Th§ Wiofhtr U.l. Witlhtr lurttu Hfiiow or Kroo^lnf lUlii v : /ir' ' voj.. laa NO. 41 ,:^HE PRESS Home Edition ★ ★ ★ nr I’ONTIAC, MlCIMOAl^, VVEDNKSDAV. MAIU’H ijfl. imil ^ fl(i PA(;KS uN,T«.m'A'rKftWlJrrioJA. Area Churches Schedule Services for Good Friday Christians around tho world lhi.s wook are commemorating the last sad days ot Jesus on earth. Servicc.s in the Pontiac area are listed below: The annual Good Friday services sponsored by the Pontiac Pastor’s Association and Pontiac Area Council of Churches, wilt be h(!ld from noon to 3 p.m. in First Presbyterian Church, JLyndon Salathiel, organist at the host church, will piay “Adagio in A Minor” by J.’S, Hach preceding the call to worship. ' Kev. Carl G. Adams oCFirst Methodist Church will preside during the first hour. Speaking on the First and Second Words will be llev. Dwight Reibling of Baldwin Ave, Evangelical United Brethren Church and Itev. Arlond N. Reid of Newman AME. Dr, Milton II. Bank of Central Methodist Church ^will, conduct the second hour with Rev. Galen E. MacArfhur Is Making Pr^ogress WASHINGTON (AP)~Follow-Ing out his own promi.se "to do the very best I can," General of the Army Douglas MacAr-thur was reported “alert" today and making satisfactory progress in recovery from the shock of two major operations in 17 days,, H e r s h e y of the host .church, Rev. W i 11 i a m Brady of Central Methodist, and Rev. Charles A. Colberg of Gloria Dei Lutheran Church bringing,^ the message'. Presiding during the third hour will be Hev. Edmond L Watkins, pastor of Joslyn Avenue Presbyterian Church. llev. Lee A. Gragg of Trinity Uopli.st Church and Kev, Donald Gnbler of Kcihel United Church of Christ, will l)e the speakers. Organists v/ill include Roland t Richter of Central Methodist, . Charles A. Wilson of First Con-Col. Donald A. Campbell, ex-j (jregatlonal and Mr. .Salathiel. ecutive officer of Walter Keed •Army Medical Center, .said at FKIJ,()WMII1 8:30 a.m,: "Gen. MacArthur Don Fngrnm, executive IN PROTEST—Carrying placards and singing as they went, an estimated 1,300 took part in a NAACP-sponsored march to Pontiac City . Hall iMiMl liy" mlgj[»iir#rmod the PonOic Pr*it Pholt demonstration a succc.ss and said they will press their claims of segregation in local schools, housing and employment pracUeaa., continues to progress satisfactorily, indicating a better (ban average post-operative course. "He is alert and conversing.” Under questioning, Campbell said his language meant the 84-year-old general was doing better than the average of patients who haye been through, the same kind of experience. director of the Voice of Christian Youth in Detroit, will be the speaker for tpe annuahinion Good Friday jserviee^Tm^erthe auspices of the Greater Pontiac Evangelical Ministers’ Fellowship. Kev. G, J. Bcrsche, pastor of Christian and Missionary Alliance Church, will preside. Worship will be - from 1 to 2:15 p.m. in First Baptist Church. I'lie hew leport followed earlier word from" doctors that while the outlook is still “guarded," MacArthur was !‘better than we had any right to hope for.” ' At 10:15 a.m.i a single sentence was added to the brief earlier report: “A small amount of food by mouth was started today.” j Points Community, and Rev. A hospital spokesman said : Horace Murry of Aldersgate Special music will be by the Gospel Echoes Trio comprised of Donna Hirsch, Mr. and Mrs.'Kyle Wilson. ^ Other pastors participhting will be Rev. Harold Gierke of Bloomfield Hills Ba^ Church, Bloomfield Townsi^: Rev. V. L. Martin of Suhnyvale Chapel, Rev. Gordon Lindsay of Five , this appeared to i n d i c a t "very fine progress, but it was presumed that the in-; travenous feeding of glucose and saline solution was continuing," The doctors have been expressing general satisfaction over MacArthur’s reaction throughout. Methodist. In Today's Press Ruby Lawyer Third chief attorney to ! pursue new line of de-i fense- PAGEA-10. Cyprus I , U Thant names Finn i diplomat as mediator — i PAGEB-8. Discrimiaafion Pentagon survey shows i bias near military b I PAGE A-3. C-12 D-5 Area News Astrology ,, Bridge Comics .. Editorials , 7- Markets i: Obituaries ^ Sports D-2-D-4 Theaters C-13 TV-Radio Programs D-13 ^ ^ Wilson, Earl ..... IMS'l . A-6 ! D-6 The benediction will be pronounced by Rev. Robert Shelton, pastor of First Baptist. Mrs. Bruce Reh will be organist. ST. VINCENT PAUL Solemn Mass at 7:30 p.m. in St. Vincent de, Paul Catholic Church Holy Thursday will conclude with a procession to the side altar and adoration of the Cross until midnight. The traditional Tre Ore service at noon on Good Friday will begin with the Stations of the Cross. Holy Communion will be distributed at 2:30 p.m. The Easter vigil opening at 10:45 p.m. Holy Saturday consists of blessing of the new fire and the Paschal candle with solemn procession and singing of Easter exultation. 'Strong Showing' Righfs March Held in Pontiac By ALLEN PHILLIPS . [ ly described by them as the i Looking over the many youth- An 0 r d e r I y ' 1,300 persons j strongest showing ever made by j ful faces in the crowd, Charles marched to City Hall yesterday a local‘■'ivil rights group. to hear P o n t i a c both praised j “But this demonstration and criticized for its handling!, doesn’t mean a thing unless of racial problems. Carrying placards and chanting “freedom, freedom,” t h e crowd was less than expected by 0 a k 1 a n d County NAACP leaders, but was entriusiastical- Board to Hear Exchange Plan Initial plans for an exchange of Negro and white teachers will be presented to the Pontiac School Board tomorrow night. Supt. Dana P. Whitmer will outline the exchange plan and detail guidelines for its use. • “Rules governing the program will become board policy,” Whitmer said in his' written propo.sal. The exchange program, which will be voluntary, grew out of charges of “de facto segregation” in local schools by some Negro leaders. , W. Cheng, chairmab' of the march committee, declared “We have failed these kids. But they are the ‘freedom fighters’ in Pontiac today.” ’ Mayor Landry^ recalling that Pontiac led the state 12 years ago in passing a fair employment practices ordinance, pledged the city will continue its leadership, in the civil rights area. “Every man has a natural right to share in the benefits of culture, and to receive e good They were buffeted by gusty j general education and a twhni-winds on ,the half-mile walk cat or professional training,” he from board of education offices, said. , There were few .sidewalk spec- Dr. Rigoberto Guzman, Pon-ators. 1 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) there’s a followup," stated Charles Billings, NAACP vice president. "We plan to increase our contact with the school board and other community leaders." The demonstrators were predominantly young Negroes, but many w'hites, including Mayor Robert A. Landry, clergymen and Catholic nuns, took part. Former Patient Charged With Area Murder LAWRENCE MOUIU.S LOUIS R. AHERNATIIEV Witness Says Man! Reloaded Rifle to| Riddle Youth's Body! By ROGER HRIGLEY and .MM DYGERT A 22 ■ your - old discharged mental lio.spilul patient yesterday afternoon, ambushed, shot and killed his former Pontiac Township friend, 17-year-old Lawrence J. Morris, llic man, Louis R, (Ray) Al)» ernuthoy, kept loading and firing his 2‘2-ealiber rifle into the youth’s limp bwly, .shortly after 2 p.m., according to a witness, "lie’s my enemy und he's had it eoming to him,” he shouted In answer to Mrs. Edith Copeland's ery, “What are you doing to that kid?” Mrs. Copeland watched the slaying from the doorway of hCr home at 3.392 Joslyn, Pontiac Township,,^.some 100 feel from the shallow ditch where Morris’ body lay. 'Voices Told Him to Kill Somebody' Ahernathey, of 1210 Taylor, Pontiac Township, a former Pontiac .State Hospital patient, was charged with fir.st-degree murder. HEARING SET ^ Awraignad ^ before Pontiac Township Justice It. Grant Graham on the charge yesle day, Abcrnathey will face a hearing, April 3. He was held in the county Jail today without bond. His victim was spreading rumors about his molesting small iolfLJSeuirtF Senior Assistant Prosecutor Robert L, Templln, The Morris boy was walking from a grocery at Vinewood hnd Joslyn to his home at .3525 Joslyn when he was shot from a shed across the street where Ab-. ernathey lay in ambush, sheriff’s Capt. Leo R. Hazen said. SHOT IN HEAD Moments later, Ahernathey stood' over the youth, who was begging for his lifei and calmly shot him in the head, according to Abernalhey’s statement to Templin, “I wanted to finish the job,” he said. Mrs. Copeland s a i-d Aber-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Ry HOGER SRIGLEY and JIM DYGERT lie wa.s not tlie type who would hurt anyone, hi.s itmther .said, He wa.s never “psychotic,” but had a "behavior disorder,” a spokesman for the Pontiac State Hospital said. But after a two-hour di.scu.ssion last night, Detroit p.sychiatrist, Dr. William Gordon presented a different picture of 22-*^ year-old Louis R. (Ray) Ahernathey. Dr. Gordon called Ahernathey a “dangerous, vicious, and disoriented Schizoid” He said the man told him he wa.s “driven by voices,” including God’s, to kill 17-year-old Lavyrence J. Morris yesterday. The voices said If he didn’t kill somebody, particularly Morris, someone was going to kill him, Dr. Gordon told County Senior Assistant Prosecutor Robert L. Templin. Yet Abernbthey, according to neighbors, was often seen hunting and walking the roads with a gun. . Yesterday, after years of, being shuttled back and forth among parents, relatives, detention homes and mental insUtu-tiqns, he used that gun. CHILD PATIENT Ahernathey was one of Pontiac State Hospital’s first child patients, admitted in 1953. ^ Prior to that Genesee Coun- boys in the neighborhj)|rf(^"^ty probatc Court recortf^ north of PoriUaor'^JBernathey ha wan nia^Ad in . rhiid wei- he was placed In a child welfare home in Flint, while his parents were in divorce proceedings, in 1947. , He was'a-patieiironhe Pontiac institution until 1960, intermittently placed In convalescent status and living at home. In 1958 he returned voluntarily for six months, saying there was “top much bickering between his parents.’! He was discharged as “iih-proved” April 6,1960. JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP)-Negro leaders called for "hit and run” picketing and sit-ins at segregated restaurants and hotels in this tense city today. But it was the unexpected— >me spark that tnight detonate further violence-thst had law enforcement agencies, city officials and resldent.s on edge. A false bomb threat was the spark that touched off mob violence yesterday at New Stanton High School, a sprawl- . ing brick school with 1,700 Negro students, Pupils filed from the school in orderly fashion, but later white police and fire units and news*-men became 'the targets of rocks and bricks. One newsman wasi mauled and a car was burned before order was restored; ' Elemonstrations' in downtown Jacksonville, staged with regularity bver a period of weeks by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People ha've to date provoked no violence. “I did it,”’ Ahernathey told police yestterday* after he had fired bullet after bullet into Morris’ body, ‘.‘He had it coming,” he said. “But I’m not going to hurt anyone else.” Rain Takes Load Off Firemen According to Whitmer’s proposals, participation in the program will be initiated by the teacher. Administrators will make the pairings of teachers There will also be a readihi l ^ive final approval of Scripture; litany, blessing of 3 years baptismal waters and renewal of baptismal promises. Solemn Mass will be at midnight. FIRST METHODIST Rev. Carl G. Adams will give the meditation, “Worthy to Partake” during the service of Holy Communion at First Methodist Church at' 7:30 p.m. Maundy Thursday. The Chancel Ch'oir will sing “I See His Blood Upon a Rose.” CHURCH OF ADVENT " A service of Holy Communion will be celebrated at 8 p.m. (Continued,on Page A-11, Col. 1) Exchanges will be for at least one year, but- no more than three. Teachers will be returned to their original assignments after the three-year period or upon their written request. Problems and pertinent information of the exchanges will be reviewed with the ui-" dividual teacher and principal at the end of each year. School officials will encourage; another, teachers to engage in the ex-' . ■change program . «« « Although the exchange plan is designed for the exchange of positions by Negron and white Pontlie Prvu eiwts Ram. Wonderfully wet soak-1but it pushed near it,” the fire-i fires in either Waterford ing rain. | man said. ' j Township or Pontiac. That’s the way area fire fight-1 * * * , Firemen in Novi, Walled ers welcomed the inclement I There have been days in the i Lake, Farmington and Bloom- weather today after a day ofiPast when the department re- field Township also spent much rushing, from one grass fire to I sponded to over 30 grass fires, ; of the day fighting gr^s ijlazes. teachers, the plan is open to any two: teachers "who -wish to ex‘ change positions, j breather, maybe even for a couple of weeks," said-^ one Pontiac firegian. The Pontiac Fire Department w^s harassed yesterday with 26i grass fires. "Not a record, 18 WATERFORD FIRES ! Those in Novi were confronted In Waterford, the township | ^y three large fires and a num- fire department battled 18 grass] l?er of small ones. Among them fires, and, like Pontiat, the blazes were widespread and pot confined to one general area. » There was no property damage as a l|sult of the grass was . a blaze which swept for a^mlle along the south side of P96. . TWO-HOUR FIGHT I For aboqt two hours mem- bers of the Rochester Fire Department fought flames which spread over more than 200, acres on Collier road before they were brought under control. The Lake Orion Kr0 department assisted. Normally, according to firemen, the grass fire season ar-' rives later, usually April, but this year the grass has been extremely dry because of the small amount of rainfall and high winds. Protests Urged in Jacksonville Negro Leaders Spur Picketing and Sit-Ins , Darkness yesterday continued to prov^ie the cover for harassment by unruly elements in the Negro sections. . Flames and gunfire crackled for the second nighW but there was no repetition of the fatal shooting that Monday night claimed the life of a 36-year-old Negro mother of 10 children. Fires broke out last night in several Negro areas. MoreSnowDue, Sa^s Weatherman The U.S. Weather Bureau ud we’re in for snow or freezing rain, beginning tonight. Temperatures are expected to dip to 25 to 30 tonight and rise to the mid-30s tontorrow. Snow flurries or snow is forecast for -tomorrow. Less thah one > half inch in rain or snow is forecast for tomorrow and again about Sun-day. ‘Thirty - six was the low in the Pontiac downtown area prior to 8 aiin., today. At 2 p.m. the recording was 39. Flash MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - A drat fishing boat overturned today while approaching an Atlantic Ocean iniqt near Palm Beach, Fla. First reports to the Miami Coast Guard said three persons died, six were missing and 11 were picked pp by rescue craft. Fears ware ex^j i /I. ^ v':'f'¥yvf( ' ■ ■ A-* Fulbrlghfi Asks New Look by U. S. • (■''''■'' l' ' ’"•" ' i' ■ ■' L' Tint I’ONTIAC PaK8S. VVKDNKSDAY, HIAltCH a»,-lB6« . I- I M/ . -ill ' 't r ' Cuba, Panama, Viet Nam Policies Hit WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ Sen. J. WllUam Pulbright, D-Ark., called today for a new U.S. look at pollctoi toward Cuba. Panama and Viet Nam. He aald the American people ahould abandon "myUii" for “realltlee" In their ap^ch to the cold war. Fulbjrlght, chairman of the Senate Foreign Helatkma Committee, aald the United StateH Hhould negotiate revlalona in the Canal Zone treaty with Panama “even though a (Ttmmltment to leviM the treaty may be widely crtUciced at home." He alio laid the time had come to recognize that KIdct Caitro’i Communist regime In Cuba Is here to stay indcll- nitely as a “dlitasteful nul-MBce but not an intolerable AlthcMigh Pulbright ap|)eared to he bucking the admlnlstra tion line on the two Utin Amer lean hot apotl, he rejected pro-p 01 a I a for neutrallutlon of Soujh Viet Nam. In Viet Nam, he said, th “only two reallitlc options" fire eximnding the war to (^immu-nlat-hcld territory or giving licuvior mipiHirt for the Hmith Vietnamese regime. lie favored the latter course, which Is current HdntiiiiatrttlloJi announced policy, l''ulbrlght’s views wore c o n- 'Milifory Aid Plan Needs Billion a Year' WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Defense llObert S. McNamara said today free world strength around the edge of the Communist bloc will “quickly melt away" unless the military Premier Rues Teen's Attack on U.S. Envoy TOKYO (AP) - Prime Min-Ister Hayato Ikeda, in the first live telecast from Japan to the United States, expressed his country’s “deepest regrets' today for a deranged Japanese youth’s knife attack Tue.^ay on U.S. Ambassador Edvxip 0. Relschauer. “On behalf of the people of Japan, I express my deepest regrets for the stabbing of Mr. Relschauer by a Japanese youth," the gray-haired premier said in Japanese. Relschauer was reported recovering and his doctor said the wound in his right thigh should be healed in about two weeks. U. S. Minister John Emmer-son read a message from Reischauer in which he said he wtinted to emphasize that the “unfortunate incident—or nny such Irresponsible incident —could have no fusible, effect on our great partnership." Ikeda has accepted the resignation of Japan’s state minister for public safety, Takashi Hayakawa, who bowed out in a traditional Japanese gesture of atonement for the incident yesterday which shocked the nation. assistance |)rogt um gets at least $t billion a year. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, sounded an even stiffer warning, lie said the requested $1 billion for the coming fiscal year "cun only be regarded as a holding operation of borderline adequacy." Both men gave their views in statements prepared for the House foreign affairs committee. "I would bo less than candid with (ho comnfiittee," Taylor said, “to leave you with the impre.s.sion that 1 believe that we can get along with a level $1 billion program over the mid-term without a serious los.s of military effectiveness In many countries which It is in our Interest to support." McNamara told the committee, "we are presenting a re quest of only $1 billion for the fiscal year 1965 (which starts July I) solely because the (.'on-gress has made it crystal clear to the executive branch that it is unwilling to appropriate a larger amount.” Rep. William S. Broomfield, R-Oakland County, said he p 1 a n n ed to ask McNamara about the morale charges leveled by former Air Force Sgt, Alvin Morrison of Ferndale, Mich., who recently returned from Viet Nam to be honorably discharged. In addition to the morale charges, Broomfield said Morrison question^ whether the correct total of American dead had been reported and claimed, that the South Vietnarriese were improperly u.sing some U.S. military equipment. talned in a major foreign policy speech prepared for Senate delivery. Tlic. address appeared il-inost certain to touch off re* Itorcusstom In many quarters. lie said the U.8. failure to persuade Allies fn>m trading with (lie Communist bl(»c was a g(KKl reason for ’’relaxing our own restrictions." Hut, ho added. “there Is n iM'tler one the potential value of trade, a moderate V(dume of trade In lum .Mlruleglc llems, as un Instrument for mincing work! tensions and stn'ngthening the foiihdatlonH of peace. Fulbright 8 a I d t h e Johnson admlntfdrallon Should seek to •nd the I'amima dispute by "stating (wsltlvely and clearly that It Is prepared to negotiate revisions In the canal treflty and to submit such changes as are made to the .Senate. PIIE.H.SING NEED’ Fulbright sold the Vletnamest' situation “poses a pressing need for a reevaluallon of American |M)llcy.“ In any case, he said, the United .States must “meet its obligations and fulfill its commi^ents with respect to Viet Nam, Fulbright called for a “candid reevaluallon of oiu Cuban policy even though It may lead to distasteful eoncliiNlons,’’ The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy and turning colder with showers and scattered thundershowers this morning, high 35 to 4Q. Cloudy and a little colder tonight and Thursday.^ Snow or freezing rain beginning tonight or early Thursday, changing back to snow or snow Hurries late Thursday. Driving conditions becoming hazardoqs. Low tonight 25 to 30, high Thursday in the mid 30s. Winds mostly northeast to east 8 to 15 miles today and tonight becoming northeast to north 10 to 25 miles Thursday. Outlook for Friday partly cloudy and cold. Af 8 a.m.: Wind velocity 3 i Direction; Northeast , Sun sets Wednesday at 8:SI p.tn. Temperature Chart Fort Worth ~ Jacksonville , S3 34 Kansas City J 31 10 1“ *—■ 42 17 49 35 Milwaukee 4 42 24 New Orleans 7 45 27 New. York 5 <0 27 Omaha t 83 55 Phoenix • One Year Ago in Pontiac Me said (here were only three options ~ an Invasion to destroy Castro, an economic boycott to bring down his regime, ■'acci'ptance of the (!ommu-iilst regime ns n disagreeable reality and annoyance but one which Is not likely to be re-mov(xl in the near future." Fulbright said “no responsible statesman advocates" Invaston. And, he said, it seem.H clear that the U.S. policy of strangulation by boycott “hali been a failure and there is no reason to believe that it, will succeed in the future," No Hearing onEast Side Rezoning There will not be a public hearing lieRl on the proposed rezoning to Resi-dentlal-3 of 16 a^r^s on Pontiac’s East Side at n e x t Wednesday's City ; Planning Commission i meeting as previously scheduled. Henry Smjth, planning commission secretary, today said that persons who have received notices of the hearing in the mail should disregard them. The area involved Is bounded r«ughly by East Blvd., Michigan, Tasmania and M59 freeway right^f-way. The notices. Smith said, were mailed affer the City Commission referred the zoning request back to planners for a rehearing March 10. Commissioners reversed their decision a week later and now the matter won’t come before planners againInstead, it will > come up for adoption at a City Commission meeting next month. REMOVE CHAINS - Officials gather to reopen the county-owned parking lot at Huron and Saginaw effective 9 a.m. tomorrow. The county has agreed to honor free parking tickets Issued shoppers by downtown stores. Otherwise, rates are 25 cents for first three hours and 25 cents each additional hour. From left are Ddlos Hamlin, chairman of the County Board of Supervls()rs; Monroe Osmurt, president of Downtown Pontiac Business Assn.; and Max Adams, Chamber of Commerce manager. City Marchers Parade (Continued From Page One) tiac dentist and head of the NAACP’s education committee, was cheered when he spoke about the murder of Mississippi Integration leader Modgar Evers and the church bombing in Birmingham. NOT VIOLENCE “But we do not advocate violence or separation of the races, or redistribution of Negroes over the United States,” said Guzman. “We are bitter and disillusioned — but we do not despair." Hitting a major theme of the march he described Pontiac schools as having “an obvious disparity of Negro children in certain schools.” He praised The Pontiac Press editorial Monday which laid the blame on housing patterns. “You ,nnd I both know housing di.scrimination exists in I’ tiac," added Charles M. Tucker Jr., real e.state broker and member of the city’s human relations commission. He said Negroes have a wider selection of housing than before, but are still discouraged when they inquire about property in white neighborhoods or try to qualify for mortgages. SUBTLE KIND In Pontiac we have the subtle kind of discrimination," Tucker charged, “the gentleman’s agreement not to sell to Negroes.” Ostensibly billed to talk about Negro employment, attorney and former City, Commissioner Milton Henry -won outward favor from the crowd with a militant speech. ‘if I told you this was a violent land, you would believe me," said Henry, referring to recent racial disturbances in Jacksonville, Fla., a subject evidently in the minds of many, in the audience. He described the N e g r o’s forcible migration to America, and the black man’s adaptability to a new environment despite existing hardships. MOST INTEGRATED “And this is the most inte- grated city in America. If you’ve seen Pontiac, you’ve seen it all,” he said to the ac^ companiment of assents from the crowd. Henry went on to make an appeal for support of Freedom Now, all-Negro political party with which he Is affiliated. "Put us on the ballot and you’ll see something happen,” he promised. He said the party couid work in a coalition with other major parties. Detroit NAACP President Rev. James Wadsworth took a more moderate tone, but was adamant. He said it was a myth that Negroes must earn their rights. PRIVILEGES GIVEN “All of us have been given those privileges by the Constitution and by God," he asserted. I)e.spite chill winds,^ most of the crowd stayed to the conclusion of the 90-minute rally. Consensus among NAACP leaders was that the demonstration had been a success, both a$ protest and a springboard to press demands to end local dis-'imination in education, housing and jobs. Easter Fun Slated in Waterford Twp. Waterford Township’s annual Easter egg hunt for youngsters is slated. Saturday at 1 p.m. on the Waterford Township H i g h School football field. Children in kindergarten through grade four are eligible for the event sponsored by the Waterford Township Junior Chamber of Commerce. Any child who finds an egg will receive a prize. Special prizes will be given for certain colored eggs. LBJ to Clergy: Aid Rights Bill WASHINflTON (AP) - President Johnson called upon Protestant leaders of the South today to fight for a strong civil rights bill through their preaching and examples. Addressing some 150 partici- pants in a (Christian leadership ■toi linar sponsored by the Southern Baptist Convention, Johnson said; “No group of Christians has more responsibility in civil rights than the Southern Baptists." . power structure The President, who drew warm applause following his speech in the Rose Garden outside his office, told the Baptist clergymen that “the power structure’’ of the South attends their churches and is represented on their-boards. Johnson said,.the beliefs of community leaders “are confirmed or changed by the sermons you preach,” as well as by the examples set by the clergy. Birmingham Area News Road-Building in Area Brings Drain Problem rwiomfield township. As the fxirllon of tlie townslilp covered with blacktop increaios, so too will that portion covered with water -« unless precau-tJ 0 n a r y measures are taken sn. Anticipating a fkaxi of problems as hlgtiways get longer, wider end more numerous, township officials are now at* tempting to set up a coinpre-henNivc dralimgc program. Much of (heir work will be with the Htate Highway Department. Preliminary talks were o|iened In lansing yesterday lietween highway department ufficlals and Riiper-vtsor Homer C«», Water and Newer Department N u p t. James A. Ncott and township engineers. . The engineers at H u b b e 11, Roth and Clark Iw. of Birmingham are to liegin sliidles to determine estimated costs. Of Immediate concern to Hie township Is the proposed s 1 x-lane exit ramp from 1-75 onto Square Lake Road. TWO DISTIUCTS The two drainage districts involved are from Woodward to Telegraph Rond and from Woodward to 1-75 on Square Lake Road. The state, working with federal funds, will be allotted enough to keep water off the highway. “But there’s no point In their building drains and our doing the, same thing a couple years later,” Case said. The .supervisor proposes that the township and state cooperate now to clear the piaRcr up in advance. PROPERTY REZONEI) He noted that property near the southwest corner of Wood- ward‘and Hquara l4ke has been razonail at ttio roquosl of (ho AtkP Hupormnrkat chain. “As the ^township grows and vacant lanil Is closed In, we'll have more of a problem," Case said. “It we Issued A & P a building permit and the ramp were there, one bud mill could flood Nqiinre laike Itoud." Case notiHl I his local Ion Is one of alwut six problem spots in the toiynsblp. Central to present dellberu-(liitis are (Misstble metluxls of financing drainage programs. ' three; METHOD.