!, m * B - \f 'T^ ■ 7 ' V-/V S8 ■ . ■ TWistY-TWo THE WtMC f»feyjs. WEDNESDAY, AUOtigT t I«83- v By JACK BELL WASHINGTON; . honie, Bauguess fired twice- at his estranged wile, Sharon, M, hitting her onoe In the head. His next abet hit Mrs. Margaret P. White. 41, la the left Bauguess then ran a few stejps to ope aide of the. courtroom, put the pistol to his head ana again. Both Baugueps and his wife died at a hospital. Mrs. White is in good condition. Mrs. Bauguess, was separated from her husband and a for divorce. He waa- living in 'a Wichita motel. She had custody of their 6-year-old eon, Michael, and was staying with- her parents* near Augusta, about 12 miles east of here. The boy was not In Court. Court officials said there wen IS or M people In the room. No one else was hit by foe bullets.' Bauguess was seated in the front row, outside the rail and just behind his wife and mother-imlaw. Bents Refusing 'wHkj&re Sheet House Republican Leader Chart** A. Haileck of Indiana and mijtted a responsible and Qam Rroirlr* R Uirlronlnniw rif a five hllftoet to ConizreS: Sen. ‘Bourioe B. Hickenlooper of tawa,1 chairman of the Senate Republican Policy Committee, laid dawn such a condition in separate news conferences Tuesday aa a prerajuesife far, GOP support. ★ ' * *■ - President Kennedy has indicated he may decide by the middle of this month whether to ask for immediate tax' cuts or follow through with his plans to request cuts later which would be effective next Jan. 1. ative budget to Congress. There “President Kennedy has sub- pap., way .... , amount can be cut out of the budget equal to the amount of reduction,” Humphrey said. SUPPORTS TAX CUT “To have any Impact o economy, a tax cut would have to be at least $7. billion support such a reduction. £$$ gress could not possibly red&ce the budget $7 billion without: Seriously impairing defense and na- tional security! The tfon far a tax redaction would be to add available free capital to the . economy.” Hickenlooper said he thinks that if Congress really walked to put into effect some economies -it could stash billions of doljatB from the accounted various "agencies. Haileck said-'cute could be made In almost all funds, but those for payment of veterans benefits and interest on the national debt. . Hickenlooper said he doesn’t think the Senate would vote tor a corresponding reduction in ex- Max cote 'Without Republicans are of the general vpinkm, lie said, teat the economic situation is getting no better I8INE8S UNHAPPY ‘Business is discouraged,” d. “Adventure capital Is discouraged It would [be very stimulating indeed if business cotdd be assured that tee administration has any idea of really working for a balanced budget There is nothing wrong with this country iexcept lack of confidence.” *. * w ' Haileck sounded the “What Is neeided to restore confidence,’’ he said, “is §n immediate reduction of federal spending accompanied by ^ a thorough revision of the tax structure to encourage capital investment; to promote expansion and modernization and to offer much needed' relief, to the ordinary taxpayers.’’ ' Pidrtlp^rag^ in Easlern State Thalidomide Seized by FDA in Three'Placestrr Massachusetts. BOSTON ,(UPI) - Three supplies of the drug' thalidomide were i Massachusetts yesterday by U.S. Food and Dnig Administration (FDA) investigators. .......fir’ ■ ★ / ★ Nevis Cook, head of the Boston FDAofflce, said he would be surprised” if the drug had not been ikeh by some women, Cook said two quantities of the drug were found In doctors’ offices.-The third was seized in a hospital pharmacy. “It would be femarkable in light of the amount given to doctors that the drug was not taken by eome women,” Cook Mid. “I can’t say whether any women of child-bearing age have taken It because I don’t know.” „ Cook declined to Identify the doctors or hospttal tnvolved. Cook said he w«* “quite disturbed” that the two doctors and hospital disregarded a request March 20 that the - samples of the drug distributed for “experimental purposes” be returned. ★ * fi . The appeal was made by the William S. Merrell CO. of Clncfa-nati, sole U.S. manufacturer of the drug. FDA agents in Boston began rounding up supplied of the drug after disclosure that samples were sent to 22 doctors ih Massachusetts, in-Connecticut, four in Vermont and two in Maine. ‘International Tragedy* Here Are World Reports on By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ideformed; because their -.mothers Here are the latest , worldwide took thalidomide, developments regarding the drug thalidomide, blamed for deformi- ties In new-born infants; 'M ToBid U.S. Loan SAN ANTONIO, Tex. — A woman who took thalidomide when she iived. in West Germany gave birth to San Antonio five months NEW YORK --Dr. Helen’ B. ago to a deformed baby that lived Taussig .of Johns Hopkins Univers-jpnly six weeks, said a spokesman ity, who made a trip to Europe for the Bexar County Medical this year to investigate the drug, dety. estimates as many as 7.0C0 babiesj . fi, * ’fi -6,000 In West Germany and 1,000| WASHINGTON -Sen. Hubert in other countries — will be bom|H. Humphrey, D-Minn., in private Man's Mishap ~ Compounded by Rescue Vehicles Edgar C. Britton, Dow Chemist Dies MIDLAND m - Dr. Edgar C. Britton, one of SO scientists to be awarded tee Perkin medal for achievement in applied chemistry, died at Midland Hospital yesterday; , -—A-'., • He was 70, and had been hospitalized more than a month.. He retired from Dow Chemical Co. after developing more than 300 patents which the firm owns, and continued to serve as a consultant. He is best known for Improving methods ot producing carbolic acid and acetic acid and for developing compounds used as Insecticides and fungicides. Dr. Britton earned A. B. and Ph. DHteptres from the University *at{-Michigan and taught there before joining Dow. In 1962; he was president of the American Chemical Society. Think PHOENIX. Ariz. « you've, had a tough day? Draftsman Don Tabor wen hunting on New River Mesa near Phoenix. He lost his footing and dropped his rifle. The weapon actilduntally discharged, wounding Tabor in the forearm. Hjs Mends started to heal him to camp on a crew-country ■coster. A wheel on the vehicle twisted and Tabor was towed Into a pile ot rock*. He Injured his knee. Then a pickup truck sped- hhr toward town. A car ahead stopped. I The pickup slammed into the rear of the car. Tabor was pitched into the dashboard, shattering his' glasses and reopening the gunshot wound. I By now Tabor needed an anvj balance. One was celled. On the way, to a hospital a motorist got In tea way of the ambulance, i ★ fi* „ fi Tbs ambulance driver swerved his vehicle violently and narrowly avoided a crash. labor was bounced around and frightened but not further Injured. Garden City Man Killed PLYMOUTH -til—- Constantino* Brat.sis, 68, of Garden City, was killed Tuesday night when he y was struck by an auto, , Approves Federal Loan for Marqutm Ski Resort -* The State Eco-it Department pod sent to the Area it Administration in an - application for a Loan for Improvements at Cliffs Ridge Ski •asks' a federal a prefect to total mansion at ( HI, Xtarquette. loanaH The remolding S38.000 would ba poration. i of Jli.opo from a DOWNTOWN SIDEWALKDAYS Entire Stock of Summer Dresses off , Values $10.98 to 150.00 Sr. Sizes 5 to 17 Straight Sizes IQ to 20 Half Sizes 12% to 22'A Cm ■ 26 W. HURON life a pharmacist, says 1.200 U.S. physicians got their hands on thalidomide through A “tragic, avoidable gap” in international exchange of information. Humphrey Is chairman of -a Senate subcommittee which opens hearings today .into what he called tee case history of “an international tragedy.” * PHOENIX, Ariz. - Thalidomide user Mrs. Sherri Finkbine, was : turned down by an Arizona court in an attempt to get a legal abortion in that state, said she plans to go elsewhere for the operation. Her husbahd applied for extension of his passport to include her, indicating they may go out of- the country. -★ • fi ★ WASHINGTON — Sen. EsteS Kefauver, D-Tenn., said he. will try to amend a pending regulatory bill to require adequate tests on animals before any drug can be marketed for, human use. Another senator, Jacob Javits, R* N.Y.. "called for a congressional investigation into" whether 'drugs red expert- . „ *r m«tof», NORAD CHIEF RETIRIGS — Gen. Laurence S. Kutei, commander of North American Air Defense Command at Colorado Springs, Colo., retired jresterday after 35 years of service in joiiform. Gen. Curtis LeMay (left), Air Force Chief of Staff, presents kuter with a third oak leaf cluster to his Distinguished Service Medal- L|. Gen. John Gerhart will replace Kuter at NORAD. Drug Administration said it is Investigating several cases which may involve rigged' clinical research on drugs that are Improperly or Inadequately tested before general release. • * idr. ★ LONDON' -Britain’s Medical Research Council said It ^81 set panel of experts Xo seek ways of screwing the public further from dangerous "drugs such as thalidomide. mentally to human beings. ♦ ♦ ★ -J TORONTO -Prof.' Leslie, Hilliard, a British doctor* specializing \n mental retardation, said special institutions should be t opened. Immediateiy fgF^ltableS born deformed as a result of idomide. “It’s no use waiting until it’s too late,” he added. Three Toronto obstetricians sured mothers who have * given birth to drug-deformed babies that' they should not have any fears] About future children. The said one of the doctors, “should have..no reaction on....the next baby.” . fi * ★ WASHINGTON -The Food and Paper Bags Help Bqost Michigan to Qur Visitors MUSKEGON W - Paper bags advertising Michigan's appeal to, tourism and industry are circulating in Western Michigan. . t ★ ' Steindler Paper Co. of Muskegon sells the bags to merchants on the theory that at least some of the bags will find their way into the hands of visitors from other states. ♦. .'.'tir ★ ■______ "The ba^-cai^"wtaier and summer retort scenes, and bear tee legends: “The Nation’s Water Wonderland and Year Round Playground,” and “An Ideal Place to Live, Work,and Play—Locate Your Industry Here Today.” DetroNinisfer Finally in Jail Anfittudoqr Actions til Scotland Rewarded bySentence GLASGOW. Scotland w A* De- "***• to * sc®4* tish ^fresbyterian Church sat to triumph in jail toifoy^ The victory M a 604ay sentence • dtonaxoi ..months of ti get jailed fop antiwdear m The Rev. laa TweedT, », S t a te Economic Body OY& Application, Sends RequesttoGapital LANSING (B — The State Economic Development Department has approved and sent /to Washington an application for a federal loan to help build a J9,746,500 hotel in downtown Detroit/. The department/Said ttle Is the atate’e largest project application to the Area Redevelopment Administration. The application asks for a federal loan of $1,894,625 with the remainder of the financing to from other sources. The Downtown investment CD. of Detroit plans to build a 25-story, 600-room hptel bn Washington Blvd., between Jefferson and Lar-ned Streets. The applleatien will be taken to Washington today by a group Including Albert Jacoby, coordinator of Mayor Cavanagh’ In Detroit, and William son, president ot the Investment The group will outline the project to tee Michigan Congressional delegation and officials of the Small Business Administration at breakfast meeting tomorrow morning. ■ breach e* the peace in Glai He didn’t pay the fine. But jn tot.hspiHBSd^I^js.*. gelext after arrest during a demonstration at the U,S nuclear submarine base at Holy Loch. ./ , ♦"...* •*: -v ’ ” » Again he didn’t pay- The,court gave him time to pay. ..... rip^Hy, he wsii tokfn tn Hsrllnle jaH. He was searched and $14'was found to his pockets and was confiscated to meet the^ne. / FREED BY CA8II Despite his protests, he was; eed. ■ ■ <"’*•" V III June, Rev. Mr. Tweedl was convicted of an offorae during an* other deraOMtratiop at the Holy Loch base. Jlis fine wap doubled to $29 or 60 days. He didn’t pay tee fine and was Jailed Menday. He told newsmen he wouldn’t mind serving 30 days — he could do it during hts vacation. But he says 60 days would be an inconvenience. He said when he has served 30 days his wife, Nan, 23, Will payMthe fine so he can return to tos congregation. Ex-Publisher Dies at 86 LOS ANGELES (AP) - Carson Taylor, 86, founder and publisher Of the Manila DaUy Bulletin from 1900 until his retirement in 1957, died Tuesday. Taylor served in tee Philippines in the Spanish* American War jund later became cimdatkm manager of the American, ' an English-language news* paper to Manila. ’DOWNTOWN . PONTIAC I dT FREE i PARKING % FREE BUS RIDES! m Drive downtown and park in any one Ate of the tots marked with the Blue Me-X dallion. Give your parking stub to the clerk from whom you mokt your pur-chases. She will gladly stomp your W r ticket. The parking tot ottendanf will < then charge you for the difference in the porkipg fee qnd the amount stamped on the ticket. ARTHUR'S Saginaw St, BARNETT'S Jt CLOTHES SHOP Oj ISO N. Saginaw St. ^ BOBETTE SHOP 16 H. Sagine* St. i CONN S CLOTHES 71 N. Saginaw St. DIEM'S SHOES 67 N. Saitosw St. GAULACHEI'S MUSIC SHOP ' 17 A Heron St. CLOOHAN tDIUG CO. 71 H lestomw ft. shopping in downtown Pontiac . ask ths clerk for your frss bus rids M token when making o $2.00 purchase. mmmm This will entitle you to a frit bus ridO ZZaZ on. the Pontioc Transit Bus in Pontiac, mmmm. the Bee Lins Bus from Ketgo Harbor, —— Rochester, Commerce, Oxford, Lako yf Orion and. Auburn Haights, and the A . Airport Lines Bus from Waterford and * 1 i Cjorkston. -* » ' OSMUHS SHAW'S MBITS WEAR JEWELERS . SI Hi Saginaw St., 24 N. Saginaw St. PIED W. PAUL! JEWELERS WARD'S BOMB 19 *■*"!*.**■ OUTFITTING CO. PONTIAC ENGGASS ei A'sestesw JEWELRY CO. « N. Saginaw St. WTMAW THE PONTIAC PUUWrUU PRESS , |7 S. JteN« Si. i Huron'St. , N 16 W. Pike St. McflNEMW emsr mm r W: \ ‘ J %l!zi 11 • -V lR:.r __________________:^3rC/_ly/^ L^ t . ; ’, /'/ .THE P^piAC PRESS. AVfeDSfe^p^vt^ .'^c--\I^>^ > , - *• P| ‘ * * iX> ® * , SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO '** &t ^ " * * H S kJ* * W*4' ^ ?7 *■«5^s*W|Ak *w«"»^~«-n»k* (,’\(,. ** wmm CheckSears Outstandhig Values During Downtown Pontiac Hiii#ry...ihej ** ww 'i-aiw*^^, Ybu Can. Park FREE Day.ntnwi>-After~5 P MTin AII City Metered Parking Lots 3 Days Only PNew Deep-Tone Fall Patterns in Boys’ S1.99 Colton Print Wash n’ Wear I Shift!- Sears Low Price Sizes 4 to 1'B or Regular Spread or Button-down Collars ' Mom,/Stock tip now for school on well tailored shirts for your boy at this sale price. Serviceable dark printed cottqns that need light ironing. Top-stitched spread collar with stays or bulton*dofoi Ivy style, collar. Choice 3-Piece Taperlite Luggage Sets separate prices total 841.94* Train (’.«»«*, 21 ..in'. Weekender, 26-in. Pulli Tlieoe Mini it, all-wood constructed cum** are covered with an extra heavy mating of sniff-proof vinyl for, long lasting beauty. Train' cane - has plastic lining, full lid mirror and removable tray. Other piece's have padded bottoms removable waterproof pocket and lustrous acetate lining*. Choose from fashionable dolors. Save 813.06 tomorrow. • - Men’s Taperlite Luggage Reg. 11$. 