v'j,' Revise ' Ify lOSKPil K, bVNAN ATHENS. Greece (AP) - The United States agreed today to give its North Atlantic Treaty Otgani- NATO’s toi^ iiiM ‘dc«e^ ministers had/ been seeking agreement on a propost^ policy* for resort to nuclear andk in of K«d attack that would Its iw«n «imnuc ireaiy WBom- would zation allies more information on sttl| give President Kennedy the the extent and power of American ----- AT n f ^BattleRebels N^Poltcy I jn Streets of Captured City^ No Jumping on Chair for Her! .official nuclear stockpiles souix» said. The U.& move was disclosed as the NATq pUies meeting behind dosed doors .reportedly iidopted a new nuclear policjr calling on alliance members to work out ilUide lines on how atomic tairtical weapons should be used in event of a Soviet attaok. The plan was contained in a report read by NATO Secretary-General Dirk U. Stikker. be set up to work out . the guide lines and information exchange. Prance reportedly has^resei-va-tions about the nuclear policy , because it will not go as far as Ipresideiu Ghades-deGanWii^id like. R does not change Kennedy’s i^ht to veto the use of nuclear vwapons,' soihet^ th§ Eretch Souwes.said RalW and French representatives expressed reser-r"*"®“’ on Stikker's. report, but CXiNSULTATION REQUIRED Venezuelan Commander CJaims Loyal Forces Take Radio Station CARACAS, Venezuela -A government spoke^iah reportfed just before noon diplomatically avoided ^ny action} Italy, which helpe(m»mc that would obstruct impicinenia- proposal tor broadening NATO's|h8“^8 rebellious marines hUon of Ihe policy,, ..1 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) jin^^^Jtne streets Of the COastal ;y of Carupano, i , He said the convnandcr of the j government’s forces in the dty-re-1 [ported capture of the rebel-hdlH Vadio station. ^ National Guard troops I were reported wounded by rebell mines in the roads approaching i tlic city, bul nothing was said labout casualties in lighting in the citjv j Earlier reports said loyal ' ptenes had strafed nnd bombed [ {:;snipi Fiscal Refoiln" Failure Touches Off Angry Blast Governor Says People of Michigan,Sick of Invisible Government “.MUJIMt ■M'TES MICE” - But (hat doesn't stop 10-year-oId Terry Gulacsik from keeping half a dozen around her home at 113 Mohawk Road. And now everyone in4he city can see her mice — in a display on their habits^nd environ- LANSINO (AP) - Under orders from Gov. Swainson, a team of state attorneys will make a full-scale investigation m lobbying against atl^ltl^ts in the-legislature to mvise Michigan’s tax structured Swainson. incensed by activities of whfii he called invisible government" to influence the legislature’s decisions on taxes, told a .statewide audience last night that he had directed Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley to launch the investigation. meiit at the Pontiac Public Sc-hools-Kleniehtary Science Fair from 9 a. m. to noon and from t p.. m. to 5:36-j)/m.. Monday and Tuesday, in Mark Twain School, 729 Linda Vista Ave. ■SiU.S. Claims Proof 0 Chinese if) Laos Franco Trying toHaltSfrikes reported to have been slMt up so badly by antlaircratt Are that it. had te land on one whet Camcas Airport, blocking runway for a time. President Romuio Betancourt accused the rebels of seeking toj set up a Costro-type Communist! jthem an uitimatuni to surrender VIENTIANEy Laos (AP) American military sources Proclaims Marti a I Law .^by dawn or ^^^^^‘^y®jJ^j^?^|said today they had confirming information that Red in 3 Northern Provinces Chinese troops assisted in the capture of Muong Sing, for Three Months and its jungle airstrip in northern Laos Thursday. ^ | , Muong Sing, five miles from the Chinese border, has] Madrid. Spain (APi-cjener-served jfs an alternate a||pply source and troop stagingr^’*”^ Franco pn>- becn broken. Any lobbying considered improper also should be reported, he said. Swatoson’s angry denouncement of lobbyist excesses was catried seven television stattons and more than a dozen radio stations. ^ government destro.vem steamed into the port of Carupano, 300 miles eabt of Caracas. to gawk at tliia sight. Richard O. Erikson, owner of the ^Ue dog, said; ”Vhien Lassie came home '8 her name) after getMti|f !iei*^»uiia: «ier clip at the vet's . . well, this is the way she looked." No lions have been reported missing from the zoo. Special Meeting Wednesday Supervisors to Lakes Code Betanoamt predicted the uprising would be quickly crushed and claimed his 'government Was Jn complete control of the rest of the couqt^,............ Despite the' president's ultima-(uin, midmoriiing passed without \voi-d from (,'anipano—eitlier of bet .surrender or further fighl- l/l«. '■/ 1 l.o'yalist* troops moved on Cam-jiano from three directions after the city’s frO-muii marine gitiTi-l ■son and 50 militar.v policemen' rebellt'd and demanded the Bets Truck Sales Up, Reports 6MG ar.^a for N-am Tha,.the half- iclaimcd today a state of emergen- I -w ■ icy' in thiee key pcoviiuo^s m encircled provincial capital Spain’s industrial nor(h to .try to 20 miles to the souUjeajit. htiit 1 Tlie’^iglitvving gova'innient an-j mounced that Communist forces followed up their success atl The people of Michigan are sick and tired *of obstruction, of rule by invisible government," he declared. “We want fiscal reform.’’ Kelley said he would take personal charge of the investigation. « of individual lobbyists or their employers will be mentioned In connection with the in->n until the report is submitted to fhe governor, he said-' “To do oltowtvliw! would comply neither with reamnuble Franco’s decree, to i-omain In ief-fecl at least three months, was aimed mainly at the Asturias coal governmenf quit. The rebels leixM’tedly passetf out arms to By jllM IX)NG A countywld|e ordinance to regulate water aifttvlties on township lakes win be nroposed Wednesday at a special jaeeting 6f the Oakland County 'Township Supervisors A.ssodation. The meeting in the County Office Building has been scheduled to, discuss a uniform code that was drafted yesterday by the supervisors of nine townships that have the majority of the county lakes. Hio' proposed standard ordinance was prepared by Hye supervisors of West BloomReld, Waterford, White l,ake, Commerce, Mpringfiold, Highland, Indo-Orlon and Pontiac Should, the uniform regulations he accepted by the 24-membcr as-.sociation, it would then be necessary for each supervisor to present ' it to the township board to decide its fate. The ordiniiiice is u modified sion of one adopted two wwks by West Bloomfield Township, the only county township to set rostric- ji ions on its lakes since a recent'' pervisor John Rehard explains State Supreme Court ruling upheld sucli township power. MAJOR REVISIONS 'Major rovisions in the ordinance would: I. Allow water Ing betw«M>ii a.iii. and siimlowq^on wwer boat un-lesr they are with an aijuif. i West Blmmifleld Township Sii- Car Crash Fatal' to Novi Father April Retail Deliveries Muong .Sing by capturing annthf>r,^ines, where 20,000 miners-Struve ure of a move by a b(i>«r(isan defensive iwsition southeast of for higher pay a month ago leav- Jump l29.4 Pet. Oi Year Ago gj. Nam Tlia .yesterday. Communist^ and leftist .supixu'lcitb >ftadjo--'nr.'-4ittics« hea*' Carupano asimed the rebels at-teniDted to spread the rcv,plt by forcing 3.000 townspeople to dem-' onstrnte against the government. Izi.vallst marines were alrllR-ed from f^aracas lo Cuniana, about 00 miles west of Cam-|mno, and marched eastward along .ihO JtnasI road. Arni.v unifs from (3udad Bolivar and iMaturln moved on the rebels from xtbe south and west. Domestic retail deliveries of new (;MC trucks in April were up 29.4 T tho sanic period last year ' The government forces resistance in the small towns of Rio Cari^o. about 12 miles east of Caru|Nino, and Cnriaco. some 20 miles to the southwest. A fire fi|||ht broke out on one road lending into Carupano before government .forces seized h rebel road-bl(M-k. Cumana radio reportwt .hotivy (Continued on Page 2, Col, 3» was revealed today. ' Some 7,106 units were deliv-ensl, aecoj-ding to CM vice president Calvin J. Werner, general managt>r of Truck and Coach Division. He said April was (lie best truck sales month for the division since August I960. In the fir.st four months of thi^ year, GMC truck deliveries, totaled 26,276 units. ’This is 20.8 per cent higher than (he January through April p(|rio(l of 1961 The Red ’CJiinese then withUveu back ovei* the border, (he i^v ernment said. The government, in re|M>rtlng the, fall of Muong tiing, had saneo’»i ‘ tecimically outlawed martial law, was order In the provinces of Asturias, Vixeu,vi| American military sources nntil! { states on Spain's north coast. 11* suspended various sections t(Klay disclaimed any cohfirmaiion ,hr bill of rights, inchiding the of this. rights of assembly, movement of * * * Ipeiyions or vehicles in, strike areas Mepnwlnle, the Communists ad- (i-cedom from senreh and ar-'anced closer to Nam Thn from!|.,,g( normally guaranl('cd Spun-the southeast by taking another defense post. Dismiss Hoffa Suif Nikita Praises Pravda MO.SCOW (AP) - Premier )UBI,1CIZED Franco’s order, which followed 1 emergency session of the government commission W eronomic affairs, was given unusually wide publicity in the Spanish press and over radio and television. 3 New Features , Three features starting Monday will appeal t.) a variety of Interests among Ppntlt^c Press readers. Husbands will sneak a look at the serfbs on "How ;o Keep Your Husbahd Alive,” a condensation of pF.. Kenneth 0, Hutchln's book, “How Not to Kill Your Hus-jand.” MbylHt the'NiHd man” will get a little sympathy arounifl his house, for this series Is written primarily for Wives. ^ And our "Dear Abby” (Abigail Van Bureii) has wrlU ten a new book on marriage, which she calls “Dear Abby on Marriage.” Installments will run under such pirovoi^ tive Utles as “Slot-Machine Divorce” and Mattress.’^ The series Is Htled "H14nfldelty." 1' ★ A ★ . ■ I If you are single, you’ll learn the marlAil ropes. If I you are happily married, you'll become more so,. Tf )) your marriage is rocky, maybe these chapters will .decr^ p you around the rocks. , A A 'A ■ . - And for you brld^ addicts, Oswalci Jacoby can give vou some pointers with his dally hands on how to bid,.or <* npt those aces and kings. , / . ■''^watch for these three features starthig Mohday. ‘ - ■>' Man Dies of Injuries at Pontiac General 3 Hours After Mishap Students Jeer and Heckle Aullioi'iiic}) in A.stui'ias Kiiid Ihe prttvlnee riMiiained quiet. Mine of fieial.s claimed thousands of strikers Iwid gom; back to wOik and prediet(*d IhnI by Mondiiy most of (he renminder would n'tnn Ha ir joliK. ' Till* governor said, he wanted a full report on all lobbying ac-livltICH connected with the legislative battle wver taxes as well as the attorney general’s opbi-lon on .whether any laws have- invoatigative priM'ednres, .was stirred up by fall- coalition of state senutoi’S to tmsh through a tax program based on a personal nnd corporate income lax. PAqKAOE killed------------; The key bill in the ll-bjll pack-ge passed last week 18-15, the minimum vote required, with 10 Republicans to put it through, The next day ken. Haskell L. Nichols, R-Jaekson, annonneed that he would withhold support of Ihe remaining bills unless ihe Senate added a bUI,to exempt In-dutUry fntm the j^^rsonal properly . tax on mnehinery and equipment. Son. John H. Stahlin, R-Belhing.» indicated later that, he would no longer vote with the coalition unless it agreed to substantial tax relief on real estate owned by retired persons ( It. it Their stand ail but killed off chanws for enacting an , income tax (his year. ASK.S ‘EQUAL' TIME’ Stahlin said later Ihe package fnii.ed to achieve what he considers genuine (ax'lteform. “Wh^ Ken. Nichols and myseW expressed the need for mocUflea-tiohs, we were simply'expressing the general concern of the entire re «no witnesses. • Police said the lack of skit marks at fh(‘ accident scene* indr eated f.umsdcn either fell asleep at the wheel or failed to turn at Hie eurv(>'1)eeaus<‘ he was unfamiliar with the road. He appaivnl-ly was traveling'at a liigh rate of speed, police said- . , f .His iHxty will be at the Richaixl-' i^n-Bb’d Ftuicral Hopie, Walled Lsfke, tomorrow evening. Ri'pre.seniaiivcs of (he miners} |declared, howewr, tiuii many} 'Strikers were awaiting wage guarantees before going liaek. I Unless Ihe stale of emergency| is sufficient to end the Asturiasl: miners strike promptly, some of-h' ficial souiTos predicted Franco would declare the mines militar-l:: Ized, iluis requirifii: Ihe mincr.s to * l•elu^l to their jobs as units of I?;; Ihe arnieit forces. ■ In Today's Press Two Ollier norlherii .Spanish m-'^ dustries at Bilboa and Beasain liuve been hit by strikes. Cloudy, Cooler, Some Showers, Over Sunday Thirsty lawns will get more than sprinkled tonight, says the weutb-ermnn. Sh'owers anti Ihutidmhow., era ari’ prtt.didcd along wlTh mild jempenilures, A low of 54 is ex-peeled this evening, Jlgbl.V will Ih* inosHy eluiiil.v He^'ciily In the pnslleU’d hl|(|i for l(Hiif>rrmv. Knir and cMilcr Is tl|ic BRONX CHEEK FOR HOFFA - A r.olden, Colo., high' school student (rtghO gave Teamster >^rosldcnt Jimmy Hoffa the Bronx cheer In Golden when Hoffa arrived at the Ctoors Porealain plant for an organization visit. Witli Hoffa, (left) Was Harry Both, aeert'tarj-irensurer of Cplorado-\Vyomink Joint Cpunell of Topmsters. Aliout ’250 JeerWg stmients showed up witli sign* to heckle the rsj^msVer boss, ' • ^ Winds are southwesterly today increasing to 10 to 2() miles per hour in the nflemoon. 1'he nl«^ cury (ell to 'S-l at 6 a.m.. but climbed to a warm 83 at 2 p.m. Now Smile Detroit freeway drivers to go on ’TV’ in Contro! project -Page f ^ Seel Bay City ttNBichcr DW'il recovers sight—PAGE) 11. 'Pollitics' New Mej lot cor^sIng^i^AGB II. World Trip Student of Winds tak Astrology ......... .....M ' Chiirdi’-Nows ........, f-t - • ' .................... Obltuarbw........ Hports . ft. « -Tb«italr« li-ltS tv * Radio PeogrMno - *> flliHHi. Earl . .m»j r M h ' It V f - . #HB " Fear Qniii Regiderits, Kidnaped 5 Europeans Disappear >lU.S,Sayst)niorfp f«OSI out NE*S WIRES were sh(^ ORAN. Algeria (AP)~R»k* i.u q„arte been sapMng Siiough thc,^ quarter firing Uctnaped by Moriema. ** w violence was reported in both Algiers and Oran, as seenrity |foroes pressed their house-to-house I search tor terrorists....^. ccet army gunmen Jailed two I Moslems and wounded one in Al-iglers, while four Moslem, youths tol death in Oran’s Jew-r. A .Witnesses saifjdie Moslems. Itod . . ^sgAt-piase, The] car crashed i^o a parked auto and 'the driver of the Moslems' AJpslems have benn discovered in a mass grave in an abant ~ mine nearj.Telergma in the Constantine tlepartment of Algeria, weB-informnd sources said today. The tour passengers fled down narrow sidestreets. But they were quicRly slain by gunmen from the Jewish quarter. Algiers, the bodies ol (The Algerian news ai^y Alf erle Press Service (APS) said in Tunis that “according to certain Informatioot’’ the grave PS). Katangese Kill Civiliaii in <£nlral Congo Battik LEOPOLDVILLE. The Congo (UPI> — Fighting has broken out between central COngo goventment troops and Kaiahgese gendarmerie North Katanga Province-and the itangese have kiUed ^,ciVilians. the Congolese press agency reported today. . ' The agency, in a report from Al- bertville, said' the first clash occurred Wednesday after Katangese captured the. villages of Beya and Kyengie. imprisoned 93 civilians, shot them and dumped the bodies in the Luvongo River. The. reporirwhich gave no Katangese military casnaities, said iOATO Allies to Get More Nuclear Data STILL CI.EAMNG I’p — Workers are c»ntinuing to cut down trees damaged in the vicious storm which rocked PWHiac Monday. Here a portion ofa larg^'ee at Seminole and Orchard Lake avenues is sawed awlay. iClbntinued From Page One) nuclear policy, has informett' SUto jker she cannot give formal ap- iproyal at this session because of the unsettled stale of her govern- N-Tests Continue; Red Series Awaited It poiMsy e VnltM SoppoHers of oaM It wMid Commit the fStateo to consult other NATO members on use of nuclear armaments in defense of Western Europe. The proposal reportedly provides that: WASHINGTON wounded were Moslems. the Lukusa River as the gendarmerie advanced towards Al- Heavy fighting followed, the report said, but. the cental government calimcd later its troops had suffered no casualties. /There was no confirmation of the lighting either from United Natiohs officials in Leopoldville br from Katanga President Moifse Tshombe's piwincial Wital of Elisabethville. The r^rrsjM fighting was continuing arouna 9^ north Katanga town of Nyunzulbut gave no further details. If the reports arc officially confirmed, the fighting could upset the unity talks scheduled for Leopoldville some time next week between Tshombe and central Premir Cycle Adoula; The talks are aimed at ending Katanga's secession from the central goventment. 2* The . United Stales would I Administration officials said al'""' - United biaies wouid|Po|jC6 NSD tlQht newSoviet roundwif nuclear blastsi*|l_ .-,'2»S..Jpromise to keep the allies in-L . codd come at almost any minute. leading ^^''111 'PI.---TTc ft ^ American nuclear stockpiles! U U C .1 The agenc-y said that even the!*"® Ihroughout , .watch for the tests, which Soviet,he world. Premier Khnishchev say . would set off If the United States! i,j n i j 3. There would be agreement ‘ The most critical «-omments on s(H;alled gtiWelines Tor r/sort came from Africa. Syria. Ii-aq. In-:to nuclear arms — still sub.iect ANNOUNCES SHOT United Arab Repub- to authority from .the White shot %|tW U»S. ,up-jlir*”statement said.j'TKn^]||baK. ns" atmounii'd TMrtiiv bv theimni-i " tj'les was" atmounii'd Friday by the;moral support for the U.S. aettonf Atomic Energy Commission and c-amc in comment from Western _ the Defense Department, The brief I Eiuopc. Latin "America. * the'ij r 1 statement merely said this of tbefCE.NTO-NXTO countries of lhe;/70iCl LMllTlCllQOIi devite : - I Near and Middle East. Israel. . __ It was dropped from a planejThailand,. Taiwan, the Philippmesl/QJ’Q|/JFJ302' ntai' Christmas Island, as were and South Korea, The Japaneses . , . the other three in the kerics, press—in marked rohTiast-.to tnr- WQC*n|#Q/ ^hiQr which began April 25. It was m rent .kXUsUed demonstrations —1 ^ «>thc intermedi,jk yiirfd-rimKe-W^Sntinued to take a balanced ap-i Approximately 130 area Imsi-™ to 500,000 tons of TNT. hkeiproach to the question of U.S.j„pgg^ attend^ a reception yes--the fii-st and second shot-the tests. ' afternowi at the Waldron third explosion was in the million- American officials have expect-; ,l,p owner of The sources said the gi about three years old and the bodies, were in a near^letal stafe. It was found by shepherds April 24. Earlier,, the body of a. Moslem, killed by gunfire, had been found in an area between MdSleni and Jewish quarters. Later two Jews ivere wounded by rifle shots. In other terrorist action, an explosion and fire heavily damaged a customs warehousev MORE Terror Terrorist attacks killed sons and wounded 395 throughout Algeria Friday, authorities reported. In Paris, a bomb damaged Ciommunist party office f)i "suburban Issy les Moulinpsux. No injuries were report^ 1 In Verdun, a bomb damaged the home of a doctor who had recently-received death threaits from the European secret army. He was not inured. ,« ROBERT J. HUBER Six men and two women Were rounded up by Pontiac police vice squad Officers in gambling and HlegaMiquor raid^ la^ night and early today. raid at 532 Franklin Road at 3:03 a. m today, polioc appre-,1 headed two women .and..ft~.imn:‘r Held imt investigation of maintain-! « » rs 1 / ing and operating "an illegal liquor fQ Soek R0D6TtS establishment was Sarah A. Amps, Senate Sedt ^jltfayof 0/ fioy who lives at that address. ton igange-and it took place at red the firat Russian explosion of ,y^ waldron Hotel and the man-2 p.m. EST " a new series almost d^y since Os- ♦ ♦ * ;the United States resumed atmo*-, ............ . The U.S. Information Agency pheric testing. They said 4hen! leports that so fajr reaction they thought the Russians were, abroad to the U.S. tests could -be preparing for. .he blasts to sup-i, summed up as "generally mild plement their tests of last fall. The Weather .Aecnsed of aiding and abetting the illegal sale of liquor was John R, Gipson. 36. <»4 LYank-iin Road. A Flint woman, Tony .Wpiamst 21, was picked up, for loitering ar 'in tnegHf Itqnor place. They were to be arraigned today. Five men arrested for disorderly gambling at the rear of 100 Bagley St., at 11:30 p. m. yesterday were * * * |Ordered to pay fines of $5 each Arman Simone, president of the!or spend a day in jail after plead-imone Management CO. andjing guilty in Municipal Cburt IHarry Whitlow, head of Pontiac doy- Osteopathic, spoke briefly. | They are Leroy Brutton, 26. ____ ! Host of the event was Bruce J. Howard McNeil St.; Lawrence i. ^Annelt. of Annett Inc. Realtors, j Foote. 23. 73 Florida Ave.; E^ddie 'who introduced the speakers as|taylpr Jr . 194 Fisher Ave.; James men playing a big part in the re- R.‘ Wallace, 23, 488 Bloomfield i.jiAve.; and Wesley P. Evans, 24, 430 Maysi: Robert J, Huber of Troy today chose State Sen. Farrell E. Roberts pro-income tax stand as central Issue in announcing his bid foe the -State.. Senate. ivitalizalion of downtown Pontiac. FULL U. S. WEATHER BUREAU REPORT PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Increasing cloudiness and warmer today with scattered showers and thundershowers in late afternoon, high 82. Mostly cloudy an^r^n^ with showers and thundershowers tonig^ht, low 54. Sunday mostly cloudy and cooler with few showers, high 70. Wind southwesterly increasing to 10-20 miles in afternoon. Rebels Attacked in Venezuela .Howard McNeil St. Police confis-catWl dice and money when the five inen were arrested. Both men are Republicans. Huber said he would op^se Roberts In the Aug. 7 primary. If the Incumbent chooses to ran Koberts told The Pontiac Press he would not make his deci.sion until aflei' the current Senate Sion—about three weeks from now. A. Jir^ of undetermined origin destroy^ two cars and did an estimated 32,800 damage to a row of five garages 'between South Shirley and South Roselawn streets early today. Pontiac firemen, who were'044 votes in the last generttl ele.c-called to the sbene about 4:.30|tion to defeat Oxford auto dealer -_,j 1.- jlomer Hlghf by nearly -40,000. No • Continued Frontpage One) caMiallies. but this could not be Iconfirmed. wmiicf 1 HithrfI I U n*lr In S» Vtsn i»! Government tnKips halted their j march ifin the edge of Carupano Inreause of darkneks and to give HI ;the insurgents time to accept Bct-' I’s ultimatum to lay doWn Hl|hm iXmicrBlui Loweiil trmperstur l^ftn teinpcrstiirii W()«Uiei~ Bunny Pension TfMsmIsr* Chart .an,™ IS 3» Dtnver 11 7« 37 oiiuith ■ 77 Mi their 73 33 El Pbm S7 7S| V* « Si ‘™*p« vvertand. 70 «7 Miami B « Mi |hr«!(l 7» tt Mllvaukar 7i mI ' •7 4« New Orlaaoa S3 on 47 Plillailrlinila 7S 7k 33 Phnrnlx N SI I and 71 40 Plti.burah 75 43i 73 44 Portlant holcs through the Warplanea fuselage but that .the plams mude it safely back. -^The infermants said f«^l antiaircraft fire drove y #’’7 * 'A • Betopcourt' convened a gcncy tCabiel ifstioii to hdopt de-decrees banning pdblic gatheringii search and eeltur«.' NATIONAL WEATHER — Some scattered showers donhop'ert will oticur tonight in pints of the lower Lakes jmA ■ showers and||0(X'ai(lonal ram pos* ’ CNiio Valley with rome sililc ,l» ttSe Northwwii and northern Plateau." It will be warmer from New England (flniuEh the Mlattisslptii Valley and uutheni , tRalns. Orol weatly/ Is exiK-cled from, the upptir Lakes wcafn^rd fhruutih the northf'm -Plains and Plateau to the coapt:’^ •pile the prestdenl's ultima-mklmorning passed without a word froni Carupano-elther of rebel sumi^r or further fighting. All Clats^. on Monday at AAodison Junior High Regular class sessions will be held at stom.damaged Madison M4Hlday tor all l.fW students. Dsns • P. WMImer announced Huber is president of the Michi-[gan Chrome and Chemical Co., a member of (he county bohrd supervisors, the Rotary, St Francis Home for Boys, Ihb Amer ican Legion, the Economic Club and the Oakland County Children’ Aid So<-iety. a.m., said the garages were behind 78 and 82 S. Shirley SI. and 78, 81 and 83 S. Rosdwan St. 1956 Pontiac and a 1947 Ford re totally desm^e^’ firemen '[/inid. Authorities were invest igatinU le cause of ilie blaze today. County Dems Expecting 3,000 at Dinner Tonight Oiiklan(l County Democrats hovel F'eatured speakers «l the din been working hal'd to make to- ner will be Gov. Svvainson and Tax Lobbying Probe Ordered by Swainson ((Continued From Page One) the broadcast media that oAr- ThaTs the, word from .Sander Levin, chairman of the county’ Democratic committee, who said area party workers huye played key rolesi in boosting ticket sales and making arrangements. And it looks like their efforts are paying off. State Denwerats are pr^ctiag a record turnout of nearly S,tW0 peiiions for the fiSO pjm. dinner lii^ JDytwItX *'?•' «®''ernor’i light' Guard Armory, 4400 ‘ *■'“ ' Eight Mile Road. Cochairmen of Oakland County’s ticket drive *«rc Martlrr Boyle of MUfoid and Al Kramer oF .OUk Park.'Servtrig as statewide ticket chairmen are Sherwood Colburn of Oak Pkrkarfd Frank Sierawiski, n former Fcrndale resident. ' A A A ^ ^Another Oak Parker. Allen Zem-mol, chairman of the arrangements committee, said Jeffeiwon-Jackson Day festivities will start iihout-lTTrnr. ; jlJemocrallc State Chhirman Joe bllins and vice chairman Mrs. Harriet Phillips of Huntington Woods wctt; scheduled‘to preside over a noon luncheon. \ afternoon reception, -headed by Mill. John App, 948 Madison St., Birmingham, OHkIand C^uQly, women We expected to rontrlbute alitiuat 1,^ cxmkles. Wisoensin Gov. Gaylord Nelson. Ally. Gen. Frank Kelley will b«' master of feremonles. grant him equal lime nUIn *k. '>u»,|t|on of W.._. eight Republican j^oderate. The Democrat tried unsuccessfully for two'legislative sessions to win approval of a tax reform program based on ap Income tax. He said It qffisrf the only adequate and fair solution to ih<* state’s money problems. Cieorge Romney, commenting today on Gov. .Swainton's order litveiligatlcn qf legishifh li^lni, repeated his charge Dennocratic state officials bow to special inleresls. "Michigan certain'y needs pub|lc, officials free of special interest' Influence but It la difflculT to set-how thin cAn be brought about by state adn^lstrntivc officials who are dlrecUrT^spouitible t^q the. moat powerful special interest, bottses *“ the staU-,’’ Romney iwtid. ^ ■ Red-Infiltrated To ^ Bar United Mine, Mill, Smelter Unit a» Representatives Bloorniield Tytrp. Shies Hearing on Zoning Plan< WASHINGTON (AP)—A gov«m-ment board says the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers is ComraunistJnfil-trated and therefore cannot rep-employes under the National Labor Relations Act. Union of; ficials denied- the finding and said they would file-an immediate appeal . _ ■______—......... BIRMlNGHAM-i-A public heil^ ing will be held Monday Bloomfield TPw|iship!s revised ing ordinance, a 78-page document taking the Tommship Plam^ Commission three years to lAe- Thc decision was announced Friday by the Subversive Activities Control Board. In a 97-page report. it_backed the findings of board' member Francis Cfieityi who sat as an examiner, that the union was' heavily laced with Communists or Communist sympathizers. . "The aid and support flowing to the Communist party from respondent (union) and Us controlling leadership has been real, substantial and significant," the re-said. "Through respondent, the Communist party has acquired and continues to Have a dependable, foothold in the labor movement In the United Staes.” In Denver, headquarters of the union. President John Clafk said the board’s decision "has no basis in fact' The evidence on which the l^fd relies^comes almost entirely from one “man, a man who was fired by mine-mill andhas since been proven to be an Army ded'erter and an unreliable wit- The purpose of the 8 p.m. meeting at the BloomfieUI Hills High. School Is to hear objeettoirt and answer questions on the pro posed ordinance. • ~ Ai^on on any ttoJecUons would not be taken nt the time of the hearing but would be considered prior to the time the ordinance la preaented to the If the meeting runs too, long, plans have been made to hold another public hearing May 11, The Monday hearing has been scheduled. for the High schod rather than the township hall because a large turnout is anticipated. the . proposed NOT IDENTIFIED Clark didn’t identify the The Mine Mill and Smelter Workers Union is independent, haling been expelled from the lid, CIO in 1950. It claimed 100,000 memb'erf in 200 locals In 195®, but then its membership reportedly has declined to about 60,000. It represents workers in the copper, lead and zinc tpining and refining industries. . Cherry’s 4-year investigation produced 9,721 pages of transcript. He announced his findings last December. The case began in July 1955,.when the Justice Department filed > a petition asking that the board find the union was Communist-infiltrated.' The five-member boat'd'’“said in ils^ report that the union’s international executive board "is and for many years has been dominated and controlled by the Communist party members on the board." The board said it was unable to link the union and. the Commli-ni.st party directly but said it found a strong showing that the union "has been and is working behalf of the Communist par-fy upon a consistent basis over aj long period of time.” i Under the finding, Ihe' union! with the recognition 'lt'^Z\Sheriif Bidding National Labor Relations Board. I Day in Birminghiwi Aooonling t» ***** BuB, pastor, ihe omgn _ gave formal ap|in>w> ^ (te a____ faiiinn of the duneh with the twa formevd curative ffnups of Some of the acth’ittes ptonnrt for Birmintfiam youths on MkM-Week Youth Dny. May 26. ito a enrp caraival at Quar-- 1» to K games at Eton Park UtUe League dtamonfe and a fHitif Bt Eton Iwrk from 1:30 to 3 P-ni. « **• search park category for light industrial research and a plan for jirovMing a neighborhood park in each new subdiviidini. ,Tbe. zoning ordinance has been a.ugmented Witff a township .ntias-ter plan' developed by Vllican-Leman and Associates, Southfield planning consultants. Other events are an open hou» at the YMCA fnm* 1 d parade and concerLAY"OfeH-s-Air Force Band af Sham Park, and a dande forlt«M ***® Community House \fn»n 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. V Fritz Fiesselman of 550 Larch-lea Birmin^nij has i)e«k elfet«tlli^eraldr iaf the B)lgrim CongraqatioM.. Church of Biri mingham at Its -second annual mreting. Other 'officers are 5Irs. James K. Flack, Church clerk: WiDiam KuRer. treasurer; I^Itoy Rum-baugh, and Howard C. Tuttle, in-.v rieawK- 0-. _ Servic^ tor, Dr. ^X***^^ Goudic. 46. of 27210 Eldorado Drive, Lathrup Village. wiB be at 11 iLfn. Mmiday at the Bell Chapel of the WUliam R."Hamitton Funeral at. Burial will be in Wood-lawn Cemetery; DeWdL > ^ Dr, (jdudie^ a prominenl Detroit pitysidan maiv years, died yesterday at Detrdt s Harper Hospital after a long Illness. A graduate of Denison University, he was a member missile - shaped monument would ever get off the launching pad. ^ ★ VJ Tliey seemed to be ISpying that elevator riding was not- as adventurous as space travel. As a veteran elevatomaut, I rather resent the levitjr. I should make dear that elevatomants. We nre n rda-Uveiy smnll group that regu- the pablto devators Jn the new Senate office buUding. I’m not saying that this is as IBEW Defends Secondary Rate New toric Local Says Some Work 1$ Alwa^ Done at Lower Pay y NEW YORK «» - A spokesman for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (AFL-aO) says Hie union has a long-standiiw policy of letting some members take jobs below the top standards He said that “policy of having a secondary rate is 25 years old." The spokesman made the comment yesterday in reference to a Wall Street Journal story that said the union’s New York LCcal J had agreed let some of its ijnembers work/8 hours a day at I straight pay. Tbe local won a basic 5-hour workday last January. , I ’The story also said the'gpecikl group of about 1,000 workers. Ward’s said three Ford plants and one Chevrolet plant will work overtime today. It noted Stude-baker worked only four days this and that the Lincoln-Thun-derbird Plant of Ford was closed two days because of parts shortages. ’/2 PRICED Men’s PANTS and SHIRTS $2 Shirts 3.H Casual Pants ic $|99 dhai get a far lower hourly pay rate— SS.25 tor mechanics and $1.90 for apprentices, compared to the rato of $tL40 and $4JiS an tomr set under n new contract for thR' 9,000 electricians handling con- Btruction. ’Ito union m /2 PRICED LADIES’ HOSE-SLIPS $1 Soa'mlass f N Slips 69'-’1» union spokesman said that !rtain repair jobs and modernization of wiring in ^mt-ControUed apartment buildings, the jobs might go to nonunion labor if no secondary rate schedule was provided. “There’s no point in being the highest paid unemployed electricians," he said. “However, t|tis has no effect on the 5-hour dtiy'and pay rates for the, 9,000 electricians on new constructioii work. Refrigerator Deaths Ruled Accidental '62 Auto Output Nears Figure I of'61 for perilous as orbiting the earth. I’m just saying that there is an element oi^ x ipicertainty, ' the same as there is In rocket transportation. ONE IS NEVER SURE A person entering these-elevators cap nei^er be sure that ..he win arrive at his Intended destination^ at least on the first try, ■ As I was chasing Titov and ^ Olenn about tli« Capitol, I *■ boardei^ the press elevator on th^ gallery floor with plans to qateh up wife lheinron;,JS!0’-;-■ chambw floor. The descended to the street floor, which Is by no means an uncommon qpcur- More frequently, punching ,the “gallery" button on the street level will land an elevatomaut in the subwayr Once it took me from the subway toj the gallery and back again without stopping. This ercatic behavior is not nearly as unnerving, however, as when it stops between floon. Nor does. It provide as taxing a psychological test -as the elevators in the office building. . The oars there respmid'to spec^l bttftonii reserved, tm senators. They proceed Inime-mediately to the floor the senator is on, regardless of what the passengers already aboard might have in mind. It U possible for an elevatbr-"i«ut t^g id Teachr 8ayro»e third floor to be caught in a sort of volleyball game Wtwem senators. He can be taken up to the fifth, down to the first, up to the fourth, down to the second, etc., - indefinitely. A senator Mhi'Self can-never become an elevatomaut be-eduse senators are always wait- DETROIT (AP)-^Ward’s reports said today the auto industry has bunt 4.88 miUioirof its 1962 models so far. equal to 90 pet' cent Of the entire 1961 mod^l rw. The 1961 total _ will be surpassed sometime this month, Ward’s predicted. Production flds week was estimated at 147,621 cans compared with 16S,4M last week and 124,464 in the sinnilar week last Truck production was estimated at 25,646 units against 26,389 last week and 22,853 a year ago. Judges Won't Revive County Unit System ATLANTA (AP)-A three-judge federal court refused today to suspend its order killing the county unit system in its present form while the state is appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court. This left in effect an interlocutory' injunction of April 28 restraining the State Democratic Committee from holding the Sept. 12 primary election under a 34T-unit law passed April 27 at a special legislative session. The court ruled this law invalid as well as principles of the Primary Act of 1917 providing for 41(1 units. Judges Elbert Tuttle, Frank A. Hopper and Griffin Bell were unanimous in refusing the stay just they .were last week in voiding the unit system as it always had existed. SAN FERNANDO, Calif. (UPD-’Tho deaths of two 6-year-old girls whose bodies were found in frigerator was accidental rather than murder, it was disclosed last night in,a statement by police. The prepared statement said sheriff’s deputies, police and coroner Thomas J. Curphey revei^ the original finding that both Death Toil Up to 155 Stephanie Hanna and PAula Cram had been raped and stuffed in the refrigerator April 23. The report was based on Dr. Curphey’s detailed study and the report of a small boy who said he saw the two girls get into the refrigerator. TOKYO (AP)—The death toll in Japan's triple train crash Thurs-| day rose to 155 today when salvage workers found the mangled body of a 51-year#old man beneath a shattered, overturned ■ commuter car, ■ I Pur<^Ta^ af a Private Diamond / Collection / All Stones Are u Clear I White Brilliant Cut Diamonds From These Remounted in New Atbractive Solitaires An Exceptional Value , For YOV Included Are: 3. HALF CARATS .....$195 2>THIRD CARATS......$135 4. QUARTER CARATS $69.50 TERMS OF COURSE Registered Jeweler American Gem Society DOWNTOWN OpKii Mondky mn Friday Nlfhls 1« W. Huron FE i MIKACLE MILE Telkcrnnh 0|i«n E»«ry Nl(ht .>/2 PRICED lADIES’ SPDRTSWEAR Skirlt-ltouMi * ' JaekOlt-Sldekt It '/2 PRICED A GIRLS’ SPDRTSWEAR '/2 PRICED RECREATION ROOMS - AniCS dormers — EXTENSIONS — KITCHENS — CONVERSIONS HUGE SUMMER iSALE STARTS NOW! NO DOWN P6.TIEENT! mA TERMS OTTO S TRS. TO PATt NO PAVOffiNTS TH lULTJ ___________________ ._________________:------£_ SAVE UP TO 25% ^ SUMMI^R PRICES NOW IN EFFECT BIG BEAR rnycfT nn Call Now for a Free Estimate uUNoi. UU. i^Hour Phone Service 92 W. Huron FE 3-7833 .i'. \'A CUP ..oSM With These SIMMS AYIAJ.ttl9PJt^ •S •1 coupons YOU Must Have These Coupons to Buy at These Prices: YOU Cm PARK FREE IR cay MetMtol^mwSPJ. o come on down to Simmi-^yoo'll save on these super-d^icount-coopons and yc pork free after 5 P.M. In city metitred bto . down with the fohiily tonite or Monday? you OBfl . why don't you clip this'entire page and come SIMMS PRICE SMASH COUPON V SIMMS PRICE SMASH COUPON I . 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I « or for «ar washing, limit 2 per coupon: I- L - JI____________________- " • SIMM5 RE^VirTHE RIGHT TO LIMIT ALL QUANTITIES • -J /98 Nortlj Buginaw Str^t anuort V si^[mmr,mt%im mmA.yiS5sks^ ' . ijfVaMMM fM , . ', *MwSSSS!%Bt»» -V^ TtSeente toMe . V.. Let’s Stari BsJI Railing Wi«i atWi New Lights at Visner St^um - ngms for ^rBtiiaKfin w-arngKiinod ige to >^pt the seem to be dragging their feet. . fact that peace only comes through The; opening of the football season “mutual ffear?" This negates, mobt of Isn’t too far away (per- the material,advances the ywld.hM jsh the thm^(ht) but made In centuries and casts^ pall forward ,step8 seem to om other a^a^ent^ have run afoul of a sue-~^c^6n of iSriill^.: People are asf ing us 1 “Why?” And we don’t know. ★ ★ ★ Last fall it was established that Pontiac had Just about tha poor* , est-lightcd stadium for miles and miles, in all directions. Our in* staUaJioa Was made years and years and years ago and has be* ceme obsolete with the mere pas* sage of time. We’ve long since “had our money’s worth.” The Press interviewed many citi* sens last fall and found an amazing Those .cheap ■outhera..daer'tal» Neg» .. hue hNub sad dilp them to Newjf«h be puniUiable by tfOwd law. Can 1 out (n Wyomiag? 