^...... “There are three ways wo could raise the money," Case said. “We could take it out of the general fund, but I wouldn't want to do tlihl. Or, we could assess tile people In the drainage district. “Or. we could assesN the township at large a small amount over a long period of time.’’ The third metliod Is prefetred by the supervisor ns the one which could solve all storm sewer problems for the next several years ■— those now recognized and those oxpeclod to crop up. First', however, the engineers must survey tlie situation and come up with some cost estimates. Th<‘n tlic slate's fair share cim be determined along with the amount the lowrmliip would need to bear, Case said. WORK TO BEGIN He noted that construction of (he 1-75 ramp, onto Square Lake Road is scheduled to begin tlie last quarter of 1965. "We would have to have our metliod of financing determined by tlien," Case said. Kennedy Half-Dollars Vanish Fast in Boston BOSTON (AP) - One million John, F. Kennedy half-dollars were placed in circulation ’ in New England Tuesday and Federal Reserve officials said they were snatched up as fast as bank tellers could distribute them. “This cause of human dignity, this cause of human rights,” Johnson said, “demands prophets in our times.” He said the clergymen of the South must be willing to take a progressive position on the civil rights issue, even if members of their congregations disapprove. City, County Offices to Close for Services City of Pontiac and Oakland County offices will be closed noon until 3 p.m. Friday to permit employes to attend ' Good Friday church services. All area banks and savings and loans institutions ; will remain open with skeleion work forces. Many stores and other establishments will follow the same plan, while others plan to close for the three-hour period. Teen Is Slain From Ambush (Ckintinued From Page One) nathey walked jtoward her and .S. M. Woods, 3394 Joslyn, then went back and fired several more times into the boy’s lifeless body. . national WEATHERr-Snow is due today from central Plains eastv^ard through upper and mid-Mississippi Valley into portions of Lakes region. Showers arid thundershowers > are l^ely to extend along southern Guilf Coast -■—vers arel)redicted over the Ohio Vailey into tlie Vjrginias. “He just stood there and pumped 12 or 15 shells ifito him,” Mrs. Copeland saiiT Woods said as he phoned police he could see Aberifathey shooN ang. BEST FRIEND Later Abernathey said Morris was his former “best frien^,” but lately had been “picking oft me, threatening to kill me and spreading stories, about me,;' according to police. . “He deserved what hie got,” Abernathey said to Templin. The »victim w^ a former student at Madison\ Junior H i g h School, Pontiac. He quit school a year ago whilei.in the eighth grade. ■ Morris lived with his stepfather and mother, Mr. and Mrs. George Duguid, and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil E. Mann, a few hundred yards from the scene of his violent death. He was not employed, according to Mrs. Mann. NOT A KILLER Abernathey's mother, Kfrs. John J. Nowicki, 50, said ‘'There's never^een any of the killer nature in Ray.” "She said he liked to practice shooting at a dump and once had a gun taken away from him by police. Abernathey and the Morris boy “had spent a good many days together, and were Very ’ good friends,” Mrs. Nowicki said. ' Her son .was -committed to Pontiac State Hospital from Genesee County at the age of 12 in 1953; by petition of his father, Hubert, Of Flin^,fc He was released in 1960 as“in|prjoved.,''’| He previously had been confined for menial illness at Eloise in Wayne County. ELEVEN SHELLS Hassen said his inen found 11 shell -o»a S i n g s. Abernathey showed jtolice how helirsfr fired from behind the. shed, and then went into the shed'>nd fife^' Mur more shots. Templin said he requested Detroit psychiatrist Dr. William E. Gordon to examine Abernathey Police said the victim parently didn’t realize immediately. that anyone waif shooting at him. ife was firsf hit in the stomach by one of the shots fired from inside.ythe ^;s.hed, police kaid. ,.4®^ .t.hg county jail. The death rifle was a bolt action weapon that had to be reloaded after each shot. It was purchased by-Abernathey about two months ago at a Pontiac sporting goods storp, policy said. Al:|ehi^|hey toldj,/police he’d been planning to kill Morris for about a week. SHOUTED IN STORE Vito CJraparotta, 39, owner of Vito’s Market, 3210 Joslyn, exF plained that after the killing Abernathey walked intq, his store and shouted; severaf times “I killed a guy.” : After the giwer smelled the gun bWel the two walked out- side where sheriff!s deputy Donald Johnston apprehended Abernathey without resistance. Service for the victim will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at the Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiac. Surviving besides his mother are his father, Charles ofi Ar-i mada; a brother, Daniel Garner of Pontiac; and a $ister, Clar-risa of Lapeer. Z , , City Egg Hunt SeiforSaturday City officials are going to really lay an egg this weekend — about 4,500 of them to be exact. Parks and Recreation employes will be laying the hen produce in sheltered nooks of four city parks early Saturday with the help of community organizations. : The department’s annual Easter egg hunt lor kids is slated for 2 p.m. Saturday, rain or shine, according to Leonard T. Buzz, recrcatian supervisor. - In addition to the eggs, 650 major prizes and more than 3,000 individually wrapped candies will be made available to participants in the Easter egg hunt. Boys and girls,, from preschoolers to 10-yeaFolds can take part in the egg hunt. LOCATIONS IN CITY Egg hunts will be held at the following locations: • Beaudette Park in cooperation with the community coordinations division of the NAACP, under the cochairmanship -of Mrs. William Cabarras and Mrs. James Wood. ’ • Oakland Park, in coopera^ tion with the Northslde Kiwanis Club under the chairmanship of R, F. McCarty. • Jaycee Park, in cooperation wjjjh the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce under the chairmanship of Tom Vivian. MURPHY PARK • Murphy Park, in cooperation with the Pontiac Optimist Club under the chairmanship ot Isadore J. Mintz. All prizes, eggs and manpower are provided by the cooperating organizations. Parents are asked, to keep their youngsters at home until a few minutes before starting time so as to give the sponsoring organizations an opportunity to hide the eggs for the enjoyment of rill youngsters. France has received more than $9 billion in foreign aid from the United States since rf1946-.- ■..... 3-DAY TRADE-IN SALE! Sale of Electric Razors $2 For Your Old Razor as Trade-In On Remington Roll-A-Matic 25 WithTrade-In Without Trade-In Simms price 16” Regular $29.50 list price — just in time-for Easter gift giving. Bring in your old brand name electric razors (Sunbeam, Norelco, Ronson, Schick or Remington) and get $2.00 toward a brand new Remington '■Rotb^A’Matic 25 electric razor —. on tb^ inside, tlie most powerful motor ever in an electric cazori On the'outside, . exclusive roller combs for closer, more comfortable shaves. •7 ‘ A. ;. i/ T* Shown In PontOQon Survoy -—r~—' ,i . _ . Bias I Near Military Bases Trik Vc)NTr;H: im(Ksh. a\[Kdj^ks])Av; >|AU(’r| 2.1 iim WASHINGTON (AP)-A Pen-tagon-ordered survey showed there was housing dlscrimlnB" Hon against Negro servloemen near 00 per cent of the military hasfli In the United States, It was disclosed today. > * if Alfred D. Pitt, deputy asslsl> ant Secretary of Defense for Civil HIghts, told tiie Associated Press that housing “clearly Is the most unyielding'' (tf the various forjns of rnclal l)las facing Negroes In uniform. This dlHcrlmlnntion, Kitl said, exists In Northern base areas ns well as In the South. Only 31 of 305 IwBes studied were given a clean bill on this count. Fills declined to name tlie 31. PllOGItPM MADK The Pentagon’s civil rights chief indicated that by the process of “negotiation and conciliation" liase comnpinnders had made progress in casing discrimination against Negro servicemen and their famiiles In off-haso scltoollng, trans|M>rtatlon and use of su<;li public facilities as parks and libraries. “I’m sure that since last fall (•(tmmanders have se f 1 Pr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: ': ')!■ 'I' <. (-« ’ < ■ ( p THK PONTIAC press. WK1)WSDAY, MAHck 2g. 1004 * i ' Variety of Ills Can Ccjiuse Nightmares Q — WS*t conld cMiM mares ha «n elderly person? Althoagh nightmares are much more common in chltdren and young adults, tlu^ may oo cur at any age. Soma pMwms appear to have a apadal prona> ness to them. It hM laof keen believed that eating a heavy meal be- fore retiring will cause night- This is true Inaofaras the eat. big or overeating causes bodily discomfort. I’hyslcal distress in any part of the body whether a full stomach or a full bladder Is often aaaoclatod With frightening dreams. If the victim has been accustomed to eating Just before retiring, he* should try abstaining from food for three or more hours liefore going to bed ami see whether that helps. In some persons, the taking of sedatives, sleefdng pills, untlhistamlnicN, Iranqiilllxers or appetite depressanh Just SPACE rm LEASE ill this heantifnl NEW OFFICE BUILDING Cornwr Eliza bath Lake Road & Murphy Street PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Includes Heat-IAghtinfr-Janitor Service Air Conditioning and ‘AMPLE PARKING AREA Ready for Oqcupancy April 1 st, 1964 KESSETH G. HEMPSTEAD 368 W. Huron Street Phones: fE 4-8284 or FE 4-5215 b e fore retiring may cause nightmares. Obstruction of the nasal passages and sleeping with too much or too IliUe covering are other possible causee. Nlghtmaroa may also follow ■eelng • hinror film on the late television show or reading a horror story at bedtime. If any of theae cduses enter the picture they can bo easily cllmlnht^. Q -I am 50. 1 get sucli Wivere ■ramps In my legs at night tliat I have to Jump out of bed. What can I do to Htop\hem? A~Although the cramps that come on suddenly when you are ill bed can be very painful, they arc not duo to any serious disease. Extending and bending your legs rapidly or getting out of lied and walking a few steps; will usually stop them. < You shou^Id then find and malnlalu a comfortable position in lied. Quinine or vitamin D may lielp you, but you should consult your doctor about the amount you should take. Q~ Usually what are the first symptoms of a faulty blood pressure? Can It bo noticed without having a doctor take It? A—Faulty blood pressure may be either too high or too low. If It is too low, you will I come lightheaded or faint. If it I.S too high, there will bo no .symptoms until Uie condition is far advanced and has damaged one or more of the vital 'organs. I know of no way to e.stimate the blood pressure without the u.se of a blood pressure apparatus. (WrlltM ter Ntwtp«p«r Ent«rprlM Aim.) APPLIANCE BUYERS: OLLIE FRETTER GOES WILDS MAYTA6 HALO-OF-HEAT DRYER ! DE105 Get The Lowest PRICES Fretter’s MAYTAG I 2^SPEED AUTOMATIC WASHER: i3r /1 Maytag Halo-of-Reat Diyer S • 3 Tampsiotura Salactlons • Full-Opaning lafaty door H * Zlnc^aolod itool dp»m_ * Cobinot aMyroirtood oflolnit nut " BUDGET __________ T-yi— ^ Electric Model A101 219”! Maytag 2-S|i8ed Automatic Washer, • 2 Water Temoeratura Selections Safety Lid \ / W^Big^apacity Tub *^ • Regular speed for cottons and linens • Gentle action for woolens qnd dainty things • Famous Maytag dependability / 1 POHTIAC WAREROUSE » I TELEGRAPH RD. Vs Ml. So. ORCHARD UKE RD. / I 9/ile North of Miracle Mile / i / OPEN SUNDAY - FE 3-7051 / OPEM DAILY 10-9, SUH. 10-7 / ****"!!^ - UP TO 38 MONTHS TU PAT ,/ FERNOALE STORE-201 W; 9 MILE-LI 7-4409 . fi , Open Men. thru Fri. 9:38 te 8:38 ~ Sat. 9 le 9 S' IMiWfiMMlfMMMMMMMIIMMMMMMMMflaaraMaMilMBMMMlijlMlllii EASTER IS VERY EARLY THIS YEAR MARCH 29 SALE SPORTCOATS OF LIGHTWEIGHT DACRON-COTTON FOR BOYS Now's the time to buy that spring-through-summdr sport coat for your boy ... at sole prices you don't usCiolly expect to find until the summer's end. The fabric is a lightweight blend of 65% Dacron polyester and 35% cottoh that is very lightweight and remarkably easy to core for. And it's tailored too boy's taste in a classic 3-button mod^l with natural shoulders and center vent. Wd hove it in plaid of bronze, blue, blue-olive, blue-grey, and in blue-brown checks. •iWhOO ■ dlAQO S.«6.12, 10" Si... 13.20^2" FAIOK-HAKEI lAVON-OALOl SLAMS FOR BOVS AND STIMA1S And what would be more timely with Easter just around the corner? The fabric is lightweight 55% orlon ocrylic/45% rayon in flannel and reverse twist weaves. And we have it in two models: the trim beltless and the more traditional belt-loop. In olive, blocX celery, charcoal, and brown. So buy now and savd on this very special selection of Famous Maker slacks in sizes 6r 12 (regular and slim), 25:32 regular,- both Fomous-Moker Dress Shirts, boy sizes 6-1Z 2.29; cadet sizes 14-20, 2.79; students' neck,sizes 14-115]^, 3.29. 3*’ /7a ■ OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 P.M. hj. .1. \)\ 7 ' 7/ TUB rONTIA^ PBWSa. AVl const redwood (Sequoia aeinpervlrona) la highly prized for Its durability and attractive texture. But another characteristic of redw(K)ds-”self-creatlon of their own so-called "life zones"— opens them to damage from freeways. Hoot slruclurcH direct small streams within the forests and form basins to retain water vital to the trees. LIFE ZONE Freeway cuts block natural drainage, expose shadowed groves to suplight, create wind tunnels and otherwise disturb the "life zone." Three SERVICE NUMBERS CHANGE Saturday, April 4 • For your quick, convenient reference, the inside front cover of ypur new April directory will list new numbers for TIME OF DAY INFORMATION and REPAIR SERVICE You’ll get the new directory in a few days. Another handy reference: Pa^es 3 and 4 outline how to speed local and Long Distance dialing. MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY 1 ll''*’- IV" .2' ■ ‘ - j’ M / j/ ■. jp V.■./#<< '-r .'.'i'l/ THE PONTIAC PRESS • W««t Huron strtrt Pontiac, Michigan WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1004 ■Minna •snc! H«MT i, MM iSwMbil > '**l?loaTrari(liInt*«iid *dUor ant* TnoM*Mii^ Olroulailan Mannar nacratary ann AdvanlalnR Uln I Ulraotor _ _________JOMAH Local Advartlflni Managar French Political Foes Export Campaigns Two French politicos take to the American hustings as a ploy to enhance their appeal to the homeland electorate. Charles de Cuulle, the Incumbent president, ha*-Just completed A tour of Mexico and Franc©’* Caribbean poa*e*«lon*. On simultaneous absence f r o m home Is the leading candidate to defeat DK Oaullb, Socialist Gaston DirxRBi -r- the pugnacious mayor of France's toughest and second largest city, Mai^sellles. He attended an Informal Intepia-llonal conference at Williamsburg, Va., and In May will address the National Press Club In Washington. At home, the two are carrying on an unusual campaign leading up to the presidential election scheduled for late next year. Unusual, because In a refendum de Gaulle rammed through In 1962, he virtually wrote his own ground rules for H. ★ ★ ★ Under them, the official campaign, will last but two weeks. Time on government-controlled radio and TV networks will be available to candidates only during that period. Deferre will thus be allowed only two hours to expose himself to viewers of the nation’s 6 million TV sets. De Gaulle and his ministers, howevfr, have the use , of both media whenever they Wish to defend their policies ■— which is often. ★ ★ ★ But the gagging of Deferre on the air waves has to some extent Vwmeranged. He has a fine excuse to play the martyr, to visit areas of France where TV and radio are not known and complain of the misuse of "a national public servl(^.” And , certainly the French press, both antl-Oaullist and Jealous of the broadcast media, has been treating Deferre better than he might have expected. ★ ★ ^ " ★ Whether he fails in his presidential bld-^r improbably succeeds^ Deferre as the self- styled “candidate of the entire left wing” (though refusing to woo the Communists) will have made a valuable effort to create in France a needed cohesive and responsible administration opposition. Uninsured Motorists Are Highway Parasite These fees are pooled into a non - satisfied judgment fund. When anyone obtains a Judg-nieni agaiiiNl an uninsured driv- er, be may/ apply for reilress from the fund. The uninaured driver, however, la atill responsible for the damages and the fund endeavors to collect from him. ■■ ■ ■ ★ ★ ★ MARLOW As chilling statistics on Michigan’s mounting highway fatalities continue to roll in, a related and periodically-stressed hazard again comes to the fore. It is the uninsured driver of an automobile. According to the secretary of , slate’s office, 30,000 uninsured drivers are involved in accidents in the average year. And 1964 is running at a rate far in excess pf that average. ★ ★ ★ One driver in 10 involved ih the State’s highway accidents is uninsured. If a person is killed by one of these irresponsible drivers, the victim’s family has little chsmce of collecting damages. If maimed, he haa little chance for compensation. Over the years, attempts to enact compulsory insurance laws for all motor car owners in Michigan have been defeated. Supporters of such legislation, like New York State’s, have thrown in the sponge. . ★ ■.★ ^ Their efforts in recent yeanrhave, been toward an uninsured premium plan similar to that in Canadian provinces and New Jersey. This plan provljdes top a perspn withouf; liabil- ■/'> ■ , Ity Insurance to pay a special levy of $10 when he obtains his car license. Verbal Orchids To - L. S. Tackabury of Union Lake; 84th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Alexander ' of Sylvan Lake; 56th wedding anniversary. David L. Sisk of 125 Palmer; 85th birthday. / ^ 't* . -' ' i'. ^ .. .. . . .Mj ' ... ■' , ,, p- Voice of the reople: Although our lawmakers in Lansing can’t be held responsible for the toll of death. Injury and property damage on the State’s highways, they can do something to relieve the inequity posed by the uninsured driver. And it is high time that they did. i ‘Need Pavement Markings for Left Turn Only Lanes* Is the designation of the center lime “for left turns only” on West jHuron Street temporary or permanent? If It’s going to be permanent bright yellow markings should be on the pavement. Many people drive In this lane fpr blocks and a head-on collision Is going to occur. ★ ★ ★ Every day drivers are turning left from the wrong lane. | witnessed one three-car, rear«nd collision caused by this. The left turn Into the post office parking lot Isn't marked at all. ^ ^ \Vhy must a whole traffic lane be obstructed by u barricade on M59 at Telegraph? Why can’t the signs be posted overhead or at the side? At a time when the state Is trying to lower the accident and death rate, I’m surprised there have been no letters or editorials on these problems. Concerned Driver Says Lettera Are Causing: Dissension Singed! LBJ Pressing on Wages, Prices David Lawrence Says: lAittei’H on Jack’s (Jrcen Lake homes are becoming answer* to anonymous writers.' IakuiI ordinances cover some of the problems and other* are a matter of Individual desire or lack of finances. I-et’s all evaluate our property’s appearance and do what wo see fit. a *■ AW We have a drain problem In our midst and right now when we need cooperation these letter* are causing dissension. We arc making some people happy by pulling apart now, so let’s I get together and make our area a letter place In which to live. Need Citizens’ Probe of Baker Marge Runkle ' ition Secretary of Our Associatil Tappon Drive By JAMES MAR1.0W Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON — The John.son admini.s-iratlon, lacking control over prices and wages, is trying in a gingerly way to nudge buslne.ss and labor Into keeping them down. At Uie same time, President Johnson has urged Congress to vote a $545-million pay raise for 1.7 m(|Iion government employes, even if the 5.55 Congress members lie.si- Kte to Include themselves the Increase. Johnson and his economic advisers, walking tiptoe in this prickly field where the government has no authority to forbid, are not telling business and labor flatly there should be no boosts. What they seem to be saying in their anti-inflation efforts, often using a rather foggy prose, is that there should be no price-wage increases unless they arc justified; ^ This leaves the door ajar, although Johnson can’t do more than this, since a businessman anxious to raise a price or a union bent on higher wages will always argue a justification. ★ ★ ★ This is exactly what Johnsion himself does in proposing an increase in government pay. He says failure to increase it would make more difficult the task of recruiting and keeping top flight people in govern: ment. SEEMED IN A RUSH Two weeks ago In Congress, the House appeared to be in a ru.sh to raise government salaries, Including a $10,000 addition to the $22,500 now paid all members of House and Senate, a 44 per cent increase. Every Um*f' one of its members sought to block this increase, the House brushed it aside, or rather it did the fast brushing so long as they were not voting in a roll call where each member’s vote would be listed by name. But when a roll call was forced on them, they suddenly killed the whole pay raise notion, for them.selves and everybody else, by a vole of 222 to 184. ★ ★ ★ A few days later, Johnson wrote a letter ■ to House Spieaker John W. McCormack, D-Maks., proposing the House start all over again and rai.se govenimcnt salaries. GIVE others RAISI’: He said Congress’ hesitancy to give itself a raise was no reason - for not giving the other federal employes a boost. Johnson tried to do some promoting Monday in a speech to the United Automobile Workers Union in convention at Atlantic City, N.J. Thh UAW will soon be in neW contract negotiations with the automakers. He warrted against a price-wage spital, but explained: “This administration has not undertaken and will not undertake to fix prices.and wages in.this economy. We have no intehtioh of intervening in every labor dispute.” ' ■ - . ' And while Johnson was talking in Atlantic City the chairman of his economic council, Walter Heller, was out in Detroit telling the Economic Club there: “It would be lesS^han prudent not to keep an eye cocked on the price-wage front.’i .. , i). ''<6-'/, 4,1 ■7 :\ WASHINGTON - Tliere Is a right way and a wrong way to handle the Bobby Baker case. A Senate commiltc'c has taken the wrong course by virtually shutting off the investigation of the former sec-retary of tfie !)