98 Companion‘Cane 10.97* Reg. SI7.98 Two Suiter... A lUlt Oeg. SI ^-98 Three Sutter.... 14.97* , £! f.uftfti#* Forty fit. Hnwmeiit■ of many patterns. Cotton Twill Pants, continental style shop ’til 9 Tomorrow, Fri. and Sat. SAVE ^ on Men’s Oxfords or Sljp-ons Regular $7.99 Q33 * i • i. a pair .l.imM.pr. i:lJK^h Sty Ii.-li lilai k oxfor.U or slip-ons ill sizes 7 lo II. I) ikidilis. (ipodyear well roii'iniriion. Marry in. on I v ,40 pr. lo sell. Al Seal'!* low. low, price! Crib With Twin Drop Sides Sleeping comfort for hnby to an active ... .. 6-yr. old. In strong pine WitliT-poslt loti spring. Kick plates tower sides. FuH foot iwinel protects from drafts. Slmtliir. Famiiifrp Dr,pi., 'Second Floor lt;iH»rge It , ^Satisfaction guaranteed or ydur monay back’’ SEARS 154 North Saginaw Phone FE 5-4171 \ m Ip IIBI^y-pour ;^Fv ■pm m v THff ybyTIAC^^gggsi WEDy^sb^^rilwgT If 1^62 fr 7P?r m T 1 New Smtibsoriiarh;Building a Treasure of V- Editor’g Note—The famous \Smithsonian Institution has Haen a TlipA spot for tourists th the Capital for years. Bui the tourists Havant seen any* thing yet. 7fce Smithsonian €t bringing to completion a ‘new building which wiU pro-wide g unique showcase -for ‘its wealth of historic trees-~ 'tires. . «WASHINNGTON W - Want to ' See a gunboat that fought British invaders in 1776 and stayed lor IS# years? -. Ok* the -desk at which Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence?- • - — -~ —— Or George Washington’s sword EH Whitney’s cotton gin, Thomas II Abraham Lincoln actually wear* lag Ltncoin’s clothes? Uten join the five million visitors expected soon-to start annually trooping through a pink palace of a museum now going up ln the center of Washington. It’s the Smithsonian Institution's new museum of history and tech*. I nology, costing $36 million and claimed to be unique, v lays Director Frank A, Taylor, “but ours will cover the widest ~ scope of any* '" 7 •’Qurs is unlike any other, for under one roof it combines the' history and' technology of tkm." ' INTEREST EXCITED The museum will ndt.be* open until next year but the progress of the construction of die five-story building, 577 feet long and $01 feet wide—with the promise, it holds for its seven acres of exhibition space—had already excited-interest in thd| capital. Under a high-domed celling off tile main entrance will be one of the moat-effective exhibits But the gunboat will be going on exhibition for the first time. . The boat, a 54-footer named the Philadelphia, was one of 19 that Benedict Arnold ‘(later to seU out to the.enemy) put together to stave off a British attack from Canada through Lake Champlain in York. .... In one of (he most important This flag/ which flew by the dfawn’s early light over Ft. McHenry at Baltimore in the War of 1812, originally measured 30 by 42 teetrwith-15 stars and Ijr stripes, Fourteen -feet have been Inst through age -or damage (bombs bursting In air?), but through ingenious system of ‘Soft lighting to the Officers, Directors and Members of the PONTIAC CO-OP FEDERAL CREDIT UNION ON THE GRAND OPENING AT YOUR NEW LOCATION! CHIEF PONTIAC EMPLOYEES FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 7M J08LYN AVE.—PONTIAC .naval battles of the Revolutionary War, in October 1776, the Philadelphia was sunk in the Lake’s Val-loour Bay. She rested on the hot-.torn until 1135 when i I raised, in a‘surprisingly1 good ’state of preservation. Cannon, anchors and masts were, complete. I Four large halls will be givea over to .what Director Taylor believes to be unique In tho.museum world—The Growth ef the United Stales. What makes it different is the athering together ot many items om^Rh period -ot jprotrtto to show how America lived taOST particular time. -. There’ll be something for everybody, especially the ladies. For example, the exhibit of _i>wns worn by the Presidents' wives.hadbeen sne.of the most popular in -the. old building and better lighting and mote Yum* Yum, Walrus Stew By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)—Suppose you were having a distinguished Eskimo to dinner, and you found out his favorite dishes, were walrus stew-and boiled owl! Would you knoi8 how to go about cooking a. walrus, or boiling an owl? Op suppose this very important Eskimo hinted that he on bear feet or soured seal, liver. Would you know how to prepare, these templing far northern delica-| cies? The four most rpular 'literary topics today ingly are ing, the hydi bomb, the d cookbooks of all kinds. That dish has another advantage for budget-minded wives—It cuts down on the gas bill. Now about that walrus “Cut the, walrus in small pieces and also cut up the akin and blubber. Then put them together in tfie pot to boil. Add salt and watery As for that, boiled owl: . \ • “Take feathers off from owl. Marriage Licenses SIM Odette and Perhaps the perfect title for . a beat-seller today would be “How to lose* weight while cooking the Civil War over a hydrogen bomb.'* But while the market flooded with cook books, the fine old culinary skills found in Arctic Circle’ igloos have been overlooked completely. RECIPES FROM MOTHERS This lack has been remedied hy the publication of a small paperbacked cook book oL age-old Eskimo recipes. The students of Shish-maref Day School in Shishmaref, Alaska, got the recipes from their mothers. Cl«n»l« O. Gabbard, SMO Stony Orton and Patricia A. Kurti Raymond W. (Jcary, nay mono w. unrj, Farmington and Mary !<• _ WhiUlhgton^rarmlMbon. ^ Curta, 77 Jwtght. SUM Wheeler, ,. William). 21660 ■ Height) and Carolina J,. Deallets. 1280 Cambria, Troy. MHcholl P. Grumka, Renew r. urumaa, ann and Ramona •. Whaley, 2338 Lake, Keego Harbor. Harry A. Okalakl, M4M Lowe pia ..Ichmond and Thelma M. Round), s. Hotpital. Union fcnka. Gary L. Cooper, 3881 .Ororton .1 arol E. Rom, 8. Plain. Klngeton. Armando Ledeamo, 411 Midway and _andra M. Curtle, ISM ' Commerce, Union Lake. Laurence L. Force, MIT Hartland, Fenton and Nancy K. Blakeley, 3233 Worth. Birmingham. Eskimo cookery is simplicity itself, and any* harried American housewife wanting to fix a quick easy meal for. her family might find tht* recipe for frozen flounders Just the answer for her problem: 'After the flounders are caught, let’ them freeze. Eat. as much as you want of it.". George Kutzen, 188 Oneida and Mil e Planer, 70S Collegewood. Tptllantl. Oncer Stanley Jr., 2M W. Strathmore g —Im l, vahlbugoh, 1333 Pine Lake, Orchard Lake. d, Alphi 24144 Audrey. War- POMPOM......... Rettray, 481 Wellee- f. Birmingham. JCenneth b. Bchamantk. 31171 Bchroe-. der, Farmington-and' Sandra B. Latta, 13101 GO Miff. South Lyon, Joseph J., McGuire. 38423 Brentwood, Southfield and Barbara A. Jarvle. 1782 Hartthorn, Troy. CONGRATULATIONS! To the Pontiac Co-Op Federal Credit Union on Your Grand Opening. SAVINGS SPREE LOW, LOW PRICES FOR YOU SLICED BOLDGNA RING BOLOGNA Smoked or Fresh LIVER SAUSAGE SUCED BEEF UVER CO-OP SPECIALS Libby FRUIT 000KTAIL 15* Birds Ey« FROZEN FRENCH FRIES 9-Oi. Pte- 10e ummu >» a u»X)uij.ni.»»uiX HIRES HOOT BEER 26-Ox. 9 for 25 WHOLE LESS 45*|b CHICKEN BREASf Riba Attached SIRLOIN STEAK 791 mam W lb. WINGS (jacks ROUND BONE SWISS STEAK 0 5 Lb. CANNED HAM $489 Throw away feathers. Clean owl and pat in cooking pot. Have lots of water in pot. Add salt to taste." FEET TASTE BUST "Most of the people like the bear feet better than the meat," the cook book observes, “We cook them -well, add salt, Four feet would take about, one teaspoon of salt. Take them out of the pot and let them get cool. Eat them with Interested in politics? There’ll be exhibits showing how dates campaigned from whistle-stop train platforms, from nront porches and over the radio. tfver'tar the United States, the Stourbridge Lion, brought from England in 1829. - By contrast 1188-ton Southern Railway steam locomotive, itseST of the last to survive ihto the diesel reeled, and there’ll be. a section devoted to women’s suffrage, life til the 18th and 19th centur-ies will be depicted in furntehed There will be a sdiool room* children's games and toys] and miauthentic oldtime ice cream parlor. EARLIEST TRAIN r~ ' The railroad exhibit will be marked by the earliest commercially operated steam locomo- age. deface, the nation's capital. This la the Mated figure of .George Washington, cai WliMllN- Horatio -Greenough in the style of a Roman senator, dressed only in a toga As for automobile*, they’ll gn bade to the Daryen Brothers’ horsless carriage of 1898-18. Going even farther back will be a horse-drawn hansom Cato Name it and the new museum! will haveit—watercraft, farm implements, power machinery, machine' tools, physics, .medicine, chemistry, textiles, electronics and an atom smasher; ' .spot for one of the most contra? versial statues ever to adorn, or For many years the statue stood ka front of the Capitol. Ridicule won oofe-and the statue was banished from piddle view. , was hard to overcome, complaints that the statue looks as if , me.father of his country, with his right hand upraised and the toga slipping - off his shoulder, was There’ll also be a imminent 'ordering a drink in a Turidsh bath. To appreciate the taste thrill ot soured seal liver requires a palate truly educated to the nuances of Eskimo cooking. The student who- submitted his recipe said: , ’Soured seal liver is made in the summertime. Place liver in enamel pot or dish and cover with bfubber. ftot in a wanp place for a few dqys until sour. Most; of the boys and girl? don’t like it, except the" grown-ups and old prople. I don’t like it either." The best way to top off a native meal, naturally, ,is with Eskimo ice cream, made as follows:1 -‘Grate reindeer tallow into small pieces. Add seal oil slowly while beating with hand. While whipping, continue adding seal oil and water until white and fluffy. Any berries can be added to it.1' FOR CRIPPLED The cook book wad prepared'by the students to raise funds for handicapped children. You can get a copy by sending 60 cents to the Alaska Crippled Children’s Associa-tion at Anchorage. Alaska. If your local supermarket does not stock such ingredients as owls and walruses, you may .haveTo go Alaska to get them. .Hie best lime is now—while the weather is warm. To mark the. silver jubilee of King George V in 1935 the Bank of > Canada issued a small number of j $25 notes.. Lui- Mr- Trea'® r„-opfede . Co-oV acco»^l9l‘n, • of credU ** Cvdi° r Board W ° ■« Ton i'"’ gilding. A ot V‘7^ comm,Sent6ervicC l° sottntl, VI vi »co ff and Me**1* CotMir'‘lul;lGJl'rC tn‘V»V»7ee* bersVitP of Sincercl)‘. ___ I 'Woodi*1®11 ^arry feneraVMan*^ Twasor«r'0el,e PONTIAC CO-OP FEDERAL CREDIT UNION On Their GRAND OPENING at Their New Location SPECIAL! 9x12 RUGS $6995 ALL WOOL CARPETING Reg* $8.95 NOW *5” Square Yd. McCANDLESS... Whore you receive more value for your cbllar thru our 33 years of e^geriehce and service to the communityl RINiKMUR We Are Spectalixti When It Comet to Inttallatlonl BUDGET TIRAAil } McCANDLESS 11 N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 mm li - -Cj... nh THE PONTIAC^PRESSi WEDXE&DAY. AUGUST i; jf9d2 Wtecituttinti Not Enough; You Need Sabin. Too for Credit Mn Pontiac Co-Op to Open , Doors Thursday at New Location The Pontiac Coop Federal Credit Union win open its doors to tile public at a new. location, 156 West Huron St, tomorrow. Organized in 1948, the credit union was located hi the Community National Bank BuHdfaiL years before its offices were < moved to the Waldron Hotel Building four yWs ago. ~ The latest move Ik being made so the credit union can better serve . its 3500 members.' - The board of directors felt that buying a buildingla the downtown area would serve their purpose better than buying or tiac. To many persons, “Salk’ ‘Sabin’’ are Just names given to jolio vaccine. Few know that if you get the Salk vdbcine by a needle, I’t keep you from spreading the .. ‘‘Current' plans for downtown Pontiac,” said Ronald Wilde, general managed, ‘‘indicate that the But the Sabin orai vac&ne, usually taken on a lump ot sugar. to Jttanje our growing number of members is in the downtown ■ area.” 1 • J -With asset* of $l,4&,D00,*the credit union serves members of alive, an organization whose membership is open to the general public,. * The credit union has paid a four per cent dividend annually since 1952. ' BENEFITS OF $10,000 Life savings insurance with maximum benefits of $2,000 and loan protection insurance with maximum benefits, of $10,000 provided to members at no extra cost. • - The credit union is owned by and operated for Its members, with each member having $$ or more to shares, entitled to one vote nt the annual meeting. Pontiac Co-op is chartered by the federal government and is examined annually by the Bureau * of Federal Credit Unions of the Department of Health Education and Welfare. Wilde is also treasurer in addition to his duties as general manager. President of the board is Joseph Fritch, 5015 Greehview || Clarkston. The remaining directors are Joseph Lewis, 723 Squire Lane, Milford; Abe Zamek, 479 West Ih>-quois Road, and Robert Stickle, 1005 Berwick St.; Max Adams, 1958 Long Point Road, Lake Orion; William Treanor, 2918 Lacota Road, Waterford Township; and Donald RoMnson, 39955 Six Mile Road, Northvillc. — Mainz in West Germany, where Gutenberg printed Bibles in the 15th century, is a manufacturing and commercial city noted for wines. ATLANTA (APj’-J A few drops of vaccine oil a cube of sugar — and a savage crippler amid be eliminated from the Americas The weapon to conquer polio has haaMHscsygred:^ Why, then, is the^ end of this dreaded disease' not being written everywhere in the land. cause, scientists say, the method may be sweet, but it’s not simple. A” few dedicated communities have used vaccine to whip polio-entirely. Others have halted .epidemic*. And It’s the hopeful goal of scientists that polio, eventually ean be eliminated,* much as ters the body and passes into die intestional tract — thus preventing its spread. ’ 3, ~ ; & MANY KINDS OF POUO . The prob l em of eradication is further complicated by the fact that there are many kinds of polio. R r o a d 1 y t apoakhjg the various strains: are! classified under three main typofc I, 1L and 111. “To make » community susceptible, vaccines mu si “them has: beeiflio"fe that anywhere in the world. This Is the most extraordinary response I ever have heard of anywh&rei’' SABIN ORAL SUNDAYS . ’ The program, titled SOS^ter Sa- bin Oral Sundays, received wide • - — - iM publicity from local radio and. stations and newspapers and was staffed by over 20,000 volunteers. The Cleveland campaign received $1.5 mUlfcMi In contrlbu- Dr. James Bryan, of the poliomyelitis nurveUlanoe unit of the U.S. Public Health Department. There' is no national program for {mnitotity; the problem is up to each individual community.