1 t t the ionosphere, but may also do lasting damage to the recently discovered radiation belts which lie beyond. Is It necessary? (toe of the purposte it the proposed teats qujjrte*'- > . is to aswsi the mllltoiy value of The momtag/slani ere Jupiter a major communications disturb- and Saturn ance, but to the higher radiation The evening stars are Metoiry By United Ft______ ^ay is Saturday, May 5, the 125th day of the year with 240 to fidlow to 1962. The moon is approaddi^ its first belts, which begin some 800 miles up, anything could happen. The first tad( is to get the Russians to agree to a properly inspected bon 8. B. ‘Two Florida Cities^ Entirely Opposite’ Days of All Faiths: Miami and St. Petersburg are two exciting and^ almost opposite communities. Family Week Stresses Home Life ind. al *y, 1 Way Out of Line .. And in Conclusion .... Jottings from the.'well-thttmbed lUUtMjr ofHCM. .ho dcJyith. or- „f your peripatetic re ders of their superiors deseye precisely the same swift, unerring pun- lands. ishment that Is accorded enlisted men. Rank is no protection. ★ ★ ★ Our entire military force ^will collapse unless order is preserved and maintained on the same basis sbMn n all e< manders in all echelons are under just as much obligation to obey as the lowliest private. > The necessity may be greater. They set the pace. ★) ★ ★ Apparentlj^Major Arch £. Robxrts didn’t leam a^ing from the General Walkxr incldmt. He ran off at the mouth before ^e DAR in spite of a jwAming and today he’s a civilian, tiuthermbre, he’s in considerable disrepute in high places. He should be. jliCt’s concentrate our fireball tactics on the enemy and get along 'with~each other behind the lines at home. Many people are hoping that the Army haute him in for further action. f porter: An increasing number of people, especially (diildren, are receiving bad injuries by walking through glass dpors. Harby J. Klinolir come down from the hills lor a vitamin snack, the farmers complain to Graentog. He sends the protests to the Department of Interior and natal why thny don’t do something to stop it. Portraits ★ ★ ★ Yale was handed mijpe than $43 million in donn$l...:. Play Boyfto Ditto Oirl; “Don’t those Bottfcherners that are. you remember in^e? Three years a|:o shipping Negroes to dlstwt ,tapd ______________almdit unthin^^ I asked "you tt^arry me." May Oirl communities, , ££’'wui dtoappw. able commentaxy «h ^ existence to (yawntog) :’'‘lteWly? And dldl?”... ---|Harou) A. Fitzoirald ItdonriiMii Z..>X. • lying evnrywni I ahall sit around and listen . . . For your voice In deep blue air . . 'And especially 1 wish, dear . . . That you were beside me when . . . Silver moonlight in (he Itcaven . . . CMktt .its light on . Ote my darling, 'waiting ... For j heading htHre, jvlthto 3 very dirty job and that a mine sweeper wduld certainly come in handy. . ^ Interior .‘lecrewrji Stewart L. Udall got tolo another Jam on his last tour west when n’report came back that he bad sMd the women in the West had A stronger hand-ihSke ihiA the mim. give you it* name becauee 1 don't want to give the brand any pub-licily.” Iln didn't say thaj M all, viM pTOtoeto. What Ito really iwM, tel SMtete, ifMf ttaii “nro Fti'e-foot 5-inch Sen. John 'iW-er, R-Ttnt., lold a meeting of the Dutch Tr#ai Club In New York that * friendly IbxM iwbipapnr with a cirtolation "al amnll as I am” hM wiaribid bis phltaaoi:^ aa bstog “somewhat to the right f >i&ss,tSAartTO wa • j 7 \ -^ '• ^ CHAT At BREAKFAST - Among members of the Greater Pontiac Evangelical Minlslers’ Fellowship meeting for breakfast and program this week were (from Idft) Rev, Thomas Guest wm, of First Social Brethren “Church,'Rev. ,6. P. Eastmantof First United Missionary Church and fiev, I. H. Loera of the MeJcican Baptist Church. The fellowship meets once a month. Pontiac Area Pastors Meet iLEAVE BREAKFAST - Rev. Mrs. Lola P. Marion of Christian Temple and Rev.^ Eldon Mudge of New Hope .Bible Church in (Harteton are drawn as they leave the breakfast program PmUu Pr«u Photo sronsored by the Greater Pontiac Evangelical Jmnisters’ Fellowship Thursday. Meetings are -^eld at aark’s Restaurant, Montcalm and Baldwin Avenue. ^ Williams Lake Church of the Nazarene to A M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 1IAM- WORSHIP HOUR 7 p.Mf. worship hour 1st Presbyterian Pastor to Install Church Leaders PONTIAC CHURCH 6f CHRIST the “HrmU of Truth" Eoth Sunday - CKLW - 11 .A M. 1180 N. PERRY ST. EE 2-6269 r, r. Hall, Minhter Bible Study.........9:50 A M. Cloum (or All Ago* Morning Worship----10:50 A M. ■~AI Hio End of lK« Rood" Evening Worship ... 6:00 P.M. "Somo Scriptural Fojwwolls" WedncMiday Nfghl . . . - 7:30 P.M; Last summer a group of about 18 Pontiac area ministers b^ame interested in an area minikerial association. / After a fety^ meetings they formed the Greater Pontiac Evangelical Ministers’ Fellowship choosing Rev. Theodore R. Alle-’ bach of the Oakland Avenue Presbyterian Church as president. “Rev. G. J. Bersche of Christian Missionary and Alliance church elected vice president; Rev. Eldon Mudge of New Hope Bible Church in Clarkston, secretary-treasurer; and Rev. Philip W. Reorganised CHURCH OF JESUS.CHRIST, at Loner Doy Saintt l9FrontSl..Plonfioc FES-7542 11 A M. - Morning Servic* 7 PM - Evening Service Newly-electfed 'eldeps,^; deacons, trustees and Tuxis officers of First PresbyteriEm Church will be installed at the 11 a.m. worship service Sunday. ★ -k ★' Elders will include Asa Drury, Leslie FTTHlis, D. E. Rightmire, Orrin Huntoon, Probate i u d g iDdriald E. Adams, Robert Neflson, I Robert Will and Duane Lemaux. n- k |- Rev. Galen E. Hcrshey,, pkstor, ,will install the following couples deacons: Mr. and Mrs. Emil Bair, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sartcll, the Laurence McDowells, the Edward Markhams and Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. Hunt. Norman Allen. Charles E. tial-loway and Basil B. Kimball will be recognised nrlnistees. Tuxis officers to be installed are Tom Short, moderator^ Christine Bos, vice moderator; “ecky La-zelle, clerk; and Barbara Gray-, treasurer. Present eld-deacons and trustees will have part in the services. 'The Lord’s Servant” will be the “MKTMOOfST CHURCH 4 SOI MI. afiMENS STREET 10 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP . 7 P,M. EVENING WORSHIP WED., 7:30 P.M. PRAYER MEETING " Membefs to He» Duets, Trios, Splps and Mrs. Douj^las Brown will sing "My Heart’s Desire” at the Sunday morning worship hour in Memorial Baptist Church. The Senior Choir will sing “Love One Another-” ( Rev. Gerald Rapelje Will preach 1 “The Blewed Hope of God’s People" at the morning hour and “The Necessity of tl^e Atonement” will be his evening subject. A trumpet trio composed of Jacob Schwartz, Douglas Brown and Glyn Stone* will present rHe Lives.” The Youth Choir will offer Galilee” at the Sunday School .period. Prayer and Bible study IwiH be Wednesday evening. fiGgsMn Boldvyin at Foihnount- suNDAY School . ....to a.m. MORNING worship . .... 11 A.M. GOSPEj-HOyR............7 P.M. 7’r ' 220 North'Cots Lake Rood, ol M-S9 i . ' ■ , , r. ■O.fBERSCHE.fcrtor Sunday School-T 9:45 A.M. Youth Fellowihlp-6 P.M. \Wonhip-*Tl A.M. , Evening Service 7 PM. -WHAT IS A ' "BE FILLED ’ Christian with the spirit" ,...^ ‘ ........... theme of the pastor’s sermon at the 9:30 and 11 a.m. worship hours. The Chancel Choir, directed by Lyndon Salathlel, will sing ‘%st Thou Now Known” by Mulleri and Diane Beach will present “Alleluia” by Mozart, as- an offertory solo. Junior high young people are sending Saturday in. Dodge Com-rminity House, Detroit, in a daylong work project. The young people will assist in cleaning playgrounds and in washing and painting the interoir of Dodge House. . k k -k Sunday the Senior High young people will have ak^their guesf speaker Probate J ul^; e Adams, who will discuss his work with Thirty Sign Up forYouthCamp Sunday School Offering Going to Missionaries in Pakistan More than 30 young people have already registered camps and conferences sponsored by the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterianv Church. k k Church leaders are hoping 100 - more will ivaii themselves of the opportunity, buring the evening seralce tomorrow the film of* the IWl Camp Michawana will be shhWn. Music will be presented by the Qnisader Choir, Debra Rleredlth and William Coffing. k k k Rev. Theodore R. Allcbach will preach on “The First Concern of the Church” at 10 a.m. Sunday. The Sunday School offering ivlll be used to help''Rev. nrtd olonarles to Paklotiui. The Oakland Avenue bhnrch h a i been pdrtlally oupporllng the McBanea for aeveipl years. “Nothing But Rules” wilt be the theme of the Pioneer. Youth GCoup meeting at 5:45 p.hi. The Builder’s Group will discuss w to the Flfld” at the same hour. \ ■k k 'The most Important service flfjthe wteek is the midweek , serviix. If we see our churches move ahead in spiritual power, then t Mve mere people who will voluntarily and obodienrty pTay,” said Pastor Allebach.' Somers of Marimont Baptist Church, representative of members. The group currently consists of 48 area ministers with an average attendance at monthly meetings of about 30. Members meet tor breakfast sessions at Clark’s Restaurant, Montcalm and Baldwin Avenue. Break; fast is at 8:30; the program is m 9 t(i 10 a.m. k k 'The main purpose of the ministers’ group is a greater evangelical thrust in th^ Pontiac area. months have emphasized a balanced' Cliristian education program in the church, Christian psychology and missions at home aind abroad. “Youth >rotectfon services in Oakland CouMy and a study of what could be done to halt pornographic literature has aim been atressed,” said Rev. Mr. AUebach. “The group plans to place emphasis on Sunday School administration, evEuigelism and socIeQ action in the fail. “Ministers of all denominations agree to the statement of faith. All members are either of .the fundamental or conservative tradition in theology,” he added. The programs for the pas^ several | arc invited to attend if thby PLEASED WITH PLANS Rev. Qarence Jackson, minister of Christian education at Columbia Avenue Baptisb Church, (left) Rev. J. E. Van Allen of First Church of the Nazarene, and Rev. Lyal H. Howlsdh of First k>«nUs« PrcM rk*t* Free Methodist Church discuss the program of, the Greater Pontiac Evangelical Ministers’ Fellowship following the breakfast Thursday, morning. Marimont First in Class € Placed High in Sunday School Contest Rev. Philip W. SomCrs t presented a gift certificate to purchase books for the library of Marimont Baptist Church at tite ^c6nd Annual Conservative BaptistVYouth Rally in Lansing. The gift ^presented a record. Marimont Baptist Sunday School was placed first in Class in the state Sunday School Contest held In (March. K«v. JMr. Somers was notl-■ed this week that the ehureh was plaoed sixth In' aass B In leader; and Ed. Robert Shelton of First Baptist Church, and Jormer missionary, will be guest epoakcr. „ , k k k Others participating in fhe program will be Bob Hassebzahl, Dennis Vincent, Judl Woiiittck and Agnes Hassenzahl. Wanda Smades will be in charge of the program.' Teacbers of the elasses are Rev. Mr. Somers ahd Nelson lest alhpp ^lielil In Miroh, ThI Willing Worker’s Class will bo host to the Faithful Worker’ C!laBS At a chicken dinner at 7 tonight. Bob Gavette will toastmaster; Bob Keller, ■ The pastor will speak on "The Threshing Floor of Araunah” Sunday morning. “The Character of Jesus Christ” will be his evening topic. Providing music will be Ardie Watts, Alan and P h i 11 p Somers Jr. k k k * ■■■ Plans will be made for Dally Vacation Bible School when the Mary Martha CSrclejof the Mls-sinary Society tneets'atlBle'home of Eleanor Hassenzahl, 1560 Richmond St. Monday evening. ' CHURCH OF SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP * BEMIS.OLSON PpSTl-576^OAK^AN0 AVE. Sunday 7:30 P.M. — HpZel Oarmou of Del.'* j Thurs., May 10—Oi^sri Forunri—Message Service May 13—Motthew Cor(n^ll,,fpepRer Marimont Baptist Ctorch “ ^ ‘' '‘68 W. Walton ‘ . FE 2-7239 SUNDAY SCHOOL ...:...................10 A.M.. MORNING WORSHIP......................II A.M. "The Threshing Floor or Arounoh" EVENING iERVICE .............------- - 3^0 PM 'The Choroctsir of Josus Christ" Reverend Philip Somers preaching ift both , Public CortiwUy Invited [Owpuu KNOW GOD ■ ]n these troublesome days thinking men and women recognize that it is only through a iknowledge of God that they can find peace and a. sense of stability.-. . Through the study of Science 'and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy maH^ thousands have found that God ia-knowable; that He is unchanging divhie LoVe---the firotector and governor of HiS perfect creation. Science and Health may bo read or examu\ed, together with the Bible, at any^Christian Science Reading Roonv,^ >t may be piuebaaed at CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM 14 W. Huron S». i Faith Baptist Church 3411 AIRPORT ROAD SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. II A.M.-MORNING WORSHIP 7:30 P.M.-EVENING SERVICE [For Comfort and Sccnrl^ fit Declining Yean 22 JEffiemey Metirment Aparfmentt indndbig complete medical, Hospital, nursing care Additibit of the new tniilding iUustmted ^ above makes awdlable muisually desir* able petsoml apurtments for a Hiidied aof new xerident members. If you be interested fai making airan^ ments for complete c«» in a fine Christ tian envlioament your inquiry ia CluLa METHODIST HOME ...... CHELSEA • MiemdAN _____»lead Diustrated Circular and details regarding Re* l| ttrement Apartmenls. I| , Central AAethodist Ssfvicet Tsiziporarily at ; , ’ WE. Gory Junior MKTONH.BANK SOI N. Com loks ad. \ hUor H. H. Johnson and J. H. Hall, Associate Pastors MORNING WORSHIP 9:25 and 10:45 A.M. . "Children Afloat" Dr. Bonk^ preaching Broadcost Live on WPON -11 00 A.M.-Youth Fellowships—5:00 and 6:30 ^ Church School 9:25 A.M. qxid 10:45 A.M. FIRST METHODIST Snulh Soginew «i| Judson rmd T. Hart, rW MORNING WORSHIP 8:30 and 11 A.M. "Societies.Safeguards" Rev. Paul T. Hart, preaching CHURCH SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. ' M.Y.F. 6:15 P.M. • WED. 7:3(VP.M. BIBLE STUDY AND PRAYER FELLOWSHIP ST. t»AUL METHODIST tes R. Sawee kfike Rd. EE 2-S233-R 2r37S2 . AMsraing Worship lOiOO A.M. ond 11i15 A.M aurch School lOiOO A.M. « lntMmedhaeondAnierYeuAOrmi|M,MOP.Mi . Older Youths. AIM to ••aOf.M. while , MY.;jMaiAtoo Four Towns Methodist Church aM:.w.«whHeaMS,Nww S(iiHtoyScheel...v^. MSA.M: ............ Ild»AA4. 5w88d Covert Methodiat Church «wkto.acwwitoiw**.#ii. thwdsSeAiw.^.,.. tidJANL: OriiKlt SUwel. tltOdAJAi. METHODIST CHURCH Oronl St. at Auburn Rd. Henry W. PtoweR. Nilor Sundays^.......10.00 A.M. Memliia WdrsWp.,. .S III S A.M. Proyer Wed. 7,30 P.M. . , ; ST. lUKrS > METHODIST CHURtH ttSOIgllMitofRA ;:'WayMSi4ibi(lip.At^ t OiuKhS«ltoel.lCkOOA.M. ‘ ;McriitoaWtnMp.HrlSA.M. gATURDAY:£lklCJri)^62, CHUgciHOFTHe OOGO SAMARITAN -47«>Nilim»0r,W00 and 10:30 AM St. Trinity Auburn at Jeuio (Eoit Side) Ralph C. Claut, PaUar Sunday School... . 9>4S AM.. 4 St. Paul V Jotlyn of Third ^ (North Side) R«v, Maurica ShaektU Eorly Servico .......8:00 f Suildoy School-- ----9:05 A.M. loti SoTMCo.............t0:43 AM. Grace Corftor Gonosioo and Glondajp (Wott Side) , RiehardC. Stutkmeyar, Potuir Church Sorvico............900 A.M Sufldoy School.. .....900 A6M Church Sorvico......11:00 AM, Sunday School........ 11.00 AM , -Iho.lullior»n Hour-over WKMH V AM Every ^undoy "God and the World ot Budnesa** will be the sermon subject of Rat. Edward D. Auchard, iMurtor of the Orchard Lake Omunuhity Churdi, tyteriih tmoiraw at both worship setvlejes. ^ Chapel Choir compel of junior. high adiool young people will sing at 9 a.m. The Oiancel Chodr will'osing L a m. “4181*. Hark, My Soul' A party for members '0 dte Compel Choir is schedgletl for TuesdaK evening. Ninth graders will be promoted to the Wertmin-ster Chtrir. The Mother.Daaghter Baaguet of the Orehard Lake Churesh It Friday at i:BB pJn. The theme ortbe program ia "Aa fMeatal Mrs. George Beiry is in charge I decorations; Mrs. " Kotdi, kitchen; and Ri thorn, ticket chairman. ■A, dr. ■ ★ Mrs. Marge Helfrich will serve as toastmistress. L^mne Helfrich and Mrs. Edward p. Auchard, the toast to daughtm, including an original poem by Mrs. Richard Mrs. H^ld L Welch will pro»i„g for the Sunday School ^e music m the sanctuary pre-dud Edwards; and Goido cedhig the banquet. The program wUI leati Yastdm Yaanunoto of Bfiridm iya, dapaa who wUl be asrisi by doasoie Auchard. ^ Rev. Henry D. Jones wto dained the original Sea ’ Orchard Lake Church served as guest minls^ at ( [ the Swuner Or- chard Lake during ----------------- 1969 has returned to Totoo, Japan, bA a fratomai worker of the United Presinrterian Church in the U.S.A tiw In will qieak’ on "The Shepherd and ai)d J^pph on the north, to New - - ZealaiMil In the east, Oeykm in the south,,apd CHURCH of GOD East Rike at Anderson , Young Peppip* 1 Service ' " -j Wed.. 7:00 PM A specialist to/the of In- dustrial Evangelism, he will work with the East Asia Christian Council- / d Pakistan to the west. Man, Woman Procaacflb Sh Joiaph Porijih; Thah Raturn forCrownmg Iht. Sam Salas, of CMle, teadier of Engllrii in Oranbrook School is holding Classes to Engfish tor Spanlrii sphaktog people to St. Vto-cent"^e, Paul Catholic church at T:30 p.tn. every Thursday. isses are taught to these peo> pto may leant to rwd. write apd speak Engflish to prepartitUMi tor becoming Utdted States citizens. aasses are under the ausirices of Rev. Thompson Marcero, pastor, and Rev. Joseidt P. Fern-minineo, asgistant pastor. . ., PLAN BANqUnr Meeting to make lii^ plans tor the ■ I Bapmt ChuiRch, 175 Bfo. Jane Johnson of 265 Branch St., dinner chairman; kta./ Percy - HeConner of '1421 Fifanklto Road, ticket chairman; Mrs. Howard La'Grone of 47 aovesa St., cochairman; and Mrs. Lee''Atrice Stewart, general chairman. The festive affair will be at 6:30 p.m, Saturday. ‘ ^New Pastor to Be Installed at 1st Baptist ^ Rev. Robert Shelton, former missionary to pidnawa and Viet Nam. will be installed as pastor of First Baptist (^urch at 7:30 Wednesday Davis will be the officiant, evening will opoi with Rev. Love offering prayer. Speak- Others Charles Nwris of the board of trustees, Bnich Reh of board of missioas. Sam Thomas of the youth ^ group. Rev. John Timmi of visits- ^ Hnn mnel Dmar ITarlA Wilcem nt tha tion and Rev. Ksde Wilson of the, Firrt Baptist staff. Rev. Iheodsm lL AlMwch will Area Evangelical BOniaters’ Pel-lowshto and William H. TSylor. city oommiasioDer, wID speak • for the C|ty of Pontiac. Brief remarks will be made by Dr. Ray Bain of the Conservative Baptist Association of Midiigan. _. /., .. ^ _. Alto iMUtidpiding in the.service This council coordinates Chrio-wsii ... the 10 a., m. service of Holy Com-Church, 9960 Thlmor on the south side of Oxbow Lake will show a Council Changas Noma NEW YORK (J!»-The 48-year-old iCburch Peace* Union, an organization. of Protestaiiits, ^man Catholics and Jews seektog to foster international peace, [ has changed its name to the Coundl..cm Religion and International " * the Sheep," Rev. Wal^ Ballagh of.Lake Orion wiU affer prayer and a welcome from the diunch will be extended by Wayne Brien, of the pulpit committee. Edor fflih, “Buyer’s 6:15 ^“m. -Church _ ^ ____________ d friends are in FoUo^ng the nMponses of the Refreshments will be served, new pastor, the service will close Dottle Gilbert^ta Dancey are with the.singing Of "Lead On O to chaigeoLtoeSenior Fellowship. King and benediction. Heading the Junior High J’ellOw- ship are Gary Selton and Jim Church Rolls Doubled SIDNEY, Australia Ul — Membership in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Mormon) has more than doubled to Australia in the last three yean; increasing from 2,200 to 4,550. GOSPEL SINGfN(^ [ MON ITOR'S QUARTET I from I Indianapolis, Indiana I Intematipnally famous TV, I Radio sAd Racordlng Gospel Singers. Sunday, May 6, 10:00 and l^k))) ft.M. "ONE HOUR SING"|2:00 to i;00 P. M. Avondale Baptist Church 2155 Auburn Rd., near Crooks Rd. , (eilowahip bMir-~aith refreshments in die dnueh pailora. Pastor Shelton is a graduate of Bob Jones University where he met his wife, Nancy. Shortly graduatkm he wax'sent toFo by the university that he migdtt help DT. mdc HllUs to the mtoi try to Chinese to army camps. FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN } 46 NORTH ROSEUWN SuWiteySetiOOl I0A.M JUNIOR CHURCH 11 A M. Morning Worship— 11 o.m. by (he Poslor—Special Choir Music' 7 P.M. Evongelistic Service Sot. 7:30 P.M. Young Adult Class — Edword's Home APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRIST 458 Central Soturdoy Young People . .. Sunday School and Worship Sundoy Evening Service Tuei. and Thun. Service Church Phone FE ^<8361 AmckIqm toilor-WIUIAM PARENT Legge. George Hcvel and Merita Asplto will sing '“Hark, Hark. My Soul" by Shelley at both Sunday ig tiervices at First Methodist Churdi tomorrow. Rev. Paul T..Hart will preach 11 "§odety’s Safeguards.' Methodist Youth FeUowship will resent a color hoice” at 6; members and friends are invited. Rev. and Mrs. Sheltdh 'will re- to the atatee. After hix marriage to Nancy Harrison ef South Bend. tod. the Shel- FoUowing a furlough Uiey tfaep sent to Viet Nam ' four yean. Pastor Shelton has served as field directnr to both Okinawa and Viet Nam under Overxeas Cnisades. The Sheltons have three ^Idren, Becky, Shari and Daimy. ★ ♦ ★ AUBUEN HEIOHTS U. P. . Maifctog the hegtanii)g of National Family Week. Rev. F. William Palmer of the United Fres-byterian Church to Auburn Heights will preach Sunday morning ■Dlrfitowel , Christianity." Hie Chancel Choir will sing "Unfold, Ye Portals.” ^ The Youth Fellowship will meet t 6:30 p. to-Mrs. Arthur Lewis, 3746 Auburn Awe. will open her home tp the •Sarah Circle at 9 a. m. Tuesday. The Cub Scouts will meet at the church at 7 p. m. and both the Sunday School Cabinet and Sejit-skm will hold meetings at 7:30 p. m. ‘ 1 p. m. Wednesday Hw-'Es-Uier Circle will gather at the'home of Mn. Robert Benedict, Chenyland Chart. rSuhen uses' for church scheduled fhr 7: W p. m. wednes- The Woman’s Society for Christian Service will continue classes under the leadeirship of Mrs. John Rmdey at 9:30 Friday morning. monthly session will be at 7:30 jp. m. Hnirsday with Mrs. Dudley CUby in chaw- The executive U servo refiresh- George Hevel will be director of Vacation Church School to be held June 8T. JOHN MtBTHODlST Mrs. Anna B. Walker wiU be nest spe^er at the 11 a. Ionian’s Day service in St. John MeUwditt Church Sunday. Mrs. Ftomie Potter is chalnnan of the ly. Mrs. Margaret Daniels will be guest soloist. Rev. J. Allen Parker, his choir and congregatioh of Newman AME Church will have diarge of the 7:30' Sunday ewmlng service. Rev. Martin Bellinger, pastor, will attend the church conference in Cleveland, Ohio Tuesday through May 13. Rev. JRobert Hoover,. assistynt pastor of Newman AME Church, qnd Rev, Wll-liani WHght, assistant at ’Trinity Baptist Church, will conduct services in the absence of Rev. Mr. MUnger. TRINITY BAPTIST "Purifying the Fountain" will be }he theme of Dr. Joseph W. Moore at 11 a. m. Sunday in Trinity Baptist Church. Levi Eubanks will direct the Senior Choir. Church School will be at 9:15 . m.; Junior Church* at 10:15 m.; Baptist Training at 5:30 p. m. and a service of Holy Communion and Baptism at 7 p. m. CENTRAL METHODIST Central Methodist Church with services to Isaac Crary School will the beginning of Family Week with Dr. Milton H. Bank preaching on “Children Afloat" th^ 9:25 and 10:45 mosning serv-:es. A service of Holy Baptism be observed at the second worship hour. The Junior Choir wilTi^ing* "Give Thanks” by Williams and the Chancel Choir will be heard “Behold, Now Praise the 1^’ by ’ntcomb. Robert Stoner wll sing “The Twenty-Third Psalm’ byMatotte,* A tour of the n will be conducted at S p. m. Sunday aftemoou. The Membership Class for those uniting with the church to May wiU be hei|d to FeUowship Hall at 4 p. m. The School of Churchmanship wai be held in the church offices at 7:30 p, m. Monday. This is six-week school with two courses offered. Rev, Harold H. Johnson, associate pastor, will teach a class on The Bible and You." Dr. Bank will teach “The Meaning of Suffering.’’ MESSIAH BAPTIST Mrs. Bobbie White will present “This Is Your Life Pr^am’’ at ,7 p.m. Tuesday at Messi^ Baptist Church, Prospect at Paddock Street. Rev. Roy Chmmings,-tor, said the public is invited YOUTH FOB CHRIST The Youth for Christ Singspirar lion will be held from 9 to 10 (.m. Sunday at thO First Assembly of God Church, 210 N. Peny ■t. ' ■ ' ' Group singing will be led by Jer-ly Walker. Special music will be by Chrolyn Simmons and Mr. and Mrf,. Paul Gehman. PMGAgANT RIDOE The Pleasapt Ridge Bible Mrs, LaVeme Cox, Mrs. Norman REVIVAL SERVICES Beulah Holiness Church OSMUN and GOINGS streets Hear j REV, j/M.-SULLlVAN of Salisbury, Md. Old time first generation Holiness Preaching speciaL'singing Services l^ightly 7:30 PM everyone WELCOME The Church Wliara Ydu’ijy Hover o Strongor >, Luncheon apeaker at the ’Tuesday meeting of the Episcopal Churchwomen of Christ Churclr Cranbrook will be jSfra, Alice # I Burlingame. Her toplcNirilf be “Gardena of Meditation and Our Jeiw of tho Naflonal Calliednit la Washtogton, d. C. Author « IW btek, “Therapy Through Horticulture," Mrs. Bup-Ungame Is currently directing the creation of n clolatw courtyard at jchrist Churrtilu Morning workshops will follow WILMA POWELL )epartinent Head 0 Lecture at Unity Wilma Powell, director of the correspondence department of Unity School of Christianity at Lee’i Summit, Mo., will lecture at I “,m. ’Thursday In the Unity Church t Oakland County, 8 N. Genesee Ave. Her subject will be “The Orbit ; oi Truth.” ► rv»»v.ir ' ^ worker In Silent Unity for sev-■cral years she has had wide expe-Aiicp- VY. rience as a Arid lecturer and a teacher in the Training School at Unity Village. She will speak to Birmingham, Royal Oak and Detroit at later dates. Rev, Mrs. Diane Seaman, min* later, will speak on ‘"The Wilderness Road” at the 11 a.m, gervice foinprfovA Sunday.School, Uniteens andT otheiK|tudy groups meet at the same hofir. 4he publU; Is Invited to all servims and lectures. ^12 EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREI qntlot SUN&AY school-945 A|vr. IP-l).00 AMr-''lOV« YOUTH HOUR-5.43 P.M,' VM^R-7.00'PM.-'T Will Aoli* ThM" 'Spwial Mud:; Numbcri by Youth Mlmtunn Rm>. M. W, fe'twrwi ilm, "Darkness in New Delhi" at :30 tonight to the churcto A discussion‘will follow. Rev. Henry Campbell of Dexter will speak. Rev. Lyle Harmon said the public ia invited. The Providence Missionary Baptist - CSiun^ will Jte host to the Citywide (jholr Union at 3:30 p.m. Sunday. At 7:30 p.m. Rev. Claude Goodwin will conduct a service of baptism and Holy communion. XhoirMambtfs Offaring Minstral Sho«r Sunday , /The Adult Choir o( Trtaily Methodist iaiundi,.-Watediu^ Ttonnblp-wUlTtresefft a ntostrel riww tonfl-ty itigM dtoner from 6 to 8 pxn. SuBiday at the Community Activities Center, on WilUanu Lake road. '‘Safitocio" Ig scheduled tor 3 pan, Sunday. Meh will cany the large statue of Our Lady of Guadalupe. Women win tbiM red roees and 'hear can shirtx and blouses if they SL Josapk.OsliioUe Ohnrah wiMM Rev. B. i, Jarsembowskl vrtB speak to the group. Everyone will riiturn to 5t, ,Vln-ixtnt's tor benedlctloip/ and the crowBtng of the wreath of roses. Each woman wfll lay her roses at the feet of the statue. A group of Catholic Sisters from Mexico is coming to the Pontiac area to start a new aociety tor Spanish $oung people.'flhey will have the first meeting to the parish hall Thursday JV>dng. The program will proVla^whole recreation. Under the direction of Jack By-rs choir members will appear, in costutoe. Each family is asked to bring a dish to pass and table service. laiel Addis of Oakland Park win iwrach "Great TMnga From Sman BijighuiingB." "When 1 Survey the Wondrous (fross” wUl be given by the choir tor the offertory. * * * . Sunday SeWt is slated tor 9:30 m. with classes for every age group. Sunday services are held in the Schoolcraft School on Mace-day Drive. BETHEL Tabernacle iM.rUMMMlCImKlKlIMw S.S.I0AM WonMgltAM. Sum, Tum. and Thun., 74X) PM Rtv. oml Mrt. E. Crew;h 1348 SoMwin Aw - FE 3g2M REV. IBA H. TAYLOR Missionary to Speak at Nazarene Church Rev. Ira H. Taylor, educator, administrator, and missionary for four t^ftihs Th Sdulh America, will speak in a Pontiac Zone Missionary Rally, Monday at 7:30 In the Zion Qiurch Of the Nazarene, 239 E. Pike St., where Rev. Harold Harris 1« pastor. Rev. Mr. Taylor was graduated from Northwest Nazarene (tollege, Nampa. Idaho. He look graduate work at the University of Wash- Master’s His missionary work began in 1934 In Bolivia. He also served 'to Chile. Mrs. Taylor is author of the missionary book, ■Trbies and Nations from the South.” So long as we low we « so long as we Are loved by others. I would say that we are Indispensable; and no man is useless while he has a^friend. — Ste UNITY 8 N. Gcneim . FE 5-2773 Diana Seaman, Minister „ The public is inviled to' hear WILAAA POWELL From Silent Unity and Unity Training School, speak Thursday, May 10 at 8 p.m. on 'THE ORBIT OF TRUTH" • A special message of the True Way of Life SUNDAY SERVICES 11 p.ni. "The Wilderness Road" 11, o.m. Sbrfday School Classes for all NORTH EAST COMMUNITY. CHURCH EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN Mt. Clamant ot Faotharilone _ Sarmon: "Honds Upon Our Chlldran" — Nursary Dadfcolion of aildran Coftaa Hour Following Worihip Sarvlc# 945 A.M. Church School 11:00 A.M. Worship Hour / L L.SCHEIfELE, Mlniitar______\_________^_____________« 8-tU BAPTIST ‘'^'CHURCIi __ w-«t-, ' 64 West Columbia Ave. FE 5-9960 Sunday School......................9.45 A.M. Morning Worship....................)Q:55 A.M. Evening Service .. ., -----..... ...■.*^7;30‘P.M. Rev. E. Clay Polk, Pastor -CLARENCE B. JACKSON, Mir\(ster of Education Affiliated wtfh Southern Boptist Conventionr ♦ Membership Over 9^500,000 / Youth hr Christ Leader Corriing to First Baptist Rev. James Savage from Lima, era will be at First Baptist Church for the service at 7 p.m. Sunday. He is making a few'stops in the States en route from Litoa to a meeting of Youth for Christ International in Switzerland. The representative of Youth for Ctorist in Latin America, he directed the advance work in preparation for the Dr. Billy Graham ;in America/[his past winter. He v|prked with Dr, Graham Ip the Lima campaign and also in the(cami tiago, Ctoile. ' [ ■. Savake ipa^ in San- Bev. Mr. he, Work >■ plans of Youth for Christ national In reaehingt young people around the world. Rev. Robert Shelton, pastor of the First Baptist Churfch, will speak at the 10:45 morning wor-Tlp. Another frature of the evening service wUI be the appearance of the choir of South Baptist (tourch Lanstog. ’Thidvis a choir exchange night and First Baptist (tooir will be singing at the south Baptist Church. FIRST CHURCH OF OOD 25 Eod 8lvd. South Gsiwrol OfflcM Andtrtoit, Ind. LTD. Jbhmon, Mlnliiwr "A Unit«d Church for a Dlvldod World" Siinddy School ... . 930 a.m. I STIAN FAMILY" Evening Service ,.. .*. 6(30 p.m. • ''MISTAKEN TBMIS" ‘ Youth FeUowihlp .... 5:30 p.M. The'SALVATION ARMY 29 W. Lawrknee Street Sunday School 9:45 o.m. Young People's Legion 6 p.m. Morning Worship ll o.m. Evangelistic Meeting 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. LIEUT, and MRS. GARY B. CROWELL GoodMiak-Siuglns-Tmt to th« Word PnacUng ‘ God Meets With Us—You, Too, Are Invited ^ First Presbyterian Church HURON AT vyAYNE REV. Q^EN E. HERSHEY B D . • PASTj^R * WORSHIP SERVICES......9:30-11:00 CHURCH SCHOOL 9:30-11:00 BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH ' 3600 T«lsgraph Rd. North ol VVest long lokt Rd. Sunday School.!0 AM. Evening Worship 6 P.M. Morning Worship 11 A.M. Prayer Meeting Wed. 7.30 P.M. Rev. Harold W. GleMke, Poitor Phone 647-3463 ■ FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH COK OAO.AND AND SAGINAW stiff(TS ‘ Rev. Robert H. Shelton,. Interim Poslor 9,45 A M. SUNDAY SCHOOL (Clossei for All Ages) 10.45 AM MORNING WORSHIP SERVICE (Motntge Brwtdoett Over CKLW at IldW) REV. ROBERT SHELTON, fVittor Spddklng 5:45 P.M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP GROUPS . 7.00 P.M. EVENING EVANGELISTIC SERVICE REV. JAMES A. SAVAGE, timo, Peru Wedneidoy, 7i30 P.M. Midweek Pfoyer Service "HOLDING FORTH THE WORD OF LIF|" X mms. A J ■ SEVEN May Breakfast Siinday ’^The Senior Usher Board o£44ew-uun AME Church «U1 gay May 20, has appealed to clergymen of aU faiths to participate in 'It is most fitting that Michigan ...heglo^ “ ■ ■■ ■ Foundations Day in wh values of other people or yott Will * ^ fafl.-Walter B. WESLEYAN METHOdlJ^T 67 N. lYNN 5T.' ^ SUNDAY.SCHOOL . . tftOO A “ we acknowledge the goodness of God to the pwqiile of-our state,” said DY. Samuel C. Weir, executive of the United Preimyterian Church, i^nod Of Michigan. "Xiiere are many wUeh'wK of «l (Sill jiin It Is fltting that we ehonld pauee to (Mweld^. these.Mces- In.s * . Inge, to give mink, for the^ Sfh Amversorv and to consider how we may . best express our gratitude,'* added Dr. Weir. All Next Week He pointed out that several fhiths and denominations have prepared statements on the relationship of their groups t6 the early history of Michigan. “This histoti- The congregatioi; of SI. Missionary Baptist Church. Bagley St., will observe tdh aitnivenaiy of aU Sunday School... 10:00 A:M. Shnddy Worship.. 11:00 A.M. Sunday Evening . . 7:30 P.M. Wednesday Choir .. 6:30 P-M.. Wedn^oy Prayer 7:30 P.M. Saturday Service .. 7:30 P.M. Rev. Tommy Guest, pastor EE 2-0304 FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD ' 210 N. PERRY Sunday School 9:45 A.M. "Loyolty Progrotn for ll Six Weeks. Please Bring Your Entire Family/' FULLY DEPARTMENTALIZED T1:00 A.M. Morning Worship A-Rich and Reumrding Servife EvCingelistie Rally-7:00 P.M. CHOIR-TESTIMONIALS PRAYER FOR THE SICK SPECIAL MOTHER S DAY SERVICE MAY I llh A for Every Mother ^AMitYNIGHT EACH^WED. 7:30 P.M. . PASTOR ARNOLD Q. HASHMAN at- Baldwin Evangelical United Brethren Church with Rev. Myron R. Everett preaching on “Committed to Love at Home” at 11 tomorrow. During the Vesper service at young people will present the program. The family hymn sin^ will led by Jeity FrederikpGh.SSusan COLLECT FOB CHURCH — Rickie Gay Moore of 9 Ottawa Drive (left) and Martha Timmerman of 312 Ottawa Drive are \ollect-ing newspapers for the Youth World Ewngel-ism Appeal sponsored by young people oVtlie . Pratlnv Preu ipiioU Church of Godl Th^ project is to build a chutch and youth emtdr in Tokyo, Japan. Rickie and. Martha are/members of the Pike Street Church of God. ligion today will provide a fipd of materials for use in connection with the observance,*’ he said. Dr.'Wpir, in listing a number of suggestions for observance of the day, said various denominations will need to adapt the ideas to meit the variations involved in differing days ,of worship. SUGGESTIONS General suggestions for Spiritual Foundations Day observanoe were listed by Dr. Weir as follbwsi Services of worship, in which appropriate hymns. Scripture readings, prayers and sermons, are included, emphasizing the propriety of the recognition of our spiritual foundations ahd the means by which they may be maintained strengthened. • Inclusions in sermons, church bulletins, news stories, etc. the p^amble of the state constitution; “We, the people of the Stale of Michigan, grateful to Almighty God for the blessings 0|f free-and earaeatly destrlug^o WORSHIP.,...,,... i 1:00A.M. W.y.P5.^---- . . . ... 6.4S P.M. EVENING SERVICE . C . , 730 PM WEDNESDAY,' , . . ' •PRAYER and BIBLE . . 7:30 PM, ■ >tV. J. M. KaVaNAUGH, MlnUWB iiHiily Thanks :hiiicynr Doctor lODGEWAT. S. C. - Episco- ..................g a do<;tor brought an of thanks from Senior Choir and ICde rus will be in charge of flie service Sunday A. B. Davis, master of Nick Cartdr wiU give the. Conte and. Rev. Paul C. Csoic; the Lake a preach Hk the CUy upeaklng aai Baldwin Evangelhal UL B. to Observe Family Week each eveitag wtth mlaMafi'at ■d .■whew The oommittee planning Hie af-I PHILADEIJ'HIA «* — A physi-fair includes Claieme McBride.P^iatrist. Dr. Paul inclU( chairmaii; Mrs. Sadie Bettis. chairman* Mrs. Lucile Peck. Mary Vinegar, Mrs. Clotee and Mrs. Doris Russefl. Others are Mrs. Ruby Eugene Bettis, Mrs. Mary thony, Mrs. Matilda Hinsoa Mrs. Mildred MdBride. All visittog to bring theh I from Loneliness’ ^|(WesHniiister Press) that the ai^ n’s sense of isolation s in ieHowship and community "> hy the grace of God- ami What yoa ttrink. yokt become. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ■ SUBJECT^DR SUNDAY "EVERLASTING PUNISHMENT" Sunday Services and - Sunday School H:00A.M. WednesdoydEveriing Services 8 P.M. Reading Room 14 W. Huron Si. Open Daily 11 fM. to 5:P.M. - .Friday to ^ P,M. ' First Church of Christ, Scientist Lawrence ond VVilliams Streets PONTIAC, Family Week will be observed | Hard.V and Ixista Stanley will Killen will play a piano solo* and Danny Lovse will presem an organ solo. Singing a duet will be David Kirby nn4 ItonaW , lk^ Ermadene Cornett, Phyllis United Church Women to Hold State Meeting The 33rd Anpual Meeting of the United Church Women of Michigan will be held. Wednesday at the/ Episcopal CathedjydT Church of Paul, 4800 Woodward, Detroit.-The delegates will assemble ^ht 1:30 sum., •coming frbfW every of the state and rejiresentlng ifpr-ly all the major-Prote s t p n t churches. They will be welcdmed ■ ■■ - - ■ frow- by the Rt. Rev. ATchie ley, Suffragan Bishop of the/Episcopal^ Diocese of Michigan. ,' ■ ★ Ik____/• Featured will be an addresp on Michigan’s ConstItulionAI Convention by George Romney, a vice-pre.sidont of the Convention. Other speakers will be Mrs. G. Merrill Lenox and, Mrs. Fred Buschmeyeft Mrs. LeRoy V. Walcott, Grhnd Rapids, is president of the Urtited-. Church Women. /CHURCH of CHRIST 210 HUGHES ST. FE 5-1156 Rootevelt WeUa, Evangelht Sunday Bible Study for all ages, 9:45 o i Sunday Worship Periods 11 a.m. osd 7 p.m. Tuesday Weekly Bible Study 8 p.m. Iht Church Ihol' "SpMkd oi lh« OroclMOteod" - (WTE«4,1I) sing a trio selection. The vesper message by the pastor is “Taking Christ pome.’’ The annual Mother-Daughter Banquet will be,'held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the church parlor. The Fellowshijt Bible (3lass will meet at 7; 30 , p.m. Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. V/ilbeit Hiscock, 2771 N. Lake Drive. New Pastor Coles^unday R^v. XIark to Conduct worship as Minister at Fine Hill Church Hev. Hurry W. Clark will conduct his finst worship service ds minister of the Pine Hill Congregational Church tomorrow. Formerly associate pastor apd miplBter to youth at First Congregational Church, Royal Oak, he fills the vacancy due W the retirement of Rev. Dr. Alfred D. Grey. Rev. Mr. "Oark’s sermoA topic will be "Slicks and Stones. Mrs. Loraine Halsey of Troy Methodist Church will be guc.st soloist. ■ Following the worship service the board of deacons and deaconesses Is Inviting everyone to remain for a coffee hour to booome acquainted with the The >tSuth group will meet at ie:^me oL.Lee Marshall, 5575 Westwood Lane, Birmingham at BREAKS GROUND - Dr. J. Allen Parker turned the first shovel of earth in groundbreaking ceremonies for Newman AME Church this week. Also participating were (from left) Mrs. B. L. Long of 169 Branch St., secretary of the building fund; Rev. Robert I pastor and trustee of the Newman Church; Dr. Parkey, p£st6r; and Mrs. L. C. 