<>mocfatiCj majority In the Senate. This means that the battle of Innuendoes LAWRENCE will continue, and the American people will get the impression that something Is being hushed up and the truth concealed about a matter that concerns the conduct of a prominent cm-ploye of tlie upper house of Congress. llic right way to dispose of the matter—and it still can be done—would be f^r the Senate committee to choose a commission of five or more outstanding citizens, either retired judges or other distinguished lawyers, to examine all' the evidence and give the American people an impartial report. Testimony could be taken in public or in private, with the objective of getting at tte truth and stating it authoritatively, together with recommend^ courses of action governing the future conduct not only of employes of members of Congress but of senators and representatives themselves. Such national commissions are used in Great Britain and Canada, and they help to keep an issue from becoming a political football while the investiga-tipn itself is being carried on. U^DEROATII The commissions are empowered to subpoeha witnesses and to hear them in closed session or in public. Testimony is given under oath, and the laws with respect to perjury govern. The trouble with the way* the Bobby Baker case has been handled is that the Democrats may have unwittingly conveyed the idea that they want to hide something. The Republicans, on the other hand, have been pointing the finger of suspicion at the handling of the case by the Democratic majority on the committee. NOT UNUSUAL This is not unusual behavior on the part of politicians. If the Republicans were in . the majority today, the Democrats would be quick to use the same tactics to expose any suspected wrongdoing by anyone in the opposite party. But the country is getting the wrong impression about the in-tegrity 'of the Senate itself. People are being led to believe that behind the scenes there are undisclosed scandals. LBJ ADMINISTRATION Because some of the persons mentioned in the- Bobby Baker case are closely identified with the Johnson administration, the Republicans naturally are not at all hesitant to let it be inferred that ..the Democratic administration. itself is somehow responsible for tvrongdoing. ‘‘' ' , ' ‘. r '‘a What has actually happened probably is not much different from what has occurred In previous wlmlaiKtratlons. Two wrongs, howtever, do not make a single right. Tliere certainly were Indiscretions and improprieties and unethical conduct involved in tlie Bobby Baker case, and tliere' should bo a eompleto exposure -of tlie transactions themselves. Explains Visiting Hours at Mortuaries 111 jreply to Mr.s. F. Williams’ letter regarding the visiting hours at local mortuaries, perhaps an explanation will help. Tliere Is no reason why the commission’s re|Hirt could not be eompleled in less tlian three months. The Niiggesfed hours (8 to 5 p.m. nnd 7 to 9 p.m.) do not mean that those are the only hours during which one may visit. Those ore the hours that visitors may expect to see the relatives of the deceased. Bob Considine Says: All funeral homes in the Pontiac area operate 24 hours a day, .165 days per year and It docs not make any diffei'cnce to the owners and operators when visitation is conducted. 7.10 E, Mansfield Fred E. Thompson ‘The Junkie Priest* Story Bares AddkVs World CONSIIMNB NEW YORK - Father Daniel Egan, a Grnymoor priest, won his nickname the hard way. One night, in answer to an emergency call in his specialized field, he .sliced beside a young girl curled ih her hospital bed, knees under her chin, vomiting helplessly. .She was in the hideous throes of heroin withdrawal. Each wrench of her body was accompanied by a dry, scraping croak that seemed to rise from the depths of her body. Egan looked at the Inquisitive and inactive doctor, seated near-,by. "Can’t you do something for this girl iiistead of watching her as if she’s an experiment in a glass cage?” he'askcd. WHO ARE YOU? Doctors do not like ^be addressed by' nondoctors, even nondoctors with a Roman collar. creasing comprehension (hat dope addiction js not a’’crime” liut a "sickness’ that can lie cured, just as surely as a head cold, if there is a proper will on the part of the victim and a tender understanding on the part of those most concerned. I kept thinking of that aproach to the sordid aspects of life, and the blessed reaches of the good heart, as 1 read “The. Junkie Priest.” It’s a searing tale you will not forget for a long time. It has/no happy finding, save the realization that a man named Egan cares, and goes about the job of lighting candles of hope amid the desperate, dark despair. , ‘ ' 1, loo, am against sugge.sled visiting hours at funeral homes. It .seems funeral homes could let visitors come at any reasonable time. Il’s such a short lime before they are buried. How about the hours at the Oak Hill Cemetery—8 a.m. to 5 p.m.? Don’t they know some people work? A Pontiac Press Reader ‘No One Cares—Unless You’ve Money’ 1 have been ilrfor over a year and cannot gel proper medical Care because I am unemployed and my mother is on AIX?. The first thing a medical doctor asks is how I’m going to pay. Who cares whether you live or die unless you have money? ★ ★ ★ My illness became unendurable and emergency at General Hospital sent me away still ill, without medicine. Who cares about people who don’t have any money, and come from an uneducated, poor family? No one. You can’t get a job because you haven’t any experience. The churches don’t want you because you don’t have money. Who cares? Do you? ★ ★ ★ I know He cares. Ills heart Is touched with my grief. ... When the days are weary, the long night dreary. I know my Saviour cares. \ Miss Nobody Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Alivoys W(dqonw? UJOI The Anna (III ) Gazette Democrat t'And Just who are you?’* (he physician asked. Egan exploded, which is not his way, generally. Visitors matte us happy: Some when they come, and others when they leave. tcmplaled under the. Economic OpiKirlunity Act. , However, the proposed new development corpora tloii would operate under a Federal charter and would have as Jt* co-chairman a special assistant to the President or some comparable Federal representative. ‘War on Poverty^ Tfye New York Times “Never mind who 1 am,’’, he thundered, like Christ wielding a whip in the temple. “I'm ju.st wondering who YOU are. AN pXHIBIT “Maybe you ought to be driving a truck. Look at you, you’re suppbsed to be a doctor and you’re sitting here as if this girl is an exhibit. “Haven’t you ever seen a junkie before? She’s not a criminal, she’s sick!” The offended doctor came to his feet, outraged. “And what are you?” he demanded. “A,junkie priest?” Yes, Egan was — and is. INCREDIBLE WORKS And" John D. Harris, one. of the best young reporters of my time, has ferreted out the man’s" incredible w o r k s and the essence of his apostolate. Harris has caught the mood . and method of this sometimes tough-talking but always soft- . A major problem in the Administration’s “war or| poverty” will be to keep the lines of command from becoming so fangled fhat the campaign chokes in bureaucratic overlap., •Sargent Shriver's record as director of the Peace Uorps lends credibility to the assurance he gave the House Committee on Education and Labor that he has no empfre-building designs. But so many departments and agencies will be involved that something more than earnest desire, will be required to keep millions of dollars from draining away in duplication of services and in overhead. Urgent as is the ta.sk of combating economic stagnation and human misery in Appalachia, ways should be found to tie the Federal efforts directly into the central drive. Ah Appellate Court held the school, board had the right and duty to rezone in order to prevent the creation of a segregated public school. Since the white children lived in'a white community adjacent to a predominantly Negro one, they had no choice' but to be taken to the Negro school. , Keep Talking The case may be carried to the Supreme Court for a final ruling. It Is an important point. Many families move |nlo and buy homes in neighborhoods where they want their children to grow up and go to school. The Nashville (N. C.) Graphic There is nothing wrong in hav-^ ing nothing fp say unless you insist on saying it. Schools Rezoned The first test of the government’s ability to prevent sudi waste will be in the program of the President’s Appalachian Regional Commission. It is preparing a plan for cooperative Fedieral and state action to, revive the economy of hearted prieat who is a patient tri^ln the poverty - racked mountain country —1 a realist striding through the crazed world dope. As much as any man alive today, this priest can be held * /responsible, for the public’s in- country -1 a plan expected to call for $.1 billioti in Federal grants, loans and guarantees over a five-yeat period. , Advance efforts are being made, to eliminate projects that anight conflict with those coATI The- Tallahassee Democra| One of the more irrational offshoots of the Supreme Court’s 1954 decision forbidding' racial segregation in public schools is throwing the North into a tizzy. la an e f f 0 r t to balance pupils ethnically, .school d i s-tricts are being rezoned and children are being sent by bus to schools outside their neighborhoods to get an even mixture of. white and Negro pupils: . The group of Brooklyn white parents who objected to sending thdr children to schools other 4han those tliey/, had been attending were thrown for a. ■' loss. * If this is going to be tampered with, their right to own or rent property is .abused — and that right is as fundamental a civil liberty as any other* They do not want their children forced out of the neighborhood where they live, and__ they should not be. Who can blame them fordemonstrating* against the folly of it? Score One The Lapeer County Press Many golf players play a fair game—if you watch them closely. ■ t - J>(_)M7AC VittlSa, WKDNKSDAV, MAltCH iiH. 10H« KLfiOLfli STORE ffl P**n' MIRACLE MILE JL^ -.ji’ "*■1. A ^\'V '-n ‘I Use A Convenient Lion Charge Plan with Option Terms Grenadier IMPORTED Worsted Suits lafa’ S|riig U All wool fully lined *olids and tweeds. 'Vniitos, pastels ondnavy. , Ladies’ Costume DRESSES You 11 And thi* venotile ImpoHed , ,.,1 Wonted will give you nlenty of wear. I' f -i> ^ and keep a iieuj, well preeied lo« and keep a iieut, well preeied look through all of Spfiug’a many ooca< sioni! Dress and Coot, or dress and jacket combinations. Wear them all Spring and | Summer. Juniors, Misses, half sizes. from '14». »2J« I* 111 mt} KNOX HATS You’re using your head to put your best foot forward when you wear a new hat that says “quality” at a glance! Gmci^uSi^ ^kapd VimPmp Girls’ Spring Dacron Organza Dresses by NATURALIZER For Easter time ... all with taffeta underskirt. Luscious shades of pink, blue and maize., frpin GKT Famous for. quality und the utmost in shoe comfortN^ new styles for Spring ^ smarter than ever! See iheniX nowF A. Stitch and Turn Wint! Tip'Blncher in Premium Calfskin. Girls’ Coats ' : i ’T*’ Soft and feminine styles, in lightweight wools ^ and crepes. Knit ^/I laminates, and ^ embossed fabrics. In Black or Antique Brown Shsca 64k tp 13. A to £ widtl^ CSioe IS r^oUfhdy higher) $2395 B. Pin-'nik Blttcher Naturaliaser com* ■.)/ biipes soft patent , ,, ;:iTVyfz l‘ - dreis shoe a smart look. The throat is and the toe sohly L tapered. ITie heel stays snug, ® the toe is always roomy ... it’s Natnralizer’s famous combination last Black, Blue or .'M Red Patent amd White Light- PI •ning. Sizes S to 10, AAA to H f'ktM B widths. ^ s Miieital k > J 4^-' j J w As handsome a suit as you’ll Hnd this Spring! Worsted iridescent sharkskin in new light and med- ium shades. Sti^ent; Regulars and Longs. 35 to"42. ..J. Cf' l 4 y t* I > I X if X if'/ lu y' I'I ■ '/ (-3-- 1 I . Rl _ii V< ■ 'V , I.' rVi' M MmJL* l\ - ' )l' * ij ' ■ ■ I '"'' ' iv ' ' ' "■ ■ ■ ' '' ""- I' , V ■' THE rONTIAC TljESS, WKPyESnAY, MARCIT 2ii, 1004 •1,1 ■V:„ til. I' V Spring TV Sport: Golf During Snow Storm By mcK WRirr WASHINGTON (UPI) U«t WMkend m«ny «reas of the country, Including this ong, bade welcome to the first snhw._j{f The first snow of spring Is al* ways on InipIrstlonnI event. I was BO mov^ by the sight that I felt constrained to commemorate It with a little poem. It Is titled “Ode of a Spring Blizzard, or, If 1 Were Mother Nature I Would Lift Up My Skirt and Scream.’’ And It goes like this: ”A snowfall on the first day after ’’The Vernal Hqalnox ”ls obnoxiously Incongruous like ' ••Shortening broad with lox.” Q When IS a quart more than 32 ozs? There Isn’t much a red-blooded American boy can dp on the first snowy weekend of spring except watch golf matches on television. I did that and I was amazed at how much the game has changed since I quit playing. Golf used to be a simple game for simple minds. You just took a Hc>t of clubs and kept hitting the Ittlle wiilte ball until ii dropped inti) the hole. SCIKNCE DEGREE len it's the Pfeiffer filO Fol|(i In tha know-Go for Pfalffar GREAT IMPERIAL QUART ... fh« bigger bottle of the better brew... 20% MORE than ar\y regular quart. . . the Luxury Beer at a popular prlce--another way of saying • Pfeiffer GIQ. But to play gulf nowadays you need a science degree and almost as imich paraphernalia as a road company production of “War and Peace." Hitting the, boll appears Jo be only a minor part.of the game. The players I saw on television spent most of their time testing wind currents and surveying the h^rriiln. Had not the announcer identified (hem as golfers, I would have taken (hem fir meteorologists and civil engineers. ^ It requires only a small amount of foresight to see what golf is cvoptually (xiining to, Something on this order. I’ll wager: ' -m- Each player will be equipiM wjth 08 golf clubs, a barometer,, a thermometer, an aerometer, an aneinometer, a sextant, a transit, a short'wave re#, a gyroscopic compass, an electronic computer and 18 weather balloons. Rather than have a caddy, he will employ a safari. SEND UP BALLOON At each toe, the golfer will .send up a huli(Min to ascertain the climate of that particular Ijole. These readings will be supplementd'd by short wjive reports from the Tiros weather satellites * Such data as a burometrle pressure, humidity, high and low (Ides, sunrise and subset, and the player’s ■ hwroscope will be fed Into the computer topopaphic ma|| of (he fairway and green. Within 24 hours, the computer will provide a ballistics summary advising the golfer which club to use and how to swing it to achieve the desired distance and trajectory. Thus informed, he will step up to the ball and dub it. Bill Kollo/t fhE-EISTER ifi^ SALE lapirianeacl craftsman uslnfi^a finaat auallty wotarlqla tailor mako yowr car's sotzt ^ars from fha jrattaraa yaw aalact. NEW LOW PRICES... GUARANTEED WORKMANSHIP and COMPLETE SATISFACTION! Jnetalled In Af Oil V.are Jlt0tt,$U.9$ TAILOR AAADE - SARAN PU^TC SEAT COVERS »l6«i SoloGt tho matorfal you wish, all frosh sfook, dot ospoclally for your car. 919 MYRTLE STREET Just Off Telegraph Road Opposite Tol-Huroh Shtmplng Center Tolaphooo FE 2-6335 :PEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY- 8 A.M. fo 6 P.M. BIGGEST BOnLE OF BEER r ‘n ■ the Luxury beer at a popular price UA M A TIIF, PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MARfil 25, lol)4 ^ SPELL BINDERS Fashion's dramatic hats for Easter in styles and colors for every outfit P V., ■ Inviting hqts, excitin^Xhats, hats with brirns that sweep dramatically, ripple romantically, oyrageously flattering flower crowns, wide brim cloches, gauchos, roller-bretons, pillboxes. A truly beautiful collection in imported fabrics, brilliant straws, dazzling colorsi Come in ahd choose your Easter hat while the selection is complete. 2-pc. royon/acetate crepe outfit. White blouse-on top, full sailor collar, traditional ^navy" tie, slim fully lined navy skirt. 10-16. b. 3-pc. rayon line, brass buttoned blazer In natty navy, white sleeveless shell, fully lined white skirt, red polka dot scarf. 8-16. mcic MOTION' Kayser'snewand beautiful nylon 'n lace fashion gloves 00 They'r\special and exclusive with Kayser. Gloves that mold themsisives to fit every hand, eve^ size perfectly. Double woven hyl6n, lace fburchettes, sides. Smart 4 button length. White, black, beige to accent any costume. Come in and try a pairl OPEN EVERY NIGfiT TO f'\‘»u;ido‘y LtirrougH Saturcl|ly /-'•It. BlACK PATENT Handbags for Easter, 1964 will shimmer and glisten 99 A gorgeous collection of simulated patent leather bags made by famous manufacturers. Styles for every Easter ensemble. Fine compartments. All with smart, sturdy detailing, inside pockets, or zipper wall frames. Beautiful fashion at a budget price. DOWNTOWN AND » DRAYTON PUINS ^ ' l' -Kt: Groduahi of Law and'^MedlcIno ^^HK roNtiAC ritRas. WBiwKspAv'. Warcu iiiil« 1., Ruby's New Lawyer to Change Defense DALLAS, Tex. (AP)-Dr. Hubert Winston Smith, college professor who is Jack Ruby's new head legal counsel, Indicates he will pursue new lines of defense In seeking to reverse Ruby's death sentence, Smith, 86, director of the Uni- versity of Texas Law School's lj|W-Scien(;e Institute, was in; troducod Tuesday night os chl«d defense lawyer by Kva (Irani, Ruby's sister. A graduate of Harvard's low and medical schools, Smitli said lie entered tlie case, without fee, b) ace that every relevant ismie of the Ruby case was examined scientifically by "the best medi-(‘ol and legal aid available." He met Ruby for the first time Tuesday but said he had kept up with the trial through another defense lawyer, Joe Tonahill. Ruby was convicted March 14 of slaying Lee Harvey Oswald I'resident John F. Kennedy’s a« cused assassin, and sentenced to death after a month-long trial. * PREVIOUS LAWYERS Ruby's family dismissed Melvin M, Belli of San Francisco, their ent a .summer as a ditch-digger In Boston-"to Understand tlie working man and toughen up myYnuscles," In September 1931. he returned to Dallas and practiced law for six yearff—his only time as a full-time couiTroom lawyer. He also taught at a Dallas law college where one of his pupils was Joe B. Brown. Convinced that ikilance was the future of the law profession. Smith entered medical school at the University of IMInborough, In Scotland and returned to Harvard In I0.1lj to obtain his medical degree. He hee wok Jn more thlsn 10j),000 now memwrs and had an Inchtoo of more than $100 million OEL«IVr;RV ”.Y Fntr:F semwice SYLVjMHA 23 ” CONSOLE TV «*'■ “HALO-liGHT’ ' / »0 D/\VS SfAME AS CA^H TIME: 8:59 p.a. DAIL This Friday 's REAai0N:W0W! Y('s, oven aa late aa 1 minuto to cloainjf time on Prijlay, March 27th, you can buy your Eaatcr .suit... avid he Riire you’ll have it in time, for Kaster Sunday, March SUth! That’a a jiromi.se we don’t think anyone elae in the entire area can make, except O.smun’a. Early or last-minute , . . there’s a great. sdccUdn_ to chiKW from, too. Shown are just two examines from famoua PHOENIX CLOTHES. BACKGROUND; Cla.saic BLACK MOHAIR in 2- and 3-button models. Perfect year-round weight in the prince of luxury suits. Plain-front trousers, supeyb fit. $75. FOREGROUND: SILVER GREY SHARKSKIN to lead the Easter (or any) Parade. High 2-button or traditional 2- and 3-button models. Choose either center or dashing aide vents. Plain-front trousers. $75. Note: Tha Osmun's gift certificate makei It eoty to give as well as wear one of these, fine suits ... or ony gift. a part of Pontiac since 1931 SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN AND BOYS Use One oi Osmunds Indivldyitlhied Charge Plans FREE PARKING DOWNTOWN Mon. ond Fri. 'HI 9^FE 4-4551 i-i -I iii,i I I. , iLl, TEL-HURON CENTER EVery Night 'til 9—FE 4-4541 TECH-PLAZA in Warren reiV NigI EveiV Night 'til 9—755-J600 ...........' / 7\V, ^ A J! « iLJ. ‘‘'i','d ' "i; ' I , THE PONTIAC PRES6. WKDNKSDAVr MARCIt 2g. m\l Pontiac Area Churches Services on Gdod Friday (Contlnuod Krwn l‘«go One) Maundy Thuwday In the Episcopal Church of the Advent, Vyest Bloomfield Township. “Seven Words From the Cross" will be the Uieme of the Tre Ore servhfe from noon to 3 p.m. (lotKl Friday with Rev, John W. M[l||le presiding. OUR LADY OF REFUGE Following the Mass with Holy Communion at 8 p.ip. Thursday there will be nocturnal a«lora-tlon of the Cross until noon Friday In Our Lady of ItcfuKo Calliollc (Jhurch, Orclutrd Lake, Tlio Tre Ore service will be fron> noon to 3 with liturgy at 1:30 p.m. on Good Friday. The Easter Vigil will begin at 10:45 p.m. Holy Saturday with the blessing of fire, l*nscliul Candle and baptisiiiul water. Mass will follow at midnight. I'ONTIAC GENERAL HOSPITAL A Good Friday service starling at 12:30 p.m. will he held at Pontiac General Hospital Chapel with Dr. Emil Kont/,, llcthany Hapllsl Church, Rev, Carl (1. Adams of First Methodist and Rev. Orville Dunkeld of First Uaptisl Church, the s|)oakers. AIX SAINTS EPISCOPAL “JudaS," a tragedy In one aet by Francis B. Creamer, a former rector of Christ Church In Grosse Pointe, will be presented at 8 p,m. Maundy Thursday In All Saints Episcopal Church. A service of Uoly Communion will follow. 11»e HI, Rev. Robert De-Wltt, former rimtor of Christ Church (Vanbrook, and newly elected Bishop Coadjutor of the Diocese of Pennsylvania, will speak at the Tre Ore services from I tb a p.m. G«mnI Friday. A special children's service will be held from 2 to 3 p.m. In Ihe auditorium of Stevens Hall. A family service of lighting tlie Paschal Candle, evening prayer and Holy Baptism is scheduled for 4 p.m. Holy Saturday, Nursery care will be available. CALVARY BATOST Oooil Friday services will Ih^ held from 1 to 2 p. m. at Calvary Raptlsl Churcli, 3750 Pontiac Lake Road. Rev. Rudy Scliuermann will bring* the message. AUBURN lIEIGill'H The Community Good Friday service in Auburn Heights will be held at Stone Baptist Church from 12;30 to 2:80 p.m. The theme will be “The Seven Last Words of Christ." Those taking part Include Casual Noises Drowned Out JOIIANNESHUUG, SouUi Africa l8V~-At lost It has been explained — there Is a real scientific reason why your youngster likes to study while his transistor radio is going full-blast. According to Prof. G. R.. Bozsoll, Johannesburg noise expert and dean of the local university’s faculty of engineering, the reason is simple. “A radio drowns oiit casual noises l)etwc('i) p»(rlods of silence. It Is IlieHe casual noKses from outside, such as a passing car, which really Interrupt their studies.’’ Rev. Eric Wehrll of Elmwood Methodist Church, Sam Sheehy, an aider In United Presbyterian, Rev. Mrs. K||jbe of WhRe Shepherd Full Gospel, Rev. Law-rSnee Dickens itf Stone Baptist, Rev. George KIbbe of While Shepherd Full Gospel, Rev. Charles Warner of Free Methodist and Rev. F. William Palmer of United Presbyterian Churbh. SACIIKI) HEART Solemn Muss will be offered at 8 p.m,'on Holy Thiirsdny In Sacred Heart (Jiithollc Church, Auburn Heights. Liturgy beginning at 1 p.m. on Good Friday will continue throiigh 3 p.ni. Way of the Cross is planned for 7:30 p.m. Holy Saturday Easter Vigil will commence at 11 p.m. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Good Friday services sjlonr sored by the Waterford Township Ministerial Fellowship will be from noon to 3 p.m. at Christ Lutheran Church, 6WI7 Williams Lake Road, Waterford. ^ Seven township mlnl.sters will preach oil the “Seven Last Words From the Cross." These include Rev. Roy F. Umlsiri of Lakeland United Presbyterian Church, Re v. Wayne E. Peterson, host pastor, Rev. Paul Coleman of the Church of the Nazarene, Rev. Robert WInne of Waterford Community church, Rev. Dennis Du-sek of Drayton Plains United Presbyterian, Rev. Robert Adams of Cy’rescent Hills Baptist and Rev. Ronald Thompson of Trinity Methodist. Presenting musical-selections will bo Margaret Ridley, Mrs. William Mercer, Mrs. Leslie Rart'/.man, Margaret Sowter, and the Junior and (.’Impel Choirs of Christ Lutheran. A trio, composed of Mrs. Rudy Schelllln, Mrs. Carl Meng and Mrs. Robert Adams, will present vocal numbers. Dorothy Reagan and the Rev. Mr. Lambert will sing a duet. Mrs. Martin Wager will serve as organist. A nursery for children will be provided. OUR LADY OF LAKES iSoIemn Maps will be offered at 7:.30 p.m. on Holy Thursday In Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Cliurch, Waterford. Noctur- A FASHION ACCESSORIES!!! GAYMODE . . . Am«rica's Best Sdling Hose Whutevrr type of hone yon prefer, ihere’it ii Guymode fuNhion lliut's jiiut |iKlit for yon. Prop(»rtioned lengthu, styles to suit every taste, we have them all. Whichever Gaymodca you prefer,, whichever shade you select, you will he getting the best of the best. After all- it is the best selling hosiery in America! MILUNERY GLAMOUR ,398 795 Sizes 8'A to T1 Short, rnedlurh and long lengths Coldrs—Pebble, Gala, Suntan and White.' LUXURY SHEERS 1.25 pr. There has to he one hat that's just right for you . . . Chic clothes, pert )>ill-hoxes, saucy “sailors,” face framing brims and more ... Choose from tailored models or devastating flower trims. Colors galore! Have'a wonderful time picking your favorite. DRESSY GLOVES Look neat all the time with a smart looking pair of gloves in your favorite fashion color. Favorite fabric too > ^ . quick easy-care nylon. Choose your length from our selection of dressmp long gloves, or shorty casuals, also stretch styles in yOur favorite fabrics. SIZES 6 to 8 LUSTROUS PATENT TVhal a terrific style coUectiont Squared off designs, softly rounded styles, long and tall! Exciting new shapes smartly tailored in patent plastic . . . with a dazzling lusteOhat sparkles with fashion authority! Quality extras, too like smart handles, roomy rayon lined interiors, zipper pockets! PENNEIPS MIRACLE MILE STORE, HOURS ' ;$:30 a.m1 to 9 P.M. .If. ^ - 'V * A. rial adoration will follow and continuo throughout the night to 1Z:30 p.m. Good Friday. The traditional Tre Ore service will then begin. Stations of the Cross are sdteduled for 7:30 p.m. I'ho Easter vigil will begin at 11 p.m. Holy Saturday with Mess following at midnight. WATERFORD COMMUNITY Tlie onnual Waterford CYim-munHy Church service on Good Friday will l)o at 7:.30 p,m. This will ho a candloliglit (Communion Horvica. The Chancel Choir will sing with Gene Peter, soloist. ST. HUGO IN XHE HILLS A solemn service Is scheduled for 6 p.m. Thursday In St. Walter Cha|)el of St. Hugo in the Hills Catholic Church, Bloomfield Hills. On Good Friday a solemn service will begin at 1 p.m. In the chapel. The Easter vigil at 10:48 p.m. Holy Saturday will bo heljl In St. Hugo In- the Hills Church. .Solemn Mnsa will follow at mid-nlgjit In the church. ST. STEPHEN A three-hour servioe beginning at noon will he held Good Registration at OU for MSU Classes Iteglst ration for II) graduale coufMe ofhfrlngH by MIclilgan Slate tlnlveralty on llie Oakland University campus began today and will continue through k'rl-day, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Spring term clusscs begin Monday, according to Dr. Prod Brieve, regional illredor of the MSU graduate center. Courses offered Include history, hdmemaking, geograpliy, psychology and sociology. Education and guidance classes are also offered. A late fee will Im charged for registrations after this week, Dr. Brieve said. Friday at 8t. Stephen Episcopal Church, 8631 N. Adams, Bloomfield Townahip. Cosponsors are Beautiful Savior Lutheran and Northminster P r e s b y t e rlan chur(Jhes,, Sermons will be delivered by each of the three pastors, Rav. Donald Zlli, Rev. MacKay Taylor of Northminster and Rev. Carl Sayers of Uie host church. MARIMONT The Gitigellvllle, Sllvurcroit and Murlmont .linptlsl churches will observe Go(hI Friday with a comliliuHl service at 7:.30 p.m. In Mnrinuint niurdi, 08 W. Wal- ton. Tlie lliree pnslors \ 111 bo speakers. Special music will ,be by the Marlmonl Choir and a trio from the Glngellvllle CTnirch will sing. Included are Denlua Griffin, Mary Hawthorne ar.J Donna DdgWort. The service will conclude witii a cdohratinn of Communion. In 1047, 310.6 man-hours were reepdred to prodmre an aulomo-hlle. This was cut to 155 In 1962. Nationally famous brands plus great savings! i WESTERFIELD SPORT COATS 22.95 New "shetland-look” woOjs, wooI-and-Orlon* acryllo ... 2 and 3 button models with side or center vents. Plaids, checks, solid effects in light-to-dark shades. I Free dteratims in time/or Easter! GOLDEN EMBLEM* WORSiTED SLACKS 9.95 Permanently created ta tave cottly pressing blffif Gabardines, flannels, reverse twists and plain weaves... in plain front or single pleat model. Spring tones, 29-42. HERE'S WHY • W* tell for eaih onlyl AT ROBERT HAIL • YoU (ovo bo«ouM w* i - mjjojNip LAMI-KNIT SWEATER. JACKET 9.95 comp, value 12.95 Won't sag, stretch or wrinkle because it’s 100% cotton bonded i! Hp-front styli}l^ with cadet Zlp-1 ■itne colIarXcqntrasting color trim, cmest emblem. New shades, S-M-L. FAMOUS WESTERFIELD® -=^CmT AND DRESS SHIRTS/I % 2.99 'icomp. value 3.98 Choice collection of all the wantqd fabrics ... all the'pbpular models id all the important colors! Sizes S-M-L-XL: neck sizes 14 to 16. USE OUR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY PL AN... NO EXTRA CHARGE Plenty of Free Parking I Open Sundays 12 Noon to 6 P.M. IN PONTIAC, 200 NORTH SAGINAW STREET IN CLARKSTQN-WATERFORD on Dixie Hvry. North of Waferfordj^^lfill • In. "' 4=01— 'IJ , ''If TIIK rONTiAC 1‘itKSH, ylKI)NKSli|A\l MAItC:ir 2/f, lOIH ' I; , vii'V ' 1;', V (RpiToh^s mm: nin «» the thtrd arttcle in a five-part jsriei on General Afpton written by Afiociated Press newsman Roger haneJ Hy ROGER I.ANE M* RnelnrHH N«w» WrlM«r NKW YORK - 'Hie promliv encc of commiltpee In declelotv inakitig at ginnt (Soneral Motors Corp. ylolda what has l)oon called ‘ orchealraled lender-•hip." " Nowadays, the baton Is wield od by Frwlerlc G, Donner, (11, « meUculoim, hard-working n( countmit with frosty,blue eytv a knock for iblnlUnK Htfignro and a reserv^t iHirsonulily. Donner credits GM's phenomenal auccesg partly to slicking to products Imsed on nu)lors, rattier than brumblng heavily Into related activities. He follows the precept personally, Just once In 5^ years as GM board chairman has Donner addressed a nonjGM audience-the International Congress of Accounts. He has held news State Hails Upgrading of Liquor Permit Waterford Township’s upgrading of a resort liquor license w«fs hailed today by a State Liquor Control Commis.sion official Edward F. Maloney, director of the LC(' liccn.se division in Unsing, said he was pleased to hear that the township had Issued its only remaining Class C license to the holder of the only resort,license in the town- ship, As a result of the board’s action, the resort license now can be reissued somewhere in the state by the LCC. “Some 200 resort license applications are on file here and we are happy to have another one to issue," Maloney said. The township board Monday night assigitOd the Class C li-sence to 'Dobskl’s Bar, 7960 Cooley Lake . FIRST CONSIDERATION A recommendation from the LCC suggesting that any resort license holder be given first consideration for the Class C was instrumental in the board’s decision, Maloney said it- was a general policy of the LCC to recommend upgrading of resort licenses. ^ Shedd's " Safflower MARGARINE made with RATED BEST in ratio of poly>unsaturates to saturated fats. Three outstanding, independent research' laboratories* working separately were asked to compare leading margarines for their proportions of beneficial poly-unsaturates to saturated fats. Samples used for comparison pur-posNBS were purchswfed in stores by shoppers for the labora^ries. The results given are the average of the tests ^de on each margarine. ' confcrcncoB twice In throe years. SPARSE INFORMATION His nine-line entry in "Who’s Who In America" omits the date aiul place of birth, and names of his parent^ wife, children mid cluhs. Donner’s reseiwo contrasts somewhut with tlic easier ways of the late llnrlow Curtice. Ikin-ner's Immediate predecessor as CM chtef executive, and C,E. WIInom, GM president wlie later liecame secretary of defense In the ICIseidiower ndmlntstralion. The quality and depth of GM management Is envied widely In business. The AS executives aliove idlvlshm manager level average over DO years with the firm, 'Hie yeara proudly are noted In the annual report to over LI million GM itoo|(hold- ©rs. However,, therd Is no hlde-ImiuiiiI iiUltude on seniority. GM inanagemorit has a steady hot not glavlsli-devotlqn to rulos and onlerly process. NOTIBLE IMIHIRT A notable example Is Roger Kyes, imported at age 42 by then President Wilson from |'’erguson-8herman, a farm eitulfsniont maker. Even more unusual, Kyes went to Washington as Wilson's deputy secretary of defense, retunilng after 10 months In May 1004. As a group vhd pres-Idcpt. he Is one of GM’s 10 lilgh-esl ranking officers. The building and holding ' df (IM'a pool of talent relies heavily on a generous and ingenious system of financial Incentives. Pivotal Is a rich bonus plan adopted in 1018 and administered with extreme care from the vary lop on down, ^ ir w * ■ Rome exeetdives on the highest levels receive two or three times their salary In bonuses. In ail, over OlOO million was distributed In each ef the lasf two years to roughly 14,IMMI em- ployes In Uie 110,000 - and - up brackets. FIVE INSTALLMENTS Purposefully, GM apportions the bonus In five annual Installments. Tlte rising star wooed by another employer thus must turn Ills back on a fortune If he leaves, for when an employe quits, payments slop. Possibly |l million iHiuld be Involved for a" group or executive vice president. 'lids deterrent’’' may account for why so few GM men stray, and for Chrysler Corp.’s falluro In a tool mnnogemont crisis to lure a GM man os successor to ousted President William C. Newberg. 'Hie efficacy of OM's rnetlKsIs Is recogiilKetl hy rivals. "We're doing the sante thing but CM got a 26-year headstart," explained a middle management man at Ford. Ernost 11, Brooch, x Chunk Style .... ./•. 3 coiw oV /' fiels Instant Granules ..........., / box /X “■ ■ ■ " l'2-ot. 3Qc // ;;7 l5ioz. yf i-c / /'■• .Nls Nsptlia a,; • ■ ■/./ / yre L Cons Bar Soap ............ O B^fs 33 ^ 15-pz. toe t/A Cbannln Assorted 4-roH 37C / B.k.r’a-Speclal Label 12-01. DQc , Toilet Tissue........................... Pock 3/ / Chocolate Chips................. ........ pkg. y WrtriiJlufiyAn 3-lb. 7QC nsh ot MMt ^er a 15-oz. —/ Detergent............................... Pkg. /V, Tabby Cat Food............................ .4...,“ Cons . y 'r / /// '■ ■gs-65'; . / ■I ' ;*' *• V ■!• •'! ' . 1'. i''i ; ; ,"i' .1 ’ ■ . STEP UP TO QUALITY..STEP INTO WRIGLEY! Doumok Mlnidtur* Marshmallows ............. i>S Southern Seat Grated Vilile Tuna .......2 SS 39' For Cookirtg or Salads . , / MazolaOil..............ffi59' Hershsy Special Label Chocolate Dainties............. ’p^* 39* Sweet Mixed Vla^Pickles.......................39 Sliced Pickled 14-oz. Pkg. 59= Detergent........... 22-oz. 65' 5- Tubes 35= For a Brighter Wash Super Suds Giant ..... Box 59= Can 59= Ajox with AniivKwifo Liquid Cleaner...... 28-oz. 69= 13-oz. Can 49= Special Lo^l Surf Defergenf ^..... Giant 64= 8-or. Jar 35= Coldwater Liquid All Quart 79' Durkees Flaked Cocoanut.,.. K. Durkees Food Color Dyes .. Gulf Kilt Cleaned Medium Shrimp Ritter Whole Green Asparagus Spears ...... Hoffmon House (' 1000 Island Dressing Special Label Assorted Kleenex Table Napkins Alcoa Special Lobel Aluminum Foil Hills Bros. Special Lobel Instant Coffee Durkees ' Whole Cloves . Angel Flake Bakers Cocoanuf . For a Whiter Wosh " Action Bleach Palmolive Liquid V'. Va; 1 r'iiu ' '-i; /i'.” 'ii^:ri/yh: ^ ’.'’■ ■^^■'\.''----^..........'i'-: ■'/ ' fe-'l^felA ^ • / TIIK lH)NTrAC imsl WI<:1)NI4s1)AV. ^1AIU II 2^, MMit ^ \ ,■ ^ Delinquency Evokes Interest Juvenile Hoodlums Shunned by Most Teens Gilbert Youth Reiearch,- Inc. Juvenile delinquents may capture headiinee, but most boys and girle aoroNs the country today want no part of teeii-ago iioodlumi. More than throe-fourtha of 1,200 young people have Juat told ua that none of their frienda could be conalderod hooda. And about M per cent denied that Juvenile dolinquenta exerted any Influence over them Even though hoods aren’t their pals, almost half the teens .—65 per cent of the boya and 44 per cent of the girls—are Interested III readiiig stories or seeing movies dealing witli Juvenile delinquency. Sixty-seven per cent of the boya and girls have seen the movie “West Side Story" which deals with two Juvenile gangs on the west side of Now York (ilty, and 04 per cent of those who saw the film, liked it. MOIIE THAN ONCE . (Thirty-eight per cent of those questioned sow the picture more than once; some saw it aO many as six times.) How Is il (hat (he teens disapprove so strongly of hoodlums, and yet are Interested In reading and seeing abouf them? Some of the young |>eople pay the movies and books allow how to help rehabilitate Juvenile delinquents, and others Indicate they like to learn about different types of young people. And Stan Wleland, 17, of Blue Hill, Neb , adds, “As far as I’m concerned, making movies alKHit hoods encourages young fieople to try to act like IkkkIs." MUSICAL ASI'ISas When askmi Hpcclficnlly almut west Side Story" many of the boys' and girls' replies centered about tlie musical aspects of the picture, lioth pro and “I learn about these pcMiple and then know how to try and help them," explains Jeffery Hanson, 1(1, of Itochcster, N.Y. OTIlEit SIHE “It's iuterustiiig to see 4hc other side of the tracks," adds Morren Miller, 17, of Monterey Park, Calif, Many teens feel, however. (raying hoiMlIinns give all young people a bud reputation. “I think they set such a bad example," says Nancy Moorhead, 15, of Detroit, Mich. AMCmCA'S LAROEflT I'AMILV CL0THIN3 CHAIN MEN’S & BOYS’ Ulesterfield SHOES with PERMA-TRED SOLES & HEELS Guaranteed fortheitteoftho upper* or your money refunded OKford «!• bluchar tnoc-lo*. Bltck i JVi-6; » #V,-U MEN'S SIZES BOYS’ SIZES 6®®I5 50 HERE'S WHY • W* mII for cash only! vnii cAWK • T***™ "•> YOU SAYS ^ AT ROBERT HAll • You tovt bocouw w» (oval Plenty of Free Parking \/ Open Sundays 12 Noon to 6 P.M. IN PONTIAC, 200 North Soginuw Street. IN CLARKSTON-' WATERFORD, on Dixie Highway NortiT of Woterford Hill V" ■ "Through modern d .0 ii e e and niuele. It showed the rebellion and chaos," says Constance Harrow, 17, of Monroe, Mleh., explaining why she disliked the show. Other teen-agers thought the movie was a good portrayal of the life on the west side of New York and Ihpt It clearly showed the race prohlem In the area. Young iieople who do feel that IumhIh exert a fasidnatlon over either their friends or themselves, point out tlie excilemonl, nonconformity inul wildness of the Juvenile delinquents as reasons for tlieir appeal. FEELING OF POWER Clirlst iiostrow, I>1 of Mlm nen|M)Us, Mliui., says. "It seems to give some feeling of power to do something Wrong." "The idea of rebellion against society is always fas- lerii it lakes," ai llellmaii. 17, of Monterey Park, Calif. Kenneth Elam, 17, of Pen-nsuaken, N.J., wouldn't want to l>e a IuxhI, but admits be would llko "to do something exciting, perhnps dangerous.” What makes a luHHilum? Most of the teeiis realise it goes he-noutli tlie surface of a fancy haircut, black leather jacket and flashy liot rod. According to Stephen Bam- Icle, 16, of Worchester,, Mass;, a hood is "someond who enjoys hurting people and loves to steal and fight in gangs to show h(>w 'big' he is, tiut If alone. Is afraid of his sliadow." Sandra llesman, 16, of Pauline, Neh., defines a leen-age delinquent as a "restless, undecided |mrson wlio can't seem to stay out of troulile," And Irene Friedrich, 15, of Motchen, N. J., |M)ints out that tlie young hooillum maj^have had “an unhappy home life, and has turned to crime." NEW FULLY ELECTRIC American Made TYPEWRITER *198" and your old typewriter plus toxus OFFICE MACHINES DEPT. Gassral Printing A Offlaa Supply 17 W. Lawrtne* St, Ponf-idc FE 2>0135 / 1 Men! Join the Crowds! Come to BtirnelCs Now! We Believe IPs the Biggest Money-Saving Sale Ever Staged In Pontiac! BARNETT’S Pontiac's Oldest Men's Clothing Store LOCATED AT 150 N. SAGINAW (NEXT DOOR TO SEARS) THE REASON! OUR NEW PLANS DEMAND WE RAISE $75,000 Immadiotalyl Wa mut» kav« tha coih to cotnplala that daal and wn know^Uta only w6y wa con roUa IhoT kind of monay fall li by pracllcolly glvlno away our mar-chondlia at unhaard of prtcoi. Il'i your goldon opportunity to buy your naw aprlng clolhaa for a aong. OPEN NIGHTS! We’re Open Thursday, Friday and Monday Nights Til 9 P.M. MUST RAISE CASH!! MUST SELL ^75,000 OF OUR HUGE STOCK AT THE MOST DRASTIC AND SUBSTANTIAL PRICE REDUCTIONS OF OUR ENTIRE BUSINESS CAREER! THESE PRICES ON SALE ON SALE THURSDAY M0RNIN6 PROMPTLY at 8:301 Year-Round Suite.. INaiUDING ALL WOOL SHARKSKINS Up to ’54.15 SUITS ... *41.89 Up to ’58.75 SUITS .. .*45.89 Up to ’68.T5 SUITS ...*53.89 Up to ’79.95 SUITS .. .*83.89 Extra, pants availfdde for many suits at greAitly reduced prices! Two-Pant Suite HARD FINISH YEAR-ROUND WEIGHTS ’89" Two-Pant SUITS... *5|.*® ’74" Two-Pant SUITS.. .*57*® ’79" Two-Pant.SUITS.. .*66*® *89" Two-Pant SUITS... *71*® WaNt and cuff alterations fr««i! Other alterations at cost! Fine Wool Topcoate Up to’49.75 COATS .. *33.89 Up to ’59.75 COATS .. *39.89 Up to ’99.75 COATS .. *47.89 Up to *75.00 COATS .. *57.89 Nqw^s a good time to new co«#/Four entire wardrobe at terrific savings! ...........................L-. ONE BIG GROUP HAGGAR AND SAXONY Permanent Crease »I2*’Slacks You'll lui/e to come fast for these. At this low price they'll go quick. A terrific valuel #998 ONE GROUP ALL WOOL $55.00 Sharkskin Suite These year-'round suits will be on sale early Thursday morning — get here early for best selection! 98 ONE BIO GROUP ZIP-LINED All Weather COATS Values to $40 98 Thit wonderful buy will go to the early bargain hunlerr. first come, first .served. We cannot guor-ontee how long they'll lostl *23’ Read Every item! Don't Mi^These Great Buys! You Save Plenty! SS WELDON BROADCLOTH PJ’s.......... $39.75 MEN’S SUMMER SUITS ......... S49.75 MEN'S summer SUITS......... sets lONO SLEEVE FAMOUS BRAND SPORT SHIRTS............ $098 $2489 $3489 $298 $16.95 and $19.95 CARDIGAN ftAWfi Famous Brand SWEATERS.. ^9 SE.9S WASHABLE tiWQA SLEEVELESS SWEATERS... ^4®* WOOL SPORT COATS Up to’29" COATS.. *18*® Up to’34" COATS.....*24®* Up to ’39" COATS .... .*27®* One Lot Summer Weight WEAN ------- eMOR HAGGAR SLACKS......... ^6 ” $S9.tB MEN'S $4499 *54** $49* SIM NEVr PATTERN S41R WEMBLTTIES.....i,,....’l $TS FAMOUS KNIT-TEX TOPCOATS..... ,’5T" OPEN NIGHTS! Open Thursday and Friday and Monday Nights 'Tit 9 PM. Haggar Slacks Opto’10 PARTS.... *6®* Up to’13 PARTS...... *9®* Op to *18 PARTS..*13®* ’8" Walk Shorts...... ^4®® SUMMER SUITS... $69.75 MEN’S SUMMER SUITS, u. $6.95 FULL FASHION S.S. BANLON SHIRTS.. I $28.15 .WINTER $1098 SUBURBAN COATS.......... $6.95 JERSEY $498 KNIT SHIRTSt.............™ $12.95 PULL-OVER $468 Famoua Brand SWEATERS.. ^0 $14.78 SIZES 40 to 46 WP* Famous Brand RAINCOATS... Because We Must Raise Cash-All Sales Cash! No Charges! All Sales Final! Mo Refunds! No Exchanges! Lay-Aways 30 Days Onlyf \ ' /.<(. V; f GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD :‘y;' C-' ' 1 OPEN DAILY 10 fo 10 *rJ[K rON^I^lAC rilKHS. WKDNIASDAY, MAHCH 11)01. ^ THtlRS.. FRK, $AT. mcir'T t Bright Steppers for Easter Sundayl SQUARE THROATED PATENT PUMPS! Easter DUcount Special t A16 Charge It The “fluid” look for EnHior! Now Rqiiaro-throuted piimpH with preRRod loplinoH thut give you ii glovc-fiko fit without Htittdics on the Vamp! Chooee high or mid heels in this year’s great new neutral, hone ... or doi^sding white vinyl patent that wipes to a high gloss with a damp cloth. Bcaiitifurin black patent leather, tool 6 to 10. ^ •> s ^ • ............................ Teens Head Up the Parade with... T-STRAP FLATS FOR EASTER! Easter Discount Sale! The perfect final touch to her Easter finery! Stacked heel flats a step ahead of the rest^ of the shoe parade with needle toes and T-straps! Choose hers in jet black cabretta leather, white glove leather or high*gloss white vinyl patent that **poli8hes” with a damp cloth! Sizes 4 to 10. Charge everything for Easter at K-mart! \\WA-.W.W.V-V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.%V.%V.V.V.%%V.V.".V%V.*.W.V.V.VAV. Bonny and Bright for Easter MornI T-STRAP PUTS Big girl Btyling! Tapered toe flats with Arm hard countersr. “Wipe ’n shine” black or white patent vinyl. Siaes 8Va-12D, 12%-3(1. It’s Easter r K-mart! MARY JANES Cute atrapa with>cutHiut vampa accented with but-tona . . . aparkling black and dazzling white patent a vinyl. Sizea 3 to 8D. Buy everything for EAater at K-martI MEN'S MOC SLIP-ON Dapper atyling for dad! Long and alender moccaain alipKtn leather, Titekote treated to re-aist Bcnffs! Rubber aole, heel. 7-12C, M2D. 7.86 BOYS' DRESS MOCS Top-quality leather shoes have injection molded soles with no nails or stitches to wear out . . . guaranteed to outwear uppers! Dress black. iVst to 6D. ^ Savel , 4.86 JR. BOYS' OXFORD Injection molded eoles and- Titekote, acuff-resistantleather uppers make this 4-eyelet blucher oxford a boys’ favorite! Soles oqtwcar uppers! Black, 9 to 3D. 4.76 Ji > ■ - !7if ^Charge It” at K-mart — Make only small monthly payment ‘t: -V 1 I;, >' -« -/'J '',. ’' HI B^S 1/ • -V r, I'iV'' )^: '■":'» ■■1 ■»'■' I i,;i \ '<1- i \ 't»! THK? PONTUC WBDNBaPAfV AtARCH #fl. 1004 I'tf ■viiiV^ ■ U Thant Appoints Finn Diplomat os Cyprus Dispute Mediator OBNRVA AP) *- U.l4. 8MTIH UiryoGaMTil U Tluint tMiay »P-polntod former Prtmler Saktrl 0 Tuomlola of FlnUnd at modi* Ktor In Uw (^pnit dlsputo. Tuunioja, U, politician and dtpknnat, uid ho would taka up hit work in the tlrlfe-tom eaat M^ltorranMn itland by the middle of next week. Ilia appointment waa approved Tueaday by Greece, Turkey, Britain and the laland'a two feuding communHIea. Tuomioja, who hat been Fln-land’a ambaaaador io Sweden. Bald he would go to Stockholm later today to clear up hit af-falra there and would fly td New York Sunday lOr further conwl-tatkma with Thant. Tuomioja deacrlbed hla mla-alon»to try to bring a permanent pewse between the feuding while tlie mediator aeeka a pe^ manent acbord. Thant needed the aaaent of the Greek and Turkiah Cypriote aa well as Britain, Greece and Turkey, coguarantora of Cyprua* I960 Independence from Britain, before naming Tuomioja mediator. munltles-as “a thrilling chol-lengo." He stressed that he was aware of the great difficulties. He aald the Finnish government had given him a six months leave of absence, btit "nobody can tell how long It will take." The mediator's mandate from the Security Council Is for only three months, but It undoubtedly would be extended If factions and nations Involved desired It. With Tuomloja’s appointment, the UnlUid Nations was almost ready to begin Its two-fold task of enforcing a peace between the Greek and Turkish Cypriots and trying to mediate their bloody conununal dispute. Lt. Gen. Prem Singh Gyanl, Indian commander of the U.N. peacekeeping f ish governments advised lliant Tuesday that tliey approved TU* omldja, who Is serving as Finnish ambassadur to Swedm. The Cyprus post will be Tuo-I’s third U.N. mloJa'_ _______ The late SecretaryGeneral Dag Hammerskjold sent him to Ueos In 1959 on an economic mission, He also spent three years ai ecutlve secretary of the < U.N. Economic Conunlsslon tor- Ku* There was no indication how the Finn would attempt to brtaig the rival sides together, They ait deadlocked over Makarloe' desire to amend the Cyprus constitution to remove the veto pom> er wWch the Turkish minority bps over major legislation. About 4,910 troops now available on Cyprus for U.N. duty. They include M enforce a cease-fife since Uto Chrlstmat-tlme fighting. WW W Ireland notified the United Na-Uona Tuesday It will send a 900- ______ ,lMCanadb ana and 3,800 of the 7,000 British troops who have been trying to to Qrms about Irish Parlia April u'if the Irish't‘arllament approves. Finland and Sweden have inomised 700 men each. jr«t* n with aw twea/ui TBMICO* Pre-Vent* t practical The Temc» Pre-Vent Cat Wall Furnace li ao efficient it pay* for lt*aU—in com-fert, lately, and economy. 0 ModSm itrttns ntrhaautlf fully wUh any decori «o compact It oxtends only with IMS fuel consumption, o Essy Instaiistlon-no costly duct work or chimney 30^000 BTU $1T5 Par Instofietf -f I Waak / wi^fliidlcr Hoatiig Co. S4S0 Highlsad $4. w MHM l*a *f Ifiillae AIrpsrt / PONTIAC $oltt--OR 3^92 Easter Bonus! 675 Extra Stamps with Coupons la This Ad! %uqw Cursd Whole Smoked Hams Nlr'f Low Prlcffi 39 Peed Fetr'i Own Semi- Boneless i Hams J Wkel9 aSosUsa Mm Snt^ MnuS at. 100 Extra Stamps with Morroll E-Z-Cut Ham 100 Extra Stamps with Swift Canned Ham 100 Extra Stamps with West Virginia Ham WITH YOUR PURCHASIS AND COUPONS IILOWI SAVE TOTAL OP 30e! SpBelol Labtl HEAVY DUTY Butferball \ Closed Good Llyltfly Sahsd luMsr 4««« ox a Land O'Lakes..........i.Lb?c!«.69* pyi^(iyma^J2 tO 3 Reynolds Wrap #»* Ketchup with Coupon lelew 2B-Ft. end $3.00 Purchase Rail With Coupon Below and $3 Piirchaie SAVE lie on 5 Pkgt.! Fruit-Flovorad Galatin Jell-0 Desserts Hills or Chase & Sanborn Coffee ... • s«va ua «ai a-u. c«a Swans Down Cake Mixes .. $«* zu MiPhft.it KMp.it-oa. phf. Pel Monte Pumpkin ................. «ci erMt Per Town Pride Cronberry Sauce ... • -ifM la m twa-i«-oi. c« Dole Sliced Pineapple .. • •.. ^ ^ a eana-uvi-oa. can DeleTrepl-Kor.... • Mtmd Hawaltaa PinW inm 17cl 211 Caaa 3 Par Hawaiian Punch .......... ^r 17al SS-Oa. esau 3 Par Food Fair Soled Dressing .... ..... SMascieamt jw Diomond Largt-SIxe Walnuts........... •. $«m loai i-u*. u% Lady Linda Angel Feed Cake ............ - .s«y. *.i n-o. sm n«ffo ShorfMln, ; s 69':ketchup2 p„ 39'[wrap39*-JEUO ..6S39*; ,«iS;i.".rrcAH « 3S-.72- UqulM • Ltaih: Oaa C«a i.. plus tfi Crisco Shortening ” Spadel ^ Lb. TfC* ■ ^ binilti WRe J| ffiillBSli* 9 ^ ■ le ■ with this coupon ud t3 purchssc ■ With this coupon nnd S3 purchaM ■ a I. ■ excluding beer, wins a cigarettes. * exetudini b**r> wins * ciRaretteS. ■ I .|||y gXlTI -M StURB I a I. a valM thru - Saturday. March S8. * VaUd thni Saturday. March 3S. ■ i ■ a IJmlt; On* ^pon. J| Umlt: On* Goupon. . ■ t' - ' ■ eaaaaaaa a'aaaaaaaaaaaBa.saaaaaaaBaBaaaaaaaaaiaaaaBa~^asaaaaaaaaa-aarBeBaaaaBaaiBauiBcuilBaaaa A Ik a excludBig Deer, wine * cigarette*, a excluding beer, wine a cigarettea. ---------------_ ............ _ ipaaei ^ UO. ■ valid thru . Saturdiw.. March 38. ■ Valid thru Saturday. March 38. a valid thru-Saturday. March 38. " VaUd Uini Saturday. Mat Label ^ Can #9 • Umlt: One Coupon. • Umlt: One Coupon. • )Jmlt; On* Coupon. J Umlt: On* Goupon. . ■ Though PatuMav. March lOOEMrastHSTAMPS With This Coupon and *10 Purchcise or Mora a a a a a a BJi a a.B a a alaiBB BaaafaaaBB a With this coupon and purchai* of a With thla coupon and purchaM of a with thi* coupon and purehaM of a With thla coupon and purehaM of ■ WlUi thia coupon and purchMe of ■ With thi* coupon and purchas* of ! y Om or Moro ! > Om or Moro £ Oao or Moro Lb; Pkft. of , Ooo or Mot* ! . Om or Mbro {| ^ or Moro /a / TYNII, 3-11. a JONIS. I-LI. PXa. • HOMi STYLI ■ gWIPT, IO-LC a MOkklU I««UT a HYetADI WHY - ^ CANADIAN HAM 8 LfNR SAUSAfti a LINK SAliSAGI • CANNID HAM 8 WHOLI HAM 8 VIRaiNIA HAM i IlNbtn JWlliiiiiri /i IW Eiln Stiiwl j ( 25 Erin Slww I : I IN Edn Jx IImb ! | I IN Enin dx SfaMl : IKW Erin-dx llaro I j B Murtlay March • Through SgtunJay* March 38. ■ Through Saturday. Marcn 28 • Through Satuprlav. March 28. ■ Through Saturday. March 28. ■ Through Saturday. March 28. - Sat.. March 28^ Lin ■_____* __________...MB* .M&MBii.. a. * - « - - - - - - _____________"L .i___ --Id/_____________________________________-__________f so Extra UK STAMPS Wlfli This Coupon and ^5 Purchase Moio IBaBBBO.jOBBBB' nnnnnaa#inab»nMai|^‘i a a a onoanaOiBBnaaaaBaaaaBaaaaaaBaBeBaaaBaao/SBaaay^OB-aaaoBaaaBapB' MlRACli MILE SHOPPING CENTER ~ TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAkE ROAD i i > ' . ' ' J' '4 ' I ^ , _ / • 11 . i, i, ii- ‘\ii ,i,i i, a • I - I rf: i: /-x ',1- ; J ’/ 4 '.// I / ""'Ll?; 1 'If'" 'a; ' ii i V A Rttd Dtf«ni# Minister ♦o Vlil# ioit 0«rmany BKrtUN (AP) - m Soviet (loronw) ifitnlitor, Mirfehal Rodion Mollnoviky, will lojad a Sih ylet military dalagatlon on ii vlalt to East Germany shortly, the official Bast German news agency, ADN, announced today. ADN said the delegation was ( omlng at the Invitation of tite Bast Oerman Communist party lull did not give the exact dale of the visit. YOU'RE A DIFFERENT MAN^ -IN A HARWOOD OUirOM-TMLOgn SUIT L FEEL BEHERI YOUIL LOOK BmriRi WHEN YOUR SUIT IS STYLED AND TAILORED JUST FOR YOU! SAHOOIPH ^ Haruiooii *MTIS IIX" DMttl tWT SSSrSU 908 W. HURON AT TELEGRAPH-PONTIAC Gem Rob|]ery Trial Stalled as Suspect Jumps Bond TIIK I’ONTIAC /'I H I) grand rapids (AP)-A - fendant's Jumping of 120,000 Iwnd Tuesday forestalled a Jewel rpbltery trial with a hliarre background. lliree men, an alleged mu^ der plot and a long string of crimes also are Involved, police BImey T. (Chick) Havey, 42. New Yorker with an office In Kalamazoo failed to apixiar for trial Tuesday in a $10,000 Jewel ry store robbery here In 1069. A fugitive warrant was issued by Superior Court Jpdge Claude VanderPloeg. The court also ordered Havey'a $20,000 bond forfeited. BUSINESS CllUXISS Havey, well known socially and vln business circles in Kalamazoo, and Kenneth R. Mid-ling. 37, of Kalamazoo are Charged with stealing $J0,000 in gems and $160 In cash fmm the h. B. Phillips Co. Both denied the charges. A store employee, Curtis Koontz, 93, was pistol-whipped In the course of the robtery. Police said Koontz identified Havey as his assailant. Assistant Kent County Prosecutor Joseph While said a prison convict has told of Is'lng offered $10,000 by Havey and Mld-llng to kill a man who implicated the pair In several crimes in the late 1950's, mostly robberies and burglaries. White named the convict as Virgil Miller, serving Btk-26 years In Southern Michigan State Prison for robbr^ry. He said Milter had been brought here from prison to testify In the Jewelry store robbery case. MARKED FOR DBaTH The man supposedly marked for death. White said, was Jack Moreland, about 38, of Kelama-zoo. father of six children. White said Moreland, on probation for burglary, admitted he had taken part in robberies with Havey and MIdling and that all three participated In the Grand Kaptds robbery. Havey, originally a St. Iritis, Mo., resident, was said to be a graduate of Washington University in that city. Police said he was connet^led with night clubs In St. liOUls at one time. Both Mldllng and Moreland attemled Western Michigan University at Kalamazoo in younger years, police said. Attorney Bugepe Fields of Kalamazoo, counsel for Havey and Mldllng in the robbery case, said he had no Idea of Havey’s whereabouts. Judge VanderPloeg set May 12 as a tentative now trial date. Mldllng Is free on^^.OOO bond. His bond was continued. 25-Day Semesters Keep Sailors Busy PEARL HARBOR (A ~ Radar picket patrol In the North Pacific 1b a lonely duty, but sailors aboard the Pearl Harbor-based USS Newell put their long hours to good use. On the Newell, 40 per cent of the 149-man crew take college and high school courses through the U.S. Armed Forces Institute Overseas Branch. Some already have earned credits toward bachelor’s degrees. Semesters run during each 2.')*day picket patrol and arp discontinued when the ship returns to port. It takes two or three patrols to complete most courses. The first coin operated dial Udephone was installed In New York In 1927. 'Got Cancer From Virus in Chicken' PALM BEACH SHORES, Fla. (UPI) — A woman cancer act-entlst believes chicken cancer viruses sol off the cancerous process lii her txKly. Professor Olive Still....Davis preswitly Is having a recurrence of a cancer that erupUsI In her iKxly years ago while she waa working with viruses which cause «*aticer In chickens. Dr. Davis’ research In cancer and contraction of the dls- writers’ seminar of the American ('ancor Society here. If her hy|M)ttieHes Is correct, Dr. Davis Is tfie first human being known to have acquired a cancer which had been believed limited to birds and the first human being known to have contracted cancer from viruses. Dr. Davis now Is In a five-year experiment with chicken viruses designed to prove or disprove the hypotheses conclusively. COBALT TREATMENT As for her present recurrence of the cancer. Dr. Davis soon will undergo cobalt irradiation treatment. Similar treatment produced a complete remission of the cancerous eruptions in her lympli system when they first occurred. Dr. Davis emphasized that there Is no reason to fear chick- ens and their eggs, cither for handling or for eating. Lansing Man filled LANSING (AP) - Albert Seger, 55, of Lansing was killed Tuesday when his oar crashed Into a guard rail on a Lansing street and rolled over. Police said he missed a curve while speeding. Anew be.ef-chimk dog food that smells as goodand There’s nothing like MEDIUM RARE on the market. It actually looks as good, smells as good and tastes as good as people food. As it should. MEDIUM RARE is nothing but beef chunks, fifteen juicy .ounces of beautiful, well-marbled chqnkE of radiant-broiled beef. Just made for dogs to love, ftlade to inake yoiiitdog gladhe’s alive. 1*^^ '' MEDIUM RARE is worth its weight in sirloin to a dog who’s dying to get his teeth into beef that’s really worth biting. New MEDIUM RARE for dogs. Pick up a can at your favorite fpod store. Feed it tp pooch. And watch him verify everything we’ve said, l^t ijreally is that good. i ii This Gas Station Is Fully Automated CALVERT CITY, Ky, (AP)-One of the few fully uutomat«en to write to hta congressman to aiiptmrt 'Buy American' legislation" rWiii W«rr,h l4 *,1(1 ),t, IM4 ■Mj I ' Fleischmann^ Margarine Lowest in Saturated Fat of the natiords leading margarines Because ft’s made from 100% gojiden com oil, not a mixture of oils, delicious Fleischmann s Margarine is lowest in saturated fat of the nation's leading margarines. Delicious Fleisch-maim’s Marg^^e is ideal for low saturated fat diets that many doctors recommend. Scientific research indicates liquid com oil such as used in Fleischmann’s Margt^ne helps reduce the saturated fat content of the diet Ask your doctor how delicious Fleischmann’s Com Oil Marg^ne can help reduce the saturated fat content of your family's diet Fleischmann’s also comes Unsalted. It’s ideal for low-sodium diets. Look for it in the frozen food section. w <■’ r"'I ? 1'^ '"{i 'I- "'I ' Li- '■ *' ' ” ' * " ' ' p I/,- ^*- ■^'^ 1,10 T ^ ,1 : _ . Pnir.Sfi. :WMnT«-TCHTlA'V \/rA#ir»J^Aj«ii in/iA rtMrv* lh» right to quanlltiti. Pricti and I •((•ctlva of Kragar In ill and laitarn Mlchl-_... thru Saturday, March 3a, 1964. Nona lald lo doatart. Copyright 1964 Thf Krogar Conipany. Moit affacllva In Pontiac oroo through Tuoi., March 31. Thrifty Beef Sale! SIRIOIN or RIB STEAK 69< ROUND or T-BONE STEAK. ..... 79.1 CUBE or PORTERNOUSE STEAK 89.1 Pot Roast Cut CHUCK ROAST PORK CHOPS 59* center cut rib WhoUorHalf (' SLAB BACON........35.1 H^radc'a tea BOLOGNA.... 39. Lean, Meaty SPARE RIBS.............39.1 Home Mad* P0RKSAUSACE...4'^>^1°° Hygrade's Sliced—5 Varletiea LUNCHEON MEAT.. . .49. SAVE f-WHOU KENNEL OK CREAM STYLE eRBEN eiANT CORN .... 4 OREEN OIANT NIBLETS CORN »«< < ..... 4 TASTY SWEET GREEN GIANT PEAS ....4 SA^ 1THCITCHEN SLICED GREEN GIANT GRfEN BEANS 4 4* OFF-SPECIAL LABEL PIUSBURY FLOUR .. ^.. 5 OCEAN SPRAY-JEIUED OR WHOLE i CRANBERRY SAUCE... .2 HOMESTEAD MARGARINE. 5i SAVE T7*-RED OR YELLOW HAWAIIAN PUNCH EetkfPUu(tt HYDRANGEAS • TULIPS or EASTER LILIES. I • • • • • •} -CRISP ICEBERG.^. HEAD IJTTUCE We carry a complete and wide variety' of your favorite Kroger lew-pHiHId Editer pldiitt guaranteed to please your wife, mothet, sweetheart/family or favorite friend. YOUR CHOICE EACH U.S. NO. T MAINE POTATOES GIANT SIZE CHEER4^^. ...64‘^^2S^9H ^ / MORTON'S FROZEN EACH ITS CNJIlTB).STRONO KAISER aluminum HOUSEHOLD FOIL ^^29" MORTON'S FROZEN CLOVERLEAF ROLLS...........fko. of34 39« SWEET HAWAIIAN-FRESH PINEAPPLE — NEW DETERGENT SUPER SUDS.........................2 14-ox. PROS. 49* MADE BY SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERS .......i4ox.pko.29* UVER FLAVOR ALPO DOG FOOD...................... v uvi-oz. can 31 * ii Y HACn . , \ MADE iY INDEFENDENT-DARI'S. AAARK) OLIVES *paaa«<4aa.a,^S.bKtTL49* BEST O' BIC AiSORTMPfT , •( ' a - , J . k . CHUNK STYLf ^ .. HO. 49* CHICKEN OF the sea tuna .. 3 *»4)z. cans 89* REMOVES STAINS ^ DUTCH CLEANSER . ASSORTED COLORS i < WRISIEY SOAP... A.'lr''','. 11 ,.i ., 2 14-ox.Uans 33f _ • .1-1 . P . * . PKO. OF 4 39* I.' I . y. 'K'*r '1- ' I,' '"l TitK roNTiAc rnKAg, Iwemnusda y, m arc^u m. ' I ■ ' ■ I 'l: '■' KMU , ,1\ II ' K »l i* ; I., '*'1 ' I ' ‘ 'L 1 S .“H. TOP VALUE STAMP RaNESMY thni MTURMY, UKR 2S thru 28, with nupm at ri{ht doublI' N top VA1.UI STAMPS! ■ WmiSDAY THRU SATURRAY ^ ■ ■ MARCH 2S THRU MARCH 2A " ■ Coupon valid at Kro|ar In Datroit and laat* aan Michlfan ihfu Sflurday, Marali 21. ■ mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm" SAVE 10« -UOHTIY SALTED Land O'Laker BUTTER SAVE 20*-BORDEN'S RICH WHIPPING CREAM.. BORDEN'S TASTY PURE SOUR CREAM ?•>:... SAVE U)^ BORDEN'S GOLDIM YNTillP Franklin DRY ROASTED PEANUTS 8-oz. Jar UR. L vllamlni A anal 0. CTN. KROGER CACKLIN' FRESH IUKES WITH COUPON BELOW A *3 PURCHA3I SAVE 6* PACKER'S LABEL FROZEN ; STRAWBERRIES 4.89 SAVE v; 30* 12 FLAVORS BORDEN'S ICE CREAM lO 'GRADE'A' ALl WHITE LARGE EGGS Country Club ICE CREAM '/2 Gat. |C DOZEN 50 T.V. STAMPS WITH COUPON AT RIGHT uv I.T, uIr>mr» Tvim wurwrw «j Rivjim BORDEN'S EGG NOG 59' KROGER FRESH BAKED DINNER ROILS »va > J5< KROGER SLICED CRACKED WHEAT OR WHEAT BREAD.2-35' KROGER BRAND MAYONNAISE n.45' OSAGE BRAND Freestone PEACHES-25r MUSSELMAN BRAND APPIES AUCE.sAy!.. .4 - H SAVE ^-CHUNK, CRUSHED OR TIDBIT , DOLE PINEAPPLE 4-89' NO IIMITI NO COUPONS NECESSARYI BUY All YOU NEEDl Kro9ar GELATIN DESSERT 3-oz. Pkg. 6-SI SAVE 23* VERNOR'Sl GINGER ALE || 25 EXTRA VAUJI STAMPS I R ■ WITH THIS COUnON AND MJKHASI ■ WITH THIS COUPON AND PUtCHASI " OP JOHN^ LIQUID I |l WHITE SHOE POLISH { ■ I Caupan valid «l Kivgar In Dalrail ■ * I and lanlam Mkhignn thru t«lu^ I I dny,MnKhM, IfM. V | Ht------------------------ 6 I 50 EXTRA VMUI STAMPS! I WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASI | I OP QUART ■ BORDEN'S 100 NOO I I Cau|tan valid dl Kragar In Oatiall ■ tand laitam Mkhioan ihruf Salur* * ^ March at, 1964: . W | !4BIS ' SAVE 20‘~SPECIAL LABEL-HEAVY DUTY FOIL WITH COUPON BELOW A *5 PURCHASE REYNOLDS WRAP v-49' FROSTED ^^W^FOODS PEAS • CORN • GREEN BEANS SPINACH • MIXG VEGETABLES SAVE! to* I VECETABLES IN BUTTER SAUCE LIMA BEANS OR BROCCOLI 89 I SAVES? OVER COMPARABLE BRANpS SPOTUCHT COFFEE $1 I 50 EXTRA VALUE STAMPS I I With this coupon and purchasi i ” OP OOIMN SNO OR ■ I NROGEH UYiIT'cAKI ! I Cau|Ma valid at Kragar In Datrail ^ | I and Raatom Mkhlgon thru iatw^ Am ■ at___________■ VP I 50 EXTRA VALUE STAMPS I I with this COUPON AND PURCHASE | I EASTER CANDY I Cou|Mn valid at Kragar In Dalralt ■ day, March ai, 1964. Oi . WITH THIS COUPON AND | I $5 PURCHASE OR MORI J ” UOHTIY SALTED • I LAND 0' LAKES; BUTTER I GOLDEN RIPE ICawgaii valW at ktagar~In Datrail and " Iditam Mkhlgan Ihni Saturday, March R VALUABLE COUPON 'I VALUABLE COUPON tnUng your lha b«an. t 1 WITH THIS COUPON AND | $5 PURCHASE OR MORE " Sciantifically ripanad in aur 9wn ripanine roams ta oring you toll, maliaw*ripo awaafnatt ond flavor. WITH COUPON AT RIGHT & *5 PURCHASE VERNOR'S GINGER AI I B a4-OZ. RTLS. T5‘ * Caupan valid at Kragar in Datrail I latlarn Mkhlgon thru Saturday, Mi " as, 1964. limit an# coup6n par family. -----------------------aH IB. RADISHES tu> YOUR CHOICE GREEK ONIONS BUNCH 81 FRISH PARSLEY BUNCH I GREEN CABBAGE I. ^ WITH THIS COUPON & $5 PURCHASE-BORDEN'S ELSIE I ICE CREAM BARS IjaWMv^^ ^Ml^a^a^kMtaa Ibra Satorday, March 28, m^lioill tM laayaa ya' laatHy- _ WITH THIS COUPON AND ■ flAYWARE m I $5 PURCHASI OR MORI | Ragobrpifca. . $1.49 ” I SPOTLIGHT COFFEE | - \ I 3lb. BAoSI.49 ! WWilNs«gpae .99 I a bf t fa a la j I CoupoH vnUil «t KiMor III DotfoU end ■ I Caupan vaM ot K^ In Datraif and ■ Saturday, March I Eaitam Michigan thru Saturday, March I aa loai ' ~ aa laaa ii-i.__I___________ii.. ■ '’*^* 1^8, 1964. limit ana caiipion par family MAKIS CLOTHES ClEANIR FOR ALLERGIES OR HAYFIVIR CALGON WATER SOFTENER. 4o:oz. pkg 75* ALLEREST TABLETS ........ btl. op a4 $1.25 POLYUNSATURATED CRISCO ........................ 1-iB. CAN 35* CUTS GREASE FAST LITTLE BO PEEP AMMONIA------ btl 25* PRE-SinED ROBINHOOD FLOUR.............s ib bag 53* THE GOLDEN SHORTENING FLUFFO.........................3.14 CAN 74* ( V . POR PLOORS I WALLS IMAHN'S MARGARINE. I IB. CTN. 42* [ SPIC & SPAN .. THE fORTIPlEO DITERGENT-8’ OPP LABItr V . i-U. PKG. 29* SALVO DlTERGlNTvJARlETS . //' • I itJ'" /'A!^ ■ . a/‘, / . i .OIANT PKO. 65* •/v"' WS i' Tif-r," M ' . A ’ A rf' '' ' ^ 'S'!'!-* I'i ,\v u I'Eih: TIlKi FONTlAr ,■ ^ _ I \ ■ ' 1.... Tories Dismiss Labor's Calls to Resign '■i I'HKSS, iisnAy, MAKcn sa, jo«’« ' i :H,.yvT T.I LONDON (ffl P. BrIUln'a Con-•orvaUva fovarnmimt rajaetad dainanda for Ita raaiipuiUon laat nl({ht afiar a raballion Jn Uia rul-Inn party'a own ranks brought It within one vote of defealt on ita bill to aboliah price-fixing. Wilh acoraa of Conservative metnNra of tfie House of Com-inona olMtalnlng to show tliolr disapproval, the government squeaked by 2M-20S to put down a IJiborlta attempt to weaken the highly controversial government bill. More than 20 Conservatives votep-keaiiers. Thaao nuirchanta aoe aupor-marketa and other large chains driving them out of business once prices are free to fluctuate competitively. OFFSET However, ihe goveniment ex-pocls to offset loss of shopkeepers' votes by increased su|iport from oonsumers, wlio will liene. fit (lYtm lb# ubollllon of fixed IH'Ices on (werythlng from auto-mobltes niid television sets to children’s toys and cigarettes. The (kslservatlvos have a majority of 85 votes over all other parlies hi the 830-seat House of Commons, On a divisive issue, the Coti-sei'vatlves (isually register 8080 votes more limn the opposition, depending on attendonce. 1 KllUdi 5 OvtrcoRui b/ Escaping Ammonia HOU.STDH, Tex. AP) tiaa eNl aplpg at a broken connection In on ninmonia line killed , one man and overcame five otiters Tuesday (tt the Blue Itlbbcai I’licking Co, Cordell McGee, 30, died before flrenlen wearing gas masks .could carry him and a second Wkbr from the loading area where the acutldent happened, ’The ammonia is used as a re-frlgeranl at the plant and In the firm's trucks. Cathcjltc Bishop Dki BBLORADIS. (AP)-Dr.iJoilp UJcIo.'m, Roman Catholic archbishop of Belgrade and nrealdent of the Tto-man Catholic Hialiiips (kmftr-enco of Yugoslavia, died Tuesday after auffuring with a heart ailment tor some tlmq. IJNlTilD SIIIIIT DISTRIBUTORS T*l-liHMN HImpiiIar Onlrr I JUNK CARS ■ ! WANTED I USED AITO PAIR I FDI SALE I FE 2-0200 laBaaaiaipiBMPONTiac ici^ap!■■■■■■■■■■■ BARGAINS 1 WE’SE ALL SET FOR A GREAT SHOW OF VALUES SHOP SAVE : FLbMl tbOLS COLTIVATOK STURDY HOC RABBIT-EAR HOC SgUARC-FOINT SHOVEL bow ; RAKE . \ ROUND-POINT SHOVEL: 0* OSTER ELECTRIC CAN OPENER Now . . , open cans quickly, eaiily, tqfaiyl Magnetic arm lifts lid out of the PRE-EMERGENCE CRAB GRASS KILLER 3^^ way, automatically. Rmqvable cutting wheel for easy cleaning. Smartly styled . a perfect gift! OSTER Quief-Acfion HAIR DRYER The "profiiiional" touch for smart hair cart. So quiet you con talk on thq phone, wafeh TV. Fast-operating . . , saves time. Lightw weight, With carrying strap for extra activity • •. such as ironing ... whila drying hair. Covers 2000 Sq.Ft. BROADLEAF WEED DANDELION KILLER |OB Covers 6000 Sq. Ft. LAZY BQY 10-6-4 FERTILIZER |50 50 LB. BAG Single bag. lot prices slightly higher. OSTER ELECTRIC KNIFE SHARPENER Gives factory-sharp edges to scissors and knives, with no skill requited. Special guides assuni perfect results. Special clutch action pravents damage of blode. Mount on wall or usq on eouniar. OSTER STEAM anil DRY IRON Enjoy easier, fmoother, faster ironing with . more perfect results! Fabric ^iol Offers cor-^rect heat choice... even for wash and wear. Stbinless steel water tank prevents rust. Iroh . heqtk irt 30 seconds. ' OPEN MON. and FRl. 9:3016 0:00 Tues.y)iyed.,Tliurs. Sat. 'til 9:30 to 6:30 GLOSED EASTER SUNDAV TDAnE EAID merchandising I FMilIl CORPORATION KmVKi CORPORATION DISCOUNT CENTER-Phone 332-9137-1108 West Huron ' f V:- ■ f -Y ’ ' • '■ 1 U'U 'Vf /‘l- . 1V ■;. *! L'' 1 TllE t ;4 ,,ij V, X Rays Urged to Cut Cancer PONTIAC^ XniE8S, WICDNKHDAY. MAHCir y, 1004 Pariddlc Exams Aik«d for Womon Over 40 Flghtih^ fo Gef on Califorhia Ballot Salinger Charges 'Politics' in Eligibility Iss PAI^ BKIACH SHORES, Fla. (AI>)—Periodic X>ray exemtiui' tlonn of ill wonomi over to wore ursed today ■« the only meana of cutting tho grlevoua toll from breait cancer. Dr, Jacob Oerahon>pohen of the Albert Elnatein Medical Center, Philadelphia, made the picn In addreaalng the alxth unmial aomlnar for aclence writ-era aponaorod by the American Cancer Society. He aald that at present about 01) per cent of all breast cancers are first detected by the patients themaelvea, and Uiat at the time tliey ore spotted 60 per cent of tliem already have spread beyond the breast to the armpits. Thus, he said, available curative methods — such as surgery -are forfeited In approximately 50 per cent of all cases. ALTER SITUATION "It Is my belief," he sold, "that pcrlpdlc X-ray examinations of women over 40 years of age can alter this grievous situation.” Describing a survey of his own, he said that among some 1,150 women having breast X-ray exams at six-month Intervals, 31 cancers were discovered among 20 patients. In all Instances, the cancer-growths were very small, SAN FRANCISCO W1 - PL orre Salinger is wondering aloud whether partisan politics are re* sponsible for hia troubles In getting his name on the California primary ballot for U.8. Senator. A legal wrangle over Balln-ger's eligibility as a Democratic candidate was taken to court yesterday. |)ia attorneys asked the State Supreme, Court to order the state to place his name on the ballot. Secretary of State Frank M. Jordan, a Republican, forced by rejecting tbe former presidential press Bocretary’i candidacy. Jordan said there was no proof that Salinger was either a resident of (Jallfornla or u Democrat. T Just wonder," the cigar-chomping Salinger said, "If It Isn’t because of the Republican feeling that I would be the most difficult candidate to defeat In November. "I can’t understand why Jordan changed bis mind 48 hours after he said he thought I would qualify as a candidate," Salinger said. There was no Immediate reply from Jordan to Salinger’s statement. Jordan had been quot^ prior to Salinger’s filing for nomination, that he would place his name on the ballot. Salinger had not lived In California since 1055. He Is a registered voter in Virginia, Salinger’s pyre si aide, Andrew Hatcher, said U.8. Senate candidacy hinges on the federal constitution — not state law. "Wo feel ho Is qualified. Wo think Uio courts will uphold his eligibility oh tho basis of the U.S. Constitution,” Hatcher said. Hie Constitution requires that a caiulldate for the U.S. Sqnute be at least SO years old, a U.8. dllxen for nine years and a real- SPRING SCENE-lt looked like this yesterday in Running Springs, Calif., a mounloln resort town In the San Bernardino Mouittnlus alioul 78 miles from downtown I..0S Angcle.s, after 34 Inches of snow fell during a snow storm, 'rhe weatherman has delighted vacationing Easter Week ski enthusiasts by predicting more snow for the mountain areas. dent of the state on the day of the election. No sooner had Salinger’s motion been filed than a similar motion Was filed — In the opposite direction, Mark Morris, a certified Uem-. Qcratlc candidate for the party’s nomination, asked the court to order Jordan to keep Salinger’s name qff tho ballot. Morris said Salinger wasii't qualified to run. S Sr The other two DciiUK'rnts Salinger will face — if ho gets tils name on the ballot — are incumbent Son. Clair Engle mid State Controller Alan Cranston. Morris, 65, on Independent oil pnslucer and a rancher from Bakersfield, colled Salinger u "carpetbagger." Quentin Kopp, Salinger’s attorney, said Jordan rejected Salinger’s candidacy on the major claim tliat there was insufficient prRAU • Too wvJ'bocaoM wo oovol ENJOY SEALTEST HALF & HALF Richer than milk, lighter-^ than cream. Tastes so good so many ways. Perfect for |Coffee, cereals, fruits and desserts. Plenty of Free Parkingr Open Sundays 12 Noon to k P. M. in Pontiac, 200 North Soginaw Straat in Clarkstan-VVotorford on Dixie Hwy. North,Wotorford I f ■' •.-p:.j/A V,''/'■I;’’' ElM". •' ,'■! ^'A,”. ,yi,'^>\ mi* ^1:1' ^ ,;■'-■!’<■ V',' I ' .„ ■ XI* < '■ ' * 1 f ' '■ ' ' '• k Tirt poiir'fiAC! PHjBsg, wKDyjiaHAy, maiu ii 4«. iwu ; mum Formorb. C. Home Rol*®* li^ Dough from Swivel Chair Sold by Johnsons WASHINGTON (AT) - Prwil-ilent «nd Mn. Johneun have •^kl Uwir former Waahlnglim home. The Elma, to a Miami, FIa„ huainessman, the Washington Post reported today. , Vno newa^per said lAither B. Smith, a major atookholder in noma 3b corporatloiia largely In the aircraft Induatry, signed a Mlea contract arranged by t Ami American Security Corp, The l*oat aald the price wan nut dlNclmed hut It was under-atiaai that tlie property won In the 1300,000 bracket, Germany once IsHiicd i’oIuh of porcelain and papter-inaclio after World War 1. Roy Rogers Does His Riding on Exercising Machine By DAVE SMITH Written for Bob thumaN HOLLYWOOD (AP) ~ The Queen of the West w.aa at the hairdrt»aer’s, explained the king of the cowboya, Ihraahing wildr ly about on bis oxerciaing ma- With a flick of a awltch the thrashing stopped and the king of the cowtioys diHmuunted, On frlcks to sell to finance a ttiemorini at Stone Mountain Park to lionor the Contederate dead. A W ★ State Ally. Gen. Eugene C(M)k says Ibe sinie constitution forbids the stale to make even so small a donation, hut Sanders said yesterday Ihe UDC would gel the brick.s "If 1 have to pay for them out of my own pocket." 1)0 lonsli^n.", lie says, knottiKl Up, hard as rock right back herif"—ho givos himself a poke between the ahoulder-blades--^“iii)d the doc thinks that may be contracting the main artery to niy heart. TWKTC A DAY "So I ride this thing twice a day and Just lake it easier tlian I used to. I'vd been lucky so far—never bavo ^ad a heari at-tack-but If I trIAd to run from here to Ihe barn J'd keel over latforo I got 25 feel," Hy taking It easier, the 52-year - old Itogers means he makes his millions these days by firing phone calls from a swivel chair. But he’s atlH winning the West, by buying and selling big chunks of it in KJng Mldas-ty|)e real eslato deals., SEU^t SEtmON V I get all and various of tholr oiglit children and 10 grandchlldrrin. Only devoted family man could take it easy with that many kids whooping through tj)e house. He whisks you through- Ills game room, whera a whole «oo-full of stuffed animals testify that the erstwhile fastest shot In the West was no slouch on several African safaris, either. Then you hop in his small fo^ eign car for a brisk canter out his latest lovc—the new KR-Bor ranch In Hidden Valley. IliSMOTE 80LITUDE Rogers' new ranch is a place of rocks, live-oak, scrub brush Ills 138-acre RR-Bar ranch In Chatsworth, for Instance. He bought it nine years ago for $120,000 and sold 131 acres to a suMlvlder last year for $1.3 million |)lus part of the gross. "And I kept the seven Insst acres for myself," ho says. "Ih’ettv gowl, huh, tor n hick from buck Run, Ohior* Ills ranch hou.se office — ho calls It "The Boar's Nest”—Is filled with pictures of his wife and lending Indy, Dale Evans, iSAVE ONMDUR NEXT PURCHASE OF ANY KRAFT PRODUCT LISTED BEUCWl THE EXOmNQ NEW Wfi^TOSAVEJ To get one...Just mail in a label from a ^uart yaro/MiracleWhip Kraft will send you a coupon like this... Buy a jar of Miracle Whip—save money on your next Kraft purchase. What a wonderfully easy way to save! Just send in the front label from a quart (or 2 pints) of Miracle Whip with your name and addrem. Kraft will send you your Cash Couii^n good^n atiy of the ^e Kraft products listed here. Today treat your family to the famous flavor of Miracle Whip Salad Dressing and turn your next Kraft purchase into a bargain! Cup Yonr Kraft Cash Conpoa la good on anr of th<»8e flne Kraft prodnets: Kraft liiquid Dressinga Parkay Margarine Kraft Mayonnaise Kraft Sandwich Spread Kraft Oil ■ Miracle Whip and Holltudlo. Hora, lif tton-tonds, the daer and tha ahtelupe will play and never will be heard the niscouraging wopd of the Bubdlylders. Tlien he takes you down to a nearby paalura for a hwk at his flral love, It Isn’t Dale, fresh from the halrdyesaer's. It's Trigger, fresh from a balli, gleaming gold and white In the sun. The famed palOmIno turned 31 this month and is In excellent healtl). Rogers says. 