--- However, Cbngress has approprP ated $1 trillion in vaccine as a stockpile tor those communites who need help to prevent an epidemic. “Polio Kills Boy; Had No Vac-this headline in a Texas One astonished executive doubted Geveland could get that many people to turn out - even if you newspaper recently helped to bring opt 600,000 persons in six hours will. So even if you've had the full series of Salk injections, you're urged’to take oral’Sabin, ' The Salk vaccine worita on tot), virus at a later -stage when It Is In the bloodstream. In the vaccine. - The greater#-Cleveland area «aw #3 per cent ot Its population —about -1.5 million people — turn out on a- series of Sundays last month to take Sabin vac- highly eontagtoua and can be easily transmitted. The oral vaecine, however, not-only , protects the Individual who takes it but it helps prevent the growth of polio virus when it en- clne.The vaccine was free but people were asked to contribute 25 cents. Df. Albert Sabin, developer of the oral vaccine, said of the turn-; out; GAB Confirms Dynamite Caused May 22 Crash WASHINGTON (AP)-The Civil Aeronautics Board ruled officially today that the May 22 cragh.~0f- g ContinegtaLAirlines Jet which took 45 lives near Unionville, Mo., was the' result of; a dynamite plot. Summarizing weeks of investigation, the CAB said "evaluation of all jhe evidence leads logically to the conclusion that a dynamite' de-was placed in the uged towel bin of the right* rear lavatory with the express intent to destroy the aircraft.” Making no direct reference to the culprit, the CAB merely said that the Federal Bureau of Investigation was still investigating. It was reported some weeks ago .that the FBI had learned that Thomas G. Doty, 34, of Kansas City, Mo., one of the crash victims, bought some -dynamite and' about $300,000 of life insurance payable to his wife. He also faced prosecution on charges of armed robbery and concealment dangerous weapon. Friends-said Doty talked of killing himself rather than face the criminal charges. PONTIAC CO-OP FEDERAL CREDIT UNION on your new home' BODY CRAFTERS FEDERAL CREDIT UNION FON EMPLOYEES OF FISHER RORY 846 Baldwin, Pontiac Geneva Greenwood Fraley,-'34, described as one of Doty’s bust-ness associates, also was among the victims. The Continental flight, on a Boeing 707 jet, .left Chicago for Kansas City and, on route, detopred slightly from its planned route to skirt a belt of severe thunderstorms. ; However, the CAB report said that at- the time of the explosion, at 9:17 p.m., the plane was flying through clear skies. It concluded the weatheV was not a factor. In addition, the board said: ” amination 'of the wreckage showed evidence of metal fatigue, structural or systems failure or malfunction, fire in flight, or col: listen with another aircraft or foreign object,’’ The main wreckage ot the plane was scattered along a path 40 miles long although some lightweight materials, such as pillows and insulation, -were recovered at distances as far as 120 miles from the crash site in a rural area. Among the evidence of an explosion were deposits of a. gray-black material in! the lavatory, the fact that the skin of the aircraft was pushed straight out over rivet heads in the area, and there were jagged perforation! of metal fragments. The board clinched the question by reporting- that these results were caused by dynamite. From their reconstruction of the flight, CAB experts concluded that the explosion occurred near Centerville, Iowa, tearing away the rear aertion of the plane.,Evidence was found that the crew had time to don smoke pu^ks. and begin executing „ emergency procedures h«fni-c ttu> -huge plane; wpnt an uncontrolled spin and dived into a field, f Pontiac Co-Op Federal Credit Union’ Nalfoiia'I I Bank O V PONT I A C FE 2-8171 •Mis* #siswjfl atMMH* told them you were going! to give away $160 tolls.” try. An advertising.ageoey volunteered its services tor promotion. And the vaccine maker, Charles Pfizer Co.,- extended credit on $61)0.000 worth of Sabin even though the sponsors oCthc Cleveland program, the city’s Academy of Medicine; only had Th e Hillsborough Co u nty, (Tampa, .Fla.) Health Department set out tojmmunize some 250,000 persons under the age of 40 a few months ago. Although the program fell short ot Its goal — only 171.575 doses of vaccine were administered — the department was pleased with the results, is alrradyhealto-eohseioua enough to have had his first vaqptoe, or tis Salk shots, — ~ “PoBo seems to seek out the unvaccinated to a heavily-populated place,” says Dr. Bryan, Why, with a free vaccine, did not more persons take advantage? What explains individual apathy? If the fear impetus during an outbreak is lacking, how do you get people to come? HEALTH CONSCIOUS Records at the U-S. Public Health Service • Communicable -Disease Center here show that the person most likely to takeadvantage of eliminate much of' It,” Bryan said.)inunity for many years, then: in But there’s no way of crystal* [outbreak such as would -occur if balling this.'Unless the new-bornla case oftneasles.were brought to are vaccinated as they come along, a South Sea island for the first you could have a situation of im-'time.” ( the vaccine offer is the ® ’and outbreaks obcur* In these so-called-‘hard-eore’ arras, the low-income neighborhood.” ,Vy These people, the CDC says, are hard to reach for several reasons. Their lives are so full of-problems —getting enough.food, heat, clothing, hanging onto jobs — that the danger of polio seems to be relatively remote. “—V *;l----- j , What, then, is the "magic number that has to be vaccinated in. a community, so -that the disease will virtually disappear? "If 80 per cent could be vaccinated with oral vaccine, particularly the preSchool children ★ CONGRATULATIONS ★ _ Pontiac CO-OP Federal Credit Uiiion HILLS' BARBER SHOP FRAXK-KEITH-BlLL-JACK Our New Location! - ,—- 4632 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. -• Opposite Pontiac Country Club Golf Course PONTIAC CO-OP Federal Credit Union AUGUST 2-18 At Our New Location 156 W. HURON (CORNER NORTON) rc o*/ ooo PONTIAC SI.M nun Get Gifts Free lor Top Value Stamps 1 Special 500-Stamp Bonus WHen You Open a Savings Account STAMPS FOR SAVERS DEPOSIT 129.00 $100.00 $500.00 $1000.00 $3000.00 RECEIVE 100 STAMPS 400 STAMPS 2000 STAMPS 4000 STAMPS 12,000 STAMPS MAXIMUM DIPOSIT ON WHICH STAMPS WIU M OIVIN AWAY IS $3000. Omit EXPIRES AUGUST M, 1**1 DIVIDEND PAID SINCE 1952 MATCHING LIFE INSURANCE ON SAVINGS UP TO *2,000 Ask for Details at Office ■^ooWW«NOs Aogus 'j M FREE TOP VALUE STAMPS NO OMIOATION . PMSCNT THIS COUPOp °* CREDIT UNION OPNCI ADDRESS. I SELONG TO.... 1...........CREDIT UNION | —* If not qf nwmbor write NO LIMIT ONI COUPON I EXPIRES AUGUST 18/1982, tHE PONTIAjC PRESS. WBPfcESDAY, AUGUST If 1962 ^isit i\|flllO«er SnPP'1 fa fovotW**' PROOUCt t C^RHWAV gar ••« «./: -; //. ■’ •*'•• J GLENWOOD PLAZA next to This Ad Efftetiv* Sunday, August S / E ACCEPT MANUFACTURERS’ SPECIAL MAILED or NEWSPAPER COUPONS * K-MART S|A|V|0|N| A NEW DIMENSION IN THRIFTY FOOD SHOPPING 1 LOW PRICES EVERY DAY! j White Satin Sugar 5 a,49* Domino Sugar •‘‘Vigor 2 ••“■■29' Gold Medal Flour. . ..... 5 % 49° Prido Shortening »•»>*. *.*. .3 & 49‘ Bisquick Mix..... ...... ,, »F39* Watson Oil ............. l i Cm | Royal Instant Puddings ... a « «<«• 10° 1 SET YOUR TABLE FOR LESS! 1 Heinz Ketchup........ M . ,4i.mu89° Heilman’s Mayonnaise r..., . .#jT69* Hunt’s Tomato Sauce. .... , .ft: 10- Mueller’s Thin Spaghetti... . ,u: 23* Doming'* Sockeye Salmon ig..\cl.« 78° Chicken of the Sea Tuna *$S 389“ Libby Pork & Beans....... ..’{MO' B SAVE ON YOUR TOTAL FOOD BILL! Clapp’s Strained Foods... .10-89' Gerber’s Baby Foods* »tr.in.d 10— 99' Pot Evaporated Milk .... . .6 c.*:. 88' Cfaarmin NapkinsttSST. ’VS" 9* Banonn Aluminum Foil.... ... 1w25' SAVON'S Well Trimmed Steer Beef Steaks »Pin Bone SIRLOIN •First Cut ROUND »Center Cut RIB Steer Beef Pot Roast Blade Cut i ■ ■' ■ ■ ■ 38cib Cherry Red Ground Beef........ 33c.b Medium Size Spare Ribs Bake or Barbecue ’Em 39 Young, Tender Ducklings .... 39 Peters’ Skinless Frdnks GRADE 1 2&69V .~"I * "", t'~ 7 7 ’’' . Young, Tender, 14 to 18-lb. ' _ .^v Turkeys.....................29! HOBANCO Fresh Creamery Butter Mb. Print SILVER SPRINGS Grads A Eggs -asr 3s.$100 FARM MAID HOMOGENIZED Fresh Milk iss 37e FARM MAID' Buttermilk w10c White or Pastel Colored Cut Rite Waxed Paper / .. .2W49* Kleenex Facial Tissues.... .48?i»*1M Scot Toilet Tissue.........4 49c Northern TOILET TISSUE 7* > Limit! 1-4 Pkf. Roll Roll KELLOGG'S 12-0z. Pkg. Corn Flakes Limit; 2 Pkgs. MRS. OWEN’S STRAWBERRY Preserves V OOc Pol Monte Golden Cream Corn SAVON GIVES YOU THE CASH SAVINGS THAT COUNT MOST! PERRY1 t*R KJN i < >«. > ..«V.59# SAVE MUCH 2S°7o YOUR TOTAL FOOD BILL! THE yONTIACTBESS. WEDNESDAY. AOGTTSTir 1WM ."T n •. j ' }. 51 I „ GROTON, Cbnn. (AP) - Con* 5 Etruction of 11 nuclear submarines | resumed today as production | workers at General• Dynamics’ | ' Electric Boat'Division returned to I their jobs after a* 13-day strike. 1 Work had been at a, standstill p . Ih The sprawlihg yards of “ the na-| v tJt^sieading! producer of nuclear * submarines since the 8.700 .workers-walked off their jobr.July 19 lif a dispute that centered on seniority rights In event ofilay- m. ■ ... / ■ . .,/ ■ |I; j - ' After rejecting two previous contract often, the wdrkeW a. DETROIT Ml—Gov. John Swainson today began his 38th year with a campaign tour of Macomb County and critical blasts at the Republican - dominated legislature and constitutional convention; He celebrated his 37th birthday last night as guest of honor at a I a plate birthday dinner to help finance ah administrative aide’s office in Detroit. He said the language of the proposed new constitution’s prohibition use of school buses to transport children to nonpublic schools “Is Insupportable and should .be deplored.” He said if the language were de-liberate, “It constitutes petty; vindictiveness againSt-lraiMi^ds ot thousands of youngsters ... if it was by accident, it illustrates again the uninformed and careless draftsmanship which characterizes the entire document.’’ ★ it it Swainson also said Republicans in the legislature ”bottle up good bills In the committees which they dominate.’’'^ He said In 1960, the -12T Democrat 1c State Senators had 650,000 more votes than all the 22 Republican: put together. In a television appearance taped in Windsor, Ont., Swainson said it was the Republican “season of promises” for civil rights legislation that never becomes law. Detroit Boy Dies DETROIT (It - Michael Lipka, 6, of Detroit, was killed Tuesday his bicycle was struck by Jackie and Caroline Leave7for Italy Tuesday WASHINGTON (AP) — Jacquer line Kenhedy ana her daughter, Caroline, will leave Tuesday for a vacation in1 Italy. ★ *, ★ They have , booked first-class passage, along, with two Secret servicemen And Mr*. Kennedy’s for nonstop flight Rome. , ★. ★ , it It’s the first leg of their route j a cliff-hanging vacation villa in the little town ot Ravello, Italy, where the President’s wife and daughter- will spend two weeks. The First Lady will to traveling s, she did on’lhe first feg of her March trip to India and Pakistan dike any other paying customer. $he and Caroline will, however, have special sleoping^berths. From Rome, a private plane will carry them south'to Naples, not far froth their -destination. They will be met in Naples by Mrs. Kennedy's bister and brother-in-law, Princess Lee and Prince Stanislas Radziwlll, who will drive With them to RaVello, where the Radziwills have rented a|i 11th-century villa. State CommissiQn Files Reports on Employes LANSING m - ThS State'Civil Service Commission reports state employes were fired last year and 530 conditional or Unsatisfactory ratings 'were filed with -the commission. , Appeals were filed *by 22 ployes fired blit onto one {ttsMI Was reversed. Five( employes suspension Instead of dismissal. stricted period was- trimmed to four yean.- The- union had sought its elimination entirely. ' / The contract provides wage fn* creases of 7 cents an hour in the first year, 7 cents in the second and 9 cents in the third. New fringe 'ifeneftis were estimated by the company to to worth* an additional 2 to 3 cents an tout. Wage levels vary according to craft at Electric Boat, tot the key rate before the strike was |2.96 an. hour. • . it it'- it Eleven AFLCIO craft unions Were- involved in the strike. They bargain together as the -Metal Trades Council of New London Gxinty. The contract was accepted If a vote1 of 4.7B-1.485* ‘ In tile prior votes, the Wtefcera rejected two-year contracts jpra- -viding; i total of 14 cents in wAgti increases, plus five years aa the period ut which seniority need apt apply in event of layoffs. * .7 Both pacts had been recom-mended by the union negotiators. NEW STQR A. ft 9 P.M. Monday through Friday Saturdays'from -. 7 A.M. to 6 P.M. WE’LL FIT VOOK CIR REGUDLESS OF SIZE 49 Plus tax and 4 trade-in You know what you're getting when you buy Firestones • You get Firestone's exclusive bladed tread design for maximum traction and quick stops. . -e You get your Choice of narrow or wide whitewalls and we can convert your ?resent blackwalls to white. ou get Firestone Micro-Blend tiea'd rubber for long mileage resistance to damage. WE CAN CONVERT YOUR BLACKWALLS TO WHITEWALLS 12-Month Nationwide Road Hazard Guarantee Honored at over 60,000Tocationt in all 60 States and Canada. OurNtw Treads, identified by Medallion and shop mark, an OllAltANTBHO i. mmM to todmtmMs mA tmioMa * Mni 111* at trod. 1 Af.iiut normal mad toMids (ampt wMb NO MONEY DOWN ON flrttfOItt NYLON FARM A COMMERCIAL, TRUCK TIRES SIZE | PLY I PRICE* . 