'Smith of 219 Rapid-St., genera) chairman. The t will be located at brush and Bagley Sfreett. AH services including Sunday School and Bible study class for high school students begin at 11 m. each Sunday' at the Pine Lake Elementary School on West Long Lake Road. U of D Holding Counsel Course for,Priests Emmanuel Baptist Church 645 S. Telegraph Rd. it — Independent ~ Fundomenlol REV. V. L. MARTIN SPEAKING 10 A.M. and 11 ^M. 7 p.M. Baptism ' I- ■ Radio Broadcast WPON 10:15 A M. h Sund4<'' 1 Each ! T Sunday School Attendance Last Smday: 1466 * A two-week summpAnstititte for priests in the theory and practice of counseling will be held at the University ql Detroit from July 23 August 3. The course, which will be held from 1 to 4 in the a(ternoop, pro-’1es ( wo hours of graduate credit psychology. Rooms arc available on the U-of D. McNlchols Road campus and meals may be obtained in the stu-^ dent union ciiifeleria. , For further infprmmlsn contact Dr. Francis A. Ariinghaus, dlivc-tor of summer session. University of Detroit, Dctrjlt 21. TTie first week will consist of an exposition of some qf the more baffling aspects and problems of daily personal behavior. The second week will be focused on psyetwlogl-_ counseling and its use in educational and pastoral wjork. Teaching the courab will be Rev, Vsn F.- Christoph,' 8,4f., chnlriiiHii of Ihc depBiirtient of sociology at (toiizaga University and Rev. Jolut J. Evoy, H.J., chairman of the deparlineni of psychology at the same achool. Analyzes Council Plans NEW YORK * — Plans and prospects lor the coming Vatican Council In Rome later this year are analyzed in detail 4q a new book, ‘"The Ecumenical CUuncU, The Churiih and Christendom,” by Archbishop Lorenz Jaeger, of Paderborn, 'Germany, published by P. J. Kenedy & Sons. He says a universal' longing for Christian unity sets the. atmosphere fof the council. FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Lake Ave. f ■ y \‘ 5/6 Orchard Lake Ave. SUNDAY Service 7:3o p.m ., GUEST, SPEAKER President and lj*aslfr: Rev. Marshall FIRST NAZARENE 60 STA^E STREET ^ MAY 3-13 (To«igl,f 7:00) . DEEPER tIFE SERVICES , "Singing Chotfields" VARIOUS MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 4 and COMBINATIONS SUNDAY SERVICES'' _ 7:00 P.M. REV CHAS. lIPKER Hear Thi» Intoreihng Sjpiaokar, Whose j Ministry-H6s Thrilled AiidieiiawJhwi>Meifte to Californio, CokH PAA PONTIAC TONE N«nRMlY|d^^ 74WPJA -HEAR THE CMATHEIOS AND RCV. CHAS- UHcfeC* ’ THE CHATFlitDS MUSICIANS .e SINCtitS 4 ^ I '/./ “ tfrr* ■■ ^ Ctu^s . Jtpr Reports ^.raE^O^jTUC PRK83, SATUaaAY. l^y*»/j^6gi/\. / ' ___. ' *'' Nj ...’ . ^ * ■)) t ■ " -" ~“'p~ .!~-4- - j, Hie Ortenvflle l^'oman’s Qub was hnrtea^to the Oaklend \ Oounty Federatkm ef^Wom- J en!« Chibe ftlday in the Or-tonviUe Metbodiai Church. ^Twenty-elx club {tresldents 'vend Mumal re!potti at the lunchMM mee^ wmI Mrs. I. J. Gouin ot Lnice Orion re> ported on the Midiigan state^-fedemtion convention in Bat- A receptiop In the Bloom* Held Hills home ot the Fran* <;is C. Gallaudets followed the' marriage of their daughter-Marlon Michele to Lt. tj.g.) George Van Kula Jr., US^.' today in Hdy Name Church. An heirioom veiUof -Venetian lace on point d’esprit, extended over the cohrt train of tie creek. Jhe Brandon High School tion of Dan Ritsema. Mrs. Ralph Main. Birmins-ha/n, president of the- southeastern district, instalied Mrs. Gouin as president; Mrs. Forbes Hascali, Birmingiuim. first vice president; Mrs. William Gilbert, Oak Ridge, second vice president; Mrs. William S. Gault, Roy^V * recording secretary^ Mrs. Gehrge Goble, Rbchester, cor-• responding secretary; Mrs.l F.me#Novack, Milford, treas-~S«rer. ' - ■ Directors are Mrs. Richard N. Cbgger, Lathrup Village; Mrs. George Mfoser, Fem-da||e, and Mrs. Ralph Scho-walter d Berkley. in Holy Name Churph Ceremdrfy hlto white vfolets, lillm and ivy comprised the bridal bouquet. \ttendint their sister were Mrs. Ralph A. Sturgess XlT New Britain, Conn., aid An-dree Gallaudet, Bloom tie iel'tt'; , aiid the brldegromn's sister, Mrs. John Johns, New . Baltimore,' who were bride»-r lem, Va. .v / . Grandparents of the hride. are the late Edward Asidh Skaes of Pontiac, Mrs'. Edson F. Gallaudet, Pine OrdMird. Goon., (who attended the wdd-.dinglandthelateMr.GaDaa-^t. The bridegroom’s gcand- Kula whs junior attendfuit. Mothers, Dacight^s Gather - of white freesia and ivy complemented Jheir di-esses 6t light green peau de sole worn with ivy wreath crowns and ivy green shoes. Schubecks, $t. Michaels. Pa., and the late George V9n Ku-las, lynkNitown, Pa. The nuptial mas$ of the Byzantine Rite was served , I’s brother, Master^ I Kula. Mothers and daughters of Central Methodist CBiffeir'' quet in the FirM: Federal Savings and. Loan Association of Oakland club, rooms. Mrs. Wesley Johnson was mistress ot ceremonies and Ellen Tayloi^gave the invoca-tion. Mrs. George Putnam led group Singing with Mrs.' Nelda Sink at the ^no. . Charles B; Shubeck, Malibu, Calif., stood ^as'best man for ' his nephew, son of the George Van Kulaa, Detroit. Brothers of the bridarcouji^e, Thomaf and David Van Kula; Detroit, ushered with Edaon F. Gallau-dett II and Thomaa H. Gallaudet, Bloomfield HUls. . s.-f^ White cymbidium orchids accented Mrs. GailaudeCs Ital-'ian silk blue print costume suit Mrs. Bhlt^ Renai^.of troit -showed films of • he State of Michigan^lo Ululate her -iecture Century Tao.’ Officers forjhe^ Oakland County Federation of IF omen* s Clubs were installed Friday at the annual luncheon meeting in the Ortonville Methodist Church. Mrs. Henry M. Simpson, Beach Street (gt left), is ^TwaifirtF~7^'7>ttA/ici7y cochairman; Mrs. Ralph A. Main. Birming-holds B.S. ^ ^ (ident, southeastern district, presents the gavel I A dent, i Detrgi (at right), was-guest spedlxr. and M.S. degrees in geology from University 61 Michigan and was recently a geologist with the Michigan survey division of the Conservation Department. She is presently lecturing on the staff of Wayne State Uni-' versity andJhe Ford Foundation in the continuing education program. Auxiliary Holds May Meeting Attepding from Pontiac Woman’s Glub were Mrs. William Dorris, Mrs. Oarence Myers, Mrs. Edgar H. Learned! Mni, Grace Steeves; Mrs. Turris McCully; Mrs. ’ Herbert N. Watson ^d Mre. Henry M. Simpson. Representing the Round Table C^ub were Mrs. Randail E. Spurgeon and Mrs. Leon Belknap. Mrs. Jcmph Phillips of the Women’s Literary dub of Pontiac was also present. Quadrille Club Closes Season The Elks Sa-Shay Quadrille Club has closed its season at the annual dinner dance in the Elks’ Club ballroom. Howard Bond directed a group of'Variety dattets and callers were William Schmiel, '-Howard-Upton and Oscac-Den-... ham, incoming president, whose recent birthday was . honored. The May meeting of the Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce Auxiliary was held at the Rotunda Inn. s Members discussed {dans for the annual June dance scheduled for Saturday, the second, at the AMVETS HaU. Caribbean Cruise is theme of the social of which Mrs^ Richard Templeton is chainnan. Mrs. Templeton was elected president of the group for next year at Wednesday’s, gathering. Assisting her will he Mra. William N. Kennedy, vice preMdent; •Mrs. Thomas Roc. secretary: Mrs. E. W. Watch-pocket, treasurer: and Mrs. Norman O’Brien Jr. and Mrs: Daniel E. Allen, board members. Incoming offiifer^ Will l)e installed June 13 at a joint meeting with'lhe men’s organization at Michigan State University Oakland. Decorations wcfc Tcidied for the t^ual state convention in Flint Friday and Saturday. Delegates from the group will be Mrs. Richard Jorgen.sen, Mra, Templeton, and , Mrs. Kennedy. Mrs. Donald Weddle was .congratulated upon receiving the (Ustartnwara'asoS^^ ’ ing associate member, after which the auxiliary i" /. J. Gouin, Lake Orion, mctfming presi-\kland County Federation. Mrs. Bruce Kenaud, Womens Section “Pattern for Living,’’ theme for-the levening, presented by Mrs. Chimes Steeber and demonstrated by Sharon Danieb as she fashioned a dress on a form, using yard goods. Mrs. Donald Porritt Jr. wrote the script in original poetry form. ’The. tributes to daughters were sung ,by Mrs. RusseU VesseUs. to Ju^; Mrs. James Hon to Jerllyn and Mrs. Robert Wisdom to Shelly, accompanied by Mrs. Willbm Bull^ who sang to Janet. shoes. Mrs. Van Kula c beige silk ensemble, moss green hat and shoes and corsage of green cymbidium orchids,... ’The newlyweds will honeymoon in Canada and New Eng-' land en route lo Bainbridge Naval Training Center, Bain-bi^ge, Md., where Lt.. Van . Ma will ,be an ipstructor. He/' \ras graduated cum laude Irom i Notre Dame. Unlveriity. Hto bride is an alumna of Georgetown Visitation Preparatory School. Washington, and at- l^BS. GEOBOE VAN KVLA JR. Abby Says: A to *he Wise Talk fq Your Friends Kindly; A^k Dad to took Into Mirror By ABIGAIL VAN BUBE.V DEAR ABBY: AU my friends are either 16 or 17. I like my friend? and i to keep thema a.s frieii^., I my problem; My| l.'ither wears a. balr piece and{ uhen he walks by. ray friends, they say an cruel. They will --------------- , you approach them setfots^'. P. S. Your father's hould take a long Took at his hair the new 1962-63 seasolT - make fi his hair piece. My father never says thing to them because be u | too emixurrassed. Abby..Jhaw ' can I ten my fiends to ^t makihg fun of my father? BOTHERED DEAR BOTHERED: Tell them that their sense of hu- . DEAR ABBY: A neighbor borrowed our vaporizer and she never return^ it. When....... we needed it. I had to go to her house and get it. She I’m sorry you had to come aft^r it. I guess I should have - nShmtoil: it.” " Then husband turned to me and piped up, “There is no reason for us to have returned it. You knew where ja}g.,.vaportzer^a#'-and^-^te^^^ just as safe at our house as it is at yours!** Can' you 'imagine anyone so inconsiderate and stupid? How can we refuse to lend things without giving our neighbors the impression that we ate selfish? NOT SELFISH PEAR NOT SELFISH: Not all neighbofb are as inconsiderate and ignorant as the husband of your friend. But a good, rule is: “Neither a bor-lender be.” pros|N|Ctive bridegroom who ..-prefers twin beds. Women would be surprised to know how many men would rather sleep alone but who don’t admit, it., for fear of being ridiculed. I think two people sleeping in one bed is the most stupid of all mar- ■ riage customs. It was understandable in the log cabin days due to lack of space. But in this health-conscious 'age why should an inteUlgeot . adult put up A vocal tribute to mothers was offered by Charlene Sayre, Judy Slade, Debby Sibley, Lor-rie Taylor, Suzy and Debbie Sayers. The Tuesday program’ closed with a humorous skit by Mrs. Roscoe Lund, and benediction given by Mrs. William Taylor. Angel Spencer was honored on her sixth birthday and Mrs,,.. John Hartwlck for Jiffl*- Motfi-er’s Day birthday. The oldest moth& present was Mrs. Ada Schreck. Five great-grandmothers wWe also honored; For Quarterly Meeting WCTU Convenes Eight ( were represented at' ifie quar-Jerty of the Pontiac Federation, Wmnen’s Christian Temperance Union, in’ Bethany Baptist Church. Assisting Mrs. Bullock, chairman: were Mrs. Harold Sibley, program; Mrs. Norbert Hoffman, decorations and favors; Mrs. Efhery llolcomb, tickets. The men of the church served as waiters. Mrs. Nellie Monroe, federa-'tion president, greeted state, district and local officers after Mrs. L«roy Shafer’s opening prayer. Mrs. T^ieodore Alle-bach chose the second chapter of Second Book of (Jironicles for her devotional message. State Vice Pr^ident Mrs.. Doris Tagsold spi^ on ‘T>ec-ade of Destiny’’ and "Poimlar fallacy of the Word, Moderation.” Mrs. L. G. Rowley, state president, spoke concerning “Membership, the Christian’s Responsibility.’’ Mrs. George -■Feririns, l«th distript prari- legs suddenly flung across his chest, snoring, cold feet and having one side of the bed' slanted down becau|e< of weight difference? Can you explain it? PENSI DEAR PENSI; I haven’t seen any surveys on how ntnny married couples sleep apart and, if so. Whose idea it was. But I would guess that as many women prefer solo slumber as men. As for cold feet, flying arms and legs and snoring, it’s the little woman who takes the beating. ' A 'A,. I DEAR ABBV: I^y of your men readers, including myself, must agree with the For Abby’8 booklejt, "How to Have a Ijovety Wedding," -send 50 cent? to Abby, pare of The PontlaP Press. Temple No. 41 Hostess to, Pythias Convention' dent, chose tor her topic “Challenge and Goals.’’ Leonard Perkins, president of Sadie Patten’s Youtti Tem-l^ranpe Council, reported tm a . rally and spoke on the approaching camp time. Mrs. Bonnie Hartzman, Mrs. Lois Bradley and the Mary Morton unit 'offered imistear 'The Dora B. Whitney unit assisted Mrs. Grace Steeves, hostess chairman, t Mrs. Alta W. Smith of Duluth, Minn., was a guest. . - Rev. Leroy Shafer closed the fellowship with prayer. t Spts Polio Clinic ’The (jooley School Parent-Teacher Association will sponsor a polio clinic at the school Tuesday from 6 to 7:30 p. m. Charge for inoculations will be II. PonlUo Preu Pbola Proceeds from a benefit sale at 9M.t}i.Friday in Waterford Community Center, sponsored,by Belter Home and Garden Club's civic committee, will ' help purchase tu/o wheel chairs, similar to the one above used by Mrs. 0(we Dingman, for Oakland County Medical Care Facility. Shown with Mrs. Ding-man are club members (from right to left) Mrs. Ardo Crocker, Mrs. Richard Parker and. Mrs. Warren Oakley, the fa^litys superintendent of nurses'. Fannie E. Tompkins Temple No. 41 Was hostess for the recent annual convention of District 7, Pythian Sist<»Ts of Michigan, in the tonights of . Pythias hall. MnS' Autumn De-mick, Clawson, district’ depiity.:.^^ Offer6d 4he opening prayer and conducted the sessions. The hostess group conducted the opening and closing rituals, presented the colors and welcomed the assembly. Lafayette Unit, Detroit, gave the response. in Flint with the ] Temple, hostesses. Caldron No. 70 Holds Meeting BAR Planning Picnic Salm on Frk|ciy Genetsd Bldiardson charter, Daughters of the Amencan nevolutlon. held Its May meeting «t the Motorway Drive home oi Mri. Flraiik B. Oerls. Hrs. Louis .West, chaplain, t gave the devotions and led tber ilroup In the “Pl«d|e of Allegiance” and the “Alneri-oan'a Creed.*' Mrs. Bradley Schtt then reported on ha- Diporte foom the DAtt^Onli*-tlneiitel *“ u were‘preeiiBted by tile Regiwt, m,Un.W.n. Cf’LavRhlin. Mix. T. W. Jack-Boti and Mra. West. ^ The June meeting will be the Oakland County OAR pic-nto'et the .General Squire. Club house in DiyifofMrith the John (^knwford chapter of^ the Ox-ford-Orion hrea serving as hostess group] Assisting Uu> hostess (or , Thursday’s /gathering were Mrs. E. G. r’lark. Mi's. Frank Vaclavik, Mrs. Peter Dayid-son, Mra. Eukm Gardn^„ Mrs. W. L. Pelton, Mra. E. H. Wallace, Mra. John M. Denne and Mrs. Magwell Doerr, OUien were Jdri. William Kaiwltz, Mrs. M. B. Kttiiger-toiti and Mra. V A. Woodaid. Memhira of Poiitiac’ii Better Home fuid Garden-C3ub’s ;^lvlc committee are oomplet- sate'at'9 A m. Friday in Wa-terfOid Gomh^anity (Jefiter. ^ Ptoceedk finir^dffort.«U for patients at the Oakland County Medical Ctire Facility. Last year the dub, whi^ nas sponsored projects for hen- 27 years, bought a cwnmiiinion service and dossal curtain for tifo medical facility diai^l. Members also haVle ^nted trees and greenery aA ponijac BUtte UoGrffol and are plan-idiqf civic pnjdeta for Michigan Week later this month. • The City of- .Straits Unit, Detroit, corhprlBed the deg^ jitaff for initiation. The River Rouge Unit conduded the candlelight service; Liberty Unit, Gawson, the ballot drill and; the Big ^ister Unit, Flint, draped the charter. *1716’Cad-yiac Unit, Detroit, led the me-mortal service. *’ A ★ ' ’ M^epah ’Temple setprip the ' nwm lufichmm andJhfe Gtel*.’.,, ChoWe group froni\PoiiUac' ^fral High School smg several numbers. ■ District officers present were Mrs. Hugh Endries, secretary; Mrs. Mae Figite, pianist.; and Mrs. Wilbur Morey, chairman. Distinguished guests' were Supreme Junior Bertha Lynn, Detroit, gnd Grand ChleMrma Moore, The 1963 convention ivill, be Mrs. William Koggenhflp, Mighty Chosen One, presided at the Wednesday nleeting of Iraq Caldron No. 70, Daughters of Mokanna, in the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland civics room. The group will observe Founders' Day at tha next regular meeting on June Announcement was made of the Supreme Convention, Sept. 26-29, in Bkron, Ohio,, . Refreshments were served by Mrs. Matt Shelton-and Mrs. Eugene Bragan. Mrs. Frank Halse.ma, Keego Harbgr (at right) holds the 1962 Administrative Board Award presented to the top bemocratic worker in the 18th Congressional District, by, William A.- Burgett, deputy auditor-general. Mrs. John //. MeVay, Birmingham., vice-chairman, Oakland County Democratic Committee, holds a ticket to the Jefferson-Jack/ion Day dinner this evetiing.in the Light Guard Armory., Detroit, at which Mrs. Halsema will be a guest. . . , Color an be restored to h)- R»n(l'CARPETS hr exiierlenc.ed ersltsmen ami I Him cleaning eqiilpntepl will, move the deeply emliedileil grit 1 dirt that shonen Ihe Hie and f eoloi Ilf your rugs M .1,1 ....................«' i: ) .11 ^ Brl^s to Be! 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Grade 1 CHUNK A , ' BOLOGNA a Pontiac’s Finest LEAN GROUND BEEF 3"” 99 HOFFMAN’S PONTJAC FREEZER FOODS. Inc. 526 N. Perry FE 2-11 PABK FREE IN BEAR "IuAicMmImhi LA(WN CHAIR n-WebAlMal TRADE FAIR llOAWMt Huron Street OPEN 10 A.M. to 10 P.AA. AAON. THRU SAT. marl BARUESA HARGRAVE Hardware 74? W. hDRONST. FE 5-9101 /M«A//r/.A: GLENWOOD PLAZA >od—A baby' bey dtedj ujuAteJM-deetegffl^ story ffame housp about a and h half east of her# yesterday. TIk' blaze swept the home asj fte baby, Allen Adanu, son w hk, and Mrs. Ward Adams, lay Wiis'* cribi The mother was treated for shodc and bui^ at. Hiutey Hofid-tal here atlpV vaiidy trying to Plant them and earn 4% Sayings, like seeds, when well planted and cared for, flourish and grow. When you plant your savings here, you can be sure that they’ll thrive and he safe, too. INSURED SAFETY on accounts to $10,000 by an agency of the U.S. Government. Plus our own high reserves anid long standing recr ord of reliability. SERVICE* Our simple save-by-mail service makes it easy for you to plant your savings with us , . . and reap the benefits at the current 4/< rate of dividend paid quarterly. HIGHER RATE. What makes 1st Federal Savings of Oakland’s high rate of earnings possible? It’s a case of our being: specialists in one section of the yhst acres of finance. We don't try to be all things to all men. We concentrate on just one thing; being the most expert caretakers we (Can of the savings dollars entrusted to us. Why not start today? Then sit back and-watch our “Green Thumb" work for you ... gather in a bumper crop of dividends on June 30, September 80 and December 31st. Funds received by the 10th of the month eara^from the 1st. Wh$re you mve does make a difference “IT !\ J Oswald on BRIDGE / Now you can leam to play better bridge with one of America’s (oremdst bridge authorities, Oswald Jacoby. Share his tournament-winning techniques in his column, “Oswald Jacoby on Bridge.^ A unique combination of mathematical genius, memory^ expert^ and brilliant card player, Jacoby has won 29 national ehampionsbips. His column will appear regularly in this newspaper. Starts Mottday, May 7th in THE PONTIAC i •V THBT'PO: PREgiS, SATURDAr^ MkY^^jg62 \, ...^EtgyEK ^>,^hdwever, she said: md good. He’s a la- : LateF.^hdwever, Vue hwks real Wdo paibh, bat a Edcer, 34, is A native of Linwood, idL At the age V>f 14 months, I infectious disease robbed him of bis 4>ye8i|tet- Sidisequent treatment The union’s resolutlan stated*'™^ * P“P»»»e Uiat let the riidit eye. t dose at hand. But lor all psfCtical purposes, Ms Noeosttelese, to tesmed to Edner and .Us .wife met while oth were students at Michigan State lAiiverdty. Mrs. Ecker recalled. with no indication of irony: '*We met on a blind date.” Whoi he proposed marriage, "I turned it over for some time tafaxU But I had enoQjgb man. After all, Ulnd peojde still arim-T accepted fully. There are still barriers to be "1 bad far mote than the ave^ As tor. Edmr. he recalled Us down. I had ndsi^vlngs certainly. But she wps brave and willing take the chance. She was the one who took the rUc. I ooiddn't H had the wimian I wanted." They were married In 1949, and* their four children are Laura, 9, Paul, 6, Batrick, 2, and Kenneth, 1. s'TUDiam HBlip Eckcr’s doctor in Bay City — rho asked that his name not be sed » was familiar'with, work being done at the New Yoric to-. firmary and arranged for Ecker’s entry last April 3. Students at Bay City Central Illgh Schoo he teaches, raised $500 to help defray expenses. 5-foot-lO, discussed his own small miracle, brought about Will Consider jBoardteqfl^ A request from the Waterfbid Township Board of Edm use voter registration re the township. at 'future electlohs will be considlered by. the Township Board Monday. J A law enacted by the State Legislature during its 19SI smwim) specifies that townships may grant permission to school districts to share these records and eliminate duplication of effort. Al^PhototaX HAS EVE SViMEilY—Leonard Ecker, 34-year-old Engl^^h teacher at Bay Qty Central High Schpol, leaves the New York Eye and Ear toflrmary yesterday after undergoing a successful comeal transidant openrtim. Ecker hM been,, blind since he was 14 months old. *” " J Swainson to Rap GOP ' at Dem Dinner Tonight DETROIT (UPI) Democratic Gov. John B. Swainson launches his bid for re-election tonight with some bitter words for the "obstructionist" Republicans who blocked his flpcal reform program Mn'st^e state legislature. Notably absent from Swainson’s pre-election bid remarks, however, any reference to automaker George Romn^, the governor’s sure-bet Republican opposition in fall. Swainson to use tonight's platform in front of party bigwigs and rank-and-file to say some pretty angry things about Romney. But that comes later. Tonight’s concentration by the governor la the Republican party, apeclflcally the GOP old-guarders who con. trol the state Senate. m HONET DOWN $ THUS TO PIT • PATIOS * ATTICS * SIDING * FURNACES AIR CONDITIONING LSTORM WINDOWS^ and DOORS w ADDITIONS • KITCHENS • BARBECUES • RECREATION RpOMS OlBIEir ^tODERNRERS OIVKION Of 4PBRIIN NIATIlia ■ui SUrFt.Y aO 'YlARS IN PONTIAC " 371 VOORHEIS RD. FE 2-2910 ' The goveroor’a decision to Ig- eharitable In view of their expected bitter word battle thia fan. Neither man Is expected |o o|th August primaries. Tonight’s attack on Romney' as Michigan Desijocrats observe this year's Jeffersm^ackson Day has been left tor Wisconsin Gov. Gaylord Nelson, a featured speaker at the gathering. 4t would I i appropriate for supexi and enough votes from the block of moderate Republicans, pushed a compromisie tax program, which included a three per cent Income tax, through the senate three jveeks ago. But the inconw tax bill was laid on the Senate table to die this week after Republjcans switched their votes on reconsiderailon. Despite the fact that the fiscal reform pn^ram Is the source of Swainaon’s irratatlon, Romney and not the iegiislature’s failure to adopt his program, is the governor’s '•hief concern this November. throu{d> the skill of modem medji-d^lfeTiid: ^ , Vl nrane^ lee masses. Fig-residro sUll lu .see any detaU. I. can ei^ple, that my wife U kring'^TL vivid red <»at. I can Ingnlsh^.the necjiline of the -coat K can see where her fsc»~ Is — the flesh color, and the hairilne. Bnt 1 can't make out hei;^ features.'’ Mrs. Ecker arrived at the hospital about 8:45 p.m. Thursday. and iier husband have been in dahy. contact by telephone but "■phe had not seen him since he left in early April. was late — he already had tucked in for the nighi,” 8E«d of her first visit. "We talked, about home and the children mostly. I only stayed about 20 tnin- Waterford School Unit Wants to Share Voter Registration Records The township has been notifying the school dMrIot of all rejg-Istration changes and records have been maintained by both Opening of bids onja new dump track to be used by foe vvfttet' department. wilt take place at the meeting and board members wlU review a ,te OHN tvm NIOHT mtoso I AIR CONDITIOI^rm YOUR SHOOMNlf COMEORt IN PONTIAC IN CURKSTOr^^ATERPORD 200 N. SAGINAW ST. on DIXIE HIGHWAY—Just ' North of Waterford Hill PLENTY OF FREE PARKING Open Eveny Night 'til 9:30 P. M. BOTH STORES OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 6 1-.A, ._.A_^"-X ' 7/'-' .-‘ Tiu i'1/ '' ' ^ i". '11., S : ~ "1 f, s'w*i • ■''Tim^iK^wttcyms^ s&torpAy. '}iAX 'fiiiiifii * jpejeri^Bon Appeda for Help / For# Sfiidfflls M [isrlulM:. I to fb^ t iwd coBi thws^ are ml a An appeal to find summer jobs for foreign students studying in American colleges and uniyen^ties issued this week i>y the National Student Christian Federation, affiliated with the National Ooundl of Churches. In a letter sent to all its 0>ntral Committee members, Genial Sec- ploynient and cost-ftiee lodging fse respond quioUy to kelp flee ali|-several retaiy Herluf M. Jtmsto points out asMimtlal ipfoi fpr thto |SU^ file need for finding ^ ‘ Hie SSCF has svaUshie tunds to alleviato Ipmiedlato, emer- aaM Mr. deasea,- imt 1 To Go Around World "1 He's Off... Op arflaif dents pay their own way, > ^ "i. To coordinate its services, NSCF Committee for Work Among International •: dents will have the assistanbe loan" of David Mandudl, a member of the staff of Urn Ikilaoopal Council for Foreign students, Mr. #llvtdual8 and churchea which .................. ■■ s'tor receive^appeals ia!t assistance foreinrstnileiits are asked^to them on to the NSCF Committee REDONDO BEACH, Calif, (AP —Adventurer DeVere Baker fig-res'it’s time to be drifting on. He's starting a trip around the world, by raft, at high noon today. Baker. 48, is the man who driftedfl-om Redbndo Beach to Hawaii in 1958. That was on the Police Continue to Probb Killing State Youth Is M Jaii in* InvesttgBW Mother^s Murder STANDING PRETTY — Or sitting pretty, either way Nancy Harper of Lansing is Michigan Posture Queefi of 1962. She was crowned at Jackstm Thursday night and will compete for the World Posture Queen title in Detroit June 24 tq 27. ,_\ ALLEGAN. Mich. (API-Faced with a long weekend in jail, William J. Warner,18, devoted himself to magazine articles and sleeping today while authorities continued to gather evidence ip the bizarre slaying nf . his mother. Baker, a student of winds and current, figures he’ll have to have r«dt towed fo(»n Inland through the MediterranouB; and the-4ndian Ocean./He figures curients will take hum toward Jajrin, then across, the Pacific. -e>cpect to Iqt the California coast aghin —in 196'! —no more than 10 inile§ fcqm wherfe we start,” he said. ■ The Lelp V is 40 feet long and 20 feet wide. It will hqve cabin space lor 6aker, his seven-man crew, and the only woman aboprd —Baker’s wife, Nbla, 43. ^ "She’s A writer.’’ Paid Mcer. 'so/she’ll be our historian. And he’ll also help with the cooking rfd the other chores.’’ T^o Ex-Sweetheaits iJoh'i Need Reporter / By EARLJWILSOB NEW YORK — Suddenly-I felt like I wasn’t needed ’ SheUey Winters and John?'Ireland, sweethearts once, were eiMently starting a new romance right before my eyes, in spite of foe. It was 11:30 Saturday night, fd dropped In at Shelley’s dressing room at the Royale, by appointment, to ask her a'tow simple ques-tlolui about Iiow was everting going In "Night/)f the Iguana’’ between herself and bar le&dlng man l4triclE O’Nbal? "HI!’’ said this feUow sitting there, loung-Madame itig back in an ante-room, waiting for to get dressed in her own larger room Just beyond. youth- has confessed he shot his mother, stuffed her body into a sand-weighted Steamer trunk and then dumped/it iiWo the Kalama-River. / \ „.ate police skin diWra recovered the/trunk and bod^ .FYiday morning/ ....../...* ★ •'\ Held is a letter detailing Mrs, Warifer’s stq>posed plans fo elope to /South America withAa '------- named “Harry,” leaving home, two cars and all other possessions to her only son. said Sbeltoy, sud- wu^N «s,>^aifmn and rlri^Wed t08 ANGELES (llPI)-Publlc officials were asked for help yesterday to establish a relief fund to aid Negroes resettled here Attorney Morgan M. Moten, legislative chairman of the Na-tlonal Assooiation for the Advancement of Colored Peonlo (NAACP), said a telegram had been sent to county supervisor It asked that a fund be established with the Urban League to care for Negroes similar to one which pnivides help fof foreign "'These American eitixens are tnmds ind #{ h# out toiids 'to provide for them-selves by a very sinister and un-American plan and will starve unless some kind of relief Is given forthvrlth.” Moten said. Too Busy Aiding Others Oxford Student Seeking Way to ^Elephant Face Area Kiwanis Club to Host 5th Division TOPEKA, Kan. (AP» - Federal Judge Arthur J. Stanley Jr.^ imposed a $1,000 fine Friday on Rog-y. Lovett, an atlorhey who said he was so busy making out Im’ome lax returns for clients ho fulled to file retums on his own income tor 1957 and 1958. OXFORD. England (UPI) AafiMu, Glllon has his elephant and a challeqgc from. California race it. All he nritds now is ah airplane tb bring the elephant a()|d California together. . W* *. * J ; Aanan is lui Oxford mtHlical stu-,dstit who accep# a challenge by Orange County State Cktllege stu- nlverilty team to take part in •a international elephant race. nates leek up (he * aBnurt, uftored IMcef arlo Billy W eleptoints. lilloN said today he is looking a wealthy backer to fly the im and Its elephant to the Unit-States by next Friday. ‘It’s deaperatoly Important,’’ lie iTJje Draylon-Waterford Klwanls Club will host the J5th Division spring meeting Wednesday at the Community Activities Building, Waterford Township. A total of 16 clubs throughout Oakland CgtJnty arjs expected to pai^clpate. Tniarnatlonal as well os vtuto dignit^ims will be present Including the featured speaker, Dr. Gcorijo E. Bowler of Ann Arbor, Oovernoi: of the Michigan District of Kiwanis International. A family style dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m. Ex-Board Iphairman Di# DALLA.S, i’px. (AP)r- John Bynch lanicaster, who retired in 19J2 as chairman of the board of the. Texai A PaWfic Railroad, died Thui-sday niifot. Lancaster, who was 92, was a native of Jack-"1 think my team wouU son, Tenn. IIo began fats , railroad Hi’areer in 1885 As a rodmnn. Richard L. Mineweaser ANNOUNCES NEW “INCOME INSURANCE” This year The Equitable Life Assurance Society introduced a new insurance program that helps protect you against loss of inpome caused by sickness or accident. We call it Living Income Insurance. Here’s how it works t when you are sick or hurt and unable to work, Equitable Will pay you a specified amount each month.. to $500 a month ... for 15,30 months or longer-depending on the plan you select and for which yoq qualify. Living Inoime can meanL real financial for you and your family ilyou are laid up. Here’s money to help pay your bills, protect your cavings, keep you from^lqsing your home. With Living Income Insurance you’ll have money to go on living -when you need ^t most. Let your Man^ from Equitable explain it to you personally. CALL RICHARD 1. MINEWEASER Reprr§nnlnlivf EquitabU Life 4t$urance Sorietx 66 W. Lawrence, Cor. Cast Phone 332*0900 Thank You, PONTIAC FOR YOUR 'v Past Potronoge ^ Mr. and Mrw Frank Clark, formar ownart af CLARK'S DRIVI-lh napraia thair ilncara fbanks to fha clfiaant of Fon»l|| patronaga duHng/;llMU»aft I yaart. Mrr* yon and to como to know yon bottdr. art glaaaad ^onal and Cyiitlan groagt. ThaiClark’a Mil ho a open. The Air Force said the launch as the fifth Titan firing at the base. Previously • launched' here were 22 Atlases, 21 shorter-range Thors and 52 satellite vehicles. former owners: CLARK'S DRIVE-IN •• Signonce March 21 when rejected a company otter whi^ I The spokesman said jnipflfitoe of iais- top ive already been semi Itoaleriais to the .-Hollaad ATLANTIC qry f»-A ,iTtolW't»ttie»«'Chiirdi i|i Amw- ge a ‘lea. to«. me board, dwifig «■ qunrt^ meeting, ^iproved, «n expe^ prow to Ploddn, nitoQla, ^ ana. Tennessee, Maryland gM» New . York, North Chroilina, d and;New Mexico, and In to start new congregafions to ID. P»vh^ Alberto states and three Canadian pwiv- r "*’ " To liritm In Mich^n. ^ Ann. ARBOR (II w Tim IM* board of Auiertoanittiaaians offiw veraity of Michigan Medical School wtHL^nd 108 new students to begin intwnship training at 26 Michigan hoapitals July i. They ate' a total of 169 men and eiqpected to receive their MJ>.’a. from iJ. of M. this June. 20450 Uttmoia OFENIHG MAY 7th> KeM Foxx^The King of Party Album$ and ’ Linda Bishop, Attraedvo Song Stylist DANCING NIGHTLY In U« Woltm* OrclMitni Contonost ond Amfirican Cuisint For Rosorvotiotit Coll Dl 1*7633 WIA TMi Cerewi Toss- Wed. end Thote W' *1*50 FAUCI’S AUTO WASH 07 Baidvrin ★ ★ Hr> SPECTACIWR PICTURE! 1 ■*i!v -rN.r.BAn.r iitws BEST REBIGiOUS FILM EVER MADE! J ^iousUAPAitBOia,stiiam^ SWEEPING SPECTACLE... THte sAtmi^AYtUm &, mi Dg?id Ross in Theater^Venture ProSucer Turns to Tried and TtiM Plays .-X Syria Adds Giiards pi By WtHilAM NEW WRK (AP)-Brwid«»»y’.»|Gabler'* and «™ . ----- downlW a^ David Is "tba, ^na. Roia exp^ asfntmWalr a# tiwenwlEe'*' a ■ ___-^ « dram*. in»a predecaaaora, **Aedda Iiov provaa to Roaa that Car too hmUng^n New^ork,^R vetopM one of the moat ‘ ‘ the current ahoar to be around lor j^eai^ he leta it ahnply for Ua own sake. ever perform Would be in a theater of hia own. He never got the ofr-Broadway theatrical venUfre^ MUST BE THE LATEST ^ "We have a propaganda in this A man tom between artistic ambition and cipidid enjoyment Of life's comforts, Roaa wishes llnan-1 necesaky di^’t make tong Is highly desirable. 'If we Mowed the same theory ydtb music, we’d never hear Bach or Beethoven,’^ argues the impresario who started out in life to be a concert vioUhist. "-W Roaa acheduled "The Dybbuk" for a‘Starter, cast himself in a principal roll. Unable to get the desired director, he took over that Job himself, dropped out of the cast. He has been at that work ever since. by rebellious Kurdish tribesmen being chaa^ by Iraqul brooM crosring the fronder. The Damascus dolly newspaper Alayyam said Iraiqi's air force has been intensively shelling and strafing Kurdish rebel strongholds in/north and northwestern Iraq. The roar of shelling, the paper said, can be heard by the inhab- If you con hear, but cannot understand, 1 helo Wl! I country to dismiss something if it 'isn't the very latest,” says the portly producer, "But great thii^ Ross was bora in St. Paul, 37 years ago. Having de- to box office ’capacity In., cided his musicaL.lalent.was- not ^ 1 iir di-' *^Voia can’t eiyiecVgenluv to be delivered on order. Catching up with appreciation of the classIcK Is the oiily salvation for the -ardea~to“*efr--wa:rxrtttt:"ffiC’JSeil' project. The public response to the Ibsen cycle (he plans to do at least five more of his works* and a previous i'l’ve never had a _ ____. »rtins-“ toank^^a^ up- to his ^picationL.hf . maJo^ ments. His approach to staging of in political with a,lew courses in drama to round out the das^ schedule. So he decided, to be an actor. ^t college Ohekhbv'an(r Ibsen lias nlso b •sequence of lour by Anton Click- After two years oTfruitless job- free from the influence of seeing them dqne before. ,i He read "Rosmersholni'' five, times befoi-e deciding to do i<- ' FOR LOW COST CAR LOANS GMTC£Hn.OYEfSt| FEDEBAL CREDIT UNION 939 Woodward 33^-4001 we Vxin help 'you!! CAUUSFORAiPKEE HEARING TEST... in our office or \ or home. 682-4340 bL 233 BATtERIESr GORDSr REPAIRS ON ALL HEARING AIDS PONTIAC HALL SUNDAY- The Year’s Most Talked About-Movie! ^ IRIIIMZOI'SPRODIICTIONOF koenss WILLIAM INGE NATALIE WOOD ....,P«THIN6U AUOREVCHWStlf WARRENBEATTY8H TfCHMCOUM* WMWII MMBH fresh, engaging 'versioi "Bosmersholm'' is pow on the stage of Ross’ Fourth Street theater. It is the third oqnsecu-itive presentation of Henrik Ibsen, Wedding Draws Strong Showing From Royalty LONDON (API—Countess Bunny Eiflerhazy, and Dominic 'Elliott— ^two of the brightest lights to Eu-jtope’s international set—got mar-'tied today in a major social event jot the London Society calendar. -ALSO- The Most Frovactive Story of the year! Thit It A Movie Thit Oats With H! ■iUIKW - X at his coolest as the muslcisn. sntu SieVENS w way up to slant tiha way-out girl. Britain’s royal family fielded its I strongest team at the receptiott— I Queen Elizabeth, Princes? Margaret,, Margard’s husband Lord rden, and tm Duke and Dudt-ess of Gloucester. The couple, who announced their engagement two months ago, were wed at St. Mary’s Roinan Catholic Church, Chelsea. Tht^ dred guests attended. Among them the 22 - year • old counters’ lather. Count Thomas Esterhazy, flew here from Geqeva for the event. WE PROUDLY PRESENT AN OUTSTANDlNS“fflf __________________________ OPEN 7;00 P.M. 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This is IN AOOmON to any................... 5,000" In POUO BENEFITS %vilt bj paid any nwmbnr of your family iniurtd.wKtn strkfcM by polto. Thn policy poys up to'$4,000.00 tor hospital cosh, up to $500.00 for orihoptdic supplins, brocos, otc., and up to $500^ for doctor bills. TOYOOr PAVSINMMiniONTOWOlKMAirS COMPENSATION OR ANT Prudontial Uf# & Casualty Insurance Company now offers you a sickness and accident policy plus occidental automobile trafficdiwth benefits of $5,000.0QI Not only that, you receive up to $5,200.00 PAID DIRECT TO YOU, while in the hospili^frotask*ness or aecldenfs, originating ofter the dote of the policy. Our Family Group or Indiyiduat Hospital-policy gives you insurance protection, liberal cash, faotmfite r^ other privileges. This policy does not cover- hospitolizotion for nervous or mental disorders, rest cures or alcoholism, dental work, childbirth or complications of pregncincy, or confinement m government hospitals. / , OTHER INSURANCE YOU NiAY HAVE If You ton Qualify for this Liberal Covefflg|| Plan You May Receive PAID DIRECT YOU TO USE AS YOU WISH Wt'. FIRST MONTH YOU PAY ONLY For You and Your Entire Family MI DOUARtCOVIRS YOU AND AU MEMKRS OF YOUR faruy for tni first month, tun you pay according to tk rates shown m tabus kiow. Which covers the first month's iiitroditatory premium for you and your entire Yomilyl After the first month, you pay, only the following low rates: $2.50 month for members IB to 65 $3^50 month for members 65 to 75 Eleven months premiums in advance pays one fi^lt year. Children under 18 pay re-\ duced rates and receive one-\alf hospital benefits plus <' rail oci^ental death and polio benefltsl If you ore in good hoolth. If ell members of your fondly you wish to be teiurod under this policy oro In good heollh end If Hie medical hbtory for the post 3 yoori shows no oHments or chronic condWons extsHnu' prior to the dpto of the policy. -. you sheiiM be eWe to o««lHy. Fleese onswor oM questions fuHy end eccorolely when yoe HR In the oppHce-tion form. NO SAIESA^N WAl CALL N yee feH to quoHfy yeur pey niont will bo rofurnod to you. / _ MEDICAL COSTS SOAIfl Do YOU hove the kind of protection you l|ood, and con afford? COAAPARE Prudential * Lift A Cosiralty Insurance Co.’s sonsiMo rates and liberal covorogos. Simply fill in application and mail with $1.00. NO SAIfSMAN WU CAU NOW..,.OR EVER! The Average Hospital Cost Has Soared Te *36.98 Per Day Wan Yea Ppy h?, r National survey figures show that average per day hospital bills have mere thaffjJoubled irt recent . old-fathioned oolicv that pays only a few dollars per day then you need this additional coverage. Tn XmON TO WORkK? WeNSATICW . OR ANY OTHER INSUR^CE YOU MAY HAVE . . .' WE PAYMENTS ARE INCOME TAX FREE. Every dollar goes direct to you (unless assignment is nrnpoh HAIL THE COUPOItlipW! WHEN YOU NEED IT Sicknou or on occldont con ruin o family flnoncioHy if is 410 odoquolt insurance plon. RMs pile up at ... ond, tMt is tho brood-winnor Who is sick or tkoro is uiuolly a heavy lots in Ineomo IlMpIMBawIteplesmiAciliintaOssR^eiidPsItolinsflta Appfktaffoit Acesptsd Attar Age 75 I ■ ■ ■ i^MAIL TWS COUPON TODAYl 'll i| ■ ■ , AmiCATION lUNK ‘ PHAA f OR INDIVIDUAL OR FAMILY GROUPS Tei ItaudenHmlUta mtaCMueltyliimirto^Ceiii 111A M. W. SI if fireet, Okteheme (|aiy# Oktahema GenHsmon~4 em enclosing $1.00 l« P«ym«"Tf«f ^ Prudenrid Ufe end Catuehy Insurance Cempony't HOSWAt POLICY. (Pliese print telliMiiiM af all irnffllwri whom ywi wish Indodid In tMs policy) f«SrN«&-4IIMUIIjMIS-4M^ MO. DAY VIAR AOI 1. (AmiCANT) a.. 3. A. ' s.' , , t--. AODRESS., OTT....... ...County.... OCCUPAHDN. N/MEOFIENEFICIARY.. KUTIONSHIF TO AFPIICANT .1.. • H«v* y*v «r My maiiibwr HttaS r«MW*S ar 3 yMnf (OIr* tutl (wrltcvlari, S«Im, ale.) i4 abava In' whala anS laanS haotih la flTa Mil al yaur knawl. if, plaaia atylaln.) STMI YES 0* NO MCH-8-1 ll0Ml«ra at Afpllcanl lAiIPpATANr—#taose Aniwei; l6rsry Qust^on PrsNlenltal Uta and CnZlt^w^ PRUDENTIAL UFE & CASUALTY INSURANCE CO. Jlexj,cd (le4£AM Stoc/is- Go4fppxiHif.f 1116 Northwest 51st STREET, OKLAhlOMA CITY 18, OK LA. 