'lYIgger Jr. who Is 21, Imndles occasional acting chorea iPr Rogers-Evans televlalon s|)«clalH. The original Trigger, retired from tho screen Just loafs around the RR-Bar on his laurels. Road Hog$ Turn Out to Bo tho Roal Thing aiI(]AGO (AP) - Ibiad hogs on the Dan Ryan Expressway are not unusual, hut this time they were genuine. Motorists slopped on their way home from work 'Diesdny to aid In the capture of five hogs escaiHHl from a truck. The (xirkers tied up traffic nwre than an hour. AAem Killad bv Car 1 MCK»ON (Apf- . JO*# “W Weiss, 78, of suburban Vander-1 •eiwriea. REDUCE NEWI'y EAT and LOSE UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAP8UIIDI BASIfR TO TAKf AND MORE EPFEC. TIV$ THAN TH« POWOEMD AND tlQUfe rOOD lUUPlIMBNT, AND COITI LESS IN« CIUDINO CAPSULES SUITED TO YOU INDIVIDUALLY BY Lie PHY8ICIAH, M.D. NO OA8TRITIS OR IRREOUlARITY WffH MEDIC-WAY CAPS. DON'T DIET-JUST BATI AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE. YOU CAN LOSE fl. 50 OR 100IM. AND KEEP IT pffl MEDIO-WAT 335-9205 r If you hayenFt yet discovered the instant coffee that refuses to give up flavor fpr convenience^ < .STOItiK <'0E;i*03r~V- pli«d with I __ _______________ Irvvoicra proving purohasas pi ' It Instant Hilli Broa. Coff# oovar coupona preaantpd lor Q raSemptloi) mutt bo ahown upon it jlr- I must admit that I enjoy the freedom from' these coffee breaks, and therefore hesitate to revive our friendship. However, pur children play together and ,I would'rather be on friendly terms with her. How can I accwnplish this wKhout getting back on those two-hour coffee breaks? PUZZLED -DEA-R PUZZLED: You can’t. Leave, well enough alone. You don’t know when you are well off. . man has entered my life. I am a churchwoman, but. Jf you will IcLmfr-explain, perhaps you will find some compassion for me. I think it was his eyes that first'breached my reserve. Always beautiful, they sometimes appear gray and turbulent, like mountain lakes whipped to anger by a passing storm. His hair, rivaling the beauty of his eyes, has the windblown freshness of the open field. His physique is as perfect as his smile is disarming. And when he looks into my eyes, as he did tonight, I- can see no end to this relationship. You see, Abby, he is my grandson, just one year old, and this j his fifst visit to our home.' Aren’t some ^women just plain— LUCKY? DEAR LUCKY: Yes,,and I was getting ready to reply, ‘ ‘ 11 will never work, forget him.”! going to TAKE a bath.” Who is right? FASSIO DEAR FASSIO: One, who bathes himself TAKES a' bath. If he is giveh a bath by someone else, he GETS a bath. Unless your friend is at an age where his mother is still bathing him, he is all wet. Detroit Hosts Local Alums 'The north suburban group of Chi omega Alumnae will be the guests of the Detroit group at an Eleusinian (Founders’ Day) Lunpheon April 4. CONFIDENTIAL TO BETSY AT LOCKHEED: I thjpk you are wise to wait. A man who j has been divorced three times is a very, very, very poor risk. Mrs. Edward Roth of Detroit will speak on the "Half Way House” at the 12:30 p.m. meeting in the Grosse Pointe Yacht Club. ,(jiet it off your chest. For a personal, unpublished reply,-write to ABBY, in care of The Pontiac Press. Enclose a stamped,: self-addressed enve-lopet DEAR ABBY: A s e c 0 n d DEAR ABBY: I have a friend who says, “I am going to GET a bath.” I keep telling him that he should say, “lam Legion Travels 45 Years From Paris to Pontiac By JEANMARIE ELKINS What will milady wear in the Easter parade of fashion in Pontiac? Local merchants are in- almost unanimous agreement that it will be a pastel colored suit. Forty-five years age the American Legion held its first meeting in Paris, France. On Saturday the Cook Nelson Unit No. 20 and its auxiliary celebrated with a dinner meeting at the Legion Post Home.-Lewis Jarrendt gave a resume of the unit’s history and Mrs. Homer Sisney, Americanism chairman, announced that the group presented American flags to scout groups at Eastover and Herrington schools. The 18th District meeting of posts and auxiliaries will be held April 10 with Cook Nelson Unit as host. Sue Ann Arrives ■ MARY LOU McGREGOR A daughter. Sue Ann, was born March 14 to and Mrs. Ray Clevenger at War Memorial Hospital in Sault Ste. Marie, Mrs. Clevenger is the former Francile Corbat, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Corbat - of Vinewood ..Street. Clevenger is a former securities and exchange commissioner of Michigan. \" According to Mrs. Bea Wheatley of Alvin’s; it’s going to be a “suity Easter.” She feels that the few days of warm weather we’ve had lately have encouraged women to buy more suits. Mrs, Sam Botza of Albert’s at Pontiac Mall thinks it is “a very good year for suits, far Ixjtter than in the past.” PASTELS She also commented on the pastel influence which ran to “blues, pinks and maize.” James Rosenthal of Arthur’s thinks this “is one of the best years for suits.” it ^ it -k Costumes with a jacket seem to be taking precedence over dresses and capes seem to be causing some slight controversy. While many merchants feel the “modified capes have gotten-great acceptance,” some like Mrs. Wheatley feel “they are not of as great importance as in the fashion magazines.” However she did state that the all-weather wear capes were selling “^uite. welll” Mrs. Botzaieels “capes have been, selling well for »w^ar instead of spring coats.” hml ’ upgrnded Ihc hIuIuh of all women in politics.” WOMEN VOLIINTEKIW In dIscusHing wiirk of women laditlcnl volunteers, Mrs. GO HOME! "If you plan to desert tlie party if the national convention doesn’t pick your favorite candidate, go home now!” Continuing lu;r Republican evangelism, Mrs^ Peterson at- ’ tacked the *ncgative approach of the Republican party,” President Lyndon B. Johnson, and the Democratic |>arty. Republicans “nccHl the will to win,” she declared, and' should “begin to talk |x).sitive-ly . . . or be satisfied with ' .s(>cond b(‘.st in the White lloUse.” .She comrnenU'd that this was “unihinkable.” But all was not fire and brimstone. Softer tones and a smile introduced ixitll the |m»s-sibility of her own candidacy for United Stal(!.s .Senate and •the work of Republican wom- Aft'or describing the ,progress of h(>r campaign, she stated during the coffee hour at 9:30 a.m. and again during her speech, that she will nounce her decision at 9 a m. Thursday in Lansing. ONE FOOT IN She commented that although she had “one foot in the bathtub” she hadn’t»“de-cided which way to slip.” Mrs. Peterson recently returned from a 10-day trip to California' where she toured the state, not only in preparation for the July. convention but also to check on women’s Organizations there. She felt that the announced presidentialnomination candidacy of Margaret Chase Sniith Get ttut Sunglasses! Easter Color Is Bright Peterson called tliem tlie “strength of the Republican party. . . women like the ones in Oakland (!ounty are ttm liackimne of the Republican orgnnizutlon,’' She considers “Oakland County women Important, not only numerically but because so many are so prominent and set an example” for the rest of the state, A ELLY PETERSON PEO Celebrate^ 10th Birthday Twenty seven meml|ers and gu(^st8 attJ, Wqger, Mrs. Paul Thams, Elda Sutter, Mrs. George Putnam and Mrs. Charles Matson. Mrs. Phyllis Dixon of San Diego, Calif, was a special gbest. Mrs. Peterson was Intro-duced by Mrs. Samuel Vettral-no, president Of tlie Bloomfield Republican Women’s Club” as “Mrs. Republican.” Among her titles are; director of women’s activities for the Republican party and vlce-cltairmail of tlie Rcpubll-ean state central committee. She has served as field service manager for Michigan and worked on the election of Gov. George Romney. COLONEL’S WIFE She is tht wife of U.S. Army Colonel W. Merritt Peterson, assigned to tlie Michigan Military Establishment^ They havetio children. ' 'I’uesday’s program at Cranbrook was directed by F Vernon M. Fitch, general chairman, and Eleanor Paton, program chairman. Other 'hairmen wore Mrs. David By The Emily Post Institute Q: Two weeks ago we had a business associate of my husliand and Ids wife to dinner at our house. Later tliat evening intimate f r I e n ds dropped in unexpectedly. They did not know the first couple, but they took to each other almost immediately and we spent a very pleasant evening. I Just heard that our friends invited the first couple to their house last Saturday night. I feel very hurt and think that since we were the ones to introduce them, it was discourteous of them not to have invifed us too. May I have your opinion? A: It would have been gracious of them to have Included you in the first invitation to the couple they met at your libuse. However, I would hardly say that they were discourteous In not having done so. Ayers, Mrs. Itobert Rugg, and Mrs. Edward F. Collins. Members of the state central committee were special hostesses. They were Mrs. Charles C'ampbell, Alice Scho* enholtz, Mrs. Allen Strom, county vice chairman, and Mrs. .loseph Mainline, president of the council of Republican Women’s clubs for Oakland County. Mrs. Peterson also spoke at a Tuesday afternoon tea sponsored by the Royal Oak Republican Women’s Club at the First PresbytAnah CKufcli, Royal Oak. Q: I will be married in early June. The 'minister who will perform the ceremony “ yes several states away. Must his transportation be taken care of, and if so, does the groom assume this ex-pease since M pays his fee, or does the bride’sjfamily? A: If being married l)y this minister is your wish, yOuj^ family should assume his traveling expenses. If the minister is the groom’s choice, he should pay his transportation as well as his fee. The Emily Post Institute cannot answer per^ional mail, but all questions of general Intefest are answered in this column. Mrs. Wheatley also m e n-tioned that there has been an interest in furs for about the past three weeks. : SHOES Pastel patent shoes seem also to have sparked controversy. Some feel that “colored patent is out.” * *, .P ■ William Wiss of Alvin's disagrees. To him ’’pink, blue and yellow patent’^ h^ been selling, very well and sales are “expected to be even better after Easter than before.” Also selling “very well” are black patent and white lightning (bone). Bob Weddle heads the recently opened shoe salon at Albert’s Pontiac Mall. As far as he is concerned, it is “a pastel season for shoes, especially with an early Easter.” Blue is the biggest seller here, with pink and yellow fojj lowing. “Black patent is dead” according to Weddle, who also states that “high heels are going down. The mid-heel js now number one.” OPENWORK '“Open sides and heels are being shown for spring and, will continue, even through the fall.’' Whatever Pontiac women wear in the fashion parade at Easter this y,ea:j‘; one thing, is certain. They are going to be more colorful than ever p from head to toe!‘F ' For sightseeing and bein^^en in is this handsome three-pieWall American wool suit by Goldworm. A born traveler, the four poclceted Chanel jacket, sparkled -wUh gold i buttons, is ^teamed with a sleeveless shell and slender skirt. In wliite with black trim or red with navy trim, it retails for about tlOO. J ■fi A r,, v,'’‘■;' ^'V"'''-:: ') ^'''>'-: j ''" ,",J7 r 7,V. /; I . T|TE PONTIAC imKSS. IWEDN^SDAY. MAiyU 2i, lOfll Paraffin Ppllsh Wb«n pollshinc damp «ho«i, «dd • uttle parafUn wax to tha ptrilah for a bettor ahln«. Tilt All Ntw Modern IMPERIAL ftAlXIN Hair Styling , at You tike HI 158 Auburn Are. PAKK ntlRR FK 4-2878 ‘ SPICIALI CmtcM Mode Slip Cevari Avertf# Oielr $27.95 Avertfe Sofa $46.95 FABItIC FAIR Children’s Latest FASHIONS RICHARDS .Pontiac Symphony Orchostra Local Artists Give Concert By A. MICHAEL DEMPSEY UhdAr the direction of Richard L. Morse, the Pontiac Symphony Orciiestra prewnt-ed a varied and colorful pro-gram Tuesday evening at Pontiac Northern High School. It was made more pleasurable by the apjienrunce of soloist Phyllis Smith Harris, Pontiac soprono. ' The program opened with the playing of l•’lnga^8 (^ave" Overture by Felix McndelsHohn. TIh? overture was played with a good sense of ensemble as the familiar recurring theme was passed skWlfully from section to section. Highlight of the orchestral part of the program was the lioward Hanson Symphony No. 2, Op 30. The ‘‘Romantic" Symphony. 'This outstanding work by the famous cont^porary American composer proved an interesting contrast to the overture. EXCITING MUSIC After the rather somber three note pattern of the first movement, tl\e o r c h e s t r a came alive with sounds. 'Hie m IIM I c 1 a n s res|)ond(Hi to Mor,se’s direction extremely well In this selection, whls-pming iiiilelly at times, tlien Ihiimiei'lng with full orchestral sounds Into a powerful Instrument. Special mention should be given to the cello and horn sections for their fine work ill several difficult passages. Soprano Phyllis Smith Harris Chose as her first selection, ‘‘Care Selve" by Handel. 8he displayed a fine lyri- EARLY AMERICAN Styling You’ll Love... by Temple-SlTiart The timeless styling of Temple Staart’s Rockport Maple furniture groaps reflects the charm of Old New England. Known fair and wide as “Showplace" furniture, for their trend-setting designs, eonstmetion and finish. See our aeleotion for dining room, living room and bedroom today. \ Rockport Maple Buffet... $165.00 Hutch Top ... $109.50 New England Cham in Dining .., can be yours at a commonsense price when you select Temple-Stuart Early American furniture. It's so versatile, so compatible with other pieces in your home. 42” X 70” Gateleg Table (Extends to 90”) .............. $129.50 Side Chairs.... $27.50 each Arm Chairs... $39.50 each IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IN TIME FOR EASTER S meaiurei 20" Drop-leaf Table measures 321/2** Drum Table measures 2^''in p X 24Vit** bish. x 25'* "x 22**i high with leaves up. diameter X 22" hij;h. »46“ *36” S79SS Open Thursday, Friday, Monday Evenings ''til 9 P.M. 1680 South Telegraph Road Just South of Orchard Lake Road — ParMtiig Frae : ' Interior Decorating Consultation ?_ w , . cal quality and sang this number with precision and warmth., Two selections, "My Man’s Gone Now" and ‘‘8umme^ timer," from the Amsrican folk opera "Porgy and Bess” followed and wore enthusiastically recelvml by the near-capacity audience. Mrs. Harris performed two other H«d<*dlons with her regular accompanist It o h e r I Bales. In the first of these, mi min from "PiigllaccI" slui showed a great deal of poise and confidence, singing very (lifficull music. - Credit should be accorded Mr. Bates for tlie ex-(‘ellent supimrt ho gave to Mrs. Harris. Her spiritual number, "I Want Jeaua to Walk With Me" was sung with obvious feeling and emotion. The au- dience warmly received this :'iu gracious and talented young p<»rfonner. Richard Morse returned to conduct the final portion of the program, the "Gayne Balled" Suite No. 1 by Khachaturian. ‘A "family concert" will be presented Sunday afternoon, April 19. The entire family will be a d m I t t e d for one ticket. Tlcket.s ttuiy be purchased at any city school music department or at the door. OES Chapter Honors Officers With a Dinner Pontiac Chapter S2t, (War of the Eastern Star, honored its past worthy matrons and patrons at a dinner Monday in the Masonic Temple, ^ UiM> 8kylta allowed filnui of hla recent trip to Oregon. Glenn Wllllanbi led the group of 100 members and gueala In song, aaalated by Mrs. John Mcllroy. A life membership was prei senled to John Gibson andf gifts to the post officers. Mrs. Roltf|rt Calvery chose I ho Easter theme for favors and decorations. Terry Cloths Hit Dining Area Terry cloth makes new "table talk.*''Thia spring you'll sea terry tablecloths In a wider variety , of styles and bolor. 8tu.rdy terry lylth vat dyed color Is a good combination for Informal dining In or out, And Vat dyed terry tal)le-erly molded to your hands, smooth them carefully on your hand.s, rather than pull them on by tlic cuff ... When you wash out fine woolen hose, add a little gentle soap, to the final rinse water, to help keep them soft and resillenf. PoWfs Pointers Trick for Plafiting By POLLY CRAMER DEAR POLLY - With spring planting tlmd just around the eornsr, a bandy trick to know If you want oven rows of flowers or vegetabiss Is to dip a wot string Into a pan containing the seeds to be planted. W it j it The moist string wilt t>lck up the small seeds evenly. Simply plant the string and you even rows with no waste. >- MRS. D.II.H. DEAR POLLY -- I save your column to enjoy when 1 finally have time to sit down and relax in the evening. I often take o c(M)kbk ns a gift to a sick friend In the hospital. It not only gives her solnethlng to look at but seems to help the appetite, too. I always carry a $20 traveler’^ cheek for an emergency. One Is not as tempted to cash It as one would be to break a $‘20 bill. TIds cheek Is g(HKl anywhere It Is needed. —MRS. L.N. DEAR POLLY - A favorite trick of mine is to put a handful of salt In the last bucket of rinse water when I want to scrub the pondi during the wintertime and am afraid of the ,water freezing before It dries.— MRS. T.K. PHONE Pearce's FE 2-0127 for Choice flome-Grown Lilies Hydrangeas Potted Plants (Priced FROM $^00, Home-Grown to' Insure Lasting Freshness Roses and Cut Flowers SPECIAL Easter Arrangements Attractively Designed ‘5 00 BEAUTIFUL CORSAGES Mode of fine, fresh cut flowers in a wide variety of colorful, original, interesting arrangements. WHITE ORCHID CORSAGE SPECIAL Your c h o , V u, _ I— ribbons. Delivered $ 00 with your greeting card. ‘5‘ »i. Flowers Telegraphed Any Place in the World Pearce Floral Co. Phone FE 2-0127 559 .Orchard lake Ayenue OPEN .FRIDAY and SATURDAY'til 9-^EASTER 'til MOON —Plenty of Free Parking Space —• 2 Deliveries to Detroit, Bloomfield Hills, Birmingham and I ntermediote • Points Every Day!- ■ , Share your favorite homcmak-ing ideas ... send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a bright, new silver dollar If Polly uses your ideas In Polly’s Pointers. DEAR POLLY - Have you ever searched for something like 4 recipe that you know you saw In a magaxlne but forgot to cut U out? Perhaps the book gets thrown away before you have found the elusive Item. When reading a magazine, keep paper clips handy and clip them onto the top or side of the page you do not want to lose. When magazines are thrown out, any clips along the edges are a warning that there Is something you -want. —MRS. R.S. DEAR POLLY To fill nail holes In the wall, rub a cake of wet soap over the holes until they are filled. When dry, paint over the holes. A W T did this In my living room after I had changed my pictures and you can't Udi where thy hung before. ~ GRACE. DEAR POLI.Y - My sponge mop has a titlle catch to hold the metal handle of the squeezer to the wooden handle. This broke and would not hold the handle up. It kept dragging on the floor. - So I took a large rubber band and slipped It over both handlesi I can now pull the handle down to squeeze the mop A’ TIIK l*()XTI^A(' l\l|IKSS, MAH(’ir 2f SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Here's an Idea I promised to give you that’s sure to jjive your old suit a new lift. Get enough silk, or crepe In a color that contrasts with your suit to cover the lapels, collar, and to make an over-blouse. When applying to the collar and laiiels, hand whip the edges of the silk to your garment fabric, placing finished edges of slllc'’ about Inch from finished edge of garment. Be sure to keep the stitches loose so they won’t pull and show. Make a matching blouse or over-blouse, and you'll have the latest t(M)k for Spring '(M, This could also he done on a cool. AIMION IIANGICIl Mrs, K. C. t.lckmon, lui Jolla, Calll'., wins this week's Tailor Trlx pressing board wllh this suggesUon, “Aprons come and go, but never have 1 seen one equipped wllh 0 device for hanging It on a hook, other than the neck or strings tied together for this purpose. “Cut a length of folded bias tape, about 3 Inches long. Any tape may l>e used. Close the lengliiwlse edges and apply ; io the back of the waistband, at the bottom edge of llie center ' of the front band. Hand whip the two edges to your apron. ^ He careful not to let the stitches come through to the right side. It will be unnoticed when worn and 'Oh, so handy!' ’’ "I)enr Eunice: “I love to sow, but the Uumgbt of not having my equlpmeiil In one place and the mess I always end up with discourages me most of the time. Do you have any Ideas for a coinpaet sewing area? New Group Plays Host at Meeting “My husband Is pretty handy and Is so proud of my sewing he has offered to make something for me for Mollier's Day if yon can help with the plans." Mrs, H. H. H. Dear Mrs. II. H. H.: I am hoping all of our readers will come forth with suggc.sllons for this project. You are just one of many who have request! d plans for a sewing area. If you have .some good Ideas please send them to me, written In detail, with sketches. The best suggestions will he awarded a Tailor I’rlx pressing board. As soon ns we have several good plans, we will pul them together and make them avalhible to everyone. Send your plans to Sew Simple, in care of The I’onliac Press. Here'.s an idea that is bound to delight, the heart of any Iccn-age girl, and what fun to make! Someone Shared this idea with me after having .seen it at a church bazaar, It's an over-shirt made from a man’s work shirt. The.se usually come in blue denirn. He sure to buy the ones that have patch pockets and flat felled seams. Since they are found in the men’s department, you will have to get a small size to fit a, girl’s neck and should- Cut the shaped tails off the shirt, making it the length you desire and finishing with a. 1 '/2-inch hem. Osing embroidery thread, cross-stitch evenly ALL flat felled seams, right over the machine stitching. This is done on both edges of the front band, sleeves, cuffs, collar and liemi Three lazy-daisy stitches are, used above and below each button. It’s gay, inexpensive, and more attractive than almost anything you could buy. Try it and let me know how it turned out! Please send me your little ideas. They may win a Tailor Trlx pressing board for you. I regret that it is impossible to answer letters personally, but those of the most general interest will be answered in the column. Sandburg on Shoes Poei Carl Sandburg is always ready to demonstrate that even in his 80!s, he is able tQ; lake' off liis shoes or put them on, by manipulating the zipper (which he prefers to shoes with laces) with the toe of his other foot. w FAMOUS FUNDAMENTAL PUMP. Shaped for fashion in brilliont patent, it's the most versatile shoe you'll own. And only a Socialite feels this wonderful! 'Amazingly light and flexible . . . with a caressing no-gap topline,, the softest cushionirtg, and a slim , mid-heel that’s virtually unbreakoble.. SQUARE TOP, 12.99 PAULI’S SHOE STORE 35 W. Siiginaw St., Pontiac, Michigan I w-7'- The recently organized Morning Group were luncheon iioateaaea to the Women'a Aa-Botdatlon of the Flrat Presby" terlan Church at Tuesday's nieeiing, { , A > ' ★ Mrs. J. Is. Frankenflfild, program clialrinan, showwl a film atrip of the past, present aad future of Alma 6)llege, Preshyteriaii-NiHUiNored liberal ariH (!ollegc. It showed the ehureh's eoti' cerii for higher wlueallou and how studenis, eomliig from ill) states and 15 countries, ore served. Mrs. Nell Gray presented devotionals and Mrs. John Ihdtseh recelvtal an honorary memitership In the board of national missions. A Surprise Touch A surprise touch can be given Io a jilanter of lush grcim planlH by adding some fresh flowers, such as cyrnhldlum orchids, In a water lube, says the Society of American Florists. The HobtrrI. Miiiv-weasern of he II(iron Avenue (innounee the-engagerneni of their daughter Connie Jean ti> Joseph Anthony luula, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lada of Valencia Drive. Semester Achievernents Rewarded OutHlanillng academic achievement in their first semester at tint University of Michigan has brought the annual William J. Hranstrom prizes to 261 freshmen. Each vyinner selects one of 21 deluxe volumes of spe> (dolly selected hooks which 'are gold-stamped with the U-M seal and marked wllh a Npe ItennisHnnce," T S Eliot's ''Uoinph'le Poems and Plays" and Arnold Toynlafa’s "Sliidy of History" The prizes will be preseiHed at a special convocalion May 6 In Trnehliynd Audllor|um on cam|>ns. Donor of the prize Is William J. Hranstrom of Kre-mont, attorney and philanthropist who holds a U-M Hegent’s citation. Strain Jelly Cleor * When making (dear jelly let the juice drip through u cotton fumnel hag Instead of squeez-I mg II directly from the fruit. PONTIAC WINNEIl From Uonllae Is William D. Sapelak, sou of the Sle|ihen Sapelaks of Wtwhrook Ave- Hloornfhdd area are: Peter F, Lamhei'k, son of (he tlaymond Lnmheeksi Hodnt'y M. Uiek-w(H»d Jr. son of llie llodney l/K'kwoods and Palricia A. Shannon, daughter of the James G, Shannons; Rebecca A. Hrogan, daughter of Robert T, Rrogaii. From HIrmIngImm ore John M. lirown,! Honmr Ni Davidson, Cordon R. Harvey, Kathryn tl. Karber, Claudia L. Kesler; James A. Krogs-ru(f; Jerry A, Uihia; Rarhara R. Maxson; Merll R. Penn and Gilbert J. I^remo, Others are John E, Matu-laitls, son of' Vletor Matu-laltls: Robert E, Wlnkel .Ir, son of the Rohiu’t Wlukels, both of Franklin; also Marcella E. N(Uil, (laughler of Herbert Neal, Farmington. SAM A WALTER Delioiouf SMUtagf Open Kveningn. PONTIAC MA|,I. just in time for Eastert A Specialized Colleclion of II TEXTURED ki STRAWS All budg« Among studenl.s from the 48 N. Saginaw St, FINAL CLEARANCE! WnVTER COATS AT FABULOUS SAVINGSI FURTRIMSl UNTRIMS! Como In and solod your Eoslor hals from Ihis special qroup , . . You'll baidoliqhtod what a smart now hat you can buy at this inloresling budget price. MOSTLY l/« PKICEI Stylssi PjU Boxes, Roller!, Trolilei, Florei, Clociiei, Sollori. Milliin’ry Stilon — Second Floor ...