6.70-13 ' 6 116.95 6.30-16 6 $11.59 7.00-15 6 ,$22.49 1.23-20 10 $46.91 For Fast, Efficient Tire, Brahe and Alignment Service By Experts with Precision Equipment HO N. SAGINAW FE 4-9970 146 W. HURON FE 2-9251 H"OtcT ;'y & 1, I* , „,, • , -j TOIk PQNTIAC^PB^SS, WJjfl>yKSDAY, AUGUST 1, 196% J t v:-v^p hvEyrY-yiy^ E. Schruth has been named publisher of Holiday Magazine-by the Curtis Publ^dng Q>, {fe HftB been vice-president and advertising director of the Saturday Evening Post. Put Thatin Your Radiator and Smoke It, Friend MEMPHIS (to — Devil-may-care sign on the back of a weary old 1 truck;*! ..... “I may be slow Cut I’m ahead of you." Durango in northern Mexico has been producing silver, gold, lead and coal since the 10th century. ii On Historic Profit’Sharing Contract AMC Workers May Get Six Shares Each mrtg=iawidcs that from annual. Wy ROBERT 1RVW UPI Automotive Edltoi DETROIT—Each American life-ton Corp. worker may get she of-AMC stock this fall because of the firm’s historic profit-sharing contract kith the United Apto Workers.Union. /Based on AMC:s nine-month financial report issued last week, the profit sharing agreement is now worth about 1260 extra for each of the firm’s 25,000 workers. Sense of that money wifi be paid oat to stock, but two-thirds of It will ge Into a special fund to finance employe benefits like pensions, health Insurance and short work-week payments. ^negotiated by UAW President Walter ?. Heather and AMC Vice President Edward L. Cushman. It was the firit contract negotiated in the 1961 auto talks and gave the Union a mighty lever against the Big Three of General Motors, Ford and Chrysler. Reuther and Cushman called the agreement an historic one sincrit was the first pwflt-sharing contract' ever negotiated with a major automaker. LINKED TO PROFITS The pact links most employe benefits to AMC profits. The for- equal to 10 per cent at the pany net worth o# 1220 milHon be set aside for stockholders, H»t would be $22 million. Ol the remaining, is per cent would be placed In a progren-•haring land and Mother a per cent would be set aside for stsek Issued to employes. The first computation will be made after the present AMd fiscal year ends Sept. 30. TO'finance benefits during this, the first year of the-contract,* AMC transferred $3 million, from aninsurance fund to the progress-sharing fund. rOHKg OUT THIS WAY The fortnui* works out this way the first .nine months of the AMC FALSE TEET H Thai Looms Need Not Embarrass ’ «wns ewe sewn million before taxee. Fromthii, for stockholders equity,* leaving $43.5 million. Of that total, S4.SU.MS or IS per cent, goes into .the pregrett-sharing fund, and $2,175,000 or S per Cent fa earmarked for «**•' ploye stock. The total toA million equals sms per worker. AMC profits are running 50 per cent above last year. In the fourth quarter last year, fire firm made $5 million, thus they could make $7.5 million in the last quarter this year. Sbatu«ould-Add-«etiwE$lWI0eL to the progress-sharing fund, making a total of $5 million and $375,000 in stock for a total of $2,550,300. With AMC Stortc selling for $16 per share, each worker would get about 6 shares. Doug Fraser, director of the Union’s AMC department and h member of the UAW executive board, was asked fra his current opinion of the contract. He issued a statement saying: "-7—4 •‘The effect of AMCs profit po-cers progress-shar- ing fund cannot be determined conclusively at this- time. Computations must be based an profits earned throughout file company’s fiscal year and its fourth-barter Mnnng^ *"* Saves Half of Home EFFmGilAMr^lto^ VanLast, his wife and three chii-dren were routed from their beds to find the opposite end of their randrttyle home in flanrts. _____obviously be aftofcted by its planned shutdown in August for model changeover. judgment that this\type of contract would provide the1 benefits which it was intended to finance now appears to becon-firmed. There seems little prospect that the fburth-quarter operation can adversely affect this conclusion.” As the-blaze raced throughthe house toward the wing containing the bedrooms, VanLast looped a logging chain' around the burning portion of the house. / V ' ★ - ★ •: : Tying fill other end of the id to his traclor, he pulled the burning section away from the untouched wing and saved the bedrooms. He^Forgpf Techniques ^ OAK, RIDGE, Torn. (AP) - A’ chagrined -housewife Appeared at < Oak Ridge Public Libratyr-boOkIn one hand and~ln Overdue notice'* from the library to the other. ; > "This to truly embarrassing,’’ to explained "My husband hat,, been trying to remember to ip- .. turn fids book for weeks. Tm afraid the book rally didn’t do The tffleNatthe took* “feeh-niques tor Efficient Remember- fantastic flower Special! Ampzingly Real! Lifelike Plastic! A DOZEN ROSES Jjedr&lJoWfWhite^-Tones Beautiful roses with fctns and foliage in fade* proof, washable plastic look freshly cut from the garden. Easy to arrange in table vases or^ as lovely corsages. Durable and everblooming. Specialty priced I Colorful, | Decorative F lowers/a i m r s. s • KRESGE COMPANY II Plato* Cantor . «•■• ■ • CHARGE IT AT A S. KRESGE'S Cunningham': drug stores mm THE POKTIAC PaESS.' WEDNESDAY, ATODST -I,' ISM ffWW CELEBRATION OPEN till 9 P.M. THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAT Pontiac, and all of Oakland County for your reception to what-wo believe are thehighest quality meafs on the -market today. Our efforts to bring you the best havsfbepn rewarded by an ever increasing flow/of people from, all over our trading area with new folks becomming steady customers everyday! WonV you join us in our 2nd Anniversary Celebration and see why? * ‘ \ . * ' *1,, ' * C.'Z-:: . Harold II. Hoffman Hf fo/a King” NtFARCY Grain-Fed TENDER STEER STANDING MIMS CURED _ Canned Picnics REG. 69c VALUE-OSCAR MEYER OR HYGRADE'S FINEST m pyO LEAN-SLICED A to be ejwardad to tome.lucky bey or girl. Nettling to buy, you do net have »e be present to win. Just get entry blank fremAwtchers in store. Drawing to be kbeUc*t Soturdoy, Aug. 4th pt 5 P.M. For a Sunday Treat* BONELESS-LEAN Rotisserie Tasty-Pink Flavorful GORDEN'S PURE PORK BREAKFAST-LINK and Pep with saeh purchase o.Frie Kiddie Ridas SAUSAGE 49® rSrMCraqmv I^RICH COTTAGE CHEESE LARGE CRISP READ LETTUCE 2 Heads VINE-RIPE Homegrown TOMATOES 2 Lbs. PARK FREE IN REAR HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOLESALE PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST. we reserve the right i ■4th and 5th HUfcHff SSL 1st and Uidji THE POKTIAC PRESS, PAY, AUGUST ;!, 1962 IGA TABLERITE Hekman 1-Lb. Bag Peacan Sandies > TREESWEET GRAPEFRUIT Juice KRAFT U.S. Grade "A* WHOLE CUT-UP FRYERS NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE NORTHERN TOILET rathlean SLICED White or Pastels WAXTEX T*tpn?rnr SLICED BACON "-^WUCKWORI SLICED BACON VS- 55* THICK SLICED BACON 2-Lb. $119 Pkfl. I For Freezers 10-Inch Cyt HICKORY SMOKED SLAB BACQM TABLERITE BEEF RIB TABLERITE STANDING RIB - ’ PINCONNING TABLERITE SKINLESS MICH. GRADE NO. 1 POLISH SAUSAGE lb. < U.S. Mo. 1 Michigan TREESWEET FROZEN FRESH NOME BROWN CUCUMBERS BREEN PEPPERS or Pkg. RADISHES FRESH KUMS or NECTERINES BANQUET CREAM PIES •Ttoro : \ \ r-*. ■1 ,w\rT W$^yiWWm$gn "- */’ »•* £> * * -Agip^fTiAc Iiiss7w3a»jaiii^^ ■'/ .W» Vv tT.~ -*- Carloads of California Melons Corriing to MarketforGood Eating ig| California .melon growers are c«Htng for help. Weather coo- ' dittons have brought about a tremendous over-production. Quality . and pride v» excellent. Serve cantaloupe often during the coming wackt^ and try some " of the new radpec beiow. A firm but tender half-shellcan-taloupe sprinkled with lemon Juice fa h refreshing breakfast, lunch or dinner treat ahy warm day. The lemon helps to bring out the luscious flavor of the melon.. . Lemon tapioca pudding mix has on-dii-iMi enmn. loupe In "Cantaloupe Tapioca,” an ea»y-to-do dessert also TealUWffg CTUihed plneapple. It*!} top off a dinner handsomely. , Cantaloupe Tapioca i California cantaloupe. 1 can (8% oz.) mushed pineapple 1 egg, separated 1 tablespoon sugar 1 package (3*4 oz.) lemon tapioca pudding mix 2 cups.milk ' light cream Cut cantaloupe Into halves; remove seeds an^ Hnd, Dice fruit. Drain pineapple. Beat egg white until foamy; beat In sugar until aoft peaks form. , » • In a saucepan, combine pudding Mix; mitk and slightly beaten, egg yoffi: cook- over medium heat, stirring constantly until pudding starts thicken. Remove from heat and fold 'in egg white. Cool slightly. Fold in fruits. ' Serve warm or chilled wkb light cream. Makes 5 or 6 servings. Give n boost to sumpier appetites with "Curried Beef and Can-taloupc.” Strips. of round steak seasoned with curry powder and instant minced oaten in beef gravy are comb teed with green pens and ptaniento and served hot over noodles nesting in luscious rings of California cantaloupe. It’s a colorful flavor* lest and virtually a meal in It- The average half cantaloupe con-tains only 3» te 40 eateries; is rich in Vitamin A with a good amount of ascorbic acid (Vitamin, C), Carried Beef and Cantaloupe f ib. round steak jffT* % cup flour . J teaspoon salt . .. j 1% teaspoons curry powdpr 2 tablespoons salad oil 2 cups water 2 beef bouillon cubes 1 tablespoon instant minced ( km .... • 1 package -(10 oz.) frozen green peas ’2 tablespoons chopped . 1 California cantaloupe Ttot cooked boodles HP a '/2-tech strips. IUk 'and cany powder} dr in mixture. Brown meat In M bouillon cubes amt onion. Covfr and simmer about 40 minutes, until asent Is almost duee, stirring occasionally. Add peas. Cover and 0dik cooking. Add. pi* ndento. K Cut cantaloupe crosswise (into four .rings; remove seeds and Arrange'rings on hot platter. Spoon noodles, then beef mixture onto Sente at ooea. Makes 4 serv- ■bpMl pimiento rings. should be served weQ chilled, but metoh growers inrist.the flavor is superior when eaten gtj field . temperature. Mrs. P. Q. Chin of Saa Fran- U.8.A.,” 2 California cantaloupes French dressing -2 to 3 cups cubed cooked chicken 1 (ll-ounce) can mandarin oranges instant minced on-Tfpi|V fhftj 14 cup thinly sliced ceksy ■ ifeMk' ’ • ’ ’ • mmercial Salad greens Flaked coconut Candied ginger Chineae fortune cookies Oit cantaloupe into halves; remove seeds. Spoon a little French dressing over cut melon; refrigerate until ready to use. Combine chicken, drained orange segments, onion, celery and ! salt to taste; chill. Combine with Just enough mayonnaise or sour fream. to moisten. , Drain any excess' dressing from melon halves; «U melon wife chicken salad. Arrange on salad plates garnished with greens and sprinkle with flaked coconut. Serve with candied ginger and fortune cookies, if desired. Mains ttmr Storage of Cooked Rice Cooked- rice can be stored in the refrigerator as tong at a‘ week and in the freezer six to eight fhonths. When reheated, it wfll be as light and tender as when it was first cooked. IJou ^udt (^an’t Meat ^kat^^aUonai ffljeatl National's Corn-Fed Beef FOOD STORE SALE—| Armour Star CANNED HAAAS. 5; *3 59 • Star CANNED PICNICS I & T SLICED BACON GRADE 'A' DUCKS * 49* SKINLESS FRANKS SAVE WITH THIS COUPON Amour Star A / AamhaJ e n. / ee Imm This Coupon at Notional rood Storoi. Coupon Expire* Sot., Aug. 4th. Limit On# Coupon Nr Family. AiiADAimsr OWnUroHuro Il!l5 AHtNMMruf eonskjar no srit of MU ‘VWuo-WW you wo not fuSy utMM wnh your purauno in Top Toata Smoked or Froth _ Liver Sansagw 49 Hyptado's AN Mopt Ball Park Franks S9 Cut and Trimmed the National Value-Way dtoica Cantor Cult FREEZER y BEEF SIDES FOREQUARTERS HINDQUARTERS I BEEF j 210 U . A««. W - , JR Ec -t- 140 Lh. Avf. / u.49* ■ 140 lb. Av»v ,. ALEEs SALE! r “• 99 I Fie# of Choipo. Wo WIN Curiam Cut, Trim 4 Froaiar Wrap to Your Specifications. I't Corn Fad Roasted Sausage Host I- 1st Cooked Perch .... % 59* Ftrnh Water lontlon Whitefish 69* 69* Beef Chuck Steak b 69* National's Com Fad Beef Swiss Steak £.. ^ 79* Extra Lean . Ground Chuck . j.- 69* Hillfide Hickory Smoked JESS Sliced Bacon-,, .. 2 -*1°° Michigan Made Pioneer SUf*R 5 49 r#- Top Treat White, Yellow, Devils Food or Marti# ON MM Cake MIxex . .4 *100 Blue Bonnot" - ■ jggtjL gaga Margarine .. .3- o5c Natco American, Pimento or Swill ON jdMgjL Sliced Cheese. 29* American Deluxe ,: - ON AW Salad; Dressing * 39* F.F. FREK WMh This Coupon 50 EXTRA "$• STAMPS With Mm OoNhow of one of the f»Si»lci Itc Fill WNh This Ckupce 50 EXTRA *£?■ STAMPS WMh the Nahom of,a liken, lor'of TOP tASTI INSTANT COFMI u&slrarA'ssr^Q Gordon Fresh Frozen CUT CORN, SWIKT PEAS or FRENCH FRIES 21 ■ ■;.* Tv' ( 1 ™; PSSRWW: - THE PONTIAC" PRESS. WED^SSPAYf AUCUSTT.l, 196^ "7.! sts". ■ wpsptl #1 thibty-thRb^ , Cooked Dressing Is Lower Caforied Isn't It About That! Time /or a Nice Tall/ Frosty Fluff Mix 2 tablespoons flour, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1 ^teaspoon powdered dry ‘ mustard, 1 teaspoon salt, and a dash'll cayenne in . the top of a double boiler. Gradually stir in 1 cup whole milk, making sure there te n* lumping. Cook tbber boiling water, stirring con: stantly, until the mixture begins - to thicken. |«ii Stir a little Of the hot mixture Into one slightly beaten egg, and add to the redtof the hot, mixture. Cook 3 minutes, stirring constantly. Add 1 tablespoon salad oil. Remove from heal. Slowly blend i in 14 cup ■ vinegar. Reap salad dressing tightly covered and refrigerated until ready for use: P/S cup — 480 calories. *‘*r By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Pood Editor If it’s hot when you read this, you may be- holding a tall jgteat full of amber ice tea; or sipping ice cold lemonade from a froaty glass. Whatever it’s hot, cold drinks taste wonderful. And Tar some reason the adjective “tal|” always occurs to us in connection With drinks. JUst plain lemonade Is a perennial thirst quencher that hits the spot. If you want to change the flavor somewhat, try the following recipe for a Lemon-Pineappleade. Fresh Lemon-PInempp 2 cups finely diced fresh pineapple y_^JLu Si cup sugar % cup fresh lemon Juice 3 cups water All the lemon rhtds Fresh mint leaves -Fresh lemon dices Put through a sieve. Discard^ pulp. U a Mender Is not rinds. Let jstand 5 minutes. Remove rinds and discard, Stir in remaining water and pineapple Juice./ . • ./ Serve in tall glasses over ice cubed. Garnish with fresh and/a slice of lemon. Yield! quarts. V" ; The other day a reader called In to oak why we don't puMbh ud pvt through a wane stove. Set J mister. Mix., together 'and bring to boiling point sugar, lemon juice and 1 CUPwOf the water Roil 1 minute^ RpfflOVg frorn heat and add. lemon and do try to, print some time to - time, bat maybe not often enough. So hero to one for a sugar-free lemon drink. -MrTtip'TFSfilemon juice 2 cups warm water % teaspoon mint extract- i i. 4 drops green food coloring l'/a teaspoons liquid non-caloric sweetener . 1 pint nocalorie lemon ; W carbonated Beverage California lemon wedges Combine lemon juice, warm wa-ter, mhjt extract, food coloring and nob-caloric sweetener. Mix Well and chill for several hours in \ the refrigerator^ To nerve, add carbonated beveraige and pour in glasses -filled frith crushed lee. Garnish . with lemon . wedges. Makes 4% cups. Approximately 5 calories per serving. Makes 6 servings. Note: - One 6-ounce serving of L/& Calorie Lemon Mist contains ihore than one-tenth the recommended dally afiowancefor vitamin C. . ” * By pow anyone who reads The/ Pontiac Press food pages must know how we feel about giving children nutritious drinks In summer Instead of just flavored water. We’re all for real fruit Juices in uuy fotm And we see no harm In an occasional treat of-.something else. / But we think youngsters need energy-giving foods other than pure sugar. That makes us happy ^eherfyUtrik shake. . Kweet Cherry Ml|k Shake i cup pitted ripe Bing cherries % cup sugar 2 drops almond extract j 1 dr 2 drops red food coloring _ lcupnillk' %rto 14 'cup vanilla dr cherry icecream V Additional vanilla or cherry • ice cream Whole cherries or fresh mint Chuck steak Is -good: economy and good eating, fob. Many meii* * prefer its flavor to-more expend slve cuts. But usually chuck steak,-j' needs tenderizing before barbecue-^ Measure cherries, sugar, almond extract and food coloring blehder or small bowl of a mixer and reduce fruit to "fine pulp. Quickly add milk and ice cream and blend only until smooth. Pour into chilled jglass and float addi-top. Garnish ti6hH "ice cream with whole cherries on twin stems hung on side of glass and fresh sprig of mint. Makes 1 serving. Over Chuck Steak From the Spanish Olive Oil In-stitute tonv« this suggestion: M-"-a skillet dr saucepan place a quartered lemon, Vt orange, quartered,, 2 peeled, sliced cloves of j garilc, -2 whole Trioves, 1 buy leaf uni - • Vt cup Spanish (dive oil. Heat WWt-d tit rinds of frult fje brown. ■“**' Meanwhile pierce meat all even-with heavy, skewer, pour hot oil-over meat. Marinate 4 hours or ’*. longer at room temperature. This produces a tender, succulent steak. 