'i' / .. .■,'1 I i »/^ /;/ ' \ * )SK VKJrrJSEiC ujV Lake\0fi6n Is fhef/^n Cfepfion ' fi fot 0t cement tw hawl' „ ___ ifUsehrs vnase'. availabte. *Tii«y fan^ with air conc|iHoning. So he the hotel was replaoiitig', the otdl sei^ have'ciysWl ^ ,......... , —........-.......--------------- --------airit one-each in the tw*^ '^Hiese fire-ruby, blue, topaz aikl nt^l^ in the bought one, broij^t it home,,* bedroom*. 5 aij occasional clear one Ipcdy eu^j[s|nce. Uhdpr la"* lightl^iture. - -HIDDEN BEDS ■ • is a guest room. W>«m, iVro steps up from the diniug room is the large living room. in several areas. In the end nearest the dining -roor firenlaee with a bookcase next tc it. Opposite is a large contemporary TV* set. The nianti^ has a Mtalloped edge. Above are little wtn-framed in rnfllea. j_ A 0hnish Modern .sofa in'this area mawh^ the chairs in the sitting t In the main p:^ of the living room there’s an upright piano was to go after'the grand carnet and an organ. One of the clocks in»lliiii itNm is a majestic mahogany grandfat^ . vinyl tile______, '(same as. in the guest-sitting room)." This is one job the Du- puis’ hl^ done. , Here walls are piiie and^ me ___ Cabinifs are birc)\., Counter, pegged oak. Braided rugs' ,tte V>PS are yellow. ’The beamed .. ^ and erreeiw me nlaced StwL»^ knotty pine ceiling has an intri- «"« Sf®«n8 a« placed Iratgberringlipne •pattern that is intrigllMig,;;_to seel them in* one wall of the guest room. Above he built storj^e. . The overlook the lake., 'They are^.’ curtained ,|n a IMtalburd ditefc material. ITndet the windows, is a^iong cusUaned seat that hides storage. .. - Over in a corner is a massive and beautiful' cherry butler’s chest. It' has lots .of drawer space. 'There’s a player pigno 7— - ------- ----■ next to the fii-eplace and proli- t|ble With its captain’s ch.iirs^ ably, by now Mrs. Dupuis' neW is placed so that ^iners can W ® baby grand (••> teo<-hes music*, the lake as they eat. Hi-fi is Chairs include two deep honey piped through the house. The speaker in the kitchen is an old-fashioned telephone. This kitchen jUsl breathes charm. The dining A)pm is small iutd iMimath. Here walls are cedar and the . herringbone deilifig white pine and redwood. The floor is ranch pegged oak. An oval braided rug covers most of it. Curtains are sheer white ruffled ones. ’ . The Dupuis’ clocks are very po-doh't all strike at-take turns, one right after thel other. Mrs. Dupuis says it is^almost impossible to keep them exactly together. • There's in this Bv- blue lovd seat, flanking ,this , | are two tall Wing chairs with ' (olonial figures. Aiiother chair has a wood frame and pa^ (Continued on Page 18) \ C KITCHEN There's n round maple table near a front window. Chairs are Windsor (yfK-. In this picture you can see (lie herring bone pattern of the ceiling. Wall.s and ceding are knotty pine. The eurtains are white with blue dot trim. Note the old time telephone at die left; it houses tlie lil-fi spt'gker. In (he far eoriuir is a htiteh eal)im. t ^;-f / ^ ^ . ,1J' V' ^ j 5 ’M U> ’’ BLUE STAR Featuring ^±jmpmBum * w*ra Haia *« « IM m «Mor iw^n mM be I«ndi «an(iiw only 1.393 Mbne iMt €| Hvlng b diaplay and • Door plm with mry Inch tt hi dlmwOorts of .S5’l0'“aw hy HT* wtdo. rrmr proporly iltocMed. ' ^ V 2819 LAPEIR RD/(M-24) Loke Orion . 5 MHm North ti Pontioe ort GreenthioM M. S«. 9 A.M. I« 6 P.M. Sm. 1P.M. t* SP>i FE 8-9636 ★ SEAONOLE HILLS ★ mm:: -T E R R A C C-- --- Open Sun, 2 *tU $ p.m,^121 Ottama Drive S^ious 4-bedroom~2l4 family hoi»»t. Baaomant and 2-car garaga. Many ot^ oufitanding faaturas. $23,900. ^ WAMEN STOUT. lUahar, J7 N. $aginaw S».. Pantiaa. H 5«tUI IIATE.TIAiVS; FOSI TWO CARS FLOOB FLAW: You would find a ainglt inch waited In plan. Note tbh efficient be hard put to the dinette. House eontaini 1,303 iquart tael thii well-ordered of living area, not countnig garage and pcnxh, of the . in dtaAimioni of 3510" deep by 64’8" wide, of n»m for ' Rtadjr Pfaui Order Oaapan Ettcloaed ii 50 cditp in coin. Please send pb a copy of the sdidy plAn .ef The House of the Week Design J-U. ito stamps accepted. Please do not use sticky^ tape Send to The'Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Mich. (HMkM Print) anuECT ............ cnr........... STA‘rB ............ IRICK COIONIAL: Smw. choice west side location. Carpeting and drapes included. Price reduced to $21,500, $2,500-down and no mortgage cost. B t«a I*»t 9aaUn»a for a PBA or VA Motteoto. an »8 3 lEDROOM $9,900 taoM Oofsat Carp. FE 8-1943 Elegance of Design Can Come in'Small Package By dULES LOH Anyone dho has spent many Sundfor' afternoons looking homes doesn’t have tp be told that as the size of the h<»ue you want pr can afford decreases so the chahce of finding one you The house g-U In our aerlee,^ contains only l,tS$ square feet of UVlng area in dlmenshma of U’-10” deep by M’8" wide. Yet it ha» an exterior anyone would be proud to display —- low lines, a gentle roof pitch and a loggia which gives It a luttney colonial Ing fireplace; a separate dining could every inch of space froperty allocated for oomtortable modeim Siding aid Trim WANT TO PAINT C0V«l With We sever all woodwork Ut us shew you why Aluminum SidInsandMmisVeurbesfbiiY. BUDGET from $129 1.1 Alomimim qi Fiberglai SciMBiag oi 61iu Enciowe Available FE 4-2597-41M 3.2385>-OR 3-2842 e.WEEDON €0. ■There -are thrae though the third could serve equally well as a den; 20’9" living room with a log burn- room; a rear porch which be enclosed, if deisred, and con-ver|ed into a family room; a double garage; basement; and — note this weU - a 14'9" by 13’ kitchen with adjoining dinette. GOOD KITCHEN ’The kitchen would be the envy of housewives in many a larger home. lootrbrighfaiiinmrpiaii). . V ■'iA'ti - -J -n-- ' ft# wwQQp BflCINUTt wPPIIi 0lgr«'i$dur, ,“S!RaS* 2 Seulli Oils.. . . W »»tl29 JC iOattag PAY OFF YOUR BILLS GAM. Nmodels, and give specifications and prices on your garage plans. NO SUB-CONTRACTING, DEAL DIRECT WITH THE BUILDER FOR OARAGE AND CEMENT WORK COMPLITI liiilODIRNIZATION PROGRAM ran nTDiATBs — raa «aM» - CBMBWf woa* • awrMUsn Emus • Brtsislrsrs • eersfcss # Bssflsf Another modem feature is the flue dining room, 11*1" by M’6” In slid with sHdlng glass dons on twu walls, opening to both the •RICK TW-LIVIl: 4 bedrooms. 2>A baths, beautiful family room with fire/lace. Loaded with extras, finest of lake privileges, (ust 10 minutes from downtown. $29,500, $4,500 down plus closing costs. DELUXE 2-BEDROOM: Perfect for a couple that wants the finest. Beautifully landscaped, large screened and jalousie'd rear pgreh and gas hot water heat. Excellent location. $19,950, $2,000 down plus closing costs. 3-BEDROOM RANCH: All brick, large well, landscaped lot, con-venient to Detroit and Birmingham Inimediate possession, $22,-500, $2,300 down plus closing costs. « AND CHARGE IT! ’The dimensions shown for the living room, 14 feet by almost 21 leet, actually are modestly deceptive. y Tbe-giraplaoe on the long wall jol the living room makes furniture arrangement easy, and so does the large bow window in the front. According ia architect Cohen, -most homeownera prefer the ‘master bedroom In the'RMMit ut the house, so thafa where he put IL It has-.cniH_v.eutHatiaaj^ two closets and an adjoining lay* ntory. A stone planter outside is window height, which means it can be enjoyed from inside as wisll. Another feature of the maker bedroom that shouldn’t be osjgrlooked is the arrangement of th( serving as sound barriers between le other two bedrooms. The math bath is well placed, not only convenient to all the bed-rooms but to the kitchen and formal areas as well. It has a double vanity — another touch not generally found in homes this size. Up fp S months to pay Ho carrying charges neSHBRWIM-WlUIAMS CO. Corner Tflagrsph Rd. Shopping Cantor In Downtown Pon it Elixthoth Lsho Rd. DIxIs Highway FE 4-2571 The bBNeiiient of thix hoiiNC extends bem-alh the living nren only — not the porch or the gnrage —^ and contains plenty of ■pace for n large recreation room, laundry and storage area. A nice combination of stone and vertical board siding has Just the Ight effect on the exterfan: of this planter beyond the side wall adds to the illusion of length. "My tlicoi'y is that if a couple has a small family they shouldn’t be forced to buy space they < need just to get the design Ihcy like," said Cohen. This house seems to put llic theory into prac- tice. 1: Beautiful ground lovol family room, and Ukp Orion just acrOM flw road, LsrdI wooded lot. vacant and immodiato postgulon. Satrifico; $14,950, $1,500 down plus closing eoi^ts. as- X RANCH) 3 bodroomf, 1'/i bath*, csrftotlng, drsipot i r toftonor, CIO*# to. Sylvan- Shopping contsr. Owmir trai d and will sell St $ 11,900 with $1,200 down plus costs. V.; Kill »fl\ Iff'Ilf 71/ NO MONeV down Lot Owntrt' BUILD NOW As Low p8/$34.64 Month. • Foundarien tnstsRad THREE BEDROOMS ^ INCUIDID Price includes building the foundation, erection Of the houee and Inside materlels furnished. • Forced air furnace • Birch kitchee cihieefs chrome fithngi^ % RJoctrical wirieg lnlfslW | • Underfited autemstic weler * Ihtorior deers, hii^ere, ‘ ‘ * - -rd, -I MODEL ORB DAILY Ffi. on4 Sot. to 9 Sunday 12 to 6 MODEL: Tdltfroph E-GON-0 BUILT HOMES dltgraph Rood, SOutl/of UM Rdod FE 5-9888 '4 \- „\-Y, Jim Hampton GE has appoin^Dd Hampton Electric as their Pontiac Builder Distributor^ to sell direct to Builders and Home MoSemizers. Come in . 7. get the spec sheets and special prices on GE Ovens, Range Tops, Hoods available in all styles and colors. ^ by Gfn»al Electric 20VENSIN30''SPACEL What 8-wonderful new design idea... fits-in like a built-in without costly remodeling! Features new Eye-HI oven with rotlsserie and panorama window... lets you see inside witbiut stooping! Side mounted controls are easy to reach, set and operate! • Full-size master oven features radiant I heat broiler, removable door, two adjustable sliding shilvss and-iutomstic Interior As low as SO ‘5 Uin Is rsach eat and eparstsl **Selling for lf>is futs made Hampton's one of Pontiac's . OldoU and Reliabk Detderd* • Automatic timer controls both oyons $] and spplianco outloL •*1FI(iiirMctnt IlibtAluminatH cooktop. • Choose from 8 Mix-Or-Mstoh ooloni Petal Hnk, Canary YelloWt Satin White, ^ Turquoise Green, Woodtgne Brown, Dark Coppertonel UHBaBWMHi Open Evary Evaning 'til 9 p. M. ELECTRIC^ COMPANY 4 aiS^W. Huron S». ■ Ff. 4^511, ' BfCEf fY.. ■\ jjaE.roNxUk-y^SySA'ffeKDAY.^Mir'a^J ingGoott Time^ but Stories Short MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet '||>reB9 and radio have indicated to the Russians that' cos|non9Ut Gherman Titov is having a lively time in the United States, but they haven’t attempted < to glamorize his visit. , Reports on -Titov’s 'activities' have been skitnpy compared to the attention shofwered on him bji American newspapers and televi*: « ^ DUCK Dirorr DUCK ^ ’Ihis imaiatd duck, '* khich has falcen -up residence at the Roy Peter* hon pond mar Auburn, Cslif., was' shot by an' mher 1 ..j* several d^ ago but without , apimrent harm, ’The big gander showT no TUI . '' " Ar nmtm* etfects, but Peterson fears that muskrats may be attempting to catch the bird at night and is trying to find a way to capture htan and remove Pravda devoted only seven inches of news space on an in-' Wde page FViday reporting Titov’s call at the White jEkrusc.-TbiSiiiiu... been the pattern except for the first, day when the official Corny munist party ? in Traffic Deoth ' Charged with^giigent homicide in a trafic fatdiilyt Martha Hamilton, 20, 700^i$cayne Road, White Lake Township,, demanded aminati^ yesterday at her arraignment in Justice Cburt.. / SKe is accused of triggering an accident on M!i9 in the township Thursday thal claimed the life of ■ tE‘ ■ Mrs. Ray (Ella) Austin, 5^ of 12 Downing Oout^, Pontiac. in between the vie* Mm’s ear and a track nheadi, they said,'forcing Mrs. Austin’s auto off the road. The death car bounded off the shoulder into (he path of ar coming <;ar, driven by Haven Sweeney, 40, of 2444 "inpire Road, West BJtomfield Town.ship. n the resultant crasli. Mrs. Ans- rival at Pontine Oeneral Hoa-pNal. Deputic^i said Miss Hamilton’s cat* kept going west following the collision, but that she returned to, the scene approximately 15 mln- ,utes,-latar...__________________ Commerce Township Justice of the Peace John C. Wclck scheduled Miss Hamilton's examination of charges for May 10 in his court. She wnS'fr<«cd pn 1100 personal bond pending her appearance. Soviet P a D e r s Indicate itnbvii NY .Doctor$ j Light Exeircites, and Whirlpqot Baths NEW^^ORK Doctors day'were working on a'final plan the rehabilitation of jtfdeeph P. tannedy, stricken by ^ Dec. 19. The father of the Pr^ t^ay went through more of the', light exerciser that were prescribed for him when he' entered a local clinic last Sunday. A^.spokesman for the Institute Mt Physical Medicine and Reha-'bllltation at;New York University. ' Medical Center said.Kennedy also lakliit whlrtpooTHba^ andk-undergoing speech therapy. inside pages. AT 8TEBL MILL.— Soviet cosnumaut Gherman’Titov poses in a factory hard hat during his tour bf the Bethlehem Steel Co. -plant at Sparrows' Point, Md;> yesterday. The space V ponU»e rr«ii I pilot’s Wife holds one of the hats as an unidento fie^ newsman points a linger at her and says ‘;y'ou’re next.” . . Evaluation of tests^ given him'.. his arrival from'Palm E where he was stricken 'probably will not be ^available until next [, the spokesman said. Oakland Physicians ~ Planning No Boycott There was no explanation of why play is ito downbeat. When Titov has visited other countries, there, have been rather long stories M where be went and what he said and did.- . , ' ' There has been. no official explanation of why Maj. Titov wasl chosen to go to America insted ^ , of Maj, Yuri Gagarin,, the pioneer The President of the Oakland,members were warned by Dr. Read spaceman. But there is one ob-lcounly Medical Society tod^ pre-|in the group’s May "Bulletin” that To Build. Reser^ Center DETOIT (AP)-A $277,000 u-acl (or const ruction o( an Army Reserve Center at Kalamazoo has been awarded to Pearson Coh-slruction Co., Inc., of B(>nlon Harbor by the Army Corps of Engineers. “They want him to rest as much as possible,” he added. “The move was rather strenuous.” Worirers in a tin mine extending undef the ocean from Corn- massive rbouldcrs, rolling on the sea fjror. ‘the time for our maximum effort s here” to oppose medical care for the aged pstW for under Social Security taxes. / He said lio. proposal for such « Business Hopes o fntrodlire such JAMESTOWN. N.Y. (^)-Gov. Nelson A. Rocketaller'^ declaredl iscil did e irh alcfflmm He said he expected President Kennedy to throw his wei^t behind the bill in an address schai^ uled for May 20 in New York City Named CircuiMudge ol Genesee County expect ninenda- i , « - LAN.‘UN(5 «AP)—Gov. Swainsop Dr. Read said of the Wcoft announced Ihe appoini ____ d^eating his^/hkn objective _____ df. encouraging l^siitass when the -“It is always interesting to see la'tter recently/helped force thelpeople take-bold and independent big steel ■ ^papies to rescind [action; but somehow I can’t .see a rice inenfflSe)!. jlarge .section of.the professiondo- / ★ A A ling iti The /Republican governor said “Large - .scale professidnal pro. industrial .earnings were not suf-tests have been advocated in Brit-ficient to eticourage development ain (wfhjch has socialized medicine of new plants. Action such as (he but Ihey’yo never come off. There Democratic president J took. Rocke-just hasn't been enough backing feller said, will be li further de- f"*- ‘hem. Doctors are .so conseiw*' to investment ol capital|[>yc Ihey 11 nqvei'do an.vjhing like in plants and eqi^mei Rockefeller, on a tour of south ! wesfern New York, expressed liisl ment of §tewart A. Newblatt of Flint as Genesw County I’ircuit judge to succeed Stephen J. Roth, who resigned to accept a federal jjfdgeship. The Oakland County society’s 400 in Flint since 1930. He is single. A member of the Flinf/Tuw firm, of While and Newblatt, he is a tnistee ahd former secretary of the Genesee County Bar Associa--lion ahd a,member of Ihe citizenship committ^ and the negligonce. law section of the Michigan Stale Bar. He Whs graduated from the University of Michigan Law School OPEN SUNDAY may 6, 2 P«M. to 5 P.M. 3915 BALD EAGLE LAKE ROAD M Mil* loiM «f WIMwoMi lok* Oriv* For dotoili on Ihk beautiful 80-acrt country ottato in Grovtiand Towmhip, N. Oakland County, with two homm, horio born, lake or«o, outdoor and indoor flroplocM, lunkon ggrdoni, one mil# tod-of Dixit Highway, in Iho htori of wonderful roCrtohon land, noor now Exproiiwoy. $65,000.00-Call ^ LUCILE KNIGHT Reol EsHite ........................... views during. • a question-and-an-J swer session at a meting w Jamestown business leaders Teacher Is Found Guilty of Crue|tif GRAND RAPIDS,,(UPI)-Circuit Judge John Vander Wal found former Rockford High School! wrestling coach Larry Lindemanj gUjlty yesterday of child cruelty. Ilte 23-year-old Western Michigan graduate was convicted ttfj mistreating his stepdaughter Colleen, 2, last February. Kent, Copnty nuthoriiiea charged Undenun, who wyjved' hiB right to a jury trial, had slapped the little girl across the face and then placed her In a tub of burning hot water. (^olieen suffered 2nd - degree! tairns from Ihe bath and had to{ be treated at a hospital. Lindeman was ottered held Kent County jail without bond date was set, DiMaggio's Son Named in $10,000 Traffic Suit LOS ANGELES (UP!) - . $10,000 suit over a traffic accident! was pending today against the soni of former baseball star Joe Di- Ma'ggS^ .....—j Joseph P. DiMaggh). a Marine at the recruit depot in Sun Diego. Calif., and Wilbur Horne' of Burbank were named la the action filed yesterday by Dorotny Stark. WIDOWS—WIDOWERS LIVE IN American House AMERICAN HOUSE 1150.00 fMir month—no leai« ^ Safety Des^ned. Single Level Apts, id witt daily maid service with linens furnished with all utilities except telephone furnished also offers personal Taundry service, food service, health and activities programs, chauffeur service, guest pi-jivileges •— all available at resident option, AMERICAN HOUSE 1900 Norlii Washington Ave., Royal Oak, ^.7, . LI s-osao- Rtlltf Hurl«rt Mttr, l^gooklt Wini/4-2 terday’c Ki^cky Oaks lor 3->earold iiUies at >4ucky Derby. C- T. pienery, ]who owns both fhiirrhni Dowiu. Ocada was 8tQ)posd Wilkinson ^tied for second in thf pole vault. NKIJtfIN RKCOND Rick Zemper kl Howell was awarded jfirst place In the mile when he won his boat in 4:28.0. Milford's Ted Nelson was placed second qfter beating Oxford's Dan ^ley by two seconds In another lift. Nelson ran a 4:30. Kelley, who placed third, set a school record. .1 tItUy team of Jerry Rlslnger, (illn»)U set an-Ini B iTflh Oass A teams, Including Pontiac Northern, Waterford’ and Smholm are competing at €MU today. Pon- tiac central and Walled Lake are in the U-D Relays. Lake Orion won eight tint pl^es on the way to Its third win In Oakland A competltlori. The Dragons, mostly unde^lassmen, lend Clawsm by one meet In the standingn.^awson edged Madison 55-54 yesteraay. k ■ k k Winning for Lake Orion Jon Cucksey, high hurdles; Charles Waggoner,. 880; Pat McLaughlin, 440; Lan^Wum, broad Jump; Henry Gawne, tmle vault; the 880 and mile relay teams.. Marlin Towmfond set an Orion record with a 4^49 mile. Mike .Simonson won the brdad Jump and 880 on the way td scoring 14U points lo pace Qarkstbn. Other lOarkston firsts werCi tak-1 by Frank Powell, ibot put;-freshman Bob Gray, high Jump; Ron Applegate, pole vault; Jack By The Associated Press Sweet - swinging John (Honey) Romano has taken over as the Cleveland Indians’ top batter and seems determined to prove he’ the best hitting catcher in the club’s history. k k Continuing a hot streak that has boosted his average to .333, the 27-year-old receiver slammed a pair of homers last night that carried the Indians to a 6-5 victory over Kansas City and three-game losing streak. Carl Yastraonifcl, Unton in X3J previous at-hata, ntrotod and a dotUe to tte Red Soaf 124un fitUi, driv>i« to 1 in the biggest onetontog < in the majors Hus anasosi sent 16 men to Ibe ptole five pitchers, t4g|iis tamijn and five walktog- Leon Meanwhile, Los Angeles’ Wagner pontinued "on- a tear, hitting his seventi) in eight games for a major league leading total of nine as the Angels edged Baltimore, 5-4. Boston used a 12-run fifth Inning to whip the Chlr-cah White, Sox, 1341. ,The first-place New York Yankees and Washington were idle. DONOVAN ROUTED The A’s shelled Dick't)onovan from the mound in the second, five runs, two or by Dick Howser. Pfifciter, a 25-ycar-old rookie, protected the lead, allowing only Romano’s homer until Ihe eighth when Tito Francona’s single drove In two runs, Willie Kirkland's grounder accounted for another and Romano wound It up with his second homer, Pfiater (0-3), who struck out 11, "was charged with the defeat. Rookie .Sam McDowell (2-lj got credit for the win. ' , The Angels won It with two In the seventh o(l Hoyt Wilhelm (n-1) on Alble Pearaon's single, a sacrifice, a single by Steve Dllho, a passed ball and Earl Ayerill’s grounder that got They got hrip btau Jim O’Txde. nl» Hi hitter and held off a. Lotos In a night _ Giants’ (ead to 2% the Ords. k k k In tlte othera, all togjU g; Plttsbi^ rashed to a ran I bottomi of fbe to cl| Los Angeles OodRen Sk 1 York roily to He ■ the Nets 85 and MUwaukee 7-4. Easy One For Wdyif# (UPI) — Royal 'V' I ! fired a 74. tor i^allst honors to l(fd Wayne 9tMe University's gqlf team to a W/i tq % victory oVer -Western^ l^serVc yesterday In 41 President’s Athletio Cunfereiice ii[atcli. Tie Chinese csHnadar Estts as the year of the Hger Bal Or-lande Oepeda, (iw BWhgr San Frandseo’s Cianllsi, ns !to inifial setback. Northern ks runs in the 1st two with three batted in by i single and dou-|hto. Gmy Cray and Gary Hayward across. Farming- inniqg but Lupplnb's BiiirBiffliigham Groves opened with a J-1 win over Cherry Hill, Imlay caor look Oxford 3-1 and Anchor Bay downed Dryden, 8-5. k k k Tmy Ignasiak of Imlay fanned IS to a two-hitter. Loser Jim Bates hit and whiffed W.-TTWo strikeouts by Dennis Folan with the bases load^ saved a vic-Gary Marcero. The two |)*tetoe« had three hits each as Dennis Edney. Boucher rilammiHd three and Paul Grondin two for Dryden. Morris was the The Bays are 2-1 in the rii'''TGiiB6.''' ' FALCDriS OCT EVEN Farmington tennis team . np tor the school’s baseball Igr bentiiq^ PNH 3-2. fVed took HArry Walkley 6-8, 6-4 a John Kerns whipped Wes Orr t. 8-1 for the Northern points. Lon 1 the two Farmington s made the difference. Arnchw Bay .won its 6th straight I tenms after two losses blankjng Rfflsevitlle, 7-9. Fred KOpson, Bob Tton Pmd. Lan^ Horioiir nas and the doubles teams off Dave Menges-Duane GaVe and ActoiiioCliarles Croskey all I to lose a game. Hs 2nd gsK outing in three tries S# to Royal Oak 9uine being out-—ed 195 to 219. George Karan Bob Alanyn of Shrine had 46s. Fhank Ktodzyk of St. Mary had 49, r Itoin CIOWM tito L high pitch’ a lir toMt jNosfltoni riser Fartotagton J|este^ day. Runner on tod to,ltone BM Htol cnidtog k George Becker. .. ... . . - - - s todHrin; M triumph. ' MINNEAPOLIS Detroit Tiers have itopped hlttj^ iriien But when the ^rs loee three straight and rookie relievers HBffiSr 78lffi“W5«irT3r((SB»'“SeiP and Joe Bontkowski are the win-nifig pitchers, lometfaing is drastically wrong. ski with the triumph when he powerad a ntath-lmilng hom)»r tor a'4^ Minaesota Twin victory. \ ^ And to worsen the situation, the Tigers’ own relfel^ pitching Is fal-tering and the InjifoTes are nrount-ing. None of the Tigers’ big three Is in perfect shape. Frank Lary remains oiit with his bad shoulder. Jim Bunning has come up with a sore leg that may prevent him from pitching today against the Twins. Ahd Drm Moss!, belted out in his last two outings, is bothered by a sorA shoulder that may oan-ct^ his start he;re tomorrow. Raune hobbled other- Tiger regulars with pains are A1 Kaline and Dick McAuliffe. Kaline has a pulled leg nuude. McAuIifie was struck by a ground ' yes^rday and will be'shelved for a 1^ days. ' ....... Rrilef pitching Was the Tigers’ downfall in their flrat i with the Fjrins a turued/to a goo _ . 'lorinanoc until th) aeventh. Rom>-s. nie KUne, hlmsen bothered with a pulled leg murae, surrendered RoUina’ tWo-riiui horoCr With two out in the ninth. "Regan did well,” said manager Bob Scheffing, “but tjuSto been the way. When the pitflmg has been good, we can’t get any runs get a lot of runs, the pitching fells down." iicheffi^ Juggled .the bottom of his batting order. He promoted McAuliffe to sixth and the move paid off with a home run in the second that sent the Tgers ahead l-O. Dick Brown was boosted to Steve Boros dropped to eighth. . k k k Now Scheffing says he's thinking about benching the slumping BOWS and putting Larry Osborne at third base for a while. However, jtocky Colavtto, who went 0-f(Hr-4 again, will stay In the llheifo for a day or two more desplle a .TfS batting average. 'Tm gojng to stick with him for 1 while,’-' Scheffingg said., "He looked like his old self a couple of times yesterday and took good cuts at the ball." Bonlkowski allowed the Tgers to tie the score 2-2 by scraping a run in the eighth on Chico Fernandez’ single. OUT OF TROUBLE mage Could have been done he forced Norm Cash and Colavllo to bounce right back to hin). Then he woUnd up by retiring the last tour Tigers wtlhont letting the ball leave the Infiejd. Regan ha^ a four-hit shutout until the seventh. But Earl Battey reached fint safely on the ball Injuitm McAuliffe and started a two-run''rally. Doubles by Bernie Allen and Lennie Green and Vic Power's single accounted for the pnd brought Kfew in from lullinen. r Kline quickly stopped the rally and held off the Twins in the eighth. But two rookies got to him in the ninth. George Batiks led off with a pinch single. Two outs later RoUlns cracked his fifth hoiher over the center field fence at the 380 mark. ' ★ k k Scheffing held out hope Bunning ould/ be able to pitch today . agalmt the'Twnis’ A1 Stange, another rookie. loot^u" rt-d laoo Kritai* r( llSSRoUIni 3b till Ctol lb s 0 0 0 KlUi-brew U 3 a I O OoI#yU« U 4 0 0 «oSnyder 0 0 0 0 M'liuUn* M 3 111 AIMimn rf 0 0 0 0 rniUKlra Ml i 0 1 i Mincbor lb 3 0 0 0 iKrt!; JJiS' far s'* SJ5? •rowor i i 11 bKoai olio Bonik'ai p 04 0 0 «,7»“i5S5t tJWS if Ml (ksiino. WP~gmlk( M / i |»ONTlAb PRESS^ SAtllBDAY^ MAY 5, 19^2 • j erines IfrirVictOR OvSr MSU J # ■ DP Pvt. U 477'U7 11 IS .tn » m M IT u .m as SM S» 16 17 Ml IS m aw u M .610 aa ssT 17 446 U ai .676 14 || “* 478 iU 1^6.674 461 au^at as.678 PIttgfcurgli MUwi^m &• •Isisiii as s la M6 83 ; a 14 .8S6 if 7 30 .8S6 » 1 S .843 10 a 10 .333 INDIVIDDAl. Ml ,- jn ".'..‘-..T a »»' Lu^, K.C. SO IS KvUnv. Ovt. 7a 16 McAul'/v, Dot. as 6 Rom«ii% Civ. 57 6 Mvntt^ N.y. 46 14 ^&‘kT S I l»24 8 8 ovntnv. Bolt.. 86 11 nvarMO, .L.A. 66 11 Brvuoud, Bot. 78 11 Johnaon. Waab. D^Sw^mluo: n It is a' i4 ms rival Ii^diigan State resun B‘i£..“aV 8- 8 8 , J w :«*»>aU hostmties today in a ColVIlMII. Cl*. 77 Amoroi PUIIo. 66 Rvnew. Houv. 33 Hodovs.. H.Y. 33 Asbbum. N.Y. 33 P'ndlet’n, Hous. 76 EdwonU. Cln. S3 Thacker. Chi. '26 Boak. Pitt- S6 Bi^yr*8 H’shb’eer, CbL 84 Fox. Chi. so AUen. Minn. - 68 Howser, K.C. 94 Brandt, Balt. 60 Schmidt, Wash. 43 Posada, K.C. 30 17 22 1 is . ?u“rw.._._ .... Plersall, wash. 47' Skowron, M.Y.' “ ' Boros. Dst.' Rodgers. L.A. Tvsby. Cle. Charles, K.C. Trlaiidos. Balt. Klirbr'w, Minn Semmng, Bos. Vers’ll’s, . Minn. Kirkland. Cle. Geiger, Bos. Colavlto, Dot. Apariclo. Clil. Adair, Balt. .. . if ? 14 1 S .231 8 .231 .a .231 .167 6 .156 ^Orand Siam homerS—Mlncher. Mltme-sota. two: Hardy, ettmom^«nj^: Lan-"-Chlcago: Boyer, New Yorgr^’nw. ei AMERICAN LBAOIIE PITCHING (Two or more declr*—‘ Pitcher, Clob IP H BB 6 10 2 Barber. Balt. Hall. Balt. Estrada. 8 3 L ERA r 22 9 1 Coates. N.Y. Buih’rdt, Chi. Bonlk’sKl. Minn. Paseual. Minn, nonovan, Cle. I.ee. ’ Minn. Duren, L.A., Conley. Bos. -----rldi ■ - I 18 I 1.93 I 8 8.17 „ „ 15 3 t _ IS S S 0 2 0 1 22 21 12 15 -2 0 5 3S 28 12 ,13 4 1 7 1 33 8 22 4 1 2.03 i. N.Y. Running, 1 ( 14 17 6 1 3. ! 12 18 1 2 3. |.13 19 2 2 3.00 I 19 13 1 S 1^10 24 a 1 33 27,16 1 30 28 ilS 39 30 R2 1 Pappas. Bi Taylor. Cla Burnside. ' Bell. Cle. Cisco. Bos. Krallck. Minn/ . 24 24 7 12 2 1 24 31 0 19 2 1 Schwall,----- -- - Brown, Balt. IS 22 Kline, Dot. McDowell. Clo. Wyatt. K.C, * 7 ? S 35 36 25 1 8 8.00 22 3 7 10 72. 3 0 25 25 2^ IS 9 0 2 A6S Pornleles, I.ary. Del Herbert, t Regan. Dc 21 ; I 1 6.0 NATIONAL LEAOVB CLVB PIELDINO O PO A D . 28 878 247 18 35 .8 I 210 IS 33 [riumphM Sifter 14Tallies Cross in Inning 33 $71 354 33 33 .... SO SS7 347 33 3S .S73 31 540 sot 33 17 .S71 33 638 390 30 37 .S09 ««,g4»,38.^ Meet Twice Today; Detroit SeH Record By Hie Associated Prase Higb-ijidiiig Michigan and arch* header at Ann Arbor. Michigan held on to its Big Ten lead yesterday by winning the first University of Detroit blasted Albion College, 9-4 and 104 in a doubleheader, setting an all-time scifool mark of 13 straight victories. Dave Roebuck reidaced Wayne Slusher as U-M’s third hurier i^the day and walked in the. tying run, but held on for his fifth strsdght victory alter the Wolverines, scored four more in the ninth. The eighth inning, in which Michigan qoUected its eight runs on nine singles, consum^ onc hour and 11' minute 4lf pla^ng time. Overall, Michigan had 17 hits, 16 of them singles. SOLO BLAST The game’s lone home run was solo blast by Spartan Joe Porre-vecchio in the seoHid inning. Michigan went into today’s SImmonc. St.L. Shanti. Houa. MoDiuilcl, SU>. Fraocll. Pitt. IP H BB BO W L ERA 30 16 3 16 2 1 0.60 36 25 5 19 ........ 21 13 5 14 racord. MSU is 24 ia confereiice play- The Titans, who have.yet to lose this season, won |hc opener with s |;4only eight hits as righthander Ed Meir chalked up his fourth win of year and 11th cons^utive collegiate triumph without a loss. They belted a pair of Albion hurlers for 14 hits in the nightcap, scoring in every inning but one. Dan Oslnski, who replaced injured starter Pete Craig in the third, recorded his fourth win of the year. Farrvli. Houa. 8.F. Prlaml, Pitt. Koutax, L.A. Miller, 8.F. Hcndley, MU. SMcBean. Pitt. L. sherry. L.A Jfohnaon. Houa. Purkey, Cln. Maricnal. S.F. ... i 10 2 0 2.4S 47 37 11 27 4 1.2.49 47 39 J5 54 4 2 ib49 10 0 4 Oils!? 36 25 21 17 2 2 2.7 29 28 5 29 0 4 2.' -ia 41 9 14 4 0 3.1 42 17 33 4 2 3.1 Bill Bartling had live hits in seven trips and drove in four for U-D in the opener. Bill Symonds had four singles, a double and two walks, scoring four, runs and driving in two in both games. AJ lOOIE. V.UI. Curtla. Mil. 38 29 15 18 o o I 37 30 12 12 : 22 19 8 it,- , — 17 16 5'^ 2 0 3.71 14 13 7 17 2 0 3.85 27 13 10 24 2 1 ■ ■■ 37 41 12 28 $ 0 Jaekaon. N.Y. Anderson. Chi. 5^'aney!'m». BUaworth. Chi. Oluatl. Houa.'' Spahn. MU. Moeller. L.A. Hamilton, Phlla McLlah. Phlla. 20 34 10 17 2 0 n 11}} 22 28 7 6 1 2 16 IS 6 16 0 8 - 40 49 12 27 1 2 8.18 34 36 10 17 2 S-" H ^ ! I:S 31 39 10 17 - 2 3 8.52 21 21 11 8 13 5.87 First Contests Slated Tuesday Wateitoid Softball Opens s GOftt,/l] Class B and G leagues launch tiielr 1962 season in Waterford Township next Tuesday at the Drayton Plains Park, with all 11 teams slated to sec fiction the opening week. Tuesday’s opening contests — both “C” games — have Haskins Chevrolet going against Bob & Larry’s Bar at 7 p.m., and Rock-cote Palni taking on Haupt Pontiac in the 8:30 nightcap. The first CIwib B action takes place Wednesday night In the Waterford Township Recreation Departimint-s pen sored ' pro-^ gram. Four spunds km entered in Class B while seven make up the "0" loop. League games will be played Tuesday -through Frldny evenings at the Drayton Park dS-der the lights, with several Saturday ni^ts set aside for exhibition games.. Defending chanipion in Glass B is Spencer Floor Covering, while A & W Root Beer is returning to defend its "C” crown. LISTED' B: Spier’s TEAMS LISTl Class B: Spier’s (Joe Spencer, mgr.), Stroh’s (Jere Donald-son)jf O’Neill Realty (Earl Brus-ke) and Sarko Investments (Bill Pittman Jr., and Dr. Jack Leve). Class C: A & W (Kurt Kuhne. r.), Dixie Bar (DoirBowen and Bill Pltchtord), Bob A Larry’ Bar (BUI Stafford), Haskins Chevrolet (Dan McOeachy), Haupt Pontiac (Gwrge Adams), Lakeland Pharmacy (Frank Emerson) and Rockcote Paint (Ray Jer-govlch and Gorence Brown). The i and ( remolnO atrdh‘6 i- (both 0 . Frld»r " u»f 6i 7 P.IB., Dfxle ItDd (C); 6:30. O'NOU *t. |tvekliM r'Hell^lboth* COOl^ YOUR CA» 4 yitN 01 "T" witN on EATON Air Conditiotnor PIK^ADIATOIl SERVICE Ft 4>«692/ I 403 l*IK| ST, ^ n 7 '16 3 16 *^iii the thr^game weekend aeries [y/' 46 » S 3 *6 iwWlO* the Spartans, a wUd. 16-13 Coach Don Lund’gjbdvcriiies came up with eight nuiB in the eighth Inniiig to take a 18-4 lead, but Michigan State fled the game at 12-14 with six iuih,^H« of !h scored on fiver straight haC-1 doqs and hungry lUinols r nalned In a tie lor first place. Illinois scored three times in the first Inning and had no trouble in managing a 9-1 triumph over Wisconsin. Elsewhere, Purdue bat-tured Northwestern, 12-S; Ohio State edged Minnesota, 12-11, and Iowa defeated Indiana, 8-6, in 14 innings. Western Michigan strengthened its hold cm first ^ce in the Mid American Confereillt baseball campaign with an 8-0 yfctory over Marshall of West Virginia. Western's Ken Larsen held Marshall to two singles. The Broncos took two Marshall hurlers for 12 hits. Mike Gatz of Flint homered in the third with one vuncr on base, Control of Chisox Taiinty One Mak CHICAGO (AP)-Full control of the Chicago White Sox came under one man for the first lime sincC( 1939 Friday when majority stock holder Artliur C. Allyn Jr.. iKiught out an 11-man gi'dup liold-ing then46 |)cr cent minority interest. The move was described as solely for tax benefits. Allyn and representatives of the mipority group announced Ihe transaction at a surprise nows conferenre, but did not disclose the price, of 2,466 shares of Sox stock which changed hands. However, the 46 per cent holdings had bepn purehosed from Chuck Comiskey last Dec. 13 for estimated $3.5 million. An organize effort is under way, to dp < about the method of clai^sifying iiigh schools level competition. A gi*oup of coaches held what is described as an **ton* promptu meeting” at Gr^nd Ledge earlier this week. Ed Wichert of Bloomfield Hills attended the session. He reported that circulars^ ; ^“3 ^' were mailed to coaches and'eoach at the new G. H. *West Side this resulted in 25 mentors Cathdic Central. ____ gathering at Grand Ledge. “The coaches see 'a need for a change,” Wickert said. No definite action was taken. ’Those , attending discussed the CHALLENGER WD.TS — Referee Fred Apos-ioli motions Eder Jofre of/Brazil to a -neutral corner as dMenger-Herm^ Marquez -d Stock-. ton, Calif., sinks to, tte canvas for the second /, AP Ph^Irfwi- and.Ias't time in the 10th round of their bantamweight tide fight in San Francisco last night. Jofre retained his tide when Aposloli ruled a knockout, without counting. Jofre Keeps Tifle _ oh DisputedXO SAN FRANOSCO (AP)-Brazil- ian Eder Jofre (dill holds the cham- second knockdown. He said drawbacks of the present system and posslbre corrective measures. Schools .-are classified A, 1 and I)-according to enroUment.- 8TRONG SHOWING Track is making a strong bid at Avondale. A year ago, only 13 candidates turned out for" the team. This spring coaches Tom Welsh and AI Macknis’in^ted .40. And only lour ai\ seniors. .’rfie Yellow Jacket thinclads'are handicapped because the school "Vs ndl have a track. But this didn’t keep them from upsetting ’Troy in their opening meet and then idsing by a close margin to a strong Madison squad. ^vdn’s team could be termed a rags to riches outfit. 1’OP PITCHERS prep baseball coach feels pretty confident when he has a top pitcher to send to the mound. Coach Stad" Golonka of North-vllto has three ace chuckera at' Ms disposi^ And he sees to it thnt at least two work in every Mai, Pearson, whose Manlytee High footbaU teams have posted a 61-374L record during his Vt- , year re^. has resigned from the Class B school to take ovhr the,head grid duties at Ossa A Battle Creek Lqkevlew. Funeral service was.held eartier this Week' for Theodore P. Sund-quist, .3^, president of the Michigan Hig.h School Athletic Assn, and principal of Trenton IHgh School. He died Sunday df a heart attack. . ' NBA Alignment Will Stay Same ' Fox Time Being New York (AP) — For the time being, at least, , the National Basketball Association is going (.to retain its present alignment. action yifas all'the lease's lated board of directore could proddee after more than 17 hours of deliberation and . debate on a proposal to sell and transfer the Philadelphia Warriors to Son Francisco. pionship buf Herman Marquez, a knockout loser, claims Benny Paret was the third boxer in the ring. ApostMi stopped the fight too soon because thp spectre of Patefs death after his welterweight title fight March 24 aws too fresh in the official’s mind. Referee Fred Apostoli. stopped leir scheduled 13-round, title bout in the 10th round Friday night at the Cow Palace after the long-jaWed champion dropped Marquez for the second time in the round. ’The 118-pound Stockton, Calif, longshorepian claimed he wasn’ hurt—he was just resting after the HIT OITTEN’ Apostoli insisted Marquez was in trouble: “I think he was getting hit solidly and often,’’ the former middleweight champion said- “His eyes were-'Wery bad. He was al-Jtqost helpless and he was staggering when he did get up.'SApostoii denied that Paret's death' irtflu-him. ” * * t., , , Marquez, a clever l^xer not Apostoli had the champ ahead altar nine rounds 5-3 under California scoitog, where the winner of a round gets 1 to 5 points and the loser none. In the tenth, Jofre floored Marquez for an 8 count with a right and left. The challenger Palmer, Ford, Middlecoff Three Share Lead at Vegas LAS VEGAS, Nev. fact—ns the 158.000 Tournament ■ ^Champions rocked into the third round today. Leading the procession were Masters (Mmpion Arnold Palm-Doug Ford and Cary Middle-coff, deadlocked at, 139 for 36 holes. Tournament officials had reason to sigh in relief. Ford is known as the hurry-up man of professional golf. He wastes no time making a shot. Middlecoff is the exact opposite. (AP)—The The pair make up the last twosome, so- the remainder of the select field of 28 pros won’t be held up. It will be up to Ford and -Middlecoff to resolve their contrasting methods,. ■' . Just as the first-round ended In 4-way tie for - first and four more Just one shot behind, only . . .. _ one stroke separate the top thred^^e,. I!