■tb Look/ of , • .f "I...............i PARK FREE while shopping at Arthur's We love the utter-ly new look of Spring . . . those, which delight a variety of fashionable tastes and moods, and sef the pace for the Easter Parade ... the new and notable silhouettes.. . colors with vibrant verve... excitingly interesting fabric textures, and weaves ... all to be found in Arthur's beautiful Spring Collections. The Best of T!very thing •.. for n Long Spring Season! Romantic Spring DRESSES 17»».49“» Fashions that do such wonderful things for you, in all the newest lines, with and without jacket^, in the host of newest styles ... in solids or pFints. Beautifully designed for Juniors, Misses, Pejifes or half sizes. Young Slim COATS 29»» to 59»® Versatile, light weight beauties to toss over your dress or suit. They hove a new, younger feajing with clean lines, expert tailoring, and Smart detail. Juniors, misses or petite sizes. it's A Suit Spring and Arthur's is a great Suit Store! SPRUNG SUITS 29»“ to 59»® The mood is- feminine, the spiri| is young. There is new motion m the skirts, lengthened jackets, closer to the body lines. Beautiful fabrics. Chanel inspiration is everywhere. Colors ar^ full bloom. Sizes, for. everyone! . Coat, Suit an^ Drett Salon—Second Floor ) . ij. ) fir'. ’• A (• :“•< I A \ ii! ■:■ '■ ''''''a, ,;i;v , '\c' • ~ ^ - i, - > ", : ' ' „ ijl7jin*0NTIAC I’HKSS. WKl)Nk^^1l)AV., ; ''V '1,, 1.' ■ Trame doathi In Um UJI. have toppod.Uti irUlllun mark. 72 N. SiiKiniiw S(. "You cannot ‘can’ the bene-flta of phyaical exercise. The l>enefita cannot be stored up. Many mlddle>aK«d women do not understand the physiological Impor^tnce of regularity in exercise.'’ This Is what Dr. Charles A. Bucher told me during a recent Interview, I>r. Bucher Ik PrOfcsKor of l*klucallon In the Depurtmeiit of I'hysloul l‘:diieulifia, lleidth : CAM IK S BEAUTY SHOP 11(5 North Perry PK 2-6361 Sp0ciall milMJKT WAVE and Recreation at New York University School of Education, New York City. Ills dlNtlngutshed accomplishments are numerous aud varied, He Is the author of many b(M)ks and articles. He Is Di- rector of Gradu^Htudy fojr the Deparlmcnl of PliyHl(;al PJduca lion at New York UnIverHily, AROUND THE WORI.D 111 1!M12, UK an A m c r 1 c a n KpccialisI he travcl(-d around the world for Hie United .States Department of State, giving more than two hundred lectures concerning health, sports, physical education aud similar Hiihjects. This Just scratches the surface; Dr. Bucher feels that dally exercise Is extremely Important for the middle-aged woman, allhougli of course It should be adapted to the Individual. He also said the wcll-adjusteil person must luive some Interest outside of the usual routine. At mid life many women are nervouse, worried about chronic fatigue and chronic dlsea.se, arc fraught with tensions and ap- 11 prehension. Different and unusual Easter dinner table decorations are easy with these designs by Tie-Tie gift wtapping stylists. The young lady is holding an ornament for an egg tree which is cut from cardboard and covered ivith **Bejeweled Easter Egg”—a new marbled gift paper. It is topped with Satintone stick-to-itself ribbon. Join Peter Cottontail for a hop down the bunny trail where these exciting candy trimmed Easter eggs are hidden. The end of the trail is sure to yield more wonderful surprises. Garderj Units to Meet Cranbnsik Branch, Wom-an’.s National Farm and (Jar-den Association will gather for dessert Monday in 1 h e Place Your Order Now-FE 3-7165 I. * Jacobsen^s flowers Deliveries Twice Daily Bloomfield, Birrtinghatn, Detroit Downtown Stdre ■— 101 N. Saginaw St. — FE 3-7165 Greenhouse, Garden Store and Nursery -f- Lake Orion — MY 2-2681 Ffotoen hy Wire Around the World! i A' '.■' i./•:•./•/ p.-v r BliMimfleld Mills home of, Mrs. Earle MaePherson. I Members of Concord Green and the Williamsburg branches WNF&G will be guests of Uiclr sponsors for the occasion. Kenneth Brady of Henry Forster Florists will show some of Ihg skills that make attractive spring flower arrangements. The hostesses arc Mrs. Ernest F. Scherer, Mrs. Frederick Fl.sk, Mrs. Chnrlc.s A. Pfistcr and Mrs. Donald K. l^ler. Bake the Bacon You won't have to turn bacon if you simply bake It in a shallow pan in a hot oven. CHILDREN’S SHOP New Egg Hunt Fascinates Cbitdren Peter Cottontail is not the only one coming down the bunny trail. The Easter egg hunt will he new and exciting this year if It is conducted down that same path. (Children find the idea fascinating. , You wjll need a very long I string or ribbon In a different color for each child. The only ollu-r articles required are colored, hand decorated eggs, Easter candy, Easter baskets and any other "surprises” you wish to use.- Place one end of a string or ribbon at a starting point such as the front door. Wind the ribbon under furniture, ttirougli clo.set.s and into adjoining rooms, ending up at the "jackpot" wlicrc I h e Easter baskets are hidden. Surprises like chocolate bunnies, jelly beans or Easter toys can be hidden along the bunny trail on the way to the big treasure. If the bunny trail hunt takes place outside, use ribbon bows to mark each treasure spot rather than one continuous ribbon. WAX TREATMENT Coloia'd Easter eggs transformed into striped bugs, clowns and rocket ships arc wonderful "f 1 n d s" for children. These eggs are decorated with a variety of candies. The stripes, eyes, mouths and lettering are applied by using wax. First wax tlic area that Is Jo remain light. ITien dip the I'gg in the dye bath. If two colors are desired, wax the first jiattcrn, dip in lighter color dye and let dry. Next wax area that is to remain light color and dip in darker dye. When eggs are llioroughly dry, warm a dry, folded cotton cloth against a hot iron. Hub egg with cloth, refolding it and heating it until all the wax is removed. To make fancy or"'‘g i f t" eggs, you will need narrow velvet ribbon in several colors, gold paper lace (available in strips), doilies, strips or pictures of small flowers and glu(!. 1 Glue the gold lace to tho egg, cither in stripes or around the egg. Glue the ribbon next tft, the lace, Cut oi^t small medallions from tlic (fellies and glue them on the egg, or put little flower pictures on the eggs. DUCKS Little ducks can be made by cutting ‘‘bills" from con-strifction paper. Eyes, too, are made from construction pa- ' per. , The little girl duck should have a pert velvet bow on her head and the boy duck a jaunty hat made from a nut cup. Elegant J'Bcjcwelcd Easter Egg" gift paper not only makes a unique covering for' Easter gifts, but does dozens of decorative jobs on the Easter table. Think bleach-just whitens? Try Cforox bleach. Clorox gets out oily body dirt that detergents leave in. I That's why washes come so much cleaner when you use detergent and Clorox together;..every time. [ Clorox gfts out dirt detergents leavein! ^4 ^4 ■ '' rj’ .f -j; "’I .■>\ \..’ •' '-,Vr'' ;i '\|■'^■'^^''■"i. h f!. , '.r , '/ ■ ■ ., I . , 'j i ''At ,, ' ' t ' ■ ' '' V.""' ' * 'Inl! ■ 0 * ' : > 1^' ■ . AfAHCn 23, 10(11 ,1*''' M. i i Don't Porgeff Groom's Wedding Expense ny MAIIY KRICUCV Conittllnn( In Moiiny In the flurry of planning for a wedding, so much attention Dear Miss Feeley ; is devoted (a the brldp-to.be and her problems that there's Uttle, to spare for the hrldegr l)ost :mnn and ushers, $40; bridal bouquet and other flowers, |W; marriage license, |5; gifts to bride, best man and ushers, ISO; blmsl Ipsta, 110; clergyman’s fee, |2li. parents of tlw bride-to-be send out tho wedding Invltotlons, Including those to the brldO-grtMim's list of relatives and friends. Mailing costs are their responsibility. It’s more graceful to leave the bridal showers to the well-wishers outside the Irninedinle fainllles. ed ns ex|>eiiHe for refreshments nt the bridal porty's rehearsal. The same amount was also estimated as a '‘contingency fund" — the little bit of extra expense that might crop up and that had not been aatielputod. l•elilops you have a mu(!li more formal reception In mind. For Instance, o wedding breakfast Including chicken or tur-key, plus a more elaborate cake plus beverage at |1 imr porwm for too guests would Im almut (iralultles, usually 20 imr cent would 1>e added U> this basic cost. If a band were Included, and If the bar were open after the breakfast, then of course the cost would be eonsldprahly (You can write to Mary Fee-ley In care of TliO Fontlac Press. Hlie will answer questions of widest Interest In her column.) Gity Music Guild Hosted at Brunch Members of Pontiac Music (iulld were giients of Mrs. Ilodger W(H)d for brunch Tues-doy In her home on Shaddlck Road. Wendell Ecker Introduced Ivan House of Clarkslon who presenteil a program, "Four Centuries of Music," from Scholn to Poulenc, with recordings. And now comcH a bridc-lo hc, who is aim) getting hogged down with the b(V)kkecplng. Class of 1959 Plans Reunion Dear Miss Feeley: 1 am getting married next month, NO your article on weddings was of Interest to me. But I would like to know whore and how you can feed 100 to people on $525? What coqld you poHslbly feed them? (IraiultlcH arc nt leii|(il 25 per c(>nl of llic bill, and most hotels or restnuranls Include niu-.slc. if supplied by them, ns part of tho bill. This would add up to nlM)ut $100^ not your price of $45. 1 would appreciate It If you would clearly state what is Included in (he food, beverage, and catering service. C.A., Red Bank, N..I, IMans are under way for a five year class reunion of the 1050 groduating class of Waterford High School to be held Aug. 22. Committee chairmen were announced nt a recent meeting In the l,akewo(Kl Drive home of Ron Newimmi <'lass president. FROM OUR COLLECTION OF WALKING FASHIONS the New Fashion Shoj) (5>chalrman for the affaii' is Marty Ilnvlland. Others named arc Monn (Ritchie) Bowmaster, Sandy (Swanson) Taylor, Barbara (Coe) Rogers, Michael Ewer, Larry Bowen, Totn McAllister and Judy Kent. Dear C, A.: You’re a little confu.sed. I’m afraid, about those prices quoted. 1'hc $525 mentioned was one applhHl to a buffet reception for HK) 1.50 guests. This provides for sandwiches, a wedding cuke, coffee or tea, ph»s catering service with gratuities included. Music is piped in. These are figures based on a we|l-known restaurant catering service In your own hxiality, as n matter of fact. Class members Interested in helping with plans are asked to call Mrs. Vernon E. Taylor of Roslyn Street. Soap Speeds Up Many Mechanisms A lialf ounce of" soap per gallon of cooling water increases the cutting speed of diamond saws and drills by 20 per cent. The estimate of $45 was cit- r Serve Mustard Sauce With Easter Ham Soap lubricates tlic cutting area, and keeps the tool’s work-face chip-frec. Well, soap-and-watcr speed up otlicr mechanisms, too ^ such as the himiun body that comes out of tl)c shower with new vim and vigor! By JANET ODELI. Pontiac Press Food Editor Make up a batch of mustard sauce and keep it on hand. You’ll want to .serve it with your Easter ham. It will be good al.so mixed with salad dressing or drizzled over hot vegetables. Mrs. R. W. F'agan of Holly is our cook today. Mother of:-two, she is a high" school teacher. “21” MUSTARD SAUCE By Mrs. R. W. Fagan 4 eggs, slightly beaten '/ii cup fi^'inly packed brown sugar 2 consomme cubes 1 cup water , .1 tablespoons flour Vi eup dry mustard (2-oz. can) 1 cup, vinegar Dissolve consomme cubes in water. Mix flour and mustard and add, stirring to remove all lumps. Add rest of ingredients. Cook in double boiler, ’ stirring until thick enough to spread. Use hot or cold. Makes about IVt pints. for a lifetime of proud possession Q OMEGA you’ll say "off with the old and on with the new” when you see these exceptional Omega watclies. The slim-silhouetfe Seamaster De Ville winds itself as you weaf it, and is perfect for sports or evening wear. The ladies’ watch features a facet-edged jewel-crystal. 18K gold dial-markers, fully jeweled movements. Prices include Federal tax. REDMOND’S Jewelers —Optometrists B1 NdMh Saginaw St- — Phone; FE 2-3612 j ], Parking in Reap of Store j , ,,/ , in the Pontiac Mall OPEN with beautiful pi Easter Coats - Suits Costumes Dresses' Sportswear Accessories - OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT- ... OUR FORMAL OPENING WILL BE ANNOUNCED SOON ... -^=i*---—■' ^ *' ' . TjtKFtejrTUC pp.ss, WKhNKSUAY. MAlltll M, ^IMW^ , } ‘ . / ' ' ' ’ , Smart Folks are Heading for A&P to GET MOREl^lN THE IB Mmmmwm FULLY COOKED > ........... 5 FACTS THAT QUICKLY ADD UP TO . BETTER EATING..^MORE FOR YOUR MONEY! | * No Center Slices Removed fl * Less Cooking Shrinkage * Ali Skin Removed * No Excess Fat * Fully Cooked-Not Just Smoked i Whole or Half KING OF ROASTS! "Suptr-Right" Mature, Corn-Fed Beef Beef "Super-Right" Quality 4th and 5th Ribs Firit 3 Ribs Pork loin Roast 27; 39! 69! Jm ” Fork Chops j/f lb Full 7-Rib Portion Loin End Portion SAVE AT A&P ON EASTER PLANTS -BLOOM A AA PLANT Z.gSI Wide Voriety—-Foil Wropped A^Hydrciiigeas L ^ Hvdranaafis ^ Hydrangeas ’>unT 3.69 Aialeai »turdy punt ^ 99 Pitted Ros0s?«3. Potted Gardenias . • 3.29 Mums choice selections 2.49 Tulips ‘Vn’,S'^“2.49 Cinerarias.... 1.99 DUNCAN HINES LAYER CUIIIHB = 29“ , I ANN PAGE ' fJS* 25 I layer Cake Mixes • ^ ^ YUKON CLUB Beverages *"24-0*. I _ ®o»«ei I IN II'JS. I list /* log cabin I IN 12-OZ. I CANS |^Mda*D?y?":r.“4« SYRUP 4c OFF , 1 nLABEL -i-oz. Oac »tls. _Plu« De>o,i, SUNNYtlfLO-M SCMI , J.C ' MoJa »»i»h QTRS, W®______ I Blitter Lilies blmms2.99 bl^ms 3.49 OUR OWN Tea Bags 16 Freo With Piirchoto of 48 A&P-^RAOE"A" Grape Juice 3'S q9^ Fruit Cocktail4 - 99' fl'fc'l Jane Parker Easter Bakery Values PEACH PIE ANGEL FOOD CAKE DANISH NUT RING 64'°" 49' IMPORTED, FOIL WRAPPED Chocolate iggs 7)f Jeiiy Eggs 49 2 QUART CAPACITY With INSET for Double Boiler This Week's Special - Now on Salel Hawthorn Extra-Thick Aluminum Sauce Pan \^2,^9 fi Your Choice ^"1 39 ' JKF/ I k or Hof Cross Buns- r/ EACH -Packogt of 8 a 11 1-POUND BAG WORTHMORE MEDIUM SIZE PURCO MARASCHINO RAJAH SHREDDED Sultana Shrimp CHERRIES COCONUT X 5-OZ. too ^ CANS 1 io-oz. ^a® JAR db7 ( l-u. 9MC I DUTCH TOWN—HOLLOW CHOCOLATE Animals V.S.'69c J WORTHMORE ASSORTED |6eam Eggs ...... op< 29c I WORTHMORE CHOC. MARSHMALLOW I Crate of Eggs — of 12 25c I PEE WEB t j Jelly Eggs.......... bag 35c I Jell-0 Pudding Instant Yubon Coffee ... *a« 1.15 Cheese Pina My.2S."D8i.... 47 Shedd's Chef Dressing .TALuh *i?iv25* Mouthwash 49 French Pressing * «“ *.... •“. 25* pfekied Beets wrM®^“N.o*Ni«%lV.r25 Red Star YoostwR'Appip.. 3 7^i'.l9* Poper WTCMIN ^ Yum-Yum Cookies •UNIHtNI Vifo! 49s OeL eHICKIN-OF-THI-$IA ^ ...... inna risn whiti albacohi. ' JANE PARKER | ! Strawberry Pie . . , 69* MNB PARKER-—SAVE 9e ON 2 DOZEN / Bake *n' Serve Rolls 2 4* JANE PARKER—SAVE 10c Potato Chips 3r OCeAN SPRAY-IIRVI WILL CHILLRO Spoghttti Dinner %47* Cranberry Juice Cocktoll bVl 45> instant Coffee Heinz Soups Chop Suey Lux Soap' lo-oz. |3S JAR I VEGE^TABLE VARI^IES ^ Excupt Pm and Muihroom LA CHOY SHRIMP— i.in WITH VEGETABLES 0 0 0 CAN I CAKES 12 in" • ■ BAG 96* ' SihrM* bust SOAP PADS Brillo 1» 25' Super Suds 2 LARGE nUc BANDED PKGS. LIQUID—I2.0Z. Palmolive l-LB. lO-OZ. PKG. Baads-O-Bleach 73* LIQUID—l-QT. SIZE Chiffon 59‘ FLEISCHMANN'S Margarine 39‘ AUNT JANE'S Pickles SwMf Mitlttm \ 1-RT. 4^Z. EAc “« 59* 7;^; ■, .'^7 'VvjV'-,- ;■' vV‘7. 'r:,,.rv;v v/'.':: ^ vr 'I' . iV II' r ■ • -'W I , ■ : - -| r. ' ' \ ' . ’ - , • , . ’ ' ,1' ^ ----—------------^________L TME PONTIAC ]»HERS. WkdNICMDAV. MAlUlil 2fl. iiw»4 I ‘" I "Super-Right" Quality, Skinned Whole Smoked Homs Shank Portion Butt LB. Portion Center LB. I ■I :'!J Colter Special—BontlfiB Cooked CANNED HAMS .cEie Sixe Sixe ■pi 37 47 siicei “ 79 GRADE A —Your Choice of Sizes Tutkeys AfirP —OUR FINEST QUALITY Cut Green Beans 449‘ AfrP~OltADI"A"MIXIDSIZn a S Sweet Peas ...... 3 «« 49 A»P ORADI "A'< A I.LI, WWWf Sweet Potatoes . . . . 2 c°n. 49 HIAVY DUTY II'* WIDI ALUMINUM lOIL OCIAN JPRAY VYHOLI AOP—ORAOI "A" WHOLI Reynold's Wrap ", JJ „T 49* Cranberry Sauce jiijliid2 ^ans 47* Cranberry Soiice jil^l^ip 2ii&39‘ •.iss: TBH8CLL LL.LlI... CONTADINA, STIWID jm Tomatoes .................... 4 «« 49 lARLY CALIFORNIA a Jumbo Ripe Olives... 3 SPICIAL VALUII FINI QUALITY Sultana Plain Olives . . . 89* 49* Grade ”A" — Fancy Hawaiian A&P PINEAPPLE CItUSHEO OO* CANS SLICED 3 a 89* CHUNKS 3 is 79* A&P GRADE "A " Apple Sauce 1LB. 9-OZ. JARS Fruit Orfult New Light SPR^ I |CoHor'"““ uVi. CANS A&P Brand ... ^ 5< 0«» 1C I 10 01. CAN LofQo Of Small Curd » or. Cans 99* Fresh, Crisp Soiid Heads 3lR. CAM Jouthinn 0,uo„^ _SCUlt$ '0® Cheese 19* I-LB. CTN. iv^lWteBeouty FLOUR. .. .4c Off Pillsbury, Robinhood or 6s/rc49* I U.S. No. 1 Grade Maine Potatoes I I A&P fROZEN VEGETABLES French Fries, Peas, Cut Corn, Peas & Carrots 25-99* 3 6-OZ. 9 Ee l CILLO lAGS 2 ■ 39‘ Red Radishes Special Offer! SAVE 30* Mellowmood ^ HYL0NS2'''99* Mixed VegetaUes 2-LI. BAO Lima Beans IVu-LB. lAO Cut Green Beans 49< A&P FROZEN SLICED Gold Mednl.. 5AUD DRESSING Miracle Whip A&P STRAWBERRIES 4'-B9‘ ' CRESTMONT QUALITY—SAVE lOe Ice Cream i^‘79 CHOCOUTE COVERED ICE CREAM Cheerio Bars Woman's Day Magazine kTsue only 15^ ./ ■ 60 Gauge/ 15 Denier 29c Burnett's Color Kit Inltdnt Coffoo i?AXVVILL*HOUU * ?»r ^*09 Tund Fish ... 3 ss* Woodbury ALL A&P STORES CLOSED GOOD FRIDAY 12 NOON TO 3 P.M. "SUPIR-RIUHT"—6 INCH CUT Beef Rib Steok »B9* CENTIR BLADE CUT Pi Am Chuck Roast . . . “ 59 BOSTON STYLE BUTT Ada* Pork Roost . . . .»39 “SUPER-RIGHT"—4 TO .e LB. OW*- Smoked Picnics . .■* 37 MORRELL E-Z CUTi-WHOLE OR HALF waWW.. Smoked Ham . . .»59* "SUPER-RIGHT" FRESH ^Am Polish Sausage . . u59 WHOLE, GOV'T. INSPECTED A A Fresh Fryers . ». “29* WITH RIBS ATTACHED , ^ Fryer Breasts . . .“59* FOR FRYING ^ A Fryer Legs . ... “53* FRUIT decorated—• TO 10 LB. iV A Semi-Boneless Ham “ 73* GRADE ;^A" YOUNG-4 TO 5 LB. m Am Rousting Chickens “ 49 WHOLE LEO m ^ Leg O'Lamb . . . “ 69* "SUPER-RIGHT * CELLO ROLL Pork Sausage . . “35* "SUPER.RIGHT ' SKINLESS ^ ^ All-Meat Franks ^ B9* GRADE "A"—« TO 8 LB. SIZES ^ Capons:. . .... ^^59* CLEANED. PEELED, DEVEINED Shrimp MED.. ,3-LB. BAG 1 Vb-LB. 199 SIZE 1.89 BAG I Prices Effective Thru Soturdoy, Mgrch 28th In All Eastern Michigais AGP Super Meikefi" THE GREAT ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TEA COAAPANY, INC 99* Theru'e a Frltkdlr AiP N»at You Huron jieer Telegraph Perry St. near Walton Blvd. irry St. iM( Pike St. I Dixie Hwy./ Drayton Piaini Dixie Hwy. at M.15, Clarkiton fP)j$uper fi^arkets AMERICA’S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT SINCE 1859 lUTTERPIELD SHOESTRING AUNT NELLIE'S SLICED POWDERED 22-OZ. YEL FPWDERBD DETERGENT REGULAR SIZE VEL 22-OZ. SIZE PINE SCENT .Potatoes Pickled Beets Action Bieach Beouty Bar Vel Liquid Lestoil 2>/i.oz.^gHc^ ie-oz.::-.A Ac „ /ouss ,^,.69* t ■ . J.J :' . / 12-oz. AOc Sc il. dCO i ' 'ji .If: 2»39‘ 63* 28-OZ. A 7c toe . .SIZE if# OFF Corned Beief 12-OZ. CAN 49* i. 'A, '/fAA'jV! ~V li.......... ' i, " 'll'.; f 'i'":’’ '' I,.-'............ '4 I >■'- ,>'r Tins PONl'tAC IMtKSS, WUDNKSDAY, MAItCH aa, 1»IU NATIONAL'S GIGANTIC^ lASTER I FULLY COOKED ; Generous Shank PORTION lb. Butt Portion 39c lb. OUARAirrEE Solfct CtntGr Cut {ham slices . i Practically BonaUis Boston Butt PORK ROAST u69* ALL NATIONAL POOD STORIS WILL Bl CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY AND DON'T FORGET, TOO. WE WILL BE CLOSED GOOD FRIDAY 12 TO 1 National's Own Famous "lASY SLICI" I leg O'lamb. assler Treat ■ LOIN UMB CHOPS'...... : UMB SHOULDER ROAST . . LB. $1.01 ..... LB. 4*« ARMOUR STAR Parade el Values iNatleml'i Cemtea Vtlut'Wey Trtmfnea Beef Roast ib.89« Mh rlna. bouahini at'art takViie MENdVoO Io comb!i"l aUrray’ '■'''’'O''* cbnklna plilrain, and thiia promola fraar biaalhina and niora restful alaap, Moat druiilsls keep And raoommand MBNi:fAOO. A Financing Plan for Every Need MEW ASSOCIffiS RMILY GRtiWTH HNANCING PLAN provides money for 3 of the most important expendit|ires of young American families Medical. . . home furni.shings . . . home improvements ■ • • now you can meet all your family needs —all at oncp—with the Associates Family Growth Financing Plan. We’ll combine all your costs into one convenient monthly payment— eliminate mtfltiple interest charges. The Associates let you grow and build your future now; you pay comfortably, while your income grows. There are over 600 Associates offices coast-to- . coast. One is near you.Stop ip, phone or write today. r. ASSOCIATES CONiSUMEE FINANCE CO. IN PONTIAC' 125-127 N. Saginaw Street.....:....FE 2-0214 389 North Telegraph Road.....'.....682-2000 ^ Pontiac Mall Shopping Center * IN DRAYTON PLAINS 4476 DIxlelllghwqy*,;/.......y... •. shrimp, cucumber. Pour Into individual molds or a 3-cup mold. Chill ijintll firm. Unmold and garnish with salad greens. Makes one 3*cup mold or 4-0 servings. Wafflod ^r9aGt Sticki "Different” bread .sticks to serve with soup rhay be quickly made from stale bread sIlQes. Trim crusts and spread both sides with real mayonnaise. Toast in waffle iron until brown. Cut cat'll slice Into 3 fingers. . Tough meal can be made more tender by soaking forU few minutes In strong vinegar water. Writing Contep Set by Library Croup Walerfoi'fl Tm^nshlp’s Friends of the Ubrary will s|Mmsor a eiontlve writing contest for area .students with whmers to be announced April IS. Contestants from grades one through 12 will be divided into four age groups. Entries may be submitted from four categories: poetry, essay, short story aiul tiook reviow, Entries must lie submitted at Hie aeluMils prior to Hie April 10 deadline. 'Anmameeineiil of prize winners wlllJie a lilgliliglif of a (iro-gram at Pierce Junior -High School in observance of National Library Week, April 12-18. Heat Bread With Cheese Hoffman's 'TABLE TRIMMED PAN-READY MEATS" So Economical and Good for Your HAMJilBMTB: SUGAR CURED HICKORY SMOKED Delicious Easter HAMS Whole Hams 431 Butt Portions 39i Sliced Free! Nationally Advortisod Brandt A hiisliel of apples will yield from 2(4i Iu d'/4i gallons of juice. Tills way of fixing bakery bread gives a fish mepl ii lift, Two-Cheese Loaf '/< cup butter, soft V4 cup grated Parmesan or UomaiKH'lieese 2 lens|MM>ns paprika H cup (about SMi ouncts) blue cheese, soft I loaf (18 inches) French brenil Mix logetlier Ihoroughly (he Imller, Parmesan cheese, paprika and ' blue (‘heese. HlU’e bread Into tliick diagonal slices without (jutting tlirough bottom of loaf. Spread clieese mixture In cuts and over top. Wrap In foil; lieal in a moderate (378 degrees) oven for about 10 nrin* utes. THE WINNER! Michdol Adair of 1109 Dovar Rd. it shown hor* rocoiving his 1 st prix* award of a bright now shiny bicycio prosontod to him by AAr. Harold Hoff-mon. Owner of Hoffman's Oakland Packing Inc. The bicycle was one of twenty priies awarded monthly thro United Dairy's at Hoffman's. CENTER SLICES for EASTER CANHED HAMS S3i farm-fresh FRYING CHICKEI BREASTS OR Easter Specials FMAN'S OWN -4 HOFFMAN'S OWN "Hom«-Made" SAUSAGE Gordon's Baby Link PORK SAUSAGE lot 99^ ••Ac Chicken |>A 19 lb. LIVERS Ott budget Speeirii^ . 23s Chicken WINGS LEAN TASTY SHORT RIBS.. COTTAGE STYLE PORK STEAK... ..33 dU(.EU . BEEF LIVER ......331'b YOUNG TENDER. BEEF TONGUE... 33 il. YOUNG FANCY _ _ BEEF HEARTS.....33il. PORK HOCK.....33il SLICED BACON . .33 il LARGE-Crisp 24 Size HEAD LEnUCE ION YOUR FAVORITEHEASTER SALAD! Your • Carrot,'-'' Choice! • Radishes, I". • Greet Onions, Tender (jrain-Fed STEER BEEF STEAKS 10-Lb. Limit Please PARK FRU IN REAR HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc. RHAIl OlVISIOes «« OAHLAliiB ' Just Say “CHANGE IP’ RHAIl OIVIWOW m* OA«iASS» PACKINC QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOUSAU PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST. wi reserve the rightt to limit quantitik Opofi 9 f© 6 Doily—9 to 9 Friday FE 2-noo +—T-——+ \,‘. " ‘ )lv ■>''i, 1' V'/ '' l-v'tr '-'ii’/ [1 .F0N11AC\v»a)yKHi)AY,.MAiiCH 8fl,‘ tq(?4.' ' '' " ■* have Turned to GOlO BOND I I ■■r. -i i: ..