4 .—------ Jtt-rf dan’t :1Tihd. fresher.«,.., Airier produce! -Juicy, Red Ripe - WATER MEtlM BEST OF THE SEASON Large Size each FOOD STOBE* FOREMOST CHOCOLATE MilH Quart Carton 25 tint ot rho Winn, ColltomU ‘ Wbttf Juicy, Coliffornio BARTLETT NABS u. 19* SEEDLESS GRAPES m-29* . Homtsrown, Tondar and Crtig "7 Hon>.,rown, rnA-iwhhnNr — LEAF LITTUCI ^19* YELLOW SOU ASH alO* HONEYDEW MELONS th 39* GREEN PEPPERS I 2 Nr 19* i fKEC With Thli Coupan 50 EXTRA HOLDEN RID STAMPS With $5 Purchase or More (Net Including Beer, Wine er Cigarette*) am This Coupon at National Feed Stem. Coupon « Sat., Aug. 4th. Limit One Coupon gee Family, SAVE 6c — Chunk Style Tuna ,, Breast O' Chicken SAVE 17c \ Appian Way «« SAVE 10c •*- Deal-Pack-Shortening » Swift'ning . . . Can Home Brand Frozen Lemonade 29* 3’^ *|°° 3 ■- 59 10 Koshor Dills .. . . 39* Plantar'. Creamy ar Crunchy Peanut Butter 59* Mueller', Elbow Macaroni . 2 45* 2 SSt- 43* 'Tap To it. Sliced White Bread 40,. Can Dolo Frozen Juice 5 iSt f1°° Rich Tomato Flavor Snider's Catsup . 6 Sf «1“ Notce Salad Oil .... . '*tt- 79* Top Treat CREAM Choc., Vanilla, Strawberry or Neapolitan 49* Vt Gal. Ctn. Armour's . Armour's Deal Pack C 1 Armour's Corned Tree# HJjgjpg | Beef Stew | 3[ AHMOUR^JJI Beef Hash u-o, 9Ac Coo BH i “c°: 39* 1 IsitiH"! 15,/2-0*.S^ 1 Cans Washday Mirada Giant Tide Cavern Pieces & Stems Mushrooilis Pet Rite Proton Apple, Cherry or Peoch Fruit Pies Skedd's Lady Betty Prune Juice 0: • e e • 10* Sale Aftterican Beauty CHILI HOT BEANS Stoney Creek Cut GREEN BEANS American Beauty Dork RED KIDNEY BEANS North American Mushroom STEAK SAUCE * American Beauty PORK & BEANS 10 ImSmm llBlHEii Phil with Thl, Coupon j 25 EXTRA H85d" STAMPS auodoom Thl, Cau»o» at National Food Worm. I Canaan U*lr*i lot., Auc. 4th. GEO: , FRII With Thl, Cat SO EXTRA MS“r STAMPS Lederante Deodorant Nr-Men* Radaam Thl, Coupon a, National food Worn. I Coupon Ixpliai (at., Amu 4th. - . g|j % MM AUBURN HEIGHTS — Hill < Gazette American Legion Pott No. 143 Commander Ralph Bogart will letid a delegation from here to the annual convention of the Legion, and lit Auxiliary tomorrow through' Sunday In Lansing. . Gerald HU1, Richard Leltch, Wal-, ter Leltner and Donald Dodman altowill bedelegatei. , Mrs, James McKee and Mrs. Paul El well will represent the post's Auxiliary at the, convention. Alternates are Arthur Keller, t John Stone. ^Paul Elwell. Rafoh _ Myers and Alfred Dpisely lor the poet, and Mrs. Gerald Hill and Mrs. Doriald Dodman for the Auxiliary. State Accidents Kill 801 f AST LANSING UR - Traffic evident s have killed Ml peraMM Phigan to far this year, pro* 1 figures compiled by State toowed today. The toll at -to last year was 843. INTERCHANGE CONSTRUCTION - Construction of the interchange* linking the 1-686 Freeway with Orchard Lake Road in farmlitCr ton Township is now in progress, MM runs easterly toward the top of this photo, The Among the! loo largest labor market areas in' the nation, Detroit ranks first in average weekly Wages to production workers'' in htohatecturing. ^ ■ ■ - ■[ home 3318 Jossman Road, Groveland as married Aug, 2,' 1#13» •!« Ontario, son. nine daughters, 33'grandchildren mm. Hf# for City Incorporation Plan Would Double Present Land Tax Rates and Costs to Be Talked OvetJMth Parke, Davis Men | PAPER BAG BOOSTERS — Paper bags promoting Michigan’s resort facilities and industrial advantages, an idea developed ‘by Stelndler Paper Co. in Muakegon, have brought raves from Gov. John B. Swalmon, who has congratulated the ..... * AT Pfcotofax firm for the special promotion, Alan P. Oppenhefmer, pur- chasing agent, here displays two of the bags, which are being distributed to stores in western Michigan. If Especially in North, Central Counties Showers Boost Crops in Michigan Meet to Discuss Bigger Order of Cherries by U. S. JlANSING III — Recent showers Approved soil moisture supplier (faring the pest week, especially in dbrthem mid central counties, tl fMer deral-Stats Crop Reporting Servile said today. Shortages were still reported ajjong Lake Superior, In the west Antral areas and the tip of the { Cere and row crops were good of the southern, central f Improving In tbefaorthern areas. cent complete for the entire state compared with only 10 per cent Jto»Lx*s Only one-fourth of the oats Ka\ The' corn crop was reported about 85 per cent tasaeled, well ahead of the past two years. The dry bean crop was doing well in the Saginaw Valley and thumb The wheat harvest was 85 per been combined. Showers during the week delayed the grain'harvest, especially In the Thumb area, The tart oheny harvest continued In the central and north-western areas. Picking wss exported to be finished (n most central area orchards this week $tate Physicians Report, Right Use bt'Bad' Drug DETROIT (AP) — Nearly all Michigan doctors who samples of thalidomide, the drug blamed for deformities in new-t children, have confirmed they nirt give twfto pregnant womei That was the report yesterday from George R. Fowler, acting Michigan tehief of the Federal Food and Drtjg Administration. He said Investigators were trying to locate the few doctors whoso reports have yet to be made. trolt-area physicians who received the drug. some 5,000 malformations in Germany and nearly, 1,000 in England, has not been licensed for sale In the'United States. The use of unlicensed drugs by doctors for Investigation purposes is permitted, so'long as patients are advised that the drug is still under clinical trial. . v < In northern areas. Early peaches were being picked in southwestern Michigan. Additional apple varieties were coming to market. The blueberry hap vest was at a peak. The harvest of cucumbers for Thalidomide, which has caused pickling was well under way. The snap bean harvest, was started. Other vegetables being harvested in volume included cabbage, cap rots, -celery, sweet, corn, cucumbers, lettuce, set onions And potatoes. Early potatoes were being harvested in volume In Bay County. havij checked all but one to two of the M Michigan dee-tore'who received the drag fer clinical trial,’' he said. Reports were In from all 32 £& MSU Students to Cram to Beat Housing Jam . EAST LANSING (UPI)—Bowing for student! at Michigan Stahl Uni- versity will be crowded thla fall, MSU officials said today. Rousing apace < originally signed for 9,800 students has been assigned to U,000 students, Tom umeh, director of imtverejty bous- WASHINGTON (UPI) — Representatives of the cherry, industry and Sent. Philip A. Hart, D-Mlch. have met with Agriculture Depart-'rtret: offtews to 5Btotoa"yie--f(»ik sibiltty of the government's increasing it| cherry purchases. The department already hue bought more than $1 million of the crop for school lunch and welfare programs. But Industry spokesmen said that was not enough, in ‘view of this year’s bumper crop and carry-over from last year. Prices ire depressed, they said, and some manners are refusing to buy cherries unless (he government will increase its purchases. The group- met with officials of the Agricultural Marketing Service and Secretary Orville L. Freeman’s personal- representatives. While the conference jrtill was under way, it was reported that the department spokesmen appeared "'sympathetic" to the problem. To Head Delegation to Annual Convention ROCHESTER — Boundaries that would double the size of Rochester it it becomes a city were set for city incorporation proposal here last night. A nine-man study committee appointed to formulate plans for the proposed city incorporation alto planned a detailed survey cont- rasts of-services of a city with now in effect under village and township government. Village President Bey Rewold, chairman of the committee, was authorised to meet with officials of the Parke, Davis & Oo. facilities east of the village to dls-cuss city Incorporation plans. Parke, Davis & Co. property is included in the proposed bounda,-rles adopted last night. BOUNDARIES The boundaries include parts ot Avon Township between the village , and Dequindre Road and from the north village limits to Tienken Road. The western and southern boundaries are those now existing for' the Village, of Rochester. ‘ LANDMARK BURNS V -Fife, believed to have started from faulty wiring,y caused an estimated $5,000 damage yesterday to the century-old Washington Township, home of Edward J. Alexander, 3505 W. 31-Mile Road. The blaze was confined to the rear wing- Qf the two-story frame home by Romeo and Washington Township firemen. The fire was discovered in the laundry-utility room by Mrs. Alexander at about 10 a.m. She told firemen that she had smelled something burning there a day earlier. The home is the. former Handy family residence. Population of the area outside the village la estimated at 1,800. Village population Is about 8,000. The committee, authorized by Village Council July 9 and ap-pointed by Rewold July 23, also decided to prepare a list of advantages and disadvantages -that incorporation would give taxpayers, study the effect on roads and street^ and get details on population and area. t Hamtramck Okays Tax on Incomes 1 Per Cent DETROIT (UPI) - The Hamtramck City Council, faced with a budget deficit of more than $800,-OOQ and taxation 1 residents " ..-Oty incorporation must ie ap- who,-work. in , Detroit. )asL-nlght or veto the bill, has voiced some displeasure at the levy but Indications were he' would pass it. Another Detroit proved by voters within the proposed boundaries. Voters defeated an incorporation proposal in 1958. Last night’s meeting was the committee’s' first. passed a 1 per cent income tax. The measure, approved by al< vote, is subject to the signature of Mayor Albert J. Zak. Zak, who has a week to approve similar levy. The downriver com-■nunlty’s council voted to place the questlopi of a city Income tax on the November ballot. The Ecoree council also approved a resolution which asked local newspapers, to poll residents bn their views as to the question of, a local tax. Committee (VTC), a group of suburban mayors who originally banded together to fight the income tax plans of Detroit, lashed out at for Its action in pas- sage of the tax. TO DEEPEN BITTERNESS George Kuhn, mayor of Berkley, said such, action by the Hamtramck body would Only^deepen the. bitterness and resentment in the Detroit metropolitan area stirred up by the passage of the income tax. / Kuhn said he would urge Zak to veto, the proposal. City controller Joeeph Mlekstyn said he estimated revenue*, from payroll tax alone, "upwards to $400,000.” • “If the Chrysler Cerp., Ham-tramck’a largest employer, has a good year," Mlekstyn til Id, "The figure could go to over ft Dearborn has also discussed possible enactment of a tax but has delayed action until the VTC finishes Its court suit. Kuhn said attorneys for thfe VTC. will file petitions and briefs with the Michigan Supreme-Court by the end of this vreek.. He said the committee’s meeting next Saturday at Roeevilie was expected to kick off a statewide petitioning drive for a law to requite the voters fo approve any Income tax. The VTCs suit NUnr to reverse die decision of the Wayne County Circuit Court that the Detroit tax la legal and binding. It became affective July L Hamtramck’s tax, It .allowed to _ecotne law, toll take eftect Oct. l. It is similar to the Detroit tax. which levies 1, pir cent on resi-v dents and nonresidents who work i* city. . V . / , . • gMSflatotftKtoa , ' wm y - ■.pntte'ro *TIAC proposals will be decid i and two jdties In Tuesday’s tary toetoHKT'7 Details on each of the proposals blow: £ •• • # , *•; * WEST BLOOMFIELD TO Renewal of a ou*n>m i. a will be «$ed of West Bloom-1 .., fbdtfigpvoters. ;y • ^ '• i The tax, which would be levied through ISS7, weald provide First approved by voters in 1969, the tax expires in December. The one-mill -js In addition to thO 1.4 mills allocatedJhvJhe-coua-ty- to tfie township for each $1,- 000 of assessed valuation . - 1 WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP ’ A i.5 mill tax increase lor five years is being jwqght >JoJKhite ^ce Township to finance the con-* struction of a new fire hail andfl fo purchase fire equipment. The second fire station would be built on the asoth side of the township, probably Is the vicinity Of the Dahlia Elementary School. About 70 per cent of-all calls answered by the fire department are in that area because it is the most densely populated,‘ according to Supervisor Edward Cheyz. The township’s onlyfire station is located at the Township Hall on Highland Road, about three mfles from the site of the proposed building. Actually, laiy lion With the new (tire hall and HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP Adoption of a new building radtf and the establishment of the post| of building inspector will be asked of Highland Township voters. ■ ' dr A ' A .The cqde would regulate the erection, construction, alteration, repair, moving, demolition, occupancy, equipment, height, area, location and maintenance of buildings structures and swimming Proposition one gives the township authority to exceed the 15-> mill county- lax limitation while the second proposal gives the ’township the authority to levy"the. additional tax. . set up the office ot buildlnr inspector who would be, paid from fees collected tor building permits. . ~T8e ~^bpssaJ isrdtnance ir pat-temed fcfter the one used in Waterford Township for. several years, according to Township Clerk Normagean Waters. £____A/ A A The ordinance was approved by the Township Board in May but I daring the 30-day interim period before it became effective a group of citizens submitted a petition requesting that it be subjected fo a vote of township residents. INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP Abolishment of .the annual township meeting’wiU .be asked of , Independence Township voters. A 1955 state law gave town-Ships with s population of 5,0M or more the" authority !® ask voters to eliminate the 114-year-old law requiring the annual meetings. L Seven county townships abandoned the meetings in 1960 and since then a few others have fol- Voters to Farmington Tbwnship will be asked to pledge a tax increase to finance the construction of water and sewer facilities Into the industrial zonedIni*of the township. ~r~.................