^® and the four players tied at, 140. They were Billy Casper Jr., Earl Stewart Jr., Australia’s Bruce Crampton and Jack Fleck. Pott Retains 1-Stroke Lead in Waco Turner BURNEYVILLE, Okla. (APL-Johtthy Pott, fighting Kjyrouble-some back nine, managed a under par 71 FHday to retain one-stroke lead at the halfway mark in (he $20,000 Waco ’Turner The Gulf Hill, sional's second round^ scxne and his soling 3-under par 68 in the first roiind gUve liiin a 139, stroke ahead of Tommy Aaron of Gainesville.^Ga., and Bill Collins of Baltimore/'^ Aaron and (Filins each nrei setxind straight. Joinder par 70s. Another stroke back at 141 wen Ron 'Thomas, Rex Bailter Jr., and )n Rudolph and trailing thcih at 142 were Gaude JKing, Buddy Sullivan and Dave Ragan. \ Opening Weekend of Carl's GOLF D>IVir HG RANGl / Enjoy Our 50«T Range 1976 S. T«le9raph Rd. FE 5-8P95 Doug Sanders and Joe Campbell were knotted at 141 and U.S. Open Champion Gene Llttler, a winner here three times in tlie 10 years ,of (he tournament, was alone at stroke buck of fellow Californian Phil Rodgers. Casper shot the ftaest rourtd of the two i-ounds Friday, a 67, 5 under for the par 36-36^T2 DcsCrt Inn Country Gub course. 'The jovial AppeKVuIley, Calif., ro led off . ,wHh Birdie-birdle-birdle indudl^ X 45-foot putt on the third hole. He the round in 32-35—67. Hard luck hit three other top contenders. Sam Snead’s downfalL came open Golf Tournament. Ue jv.r-4 ninth. It waS rtmgh- Mass..,- profes- . rough, trap-trap, finally the green fat 3-oyer, par 7 for the hole-. Snead, the defending champion, wound up wdlh 40-33. Mike Souchak and Doug Sanders also had woes. Both were coleaders in the first round. Souchak soared to a 79 and a 148. Sanders was even with the lead-1 he^l a double bogey 6 i'll h.‘Ilf on the 15th.‘He finished 35-37-72. The result has been three nohitters. All are combined efforts rugged punch, bored'Brown, Eric Peterson • and Tom Swiss sharing the hohotv. noted for in on Jofre for nine rounds, building, up a 7-0 and 5-1 edge on toe cards of Judges Fred Bottaro and Vem Bybee. Small wonder that Northville is rolling toward its third W-0 cham-of toe school year. CHANGE JOBS Wayne F. Case is moving from Jackson St.. Mary to Grand Rapids JMhoUc Central as head basketball coach. He is succeeding Don Lennon who will beci^e athletic director and head -football tjien went down again under a flurry of rights^ the head and Apostoli stopped the bout ** minutes. 15 seconds. PROTEST HEARi; “This was for the world championship,” protested Marquez’, comanager, AI Avila. “Herman should have been given every chance.’’ Jo^’s camp, pleased with his 12th straight kn^out, neverthe-le^ thought toe 117% pound Vegetarian didn’t have a good niiht. too slow,” said Manager Abraham Katzenelson. “He usually goes forward and presses aft-or five rounds but tonigU he was going bttclrfiards.” ) Jofre said he never was hjirt and wasn’t really tired. rounds like those," he Jofre ran his record to 42-0-3, while Marquez’ record dropped to 20-8-1. Marquez and his handlers quickly pressed for a rematch. Jofre and Katzenelson said they had no other plans and a rematch was all right wi^h them-for the right price. 309 Golfers Entered in Publinx Handicap An ail-time record entry of 309 playOrs will tee off Sunday at Maple Lane Golf, Club in the Mioh-' Tgon Publinx Golf Assodation’i first 18-hole handicap tournament of the 1962 season. The previous cntiy record I liandicilp event was :101. A shotgun start will be used by MPGA officials in efforts to speed up playxand assure a before-dark nish for everyone. Seventy - seven founMimes will parade to the toe, beginning at 6:30 a.m. and concluding at 3:38 p.i Prizes will be awarded to tourney winners. Sports Calendar SATURDAY Tn«k Pontiac Central, Blrmlnthai Birmingham Brother Rice, ontlac Walled - ------- Walarlord Twp., Lake. Southtleld. Bloomflald niiw ahd.Troy In Central lilcblglm Ralazi at Mt. Pleaaant outh toon wad L'Anaa Creuw In Albla invttAtttoat —T. ■ rtbbr Hill Invitational at Saginaw ..._______at Dearborn Haston .......... ... Memnhla Farmington OLS va. st. Leo Pontiac Central and Bav City Cer at Flint Bouthweetern (trlanitt Arthun Hill and Flint Central at City Handy 1 triangular) Bay Pontlao Northern Southfield at Farmington Waterford Twp. at Walled Lake L'Anae Creuta at Waterford Kettering Weeg B&n?neld^^^ &Uf9r”*a( North- I (triangular) sevlIla and Ann Segura and Buchholz Reach Tennis Finals CLEVELAND 6VP) - Pancho Segura of Los Angeles and Earl (Butch) Buchholz of St. Louts gained the finals of the 13lh nual professional tennis tournament Friday night. jura, who won the pi"q crown here in 1952, eliminated Barry MacRay of Dayton, 6-4, 7-9. 11-9, and Buchholz had' little trouble with Jack Arkinstall, an Australian, 6-2, 64. _ yo Ppntiac*s No. 1 Men*» Sloro . . CHECK DICKIKSON’S ^ for the BEST VALUES in TOWN. a. THcIcinsoiPSs OPENMon.imdFrl.’lII9r.M. I v,,- “01?ENTluira.amlFrl.’lil9p.M.* SACINAW • ’ BIUMING'HAM AT • . . ■ A7E pay the parking ^272 W.MAPLE iawbence ■' ■ The pracUcal difficulties of such s move at this tbnoe” was the reason given fiw the till- . are of the aalo to go through when the dirt^ora broke up their two-day meeting behind closed doors'^ yesterday. The phrase “at this time,” however,, indicated' to some that the action still may be completed. Another meeting is scheduleit later this month, date yet .-to be AUTO SPRINGS Foctory Rtbuilt msmiED FREE Oa Your Car M JAR Aay Mills or |i| (rortnhM to w Or Pay Osly iH0»s NOLLERBAGK AUTO PARTS 271 Baldwin Avs., Pontlao PhoiMt AiU>405l EMOTrufiiiTnnf^ with Americo's Favorite Family Sport PUTT-PUTT GOLF COURSES Opon 9 A.M. to 12 Midnight MKMnKK COnnSK fPM ^IMRNIRATU ITSILF / Both courwM, open to and advanced atudenti, last eight Rtf iatratim fee df II tn»y »a pM on the ehMl^'a^t nihht Tb% PlftySS ^ATURRAY> 1962 .: _ . |r' V ^ -fl)^WyY^|VE - f Nearby Arecf Depths ms. EUA MAE AUSm Seivice fur Mrs. EUa M«e Austin, IB, of 12 Downing Court, wiq be held «t 3 p.m. Monday'at tliiie Huntoon Ftaneral Home, with burial in Perry Mt. Pwrk Cemetery. She died Thursday after an auto Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Cora Wheeler of White Lake, eons Robert and Charles of Pontiac and Everett of Birminid brothers Elmer feeler of Unkm Lake, l^aee Wheeler of Everett and George Wheeler of , Marion, and sisters Mrs. Arnold Stiqaon of Milford and Mrs. Eva Rease and Mrs. Walter Mainhood, both oi Coleman.' Also surviving are 8 grandchildren. ALEXANDER Jr. GRANT -Service for Alexander J. Grant, 66, of 157 W. New York St., wUl be held at 9 a. m. Monday at St. Michael Catholic Church -'with burial in Mt. Hojpe COme^r^. - He died Friday. The Rosary will be^said at 7:30 p.'m.^unday at the VooPbees-Siple Funml Home. Mr. Grant was a retih^ Fisher Body Division employe. ‘ . . sWiving are his wife Goldie; a 8(m, Robetrtr two -grandchildren; an^ four tdstere, Mrs, Jennie Cow-gill and Mrs. Ella Butter, both Of Pontiac, Mrs. Catherine Richman of Shepherd and Mrs. Harriett Driscoll of Brooklyn, N. Y. MRS. CARL KREPS service for Mrs. Caif (Loretta I) Kreps, 40, of 22S6ClarIand Ave. Sylvan LakO, will be Monday at 11 a.mt at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will bp' in JWhite Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Krepff^ed yesterday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital follonring a long illnml She was a mppibet of the First Presbyteriap Church an leader of Girl Scout Troop 436 iti ylvan lake. Surviving besides her husband are her mother, -Mrs.' William FrasOr; a daughter, Linda Sue, at home; one sister, Mrs. Beatrice Manning of Pontiac; and one,brotb. er, Lee Fraser of Pontiac. litiakes Church, jgdth burial' In Lakpvienr *' DANNY R. MOREAU Service for Danpy R. Mweau, 11. of 579 Desoto Piace, will be Monday at 1:30 p.m. at the Hun-toopti^Funeral Home. Burial will be in l^cry Mt. Park. Cemetery. He was .dead on arrival Thursday at Pontiac General Hospital after being hit by a car. He was a student at Mai^k Twain Elementary School. -^Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Mai«el Moreau; his grandparents, Mr. and'Mrs. Percy Searle of Pontiac;' and Wilfred Moreau of Canada; and one brother, Ronny L. at home.'' WILUAM M. .CAIN 'UmON LAKE-Service for William M. Cain, 63, of 380 Lockhaven Road, will be Monday at 1 p.m. at" the Don'elson-Johns Funeral Home, Burial will be in Roselpnd Pa^k Cemetery. Mr. Cain died yesterday at Pontiac General Hospital as the result of a heart attack. He was a member of Marantha Baptist Church and a retired foreman of Chevrolet Gear and Axle Plant in Livonia. Surviving besides his wife Mary are two sons, Guy W. Cain of Glendora, Calif., and Frederick Hishke of Drayton Plains; daughter, Mrs. Ora A. Luster of Royal Oak; and two grandchildren. MRS. MATTHEW McENTEE CLARKSTON-Servlce for Mrs. Matthew (Marie R.) McEntee, 51, of 8712 Thendara St., will be 9 SPRING: We’ve Iluilt a mental picture of a, vacation trip, sre the glass-smooth water of a lake, hear the greeting of family and friends. Sprlngis a time ot new experiences and hew life. Wat vacation will come alive.'— We Imow it’s spring; boys we rubbing oil on an old catcher’s mkt, girls are seeking picnic facilities, mothers opMercy Hospital following a short illness. U.S,'UnitsHave Atomic Motar Methodist Church in Clarkstc and'he woiked for the Omlqnd (bounty Road Commission. Surviving are two sons, Harry of Romulus and Jack of Mendbn; one daughter, Sarah White 01 Lapeer; and ‘ four sisters, Ethel of Davisburg, Grace Goodrich of Oxford, and Maude TUler of Santa Calif. Reward Offered for Information on Dog Poisoners I A eprrenf rash of dog poison-lings in Waterford, White I.oke and I Independence-townships al.so spells I danger to small children, the Michigan Animal Rescue League warned today. A jSo reward now I is offered for arrest and cbnvic-ition bf poisons. Eleven dog poisonings front strychnine and rat poison have been reported within the last eight days, according to Mrs. M. J. Davis, humane ofttcetk Any information regarding the persons responsible for the poisonings will be kept confidential, Mrs. Davis added-The Michigan located at 790 Feather.stone St. Composer's Widow Dead LOS ANGELES (AP)- Rita Young, 61, widow of composer-conductor Victor Young, died Friday in a hospital. She married Young in 1922. Hi^ied in T9B ' heart'attack. Industry-wide sales of home laun-diy Appliances during 1960 totaled 4.600.000 units. Guest speaker at 'the affair was thcARcv. Martin Luther King of Atlanta. Negro minister and head of the Southern ^ristian Leadership Conference (SCLSi. ^ The (pivernor fold the all-Negro audienc*! that Nfew Jersey's anti-discrimination in housing bU die in the state legislature unless they thtdr suppoi-t ' Hi^iway Department reports.} Tlhe, sec- GM Researcher Cleveland Nixon SucurnbsgtSl MAYOR SIGNSFoster Child Week. May 6- director of ‘ 12, is made official in FVmtiac tu Mayor Robert Michigan i Landry signs tlje city’s procla^Uon. Viewing the proceeding are Alexandpr G. ^pbiris (left). County’.s chapter, of the I's Aid Society, and Leonard secretary of Catholie-Social Cbunty. Defense Dept. Won't Say Wh^^ Crockett .Is Assigned WASHINGTON hurl a wprhead about six miles. The weapon’s nuclear warhead the blast power of somewhat less than l.OOO^ions of TNT. When the Crockett was unveiled VO years ggo it was said by the Army to “dwarf in firepower anything we have ever known in the immediate area of the b»t * 1 ^ line.’’ When the Army's divisions are reorganized, the plan rails for a Davy C!rockett mortar platoon in each battalion, with three weapons to a platoon. A division df 1$ battalions — . the maximum — would have 45 atomic mortars. Arnty specialists said the Crockett, operated by two- and three-man teams, would be aimed to enemy U.S. Must Help in Transit Tangle/ Cavgnagh Says WASHINGTON tAP)-The fed n^l government must share in llw leadership and responsibility for solving today’s mass transit problems. Mayor Jerome Cava-nagh said yesterday to the House Committee on Banking and Currency. tank concentrations, posts, supply dumps and communications. It can chew up any of these within 200 to 500 yards of its burst. o1 Negroes Asked ar rMMu NEW OinClA^The National Aeronautics and Space Ad-niinig^tion in Washington yesterday announced the appointment of Dr. Raymond L. Bisp-linghoff, 45. as director' of Advanced Research and Technol-He succeeds fra H. Abbott retired in January. -» A 24-year-old Orion Township man, injured whien the motorcycle he wa& tiding was struck by a car al North Perry Street and Pontiac Road shortly after midnight, is in fair condition today at Pontiac General Hospital. Samuel J. Hampton Jr-, 984 Caserne re Road, suffered a cut haiM and fractmed leg In tiie accident, accoidlng to hospital auths^rittes. Hampton was. struck by, a car Sriven by 16-year-old Sandra L. azion of 44 Dwight St. while he was driving on North Perry Street. The girl told Pontiac police she didn’t see Hampton’s motorcycle she pulled from t’toitiac Road onto North Perry. - ogy. I who r The 34 forest tree nurseries operated by the nation’s focest industries prdduced 258,810,000 seedlings in 1960, enough to reforest about 238,000 acres. "Help is needed and it is needed now," Cavanngh ^sald. *qEnicigcncy hup ii reqtdr^'by drain are to eontinan to be aerved by exMing boa and fl Testifying on behalf of the American Municiped Association in sup-troop masses, artillery positions, port of Pi^dent Kennedy’s urban transportation bill, mayor called for grants, loans and federal guarantees of bond issues to enable cities and suburbs to work • together in unifying and modernizing existing transit sys-lenu and to create toew lailitles. to Support Bill -^jifaines Jackson Man inNewJeraey NEWARK. N. J. tUPD - Gov'. Rkhai-d J. Hughes urged 2.300j i,aN.SING lAP'-Gov. \Swainson Negro citizens last night to wnlej,^^^y ..ppomh-d Risie.ick D Riggs (heir stale legislators in supportj„^|,son to the Michigan llighe bill which bans dis<-rimination-|r,jm.„ijjj„ Assislamr Authority, in imblic housing in New Jersey. Riggs, dean of men at Jackson l^SINtS (AP) - A 62-mile section of 4-96 freeway between Brighton and Lansing, part of the Detroit-Muskegon freeway/, will be completed this summer, the State Tenn. (UPI) -* The Vanderbilt University ^Bo^rd of Trtut yesterday announced'ttic sdtbol will start admitting “qual-ified~ ktodenfs to all schools and colleges of the -university without regard to .^ce or creed/' - portion of interstate freeway igaui will be time^in Mich-more , than ISO JOB NO 'St-ltA AOVBKTISBUSNT FOE BIOS ' ! Bmrd ot EdDMUOn of uie School Olatrlct ot (he City ot PonMAC. -...........loled l|!ld» tor au«r»uana Jr. School I#-: ottlee ot th« Board ot Sdueatlon. 40 - ~ luehigan. Bld« The entire section is scheduled to be open- 19 traffic by.~Oct. 15? When it is completed, motorists will be able to drive nonstop the 185 mile.s lietween Detroit and Muskegon. Cleveland F. Nixon, head of the Electrochemistry Department of the General Motors Research Laboratory in Warren, died yesterday at his home following a heart attack. I Barrier One Pontiac, 1 y opaoed a wort. Including Architectural, Ue-— -nd Xlectrieai Triidee. apcclftcatlohi^lU be, ava ...... lie on add alter May w M»2. at the (Ice ot the arcblUet. Harry M. DenyOe. . Aaeoclatee, SIS Community National ink Building, Pontlae, Michigan. . Propoeale xngll be eubnutted on form» ovlded by the architect, a- bid bond eertined check 1 8% ot the r ■ ■ ■ propoeal. to Seoreta' XI condUien, within ten (10) daye after b._ ----ing.' Kach bidder wilt be glTcn two tete ot plane and epeclfleatlone. . ..Uonal plane and epocltlcatlona may be purchased 11 a bidder requires. extra coptes. .The ai ited btddera. shall' to xoqutred ■law, a katiaraeterv Performante and tabor and Material Bond. ____In the amount of 100% of *)>• tract The cost of the b( paid by the accepted fidde ( Bducatlon reeervea the lole or In part, and to waive ani . rmalltles therein, BOARD OP KOnCATION School District - • Nixon, 61, of 24701 Samoscl Trail, Southfield, joinied GM in 1929 with the Ternstedt Division anji was director ot process development with the division until I9S2 when he went to the GM Technical Center. 3:00 p.m. member and past president of the Amerit ~ troplaters Sqpfety,.-a director of Ameriemi Soc' Society for Testing Materials, and a past vice president of the Society of Automotive Engineers. _______arth'a''Mfil^llowt: Arehiteetural Trade*. Hechanl-il Work and llectrleal Work. Plana and apeetneatlona wUI to avall-ble on and after May 1, 1M3, «t the nice of the arehlteot. Harry M. Denye's. .r. Assoolate*. SIS Community National Bank Building, Pontlae, lUehlian. Proposals enau ha aubmitted on torma provided by the architect. A bid bond or oertltled chock in tha amount’ of 8% ot the bid abAll accompany each . I,, payable Surviving are his wife Charlotte; a daughter, Mrs. Nan^ Riddell; and four sons, John S., Cleveland W., James R., and William D. .. ohtek In the amount of 138.00 will to requlrad for each set ot plana and apaoltfeatlona which will be His body is at Jhe Neeley Fu-Bral Home, 16540 Meyers Road, Detroit. eondltlon, within ten (lO) daya after bid -iDenlng. Baoh bidder wlU be given two 3) teta of plana and apeeuieatlons. .idditlonal iplana and apacltleatlona may ba^^rehated It a bidder require* extra The'accepted bidders ahall to required Michigan Council Marks Invesl-in-America Month paid by the accepted bidder. All propoaale shall remain firm for a p»lod ot^lity (30) days alter otflelal The Board of Bducatlon,reserves tlie iqht to reject any and all hide • in.: ..hole or In part, and to waive ady. (ormallttee therein....... BOARD OP EDUCATION School' District ot til*' City ot Pontiac Pontiac. hUoblgan Dr. J. Allen Parker Secretary May 8 and 13. 1083 SCHOOL DlSim^ A week 'wasn't long enough -for Michigan to celebrtoe the power of investment. So William A. Mayberry, general cHajhnan of, the, Michigan Coincll^tof Invest-in-Anierica, de-ignated'all of May as Invest-in-Americk Month in the state. dent of Bank ot Lansing, Lansing; Howard Parshali, president 1 ol. Bank otJhe Commonwealth: 6uy Peppiatt, president of Federal-Mo-guI-Bower Bearing, Inc. Originally, the period AprU 29 through May 5'was proclaimed In-ves(-in-America Week throughout the nation. Mayberiy iiaid tile Invest-la--America program Is designed to provide at steady flow of capital Ray Eppert, president of Burroughs Corp., Detroit, is serving itional chairman of the Invcst-in-America observance for the sec-consecutive year. Walker L. Cisler, presidept of the Detroit Ellison Ob.', is vice chairman of the permanent orgatilza- -And; Raymond T. Perrlng, president of the Detroit Bank A Trust Co.; F. L. Riggin, Sr., chairman of MueHer Brass Corp.,' Port 'HU-' ron; George Romney, vice chair-nton of American Motors Corp.: Robert B.. Semple, preslddpt of Wyandotte Chemicals Ctorp.; Nate Shapero, chaimian of Cunningham Drugs. Inc; Russell Swaney, vice president of Federal Reserve Lynn A. Townsend, president of .Chrysler Ctorp.; Ralph T. MeElvenny, president of Michigan Consolidated Gas Co.; Donald F-Valley, chairman of National Bank ot Detroit; Joseph F. Verhelle, president of Public Bank; George Whyel, president of Genesee Morehants Bank and Trust Cb., rgahiza- -j. tion, Frederic A. Potts. prAkientL lank, ft ■ FUnt; M. S. Perry WlUtoms. otesL: dent of Keteey-Hayes Co. Hughes spoke at an aattsegte-gallon fund- raising gathering sponsor^ by the Inteiilraondnn- Newark and vldnlty nnd llie Junior Collie, succeeds Ellis A. Wunsrh of "Tritverse City for a iring April 24. 1964. .Senate confirmation ft required. SwaifiAon named Gerald Tuchow of Dftroil to ihf> State Tenure Oommission. replacing Burton H.^ C^to of Hamtrnmck, who signed. No Senate confirmatioii is needed. Hold Brother-in-Law ioStab-Wound Death of Philadel|)hin Nallnniil R.' jehairm.m. Mnyberr,v on the Roliert A. Youth Shoots Sell Over Grave ol Sweetheart^ Benton, n pariher , a partner County Sheriff’s deputies. Report-of Baker, Himonds and Cs., sec-Jed missing yesterday following retnry - treasurer, and John, E. Vernier, Mnniey Bennett and Nto.,' «4iadrman of' the ednealion te»Aa of the general commit- TERRE HAUTE, Ind, (AP) A 17-year-old youth shot blmself his sweetheart's freshly dug grave Friday, then drove p mile a h:ilf lor help. mimier warrant was being j sought this morning against i llelghlK man whom brother-inlaw was found last night dying of stab wouiMs or his relative’s driveway. Dead In Gerald lUtgera. tf, of 1808S Hoover, Detroll. Being Bnvta, of 877/H Rogers Police Chief Robert Ridiardson said William Wood drove into ig station in Riley. 4huth<>nst of Terre llaule. bleeding I ( wounds fropi a 22-caliber rifle. He was hioughi U) a hospital. where his eondilinn was reported rrilicul. ^aie police wild the shooting look place near Riley In Oak Hill' Oemelery, Where Norma Mae 17,g|vus buried Wednesday. She was killed last Saturday aft-Mi in a car wreck. the Rialto address by an unidentified caller who reported a fight-Wh(*n officers arrived it- 9:15 Richardstm salillN,|iliey found Rogers lying In the driveway bleeding from a stab v^iind. Offittors said he died before an ambulance arrived. William M. Adkins, president of Broun, Bosworth and Co., Inc.: \ttoller Ba.yer, president of the Detroit Slock Exchange; H. Glenn Bixby. presidenhof Ex-Cell-0 Corp. Ernest R, Breech, chairman of Traris - World ' Airlines; Robert executive vice president of Consumers Power 0)„ Jackson; Walker L. Cisler. president of The Delrbif pdiSoa Co.; Delmar V. Cote, state director, U.S. Savings Bonds; Merlin A. Cudlip, president of Mclaulh Steel Cbrp.: H. R. Cunningham. president of S. S. Kresge Co.; William M. D)i.v, president of Michigh Bell Telephone Co.: .lohn Dykslra, president of Ford Motor Co.; Malcolm P. Ferguson, presf-denl of Rendix Aviation Corp. Attack Animals !h Zoo ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. (UPI) -mpfrollor,, “ crotory Irivini t* I I. TO SflllSt Filvei. In CorMrGto Socrotory MetMtarOv i \ ''i'l '*f , (' \'i '■% y '..v.............am /OepflfHirtices wm Sg£»¥SJ!ff’j;Sir;3R ^ siKeSi' ris^*iiMSir' iB^ !!**?* *1^ p«m ut ru* lohni Vi TTTiiF^iSSiSaf^.1 ■Tcn Rd., OnlOD'Udte; i»>»«d bubMd of Mkqr «*T fothor of Un. ittw, 0«v W. C9ktii and 3 bo b»M M«o(l>7..iio7 O.m, lU tho IMbotaoo- r^MSTof mTdMHF ll s« Piw*l'.'ewby««w IM^ UNnlWfllMt SpadeaV. American Desi^er Ritteni <«e. M per eeot p nfUa et rRpdari sariig^r UOTHEfM DAY SPBCIAI^-COUD wave. I^ML Dorotby’e. M N. Perry. W b-'taot. Open ovet. ll Home. MAY . . . J„ 151 W. Hew York St.; a«e «8; beloved hufbaod of Ooldle M. Orant; dear* father of Robert p. Orant: dear tarothev of hire. Catherine Rlehman.' lira. Jennie' Cowcin, Mre. Slla Butler, 'and Mr*. Harriet OrliooU;. also ■ vlved by two arandchlldren. citation of the Roaarv- «ni ^nday. May 6 at T;30 the Voorheee-Btnie Pnnen Panrral >ervtee will I, _________ Monday. Kay 7 at > a m. at St. Michael* ‘ Oktholle Church. In-terinent in. Mt. Rope Cemetery. Mr. Orant will lie la etate at . ... the Voorheei-Stnle Funeral Home. • BOR8TMAH, KAf~Tlni. TOA 1»S» Robson Ave. Detroit; *»: dear mother of Frank C. and Walter R. Rorstman; also vlved by elfht arandthlldren It areal arandchlldren. Fun______ service will be held Monday. ..... V .* .... . _ chaoel ^ MICHIGAN CREDIT \ COUN^IXORS ^ tIi Pontlae State Ibik Bids. Ray Off Your Bills . — without a loan — Paymenta low as tlo wk. Protect yonr fob and Credit Home or Office Appointments City Adjustijnent .Service UEARN rai HXATIHOVranBS^ with the. world'a uirieel beatint eompany, we wU uiui It Fob . Prom%w* pMatUa'^'ia ^ If**J Metallurgical Lab Technician Lart'e diversified machine tool manulecturlng firm with multi-plant stnietura headquarterad In Datrolt re- Dutles wUl Include all typea -of physical testlnc t-e. tensile stress rupture, knowledge of micro and macro examination, reading 6f t ray film and r*- *' ------- graphs. Candlales degree 1 r.^o': !. J. OODRAROT P O N E R A _ Home. Keego Harbor. Ph. 683-0200 COAT3 meullurgy work experleni slerested only experlance. M; beloved 3756 Oarlaiid; wife- of Oat. . daughter of. Mary mother of Lunda oue nreps; "deir atster dt Hr*. Beatrice. Man-. ... -srner. Funeral d Monday. Hay t the Hur*— b Rev. O. __________ Intermen Chapel Cemetery. -—" *n atatr Home: - _______ . . family________ _ ’ contributions be made to Uu Oakland County Cancer Society. LDMdDiH. Mat 5. vraon. b. 43333 14 Mile Rd.. Novi Town ship; age 44; beloved husband ol Mary Lumsden; beloved eon ol Harry, .Lumsden; dear father ol Jacqueline. Llndp Lee and Scott Lumsden. Funeral are pending at tha nicparoi . Bird Funeral Home, WaUed L dear mother of Mr*. Lola BroWlb . and Oerald R. and Carol R. HcXntee; dear slater of Lawrence D. E. Pursiey . , FDNERAL HOMB_ 3 Donclson-Iohns FPNKRAL BOBOS hi^toOn SCHUTT GNLAROE0 AND REMODELED m Anlwm Ave.__ PE 3-3400 SPARKS-GRIFFIN ■-rhoagh^'serrtca”°**^ 8-5841 Voorhees-Siple PONERAL BOBOS PE 3-8376 the felloifiJif V^, 17, 18.y», SI; SS. S4.S6.S8, 61,^68. 69. 7S. '7S. 76. 8S, 90. 101, 104, 106. Ill, US. U4. 116. poientlal. penei^ — Ex-Cell-0 Corporation 310 RamUlon Ave. Detroit An equal opportunity employer MECHANIC WITH ADTOIdOTITfe, Jobber machine ,sbiq> experienee. Apply Novi Auto Parts Inc., Novi Mich. FI 6-3600. MANAGER - SALESMAN. MOC-new construction, real itlmR^^. Pace or Mr. MAN WITH SOME RESTAORANT experience to cook and manage luncheonette. Oood starting salary plus bonus. For Interview apply to Mr. Ocnahud', Netsner ”— — ” Saginaw. Pon- erences checked, 1 MAN OR wo: service ei-- customers Apply g:~~ .......... CAR hundred Watkins nmaree Township. . 150 N. P« .t .tho Sharpe-Ooyetie , Home. Clarkston. Funeral service ( will be held Monday. May 7. at . 6 a.m. at Our Lady of the Lakes Church with Rev. Fr. Delaney ' officiating. Interment In Lake-view Cemeterv. Bfrar McBntee will lie. to state et the Sherpe-Ooyette Ruostal Home, Clarkston.________ ifOREAU, MAT 3. 1163. OANNT Ray, 570 DeSota; age 11; beloved SOD of Marcel and Kaye O. Moreau; dear brother of Ronhy L. BWiwaa; dear grandson of Mr and THrs, Ferry Searle and Wilfred Moreau. Funeral sei will be held Mondav. May 7 1:30 p.m. pt the Runtoon ■ neral Home with Rev-T. O offlclctlng. interment'In P -Mt. Park Cemetery. Danny 'Will lie In state at the HunI Funeral Home. VOSBDHO. MAT 3. 1063, PATRICK George. 3040 Avalon. Avon Tov~ shlo: age 1»: beloved son of 1 andvMrs. Oeoree Vo«bnrg: d( .brother of Blarv, Michael. • Suxanne Vosburg. Racltatlon the Rosary will be Sunday. M_. 6 at 6:15 p.m. at 'he Bloore Chapel'of the Soarls-Orlffln Fu neral Home. Auburn Helghta. Funeral service will be held Monday. Mav 7. at 10 a m. at th< Sacred Heart Church, Auhurn ...Helahts. Ihlennent In Mt. Hope Cemetery, Mr. Vosburg will tie In etate at the Moore Chanel of the Sparks-Orlffln Funeral Home; Auburn Heights. Wn-DS. BtAY A 1*63. WHXUH F., ■607 AndersonvlUe Rd.. Sprtni-fteld Townehlp; " father of Serah And Jack Wilds; dear. Ethel WUds. Ret* Goodrich and M neral service wU day._May „. wiuii'i Is officiating. Interment In Cemetery. Mr. Wlldi n sUtebAt the Bharpe- NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED, education. WUl train at our expense. men tor direct closing of national advertlslngAjeads around the Pontiac ' area. TJaU between -»:30 and 3 p.m. Aak for Ryan. 548-3310. GARMENTS. Fox Dry Ihtpw«m6i, CARSTAKBR FORI APARTMENT BMtA. owipio, nfonnect.' OIL PONtlAC ■ Osteopathic HOSPITAr In conlunoUon with lU new ex- •hift, rptaUou. ■. ■ I Registered Nifrses I TO 4S60.5J ’ EVELYN EDWARDS PhoneFE 4-0584 ' FinisH High School ACOOliiDIOtt ^dAN P1 A M ri. . Kegisten t3M.7t 1 dapa^lng upon Licensed 'Prattical Nurses . M80.7* TO 6300.53 ending upon-quaUllcatlons and tgraduato-school of Nurslnk pending! State Board Examinatlcn) / Shift Differential /for all employes working 3:00 to / UM p.m. and 11:00 pm. to 7:00 Fine opportunities for advancement plus Job Security. EzeeUent fringe benefits tnclude: & Paid Vacations ‘ Paid Holidays Paid Life Insurance _________GRAVE, PE 4-5345,_______ FOR Sale in beautiful oak- . ---- -genforial Park. 2 LOST cinity ■ E." FE g-4674... hita and Barr iM^bromr o IN LOVING BMCMORY OF NOR-man, Douglaa and Kenneth Keel, .who passed away May 5, 1054, I cannot see the red races, ^ For the barrier In between; I cannot ace your dear face*, i Through the mystical curtain's soft *’Seau* *” **’**' Bhelr'*^'*grance It strong It you. my Lsddle t are wa And yo.. .... ------ Though the curtain - Badly missed by fter 5 p.m. Or M no an-11 PE 1^34. Confidential. '■AID ShPPUES; l3» e. PE 5-7800. - AFTER THIS DATE MBT a. i062. 1 will not 6e aponsible for any ^rbt* tracted bv| any other than a^f. iSlgned) Bamnel E. master, 5770 Winslow. Poni LOST—REWARD Black baseball glove betwc Grandview and Pure on Stntl' York. Reward. Reward. 363-0456. AUTOMOBILE MECHANIC Must have own tools. Apply In person to Mr. Oliver, no ^one cells. CRIS8MAN Chevrolet, ttocb AFTER * P.M. It have 3 men to work 4 eventhg. Eamlags of 61 k. Must be neat ----- AUly. Opening all For Information call I , READ THESE Classified Cplumns Cljssification 106"' for the car of your choice. Region De?iler8 And Individuals. .. BARBER Bnrber Shop 3867 ElUabfth ___• Rd. FE 4-47M CAB DRIVERS' Steady and ' Keep this column fresh with daily listings of ■^your favorite model and mih« ■ at competitive ; prices. IFYOU arein THE MARKET NOW or soon to be. Consult ClQSsification 106 'TODAYI rsiv^ 1^. Auto B^y^-aerv^e. ____________!- either young DIE Sl?fTEl 'ERS Manufacturing Co . steady v h'ishcr Industncs ^^Magle_cor_ol_Ciwk^ EXPERtENCED EXPEHlENCED MAN VbR OEN- Jpurneyman DIE MAKERS Apply Eniploynient*Officf HAWTHORNE METAL PRODUCTS CO. 4336 COOLIDOE RD. f. ROYAL OAK Foreman Press Room sxsa jT»K.;r. exparlenca tn handling all type* and alias, of punch presses Job EjrZ.x.tirc.svyiir:"': IMpEDIATE OPFlNlNGS Neat aviwarltig marrii PART TIME. EVENINGS --------- Sat. Knowledge ol guitar helpful, Must be able to read mt-‘-Call 673-5232, Mrs. Sexton. 'national corporation In PontU and area. Must have matui judgment with a desire to grow. ^ge_25 to 40 Excellent Income Material hsndUng. metropc ,,-area, protected territory. Ei ertle helpful but not neecsslty. Mr Kent. May 7. et 668-664L^ Toot lathe wand. OPENINGS one year's experience. Age 30-38. The position offer* year around emplownent. an on - the - Job tralnInV program, and various TRUCK DRIVERS WITH V', OB 3-TON LATE-MODEL. 'DUAL WHEEL TRUCKS — OR ABLE TO PURCHASE SAME—LONO term LBASE--TO PULL 540BILE HOMES. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS. YEAR AROUND WORK FOB PERSONAL INTERVIEW REPORT TO: MORGAN DRIVE AWAY, INC. MARLETTE, MICH THE V ■ . CUSTOMER IS KING! ! ARE LOOKING f TiVC I'001) ( 0.. IN'C ■ OIL bORNKR SERVICE MAN ^ner. WA' real IITSTATE 8ALES54AN ___________ Pull time. Experience preferred.' tcXPEIUENCED Member of Multiple Lleiingi Service. Phone FE 5-6471 for*appolnt-ment. Ivei «•--<*— 8INOLE FARM HAND FOR-TRAG tor and field work. Board room, good^ **|'* » 4610 Llv- g^^tuKu tAVi>kb I^Oit' iiilN- eral farming MUM have reiev-ences Howard L/Musoll. 13834 Spencer Rdr665-3646. SINGLE MIODLEAOED MAN laod*ce|ie work and farm ch, . more for home then wajes. FE SALESMEN 'fo .SELL MODERN- rtmen.^.oi,e.fB AMBITIOUB MEN I experience to work . . ..ale sales. Oood future e who I* ,wllHng to work. • Ample floor time. Good perem - see cell for detell* REAOA real estate, UL 3-3505, Tom SHARI* WO 2-434(1 Guaranteed sallyy 165 per to start. 40 Week, e X p e r i e n cleaning, Ironing, assist ohildrsn. Thurs. off Mid other Sunday. Uve in. uloymsnt. watch ciesnert. Woodward, Blrrolnghsni A>k lor Ml aum*an. Ml 4 661* _____ irASvSiffKBriWlW^ or 10;30 a.m.-O p m, 4 day* Flc 3-2140 call between ji^'a.in and A baok bonus of dollai’-size pearl/buttons is your easy entree to this summer-loving dress by Sylvan Rich for Martini. Attention centers on the smooth glide of gently flared princess panels-then quickly shifts to the lively side attraction where bouncy skirting bells into a new and coil trolled kind orfullness. > ★ ■*. A il^rgin of bright contrast streaks up the side-wrapped back and around the sun-bound neckline. The buttonholes are highlighted by an oversize binding of contrast. Originally shown in white birdseye pique with, turquoise silk linen trim, this dress will maker neivs wherever the sun shines when made in any plain or printed novelty cpttons,_ casual silks, sharkskin or linen. N-1134 Miss e))|arfini From these corresponding body* measurements select the size best for you. sizing is comparable to that used for better ready-to-weai- Bast Waist Hips sLenttb 34 34 35 16 >4 inches 35 35 36 16Y« Inches 3014 2614 3714 17 Inches • From Nape of Neck Size 12 requires three and seven-eighths yards of 36 inch fabric and one-half yard ^f 36-inch contrast for dress. To order Pattern N1134, state size, send Jl. Add 25, cents for first-class mail and social handling. Available; pattern books are 17 and 19 at J1 each,^ Duchess of Wind-ahd 20 at 50 cents each OR all four books for 52.50. Address Spadea, Box 535, G.P.O. Dept. P-6, New York, 1, N.Y. (Copyri«i^t, ,ljM2) REAL ESTATE EXPERIENCED PREFERRED complete forces In our Pontlae .U.J Birmingham offices. Plenty o( leads and assistance. Will also train “ ambitious people over 25. • with __nre sales, clerical or credit experience. Call C. Bchuett, Realtor app't^ at PE 2-79r - ) between 1 and 8 p.m Help Wanted Female CARE OP CHILDREN AND LIGHT housework, FE 5-8718. CURB GIRLS FOR DAY SHIFT. MIDDLE^^.^. WOMAN,' OENER-home than wages. Chiw woicnmi-Fe 4-6226, mornings. COUNTER WAITRESS COUN'JER AND GRILL OmLS, 21-40. Jam's Hamburgers, 150 N, Center St;; Northvllle,.______________ Dining Room. WAITRESSES “"‘tED’S Iwatd I ! Lake 1 OCTOR'S FAMILY WANTS housekeeper to live In, responi ble. good with children, $40 p< week to Mart, social aeourlty paid, uniforms furnished, every Monday and alternata Sundays off. MI 7-1783. EXPERIENCED WAITHESSlES and eur^ girls, 18 or over. Top wagea. Beefburger Drlve-In, 5006 Dixie Highway. Waterford. OR EXPERIENCED < EXPERIENCED DRUG CL'ErA, Coolfv Lake Rd. Union Lake, SHIRT GIRLS, irson at Herald Laun-sple, Gxford. N C E D MANICUR-ne. 4 daya a week, mis. MI 6-4940.____ -GIRL TO LIVE IN care of small chlldrsn. rienc* necessary. 7405 Ct"' 'llli mlhgham, -Mich. Skill cook, o 3o pi’y' al "llamnoi”*, 1 HouUi nivd . EosI. __ OIULlJ COOK " ANi; 1571 Union Lske I ply In person. HOUSEKEEPER 5 DAYS. HOUSEKEEPER ' IMMEDIATE OPENING, UNUSUAL opiiortujilty ^for^ ^a^mtaltloUi Urty eiice Uuough trie*’’balance, pome statistical typing. To work'^wllh coiigenlul people. Modern plant. Oxford area. Interesting andi dl- J^to *40. Must have OWi portatlon. Call OA 6-3566. ^iU'hcn .Supci vi,sor SU'Z'/'........ MEDICAL A9SI8TANT FOB Doctor's office. Southern Oakland County area, experlenead, age 73 46. must have own transportation. mats expected salary. Re-jily In longhand to Pontiac Press Ask for (he \V;int AT DfpiirtiiH'iit ' I- E 2-8181 Help Wanted Female NURSES AIDS'^ NEED WAITRESSES FOB DEI eatesseri store. Opportunity P advancemenL Apply h» ■ persO Bel-Mar. Orchard Lake Rd. Keego Harbor. 682 1313. POLIO PATIENT NEEDS HOUSE-•keeper, live In. Child welcom.e. SiiiT POSITION OPEN FOB DATA PRO-cesslng supervisor In new Installation In Ann Arbor, Michigan area. - -Baperlence.desfratur^n' planning, SCMOdnUng, and: IBM unit record machines, send r^-mes and sOlary requirements to " ” Ann Arbor. RELIABLE PERSON FOB PULL time help with care of chlldre- Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A ECEPTIONIBT DESIRED BY raro*slvo' Birmingham archllec-firm to handle switchboard and ahare typing In 2-glrl off Write Pontiac Press Box No. giving experience, age. salary sired and references.______ SHORT ORDER COOK For nlgl4 work, pletsi eondllloint. apply In ii Howard jolmso ’•-■egraph. -- tperlence help- ______,FB g-0666.__________ TELEPHONE SOLICITOR, isant voice. Salary WMtREMES and'CURB OIRLS 2 SM<>" WAWfiia .86 Dixie WANTED; -------- In Birmingham ................ " ‘ '---- typing and bookkeep- — Reply Pontiac Ing experience. Reply Press. Box 68 stating i WAITRESSES white. MIDDLEAffiD HOU ■^{3 'iUys.*FK SL [ K. npAhT TIME NIOHT8. person after *------ 3481 Ellr.abu wTiITE 40 TO «0, LIVl^ IN ...... Friday, care of ^ cnii- It housework and Iron-—■■ Reply Poll- yoi/no lady to LlVi IN. HOlti plus wages ln'*exohange ' tims babysUlIng. PontU ■ WS-hESS. 34-40 FmS'T CLASS counter type coffee shop. Open-Ins' on afternoon* and mid nights, nift's Grill. Telegraph al Maple Hoad, Blimlnghaiii. Sick Leave Benefits -Social Security Experienced Personnel Contact: PONTIAC ’ Osteopathic HOSPITAL . Attn: Personnel Director Phone:'FEderal 8-7271 good commission rates. Ask for Hr. Martin. CRAWFORD AGENCY 158 W. Walton FE 6-0236 106 B. Flint UY 3-1143 ,, MANAGER , Fkr snack bar, piale or feinalif foAlnsl growing national chain Of. snack bars, experlenos desirable but not necessary. Salary commensurate With' baej^round. Apply In person to Mr. Forman, American Snack Bars Inc., located In Sparton’s Department stor-------• gnj Telegraph. . wprk. prices right. FE 6 Tell Everybody About it with a Pontiac Press Want Ad That’s because of the greater selection of everything froni automobiles to employment offered every' day. Just Dial FE 2-8181 IINHB' - ' V >11 ODD JOBS Lawii 0^ 'koato. matnten iSTt. iat ow aiUMli llratl I* 641m. 1^,. jBiLa(>WIztHd! 66.60. WAMEB CAB "callable. 6r work of any Und. wwi 14536.. jgitrk Wwiti^ Nimila ^ * y.neral cleaning. FE 4-6663. rienea. McOowan, FE iLian. . IPPiwrrTiNiEr^AY WlofeK OB "iftnlng. Hospital Road — *« a-a746. ntoNiNos W^Uu - «nees. FE 54473._____________ ’WOMKH DESIB® *aLL * washing: A-1 WOtk. FB 6-1131. WiitlOW WANTS LIGHT HOU8B-^k. earj of convalaaeeot or aeml-lnvalld. Pr^r near bua i*n« Rateranees. FB 34744.___ B Ur 1 L OI KG MOpiniNIZATIQN vMrsM^rlenoe. Call after 8:06 homes TO BE MOVED 3 and'♦bedroom frame, We will move t*,J®»r JM. Krfst Mouaa Moving. Oo., 310M Telegraph Rd. w.i.gMSa ■ , Eves. fcM 3-0603 iTTU YOUIW .faouSB MOVING *'Wlv equipped. Fg 44450. SOUOldAHOO^Y DOORS, SIZES 18X84 to Inches, Partst Antiques, 3740 S. Roriieeter Rd., wncheater. UL ^3SU. _________ -----"WHITE PINE SPECIALS 1x13 shelving 1344e Un. ft. —3 ................ 2^ lln. ft. 'airport lum'b&^ 71 Highland Rd. qr 4.igBs BMtiww >«rvlca 15 ALL MAKH» OF roUNTAIN PENS rtpalred by fwlMy trained men office. General Printing ft SPPPJJLCO. 17 W. Lawrence me FB 3-0135. ■a«bmbnt ‘ WATj||i»im.oeF.' ’^^trtc cT FB''W«3I.r _ HAinJNO BLAtiK ontT.. F9A 18 iToSTOkt FLOW. niBR ORAa, FLOWXNO. AL-8 COMPLETE LAM08CAPINO. nUnitfiff. ir«a re- ijkWN SERinCE. SPEblALmK fx larce »nd smell eatetes. cutunc. aeedlng end ferUUsing-Commwity Lewn Servtee/Lendell. Letimer. owner, 662-3571. OABDEH^PLOWINO^BT^gT OR ' bden plowing, beason- OARD'Eli #tOWINO AND DIOT ing. Reasonable prices. Noel Mat-. tlo. 101 W. Rutgora. FE 3-7360. s of mlddle- E 2-5151. PSYCHIATRIC SOCIAL WORKER ll starting salary 6506 monthly ' with .periodic Increases to $586 monthly plus all.Michigan Civil Service benefits. To fill future positions In lo-Mssfer's Degree In social work from an aCcyecIlted school of social work and have-one year of full-time paid experience In social work, gained eubsequent to obtaining the Master's Degree, For additional Inforina-tlon and application for examination write Michigan Civil Service. 1320 South Walnut. Lansing 13. Applications must be received at this office by 5 p.m. on May 14. 1962. An e"“»l onnor-tunlty employer. e kept c (lenttal. . Michigan. ABSOLUTELY NO CANVABSINO Sales opportunlly for person whe can quality. Must have neat an-pearance, good personality, with a oar a necessity. To arrange for appoUUmenl call White Chupel Marker Division,' 6894)874. Aller 5, 6474)751. CREW MANAGER training »*^2(fhoul ris for women'i opportunlly^^’ Reply pay and good Pontlao Pitaa I'WELYN EDWARDS DOCTOR'S RECEPTIONIST . 63t. "-indie office records, shorthand d typing. Previous doctor' BOOKKEEPER Thorough trial balance, pi jjiid ^P*»t records, own Iran KEY PUNCH ................. $39 —' “revloi^A experience, KEY PUNCH ................ til Recent grad. oVer 31. No pr< yloua experience necessary. Junior bookkeeper ......... 63i Payroll, compute Interest, goo typist, own transportation. Pri TlouB experience. CREDIT OAL •......>....... 6336 " ipervlslon with previous retail edit experience, age 35 to OFFICE Recent prevlou EXECUTIVE secretary $400 8ar“p7.on'“' tti’’".‘ki«’.': personality, and appsaranoa rt-quirad, SALESLADY . . , Pravloui experlenoa hi b MEN ramllUr with good, «pn«ftrKn^9, ide. KVJiIA’'N liDWARDS I. Huron Tit. Suita 4 felepbuna 4-0664 ' Ambulanca Sarvict Paving Aulbmobile Inturanca CANCELLED - DENIED Young Drivers Monthly Payment Plana Complete Coveragh Effedtlve Immediately ,-1 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING Free estimates available, lawn iTTMERION BLUENsOorDELlIr-erles made or you pick up. 2601 Crooks Auto Repair REBUILT MOTORS No money down—34 mos. to pa) Motor Exchange Co. 401 B. Saginaw FE 3-7431 Banment Water Proofing - SUPERIOR BASEMENT WATEB-proofere. All work guaranteed. Free estimates. FE 5-6730. kar-lifb battery CO. STARTERS AND REOULATORS' GENERATORS $5.95 UP 303 Auburn • FB 5-1014 Beauty Shopi EDNA'S BEAUTY SALON Permanents $4.50 Shampoo and Wave 61.76 70 Chamberlain 0 to 0 FE 4-1087 '^oats-Accenorlei SUNDAY Harrington Boat Works 1699 g. Telegraph Building Modernization 1 additions, FALL-OUT 8HEL-‘— — Raising, r—------- EXCAVATIONS ~ BULLDOZINO SPECIAL LOW SPRING PRICES. Cement wbrk, porehaa, --------- tiona. Michigan baaement. bathrooms, Utchen. rooOng km aarvlow e efOT wm'brtoB to of your buUd-m§o an flnanolng Carpet Cleaners 'MsON CARPET SERVICE call "George" MA 6-3333 Coin Lnundriet Drainage Supplies orchard Lake Aye FB 3.7ioi 7*’ ALTBRATnONS. ALL OARMBNTS. Ino.. Knit Drasiee OR 3-7131. ANCHOR FENCES Monejr_Down,___FE 5-7471 PONTIAc'niiNCB CO;^ ' 5933 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-aS66 HMr SMding A-l SANDING THURMAN Wlire PB 5.3732 FaBIlLON — WATERtOX — WAX Banding. PE *-»7«6. _____ Class A Meriun Sod 38C per yd. delivered Discount *00 apre. Merlon Sods Farms. Inc., ntic LANDSCAPJNO AND INO. SEEDING, SODDINo. Free estimates EM .7.241$ SEEDING. GRADING. _.—pe-top old le—-- ------- Eraig t 541303. tune-up AND 8HARt>ENINO, Guaranteed work. Plck-up and delivery. .Bherwood.:-GB.. 3-,om». ’ w. NEW SPRING PRIciB»_r"~" Moto Mowers, and Tractor. Yard- nkipbh*^ “f luj" ______________________ «^%^»T*FH™TEliiy8-''F'JE 5-8321. _________- W. E. TALBOTT ft SONS 2X4 - 6' ECONOMY STU^^Tigo ixli Spruce boards 8y,c lln, ft^ 3x4 NO 3 fir 10-16 n. O60 lln. ft. •V4 TD casing ..... 07c Un. ft. TD base .... 09c Un. ft. ty, _ 2 It. St. «•»!> ■• 40« oft Waterford Lumber Cash and Cany TALBOTT LUMBER New and Used TV tbad4-ik television ••service CHECKED" 630.95 and up ...u. - At llttrc at 61.26 wl GOODYEAR BBBVICB OTORE 30 a. Casa ; FB 6-S133 GUABANTEIED OFTICTAL PASS------- ^ ?nwn* Pontiac, expert piano tuning By Master Craftaman IMMEDIATE SERVICE Wiegand Music Center V « . - - REFAlRrLu. at- hour »•"*«?• ....... PImtitiRg SenrtM FL0MSgS?B8““?gft^HER. WALLFAPER STEAMERS , DRILLS, POWER SAWS 063 J08LYN ______FB 6-«I06 Wallpaper Steamer Floor senders, polishers, band, aanders, furnace vacuum cleaners. Oakland Fuel ft Paint. 436 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-6150. ,. CONSTRUCTION ROOFS: NEW,REPAIR KAVEaTBODOHlWG FE 6-0466 Stamps for Collectors FREE NICABADGA LIST Squirrel Stamp Shop B^g 4004 Auburn Hrigt MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICE DAY OR EVES., FB 6-12Bg Trees and^hrubs l-l TREES. 25 PER CENT OFF sale on Spruce, Pina and Fir trees. Regular price on other stock. Mugho. Yews, ArborvUae. village. I'/i miles east of intersection at Duck Lk. Hd. and Wlj-om Rd. Open dally, dig your own. Mutual 4-0635. ________ I Service ERVICn ------------lOVAL Traa removal, trimmlnr Qet our bid. 003-3610 or FB g-»'flil. General Tree Service ; TOA^^DBBISH, I HAULING AND RUBBISH. ANY- HAOLINO AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any time. FE g-0005. LIOHT iHAUUNG, TRASH AND yard cleaning. OR 3-7080, light HAULING AND YARD oleanup. FE 5-7435. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING. Rubbish, fin dirt, grading and 5ravel and front end loading. FB -0003.____________, Trucks to Bent Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 635 8. WOODWARD -■B 44M61 FB A-16U Open Dally Including Sunday 3K” IHAB UPHOLSTBRma NPHJ'H PERRY ST. FE 5-S888 FIELD WALL C and-jrtnaovs. $ 1 guaranteed. Fi PaInts INC. V *W*3-3306 ACME QUJ Hundreds t_ _ N. Saginaw sL NORGE AUTHORIZED SERVtCll For aU of Oakland County R ll D Servloa Oo 1606 B. Telegraph pg 3-1111 REASONABLE W A S H E R, AND - Yenmore, Vhlrl-FB 5-6015. \thb paj^TjA^ plifel- s^tu^ itAisfjfj 4 ENQINa ^mUNBR. LOS AN< B«i«i, Ban mnelico. {7r.so. H4»< • wall. *M eztH. Ntw York. 4Mi* ’ Miami. $44. SMtti«.M«.tO. iKerrr Sorvloo.^ Ine.. OB MM4. lady. wodu> lirb RiDa imou iudah Subdiviiion to Pontlao. 5 days, worklnt tiourt ~a:$o” to' 5. iGbST tfo W OB Wanted OiiMnn trUooril 29 LICBNBI Hour o wookly oaro. PE M340; Wanted Houiahold Gsodi 29 1 CALL SHILLS . for (urnitur# a gain Homo. F CASH FOR rURNItORB AND Ap. pllanoea t ^laoe or houieiuL Poaraon’B PB ~ —• LET Wantiyl Miicellansoui 30 WANTED. M RESTAURANI WANTED: 8- OR lOINCH PLOW, disk, oultlvakir, snow plow lor Bordon tractor. FE 6-6Wr-________________ NICE BOOMS. prlvato on ground Door Bear Drayton S h op pl n d Ce“Wr. Btoxe. r*i,. ao4 .*'4»t Roasonablo. PBdoraJ, 8-B 0 0 M APARTMBU I COTTAOE HOME FOR SUMMER on lake, Birmingham. Pontlao araa. by 3 young profissional flbaractor, retponslblf. ftaUO pROFlbilWB^ VAL-U-WAY RENTAL SER\ ICE ftollable tonants waiting. Fast, efficient action. Call: R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR EE 4-3.531 435 Oakland Are,_____»::» L18Tm08-::iirAST SIDE OF crrr: MIDDLETON REALTY CO. FB «.aiia - CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTBjtCTg^— HOMES WEIGHT » Oakland Ave FB g.5441 Farm wahted ‘ c tT iT ' re^rs buildings.. Can give . erenoe. Fenton. Tiolly, Clarkston and Davliburg area. Reply Pon- LiSTINGS NEEDED Listing your property or selling jmr present equity - oall Mr. Action Is good now. we badly need homes, lake property, larnM. acreage. We have buyers for land ..e have calls lor rent-. no obligation., would be talk wlUi you. Cali EVERETT CUMMINOB. REALTY, 4540 FOR bale and FOR RENT Buyers Galore TT3g Blgbland*RdT*IifcM? OB 4 03W = - r-T-—rrri ^ l-BBDROOM EFFICIENCY APART, manta. Fully furnished, parking. 1^ortb.Northeast elde. PE 5-3355 "r FB 4.48M. 'isTADlES, FiRSi' __________ip; no per week. 3.18-4061. a CLEAN RCXiMS, bibsE IN. 143 E. Howard.. FB 3-0103. r AND~3 R005IS. Pftl c FriW-rT:SAS7^ARaB' fto<>_•• 3? “fimr eSre CLEAN AND NICE 3-room and bath newly deoorat-ties. VALUET REALTY, 345 Oak- decorated. Apply "aa B. Saginaw. near pontjac MAuL^ tlll8es"plus“s — 118 per nr ____ -1103. FOR RINT--BA8EMENT AFART-----. pf oouple on WPJlon.^^At yai/^ _ refrigerator Pished, Pontlao Prw Boa ... kMBH Xiip BATH-r|ft|g^ arated bedroom, iaundry faolll SLATER'S PABM ST. Modern 5 Room APARTMIiNl stove and REFRIOERATOR OTY“4TlTff&M» Apartmc'nts a and I bedrooms MODBBVllf^EaV DETAIL Id BATH, tumlehed. $5.5 A MONTH JOrwln. 1 block east 1. 1 block north of a 1 to 5 p-m. WMtowtt HeaHr, COLORBD — SOOTH BOI _ boulevard rwSIVw” ^5« Available soon. REaL value BY S. B. 8. Builders. I TWO BEDROOM jramR ACE Near Auburn and Bast .Blvd. $50 per month. Oas heat and garage available. See manager, 130 s. CU FB 4-5375. OSCODA. SLEEPS 5. FIREPLACE, on Lake Huron. 575 per week. Ml 6-1433. LAKEFROIfT HOIIb. Rooms With Board RXCEPTIONm-Y O^'AN tooellent food/ PE 5-0377,- BOOM and. cm^ »9*S® Oakland Ave. FB 4-1554. RK A ..OP ,??AT L A new DUiiamg, gas ‘'.I'- Call "Bui" Nlcholle, Realtor. Root Offico Space CRESON BUILDING , 2840 W. MAPLE St Cranbrook, Birmingham. Of- “"'"“Sn-SoOO, BUILDING, 30x30 WEST SIDE--Two-thlrds attractively decorated and used as office, - owner will rent this spaoS for 855 per monw. Balance of building may bo eoa--fortsd to suit tenants, FE 1-1881' $fll9 HoVS9S BY OWNER: I ROOMS. OMUOl gas beat, sun poi^. north aM Terms. FE 5-3381 _.YING TO TRADE? R'S SACRIFICE. FLATTLBY REALTY :-BsibRd6ia kRick home, m- ISSne^W.' »estjr5‘i.p OL i-iai5Ufter 5;30 p.m. . 3-bedroom home 3-BEDROOM RANCH. LdiV DOWN payment. 513,000, 351 5-5058, 3 bedroom^, NE' . NEW 8 CAB OA- asBumo- of mortgage, un j-omu. rBEORObU BRICK RANCH, CAR-port, IVfc ceramic baths, yard fenced. 4 yrs. old. City water and ... -T.V. over 4Vi per 513.161 and aewer, gas beat. Take ov cent of mortgage of. 51 51,380 down. Ifo haseme Cass Lake Road, FE 3- 4-ROOM BUNGALOW WITH BATH, nrieed lor auiek vale. 338-1836. ^ ;iLY .ROOM, Easy tertbs. 5 OR 31 ACRES. ATTRACTIVE country home with aluminum elding, located Just we*> «' tlac. Good l)»8ement, -------- beat, d-oar garage, greenhouse and .orchard, has frontage on smllirlake, ran Mrs. Johhsjon. FE 5-3405. representing Clark 5-ROOM 5-® NEAR SCHOOLS. 88,50o| With terms.,,_FB_^4153,' nights 5.ROOM FRAME HOUSE, BASE-ment, bath. White Lake totvnshlp. Jam J. Mhnite Jr. call or 4-4101 and garage. Small In^re 33 Myra. Ims”"plus utilities, brtollng ui » saitlsfactory buyer pool, low prices OL 1-1778. Newly deeoirated. ................. screened porch, full basement. •Proof of value, FHA will loan 816,100 full prlca 816,356. 1785 S. Bates, MI 6-0737, 3-bedroom brick. modern north side home witr city conveniences. Take , payments 867 mo„ Includes p A NICE PROPERTY ok k. pIkE Street. Excellent neighborhood and ior-“------------hn.... .... buiTtiins. Fireplace 3 BEDROOMS , Joaah Lake. Ml 6 AUBURN ROAD West of Adams. 8 room brick floor, basement, oil furnace. - *70 lot, aoned commerc'*' • mortgage . can be j COlikTRY LlVIl^cy BRICK 5iX"Too“i.¥4!tt.”i>V‘- rag*. Over 3H aeroa> Loaded «1ut ss*.:iriiufey Peterson Real Estate MY 3-1681 COLORED BARGAIN »nn o-vAm. _ «»nlaoo - base is* wits loads of tbado trees -fiOUent location - owner hae .. duceef price over |3,600e4or fast WRIGHT CLARKSTON—HOLLY AREA.,. This beautiful country -e^te has two - homes, horse barn, lake ares, other bulldlnca; professional landacaplng.^ minkan garden, outdoor and Indoor ttre-plaoes. eighty sens, forty of which may be purchased separately. 15 miles north of Pontiac, near new expressway; Itb mtlas east of US-10, near Wildwood Lake and . HollV Recreational perfecuy beautiful set-Tsee picture In display ad. section). Open Sunday 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. rot (iatalUi call Luclle Knight, • Flint Realtor, -■ ■ - Cedar 5-3547 in Flint. CRESCENT EAKE 4905,,FIDDLE New ^bedroom rancher, full basement, automatic hast, lake privileges. extra largo lot. Fait poe- COMilUNITY NATIONAL l^NI ELIZABETH LAKE mvi 5-rooB modem. 5d.35« „„ • Low down jmyment, mil ^Mro^ETON ™***^ygr GOOD CREDIT and a steady Job — H you have m^’, %l'*ba8*ement*”hoine lease opthm with 5300 down, per month. Alio 8-hodroom^i EVES. OR 3-4535 OB FT! 3-7055. FOR BALE BY OWNER — S-bed-room raneh st^e, attached garage. family room. slum, aiding, gas beat, terms to suit. Drayton area. . Immedlata possession. OR 3-3317. HOLLY AREA ”w.tH‘?A i"cr.«.«”A"!. buildings for general farnitnjt am attraotrvp 3-bedroom Sun^g^ reserve, Ideal nr 7M 8. ADAMS. BIRMINOHAM Ml 7-3050_____FE 5-3M LAKEPBONT New orick. 3 bedrms., den. ixun-dry rm„ family rm.. 3V, baths, 3-car garage, 3 fireplaces. biflR-1ns. Sell or rent. 1544 Fruit Dr., near Milford. Keep horses near-by. Phone 507-4074.__________ I and , ________ _____ I V hom^ with no down payment! ^L^Soo" **** *■ fire- LAKE ORION. COUNTRY LIVING LOS8-YOUB GAIN. 3-BED-room hqme. Part of my equity, •takr OTsr payments on -PaL ot 86.700. 335-1385. MODEL HOME All brick, 3 bedrooms. IMi baths, large paneled recreation room, 'Ircnisce, 3-par attached garage, ralB-lns and many other features. Excellent ----- workmanship through-led,,on scenic wooded Drayton Ho'lV IS Modd at Builders Cost $20,900 Bl-levol, 4 bedrooms. 3ti baths, large family room. 3'/, ear at-tacned garage on large lot, lake privileges, 3538 Huntington- Park br. (West Walton Blvd. and 8Uv»r . Now Clvlq Center, 333-0435. NEWLY REMODELED 8-ROdk arm houae near H8UO. 4 beif noma. 3 batha^ 3%-car^^rag< NOTHING DOWN Union Lake Area - 3 bedrt_„ ranch — nice kttohrii — large lot - paved street - public and parochial schools -- newly decorated and vacant — Price 113,000. approximately 53So costs. Call Mrs. Hillman, OR 3-3351, representing Clark Real Estate. .™,...i,MALr S bedroom brick, trl-level on ... Xake, lib scree, trees, sot beach, by owner, FE 4-3171. LAKEFRONT BARGAl ,«rge glMeed-lii porch — vjng 000 mortgage v can be ftrrange< PONTIAC REALTY ) OARDENEB'S DEUOHT. 1 bedroom brick ranch. Itb baths living room, 33x15, lame lot BAiiiaAik. bAioAIN WcOME. ^ - N, Jotmaon. Make an oiler. MA 5-3517, BIRMINOHAM SCHOOLS. -mL level, 3 bedrooms. 3 baths. 3Vb-car garage. Ml 4-4340.__ BY OWNER N BLOOMFIELD HILLS — B ranch, large living room with tural ftrepiaoe, separate dl ern^kllchen* *8**ar'altaolicd' rage, full. Wement, gas 1 storms and screens, large, i WRIGHT 382 Oakland 8 FE 5 OUT..iiFiwl ROAD IN PERRY ‘— Nearly new 3-bedl-oom louse with ceramic bath, carpeted living room, (own kitchen, boaemont, storms, screens. Insulation. Vb-acro lot. Paved drive. Handy to Pontlao. 515.500. very rea----- terms. H. P, HOLMFB. INC. FB 5-3853 Eve«, OA 0- ORCHARD EAitif BEAUTIFUL dining- , ------- -------- ------ built-in oven, range and matching refrigerator. 15x24 living room, fireplace. 3-oar garage, paved drive, beautifid V«-aore site, 129.700. low doani payment. 8a2-3l>58.________________ BEDUOliib 3-BEMoW BRtOt full basement, attached garage, 816,850. FE 8-3333. SAVE MONEY DO IT YOURSEI-F Brileva It or not you can build yourself a home of. your dreams. Not a shell or starter home, but complete. No money down. You rfTv A M"' LAicfclH'..sWW fi-gme, .0 rogm*. iigth, AciiRcl,'' 8.Rod«"Ti'a''DB'ft k •- -e,, close to Fisher Body. — 6 hfter 3:** WE trAdb lion noiue, ----- ,arpoted. Picture dowi. Big lot. 5300 down. g«6 WAfitllNB PONTfAiC ESTATES 4 bedrooms, full basement lot 100x150. A sacrifice at 511.500. down KLWOOD RDALTT ... Iteottlagham KhoU. JParmtngton r&ia......... r/csawnib. bedroom brick. $740 tor 43,000 .... H^a ID. .new NORT^ScHN ' 1 ■ I* - P>“* taxes, for this 3 ht _. nUl basement, gas beat, fenced y»rd “l ! 1 ’I "511.100 with 5200 to move In-1 I I ,l I ^ Webster school -....... *^*'lf*ll* room. jnfldorn_ heat, garisg In porch. ^ W. w. Rotm' Homes at OR 3-5031 tor details I Rustic Log—^3 Acre.s nice trtes. -abruba. and 8ssr.2”*jif^ . &* aa«!r^'«S5a /bgbbl^ iKa brngaSTml »©• ,1Z4* SUuS&lS^ B?"pBA^8! 5»ALTORS. 350* W - . -• t moo. EM J-7131. 4-bedroom ^d-levei. > Village. Elf 3-3565. ITl9an LAKE. 1' frame, 0 rooms. I'A- SAM WARWICK BA»«( Ub-STORY .bathe, baae- ^beautiful wood Bd. A 3"bedroom* brick. -.............. city* watqr. W' ..................... 3 car garage. large wcreatlon room. AM-FM Intaroem syitem. Tappan bu«t-lns, lake and boat privilege. 430.000 cash. House guaranteed for full year. Open Bat. and Sun. br by appointment. Phone 083-1714 aee^U ‘ *^*'**’'....homes range and oven, iwge lot. onw 517.500. Open Sudday 3 to 5. Jennings. OB 0-0400, VOORHBW 'eLIZABB¥7 Rd. vtcmity. large 4-room hotme, carpeting, and drapes. Itb bauls. nreplaoe,' baaemenf. garage, 500 to lake over SVb FHA mort- gage. FE A3039-. _ V WHITE LARB Ooulnb constructed modem cex-cept bathtub) tumttllMr rireplace, large screened porch, attached * oar garage. 114 low - , ^onty only $9 50 Cosy modem 2-bedroom home, baaemeot garage, large wooded Jot. OnlJH5.600. 4460 down. Terms. Many olber lake hmnes to cbooge Dorothy Snyder Lavender Highland Road (MM) —• M Telegraph-Huron Eves. 11J-8B7-S417 4 miles from downtown Pontl plastered walls, lovely floors. JS5"dU.'“iSlinhi!f'"* Dorothy Snyder Lavender ’*01 Hlghalnd Road (MSS) - west of Telagraph-Huron “• nSAgy-Miv WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP. LAKE house for largo family on stream, 2 lots - 2-car garage basement. Muet be seen. |1 Terms or discount for cash l-Achi ouins. 3 baths. 3 fireplaces, large family kitchen with - ------ extras which call 684-8553. , ^ ^ 8 ACRES AND BLDO-4-bedrm. home, 1 batht. fireplace with aunkan llvbit room, r—-ramUy with lively children Joy Uil- ------ ——■ grounds. 43.800 down ' OM proving i. anly,M.000 available at a 814-4013 YOUR LOT OK OURS Seml-flolihtd. anv ilia with ~ without bksemont. Yonr lot make the down payment. 1 lA«”c‘WTgS‘'‘li SON. -- W. HURON DAYS OB 3-7414 EVES. ' OH 3-4588 OR FE 2-7000 STARTER HOMES NO moj?£y*dow^aS^'^guB i most desirable ^ . Epjoyable living. Brick front, sparkling clean with tae bullt-lns, 3-bedroom, ,newly finished oak floors. Molded Formica counter tops. Cablnew. 4U.400. I68 54 plus taxes and iDsuranee. 4300 could handle. H. R. HAGSTROM REALTOR 4400 Highland Bd. (M55) , OR 4-0361 5 5909 Ol^miH^J^arkway 3 Bedroom, Wtent. 3 c. . |8||*8S. AlumlnUq^ siding. It Off^AUgort Rd. north^of Williams tWabulId to ypur_ plans or OB 3-7088 8RT MBYKH_________ROBS McNAB OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 .PLEASANT LAkE WOODS OFF ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 161 edoela™ mpROOM 161 edoelaKe Dr. 4-BEDROOM BRICK - (>verIooklng Take, Ooorglan marble fireplace, family room. Fabulous at only 424,8®. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 3-BEpROQM BRICK RANCH - At-taohed 3-«ar jKirafe. lake p-‘--‘ leges. Price 43.000 below o< See this. 2379 ETHEL DR. OFF 8. OOMHfRCE RD. FLATTLBY REALTY 0300 Commerce Rd. 363 DORRIS BEAUTIFUL LAKE-FRONT' HOME —Contemporary rambling ranch homo with 3Mi ullramodem baths. 3 bright, cheerful bedrooms. Spacious living room and den with double fireplace. Pull dining room. A oe lot, close to school. Briye out Featherstone to Bay St., turn left to Dttfraln, tnen light to No, 1383. Mr. Henry, salesman, Residence /FE 5-800(1, representing Dark Real Estate. 3101 W. Huron. FE 3-7M8. Grovelaiid Township ---------------------- .. magnificent treee and land-aeaping. Lovely living room, natural fireplace, 4 bedroome of generous proportions, family room, library, (len, bright oonvenleni kKonen. 3-oar attached garage, basement, recreation room, new oil furnace, 3" deep /wefi, paved drivewar and parking area. 30x44 basement, barn and other out- ^m.“so« T ait Proving Grounds. ElizabKtb-'Lk.—5-Bedrms. situated on lot ®x2® with , maw stately trees Including , /^furlitshlngB.^ cement break-/ front, T shaped removable ( dock, diving float and canoe I are some of the extras. A ' r«vl vaIiis at 429.5®. terms. Hunt Club Area Very soenlo 95 practically level ---- uv...... Oood baeement OPEN SUN. 2-5 P^M. Seminole Hills, ____ TflADE ANNETT INC-I^ealtors 28 B. Huron St. FE 8-0466 ifev/. HOUSES • $00 •Down $75 month inoludeg everything H badr^m^^ih^ejj models on sst Kenm ir Body. blMks from FItber OPEN 13 TO 4 DAILY BPOTLITE BUILDINO CO. OPEN ilOlTSES SUNDAY 2 to 5 P.M. 121 OTTAWA DR. See Picture Page 20 n®k, sun rMm. sawing rMin, den, 3 complete baths up. H bath on inaln floor, stool In baswent Oil .fired hqt witer;lieat._Newly decorated iiqt 'wlitS' heat. Nawiy i. iSt 2317 BEDFORD RD- Immaoulate i-bedroom brWk raWh- ■ “ .... " Wr ... custom bu»R of tho AS plastered ge*»g». to Bedford Rd . LEFT to 01 ‘ rely 3-bed-wltb large Sinrt ______________Jy tocated Warren Stout. Realtbr 1 N. Bfigluaw St.l«h. FE 6-8JM Open Eves, till 8 p.m. Saturday till 8 p,n>.____ OPEN OPEN- 2945 W. Drahner Rd. iT aores, 3-bedroom home, dog ner Rd. 3 mllet to "Open. Ol'ENe- 1 ■ 400 Lakeside St. 4-bedroom In Ellxabeth — . p«;ra«p.tio'a eramr,*Voyr%'^Brago,*"^ privl- OPfeN-2148 Pontiac Drive ing'and drapes, femljy rwm )t md hot wets n^Orohar^^ /V lJud” Nkholiib, Realtor -HIITER \VEST SOB - ( 4ete, 3 bed-room, full basement. auUMuatW-bevdwood' r mils, Reereetlon room *bmle- f »gU««*4Wi;r‘*0*i‘ LmtE FARM 1 eer«, 3 bedrooms, besemeni, oil furaeoe, plagtere^ wells, nice gerden spot. WEST SUB-4 r S'v*er'’o®'.q* R*''®* ReomMtal room, plastered wells, plug M, iii‘.ts;.‘^5rkr“B.tsfe."“Ssm; Sui^day FOR SALE BY bwiOcR ' $6,995 $95 Down $67.50 per mo. NQTHING\ DOWN NO CLOSING COST $100 FREE FURNITURE with CORWIN.H0USES YOUR CHOICE 3-BEDROOM BRICK FRONTS 3-BEDROOM WITH CARPOR" / OPTIONAL: Basemenits .v 2 Baths f ► Built-Ins 5torms and Screens MODEL at 706 CORWIN 1 BLOCK WEST OF OAKLAHD 1 BLOOT NORTH OF MONTCALM FE 8-3783 or I* A37M 1 to 5:3r U 3-7337 or LI 34th etter 7 p.m. (XARK 47® DOWN. 4t4W. 4-1 4-ropm mode In Pontleo, t tometio fiimei MM DOWN, 14,4M. Balenea '465 montWy, Mrse-bedroom ' Waterford Twp. home, lot 40x138 feet. 78M BBS. : 3101 w Huron ^*"%«n.le. Model Open Daily 117 P.M. “Beautiful” Fox Bay 3 AND 4 BEDROOMS. ALL BRICX .349AR OARAOB. WE BUILD YOUR PLANS OR OURS — DIRECTIONS: ELIZABETH LAKB ROAD V, MO,B PAST WILUA5U ARRO PRICE RJCDUCBD — to 514,800 en this lovely 3-bedroom lake-fnmt ranch. FlreplMe In ipMtous Uv-•"‘he, fuO**** i...,14s3iet-Vs- “lmt^"BefSfr%r^r :iN8 LAKE FRONT -- ..(emporery home, w____ bedre^ Z^er attached gavega. s Mner* :ia « &oer le^, gae heat. Only OIS.NOT MD^M RANCH - Loealed te Waterford ' Townebip. Anchor 516.0®. Term{^ $8® DOWN i - ...sharpest homes We ln*g *3 brooms - oarpetlng Ihroug'bwt. I ter softener, nicely lei :ely ' landscaped. TED McCULLOUOH, RBALTOR OPEN 9-9 ■ Sunday lo-7 UULTIPLB LIBTINO SBRViCB PHONE 682-2211 PRETTY AS A PIOURBI kitchen FUb l(rts of —' -.. . ,/edroom.e, baUi w fixtures - «t®seroaomfcow $00 Ranch T; Tri-&.. .Colonials ’Cape Cods ..\V« Trade HAYDE^I. 'EODN-aTRI- SCHRAM Near Drhyton i*lains 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL, $9995 INCLUDES 83’ LOT : » $1495 DOWN AjiDnum .....► m»m.T BOOM ZW} BATH OPTIONAL TO MODltL; «c« «a MM to eo HAYDEN LAKE - Lorel; L \.NEW MODEL. pH-wooD so. DIRBCTIONS: DIXIE HA Y TO i =-.A-‘=3t2S. ^rHAYBBB BOAD TO KINOnsH ^ ROAD. Choice restricted (100-n. ^ wooded lots evelloWe lor Air toi»-quality cttitom-bi ' ' llT^ONl to $n.ooo le IrlToben ond SSTLSSi.'Z IvXn W. SCHRAM 12 JOSLTN COB. MANSPIBL-PEN EVEHIKOB AND SUNDAYS MULTIPLE Mi|TmO SERVICK Unbelievable! 48 3-Bedroom Ranches ; FuH Basements . FATED 8TBEETS BODEL LOMtIe^YsM JOffDON (Comer Featbersune) 3 blocks eest ol E. Blvd. west , of Opdyko $9,990 : reach, t __________ ____ , jutempora homes - Come out and see t idesl floor.-'— SEI'l YO KAMPSENI RK.M.tCR-BUILDliR Let's Trade Hoases SUNDAY 1-6 r.M. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. !84 NAVA^O^^ oPEr^ .... SOUTH TO NIAQA- xj^rr TO 1S4 NAVAJO In beauitfal ruoai, auuuu ruW, deo. hall end stairs newly carpeted. Drapes in a»wW«a.rk.^^ en. Extra lavatory in basement. Oas beak Recreation rooib. Nice lawn. Screened pallo. Oarage with porch and paved drtye. ^ml-num storms and screens. jmL FRICE. *12.500. SEE YOU OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 127 BIRKSHIRE ........ basement, with llnished recrea-Uon room. Large living room with flreplace. Family sued dining room, 3-car garage and circular drive, beauUtul landscaping. 1 acre lot with evergreens. Price tw.ooo. owner . ~ leaving the state. DIREX:-TIONS; WOODWARQTO BIRK-^IRE — FOLLOW SIGNS. SL S'DAY 2 TILL 5 Have a Horse? o pay over glS.OM wjul werf obcrftl tomt or Cooley ^Late JM. ^i^^lett' Lake Front OsUaimIp Lako! Bcaiittftil S5x3S0 ft, lot. MeaRy loeatwl. llalure trees. Conv^enl. boT secluded. ''Commercial , U-SK near Airport I condltloDS. das avi^able. Humphries Smith Wideman FE 2-92-16' N TELEORAPH ROAD I answer, call FE 2-5023 OPEN ...... ...............j. Nicely land- scaped. Paved St. Low Interest. No mortgage costs. Quick pos- Paytaenu only *04 eluding tases .and per cent Intereit/ Lake privileges Olive out Walton Blvd. to Embar- $40 DOW'N—FHA 0 DOWs\-VETS Highland Constnietkm Co. MILLER_ WATKINS- PONtAc estates-3-bedroom . custom built brick -tatb. Owner transferred, must, leli. Bulh-ln radke and oven. batfi. Full >>x*^ CLARESTOM;^»early new 3-bedroom single story with lake privlloges. nearly an acre. Br"* In stainless steel oven and lit Wed " _ ^o^ _______________JS. JM’MO*” Terms. 4* HOME AND INCOME, completely ----------------------- ------------------1 upper apt. .EXcepUpnallY nice lower apt. for owner. Spotlessly clean and In excellent repair. Ideal for retiree. *13,500. VVilliatn Miller Realtor FE ^2-0263- NICHOLIE .............ROAD Three*bedroom twc$-8tory h Living and diAlng roomi. Urge kitchen with plenty of BOMDS. FuU basement. _ fired hot water heat, aluminum bAteman SUNDAY 2r5 167 E. IROQUOIS Early American Colonial le -faatureis Cbm* vr OPEN SUK’DAY 2-5 r' reel with Ufge sprawl-brick S-hadrm.. rancher. Large bason It. I«i 1 and «i iielSr* garage. country near______ like the country this. Vaoaor and i xessloir' QKdoi-Al------- ttae priebTu rigbL.Jtny able tem*. Bof'-......... rigbt --Isob. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 aqae t* li. 3 bed- 41 CROSS ST. AUBURN BEIOHTS: _ all shopplbg and schools._ rooms, gas nest; glassedrln front Cch and dead . end streeV E^OMY - Newly decoratet beautiful cora^ *1.4«> mortgage. Orchard Lake y ---------------------! Ave. J Berwick, left one bloqk tP Argyle, left .3 blacks to > prop- / ) PROSPECT £ LITTLE FARM - Almost o cedcro. I DIOCS «0 SMI.I- to 3050 Breaker St. Mrs. Santsls in charge, FE 5-4600 ^ Dorotliv Snyder Lavender Nicely yMd- 10 2. i egriipb-Huroi , lll-OOI-Stl SELL OR TRADE - Liuge 0 rm. modern home with new gas furnace. Two nice porches. Beal good condition. Large 60 x IW lot. Only *0.050. EXTRA 8PBC1AL -- Only « yrs. old and all reconditioned like new. y Attractive 3 bedrimm^ rancjier GAYLORD Val-U-Way WE TRADE ON ANY HOME Office open Sun. 12 to 4 INCOME SPECTAL- _ Well bum and well kept 3-famlly One of the- -fcesi, WOO per month Income and 0 txnte roomjL ill ifumtture Included except Own- ■ ------il. »22.r- ■ —' wowsmU nKJtmai* asw 1 Lake Prop- „ __________ *22.000 and fill cept good small HOME IN u— i .v. ir LAKE FRONT - TO ft brick rancher with atuched two Car garage. Base Rsv hot watfr heat. Ea-eelleht carpeting. Ledgestone fireplace. Two full baths Built m "ng'here™ Nice "beaS All for only . Terms, LIST I US «.M Trade, li yrs, experience. Open Sunday ;i-4. Multiple Ustlng Service. , ; . L. 1). BROWN', Realtor SCO EllSsbelh Lake Hoad Ph PE 4-3504 01 FE 2-4010 HAVE YOUR HOME bulldlpg plan. We ha.. _ -— her 6 to^Kennett Rd.. right ' right to property. OPEN “iSi SUNDAY 2-5-354 FOURYh ST. NO DOWN PA^XMENT t erans, only closlpg costs mlnum siding, 3 bedrms. gas beat. Cozy 18 ft. ground level family room with fireplace that'*, a dregm. Lots of extras, even new.carpeting and priced for quick sale. OonTt fall to • see this one. Joslyn to Fourth St., left to peoperty. OFFICE OIT'N SUNDAY 1-5 Trading Ls Our Bu.sine.ss FOR YOUNG DOCTOR Or professional man- looks LIKE A NILE LONG' OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 8 P.M. ^THE~’ LAKEWIND’' 2737- N. LAKE ■ DRIVE Sab Hpums NEW Custom Built HOMES SUN. 2 to 5 T&FIELD DdsVs tl 2470 LIT( Drayton Woods „ — ____________ Lovely 3-bedroom roach' ho^.... Carpeting- and drapes. Largo 13a 15 kitchen. Full basement With recreation area. Largo woo^d Dixie Hwy. to Saginaw Vrall, to Lietchfleld: left to, property. Follow OPEI* signs. 2820 Pine Lake Drive Lovely 4-bsdroom cabe Cod. homo. Located on beautiful Pine Lake. acre lot. JUst What you'Mr; Businessmen, are looking tor. Carpeted throughout. 3 full baths. Full basement with reereation room, 3 fireplaces. Many more flue features I J. Your lot or ours. . Tops In quality. 3 Satisfaction guaranteed. Architectural service avallabel. ________ Orchard Lake 1 Pine Lake Rd.; east or Lake Rd. to-bouse, follow Lvels. 7. P»m 4 JOHNS0N *5". *• W34I4M al6r * rSi? K!.“>arva.'«s iSA ;iU-U2^':alvk CANDLEWICK Drive. «>««»«“ gsjsTS-sat.’ LAKEFRONT LOTS MigTxy. Drayton Plains. Will.build to - — S-2474 FB - 6-IOM, Eden’a coo-fstnietion. ■ LAKE UTINO. LOra, POI 15 min. Boat spat*. **. •■7711, OB''3rf«57~bale ItHan cotp.- - LAKEWOOD VILL^E. y.g- OBC rdi iAcmI ta Watkins Lake « Ilte, 90x200 for bet-exceUent ^locatlc^ CAR!. W.\BIRD, Realtor Community itat'l Bank Bldg. .... - s. FE S-I39* 8TANOFEST BARpAIN HOUSE I floor-to^cellli • 3 lovely bedrgoi bath and * half. glastered' walls. celling I InsliTe ’ available In Lake front-. Mrs. Bette will serve CrAnberrj : buiit-Jhi, Me garage, .full walk-out basement, oak floors, 1 mile north of Clarkston Drive, turn right to —' OPEN full baseihi Angclu.s Golf View Estates Three Bedrooms Split Rock and Tenne.ssee Marble Exterior Aluminum Sliding Windows In.'iulated (ila.ss and Scrcen.s Marble Silks Plastered thronglioul incUiding full 2-car garage with double Tilt-a-door uldSJly' V acant or •Improved wing'^room*'Yitchen.* upper' levi ins. * ■!& ■t“""lTlr’ilASSi:TT II G. WOODRUFF. Im OPEN WNDAY 2 TO 9 m.IX>RBEH'A LANE LOHR*iNE MANOR BUB. fully I , ,.Jd ftarxge. 3-BEDBOOM .-by earpeled llvlog room and din/ng L, beautifully discorated IMMACULATE condfllon Oeram-W Ule bath aWractlve kitchen A Wy to shoii ^ Wr'oi/'fi oWS «” C'c schools and churches. Must be s*»n to be ‘ anpreclated Ol 4ts ,p»r oent. moitgagii may be as- . moiigiMie I l| deslrecL to Peiiihaii to liorbem uane. turn left l prap*rty,. Mrs. Hoyt In. oMurgi HGYT •*ror that personal Interest' ;. l50t W, Huron nyiiSlifajl LMTIHCI SERVICE NfeAR MALL ' and, base V ineairitx Mr*, lorn e« trees. 300 OWNl.R •) R.VN.SFKRKF.I). rie Is a 3-bedroom **BUt tjffice OPFN SUNDAY 1-4 AI. t (Yrkston RKA l-NrAri'.. )Nc. |^Sft6 fl Main m. MlrliUnn KENT. EsMbUsbed to mo , lake front - Oply *1.000 dn. forIhta year around home. 19 ft. Ilv. rm. with aUms llreplaee. Roomy hlteben. Bsm't. with oil heal. OXrage. AUractlve elr drive Wiade tree# and nice ‘liio'e-^r WB8F SUIIURIOAN ' ^^^H'^''’2*‘'AKpLACE8^. All-eleclrlc kitchen. Hill sU* dining rm. It's high on a hill on vs •era a maiesflo^ scenlc view of LAKEFRONT in GYLDE 4824 Stratlreona Drive New * bedroom c^m built ; 100 ft. lakefront. luit W. of I Milford Rd.. and i miles N. of M* Has 27 ft. Family Rm„ , Nat fireplace, with sliding gla»«^.?«>r Very modern all bullt-ln kltche Builder's sacrifice or yopr boUi AT PON'I IAt I4K1-sr nrand insuleted lekelront F_uritoh^__ Fit*?’ I Poiiu iplioiml mi value. See (fKlfty UETT Uptn untli 8 pn LET B TRADE DONLLSON I’ARK with extra large landscaped Hacly American, IVs story hoi Plr^lace^ In^paneted^ u^"2-car glrsg's''wlth screened porch. *15,760, *1,575 LET'S TRADE OUTDOOR COOKINt Is featured with this 3-bedroom with outdoor picnic patio. fireplar JQsnUI LET'S TRADE . LAKt.E IT.AY YARD Three bodros In Waterford s large ..,.j kitchen -.......- ____ water baseboard healing system Where could you *'"■• — — tor lust *800 dowi gsge costs? Bell Full price only LET'S TRADE A DOLL HOUSI': with wondbrtul Iske p Fireplace, storms and ......... and forced air heal.,Nice beach ' ............................ l'aI'E DON'T' LET'S TRADE SPECIAL! JUST FOB YOU. 3-bedrm. bungalow with garage and fenced yard. Basement, gas heat, even — ,L._ n't be \V( ■ Love to trri(lc REALTOR 3)7 8. Tsiegripn.... j FE 4-0838 FE 8-7181 Opeh 8-8 Sal. till 8 Sun. 1-8 MWL'flPLB LlBtlNO SERVICIb I'lill Thick Insulation ’aiieled waiiiscoatiiig in Dining Room Select Oak Floors 1 Kitchen Floor (,'ovcriiig J.arge Full Basement All Copper I’lnnihiiig Submersible .Sump Pump Te Water and .Sewer Allowance Gas FA, Heat Duplication on your lot $19,500 OPTIONAL EQUIPMENT "TRADE" III yiinr present home 4)11 a brand new cusiom built borne or on an ex-i.sting lionic of your choice- DIRECTIONS: Pontlae: Drive out''^U.8 Biiill ,ati(l .Sold by KAMPSEN Realtor-Builder W. Huron FK 4 OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 2100 Fortress” — j colored ONLY RECENTLY COM- ... PLKTED FOR AN EXACTING FAMILY to a state of near perfection.. We recommend that you see this home. Over 1700 sq, ft. of living area not fhcludlng the ,'3-car attached garage. Huge Cleb Moore, Bulldel*, Income Propert'y dwelling Ir finance.* Pontiac 1 In the I wool heavily pa( Retlng Is Included selling pf ' -■ DIRE(5?T0NS*— North on , watch for signs. FE 2-8936. TRADING IS terrific; PICTURE BOOK HOME ' and we mean that exactly. larpeting and cornices; just I delightful home to look -------- private, enclo Like." A toi $11,600 with •««<•• ,»■ plus cloning costs. ^Eolki Bette at OR 3-2028. HiCKOfi/ • 6xU.3. 4 ACRE. I 0»k und bedroomi &.‘‘d'‘’rs^«h"'yo*r'S!:m: 7ard and 'xndscaped to per-iectlon-wltb to*-* Priced at only *11,800. LORRAINE MANOR > bedroom - ^***®*^ J****®^^^ econ” omyf*TaVge lot. Only *lr 150 moves you in wiin monthly payments ■ s atid Insurance, J08LYN AVENUE --- a-bed-room bungalow, close to shopping Sra“^es^r^.r.~be5^' scaped'*''''hoto*e. ^Featuring coinlort within Itself. Natural wood-burntui — oil FA heat. year fof_ 'W ’'Are^Tal sting season^ 3-c*r garage plus riding \awn mower and garden tractor. 81.200 down plus, mortgage costs. f?arMer« c.Jr garage. Vacant. Amve It* immediately. Only *47 a 'G.L No Money Down ' OWNER riLL DEFRAY liiai 10 minutes friim dO' iuwn Pontlae. Lar|e liv end dining ropm. 3 b rw)ms. full .basement plus a finished 12xM apartment. Bioellent condition throughout. Monthly peym(||nts lesie^-. ()’nY:/’l. - 3*2 a. Tt , Rl‘AI/rOR Telegraph ------- ..H— -unday 1-4 p.m. PB 3-7103 F* 8-4*1 MULTIPLE LlSTINa BBRVICB Box 38. for offices or many others. 2k> commercial. Extra parking Rent would make payme Owner. 617 S. Paddock. (leliixc kitchen with OE my room firenlaoe ny book i hearth. Stc .... ........mica count..... Uy room. Lovely landscaped I with many birch f...........•• ’ borbecue. Steal dock and r JlfliOO,'^' F&ks; LAKEFRONTS $7,»6*—terms. fI.VAN LAKKr-3 be'<3 ■ ‘ beach., Only |13 M PONTIAC LAKB Year r ntfucf' “ ..... • •• 5 t'h®^'fireplace, Omy'*ll.9&"'term8”* BRENOEL lake lot 100x300, . I: with fireplace, terms to suit. WHITB LAKB—Year round, fan)---- - flr.p?ace. iiv kiteben, urepiace, porch, beautiful lot, high looklf^ •- 815,860 - Only OXBOW LAKB Litealy BUcK bi-K^evel with 98'^ of beautlfhl ^landy beach, ell thermopaiie windows ovenpoking lake. Quality bunt tbrou*lioUt. Inoludes hot water lieaUng plant. Large raised paljp with ouldour barbeque. Full price *24,780, terms. PONQIAC L CE—3 bedroom, year ated ph one of the ns on the lake, tn--'-■•M to Uvfng room, and kitchen fac- Waite; s Lakefront WOODHULL LAKE 4-BEDROOM COTTATE ON 2 LOTS Nicely furniabed, fehced to. lavatorle^ and shower. Owm SACRIFICE $4,90C Call Sam;. Sills. LI >4077. Eves after 0 dm, or FE 8-2703 bel 2 and 4 p.m. any day for app't Westown Realty,______ lent. 3______ _____________________n. Em 3-0027. WILUAMS LAKEFRONT. 80-FT. sandy beach, carpeted living room abd dining room, brick flreplace, bullt-ln ranjie, * ‘ 816.300. MA 8-2400. 51A COTTAGE F { SALE C Resort Pro|ierty FURNISHED 0-ROOM bout*. EimrlcUy i Wostem Uppor M28, Village flAhlng area. $3.51 e«2-2767. Il Townllne Lake. C SMALL LAKEFRONT HOME. veaiTarounp ^IOMB I lake privileges. EM 3-7219. rch. EM N 8 LOTS. LOTS PAVED WINDING STREETS SOME ON RIVER 20% OFF FOB CA8H_ Located to Carousel Homes Sub. on M89 bet, creaceift Lake Rd. ■ ‘■'port Rd. ___ Clarkston lM._and Onwrltm, . - OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 P.M. rf'roe'S'thei'e'hiiS'iCM^ sites with breatlAaktog vl sU Katrbded, area of fl^ne ______ blackiop streets, DEER Lake privUegeg. Prices start at *3,780 with only 20 Pfr cent _____________ U.8. 10 to M-I8. north to stg^bt to center of Clarkston. LE^ to Holcomb Rd., SUBDIVISION LAND ON PaVe- ROLLINO LAND-4^ per acre. 27 ACRES-3 miles Dom Pontiac— UNDERWOOD BEAL ESTATE 25-2618 MA 5-1776 MA 5-ftl4 tTANDFEST BAHOAIN HOUSE BroltyTTIliea. 33 MItoRd.. oUne toPordTs" IS acres. ■Perrf«c.*uy. 814.8(». terms. 681-0034. WALTERSaAKE Privtleges, choice of hundred scenic building, sites near Chrysler Expressway. . Bales office 8 blocks west of Clarkston - Orion Rbad at Eaton. PoUovt. aitoM. on. Mohawk Drive to Thendara-ln-the-HlIls. loss per lot. Zero down. *10 month. Owner. 083-3300 or “ 1-2174. Sal* Parait lltk-ACRE FRUIT AND BERRY farm. Modern home, breexeway. 2-oar garage, substantial down. 2 miles west of Ortonvllle on Orange Hall Road. Write Box 1, i ACRES. ORION TWP. MOD-ern comfortable home. 3 bedrooms plus .12x10 activities room with separate entrance. Oil furnace. IMo evergreens, *17,000 — Terms. Immediate possession. 80-acrb farm, laroe barn. 0-bedroom home near 'Jake. Priced to sell. mU D----------- Lake Road. no ACRES’ Modern 6-room home, 2-ear ' garage, born. 2 corn cribs, new tool shed and other out b'jfMlngs. Lapeer Co., *35.000. terms. CLARENCE . RIDGEWAY FE 8-7051____ 290 W. Walton 185 ACRE FARM VIVO xrairy r-urm; very pre tire Clay loam soil. Large h__________ Attractive to rm. modern farm home. 7 rm. modern tenant house. *'"■ house, storage bldg, and - -------------- nlng. Shown by garage. 8 appolntmi EXECUTIVE’S ESTATE led to a hillside, this scenlo ern tonne sparkles with beau-Spaelous kitchen that has y built • to features. Living ____ and family rm. Large fireplace. 2 tiled baths. Many glass —.. ...J .- —u,uai qualities ______. Excellent land- Prlvate spring fed pool. walls add ( lU'RE e with 1( rowing ... — ...tabl-already producing; -‘-ubarb. Houi ------- House Is 3-b«d with light b----------- garage and * tront^^oi Barn for saddle horses, paths. Many other fea- Floyt) Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy at Telegraph FE 3-0123~Open Eves. Free Parking w Lake RoaiL just north Lake Road, wlilta Lake "-'lonabio price with teti—Acroag* (2 ) 40x100 L01 Mendon Lake ana aeno miles to Unibd Loko 3-^m' **"**' * ___ 3 LOTS WARD'S ORf^HARDB. FB 6-800O. M Ml BLOCK TO * - ■ 1 bus. 3 STTA 3 SCENIC BUILDING SITES acres with large oak trees to eiihance the beauty of the bulld-..... d'level lai able $3,301 C. PANGUS, REALTOR ORTONVILLE ” WA 7-2018 • V M' BATEMAN . W RBAL-rOR a.a .,1,1 a m '8 ACRES Rochester-Area A beautiful hilltop building s In a good area with a velw miles. Only *7*0 d"— Ing lake. _________ __ And garagA- Only 010,800. MACEDAY LAKB - Lovely leke- --- located on lOO' of '' Tronuge. iji* living ehd (Ireplece, 3 bed,- .tsh.rt lee 023.800 J. A. TAYLOR; Realtor ;EAL pSTATi AND INBUIlANOI 7m moHLANP ROAD (|18t) Dally^f.