* ^ The propoaal requests a one-miff tax be .pledged on each $1,000 of state lequalized valuation -tor the iggn.'39 The purpose of extending the services Info the area Is to attract new Industry that could share the tax burden with residential property ownenk The township would only spread the tax when revenue from tap-ins in the industrial area did not cover the cost of paying off the bonds sold to finance the construction of tile water and sewer lines. , - .dr fr r .dr ' The industrial area' Is roughly bounded by Haggerty Road on the West, 9V4 Mile Road on the .south, Halstead 'Road on the East and 11 Mile Road on the fwrth. SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP Authority to sell 11 lots is being sought by Southfield Township. The lots, located in Era City Subdivision, were originally purchased hy the township for a-wrtl site.' SOUTH LYON Permission for the city to .borrow $61.000 to finance the construction of storimTiewer will Be asked of South Lyon voters.. The aewers would be built the west side of the city. While the storm drains will low only a half-dozen streets- city officials said that many areas in ♦y Mty »ai tnA indirectly from the project. MADISON HEIGHTS Three amendments to the . (Sty Charter wiO be propoted to Madison Heights voters- The first proposal would In-crease the salary of themayor from *756 annually to W.000 “ the six cowsdlmeu f $2,000 each. The other two proposals seek to mrice the-offices of constable and board of review appointive rather tan elective. ' 4 ... • r-—~Al• The municipal judge would nominate the constable and the council would confirm him. The council ateo would appoint members to the review board which hesfrs appeals on property 7asseMments. A * A . ' SHELBVTOWNSHIP i Charter status for Shelby Township Will be decided by voters in addition to the prepoeed abolishment of the annual townriiip meri- fog- . pfj *1 - I >) ■ . *. Along with all other Macomb county towrahlps and cities, Shelby Township, voters also will be asked toipiAOvethe establishment of a two-year Ooihmunity College tcrease taxee by $X pew-$1,000 to conitruct the educational facility.. ' As a charter township, Shefty bonding' power would be Increased from 2'/, per cent to 10 per cent of Us tax base, and raise Its taxing power limit from the present one mill to five mills. ( Township officials have stated that if the charter form of government is approved, the total five mills would no( be levied immediately. 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It came out of there Tuesday on its way to the full Senate, but in a form that Would cost the government )75Cb million a year in revenue. So that’s up in the air. Meanwhile Mills’ House Ways and • Means Committee began bearing, behind closed doors, wit- Will President Kennedy recommend It? He has Indicated he might decide about the middle of thUunnnth. whether Jo. feskjaxUBfc mediate cut or ask one later which would be effective next NEW BEAVER ISLAND ‘ SHIP-New *208,000 Charlevoix Harbor o hours, seven min- Harbor on Emerald Isle to Charlevoix. The time was 35 minutes faster than the old record. power after setting Indonesian Aide Flies Home; U. N. Optimistic Hopes to Sell Sukarno Pact With Dutch > UNITED NATIONS, N.V. (AP) the first formal announcement of —Indonesian Foreign Minister Subandrio flew home today to 'Bell President Sukarno on a settlement . .with the Dutch on West New Guinea. , Hopes were high here and in Washington that a final accord will be signed by hiid-August. But Sukarno first must retreat from- his frequent pledge to take the Dutch-held territory by Jatt 1. Under the prelintinary agreement worked but at a country estate near Washington, Indonesia would not get full control of the territory until next May. Reports from The Hague indicated, however, that the preliminary agreement gives Sukarno a face-saving out—a token realiza-—flgff iof big pledge—by providing for a symbolic raising of the. Indonesian! flag over West New Guinea on Aug. 17. WOULDN’T PREDICT Subandrio refused Tuesday night to predict Sukarno’s reac t ion to fhe preliminary-agreement but he also expressed hope that a formal treaty can be signed by mid-August. Subandrio conferred for 4DTmln-utes with U.N. Acting Secretary General U Thant and reported on the. tentative settlement he reached with Dutch Ambassador J.. H. Van Roijen through the mediation efforts of US. diplomat Ellsworth Bunker. The United Nations then issued the preliminary agreement, which had been reported earlier by high diplomatic sources in Washington. A U.N. spokesman said "official negotiations”' will take place der Thant’s auspices about ythe middle of August. N * , 4 Van Roijen was flying to The Hague today to report to lus government. He and SubaMrio are expected to meet with Tfeant here to draw up the final accord. MONTHS OF EFFORT The tentative agreement reached after months of effort by Thant and. U.S. officials to bring the two sides to a settlement fore the 12-year-old dispute broke [into open TWSttm} ' Indonesia claims the on the ground that it was part of the Dutch East Indies and should have become /part of Indonesia when it wwy independence from the Netherlands In 1M9. The Dutch contended that the 700,000 Papuan inhabitants oi West New/Guinea are not Indonesian and should have the right of seU-BIwerminubn. The basis of the accord was a plan pu/ forward by Bunker In Apyil. As modified, It now calls for: A nine-month U.N. stewardship of the territoiy. Dutch authorities will withdraw their administration during the first half of the per-the Indonesians will begin moving in during the second half. Indonesia gets full control May 1. k: * ★ Strong guarantees for eventual self-determination lor the PapiF ans. Indonesia agrees to hold a plebiscite at a yet undetermined date. ' ' r_ w a* ★ Provisions lor the recovery of the hundreds of Indonesian paratroops who have been dropped at various points in West New Guinea over the last three months to harass the Dutch. 4 Red Snooper Ships Leave After Big Test WASHINGTON (AP)-Four Rus- Originally, three or four of this •ian instrument ships which spied i‘yp« were planned. But If one on U S; nuclear tests for weeks Itt the Paciflc steamed away after trie 200-mile high shot on July 9, it was disclosed today. ★ a a That high altitude test of a hydrogen device over Johnston' island wa« believed to have given U.S. scientists—and perhaps the Russians — important information on the effects of such a mammoth explosion on communications and radar. Such data Is cob-sidered vital in developing an antimissile system. a a a The test also may have given the Russians significant clues on U.J, progress in perfecting , ar weapons'. An informed source said (he Soviet vessels pulled out of the test area July 10 or July 11. This wai either a day or two after the ohly successful high altitude explosion so far in' the three-month old US. test series. RECALLED TO OBSERVE' It was considered possible that . the four Red ships may have been recalled to observe the new series of Russian nuclear tests that the Soviet Union has announced it will undertake. U.S. patrol planes had kept watch on the Russian instrument ships since, the first three appeared near the test rone in early May, shortly alter the current felt aeries began. On June 12, the Pentagon reported a fourth Russian vessel bad Joined the spy more is held, it. may be the last of the series. The Russian vessels took In as many as 27 U.S. nuclear tjst plosions. Most of the devices were dropped from airplanes and most released'the blast power of less than a million tons of TNT. Since the Russian ships were In international waters,, the United States could not order them away. A disclosure that the snooper . fleet had departed came a day after the united' States had indl-catftd it would hold further high altitude testa after repairing a launching pad. The launching pad wqjf heavily damaged when Thor rocket was destroyed July Officials said it might take as ngidi as fight weeks to put the lone launch pad on Johnston I«-land in usable sh&jpe. President Kennedy' will make the final de-. delon 0b Whether to. proceed with Hte-iiigb altitude ahoti, ' / Aspires to Higher Things but Lands in Jail Anyway RICHMOND, Calif. (UPI) -Charles A. Hill, *33, of Richmond made a somewhat confusing appearance as a character witness. He appeared In Municipal Court in an Air Force uniform with lieutenant's bars on his shoulder and. enlisted men's service stripes his sleeve. The FBI arrested him yesterday for impersonating an officer. Sleeping Beauty FinaHy^fokr 16-Year-Old Says 'Hi* to Daddy After Thirteen Month Coma PINE BLUFF. Ark. (API-daddy.” Those were the first words of a 16-year-old sleeping beauty, Linda Sue Calvert, when she woke up from a 13-month sleep, e ★ ★ ■ Linda, v of Houston, Tex. critically Injured in an automobile accident last year on Father’s Day. Sha had been In a coma since June 18; 1961. She and her mother, Mrs. Harvey Calvert, were visiting Mrs. Calvert’s parents in Pine Bluff and decided to return home a day earlier than, planned, to surprise Linda’s father. kkk On a curve about 17 miles Bouth of Shreveport, La., their car and a large oil transport truck collided during a rainstorm. Linda’s mother and an aunt kkk Linda was taken to a Shreveport hospital. Twenty-four days later she waB moved to the Texas Medical Center at the Methodist Hospital in Houston. A blood clot waa removed from her brain, but she remained unconscious. About a month ago, Linda was brought to a Pine Bluff hospital, friends and relatives visited her regularly. kkk Finally, alter 13 months of glv-ig no sign she recognized any-ic, she awoke a week ago and said, "HI Daddy.” She has now learned to speak iveral words at a time. “Of course, there Is no guarantee that she’ll ever be completely well, but we can still hope and pray,” her father said. l^ssingHyp§n Blew Alas Shot '$18 Million Error' in Computer Equation Led Vehicle Loss WASHINGTON (AP)-For want of a hyphen a U.S., Atlas-Agena rocket .and, 818 million were lost. The hyphen was missing from a computer equation. The error led to the destruction at Cape Canaveral, Fla., July 22 of a Venus space probe launch vehicle and its,scientific package. _____• ★ k'-4t~- Officials said at the time that a mathematical mlscue was the cause of the flight’s failure- ★ jt k But Tuesday the House Space Committee heard about the missing hyphen from Richard B. Mor-launch vehicle director for National Aeronautics Space Administration. ★ ■;★*★ Morrison told the committee that in nearly all launchings there are brief moments when the ground station loses radar contact with the soaring vehicle. At such times the rocket is supposed to follow Its planned path without instructions from the computer. GIYEOIflNAL In the complicated communications setup, the hyphen gives a signal to alert the vehicle to^ ig-certain data until radar c tact Is established again.- “When this rejection signal :l left out,” said Morrison, "false formation was fed to the computer. It commanded ‘hard left, nose down,’ and vehicle responded.” Who left out the hyphen? k k k “I don’t know who the individual was,” said Morrison, “but 1 would imagine he is a senior engineer with'a doctor’s degree in mathematics and considerable experience In celestial mathematics.’* • . - NASA officials said a new equation is being drawn up for a sec-shot at Venus in the middle of this month. Plan to Portray Mormon History During Pageant PALMYRA^ Y,, (UBl) *,AJxkit )0 youths, including 120 coeds ■om Utah’s Brigham Young University, gathered here today to show their faith in Christ and the world. Tonight they will meet the first of 100,000 spectators-expected during the tour-day pageant which portrays the story of a civilization said to have flourished in America 2¢uries ago. The Mormon Hill Cumorah Pag: cant, “America’s Witness tor Christ,” tells the story which became (he keystone for the 'Mormon Church, founded here'- 135 years ago. Harold I. Hansen, chairman of the department of speech and dramatic arts at Brigham Young University, will direct the cast of 300 and the 110 production assistants In the spectacle, nesses testify on what they think* of the state of .fob economy. * bust- labor and some are economists. What they think—or, esfuii , Mills’ committee of what they akfe**riJll be fa tector hi deciding on a tax cut; ‘ if Kemtedjy suggests it. At this point—because it Isn't known what kind of. cut Kennedy might propose—it can't be clear just what a tax cut could do to buck up the economy. Kennedy reportedly has been much concerned with what the reaction of Byrd ond Mills ifiight be if he asks for a cut now, since they, because o* their .jqfes as chairmejn, are two of the most powerful meujn Congress on,this question. Adi" 'Some dtlierTac- tors to consider! Would a cut now make the people jittery that the economy must be in rocky shape to require this kind of remedy? * And, this is an important rate, suppose Congress cut taxes this year and the economy got worse next year. What remedy would Congress have then? „ __PHMmrvT TAt.ua dent Kennedy talks to a group of Brazilian graduate students on the White House lawn yesterday. ar Pkotofm students that “anyone1 who desires War in these days is insane. ■’ TV Star Has No Comment on Abortion Hopes and Plans PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) — Mrs. Sherri Finkbine,* who shared with the world her fear of bearing a deformed Child, apparently hopes to keep secret when and where she plans tohave an abortion. However, it appeared today the Inkbinea will travel to, j which will permlt the i Back in her suburban Scottsdale home after four days of seclusion, the pretty 30-year-old star of a children’s television show said Tuesday she has been advised tint any comment on her destination could jeopardise her chance of obtaining an abortion. “It’s hard tor me to say 'no comment’ because I’ve got plenty of comments,” she said. “Bujt I can’t say anything.” . Mrs. Finkbine. took the drug thalidomide,' blamed for the births of thousands of malformed babies in Europe; Canada and Australia. Her husband, 31-year-old Robert L. Finkbine, says, "We’re still exploring all the possibilities. We haven't made a decision.” He appeared at the federal building here Tuesday to apply for extension of his passport to This is the passport he used last summer when he escorted a group of high sehool students on a tour of Ebrope. He purchased the thalidomide tranquilizers for his use during the tour. He brought some home, and Mrs. Finkbine used theqi. The Finkbines have tried to find a legal way to end Mrs. Finkbine’s 2%-month pregnancy. After a secret panel of doctors advised an abortion, it was scheduled for last Wednesday at Good Samaritan hospital. But hospital authorities called it off to await clarification of the hospital’s legal position. k k k A suit was filed in Superior Court, asking for a judgment that her case quite under an-Arizona law which permits abortion.; to save the life of an ..expectant mother. The court dismissed the suit on a legal point without ruling orf the question.