* Bun. 1-8« OR^-030i ■aaeaamweeeee#* ■» SpItkteV Lake, fnlla road frontage. ectoss Uie road from i'eii'rs'iak!? miles from Milford i. Thl« Is iiwUtnr^ for MM; Dorothy. Snyder 1-jt vender HUfhleniil Hoed (MS9) . . BEST OFFER TAKES. 32 ACRES. bldgt. in resort are* *' '---- Bxpreseway. 2 Ml. KB >22W. Detroit. i.”**i(^wlSi''‘'*l5S ■ WEBSTER LAKE ORION ~ OXFORD 40 rolling oeres. 7 room fan home. Large IWtoK room, aep*. erets dining room.^it benroome and balh. OH foroed air heat. . *13,800 with *3,500 . WEBSTER. REALTOR ill spring-fed 20.000 with gi M6?TlWB’'^OTtN^^^ I-W20 rif^Y^ioi 180 ACRES, 120 OF WOrIIC LAND^ — ------ ----- lot. hard maple; 70 (soree, bey. 32 eerea oats; 0-room house, part bath, good barn, 13 etanehloni. iw per ac“ reasonable otfer^efueed. L ACRES - bam -^ear Clart^ton -TgM.oiS! “'-^“-“i^':;rir»rS*rV — Hear expreaeway — *11*80. .—— „_,a. BBTATE MA 0.1241 MA 0-1770 - 57 ‘ I'. M 4#KI»TO»MraE- »«6l COOTOM MAD® OAKFM. ^All (qvIPPMl on <4400 tru^. TW Clorfcrtoa Rond, Lofco Oriwi.- A M^SSAoE mOM US TO. TOD .1 Which «• tool vm be «T great *' intereet and impertaoca. Now tor the tint time. tt!i poielble te move into a eompletelf furolsb^ «» DETROIT MOBILE WOMB t^ae d«FdVirV.^iSReri”„r«BSr. to eeleet from, Alee manr ageei-lent need moWle homea at ./e-dueed prieet. Stop out eeant You —• be glad you did. Bob HiUchinson Mobile Home Sales, Inc.' OR„^ista JUS CONVERTED TO MO^ BUB -................. _ home, new tirei, motor, hm EXPERT MOBILE HOME Ri'lrAIR eervlee. tree estimates. Algo, paris airf ejccsBorles. Bob Hoteb-insoD. Mobile Home Bales. Inc. 4301 Dixie Hwy.. Drayton Plains. OB 3-1303. JACOBSON TRAILER BALES AND RENTAIJ8 . 8PRINO SALE Many used^ratleri: 1 daw 1003 Trotwood'34 It., as lA 03.300; I new 1003 To ft. TrotVood, aelf __________ 1,300. New mod‘ els coming in ryday. Oet your ------..... .. ------------ - CREE TRUCK C Stop in apd Ic.. . over Ipnighti Stiles and Rentals 1 trailera. 13, 15, i '^Ara R^^TATIONB NOW ' F. E. Howland, Rentals - Dixie Bwy,____OB 3-1450 Oxfora Trailec Salea and Court ' i vagabond. Paramount. Champion'. Oenoral, Yollowstone and Btowart with Poam-a-wall, iO floor plans; all prlcdt. fair bank rates. Wo — — gtmmieiis, !"■» — satisfied r— have 3.OO0 satisfied oust 14 years of good honesi. ---------... Some used sold on rental plans. For A Really Oood. Buy Oxford Trailer Bales 1 Mile 8. of Lake Orion on M-24 TELEPHONE MY 3-0721 '..Parichurst Tfailer Sales - MOBILE UVINO— iWg*\« Venture —'Buddy <] ?^EB CTNT DOWlT'cars wired and hitehes Installed.'complete line of parti and bottle gas. ". PE 4-0743 3»3 w; Hurot rOR UB TO ricskur nnu Iteiil Trailtr Spoct TrMa in on Oenoral Safety T Oavs up to tb of Mtg.'0 .... price. Black or whitewalls. ED^W^^S Hn°eixl^ DSHD YtREB, RBOtlt.AR.UUD-—IW, low at 03.U. Motor ir-^ ■33 E. Montcalm. PS. Regular or lug treads, gOod supply. ED WILLIAMS 451 B.,.aaglliiW..at.B 4 Baa||urn ORAMK8MAPT OtiINOtNO IN TV® ear. CylIndara rabored, Buck Ma-ehln* BboK S3 Hood. Phone P® •ilvtMr .Sctwtart new'-''-dSBD C08H- „ . Vespa scooters, HLZ Terms, demon gfticft ServlQg. yp Motorcycles I HARLEY CH. 7.01W ACTUAL ' lion, 5750. Must sell. 653-3317. Boatt-AttOHOilUl n. .BOATS. throttle. Make an offer. OB 3.iuil3! 13 - FOOT TH653pM0i5 SoAsr, aOod condition, W5. 074“1B13. 12 FOOT MiTAL'WsIftlNa boat, with IVk hp. Mercury motor, oars and anchor Complete, 0150. 4777 ----- Hwy. 13.rw)T >10 L D ® D PIiYiVOOD Wolverine, 2S h.p. Johnson rf- zt \ V, 0400. Ph. OfliUWO. i4-FOOT ALUMlNUii RUN-about. to h.p. motor, trailer. OB 3-3077, 14" mm....gA?~'iSTOTg~'piy- wood 1--** --— iloot. 14-rdOT 6bDAR fWRlP BOAT. motor and trailer, 0150. OR S.6400. 14 rdoT BOAT, 35 HORBEIfTlWER Evinrude motor.'- 0350. Call OR iProgr¥iiiiKara:aw^ boaL M h.p,^ motor, ataetrlo ■**'l.7i**‘.**?l*P**L*''*'l*f Odd StUi lr.uer. to "h*p? Svini*^Li^ -eeeesorle^ 5 years md. P® seeeaonest i after S.'to. 'lo^^a^^atlir, MOO. 700 Sun- lioULDEbFifi'xMSob, winriahlehi and upholsitrad with Blentrio hamaiO for; Jhaml?’ contmU, Job IWf....W'r»l‘tgT!f:''lHME ^ J. ■".1 'V THE J j \yj . ^ -’vyVf*' ’ »I Hkau K-"Jki r L08(X»fBE »C. 7» FUEL 1NJEC- iitue, 'n,m. OR a-- ! MODELS h^. bour^I PL »-l«M or OB 3-lW. Aquk OUMD. .Aqa» Swan, C TA£*aifi^4S!5i^'^ OUT-STATE MARKETS Extra Top Dollar TOB LATE MODELS u A/aj oaiiooai*. A*tuwu vmiwts chrtsIaBR mArinb motors ^ Scott and Wait Bend Motom ANny Trailers and Boat Hoisti ‘Marina Aooeasortes and Sport) “^ISB-OCI BOAT SALES a E. Walton /'trailer. ■M&M l|awrsWladgB?/Ti^ • “tw'WwairaB^ ■ '■SrSsSWa “««T. I«l«-- ’/FOItta. H I NswMdUtMCm W Many cstras. Also custom Tan-a™ «.r traUer. I3S. Can FE CB .44IIU afler S;30 S^aas—— - corvette, rolled and pleatad intertor. FE SOSSS^ OPEL WAOtHt. dren. PL M3M SPORTS CARS e the new Triiimpb. TR 3, 1 a. Roadsters and Her*'■*-• >0 Sonbeam Alpine. HIU i Morgan. Beady lor Imi MOTOR SALES Marvin MrAnnaily. owner Dale McAnnaUy ___ JUST N. OF FORTIAC DMV&IR ATallabli ...... . Superior Auto Sales 550 OSlfLAND AVE. I WAin^ CLEAN USED CAM CRAKE MOTOR SALES .... FE8-6S22 . 1954 CHEVY 2-DOOR , i9 ffooA trftnlip6rt*Uoo» fuU * jr* ‘ prte^^ $9^. SURPLUS MOTORS , IS ! 1»W CHEVY, LCYMNDEB. STAND- wsrcHi^ , BOB ilART MOTORS I 608 Orehatd Labe Ave. FE 4-8921) 'B&!®Srsfflr.7« Mile on PS-10, Birmingham, Mt- »tS-SS-S4-68-BUlCS lArtety ol other ,inodelSj__^ WhlW., Very clean. Orlg^t . BONTIAC ---. ^ clean and is a one ownofT Only ^)teury. gCom^ ‘®* ®' W» METROPOLITAN HARDTOP, price 1 LPCKY station wagon. »e awouiauc, es.*‘*ttS> J»5S *5**^ -r. sm down Mid as«im « FOOT CHRISCRAPT CBPISEB. i • TffT riewTa||l*^^ E*- cellent. r*— ........... OR ♦-0I00_________ -OR .C^BgQ FOR THAT "TOP DOLLAR" OS SHARP LATE MODEL CARS 19W CHEVROLET SEOtW STICit With radio and heater. ”•■ price. $197. No money doi sume payments ot S9.9L .... month, Klng_Auto Sales. US 8. Saginaw. FK 8-0402, call Mr. He’s SO peaceful . .. why disturb him? ‘■'»ertlbie'.'”-P0Wer brakes A^*d steering. standar^J shift. PX . “AvertlTs" itWtw^oiri-tlwd twr—ntTriTeW WVwfftHW 106 1063 FORD HARDTOP. OR 3-0870. iSSO MERdPRY COLONY 1 nukt sell, call PE iwi Wween Starcbaft aluminum it and 76 horsepower Job tor, boat cover and all a ... t.ik. new. FE 4-0370. R EVINBUDE MO- mlssion. radio, beater. I W station Wagons t ALLEN. A SON INC CARS A !. Cass Lake. 662-2518. ________trucks, wrecks OB JUNKERS. ROYAL AUTO FARTS . _______FE S-«4__________ HI Dollar, junk cars and tmeks FE 3-3W days, evenings. ALWAYS A BUYER OF ears. Free tosrlng OR 4-1401. PRIVATE PARTY WANTS LATE * ee' ^1«» \\M fW-McELROY. InC; 44S W. Burtm TRUCKS wt vwigt ________OR 3-3433 1961 VOLKSWAOEN FOR QUICK -........ . heater, Fordamatic trans-sion,. 8160 down, assume pay-___at *54 per month. LLOYD MOTORS, Lincoln, Mercury, Me- ----Comet, English Pordt 232 S. .Inaw St. FE 2-9131. r 1957 FORD 4-DOOR STATION 1956 FORD WAOON. BUNS good. 9125. MY 3-4373. 1953 FORD CUSTOM 3-DOOR, rtfdto.' heftier, ftutomfttic. lUevl- 1961 6. STICK SHIPT FORD. TAKE . iraiir........ . 1969 PONTIAC CATAITOA CON- IMl MERCURY 2-DOOtt^HAkDTOP "ull power. 1. 082-1568 1961 FALCON 2-DOOR With heater, whitewalls ai Id red finish! S6.86 iMonUil^your old cs? down r $200. LLOT-D motors.- Lln- PONTIAC 1060 CATALINA SEDAN, power brakes and steering, white condlllon; $i,476. Ml ’ I . 1968 PONTIAC, 0760. vertlhle radio, beater, V8, i eering and brakoa, sharp «uin ,-er Ibilsb. $17$ down, .assume ?er;"«."ii:SrD"^o%! ti-ic?.?. Mjrcug. C^^ CLEAN, l$88.PONTUC WAOON. -■ ■ White. lull wagon, STICK 6 CYLINDER, BOAT INSURANCE 1953 OB 1054 FORD <»tCHKVY; Low"' Cost - S^ial Reductions SLENN'S CENTURY RESORTER. 1983, i West Horan St. TOP BUCK—JUNK CARS. TRUCKS P(W4TTAC waste, FE 2-«20$ SEE THE ALL WOOD , Winner-lipstrake 17 ft. Cruiser on Display! "Y^ur MERCURY Outboard Dealer" $25 MORE For that high grade used car. i us. before you sell. H. J-V Welt. 4540 Dixie HlAway. Pho OR 3-1355- SERVICE FOR ALL MAKES OF IMPORTED CARS CHEVR.OLET, ^ DOOR power pack, stick^lft, no rust, Ot 1-1434. _________ mCHI^ STA-i-ION WAOON, Immaculate condition. Ll 3-8237! 1059 CHEVROLET BEL-AlR BUY your new RAMBLER HOUGETEN & SON $J795 )r OL 1-9701 John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 WhUewalls'. $L148. Pull* Prick. OnS Year Warranty. BOB BOBST. Mercury. One Block S, of^.8. 10. Birmingham, Ml 6-4538. 1858 CHEfroOLET , BEL AIR door hardtop. Belke finish wH deluxe copper tone InterloV. R dlo heater, whitewalls. E x t r snow tires and wheels. Exc. coi FORD c6n^RTIBLE, OOOD adlUon. 8375. 136 Prospect. loss FORD VS 4-DOOR WITH RA- down and oasume p----- month! One year LLOYD MOTORS, l)l89 FORD CONVERTIBLE, .... V8 engine, all white ItntshI Power Steering, power brakes, wnltewalls, and low mlleagi cellent condition. ^CLARKSTIBI MOTOR . Engll 1959 OLDS SUPER 88 4-door hardtop super sedan. Sparkling white with beige top. ’Power steering, brakes, windows and 6-way seal. Extremely low liiUeage, locaUy owned. $2095. /HOUGHTEN & SO^ - -- -■‘un ». “ OL 1-0761 3%i rambler CONVERTIBLE PONTIAC 1080 Catalina Convertible. White with red InteHor. All power. tires, 02106. FE 2-6481. Ford, m S. Saginaw St. FE AUTOMOBILE] IMPORT GO.' WANTED: ’54-*61 CABS Holly Marine & Coach 10 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 4-6771 Ellsworth CLEARANCE Former owner of Barber'a Flying Service la aelUngcbolce BOATS - motors — TRAILERS com-hlnatlans purchased last fall at 211 S. Saginaw FE 3-7049 Pontiac Autturtsed Dealer—BMC JAGUAR—DAIMLER—LANCIA _______ALFA ROMEO______ MISSION. WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments $29,75 per monUi. Call Credit 1 „ Mr. Parks at HI 4-7600, Harold Turner, ForiL.<- 1958 CHRYSLER 4-DOOR. RADIO. inpsTU»0^ AnTnMATir- •TWANR. AUTO SALES 6577 Dixie Hwy. MA_____ WANTED: OOOD USED LATE New OHd USCd COFS model pickup. Cal! FB 54741 POWER BRAKES. WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of $32.16 per month. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500, Harold Turner, Ford. 1961 FORD OALAXIE 2-DDOR Victoria, factory oUlctal «•’<< only 8,000 mllesi ' and'fi down, assume payi____.... LLOYD MOTORS. Lincoln. cury, Comet. Meteor, Engll FoVd. 232 8. Saginaw Si. 1 ^9131■ __________________ 1861 OALAXIE HARDTOP. LOW mileage. Private owner. Reason- 067 THUNDERBIRD; 366 CUBIC infll Chrysler engine,' Herbert 3BllifoIler, 13-1 pistons, balanced, apedal hbads. 3-4s, Spalding Ig- , nltlon, 4.71 gear. A machine ‘ built tor tWe drag, but Is stre ' driven every day. 608-1163. 1068 FORD CONVERTIBLE, 3 rantyl BOB^^BOMT,^ on1[i.S°”lO. ^mlngham MI 6-4838. Llk«*oi» Uiraughout. low mileage. radio, heater, radio.' auto- Wdl tlrea^'«095. / HOUGHT^ & SON 128 N. Main 8f. Hocneater OL'l'9Kl v> 1956 PONTIAC CATALINA SEDAN, Sparkling sliver mist finish with like new matching Interior, radio and heat- 1061 RAMBLER________________ tlon Wagon, deluxe 3 door, metal-Ic Blue Mth whitewall*. " miles, spa^iDOver^^used. A “‘(XAMBTON MOTORS h.p. 1-owner. 673-0101. . Radio, heater, whitewalls, ------- heati-. miles. -Original o „ -jat op nrlcB. bi ’ 11,287. Ml 4- TRY whitewall Ur throughout. $1595 1054 Fdito 4 - DOOR. ^BODY, rusted, hood -mechanical condition. Good tires. Call al‘" ' WILSON i PONTIAC-CADILLAC i9» nash sfrTioiTwAooN. WE BOY ANY CAR. RUNNING pTBUICK century Pdays^on^. ^lo Flying "fcrvlJK Ponlitc Municipal - ■—-t, SeeXMr. Regie. Aete-Tisck Peris 102 1958 DODGE, 2-DOOR HARDTOP. ..... ...... ...........io. heater, solid -black .finish, glOO dowfl --$28,04 monthly, LLOYD MOT0RS. Lincoln, Mercury, Comet,__Met.eor STARK HICKEY’S ■ May Special^ -.18 FORD Rmich JWagon, C-Cyl. Stick, ^wder s, $597 - I. Saginaw. FE 2-91 "Tt flberglas . oruiser. waa gi.oOi. now $1,284. \ KELLY HARDWARE 3994 Auburn at Adams UL 2-2440 ' Opro 'Dally 'til 6 luiCKY AUTO SALES. Saginaw. FE 44214.________ t 19S8 BUICK SPEaAL 2-DOOR 1961 CHEVROLET 13.000 miles. DAWSON’S SPECIALS Uiad 17' sanplre" flberglas, com- . Piet top, 1056 50 h.p. Johnaon. and 1300 Alax trailer. A real rd buy at - $1346. pent----------- —■* hardtop, wi and power brakes, i m aav.io. uue jvih v!***t-*-r. LLOYD MOTORS. Lincoln. Mercury, Comet. Meteor, English F34 fti Buckbora •Lake u -a._ MY 1-MM , PIRMlXr.HAM yirvslpr-l’lymoiith 912 8 '^/door Has radio and heater. Can be yours for only 8150 flown and monthly payments ot. JM^O. —EiStD MOt^S, Llncoin-Mer-cury-Cbmet-Meteor. 232 S. Sagl--- FE 2-9131. Stark Hickey, tlawsoH- 14-Mila Road.' Between Main and CrOflks Rds., across from the Claw-Shoppln^ ‘ ' $1095 Center, JV i 1859 FORD OALAXIE 2-DOOR hardtop with Automatic (ransmid-Sion, radio, heater, one owner, extra nice. $94 monthly, your old car. down or $150. LLOYD Toils, Llnoeln, .Mercury.' O Meteor, 232 S. Saginaw St. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick Rochester, Mich. OL 1-8133 John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 Open Mon. Tues.. and Thum. ____Until 9 p.m._____________ PONTIAC. 2-DpbR CHIEF^ -----------565 before 3 “ 1963 PONTIAC EXTRA GOOD, Sharp Cars GLENN'S 2-9131. boat yard. T^ieae are all reduced In proportion to damage, and Among them are the flowing: Alum, g It—10 ft.—13 ft. Prams. Aluia. 22 ft, and 24 ft. Ptshliig 1957 CHEVROLET Ji TON------ " e new. Pull price $896. HAR- CL udTona. 351 fE.--------- motors. liJc ‘ Ford. 232 S. Saginaw I THUNDERBIRD HARDTOP Has double power. 1 owner and a real sharp car. 8200 down and assume monthly . payments of 11063 Ppntl 880,24. LLOYD MOTORsImincoln. | CHFAPIES ,.u„ For^. ^8 stFck . 1953 Pontiac hardtop, good , 1959 6-PA88BNOER WAGON. POW-steering and Power brakes. , .—.U— 1859 PLYMOUTH STATION WAO-pg, 22,000 actual mies, excellent PRICE $L^ '^ceVl' ITH 4-DOOR Mil,VE- ............ Solid efter 1$|3 HONTTAC A. OtPASSENOHI fon, standard shift, ir— IL.-.............. PAsiiNoSRs and Ftberklaa canoes , .. rfftmdition. All « triclan or -plumber. WUIyt Ja^. $28-1657 : BTATION Wagon, full power, original owr er. Clean. $2300. FE 54001. t Paul A. Young, Int. . 4030 Dixie Hwg^^on Loon Lake 1951 PPRD VANETTE. EXCEL- £ 1957 FORD , ku iHm ' movtitk . 0-PAI»EKOEBi ^--|«r red end w^■-I. Only giiiis. __ ________ISON. Roche 1 Dealer. OL 14711. iteerlng end puwe. black Unlsb, red and assume - 575.M monlt! Ore year warranty! LLOYD MOTORS. Llo^. Mercury. Comet. Meteor EngUah Ford. 232 B. Saginaw ' OUlROAI^^OTIJR SALE 40 H.P. .........j|..7 , . $359.9 35 H.P..........f....... :■ 9299.95 12 H.P. ........ 9199.95 ' 716 H.P................... 1119 95 2 H. P. ................. 9.09 95 Plreitone Store MO N. Saginaw JET POWERED 18 POOT TORBCF Wagon 4 Door 5 VS Engine. Aulomatlc Trana-alon. Thu special Is only -■ ■ $495 1956 FORD 2-DOOK SEDAN. fiX- Better Used Trucks GMC ltS3 CADILLAC GOOD CONDI- BEATTIE __________ WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-12in 19M KORD 6, 2-DB.. ONE OWNER. ,»er. 15.000 miles. Superior Auto Sales 550'OAKLAND I960 FORD OALAXIE 4 - DOOR “"■i Automatic tranamlaslon, ra-_ , heater, Power. steering and brakes, a low mileage one owner, ....... ithly with your old car _____ $225. LLOYD MOTORS. Lincoln, Mercury, Comet, Meteor. 232 B. Saginaw 8t„ FE 2-9131. FALCON 4861 PONTIAC CATALINA. . door sedan, full power. $2,250. FE 4-4827. 1950 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, full power. Will ts' -2-3B56, 23 Roshlre 1958 PLYMOUTH CONVER'nBLE Is'Tn EXcIeLLE'nT oondlUon* Full 1959 PONTIAC 2-DOOR CATALINA, 20.000 actual miles. original ------ $1,350. Call FE 2-0749. ' tkALND 8 Price $9tS. EM FE 8-4088. t Elizabeth L»ke I Sales. 3276 W. JIuron 1959 PORD WAOON. RADIO. HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments ol 932.10 per ftionth. Call Credllt Mgr., Mr. Pkrks at MI 4-7500. Harold Turn- lf«) I-ALCON A delightful 2 door with economical standard transml.ssien, sound body, good tires, 1 owner, ^mmaculate InterlOT-^'Trcmertdous 195f PLYMOUTH HARDTOP, Excellent condition. Take over payments of 94.45 per week to pay off balance due of $397. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN — King Auto Sales, 3275 W. Huron si. (at' Elizabeth Lake 1969 PONTIAC rflATALINA VISTA, ' “ hardtop. ^Loaded, ahar^. Economy engine. 91.895. I ■59 PONTTAC '9-Pasa. Wagon t ■69 FORD 4-doOL » PONTTAC hardtop . '59 PONTTAC CUnvertlhl •59 aiEVROLET Brookwood j •60 CHEVY Parkwood pagon $1 ■60 FORD convertible $1 9.8TAE CI^EF^h^rdtop $1 ■60 CHEVROLET Convertible $1 ‘58 CHEVROLET Wagon sharp $I CHEVROLET 2door 0-cyl $ ■50 PONTIAC 4-daor, nice $I CTROLET 24oor black $ 10 PORD Country a 1060 PORD CONV !“.ir JEEP Auburn T ____.6 FOOT OLAB8_____________ tor, trailer, gl.175. New alum runabouts, $316. 12' alum, boats $115. Plywood 080. Rowboats $40. Trailers 800. Heavy duty lilt trailer! 1180. New '61 motors. Big dlioowit. Buchanan's EM 3-2301 9600 M-50 - ■ Vuur Authorized Dealer OLUER F.UICK and JEEP |10 Orchard £«ke CADILLAC 1960 COUPEl DfVILLE , FOHD. CHOPPED 1; iiai I xr.H AM ( lirvsl I'iilM) 2-l)OOR NEW CAR SALE NOW GOING ON! 1961 PQNTIAC, ■TEMPEST S'TA-tlon wagon Stick shift. Radio. Heater. Whltewona. Many extras. . OB 3-51W after 5 p m. GLENN'S Motor Sales , 052 West Huron Street ’ FE 4-7371 PE 4-1707 1050 CHEVROLET Ton B JC^ABduT^-' IMb CHEVY. 16,000 MILES. EXC. ■ ’eondlttoii. 51.t50. FE 2-5701. K6 CHEVROLET 2-IXXm. FUL_L £^kr AUTO SA^eI. 19 9 FORD CUSTOM 4,DOOR WITH 18. Radio, beater. Aiilon ' liPwyi itHnwIe on U.S^^ Birmingham ... .._mc payments of $21 Month. 1,50 8. Saginaw St. U-■ QUIDATION LOT, FE 8-4071. - FORi5~FBTATION wXoON sSUKM.UsS .MOTOR.S 1,8 Hatiinaw FE 6-40 .1900 FALdON HEATER. DELUXE _______ rSii. WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN — Assuma payments of 832.78 per inunlh. Call Credit Mgr., Mr. Parka at Ml 4-7500. Harold Turn-Ford. , $99^0 - DcmT '■ Will Buy a New 1962 PONTIAC OLIVER BUIGK ' "TOP GRADE" CARS- '60 BUICK LeSabre ..,-.$2285 Incoln Mercury ■ALBS 1 1950 FORD. FAIRLXNE' 500 VO. - ■ 1958 LINCOLN PREMIER 4-DOOR ■■■ ■■ ■ ' ‘sr, full t sharpl 1962 RAMBLER KDiil-iiiR'MLN I2.FOOT ALUMINUM BOATS $149 14-FOOT ALUMINUM BOATS $19$. LIteUme warraitlv (A) FRAME TRAILERS , $119.95* PINTERS MARINE SALES open aundaya 370 K. Opdyke PE 4-092i ,1 E*Z TERMS — SPOT DBLI^RY ■’ McAULI FEE FORD 610 OAKLAND. PONTIAC 1-owner, Must sell. No ( 682-2052 after 8._____ - 1958 T-BIRD WITH monthly with f— ........ „ -'1 earl LLOYD MOTORS, Ljn n, Mercury, Comet, Meteor, 233 Saginaw, FE 2-9131. _______ 1962 Pontiac Grand Prix Mandalay red finish, power s' lug. brake power antenna, ts a beauty. Low mileage, car warranty. '6(1 Chevrolet Impala . .$1945 3"door hardtop with -automatlo trftnRfnlsnlon, rftdlo. h«ftt«r, poWei fitoerinii; luid bilikoi! whitewalls, tlhted glass, silver eloud flnlBhl H4-TON PORD PLAT t6-ton Chevy pickup Economy C-~- _clean 998^ Wj-iSiS;______ ____ CHEVY 2-DOOR. C"LE 'a If good. 9125. PE t-*"' 7 FORD STATION WAOON, cry good condition. $550. OR -1220. before 5 p in. 8 FORD SSibAN, FORI^O-MAT- $1595 Joliii McAuliffe Ford $3395 1 Olds. F-B5 deluxe 4-door S‘ Wagon Sale - JOIWaOR MOTORS -SEA RAY BOATS aero-crapt aluminum ODAY SAILBOATS PORTAkCAMPER TRAILERS W« Welcome Trade-Ins Marine ftecraaories i--* "— 1957 international ( all hydramallc p- t^mwmate imndHloi OMC PlCK-OP. ‘6 naw. FE 8-4088. call Mr. White ru^TERBTiiiy' 2-DO or F1-: 5-4101 mTFORDToTTOrWATfCFui,^''' KrVEl'’' hfoTORK*’ aSr LAND AVE., FE M078._______ f=ORDr~LOW-COBT BANSi LOAfl r you ’nMSS- -i;2i)i5, ds. 98 convertible, blao » top. A real sharp o ^"$2395 rambler Wagon ,. im RAMBLER I Randy V^agim . I ?^BD*‘Ra :'X YOUR CHOICE $2^X5 1968 RENAULT Sedan —10 PONTTAC Sedan H M<3n7,A. 4-speed TRAN8MI8-klnn While with red Interior. M.'i»5 Ml fr9442____________ , 55 "cSmVY station WAOON hardtop, power stoerlpg, and windows Sharp, clean. : E., Walton nivd. FE 4-1688. KES.'iLER'S MARINA 10 N. Washington, OA g-1400 Ozlord Oxford Weekdays « l^turaey*_# a.iB. jOHNSllN OUTROAKD MOTORS (IMC CARRY-AIL. GOOD •e*. new baileiy. all «f pail» It offer PL 1 1369 allerOpm Sjr'£swr"i!%Siy ITj* 50 per 1937 Otevfolct‘1 ^: I ,^^ogtms fmishid.^ ttaim$ luhd in this colutraTare subject to changes mlhout notice-................................................. - ''owfiiit' •'■' h ............ 1:M (2) Magic Monoients la Sports (4) (Color) George Pierrot i*H»y . PonKoc Stefonski Radio ft TV FE 2-6967 Sweet's Radio ft W FE 4-1133 433 W Hvran, Pontiac Al Rooding TV MY 3-TI24 900 Jaalyn R4., Lota Otian Television Serv. Co. Ml 6-8500 SS7 E. Mopla, Sirminphotn Walton Radio ft TV FE 2-2257 20” ea.-N0 LIMIT Available at TESA i Service Dealers listed qbove JJf^NOTONE” House of Hearing Free Heating Tests "Open Eves, by Appolnlmont" 143 Oakland FEderal 2-1225^ PONTIAC, MICH. ^RCA COLOR TV ^ Solos’and Service Sweet’s Radio TV Open Mctn. & FrI. Nights (9) Juliette ' ie!08 (2) Gunsmoke (4)^ Movie (Cbnt.) (7) Boxing — Luis Rodriguez v8. Yatna Bahama. 49) News. 18118 (9) Weather, Sports 10:«8 (9) Golf Tip -10:30 (91 Canada at War 18:48 (7) Make That Spare OuimM 8>WJBK-TV manjaro.^’ 1992. In the shRd-bw of snow-ewped Mt. Kij|r manjaro, Har^y Street is dP-ing frbm injuo'—and knows . itT Hlr’inbid is filled with I memories of career as writer, his adventures and women in his Jifei Gregory Peck. (7> Lawrence Welk ... - (9) Internafidhal Detective tilO (2) HaveAG^WUl Travel (4) MovleMfibiit.) •'* (7) 11:00 (2) ^ 9:18 (2) Decisions (4) Cljarch at the Cwiks- .. (7) Plays of ShakeSpOare (9) Oiristophers 8il5 (2) To .Dwell Together 8:80 (2) Detroit Pulpit . (4)^(Col«ar) JEtozo-.the.’Slim ‘ (7) UndersCancUng Our VYorld (9) Ora|. Roberts 10:00 (2) This Is the Life . . (4) ((folor) Diver Dan (7) Faith for Today -s (9) Cathedral of Tomorrow 10: SO (2) FeUx the Cat (4) ((folor) Davey and Goli- (7) News (9) Mjov+ec "Chiiw/Seas.’’| 1935. On trip from Wong Kong to Singapore, Captain Gaskell has hands full. Clark Gable, Jean Harlow, Wallace Beery. 11:15 (2) Weather (7) Weather U:20 (2) Sports—Barney Lee (4) News. (7) Play of the Week: "Mer dea." Medea, against the will of her father, aids Jason in :^pturing Golden Fleece. Fleeing with Jason, Medea murders her own brother to hinder her father’s pursuit. Judith Anderson. 11:25 (2) Mov^e: 1. "Northwest Mounted f?olice.” 1940. Canadian troops face settler’s insurrection, while officer I from Texas and mountie hat-lle for possesion of outlaw wanted by both (fanada and IJ.Si Gary Cooper, Madeleine I Carroll. Paulette (Soddard. 11:35 t4) Weather |ll:10 (4) Sports !tl:50 (4) Movi^: 1. "Sound of ! - Fear.” Young playboy lizes his only hope of clear-fne himself of murder charge i is to expo^O father’s past. 2. “Adventure irj Manhattan.’- 1936. Detective'-story writer does a series of newspaper articles about jewel cobber ies. Jean Arthur, Joel Me-Crea. SUNDAY MOBNINfJ 7:45 (7) Amorieans at Work ' 7:55 (2) Meditations ' (4) News 8:00 (2) Mass for Shut-ins I (4) Farm Report I (7) Rural Newsreel 1 8:10 (9) Billboard 8:15 (9) Sacred Heart 8:80 (2»'Christophers ! / (4) Frontiers of F'aith (7» The Way (9) Temple Baptist ('Inirch I 8:45 (2) With This Ring TV Features (?) 0. T. Hush I8M5 f4) Industry on^^Paradc 11:00 (4) House Detective' (7) Realm of the Wild (9) Herald of Truth 11:16 (2) Cartoon Onema ' 11:30 (2) Washington Conversation (7> Oi - 1 Ljmie ie: 'jTwice L'pe By United Pr Saturday KENTUCKY DERBY, 5 p. m. (2). The 88th run for the roses at (JiUrchai Powns. Actor Don Afneche joins in prerace chat., PERRY MASON. 7^86 p; m. (2). Perry is ill audtence when aging is killed onstage during dueling scene from "Romeo, and Juliet. '^HE defenders. -8:30 p. nl. (2). Eaderly former vaudeviilian (guest star Paul Hartman) Is accused by his 9-year-old granddaughter of murdering her father. MOVIE NIOHT, 9 p, m. (4). Re-broUdeaSt of “The Snows of Kilimanjaro,” starring Gregory Peck, Susan Hayward arid Ava Gardner, based on Ernest Hemingway short story. (Ctolor). nOHT NIGHT, 10 p< m. (7), Luis Rodriguez v8, Yama Bahama in 10-round” welterweight bout at t. Nicholas Arena, N. Y. Sunday TIGER BA8EBAIX, 2:30 p. m. (2). IMrolt Tigers play Minnesota Twins at Minnesota. George Kell, Ernie Harwell. ( TWEN’nETH CENTURY. H,m. (2). Communications satellites are examined. v ED SULLIVAN, 8 p. m. (2). Bobby Darin and Diahann Carroll lead guests. HOLLYWOOD SPECIAL, 8:30^ College Bowl p. m. (7ir "Witness for the Prose-1 ■ution." movie starring Tyrone! Power, Marlene Dietrich, and Charles Laughton in Agatha Christie’s courtroom mystery-melodra- ) Vtomtt Fair 11:55 (2) News SUNDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Detroit Speaks (4) U. of M, Presents (7) Bowling ((font.) • (9) Movie: "Northwest Rang- 12:30 (2) Project Hope (4; Builders' Showcase (7) Starlit'.Stairway 1:00 Their Tongues Shall Sing (fecial) (4) Journey . (7) World Adventure Series (9) Movie: "Thfe Doughgirts” 1:30 (2) Report: From Washington , , > . (4) Quiz ’Em (7) Youth Bureau (9) Movie (Cbnt.) 1:46 (2) Changing.Time 2:00 (2) Voice of the Fans (4) Capital Reports ("' Championship Bridge (9) Movie (Cont.) 2:15 (2) TTger Warn>r «» o( Crucified WPON. itpiacopal Hour tiW-'Wjn. garni » WJBK Ava Mar mnts giOA-'WJR N»w*. % Tim* WWJ Nawa, Mualo WXYk, or* Bob Ploroa CKI.W. YOU' Worship Houi WJBK. Mual* with Vvorda Sii»-WJR. Renfro Valley WWJ. StorylaiHl _ wxvil. Revival Hour ^ tiOO-WJH, Haw*. W**h. l*g«n< ?Vlt«l&,^^*dlo* BlWa" ■' CKl W, T '"Ada Tempi# WJBK, Voloe-of Church WCAR, News Palnck WPO^ Waraaw Concerto •jg*~wJH.* AIhuni'. R*hgi.in IwWJ, Hew*. Mualo .SwxvIB. Voice of Proptijoy CKLW. Meb. .Chrletlan 'WJBK, worlrf Tomorrow News, Lynkcr Fred Weiss, News News, Chuck Lcwli , News O Mlllaii Windsor Labor Dave Mlllan Welts, News McLeod Show WWJ. News. Melody. WPON Newig Bob uree WJBK. News, D*ve Ml CKLW News. Staton . Now* WJBK Nbwa, Dave Mlllan CKLW. News. Staton 4iX0—WJR, Story Hour WCAB. News, Loiaii a.M-WJtl. Hawaii Calls 'WWJ, Scoreboard. News WJBiL Newsjpav* Mlllan WXYzi. rrmrilNiM. New* WP<*N, Newa. Wlleon Show CKLW, New*, Staton - litS-‘WJR. campus Concert WWJ. New*. Monitor WCAR. News. 'Logan SIINUAT KVKNIND «I«0~WJB, White, Newf* WWJ, News, CSnslilliie WXYZ, Sebastian. New* WJBK, New* World' Revli V«;t»:.e ^ d:30—WJR. Hymns of Faith CKLW, T;he Quiet Hour WWJ. News, Monlk^ g;lH)_WJR. Chapel Hour WXYZ, Leadership ' • CKLW. Orosse PL Bpt. WCAR, Brotherhood Show WPON Pontiac Reports l):S0—WJR, Laymen’s Hour WWJ. News, Monitor Oi««--WJR. Percy Faith WXYZ, Truth Herald, New* CKLW. Hr of Decision WPON, News, Wllaon ,, WWJ. Catholic Hour ------ ------ Concert 1 ^WJBIC, t< flt.ld—WJR, A*k Professor ^J. ICtemsI Ltaht WKVZ Revlvtl ’rime CKLW, Light, Life Hr ll:00-WJR, Newt, Sports WXYZ. Meet Professor CKLW, KIder Morton WJBK, Music from Albums WPON News. Wilton WWJ. New*. Music IliBA-WJR. Music 'for* Mid WWJ News. Music CKLW, ,Bll of Heaven WXYZ. Stevenson Reports ItM—WJK. Music Hall WWJ, Newa, Roberts CKLW. »y* Opener, DavIC WJBK. News, Avery WPON, Bnoit* WXYZ, Wolf, New* 7isS-WJR, New*. Mualc.Hal WWJ, Hews, Rpimrtt* M., WXYZ, Newt, Wolf CKLIV. News, tobv D»vld WJBK. Newt. Avery Uewt, Don McLJod YZ, Newt," Woir WWJ, New*. Kobertt CKLW, News, UavKU -WJBK Newt, Avery i WCAR. News. SherhUn a’sdb-WJK. N*wi, O'.esl WWJ, News. Robcrii WXYZ. New*. Wolf WXYZ. Fred \ •LOO -V JR, Karl Heat WWJ, Newt Martens WXYZ. Breakfast Club C '„W Joe Van VljBK. News, CItrk Reid WCAB, News WPON. Newt. Jerry Olsen IhSIl—CKLW, Kennkdy Calling I :»*—WJR Newicope, WWJ, News, Lynker CKLW, Time to Chat WJBK, News. Reid MONUAT AFTICBNOCN It'WI- WJR. Newt. Farm WWJ News. Lynker WXYZ, Winter CKLW, Newt, Grant WJBK; -H'ew*,'"Reln'...... W( AR. Newt, Purse WPON Newa, Jerry Olsen I*!*0~WJR. Tlrne tor Mu*. CKI.W. Joe Vln WWJ, ■mphasif. Lynker CKLW. Joe Van WJBK. News, Held WXYZ. Winter,. Newt li«**t-WJR Newa, Showcase WWJ, Ask Your Neighbor WPON, Newt, Olsen Show WCAR News. Music VfJBK, New*. Reid WXYZ. Winter. News CKLW, ..^ws, Joe Van tiM-CKLW. News. Shirt 111 giMA-WJR. Newt Showcase WWJ, New* Maxwell ckmIi, ....* WCAR, . -___ ___ WJBK News, ^e WPON. New*.,, Bob Green -WXYZ. Sebastian , Sheridan -WXYZ. Sebaatlan, Nawt CKLW. Newt, Davit WXYZ 8#ba»llan, N SfSO-WJR. Mew*. Ml WXYZ. Sebaatlan WJBK. New*. Lee WPON, Ngwt. Bob < While, John Hoyt, Mar-ion Ross. iPl0i4)^ovie; "Kentucky." 1938. Two horse-breeding families come into conflict. This feud affocts the lives of their grandchildren. Richard Greene, Loretta Young. Walter Brennan, Karen Moriey. MONDAY MORNING 6: CO (.4) Continental Classropm — Statistics ^"'* 6:20 (2) Meditations 6:25 (2) On The Faint Front ^ 6:30 (2) College oFTht ,Vir — Biology (4) Continental ClassnxMiL — Biology 7:00 (21 B'wana Don (4) Today (71 Funews 7:30 (7) Johnny Ginger 8:00 C2) Captain Kangaro*' "This (policy) is not being pushed by communists,’’ the sena-or said. “It l«-^lng pushed by tmericans who are Just as loyal as you aM I." He addressed a Republican rally here. 1 2 3 4 6 4 1 6 TT 11 12 lA i* 15 16 it 18 19 21 22 ^■23 . 26 25 26 28 29 30 31 ■ 34 37 38 ■ 40 41 r 44 45 47 48 A9 50 IT 53 sr 55 56 67 liQ 54 8 Jt Number 33 Role 33 Obtained 34 Female tall .......... iirtflxi 14 Jlot am- {* i. «ful. I? ^Slev maker J4 Mountain pool* 37 Dayshif rest lirlly iprtf 43 Brailllan macaw ' 43 Contalnej 4* Legislative body SO Diamounted si Dine 63 Driving M Plexus 66 Caraal grain 6 Musical drama « Irritate 7 Town In .ttied * CbYlsteaas carol 37 Without 31 Old 35 Tim* long toES*.^ 33 Cpllaaaues 36 Clly In Negi 39 SiAey ailH ra'tVd 40 Peril 43 Fall Hewer 43 Vehicles M To.ward the ~ sheltered Id* , U STorelfcraft 49 DuraUen 49 Sasentlal bring 93 Atfirmativ* '•RENTAL* SOFT WATER UnNs«itad Quts«iHe* SALES—$199 Up UNDSAY J sort WATER COP 88 Nswbsrry Si. P6 8-tj621 -=== GAS Clean Low Celt 111 Dependable WeMaidServiet: LUXAIRE AIR-EASt DELCQ (OM) AFCO jaMitrol LO-DLASr ' GAS CONVERSIONS No Monty Puwnm-Tunnf Chandler Heating OR 3-4482 0825132 4431 PmwILNiillae >IOW! YOU CAN START.TO PICK Hundreds of STRAWBERRIES Within 60 DaysL ME CUMBER...’TRAIN IQ 6R0W UP-IIP-UP-TRELUSV WAILS’, etc. TICE SALE i^GROWAlLYOII CAM EAT SI' "%r From the U S. Department of SwkET^SUB^ROT *STBAWL_.......... 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ALLSTATE All-Weather lOWV Motor Oil 197 Reg. #3.69 2^ J0.(|t. --style imekeL .AdiMri«]l»ll.»rist.^ t uur c YOUR CHOICE: 3 Electrical AppliancesT All R«g>Urly I’rl.ol •! Kcnniore .3-speed ha with chronic-plalr “ l,i|ihlweighl d mixer Wall moiiiit Flecirical Oepl.. Vtain llasenieni MONDAY ONLY! ''***' *"''“ytodlssu.ty ^ Flowenng Shrubs Reg. #1.79 3 Kinds Charge It CHoose from Forsythia, gdiden syringa or pink fhowering almond. Colorful flowering shnibs hring'a touch oY eh^rfillness to any kind of landscape. 2-3 feet high Shve 57e on each one you buy Monday at ^ars! „ MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! ^'Twin-Top” 30-Inch Kitchen Buffet Cabinet Kenmore Completely Portablp Hair Dryere 33^ Regularly *44.95! Open to 60 Indies , 'Take-MIlh” NirMONE) IM)WN on Sears Easy Payment Plan the touch of your fingers moves the "twin-tops' apart, forming a smooth, laminated plastic, sturdy 5-ft. table. .Smart sliding glsss fronts cover spscioiis storage com partmenl. Save m*ire at Sear*! Kitchen Itsnniaa lh>pl„ Fi Monday Special! Extra large hood just say. "Charge It” at Sears Leaves you free to move about. Five position switl exactly adjusts rate of drying. "Reach in" fealifre of hi lets you feel hair for dryness without disturbing hr Weighut^rin than 5lbs. ■Irel Mein HMemeni Giant 8-Foot Umbrella Ha* 12-Ribs and 24 Gores Regtil«rlyx*54.99 S Q 5 / Monday Onl^pedal fJP fJP Y NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Eaiy Payment Plaj N.i SAVE •40M0-Lb. Kenmore Automatic Washers 199 Remilarly *2,39.9.5 on i^le Moi e Monday Only .ots of shade, every day with this big beauty. Tilts close. Choose yellow, green or tugquoise with white. 2-pc. 'in. ,NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan iliiminum pole, Sturdily constructed. Get yours Monday nd save. Sno > until 9 p.m.! " Fumllnre Oepl,. (ieenad Floor Has special cycles forjqveryday, delicate or wash ’a’ wear .......... filAr. ^a iireela^ed •til p.m.! -fabrics. Built-in lint filter, ^ater level seleetioijit. 5 wash-rinse temperatures, poireela^ed top. lid, tub. Save Monday. Shop Monday nite until "— ' Applinneo Oopi. tmrnpMe Kllehen Honnlna Orpl.. IVrrv Si. Beml. ^ ‘ OT' A ''Satisfecti^in guaranteeid or your money back i54KorthSa,^w ^treeC-^ y Phone FE S-4171 \ 'V-V ■/ \ The Weather '^ VOL. J20 NO. 75 THE PONTIAC ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. SATURDAY, MAY 5. 1962 -32 PAGES ONt)^ PBSaS UrrBRNA'UONAb Probe of Tax Revise NATO N-Policy No Jumping on Chair for Her! , DYNAN NATO's iorelgii ami defmisp minteteni had been M^eking agreement on a proposed polle.v case of Red attack tha( would still give President Kennedy the final decision. By jrOSEPli ATHENS, Greece {AP^ - The United States agreed- today to give its Nprth Atlantic Treaty Organ!-nation ailies more information the extent and power of American nuclear stockpiles an official source said. The' U.S. move was disclosed General Dirk U. Stikker, as r the NATO allies meeting behind closed doors reportedly adopted a new nuclear policy call- representatives expi-e.ssed k|Vations on Stikker’s report The plan was contained in a report read by NATO Secretary- iTroops, Planes Betancourt\ Predicts Quick End f6\Uprising, Issues Ultimatum CARACAS, Venezuela, ing on alliance members to work|......... out guide lines on how and when {diplomatically avoided any action atomic tactical weapons should be .that would obstruct implementa-used in event of a Soviet attack. | Mon of the policy. France, reportedly has reservations about the nuclear policy be-! cause it will not go as far as| President Charles de Gaulle would like. It does not change Kennedy’s right to veto the use of nuclear weapons., .something the French j _ nalian’'and French,7“*'t‘;j'-v would like to tro^^"rollfed expressed reser- ’ j^ver light reslstence to the in edge of carupano today un-: Italy, which helped frame the . , . proposal for Inoadening NATO’s tO crush rebel-| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 31 jHous marines and militaryi (policemen. Loyal, warplanes I bombed and strafed thej j coastal city. Lassie Is Lionized I President Romulo Betancourt [accused the rebels of seeking to| 111) a Castro-tyiH' Communist j [regime in Venezuela and gavel them j»n ultimatuin to sjineiider, I by dawn or be dc.stroyed. Tv\ oi jgove-nment destreyers steamed ■ into the port of Carupano, 3001 Fiscal Reform Failure Touches: Off Angry Blast LANSING (AP) - Under orders from Gov. Swainson, a team of state attorneys will make a full-scale Investigation of lobbying against attempts in the legislature to revise Michigan’s tax structure. Swainson, incensed by activities of what he called “the invisible government” to influence the leg- miles east of Caracas. Betancwiirf pmlleted the up- “MimMY IIATI':8 But that doesn’t stop 10-yenr-old Teny Gulackilt from keeping half a dozen around her home\^ 113 Mohawk Road. And now everyone in the cit^can see her mice — in a display on their habits aJjd environ- Pontlse Prem> Pkoto ment at the Pontiac Public Schools Elementary Science Fair frem 9 a. m. to noon and from 1 p. m. to 5:30 p. m^ Monday and Tuesday, in Maik Twain School,^729 Unda Vista Avc. ifSlng «vould be quickly crushed and elalmeil his government was in complete control of the rest * Despite the president’s ultlma-im, midmoring passed without word from Carupano—either ofj rt-bel .suiTender or further fight-1 Report Red Chinese (Franco Trying Used in Laos Baffle ^toHalfSfrikes SHEAR EXCITEMENT - That's what motor-ists experienced yesterday as they slowed traffic in front of 993-LaSalle Ave., Waterford 'j^nship, to gawk at this sight. Richard O. Erik.son, owner of the collie dog, said: "When Lassie came home pantile Pvmt Ph»t» (honest that's her nitmci a|ty;. getting,.her sum-, mw dip at the vet's . . . well, this is the way 1‘ported missing Special Meeting Wednesday Supervisors to Get Lakes Code Loyalist troops • moved on Cnni-pano from three dirccUdns after the city’s 4C0-maii marine garrison and 50 military fxilieemen rcbclltKl and demanded tlu' Betancourt, guvcrnmeiit quit. TIu- rebels reportedly pH.ssed out arra.s to muhist and lefti.sl Mi|»|jorlei’s. j Radio reports fro.fl cities near Carupano asserted the rebels al-| temntwl to spread the revolt byi forcing 3.0110 townspeople to demonstrate against the goviunment. I Loyalist -ftilSriiics were arllft-c)l from Caracas lo Cuiiiaiia, about 60 miles west of Cani- By JI.M LONC A countywide ordinanci Idle wal('r activities on tovvnstiipi lakes will be propos<>d Wednesday at a special meeting of the Oakland County Township Supervisors As.sociation. The meeting in the Counly Office Building has been sclieduled f() discuss a uniform code that was drafted yes(erday by the super visors of nine townships that have the majority of ihe county lakei iState Suprenu' Court ruling upheld [siK-h townsliii) imwei’. MA-IOK REVISIONS Major revisions in the ordinance would: The pro|HiNrlngfield, II I g h t u n d. Iiide-Orioii , und, Pontiac 1. Allow water skiing between 10 a.in. and sundown on wrtl of a.bathing beach, fishing boats and flouts. I'lohibil those 1j yc'urs old oi' •ounger from operating a Iwal with motor in excess of 7'a horsepow cd. r unless accompanied by un adult. Should the unifoini reguliilions be accepted by Ihe 21 rm.'iniM'r as-socitUion, it would then Iv necessary for each supervisor to pi c'senl it lo the township board lo decide' its late. ■ I The ordinance is a modified version of one adopted two w<>cks ago by West BIcKnitfield Tdwrtship, thej only county township to set restric-1 (ions on its lakes since a recent' "My own personal view is the uniform ordinance will only be a tern penary measure because stale will probably take* over the •jconirol of lakes someday and Its laws will pfe'empl vvlial we’ve done” West BI(Kjmfie;ld’s ordinance, w tiieb goes into effec'l Majt 25, re-sli’iclH skiin'; to Ihe hours betwec'n 10 a 1.1, mil (i :i0 p.m.: prohibits bemis fmm exct'Cding 10 mile's an hour between 6:30 p.m. and 10 a.m.: and prevents children finder M from using any isiwcr Ixial un-| Man Di©S of less they are with an adult. Car Crash Fatal to Novi Father Betancourt predicted the uprising would be quickly crushed and Prbcldims M a r 11 d I Ldw in 3 Ndrthern Prdvinces /u for Three A^nths FROM OUR WIRE HEKVICE8 VIENTIANE, Laos—U.S. military sources disci) for the first time today that the troops 'who capti the strategic Laotian town of Muong Sing Thun apparently came from nearby Communist China. Ai-though evidence still was fragmentary, the sources said that two-thirds of the attacking force spoke Chinese. The U.S. sources were quick to point out that suchjsp“*'*’s'^“®‘‘’‘“* troops would not necessarily be members -of the Red|‘’*“ ‘‘ sjWading ■ I „ ->3hinese army. MADRID, Spain (API—Geher-iimo Francisco Franco pro-(oday a state of anergeh-threc key provinces north to.try to wave of strikes. Truck Sales Up Reports GMC along ihe coast road. Army niiits from Ciudad Bolivar and .Matiirin moved on the rebels fnmi the south ami w<‘st. The government forec.s met lesistunce in the small towns of Rio Caribc, about 12 miles east of Carupano, and Cariaco, some ‘20 miles to the southwe.st. A fire fight broke out on one road loading lain Carupano before government forces seized a rebel roadblock. Cumana radio reported heavy (Continued on Page 2. Col. 3) Nikitd Praises Pravda MOSCOW (AP> - Premier Khrushchev hailed Pravda on its 50th birthday today, saying it 'Holds high (he banner of I.enin, (he banner of eommunisni and pi'oleliirlan Inieinalionalism” April Retail Deliveries . They sftid 'the attackers of the Lad-Itian town 30 miles inside [the armistice line drawn by [the Geneva oonference on [Laos could have been Chinese-speaking tribes-men recruited by the pro-1 strikes Communist Laotian rebels.' Fralieo's decree, to remain feet at least^thr(H_ aimed rodiMjPft.tfae Asturias coal mines, where 20,oit)0 miners stnicli for higher pay a mhpth ago leaving-at least another 20,000 without work. ..jUic vbitenMiit.....................................uvvwtbv Year Ago Domestic retail deliveries of new GMC trucks in April were up '29.4 over the same peritxi last year, it was revealed today. 