-* The hospital then decided late Monday night the legal risk is too great. The Finkbines, who have four healthy .children, learned ol their plight through newspaper stories about thalidomide. Mrs. Finkbine said she took 30 or 40 of the pills early in her pregnancy before the newspaper articles appeared. Eye Hew Test Ban Bids; One Would Aim at Fallout WASHINGTON (API-U.S. officials are reported considering a new bid .to. Russia designed to break the cycle of American and Soviet nuclear weapons testing. One proposal reported under serious study would cedi for a ban oh"tosts which eausrra fallout, meaning tests in the fit-« and under water. These can be detected at great did* lances. Such a ban could be policed with present detection arrangements without the neepssity of setting up hew, international inspection procedure*' inside the Soviet Union and the territory of other nuclear powers. ♦ k k President Kennedy scheduled the latest in a series of nuclear test policy conference* for late this afternoon at the White Hoiise. He will go Into that meeting with Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and other top policy advisers immediately after his news conference. Denver, Phoenix BattleUrban Woe Air Pollution Hits Health Havens PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) — Thie Wept—particularly the hot, dry deserts of Arizona find the cool mountains of Colorado—once mecca for thousands suffering yapiratory ailments. TTiey left the crowded cities of the East and Midwest and sought the* sparsely populated areas with untainted air. Communities nurtured by health seekers began to grow at a phenomenal rate. Now these havens of health are combatting the same force that drove the sick from other parts, of the tion. '• * Take iwo examples — Den surrounded, by the gnow-covi Rockies, and Phoenix, an oasis in the American desert. GROWING PROBLEM > *'7 Denver bas a growing aif’ pollution problem. Dr. William F.-Spence of the University of Colorado medical school toys pulmonary emphyd-a lung disease, is on the Increase. Chronic bronchitis has shot upward in the last few years. Dr.* Cyrus W. Anderson, president of the Colorado Medical Society. says dirty air Is at* gravattng sinus disorders aid having a dangerous effect on the lungs. And the worst Is to come. A 1957 survey indicated that within eight years auto exhaust pollution would triple, industrial pollution would increase by a third, and household pollution would be bp one fifth. To battle this condition. DenVer has restricted to certain hours burning of -trash in hoipe incinerators. The ordinance also prohibits indiiatrial smoke of greater than specified density. But nothing has been done about auto exhaust fumes, HAZE IN PHOENIX Phoenix is covered with, an almost perpetual haze. From the downtown section, famed landmarks such as Camelback Mountain are lost behind the smoky mantle. \ k % k. The larger eountiea—primarily Tucson) — demanded action. But many mailer counties feared legislative action might be aimed at their copper smelters/ After a one-year delay- Ari< mu’s legislature passed a measure permitting each county to combat air pollution on its own. A U.S. Public Health Service itudy reported that Phoenix had he fourth dirtiest air in the na-ion, although this waa, disputed by several Arizona sanitary engineers. ___;_____ One Phoenix specialist,.' whq asked that his name not be used, says air pollution is irritating many sufferers who came west lor relief. DEVELOP SYMPTOMS “Others, who never were troubled with bronchial ailments,” * said, “how are developing ayi toms.” . The burning of trash has been curtailed in the Phoenix area. More anymore streets, are being paved to Curb dust. And state health department officials say, “we are only a few years aWay from nationwide lof suppression devices on all cars to combat exhaust tomes." Ontario is Canada's richest prov- The , fheeting was expected to produce decisions on U.S. moves in the nuclear test negotiations be-■arried on at the 17-nation Geneva disarmament conference. The United States has substantially -completed its series of at-meepherkvtoid' hlgh-Mtltudetrots over the central Pacific which began last spring. Underground-tests begun earher have been continued trr"Nevada. The Spvjiet government, which resumed testing last September after a worldwide moratorium of almost three -years, has i bounced its intention to hold rebind— of—nuclear expert* ments. The United States, meanwhile, indicated Tuesday I hat it might conduct a few more high altitude tests over the Pacific. It announced that the .launching pad for • rockets at- Johnston Island, heavily damaged by the failure of a rocket launching July will be repaired for "the re-mafhlrtg high altitude tests." However, officials said the Pres-ldeht will make the final decision as to whether more tests will be conducted. Policy problems before President and his advisers were authoritatively reported ihto two groups; First there are the problems rowing out of new scientific advances in the detection and identification of underground nuclear explosions such as would be prohibited by a treaty ban on all clear weapons tests. 'The United States is expected to present the new Mlentlflc data at' the disarmament conference end find out whether Russia will agree ■»»«*■■»»*. B eww mmwi a worn B ' omm «*.««>* E ■ n irtr# •••* I wwiwwieiioMif I •'«»'»",w» I M «ww» wiwSw' ■ [ inifniimtiit § UAiieMi. I ewn'eSjaMiie - » M Extra GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of 3 Lbo. or Mere of GROUND BEEF Extra GOLD BELL Extra GOLD BELL stamps With Purchase of 2 Pkg». or More of COOKIES Stamps With Purchase Lb. POTATOES Out Nf CtlEWttf, lUtlftB M I M Extra GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchaii ■ of Any fresh WATERMELON vm Per Cummer, jnnitii Am.j 50 Extra COLO BELL Stamps With Furchasa oftl Moro Aids Health Beauty ,«xplr«fAue,9 '-,_ l,>'‘fj4rl„„.J MRK it i..■. 1- . HI / J 1 ,V V.-M /r%~ ’"TT^:' "1^: :1!B^. ‘ - KarenBennett toWed, % A/* 1 C --.- Women s bection ■ Karen Ellen Bennett, daughter of the TOmaae J. Ben-" nett* of Birmingham has announced attendants for - her Aug, 25 vows to Edward W. Estes in Christ Church Cran-brook. Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Elliott M.. Estes, also of Birmingham. dude Jane McKinley and Mrs-Peter Palmer of Binton^iam, Dale Logan of Tampa, Fig., and -Mrs. Thomas P. Estes of Cleveland, Ohio. Mrs. J’Ohh E. Shannon of Omaha, Neb., will be matron jf jfcmor, Bridesmaids will in- To Avoid Gossip, Go Elsewhere '—By The Emily Pont Institute Q: Five years ago I came to ..this dty to work. A middle- aged couple who are triends ot-mine back home, rented me a room in -their - house and I , have been living here-with QRm ever since.-----■-- —— Two weeks ago the. wife-died. * very suddenly and now I am wondering whether it would' be proper for me to continue living here alone with Jier husband. I am. In my late twenties and he is fifty! . I would hate to have to-move out of this lovely house, but I certainly don’t want to start any unpleasant gossip. May I On Saturday, lAn. -JolSi Bennett. ot Grosse Pointe wiU honor her niece at a shower in toe Grosse Pointe Yacht Club . • Alto entertaining recently for the bride-elect, were Mrs. Robert Smith and daughters Nanay and Diane of pear-born, at a personal shower. Hostesses at _ a shower- to/ Plum Hollow Golf Gub were Mrs. George R. Smith, Grosse Pointe; Mrs. Edward Eick-hoff, Farmington; Mrs. A. F. Swetish, Detroit, and Mrs. L. A. Peters, Huntington Woods. Mrs. Estes honored the bride-elect and her mother at a- “tea—to her Birmingham honte, and Mrs. Charles R. McKinley and daughter Jane -Earlier in ,the summer, Karen’s roommate, Dale Logan, gave a. shower at .Stephens College, ColumUa Mo. Mrs. Walter G. Henderson of Birmingham, Mrs. M. Hyde ot Detroit and Mrs. Encil Shannon of Columbus, Ohio More than flowers were blooming in the pot of geraniums trial Mrt, Fred A. Voelker, yoorheis Road, presented to fames Howlett, president of the Pontiac Symphony. Orchestra. The WkM6WM extra something was a check for $1,000, derived from' the May sale of geraniums by the Womens Association of the orchestra. Mrs. Voelker was chairman of the benefit sale. this matter? A': I am very sorry but unless the widower hag a female relative of at least middle age come to live, in his house, it will be improper "!of~Jrou to continue! living there. Worried Mom Told by Abby Frizz a Pass ing Fad By ABIGAIL VAN BtlREN DEAR ABBY: 1 have a pretty, intelligent, popular, 16-year-old daughter. She frizzes every halr on her head until it stands i like a Fiji islander, Then she . brushes the. top hairs > lightly 01 that mess and l goes off with a bushel basket hsir-do. Her hair appears to be falling out and it’s lost its luster. This type of hair-do can’t be good for the hair, can it? Why tfieh do beauticians, who~ should know something about the care of hair, encourage hair-dos that ruin the hair? MRS. A DEAR MRS. A: We are vie-timized by fashion again. , Beauticians don’t Have a corner on common sense. Everyone knows that hair, to order to be hpalthy, must be thoroughly aodfrequently -brushed. BufthOre are dollars (as well as sense) involved. The new hair-dos are so Intricate that professional combing is necessary almost daily, if this keeps up we’ll have a nation of well-heeled hairdressers and bald-headed women. DEAR ABBY: What would Stein Rites Followed by Garden Reception you do if you ssvedfortwo~ years to buy a diamond ring for a girl, and then she turned around and married a guy she had known only three weeks? That’s what happened to me: When she gave me my ring1 back, many of my friends told me I was lucky to! be rid of her because she was never true to me, •T IMS I could jump Off 'the bridge. How does a guy get over a sock In the solar plexUs Ilke this? UNLUCKY IN LOVE DEAR UNLUCKY: -Personally I think you’re lucky. Lucky to have found out what kind of a girl she was before you gave her that little roijnd ring that counts. My sympathy goes to the guy she married. Q: I love corn on the cob but find it rather messy to eat. Will you please tell me If there is a graceful way to eat this pleasant-to-taste butnot-. very-easy-to-manage vegetable? A: The real thing to avoid is too much buttering ail at once and. eating it greedily. If you like much buffer, thenspread it across only half the length HttkMt two rows at a time. If you like a moderate amount, of butter, you can spread it across the whole length of two Tows, add salt and pepper, hold the ends in both hands, and eat these two rows, and repeat the’buttering and eating until all is finished. i shower at Devon Gables. The bridegroonvelect’B -parents will give the rehearsal dinner Aug. 24 In their home. A reception in the Bloomfield Hills Country Gub will follow the mid-afternoon ceremony. Forsaking the. wild blue yonder for more earthly duties, three airline hostesses alighted in the Pontiac area after more than two years of duty apiece with major airlines. ' From left to right •gg Zintmermunrformerly with Trans World Airlines, now based on Ottawa Drive; and ex-American Airlines stewardesses Mrs. David Huth• waite of Southfield Road, Birmingham, and Roma Nephler of Cherokee Road. Look Elsewhere, Says Doctor Separate Love, Business Sorority OKs New Chapter Pregressive IXThner Precedes Action on Additional Unit Q: I am a minister’s wife and as ‘such am frequently invited to the weddings at which, my husband officiates. Often I •do not personally know the r bride or. the .groom. Do these invitations obligate me to send wedding presents? As There is no obligation to lend a wedding present when you know neither the bride nor the groom and are invited to the wedding only because your husband is officiating at it. Woodwardta fern and plpk gladioli in pedestal baskets formed a background for the --vows of Dolores Ann Riddle to Theodore H. Stein, Saturday, in the Abingdon Methodist Church, Abingdon, Va. A ■’■ garden reception at the Abingdon home of the bride’s parents, the Clayton J. Riddles, followed the candlelight. ceremony performed by Rev. George E. Notf. The bride’s gown of . white silk-faced peau de sole fca-* lured a square scalloped neckline with skirt panels of Al-encon lace sweeping into a chapel train. A double queen's crown of lace held her imported silk illusion veil, and white orchids and Stcphanotts comprised her bouquet. A sequined petal cap accented an aquamarine mist silk organza dross for matron of honor, Mrs. James Might of Pontiac, sister of the bridegroom. She carried pink carnations and white Shasta daisies. IN BRIDAL PARTY Wearing peacock blue organza were bridesmaids Joanne Holbrook of Dearborn. Mrs. Carl Elsea of Kingsport, Tenn., and Cheryl Hight. Deborah Elsea was flower girl and-Daryl Riddle carried the r'..igs. The bridegroom, son of the * Franz C. Steins of Thorpe •. Street had Brooks Robertson for his best man. Seating guests were James Hight, Robert Martin, Marion, N. C. and Ciirl Elsea. The new Mrs. Stein was graduated from Rollins v College, Winter Park, Fla., and Iter husband from Albion College. His fraternity is Tau Kappa Epsilon. lieturning froml a honeymoon in Bermuda by way of New York City,, the couple* will be at home in Pontiac. DEAR ABBY: My wife keeps running to doctors because she thinks she has cancer. Evety time she feeto .what she thinks Is a “lump/' sbe goes to a doctor and begs him to oper- ate. So far every doctor she has ever gone to has told her that she is 100 per cent all right ’and she has nothing 'to worry Since January I have paid off nine doctors and they aren't cheap. How can I convince my wife she is fjiright? BROKE FROM BILLS DEAR BROKE: Worrying about whether or not one has cancer is an illness, too. Send her to another doctor. This time try one who deals with emotional problems. ...Q: Some friends of ours came to spend a weekend with us recently and brought their own towels and wash cloths with them. I was quite taken back when I saw their towels hanging in the bathroom. Wasn’t this a strange thing to do, or are guests supposed to take such appointments with them?..... ■ A: People dropping in (o' swim at a friend’s house on a* beach should bring their own bath towels, but guests invited to spend one or more nights should not, Members of Epsilon Sigma So-.rority, Alpha Alpha Chapter, held a progressive dinner Morn day evening in Waterford Township for members and guests. First course was a cocktail party at the School House Drive home-of Mrs. Jerry Strang. Mrs. L. L. Schiefler of Shawnee Lane was hostess to the group on her patio for the main course, and the dessert was given by Mrs. James Vincent of School House Drive. : At the business meeting which followed, the group decided to form a second chapter, Beta Chi. Newly elected officers of Beta Chi include Mrs. Donald Stone, president; Mrs. Jack Holler, vice president; Mrs. James Vincent; secretary; Mrs. James George, corresponding secretary; ,dnd Mrs. Rudy Mazza, treasurer. The newly elected officers will be Installed at the first regular meeting in September at the West Side Recreation. By DR. GEORGE f/. CRANE . CASE M-481: Samuel G.. aged 38, i&dft Congregational clergyman. “Dr. Crane,” he wrote, “I have been most happily fled for 16 J y. e a r s and • iuLve two ehtl Aron tn grade school. “But I lost tfay wif.e a year ago be-1 cause of cancer. Although I ha s p 1 e n d i and a schism will probably develop in my church. 8TATES PREFERENCE “So I would prefer that you introduce me to: a suitable girl from outside my parish. “If I then fall in love and marry her, though I may . mildly offend all 20 of these ghpihlo within mv parish, a .schism will not %e so . likely to develop.” housekee per DR. CRANE for the children, she is of the grandmother age bracket, so I realize they should have a younger woman in charge. Bonnets Bock . Unload your problem on Abby. For a personal reply, send a scl(-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. For Abby’a. booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send 50 cents to Abby, care ot The Pbntlnc Press, Box 3365, Beverly Hills, Calif. When and how. to' introduce people seems'to puzzle many. The new Emily Post Institute booklet entitled . “Introductions” gives helpful information on this subject. To obtain , a copy, send 10 cents in coin* and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Emily Post Institute, care' of The Pontiac Press. The Enttly Post Institute cannot answer personal mtfif, but all questions of general interest are answered in this coi- “Taking a shampoo” makes your hair glamorous — .and to keep yourself glamorous with your hair in curlers, try -wearing a frothy nylon lace bonnet topped with ruffles and a matching bow. To keep, this perky, swish it through warm soap or detergent suds and rinses after every .shampott. It will dry quickly; and needs no ironing. “And I would be far more happy and effective in my work if I could meet a congenial woman about 35 years of age. If your Scientific Marriage Foundation can find me a girl even half as wonderful as my first wife, I'd be ’delighted. •''Now the main reason I am coming to you is the fact that -it isn’t good policy to mix romance, with one's work. “There\are probably 20 attractive teachers, nurses and widows about 35 years of age, in my parish who might make very desirable wives. “But if I show any partiality - or favoritism tO«e, the-other 19 will then grow offended Well. we soon had found an ideal girl for this clergyman and in a few months they were happily married. And this point ✓ of , view which he outlined, is similar to that which physicians and others routinely mention. A proponent surgeon recently registered with the Scientific Marriage Foundation, saying he, too, didn’t want to mix romance with his flourishing medical practice. "And besides," he added, "I am a wealthy man. Most of my fellow townsfolk know that fact, so I'd never be sure if a local widow were inter-• ested in me or my millions. “So I’d prefer to have you introduce me to a ^suitable Woman about 40. years of age who doesn't know 1 have any wealth.” „ OMIT FINANCES In that connection, we never list or even mention. financial standing of our registrants, , for we don't want “gold diggers” or '“gigolos” tp be attracted by. the wealth ; of our "applicants. Although we have several multimillionaire widows and ' widowers on our BMR files, we learned those facts only later and do not pass such data along. For Our board, which contains outstanding clergymen like Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, Bishop Gerald Kennedy arri-etherW -leaderarof Jew-1 ish, Catholic and Protestant faiths, felt we should lean. over backward to avoid any semblance of commercialism. . The SMF Is solely an eleemosynary, charitable educational foundation and thus functions much like the Red Cross, except we try to offer food for the heart and soul, instead of the stomach. Tomorrow I’ll describe one ot our types of male who is a headache to our Scientific Marriage Foundation. cr»n«*!n coreV^TIw*Poiu*»or*Er«M! PontUc, Michigan, enclosing a long vtlopt and *1?*cei psychological charts (Copyright, 1962) r typing OU sand Don't Omit Lids ’Remember always to apply foundation make-up over your eyelids. Many women forget this important area when applying foundation to the rest of their face and leave blotchy-looking eyelids that don’t mafoh the-refljjT b?rtweir (form* plexion.. Entertain - Afte Vows of Just Wed For Coot, Suit Thought tor that out-of-fash-ion but still-good fur collar: Detach it from the coat and have it made into a little fur choker to wear with your new collarless coat dr suit. Wed Saturday in the ' Abingdon Methodist Church were Dolores Ann Riddle, daughter of the Clayton Riddles, Abingdon, Va., to, Theodore son of the Frans C. Steins of Thorpe Street. B'nai Israel Unit Gathers at Pool for Luncheon The Kendry Avenue home of Mrs. Sidney Czeisler .was the scene for a poolside gathering held by Sisterhood of Congregation B’nai Israel Tuedpay afternoon. A buffet luncheon was served under the chairmanship of ' Mrs. Irving Schlyfestone end her committee. , Cochairman was Mrs. Ralph Merkovitz. MRS. THEODORE //. ST Elk Guests for the afternoon were Mrs. Harold Abrams, Mrs. Andrew Yang, Mrs. Helen Newman, Mrs. Harold Tobias, Mrs. Jerome Varpri, Mrs. Barney Wyman, Mrs. Don Solvel, Mrs. Norman Buckner, Mr*. Howard Berkowhx Mrs. Bernard Gaspas, Mrs. Safah Meyers and Mrs,; Ida Meretzkey. Mrs. Morris Bletstein, president, welcomed alt membcrs and guests* , CAROL ELIZABETH SAVE The Joseph £, Sauls of Rbseberry^ Court, Drayton Plains announce the engagement of their daughter Carol Elisabeth to Airman Bertjamin A. Bayma Jr., . U.S.N,, son of the senior* "Baymas, of ||i|ra Premont Street, Waterford Township. She attends Alina College, Her fiance a, “mil/ be statiafietl .. in Haivaii. ; A lakeside reception and buffet luncheon at the home, of the Fred A. Slavins on Woodbine Drive, W’aterfdrd Town* . ship, followed the marriage of their daughter RUth Dorothy to James E. Coiilson, Saturday, in St. Benedict’s Church.' Vows were spoken before Rev. Richard Thomas at an altar banked with peach gladioli and white chrysanthemums. bride was graduated from Marygrove College, and the bridegroom from the University of Notre Dame. sage'of Yellow Rapture roses on her dross of deep, delphin-ium blue lace over satin. Johanna . Hill roses complemented Mrs. Slavin’a mint green linen dress. The mother of the bridegroom ’wore a cor* The bride’s sister, Mrs. Dar-rejl Konkle, and sisfer-ln-law, Mrs. Richard SlaVin and Miss Comps entertained at prenltp-tlal showers. ’White silk organza and tulle over taffeta, for the bride, featured an embroidered organza border above the hemline which dipped into a chapel train. She wore a bouffant veil of silk illusion attached to a' satin . band and carried album lilies aftd StephanoUs, Arranged in a semicascade. v Nectarine carnations ''complemented white lace over ir-ridescent gold taffeta for mdld of honor Elisabeth Comps and Marie Siavln, her sister’s junior bridesmaid. BEST MAN Martin Coulson stood as best ipan for his brother. They are the sons of the Gayle Coulsons and Carl Tenuta ushered. ' Presently motoring through northern. Michigan, thetgouple will reside in PontiacN T h el . i (-»» ‘n ' w-' MRS. JAMES Et COVLthW \Ruth Dorothy Slavin, daughter of the Fred A. ' Slavins, Woodbine Drive, W aterford Township, and James E. Coulson, son i of the Gayle Coulsons of Mar queue Street;- . spoke vows Saturday in St. Benedict's Church.; . J> m THE PONTIAC 'jPRES S, i^DI^SpAY," AJJGUST li IjM2 FORTY-OKE fashions t3o Ahead Specialized Babysitters Successful - 'DISllNCItVE ^ mM&y ARRANGEMENTS MR: AND MRS. C. E. RAWLINS ^Mr.andMrt. Charles E. Rawlins of Lincoln Avenue will celebrjite their golden anniversary Sat-u,tday dating,Wi open hoii.se at WaltzHall on Lapeer^ Road,, starting 4 p.m. _ Tfreir children, Glendelle of I Second Street and Hayward L. of San Fernando, ! Calif*, eight grandchildren and six great-grandchildren will be hosts add hostesses at the affair. Mr. and Mrs. Hayward L. Rawlins wilt'celebrate their 24th wedding anniversary the same day. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer A waistband. that grows is perfect for skirts, short and slacks that must fit a growing child with a varying waistline, hand-sewing the inside waistband to your skirt, make two machine buttonholes at the back about 6 or 8 inches apart. You may slip a piece of elastic through the buttonholes, using the waistband 6f your skirt as a casing. The elastic must be measured a snug fit. You may machine stitch both ends of the riastlc to the waistband, or you may fasten a .hook and eye to oni.end. When it is. unhooked, you can press the waistband flat, and it also makes it easier to change the length of the elastic as your child grows. This waistband that grows is . not an original idea of. mine. It was suggested by Mrs. E. J. Reil, Manson, la., who is being sent a Tailor Trix pressing board for the best suggestion of the week. SHAPE THOSE DARTS "Dear Eunice, "Would you please tell me where to take in the proper amount on the back of a skirt pattern? My Skirt always seems too full across the back where the darts end and doesn’t shape like skirts should.” — Mrs. J. W. T. The.center back seam is sel-' aani takem in. If you do adjust this seam, the same amount must be taken in down the entire length of your skirt or you ‘Will change die grain line, Yqut problem seems to be in the darts. The deeper the darts are stitched, the more shaping you have formed. Since the back <>f your skirt should be relatively Hat, try making the darts - the some length, but slightly narrower at the widest part. Your skirt should be perfectly flat at the ends of the darts in back, without any pucker or shape at the ends. TRY CHALK MARKS “Dear Eunice: ’ “What is the quickest and most accurate method of transferring the pattern markings to printed or textured materials and also garments that are to -be lined?’ -Mrs, A. J. R. These markings vmay be made with colored chalk on the wrong aide of your fabtfc, Darts can be marked by maidng a 14-inch clip at each side of the end of the dart, and' chalk mark the point where dart ends,. It Is best to mark with tailor tacks any markings from your pattern that you will not be using Immediately. - Whenyour garment is to be completely lined, you will have to mark your garment fabric at all, simply place all your markings on the lining itself. A tracing wheel would be satisfactory for markings on the lining. A SUMMER LIFT ’ Give your family room, child’ room and your bedroom a lift for summer: An inexpensive fabric can be the magic Ingredient to perk up your home. Gay checked cotton gingham makes an unusual .frame for a group of pictures. Pictures may be floral prints, nursery prints, cowboy, old cars, or whatever, clipped from magazines. Cover a piece of hardbosrd 4 to t Inches larger than the pic- the predominate color In the picture. Glue or staple the fabric to the wrong side of the board and then glue the picture in the center of the board and group several together above a couch, bed table. You may also cover, throw pillows with the. same fabric. GRESHAM goes a long way... toghrayau CUSTOM CLUMH6 at regular prices! Hara ara |us» « few axamplas why our customers raturn yaar, oftar yaar, aftar yaar: o GRESHAM takes the time at no additional charge >■ .to rotack all loose garment-linings.- ,—~~—.—— o GRESHAM resaws opened seams. ■' y-GRISHAM replaces broken or missing buttons. .. • GRESHAM will mend your broken belt loops .. and much, mu^h more. that’s why wo soy- ult’. Ht« Uttio TMnerW *•«"» •» Ors»lK»mr WATIRMIOOHNO SMVKI | GRESHAM \ CLEANERS \ SHIRT LAUNDRY r S SHIRTS II 4-3579 S Oakland Av« A mentally retarded child, a little girt who's been blind since birth, a boy prone to convulsions, are today the -recipients of a special kind ofbaby-sitting servjceinitiated Inc'them by members of a Hy-Y Chib in Chatham, N.J. Rut thq happiest beneficiaries of this voluntary service lire the parents of; these hatoicapped children who now can go out to dinner or to a. movie without worrying that something will go wrong St home. ■ dr :- The chib was- casting about for a service project when it met; up -wife Dr. Catherine Spears. Well aware of the Hfestricted life that parents of her handicapped patients lead, rite suggested the service to. the club—and got immediate acceptance. A training -program, followed, with the mother of a I neurologicaliy-damaged child ! offering to explain care and precautionary, measures to the group. Further safeguards were set up by having Dr. SpearJf personally ppprove or disapprove the children who would be cared for by the girls., MT BY TSCAM* ■ y- " the children put'hot be So old or'so big or so fractious that a baby-sitting team of two can’t cope. Lists of telephone numbers,- including the doctor. the ambulance squad .and the police, as well as the absent parents, are kept handy. Most parents put their children to' bed themselves before going wit, to lighten the burden of baby-sitting, and always feed a child who baa special difficulties eating, dr * dr Asked what kinds of problems the girls have encountered since their mission began, they agy none with the handicapped. “It’s the ^brothers and sisters that sometimes get in our hair.” It's Easier storage cabinets, Snd towel rings and bars in the stores, even the tiniest bathroom can be equipped with many little bathing and wash-up accessories that help make daily ablu- The trump card for each of these senior citizensistheirpkilosophy that .the years after. 65 can be meaningful Book Backs Aging Facts •; and fun: We have, through medical miracles, recaptured the later years. ‘Plus’ Years Can By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN I have just finished one of tine most exciting and Interesting books I have read lor a long time; It is “A Brighter Later Ljfe.” Its author Is Ifoward Whitman. The approach is inspirational, but the book is filled wife well documented feels. I think should be “must” reading for everyone who is 35 or older. ^ * dr * ^ suppose one reason I am so enthusiastic about this kook is proximately 1,100 persons every ZAjMurs. ■:* -We have, through medical miracles, recaptured the later years. Now we must fill those years with meaning. < We must gain a clear sight of the exuberance of PPl i, the creativity and forward thrust of the years of life’a fruition." Think at the years which have nm added to your life span I of the most fasclnntlng much of what it flays. Mr. Whit-man deals wlth lhe -problems of later years which are due to the greatly extended life expectancy, to the problems of compulsory tirement ami to the changes in family living patterns. WHAT HE SAYS He blasts the idea that i „ must necessarily mean mental deterioration or senility and highlights the importance of understanding between younger and older generations, the terrific ' pact of mental activity and attitude on health and longevity, the wasted thinking of mature and later, years with dread * ‘ than with hsippy anticipation, and tii* mistake of not pfenning for these years emotionally an' mentally as well as financially. Ii| INS AC, to Greece the average expectancy at birth was 18 year*, to Rome to Julius Caesar’s day it was S8 years. In (he United States during Lincoln’s day It was 40 years. In the United States In 1100 It was 48 years. In ION It was 10.0 years for males and females of all races. Mr. Whitmarf says, “Because more and more people are being kept alive to reach a ripe old age we are today seeing an increase in our over-66 population of ap- Prices reach a new low in our mm SALE! QtlALICEAFT SHOES most were $7.99 $2" USUIS SOW