7,l,t5 units were delivered, according to OM vice president Calvin J. Werner, general manager of Truck and Coach Division. He .said April was Ihe best truck sales month for the division since August 1960, In Ihe first tour inonllis of this year, GMC truck deliveries totaled '26,276 units. This is 20.8 per cent higher than Ihe .laiiuary through April period of ISMil. .* ledmieally outlawed less was the closest that U.8. sources have jel come to supporting Ihe charges of the right-wing Royal Laotian government V are taking part in the civil In llie past, U..S. officials always have l)rushed off such claims. But they said today that survivors of the Muong Sing defeat generally agreed tijat Ihe town was captuied by 200 Chinese-speaking soldiers and 100 Laotians. Elsewhere In Laos Communist troops overran another key defensive position and drove closer lo beleaguered Nam Tha today Ih an a [(parent stepped up offensive. ORDER PUBLICIZED Franco’s order, which followed an emergency session of the government commission of economic affairs, was given unusually wide publicity in the Spanish press and over radio and television. n j u r I e s ................. at Pontiac General West BlomiiflebI 'InwiiNhip Hu- L pcrvlNor -lolin lU liaid explains j 3 HourS After MlSHOp Students Jeer and Heckle 5 * 3 New Features A ll-yetii'-old Novi fuihe'r of m Ihrc’c childri'n died today at Pontiac General Hospital froni I juries .suffered when his cnisla'cl .into a liee in Waterford Township. . , Virgil I). Lums- Three features starling Monday will appeal 1.) a , ,[(>n, 42.123 14- irarlely of lntere.sts among Pontlno Press roadora. if [Mile Road, u Husbands will .sneak a look at Ui'e series on "How , : (le.Muan for a .0 Keep Your Husband Alive,” a condensation of Dr H Deirolt machinery Kenneth C. Hutchln’s book, “How Not to Kill Your Hus- co'opauy. jand.” . |)ix)nouiu’('d dead Maybe the “old man” will get a little sympathy around his house, for this series is wr|tten primarily for wives. (It 5:45 alKMit three hours afler Ihe oeddent occurred. Oakland Highway Toll in ’62 33 And our “IJcar Abby" (Abigail Van Bureiu has wl'lU ten u hew book on marriage, which ahb calls "Hl-Imi-3ellty." Installments will run luider such provocative titles a,s "Slot-Machine Divorce" and “Mind Over Mattress." ★ ★ ★ . '' If you arc ahiglc, you’ll learn the marital ropes. If you are hapipUy married, you’ll become more so. It your marriage la rocky, maybe these dinpters will steer you around the rocks. , , dr WulcrfonI TowiiNhlp' pull e o unlil LunUHlen Inllod to oegunale n curve on CtnoHuuil Lafco Road, JtiNi north of Ellcalieth Lake Road. Ills ear slnd slraighl aliead and hit the tree alKint IH (ret from the road. There were nu Ahd for yop bridge addicts, Jacoby cun give you some |, pointers with his daily hands on how to bid, or not bid, B those aces and kings. Watch fof these three features .starting,' Monday. Police said the lack (d skjd marks al (he accident scene indicated l.umsden either fell asleep at 1l)e Wliert or failed lo turn at Ihe ourve because he \^a« unfamiliar with the road, lie apparently wMK I raveling at a high rate of srs'cd, police said. Mis’body wilt ls> al'^he Richard-.................. Walled son-Blrd k'uneijtd Home l,nk^, ionmrmdv evening. 'Y BRflNl* CHEER Ylift IIOFirA - A Golden, (?olo., high school student (tight i gave Teamster President Jimmy lloffa the Bronx cheer In Golden wltt'ii Moffa arrived at the Vmm Poreelaln pUinl tor an (organization visit. With Hoffa (Ictii Iranco'M action, described Iqr some authorities here as In effect martial law. was order in (he provinces of Asturias Vicoaya states un Hpaln s north coast. He suspended various* sections of the bill of rights, including the rights of assembly, movement of persons or vehicles in strike areas and frc(!donj from search and arrest normally guaranteed Spaniards. Authorities in Asturias said the province remained quiet. Mine officials claimed thousands of strikers had gone back to work and predicted that by Monday most of Governor Says PeapfO of Michigan Sick of Invisible Government statewide lienee last night that he had directed Ally. Gen. Frank J. Kelley to launch the investigation. ' The governor uald he wanted I all lobMng lativo battle over taxM aa well as the attorney general’s opinion on whether any laws hava. been broken. Any lobbying « sidered Improper also should be Swainson’s angry denouncement of lobbyist excesses ^s carri(ed over seven television stations and more than a dozen radio stations. ’’The people of Michigan are sick and tired of obstruction, of rule by invisible government,” tie declared. “We want fiscal reform.” Kelley said be would take personal charge of the investigation. No names of individual lol^sts or their employers will be men? tloned in conneetion with the Investigation until the report is submitted to the governor, he sqtd. “To do otherwise would (foOi' ply neither with stondaids^ lalmcsdfa#|Wp5r in1------------------------ -- Swainson was stirred up by failure of a move by a Upartisan coalition of state senators to push through s tax program based m a personal and corporate Income tax. PACKAGE KILLED The key bill in the 11-hUl package passed last week 18-15, the vote- -csqulndr with-10 .. Democrats teaming up with eight Republicans.to put It through. The next day Sen. Haskell L. Nichols, R-daokson, anhouwDed that he would withhold support of the remninint bills n ‘ Sen. John H. Stahlin, R-Beldingi indicated later that he would Bo longer vote with the coalition w-less it agreed to substantial («x relief on real estate owned by (|^ persons over 6.5. » Their stand all. but killed off chances for enacting an income this year. Atm ‘EqUAL TIME' Stahlin said later the package failed to achieve what he considers genuine tax reform. "When Seti. Nichols and mysolf expresaed the need tor modifications, we were simply expressing would return to me general concern of the entire coalition,” Stahlin asserted. Represmiiulives of the miners declared, however, that many strikers were awaiting wage guarantees before going back. Unless Ihe state of emergency is sufficient (o end the Asturias miners strike promptly, some official sources [jretiioted Franco would declare the mines militarized, thus requiring the miners to return lo their jobs as units ofi the armed forces. In Today's Press ) other hortlu'rn Spanish industries at Bilboa and Beusaini have been hit by strikes. NOW SMILE Detroit freeway drivers to | go on ‘TV’ in Conlro! p(PoJect ! —Page 34. Cloudy, Cooler, Some Showers Over Sunday Thirsty lawns will get more than sprinkled tonight. sa.vs the \veath-erman. Showers and thundershow ers are predicKsl along with mild lemperaturbs. A low of .54 is expected this evening. imlay will be inostly eloiidy WHS Harry .Bath, secretruy-treasurer of Colorado-Wyomtng .)|olnt Council of 'R'amsters. AbouP 2501 Jeering students .showed up wjth signs to heckle tiu; Teamster boss, Wikds are southwesterly todt iner«|aslng lo lO to 20 VtllcH P liour’ in the aflemoon. The mi cifry fell to 55 'jtt 6 a.m., but (llml)ed (0 a wurhi 83 at 1 pah. Seel Hay City teacher partially recovers sight—PAGE II. PolHksI New Mexico primary bnl* I eonfusinip-PAGB «. WorW Trip student of Winds takes a trip-PAOE M. , . ,, ... Wn >.. (k? " ........... i. ,'V V H'iv :,' /t. 5 Europeans Disappear flROMI OUR N1SW9 WIRE$ ORAN. Algeria in the series, jprcss~in marked If the reports are officially confirmed. the fighting could upset the unity talks scheduled for Leopoldville some time next week between Tshombe and central Premir Ciyr-ille Adoula. The talks are aimed at ending Katanga’s secessidn from the cen-“|t^al government, formed of the extent and power] of American nuclear and their deployment the world. 3. There would be agreement pn so-called guidelines for resort I to nuclear arms - still subject fGontinued From Page One -itical (-omments'to authority from the White . UK ai c-omments, boradcast media that car- jt* # m to mayor oi Troy .hllSlTax Lobbying Probe Ordered by Swainson I ROBERT ,). HUBER ■S. which began April 25. It was in|rent leftist-led demonstrations — tbe ffitefiWediafe ”yieia ■Tafige a SSariccii ap- 300,000 to 500.000 ton.s of TNT, likeiproaeh to the question of U..S. the first and second shot-—the Jests. third explosion was in the million-i American officials have expect-!' ... ,, , ^ range—and it look place aljcd the first Ru.ssian'explosion of| ospi a . ITii.m. EST. ja new series, almost dail.v since jthe United .Slates resumed atmos- Hold Luncheon hr Hotel Owner, Hospital Chiei rled the governor’s ninSNage grant him equal time to ex- ' ry I D ‘ j z plain tin- {msition of what he (O lOeeK tlOOertS The Democrat governor has tried unsuccessfully for two legislative sessions to win approval of a ta?t .reform program based on Approximately 1.50 area bust-, jneomo lax. He said it offers the ncssmen attended a reception yes-iQ^iy adequate and fair solution lo terday -afternoon-aF the WaWronJIk- stale's mdnev problems. ......... Hotel, honoring the new owner of, the Waldron Hotel and the man-i ager and directors of Pontiac Os-! The income lax bill, carrying ■ ........ three jK-r cent tax come, a five per c( Arman Simone, president of the "The U.S. Information Agency pherie testing. Thev said reports that so far reaction,th.-y thought the Russians were abroad to the U.S. tests could Ix^preparing for the blasts to sup-gummed up as • generally mild piemen! their tests of last fall. personal inlevy on eor-poralion profits and a seven per (enl lax on earnings of financial institutions, was kepi from going the house this week. The Weather • FULL U. S. WEATHER BUREAU REPORT PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Increasing cloudiness and ‘ warmer today with scattered showers and thundershowers - in late afternoon, high 82. Mostly cloudy and mild with ^llhowerg and thundershowers tonight, low 54. Sunday most-UjJy cloudy and cooler with few showers, high 70. Wind southwesterly increasing to 10-20 miles in afternoon. Osteopathic, spoke briefly. Host of the ev^nt was Bmce J.; Annett. of Annett -Inc. Realtors,] "Never, in my .years at Laif-who introduced the speakers as sing, have I seep lobbying as In-men playing a big part in the re-]lcnse, as frantic, as desperate as vilalizatlon of downtowm Pontiac.]the lobbying everyone witnessed ---------------------------- I during that perioF following sen- Rebels Attacked in Venezuela Senate Seat Mayor Robert J. Huber of Troy today chose Slate Sen. Farrell E. Roberts pro-income tax stand as central issue in announcing his Mi .SeMte, Both meo are Republleaii: Huber suid he would oppose Roberts In the Aug. 7 primary, if the lneumbi‘nl ehooses to run again, Roberts told The Pontiac Prcsi he would not make his decision until after the current Senate session—about three weeks from * A Huber is president of the Michigan Chrome and Chemical Co. member of the county board of supi'rvlsors, the Rotary, SI Francis Home for Boys, Ihc Amo lean I-egion, the Economic Club and the Oakland County Children’! Aid Society. WASHINGTON (AP)-A govern-tent board says thq International Union of Mine, Mill aijd Smelter Workers is (^ommunist-infit-trated and therefore cannot represent employes under the National Labor Relations Act. Union officials denied the finding and said they would file an immiediate appeal. ★ *■ it The decision was Friday by the ^bversive ActlvR ties ClQntrol Boaird. In a 97-|^e report, it backed the findii^ of board member Francis Cnerry, who sat as an examiner, that the union was heavily tered with Communists or ,Comrtiunist sympathizers. Ing CHrdinance,j 78-page-dAifument Txiwnship Planning _ the (Commission three years The purpoim' of the 8 p.m. f at ^e Bloomfield Hills is to hear objeefions que.stions on the pro-inance. n any objections would ‘The aid support flowing to the Comn^ist party from respondent (union) and its controlling leadmhip has been real, substantial,/and significant, port ^id. "Through respondent, the /Communist party has ac-jired and continues lo have a spendable foothold in the labor movement in the United Staes.” In Denver, headquarters of the union. President John Clark said the board’s decision "has in fact. The evidence on which Ihe bonrd relies comes almost entirely from ope man, a man whd was fil-ed by mine-mill and has since been proven to be an Army deserter and an unreliable wit- NOT IDENTTFIED Clark didn’t identify the man. The Miffe Mill and Snfielter Workers Union is independent, having been expelled from the old CIO in 19.50. It claimed 100,000 members in 200 locals in 19.59, but since then its membership reportedly has declined to about 60,000. represents workers in the copper. lead and zinc mining and refining industries, ★ ★ ★ Cherry’s 4-year investigation produced 9,721 pages of transcript. He announced his findings last December. The case began July 1955, when the Justice Department filed a petition asking that the board find the union was Communist-infiltrated. The five-metnber board said it.s report that the union’s international executive board “is and for many years has been domin-ited and controlled by the Com-nunist parly members on Ihc board.’’ The board said it was unable !o link Ihe union and the Communist party direclly but said it found a strong showing that the union "has been and is working behalf of Ihc Comniunisf par-upon a <;Qnsislent basis over long period of lime." hearing but would be considered prior to the time the presented d tor ado] If the meeting runs too long, plans have been made to hold another public hearing May 11. The Monday hearing has been scheduled for the High school rather than the towpship hall because a large turnout is anticipated. dinance are twq new xoni cepts for the township: search • park category f« industrial research and a plan for providing a neighborhood park in each new subdiyiston. 'The zoning oi^inance has been aupnented with a township master plan developed by Vilican-Leman'ahd Associates, Southfield planning eonsultants. Frilz Fiesselman of 550 Larch-lea Road^ Birmingham, has been elected moderator of the Pilgrim Congregational Church of Birmingham at Us second annual meeting. Other officers are Mrs. James K. Flack, church clerk; William Kuiler, treasurer; I,eRoy Rum-baugh, and Howard C. Tuttle, «(^eblili Mrs. Hurfaui R. Bird...... (iMtomeM) and John 8. Cooper andi Ketth R. Petherrlck, tins-teea. ■ Accoifding to Rev{ Howaid E. Bull, pastor, the congregation alro gave formal approval to the affiliation of the church With the twr recently f o r me d cooperative groups of continuing Oongrega-tionaJ CTiurches. They are the Michigan State Association and the Southeastern Michij^n Association of Ceingregatlonal Chris tian Churches. Some of the activities planned for Birmingham youths on Michigan Week Youth Day, May 26, include a carp carnival at Quartan Lake for children 10 to 12 years old, father and Son baseball games at Eton Park and othei Little League diamonds, and a tennis clinic dt eon Park from ':30 to 3 p.m. .'*:* *■ Other events are an open house at the YMCA from 1 to 4 p.m., a parade and concert by the U.S. Air Force BAnd at Shain Park, and a /dance for teens at the Community House from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Dr. Frederick D. Ooudie Service for Dr. Frederick D. Goudie, 46, of 27210 Eldoradc Drive, Lathrup Village, Will be at 11 a.m. Monday at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Funeral GO. Burial will be In Wood-lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Dr. Goudie. a prominent Detroit physician for many years died yesterday at Detroit’s Harpei Hospital after a long illness. A gr^uate of Denison University, he was a member of the American Medical Association, Wayne County Medical Society Michigan State Medical Society, Sigma Nu fraternity. Sigma Xi fraternity, Phi Beta Pi Medica' Society and of the Northbrook Presbyterian Church. Drl Goudie did graduate work at Wayne State and the Univer.sity t Michigan. Surviving ^are his wife Frances, son William, a daughter Susan, all at home, and ax brother. FRANK W. IRONS to Be Automation Toll HARRIMAN, N.Y. (AP) -Al as( 200,0(K) jobs a year will be eliminated by machines i next decade, a<-cording to a report to the American Assepjfey confer-ice here on ti'chnical changes. * ★ The -'■Import, submitted Friday night by Ewan Claguc, U.S. commissioner of labor statistics, and Leon Greenberg, Bureau of Labor .Statistics, was described as the first attempt to reduce aulorna-lion job losses lo actual figures. (Continued From Page One) •asualties. but this could not be •onfirmed. j C.overtmw'nt troops hailed ihcir march on the edge of Cai'upano 5;j|l)ecau.se of darkness and to give 4»[the insurgents lime to accept Betancourt’s ultimatum lo lay down I heir arms. As (he troops moved overland, three government warplanes 2^1 bombed (he Canipano airport 991 and strafed the marine garri- Almost Burned Steaks Gbns Host Titovs J*' As the Iroops moved • overland, J9 three government warplanes 67 homhed the Carupano airport and J^jstrafed the marine garrison. fl;i| .Souces said the rebels fired njiliack with antiaircraft guns that I shot holes through the warplanes fuselage but that the planes made it safely back. The Informants said rebel antiaircraft fire drove off three other government planes. ★ dr ★ Betancourt convened an emergency Gablet session to adopt dedecrees banning public gatherings nd suspending laws covering (•arch and seizure. Despite the president’s ultimatum. midmorning passed without word frortt Garupdno—either of reM'l sunender or further fighting. *r I’bctaU NATHINAL WKATHRR — Some scattered Showers and thun-deritbowers will occur tonight in parte o( the lower l-akes and Ohio Valley with soqie reattert'd showera and oocasiooal .rain possible in the Northwest and northern Platonu. It will be warmer (ram New England through tiu> Mississippi Valley and soutliern Plaint). Choi weather is exjMiefed from the upper \41kes westward througb the iwrtihern Plains and Plateau to thg doast. All Classes on Monday at Madison Junior High Kegnlar class sessions will be Junior High Behool beginning iviondny tor nil t,10|) students, Ineiudliig special education stu- Huun P. Whltmer Iwlay. sis fiupt. innounciM W’ASH INGTON (AP l~Ast ronaut John II. Glenn Jr. almost burned the s(euk.s. Cosmonaut Gherman Titov wound up in apron, everyone seemed to have a wonderful lime. -see The affair: A spur-oMlie- ment cookoul al Glenn’s modern brick home in nearby Arlington, Va., Friday night. In the hurry to gel Ihe fi-ozen steaks cooked, someone poured on too much churreal. A Inte-urriving guc'st said it looked like Glenn' garage was going up in flames. BEEMKI) TO LIKE IT "Daddy cooked the steak and it almost got burned up," said Glenn’s 14-year-old daughter. Car-elyn. "Bui they (Titov and hl6 wife Tamara) seemed lo like It. had a very enjoyable evening. ” Glenn said later Ihal ev«*ryone axt American lo Journey In fpaee II...................... NBC’s ’’IV Nation’s Future Sunday night. The Glenns had invited th Titovs to dinner earlier, but plans were rather indefinite until Tilov decided about 6 p.m, to lake them up on it, a National Aereniiutlc and Space Administration official said. At the lime, the Glenns were attending a Soviet Embassy ception for Titov and his wife. There followed a mad dush for home to gel Ihe steaks out of Mrs. Annie Glenn’s freezer. There was a small crisis whe the supply of peas run low, but hastll;^ dispatched motorcycle policeman salved thut problem. TO NTUDV IjqilHIfi Glenn said In the Interview that, In addition lo the 30>ineh balloon towed by a 100-foot line, the next spa(xH:reft would carry put on aprons and pitched In to #«««*' transparent sphere contain [Cl the dinner-steak, |K.>ns, potato •hips, salad and ice cream—on the table. 1 w ♦ w Muj. and Mrs. Titov spent about 1 hour and a quarter Hi the Gl«‘nns’. Then Ihc two spacemen and their wives hurried to a television studio where Titov and Glenn tape-recorded an Interview in whieh Olenn revealed that the ing liquids. The study the behavior of liquids in the state of weightlessness. During the program, Glenn pressed Titov lo glvq Information on any failures the . Russians may have had in their space program. ’ e ★ A JItov replied with some heat that Russia had never lost a (X)s-Jnonaut. If it had, he said, ii would have been Impossible to hide it. 'A cosmonaul lias perhaps ISheri// Bidding tor 5th Term in County Oilice Undei’ (he finding, ihe would no longer be eb'e lo bar-'iiin with llie recognition of the N.'itional l.iibor Relalion.s Board. Oakland County's' leading 'vot^ 200,000 Jobs in 10 YearsIS^r,!:^. lion this ye: .Sheriff p-rank Irons, who turned 6:', on Thursday, is bidding (or his fifth term as head of the county’s police force. Ironsv a Republican, polled 16.’5,-644 votes in the last general election to defeat Oxford auto dealer Homer Higlil by nearly 40,000. No other candidate drew more votes or won by a wider margin. Pontiac resident, Irons has k county law enforcement o(-(or .38 years. Ho stalled as a patrolman with Ihe Berkley Police Deparlmenl on Miiy 10, 1924. Dailies Await Vote on Offer Local's Decision Set for Tomorrow Could End 24-Doy Shutdown DETROIT (UPI) - The Detroil newspaper strike entered its 24th day today with hopes for settle ment still pinned on a union meeting tomoroow. Members of the International ’Typographical Union at the Detroit News and the Detroit Free Press will meet tomorrow lo vote on the publishers’ latest offer, .. . An ITU -spokesman said Friday that the union has made no offi cial recommendation to its members regarding the offer. The publishers said that if the ITU accepts the new offer they will begin recalling employes in hopes of getting presses rolling again. Local 13 of the Printers and Pressmen met with publishers Friday lo discuss pension matters They will meet again Monday and the union also has a general membership meeting scheduled foi Monday. The Paper find Plate Hfindlerir Union is also seeking a new eon-Irael with Ihc papers.' "HAIL TO THE CIIIEF«" - And hail to all Ihe other Pontiac and Temiiest cars, too — (hat’.s tlie tune the Eddie Schick Quintet of D««lrolt wa.s playing in the plant* yesterday when Pontlae Motor Division ie))orled its all-time record sale month A total of 62.938 Ponlines and Tempests were sold in April. *ky above ^ earth's atmosphere. a wife, and (he molh- 0;. er would tell somebody, he suid. PKOORAM TAPED "Everybody would find out by Ihe The Interj'lew wait tajH'd for|grapevine.” , Birmingham Attorney | New BreWDry President !! Aliorney Willlan) E, Francis ofi] f>92 Lakeside Drive, Hlrmingham, j elttcled pi>{|58ideiit of the Se- I bewaing Brewing Co. yestei-day, j succeeding Milford Golden of Do-troll, Who resigned, '★ k, ★ A shake-up of lop offleeis Ihe ftLyeur-old lirewing firm fol- i lowed a recenl proxy jlght. ' i" CLOSED MONDAY /15(‘cati.se of llte lo.ss of our loved one. Our khon closed all day Monday. Tony’s Beauty Shop jjL /the POl^TIAC press/SATURDAY, ^tAY S, 1962 May Breakfast Sunday The Senior Usher Board of ^New-man AME CSiurch will sponsor the annual May breakfast from 8 to noon Sunday morning in Canlyn’t Studio, 124 FrankUn Blvd. Mrs. Allen D. Noble is president of the board and Mrs. Adel Walker^ program chairman. . I cannot conceive how a man can look up into the heavens and say there is no God. — Abraham Lincoln. BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH W. Huron at Mark St. Worship Services at 8.40 and 11.00 A.M. , "TWO BASINS-TWO WAVS" 9:45 A M.—Church School Classes for All Ages ‘ 6.30 P,M.-BYf Groups Miss Esther Middlewood, speaker 7.30 P.M.-Miss Esther Midd|jsw0od CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 30 WhiHemore St. FE 2-7657 SUNDAY, 7.30 P.M. SPEAKER- HORACE JOHN DRAKE. WEDNESDAY-.-SILVER TEA,' 7.30 P.M. The chairman of Michigan Week’s Spiritual Foundations Day May 20, has appealed to clergymen of all faiths to participate in the observance. "It is most fitting that Michigan Week should begin with a Spiritual Foundations Day in which we ac-knowledge the goodness of God to the people of our state,” said Dr. Samuel 0. Weir, executive of the United Presbyterian Church, Synod of Michigan. “There are many blessings FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin FE 4-7631 Sunday School... 10.00 A.M. Sunday Wdrship .. 11.00 A.M. Sunday Evening . , 7.30 P.M. VVednesday Choir.. 6.30 P.M. Wednesday Prayer 7.30 P.M. ., Saturday Service . . 7.30 P.M. Rev. Jommy Guest, pastor FE 2-0384 Baldwin Evangelical U. B.-to Observe Family Week FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD 210 N. PERRY Sunday School 9:45 A.M. loyalty Program lor Ihe Next lix Weeks. Please Bring Your Entire Family." miY DEP^ 11:00 A.M. Morning Worship Evangelistic -7:00 P.M. Rally CHOIR-TESTIMONIALS 'PRAYER FOR THE SICK SPECIAL MOTHER'S DAY SERVICE MAY I Ith A Ctfl for Every Mother FAMILY NIGHT EACH WED. 7:30 P.M. PASTOR ARNOLD Q. HASHMAN FE 4-6301 COLLECT FOR CHURCH — Rickie Gay Moore of 9 Ottawa Drive (left) and Martha Timmerman of 312 Ottawa Drive are collecting newspapers for the Youth World Evangelism Appeal sponsored by young people of the Pontiao Praia Photo Church ot God. The project is to build a church and youth center in Tokyo, Japan. Rickie and Miutha are members of the Pike Street Church of God. Michigan Week Starts an Spiritual Foi Urges All Failhs Observe Special Day Use of the historical statements published by the various denominations indicating the beginnings of their life in the state and the tribution they have made to spiritual stature. I^nsoring an InterilenominatioiH and It is fitting that we should ings, to give thanks for them, and to consider bow we may best express our gratitude,” added Dr. Weir. He pointed out that several faiths and denominations have prepared statements on the relatjon-ship of their groups to the early history of Michigan. “This historical material coupled with a recognition of the vital place which religion holds in the life\of the state today will provide a fund of materials for use in connection with the observaijce,” he said. Dr. Weir, in listing a number of suggestions for observance of the day, said various denominations will heed to adapt the ideas ‘ : the variations inv^i^,,in t fering dttys of wor^ip. ■ SUOOESnOMS General suggestions for Spiritual Foundations Day observance were listed by Dr. Weir as follows: Services of worship, in which appropriate hymns, l^ripture readings, prayers and sermons are included, emphasizing the propriety of the recognition of our spiritual foundations and the means by which they may be maintained and strengthened. Inclusions in sermons, church bulletins, news stories, etc. the preamble of the state constitution: “We, Ihe people of the State of Michigan, grateful to Almighty God for the blessings of freedom, and eameslly desiring fo Church Marks Sth Aniversary All Next Week TTie congregation of St. James Missionary Baptist Church, Bagley St,, will observe the sixth anniversary of organization services all next week beginning provided by financial grants from the Episcopal National Coun- which the emphasis on Spiritual Foundations Day is prominent. Arranging a religious service or a panel discussion involving representative members of the religious community on a local radio or television station. Use of the state flower, the apple blossom, in deccirating churches and synagogues. Use of the state flag with an interpretation of its design. Communily Thanks Church for Doctor will be in charge of the 3:^ service Sunday afternoon with A. B. Davis, master of ceremonies. Nidt Carter will give the welcome- and Rev. Paul C. Cooley of the Lake Street Church of God will preach the sermon. Services will- be held at 7;S0 each evening with ministers of the city speaking and members of neighboring churches giving cil and from the United Thank Offering of the Episcopal Church-women is acknowledged in the resolution «f thanks; which notes: "We are of the opinion that had we ndj: had the help of the pal Church by having them buy and pay for a building for doctor’s offices, our town and community would have had very little success in having been able to attract a doctor to settle here.” The committee planning the affair includes Darence McBride, chairman; Mrs. Sadie Bettis, co-chairman; Mrs. Lucile Peck, Mrs. Mary Vinegar, Mrs. Clotee Jones Snd Mrs. Doris Russell. Others are Mrs. Ruby White, Eugene Bettis, Mrs. Mary Anthony, Mrs. Matilda Hinson and Mildred McBride. All Visit^jng churches are PHILADELPHIA (JPl - A physician and psychiatrist, Dr. Paul Toumier, maintains in a new book, “Escape from Loneliness’ (Westminster Press) that the an swer to man's sense of isolation lies in fellowship and community made possible by the grace of God. to bring their choirs and usher boards. Rev. V. L. Luther salj^. Family Week will be observed at Baldwin Evangelical United Brethren Cliurch .with Rev. Myron R.'Everetl preaching on ‘‘Commil ted to. Love al Home” at 11 a m. .tomorrow. During Ihe Vesper service young people will present the program. The family hymn sing will be led. by Jerry Frederiksen. Susan Killen will play n piano solo and Danny Lovse will present an organ solo. Singing a duet will be David Kirby and Ronald Metz, and Erinadeiie Cornett, Phyllis United Church Women to Hold State Meeting The 3.3rd Annual Meeting of the United Church Women of Michigan will bo held Wednesday at the Episcopal Calhedrnl Church of SI. Paul, 4800 Woodward, Detroit. The delegates will assemble at .30 a.m., coming from every part of the state and repre.senling neat ly all the major Protestan chui'ches. They will be welcomed by the Rt, Rev. Archil' H. Crowley, Suffragan Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Michigan. Featured will be an address on Michigan's Cons'tituUonal Convention by George Romney, a vice-president of the Convention. Other speakers will be Mrs. G. Merrill Li'nox and Mrs. Fred Busebmeyer. Mrs. LeRoy V. Walcott, Grand Rapids, is president of the Uniti'd Church Wome CHURCH of CHRIST 210 HUGHES ST, FE 5-1156 Roosevelt Wells, Evangelist , Sunday Biblo Study for all ages, 9.45 a Sunday Worship Periods 11 a m. and 7 p.m. Tuesday Weekly Bible Study 8 p.m. The Church ihol "Sp«olid oi Ihe ol God" Hardy uiul Lesta Stanley will sing a' trio sehHition. The vesper message by the pastor is "Taking Christ Home.” The annual Mother-Daughter Banquet will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the church parlor. The Fellowship Bible Cla.ss will meet at 7:30 p.m. Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. V/ilbert Hiscock, 2771 N. Lake Drive. New Pastor Comes Sunday Rev. Clark to Conduct WtiifsfiTp ds dt Pine Hill Church Rev. Harry W. Clark will conduct his first worship service at. minister of the Pine Hill Congregational Church tomorrow. Formerly associate pastor and minister to youth at First Congregational Church, Royal Oak, he fills the vacancy due to the retirement ol Rev, Dr. Allred D. Grey. Rev. Mr. Clark’s sermon topic will be “Sticks and Slones.” Mrs. Loraine Halsey ol the Troy Methodist Church will be guest soloist. Following the worship serv-he the board of deacons and deaeonessi^s Is Inviting everyone to ritmaln for a eoffee hour to heroin)' u)'(|iialnle left) Mrs. Ard.o Crocker, Mrs. Richard Piuker and Mrs. Warren Oakley, tlu; ■facility's superintendent of nurses. ^ The hostess group conducted thel-I141 at the Motorway Drive home of Mrs- Frank B. Gerls. Mm, Louie West, chaplain, gave the devotions and led (be group in the '‘Pledge of JUIeilJanoe’’ and the “American’s Craad.",, Mrs. Bradley Scott 11^ reported on na- Repoite from tiie OAR ,C9|;f|n> s tini^M Congress |iald in Washington, D.C. In April, wara presented by the T e presented by ll Mn. FYnnk Allen, Mrs, W. H. O'Laughlin, Mrs. T. W. Jack-.Son and Mrs. West. Till} .tune meeting will l»e the Oakland County DAR plr-nic at the General Squire Club house iu Oryden with the John Crawford chapter of the Ox-ford-Orion area serving os hostess group. , As;*lstlng the hbsless for TlmrHduy's gathering were Mrs. E. G. Clark, Mrs, Frank Vnelavlk, Mrs. Peter Davidson, Ml’S. ETdon Gardner; Mr$. W. L. Pelton, Mrs. E. B, Wallace, Mrs. John M, Dimnii and Mrs. Maxwell Doerr. Others were Mrs. William Kalwltz, Mrs,' M; Bi Huhgw-terd and Mn. t; A. Wbodard. Members of Pontiac’s Better Home and Garden Club’s civic commitlee are completing arrangement* for a Ik'nefll sale at 9 a. Friday in Waterford Community Center, JH'ocecds from the effort will help purchase two wheel chnlis for patients at the Oakland Ctounly Medical Care Facility. Last year the/dub, which has sponsored projects for iwn-efit of the community for some 27 years, Isiuglit a communion service and dossal curtain for Uie mediiNnl facility chapel. Members also have planted trees and 'g;r<‘ener.v at Pontiac fState Hospital and ai(> plan nlng eivle projjpels for Mld;-Igan Week later this month. The City of SiruitH Unit. •Delroll, comprised the degree staff for initiation. The River Rouge Unit conducted the can-(llell(|'ht service: Liberty Unit, Clawson, the ballot drill and; Hie Big Sister Unit. Flint, draped the I’lmrler, The Cadillac Unit, Detroit, led the memorial servjj’o. \ The group will observe Founders’ Day at the next regular meeting on June 6. Announcement was made of the Supreme Convention, Sept. 26-29, In Akron, Ohio. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Matt Shelton and Mrs. Eugem* Brugan. Mizpah Temple served the nodti luncheon and the Girls’ ' Chorale group from Pontiac Central High School sang several numbers. District, officer.s present wepe Mrs. Hugh ’Endries, seeretary; Mrs. Mae Fisile. pianist; t|nd Mrs, Wilbur Morey, chairman. Distinguished guests were Supreme' Jiinioi- Berllm Lynn, ' Del mil, find Grand Chief Irma Moore, NIIwj , 'i The 1963 lionvention will lie AHENTION Brides to Be! Weddings Photographed 33 YIOARS aXPBRIBNOB 6-8x10 Photos ....$18.00 12-5x7 in Album .. .$25.00 -12-8x10 in Album . .$40.00 Samples Shawn in Yonr Horn*, Anytim* Day or tflffhl ★ FC $-7402 ★ 100 Thank You Cords .$£S0 lOOJInvitatibns, raisod $6-50 ff&tllACKlAW A reception in the Bloomfield HUls home of the Francis C. Gallaudets followed the marriage of their daughter Marion Michete to U. (J.g.) George Van Kula ^r., USNR, today In Holy Name Church, Birmingham. An heirloom veil of Venetian Temperance l^on, in Bethany Baptist Church. Mothers, Daughters Gather the bridal gown of candlelight peau de sole. White roaea, white violets, liliea and ivy comprised the bridal bouquet. Attending tfielr slater were Mrs. Ralph ^A. Sturgeas 111, New Britain, Conn., and An-dree Gallaudet, Bloom f I e 1 d Hills, and the bridegroom’s sister, Mrs.' JcAn Johns, New Baltimore, who were bridea-mafels, Ann Margaret-Van Kula was junior attendant. Cascades of white Ireesia and ivy complemented their dresses of light green peau de .wie worn with ivy wreath crowns and ivy green shoes. toided RoanMte College, Salem, Va. Grandparents of the bride * are the late Edward Askln Skaes of Pontiac, Mrs- Edson F. Gallaudet, Pine Orchard, Conn., (who attended the wedding) a|id the late Mr. GaUau-det. The bride|3XK>m’s grandparents are the Jate Michael Schubecks, Sf. Michaels, Pa., and the late George Van Ku-las, Uniontown, Pa. The nuptial mass of the Byzantine Rite was served by the bridegroom’s Isrother, Master James Van Kula. Mothers and daughters of Central Methodist Church gathered for the annual banquet in the First Federal Saving^ and Loan Association of Oakland Club rooms. Mrs. Wesley Johnson was mistress of ceremonies and Ellen Taylor gave the Invocation. Mrs. George Putnam led group singing with Mrs. Nelda Sink at the piano. "Pattern for Living,” theme for .tjie evening, was presented ‘by Mrs. Charles Steeber and demitmstrated by Sharon Daniels as she- fashioned a dress on a form, using yard goodi. Mrs. Donald Pprritt Jr. wrote the script in original poetry form. T^e tributes to daughters were sung by Mrs. Russell Vessells to Judy; Mrs. James Hon to Jerilyn and Mrs. Robert Wisdom to Shelly, accompanied by Mrs. William Bullock who sang to Janet. ■ Charles B. Shubeck, Malibu, Calif., stood as best man for his nephew, son of the George Van Kulas, Detroit. Brothers of the bridal couple, Thomas and David Van Kula, Detroit, ushered with Edson F. Gallau-dett II and Thomas H, Gallaudet, Bloomfield Hills. W i ★ White cymbidium orchids accented Mrs. Gallaudet’s Italian silk blue print costume suit worn with matching veil and shoes. Mrs. Van Kula chose a beige silk ensemble, moss . green hat and shoes and corsage of green cymbidium orchids. The newlyweds will honeymoon in Canada and New England en route to Bainbridge , Naval Training Center, Bainbridge, Md., where Lt, Van Kula will be an instructor. He was graduated cum laude from Notre Dame University. His bride is an alqmna of Georgetown Visitation Preparatory School, Washington, and at- MRS. GEORGE VAN KULA JR. A vocal tribute to mothers was offered by Charlene Sayre, Judy Slade, Debby Sibley, Lor-rie Taylor, Suzy and Debbie Sayers. ’ The Tuesday program closed with a humorous skit by Mrs. Roscoe Lund and benediction given by Mrs. William Taylor. Angel Spencer was honored on her sixth birthday and Mrs. John Hartwlck for her Mother’s Day birthday. The oldest mother present was Mrs. Ada Schreck. Five great-grandmothers were also honored. For Quarterly Meeting WCTU Convenes Eight church denominations were represented at the quarterly meeting of the Pontiac Federation, Women’s Christian Temperance Union, Tuesday evening in Bethany Baptist Church. Assisting Mrs. Bullock, chairman: were Mrs. Harold Sibley, program; Mrs. Norbert Hoffman, decorations and favoira: Mrs. Emery Holcomb, tickets. The men of the church served as waiters. Mrs. Nellie Monroe, federation president, greeted state, district and local officers after Mrs. Leroy Shafer’s opening prayer. Mrs. Theodore 'Alle-' bach chose the second chapter of Second Book of Chronicles for her devotional State Vice ' President Mrs. Doris Tagsold spoke on “Decade of Destiny” and “Popular Fallacy of. the Word, Modera-tiiHi.” Mrs. L. G. Rowley, state president, spoke concerning “Membership, the Christian’s Responsibility.” Mrs. George Perkins, 18th district president, chose for her topic "Oial-lenge and Goals.” Leonard Perkins,, president of Sadie Patten’s Youth Temperance Council, reported on a recent rally and spoke on the approaching camp time. Mrs. Bonnie Hartzman, Mrs. Lois Bradley and the' Mary Morton unit offered musical selectibns. The Dora B. Whitney unit assisted Mrs. Grace 8teeves, hostess chairman. Mrs. Alta W, Smith of Duluth, Minn., Was a guest. Rev. Leroy Shafer closed the fellowship with prayer. Sets Polio Clinic The Cooley School Parent-Teacher Association will sponsor a polio clinic at the school Tuesday from 6 to 7; 30 p. m. Charge for inoculations will be fl. Mrs. Frank Halsema, Keego Harbor (at right) holds the 1962 Administrative Board Award presented to the top Democratic worker in the 18th Congressional District, by William A. Burgett, deputy auditor-general. Mrs. John H. 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