|:f Jm}; •/;■ -jj. stamps at... Milford, Michigan White Lake, Michigan I980 Auburn Ave., Pontiac Jf! Gold Bond is an International Stamp Plan Sava Gold Bond Stamps with confidence they can always be redeemed from any place in the world. WHAT DO I DO WITH MY M&M STAMPS? Get More Gold Bond Gifts Faster It takes less stamps, less savers books, less total purchases on the average to get Gold Bond Gifts... COMPAREI Right now you can exchange your M&M stamps for MORE VALUABLE Gold Bond Stamps... stamp for stamp. Simply’ take your filled or partly filled M&M aavers hooka to our Food Store and you will receive your more valuable (lold Bond Stampa. Paate all M&M Stampa in M&M anvora books; no loose stamps, pleaae. ^ Only Gold Bond Offers 2 Completely Different Gift Books 1 — for gifts by America’s finest manufacturers. 1 — for hundreds of import gifts from foreign countries yours exclusively for Gold Bond Stamps. * Gold Bond Proved for Over 25 Years Almost a quarter century experience guarantees satisfaction to millions of Gold Bond Stamp savers. HERE’S EXCITING NEWS THAT MEANS GREATER VALUE TO YOU. Starting immediately, you will receive Gold Bond Stamps FREE with each purchase you make with us -1 stamp with every lOr purchase, 2 stamps with every 20(^’ purchase and so on. GOLD BOND STAMPS ARE MORE VALUABLE This means that more thifn ever it will pay you to shop with us. Because Gold Bond is an International Stamp Plan you get a greater selection of gifts that require less stamps less saver hooks, less total purchases on the average. * , Qolil Bond WORLD IMPORT GIFT BOOK for import gifts from foroign ceuntriti. awiu Bonn Bin DODR ^ for gifts from Amor* ^ lea's finost manufae-turors. • 1.’ CHOOSE GIFTS FROM THE WORLD’S GREATEST SELECTION OF GIFT VALUES! Join the millions of families saving Gold Bond Stamps from coast to coast. Start shopping the thrifty Gold Bond way. Giving Gold Bond Stomps Is another way for us to say Thank You for your loyal (totronage in addition to continuing to give you the finest in food at the lowest prices. NOTE: This advertisemenf, and these coupons effective bnly at these IGA Stores in the Bontioc area... WINGERT'S IGA. 1980 Auburn Ave., Pontiac PEABODY'S IGA, White Lake, Michigan BREEN'S IGA, Milford, Michigan '^■'V 7‘/ .\i„, , ' ,, , “ !■ ’Ss V.' :r' TIIK, rONTJAC; fRKSSWliVKDNKSUAV, MAHCU, a», V in/v-t . ;-v 'k^-',1 ■■ IIIM i ' i: StandingRib Roast Z i;". u.69* Swiss Steak m 59* W. Va. Ham ;;?r » 79* Canned Ham Slaokhawk 5i:i*4« OiMkl#ak4 ________table King, Whole i|Ko omOKoa nam orButiPomon 4.b.>Ki Table King, Viilt your Pontiac area IGA "Store for all your Easter holiday fixin's. Each and every department featuring valuee galore . ,. from Hami to Turkeye ... from Eggs to Color Dye Kits. You'll find lust what you're looking for at tike kind of price you love to pay, m Smoked Ham Pull Shank Half 35* Bacon ',:;:49° 2 Lb. Pkg. Pork Sausage Sausage Hy grade’s Mb. Roll Eckrloh, Smoked 97* 33* lb. S9° SEMI-BONELESS Baking Hens ^Orade M-4 Lbs'*’ Lb. 39* Wrap Your Ham In Reynolds 1 S'^lnch, Heavy Duty ALUMINUM FOIL 49*^ Cranberry 2 t.r 39* Sweet Potatoes!Sb.u"°’ 1,'29* HEN TURKEYS 39f Peach Halves 4r.r»i IGA Com «^«roi(li!*hni Gisr*! IGA Peas gN...3,l Asparagus Spearss S:.'49* Sweet Pickles i:.« 16-ox. 0^0 Cherries Sr.'.hi»> io<^-oz. 9He Buokst 1*3 TABLE KING Kleenex Napkins^H' K 23* U.S.D.A. GRADE A 6-12 Lbs. FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS STRAWBERRIES lat TABLE KING, FRESH-FROZEN SLICED 10-OZ. I Pkg. Cream Pies 'r 29* Cauliflower f"nm io> Pkg. Cut Corn or Peas’Kir Cl 9* h Crange Juice 4l^fi *1 j | Chec. Cake Colonial Frozen 24-oz. 99* SHIRLEY GAY NYLONS With the purchase of one 2 pair box of seamless nylons you receive a... FREE can HAZEL BISHOP HAIR SPRAY’ Tek Toothbrush 19° Stuffed Olives Prices Effective thru March 28 Miracle Whip 39« with thli coupon at your Pontiac oroo lOA Sforo. I Effoctivo thru Match 28,1964. Adults onlyjlmi^n^ ^ REGULAR OR DRIP GRIND jC| ISA Coffee 59« With this coupon at your Pontiac oroo IGA Storo. ^ EffoctIvo thru March 28,1964. Adult* only, limit ono. I ‘v:, * IGA TABLERITE leeGreem 39^ ’/2-Gal. Carton with this,coupon at yotir oroo Pontiac IGA Storo. Effective thru March 20,1964. Adult* only, II Vanilla Extract V^,;;.^35* There'S an IGA Store NEAR YOU! 68 S. WASHINGTON 2100 WALNUT LAKE RD. OXFORD, MICHIGAN BIRMINGHAM, MICHIGAN - MAIN STREET MILFORD, MICHIGAN 1980 AUBURN AYE. PbNTIACy MICHIGAN 2685 N. Woodward BLDOMFIELD HILLS 514 N. SAGINAW HOLLY, MICHIGAN 3990 Baldwin AVe. 3393 ORMOND ROAD 3159 ORCHARD LAKE RO. --------------------- iRB0“ iPONTIAQ, MICHIGAN WHITE LAKE, MICHIGAN KEEGO HARBOR, MICH. Nescafe Special Label Crackers 10-oz. -4 39 Jar I 26* 1-lb. Pkg. Tissue Northern Bathroom White or Colors 4 «•" Pkg. 33< I Large Eggs 35« Doz. With tht* coupon at your Pontiac area IGA StPro. I EffocthM thru March 28,1964. Adult* only, limit 2 doion;, y, 1.^ iil- / ./> y- I4t’/ j k'‘ , i4was not among the original np-dlth Warner, vice president of’proved sources of aggregate for Western Contracting Cor p„ Slous Ciiy, fowa, leslifled Tuesday he does not know wist ap' ftroved use of nggregnte from the Oxford pit In the constriw-tion of paving at the Selfrldge Air Portte Huse at Mount Clemens. Mich. A general accounting official lestifli'd prcvjtmsiy the government will Incur 12 7 million In unnet'ossary costs to rtmlore the pavements at tiu* field he cause of faulty materials used. the wor'k. Five approved sources were In the Upper Peninsula, Warner said use ttf ag« gregato from any «tf these would ;lri have cost an exirn AREA NEWS. A Mouse Armed Services committee headed* by Rep. Porter Hardy, D-Vat, 1s Investigating (dnmmstances surrminrilng the work done by Western tin-dor contracts totaling |U.O million. The Oxford pit, owned by American Aggregates Corp., Itep. Otis (5. Pike. U-N.Y,, oh-served tliat at one |K)lnt someone said It would be all right to use the aggregate from the Oxford pit, which was closer to the field. Warner replied the Oxford pit was approved, but he could not say who approved It. There Is no written record, Warnef said, as to who approved use of the I Oxford pit. Last week Jamea H, Ham-j rnond of the Ooneral Account* liig Office said the contractor on I Aug, IS. lUM, aubmittetl to the ()hlo River Division Ijiborator-les samples of the Oxford pit j aggregate. [ I'lesplte an adverse report on •Ik' samples two offh'lals of the Army engineers "advls want too many changes In Iheir government. Early Indiea-Uons were that tho present charter Would be revi.s(-donly to tho extent nece.Hsary to change (ho village to a city. I’licme stressed l)y llie group which backed eltylus)d was the maintenance of Orchard Lake’s residential character and Informal government. Police said the fight Involved three delegates to tho UAW convention, the Woman, her manager and another man. Frank De Lape, 38. of Col-lingswood, N.J., was held in the shooting; TWO RELEA.SED 'I'he two UAW delegatesTcal vin llurlbert, 35, of St. Clair Shores, Midi., and Robert S. Bower, 31, of 46261 Harry, Utica, Mich., Were released on bail as material witnesses. , Held as material witnes.ses were the 24-year-old ebtertainer,' Patricia Holland, and Albert Dc Carlo of Camden, N.J, HAD BEEN DRINKING Det. Capt. William Rickert -said (he six had been drinking in a tavern. He said Hurlbcr't took the woman home and the other men followed. A scuffle started outside tlic motel, Rickert said, and De Lape allegedly fired a gun during the fracas, wounding Martin. Until a new pastor Is selected by lh(> congregation, tlie First I’resljytcrian pulpit will be filled by visiting clergymen. “FOR A BEHER MEASURE OF VALUE. EASTER SHOP AT WKG JEWELERS! Heads Club in Rochester ROCHESTER - Newly elected president of the Rochester Junior Woman's (Tub is Mrs. Lloyd Lake, 191 Charles. Other new officers , include Mrs. William 11. Keinath, 1430 Gracedale, first vice president, Mrs. Nelson D. Parsons, 61 Nesbit, second vice president: and Mrs. Walter J, Kowaiczyk, 114 ^VFMuryluioil, recording secretary. The rest are IVIrs. Carl Pearson, 794 Castlebar, corresponding secretary; and Mrs. Thurley C. Allen, 842 Ironstone, treasur- fashion new JEWELlff % From tho brlgtif sparklo of white to tho f'llt rich gloohi and w Installation of the new officers, who will serve during the l!!64-65 and 1965-66 club years, will be June 19 at the Kingsley Inn, Bloomfield Hills. Fenton Man Killed LAPEER^, (/P) - Francis J Wright, 34, of Fenton was killed yesterday when his truck veered off M90, 12 miles north of La peer, and hit a tree. Immediately following the service, the Woman’s Mission-I ary Guild will' «erve breakfast jin .Arvin Hall. Mrs. Emery I Pierce’ heads the breakfast committee. , tAROLYN E, MURDOCK 'Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Murdock of 224 Mont .Eagle, Milford, announce the engagement of their daughter< Carolyn E. to Bruoe T. Hancock. Parents of ^ the prospective bridegroom are the Thomas S. Hancocks of the General Motors Provinjg Grounds, No wedding date has been set. Sunrise Service to Start Troy Church's Easter TROY — The first ..service Easter Sunday at the First Presbyterian Church of Troy will be a sunrise service at 7 a.m. IP will be followed by a breakfast from 8 to 9. , The Children’s Choir will sing at the 9 a.m. family service. An adult service is planned for 10:30 a.m. .during which time children'will see a film on Hie' resurrection of Christ. Pan ^ Portraits ' Take a B[3 IV' X 14" PORTRAIT of Your Child (5 wks. to 8 years) For Only 99' YOUR GH0ICE...$I9 POLISHED .!? CAST ALUMINUM 10;Tc, DELUXE WATERLESS COOKWARE Eotv to keep clean... Always looks like new! *, ^ [themodern, appetizing, healthful^waterless way. Plus 50c for wrapping and handling Bust Virjr^ctte Let PETER PAN'S Portraits skilled photographers THURSDAY capture the charm of your child! You select from ' # 6 or more permonent photographs the lovely FRIDAY, portrait You'll cherish forever. Limit one per CATiini^Av - child, two-per family. CKildr^w’. taken ot 99c per child- n's group pictures ~ 10 0.01. 'til 8:30 p.m, , GLENWOOD PLAZA . V NORTH PERRY ST. at GLENWOOD \r‘ ■ ..J. :WJJ" J.-' FRUIT FESTIVAL DINNERWARE 61-Piece, Service for i including A Extra Cups • Dinner Plates • Bread and Butters • 12 tups • 8 Saucers, e 8 Cereal-Soups • 8 Fruit Dishes • Coffee Pot with Cover e Salt and Pepper • Chop Plate e Veg. Bowl e Creamer e Covered Sugar ALLFOR$ig ONLY 108 NORTH SAGINAW 'I', Hi :> '' 'jl ,, I .f I f.>'M r «r^:" ’!■ I'.i -\ \|!'(» JM V -^ni ■A ' ‘'f,'v-'i -.y''-':' VA'I U ' ", • . ' I ■' THE PONTIAC!; PllKSS; WKIINKSDAY. MARCH 2|; p« ' 1 ■ i: yr., ^' yt ' if.l: I '/II 004 AMR PROWLS THE STREETS! A young girl defies a whole towri^ to save a frightened tiger! WAIT DISNEY lTIGER M\WK& •BRIAN KEITH-VERA MILES I PAMELA FRANKLIN-SABU I EDWARD ANDREWS • UNA MERKEL • PETER BROWN ■; 'nmimoir ibfftcor and gontlaman by act of Congraat..^ Man, how they goofed II. ' DOlftt^UPt Ihe^ipaji**' ilil’IMlR imiiHiiior ’ fita»00»-IMaABWS0«-CHI«*»SSl DwM tv NM iwm • SciM^t) HUI6UI can tDHUHtlBaOINrtHtNWIWISCH lyNUWDUWwwrWfiuuwjui SloivWtLLlSMttSON'APAflAHW JERRY LEWIS cHfi mN Fn Rocky Faces Showdown Over N Y. Liquor Issue ALBANY, N.Y. (UPD - Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller placed his leadership of New York Aepub- EUESIIMMEI EDMIIDS.IIOIIIN!»l PANAVtSIUNSndMI llUiCOLOR Jerb'lBNis/ wiOiVLY? AlONCY'f licans on the line today in a bitter fight among GOP lawmakers over a plan for lifting liquor |)rlce controla. Rockefnller, a n announced candidate for the party's presi> dentlal nomination, ha a inanded the Itepublican-domln-Bted legislature take steps to offset public reaction to scandals Which brought about Indict-meiit of his former clinlrninn of the New York Sliile Llquoi Autliurlty. lie believes ending price > controls would go a long way toward wiping out adverse publicity. "I know oil no oMier situation where an industry fixes prices and Uie state enforces Uiem, the governor said, lie added thot some action must bo taken before the 1004 seiialon Is brought to a close. Of three proposed bills discussed at a closecl Republican conference, only tlie price control measure drew serious opposition. OTHBK MEASUIIRS llio other measures would eliminate the requirement for taverns to serve food and replace the minimum distance between retail liquor establishments. “Tbcre isn’t serious opposL lion to these proposals,” an Informed source said. ”But, (he governor will not be satisfied with Just those two He wants price I,egtslativc spokesmen for the administration told reluctant lawmakers that unless controls were lifted, opponents of Rockefeller in Uie presidential sweepstakes would use the issue laaa against the governor. The Rockefeller >yncn said this was Uio most important issue, from a national viewpoint, te come before the session. When the legislature met last night In what had been expected to be their final ni(jtht session before closing, Rockefeller aides were certain Republican members were ready to accept lifting liquor price controls. But some' began to balk. Behind-the-scenes m a n e u-verlng on the liquor bills kept lobbyists hopping between the assembly and senate chambers. Goya Painting Still Missing After Judging LONDON MV-Judgos of Britain’s Royal Academy today finished scrutinizing 10,000 pictures entered for (he academy's an; nual exIilbUion but failed to find the missing Goya portrait Of Iho Duke of Wellington. School Board to Study Needs Eicapact Chtck-Paiiar to Bo Roturned to Jail oXlii V ■'7 •UmTMNNlN Tlie Goya, which was houglit for Uie nation for IS02.000 In August KNil, was stolen within M month from the imtloiuil gallery In Trafalgar 8<|uure. No truce of It has ever been fouml. Future school needs and their cost will be discussed tomorrow night by the Pontiac .Schomi Board. 'Ilio board will receive a report from the Pontiac HcIkhiI ‘Study Committee, which has been studying needs of local schools. Hlr Charles Wheeler, president of (he Royal Academy, had suggested (hut (he thieves r'^tum it “with no questions, asked" by slipping It In among (he many pictures submitted fur (he acadeniy's annual exhibition. lie gave special permission that pictures submitted this year could remain In thplr wrappings until brought before (he judging panel, but the thieves did not accept his offer. Some experts think the picture may have been destroyed or damaged. Jumes L, llowleit, committee ■hninmm, will present the re-|Hirl to the bottl'd. In other business on tomor-)W night's agenda, procedures for appointment of a board of canvassers for sdiool district elections will lie presented. ilOAui) ueaciiiicu A boord of oanvairiers Is re-tiulred under the new state constitution. vStlll other business wll see iMiard members discuss a boundary lino chango, library services In elementary schools and pro-‘posed school legislation In the state legislature. There were scores of persons representing all phases of Uie liquoC business roaming capital corridors. The Republican senators In private caucus conferred about an hour and when the meeting broke up shortly before midnight, leader ^Walter J; Mahoney announced: ‘‘There will be no vote on the liquor bills tonight.” Chicago Stud/ Shows White Outvotes Negro CHICAGO (AP)-Votlng registration by Chicago Negroes nearly equals that of Chicago whites, but whites outvote Negroes by a margin of almost 3-2, a Chicago Urban League report disclosed Tuesday. The report theorized that Negro abstention from the polls reflects indifference and passive political protest, an expression that "the voter considers he has no alternatives on the ballot.” TAPE RECORDER JiVIGHVSt mm, COMBINATION OFFER! Fully transistorized 2 speed tape recorder • AC adapter (for use on home current as well as batteries.) • Phone pick-up , • Foot control • Microphone with remote Cbntrol • Earphone • Leather carrying case • Batteries • Reel • Roll of tape Regularly‘173.80! ' ALL FOR ‘88 While They Last! Grinnell's, Pontiad* Moll, '• ’V' ‘ /' T. ‘ / " ' tj K 21 S. ioginow St., FE 3-7168—Extended Accounts Avoilobte nowiBSHI Ponlloc'i fOmiAR.THtATER WMk Diy«i OciiHiunin 11 %m, 1* II | ’ tmiip ••irtlniMin II 1* It ».i Bardot ■WOMAN LIKE SATAN’ SI!____ IS DIFfERENT.ITIS DARING M0SI0FALL,IN ITS OWN TERRI FVINSp.lTISAlOVESTORY jacKientmon mteeBcmicK DaYSOFwme anPBOses" CIUCAdO (AP) . - Convirlail ’lieck-puNHer Fugene Anioiiette, 33, was awaiting extradition to Michigan today, where het had escaped from Camp Waterloo prison farm at Grass Lake. He WHS sentence for checks. ser^i lug a I"8 year Fassliig worthless Included In (|m report will Im mllliige rocommeiidntionN te finance future Relieol needN. Amninetle fled the prison farm March 0 with Ronald Vest, who was serving two to five years for auto theft. Vest was arrested III (Chicago and returned to Michigan Friday, Coijriiion Kills Man TRENTON (AP) - Hurl Gilliam, 40, of Trenion was killed Tuesday In a colUsloii between his stiillon wagon and a tnick UiX24 In Taylor Township. l«rMil iMry Nl|l|l |1 RA All Yw Cm Rl-aU Thun. Dlnntr S to 4 g. M. BUFFIT LUNCHION All Y*u Cm n*i on W"e>ifrx^kAW?.v* ’‘iS 7II t.m. AH Vau Cm 99C WALDRON HOTIL > CIKn/aNO eONNV ; Rvery Sunday lieginning Kiiatt^r Sunday Noon 'III 8 P.M. liiUTimlioiiHl Biiffol Childron Under 12, $1.50 $2.75 nOKMAN’K OLD MILL TAVERN ON MtOI Wil*n«rd EVERY WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY ENJOY I UOIUARD Mmon'j AU YW CM EIT WONDERFUL BONELESS FILLETS - frlod to n crisp golden brown $1.00 French Fried Potatoes • Cole Slaw Tartcire Sauce • Rolls and Butter CHILD'S PORTION 65 k 3650 DIXIE HWY. . HOWARD JolinjonJ ot Drayton Ploini »DR. STRANQELOVE^’AT rURDAY-—— . . . T:35 - 9:50 SHORT SUBiECTS AT . . .7:15-9:25 t ADMISSION J * Sunday thru Thursday • : ADULTS.... $1.25; SHORT - "NIGHT THAT SHADOW MOUNTAIN DIED" DAY 0NLY~ • f Fridw and Saturday • : ADULTS.... $uo: FEATURE AT ... Sdis - 5;3B ■ T;4B - lOrtS SHORT. SUBJECT--^ 3;00^ 5;10 - 7;2Q .TsT" » COLLEGE mum ■Bias P.M. » (WITH I.D. CARD1 .$1.00 A THfATW^ ■jLSc. ■J* iv 7.; -i'A jEplii- 'f j". m; L I J ‘ JllIK PONTIAC'XoiKff^^^^ WKONKIIU , 'A-- '1, f"«;i I " ( ■ fl LBJ Aide Tells Have-Nots: CJKNRVA AP) ^ Thfl IJrtlUHl Stutes dollvorMi it «t«m iMHiirt Utdiiy to th« worl(t‘ii (Ktor na* f ttons,. urgliis them to forget tr«> diUonal fears of Investment by foreign capitalists and get to work reorganising their backward economies, ‘Utoonomto deveiopiiienl la an intrlcato and difficult prtKtaaa,” t'nderaeoretary of Stale George Ball warned the U.N. Trade and Development ('onforence. *‘It has proved dIfIcuU for tlie industrial countries who have gone through It In (lie past, a it will be so. for the newer uoi tiles going through it now.” '1 Tile rich nations, he added, can tml]) with teclinlcal advice and close omgieratton Uirough such estahilsiied ftiruma as the General Agreement on Tariffs and 1Vade-era- tlon In this groat Joint endeavor.” Retired Publisher Diet DELRAY BEACH, Fla, (AP) -John, C, Sterling, 76, retired publisher of itiis Week mega.-xlne and former president of McCalls magaslne, died Tuos^ day. Sterling was a native of Greenwich, Conn, 'A'*“ ,:r'‘ -KI _ „ , , : ' : 'nur M|nii< ........ ' ' - ■ ffVtmmc winiiiiiiw»i«in um uUUIB ■j. ; , , , ‘'.fViii'*- <■ '' .';,:v. ■■ '•'N ] A', *V, -..V „• |i PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS , ‘ ■ MAUIUIIII I 4I» E. P(KE ST. I 7M«UtUilN«T. I ^.v. #1' i'trM'^:;.rp;r.wir I I KW : -'mi/ ■ ClOUOtUNPAYt | OftN (UNDAV V la« | ’0|Mn 7 Ripyi a WmIi | FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS Ml ORCHItllD LltKC AH. Oiwn y A M. 'Ill f f.M. « DAYA A VYCtK 07CN SUNDA^Y 7 to 1 I /SNNIgMMtllU. |lUOIiMiYhi««*.| I27SCNityUk«M. | mililakaM I ■ IMtaiali* N AUNDAYA S OffNAUNnAYA ■ OPfN SUNDAY 1200 BONUS COLD BELL GIFT STAMP " ^ 100 EXTRA GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS FREE EACH WEEK FOR SEVEN WEEKS WITH COUPONS I 1 and 2 Oouponi Good This Wook! • I ww«.x» tmmmm wf» . w i •-»»*.» « i nirh mm^ii wwmfn rwM OK VBi^ ttkeiVaF tti • n Vawwrwrro i THROUGH 7i AN ADDITIONAL 300 FREE GOLD BELL STAMPS WITH MASTER COUPON 8j TOTAL - ONE COMPLETE GOLD BELL SAVINGS BOOM PICK Ul» CE>EJI»Ot^S Armour's Fully Cooked ... DEFATTED SEMI-BONELESS HAMS SMS«E Pork CUTLETS for only PricoA SubjocI to Markot ConditionA. Wo rOAorvo tho right to Limit QuantitioA None to DoolorA or minorA. f 'JUlUlUluall|nulUlYllW'WlW^(lUlWlUl^/TtSwlillt|lvn' - FOOD TOWN - PEOPLE'S COUPON r':- Pure Granulated BEET SUGAR I WithThiA r bag WW Coupon Crisp Delicious POUTS CHIPS REMUS BUHER Sunkist [ NAVEL ORANGES Madarin ORANGES -WHIPT0PPIiKH!9 Si •■ir f Fresih CARROTS »d RARISHES 11 OZ. cello pkg. Red cello pkgJ Hamilton Grade "A" LARGE Dozen 'f ■'ji/ndWiwiWutiVdwnVi • rji/iiiuMiHUiitHtyttHi Birdseye . GREEN PEAS CUT GREEN MIX VEGETABLES Frozen M-M. Asst. Flavors I Hollywood BEANS ICE iLLl\ mTTERSiiCE Your Choice! Sunda^^ fond Town • People*! Bonus Stamp Coupdit nmitnaiMUd/iiU: I f4Hfdd>YlUiUtt(ii(i»dwii Feod Town • People’s Bonus Stamp Coupon .5S j p Food Toum - People*! Bonus Stamp 0i 50 FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of any BEEF ROAST 50 FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase lb. or more of any STEW BEEF m* Sold to i?) (| 50 iHidui ____ People*! Bi . , FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase Borden or Seattett HHUeHHU Hatf Gallon - ,3§ Food Town ■ Pneple*s Bonua Stamp Coupor» 3.^ y ANY EASTER PLANT •vs«iir«i-»Bi.;iimt»ch2a. luee. lagH Cn FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase ' of any 3-pkgs. of. EASTER CANDY It ^ Coupon ... Non* Sold .. CpHppn txpift Sot., Mqrch' Food Town ■ Peopla*a Bonua Stpft% Wupan p £ S FREE GOLD BELL ||3 IP'' SO Stamps With PurehasG of any 2 {art or more of PICKLES OR OLIVES / ; '7^': ts.;,:-: f II- f ■ Jl- ft'fv i '"I 1 ■' i 1\! V 'J 1: ' t';S ■/'»;.■ Tira POtTriAC PltKSS. We/)NKH1)AY. MAUCIt u. mt ^ hifir: X 1 '•■■■ ' V ' A y«ar hus ntid« » big dllferonM for MUuindod bowler BlUy AUm OrUindo, Fla. l4iat April, after 11 tournamwits on the Profeaalonal Bowlera' Aaaoclation tour, Allen arrived In Fontlac thinking the PBA Open at the 300 Bowl might be the end of the trail for him. „ He was already thinking about getting back to Orlando and chalking off the PBA tour as a good try but a lost cause for his pocketbook. He arrived in Pontiac cempact style, sharing a little car and looking for lodging that would meet his budget. That budget Included a light breakfast, light lunch, light dinner and a light bed all In the neighborhood of a five dollar day. The day of the nationally televised finals It was a dreary, gray and damp day in Pontiac. But for Allen it was the brightest day of his young bowling career. He was presented the first prize check of |S,000 for winning tthe Pontiac PBA Open and even though he knew he was fibbing he told the national TV audience, "The sun Is shining bright here In Pontiac." \ TOP SOUTHPAW Since then he has become one of the most respected southpaw bowlera on the raA tour. He won four tournaments including a pair of back-to-back tourneys and his earninp for 19^ amounted to $21,900. National champion Dick Weber, even though be knew 1 hadn*t woo a taumament on the PBA tour prior to his ★ ★ ★ ★ dr ★ ★ dr ★ Deadline Hurting Pontiac UFL Bid A ^fast-approaching deadline' tiac in the United F(j)Otball ha| apparently halted an effort l.«ague. by I group of local businessmen to gain a 1964 franchise for Pon- TOOAY'S aidJISITIOM SASaSALL ‘ur.isr'sa.V Chictoo........... ■ - In a lengthy session at the Elks Temple last night, the group decided to drop plans to field a 1004 team and cohcen-trale Its efforts on organizing a professional club for the 190S season. The group came up with pledges of $19,Ml at the meet^ faig, far short of the $50,000 required by the UFL for a new form a corporation that will ca^ ry out plans to field a 1900 team. lie said he would atteiit the meeting of lean\ owners of the UFL In Charleston, W. Va., April 4-5 to Inform Utem of the progress made by the Pontiac group. "We will also be able to discuss some of the pitfalls they may have encountered In organizing their clubs," Shelton I CNy ftveryone picked Allen to finish last. "He’s a lefthander and uatioual lsaous ^ that Is enough for me to know," said Weber prior to his match Jf" with Allen. jmIum * * * !» Of course Weber must have had the darkest fear of left handers for obvious reasons. His four 2nd place finishes in recent PBA tournaments have been to southpaws, so he must have known, Ws own riMMrteomIngs. He was right. Allen did beat him on his way to the 1903 Pontiac championship and thus start his climb upward. Yesterday, Allen arrived to defend his title, tired after continuous week long travel from Buffalo to Florida and back to Michigan. He wasn’t traveling "compact style" now. He owns a 1964 auto and he made this trip by Jet. would Ilhe to be driving the car that would remind me of my first PBA victory," said Allen, "hut my backers made my present car available with such an offer that I found it too hard to turn down." Chlcugo The effort to bring professional football to Pontiac was The deadline for entry into. launched last week by a small j the league for the 1904 season ^ businessmen who dls-la April 4, leaving Uttle time to ® membership raise ftnids to finance a team. I "'Hb UFL commissioner Oeorge i :So Heading the group working Columbus, Ohio. :SS for a 1905 entry into the league „ „ ^ . I Is Bud Shelton, Rochester. i bt that Ume the PAiarr wnn ism W0,000 by ;Soo “PP’y ^>embe^ M Shelton said this morning that ship, and another $50,000 before he will start Immediately to, the sea.son opens In September, j Chuck Roehm W Winner at 300 Bowl Pro Sfwvt Nagy Atdi Winning 1436 Total; 160 Op«n Qualifying $800 RICHEB—Pontiac’s Chuck Roehm (left) is $800 richer because he met Professional Bowlera’ Association president Steve Nagy Tuesday night. Roehm won the first place check in the Pro-Am event preceding the North American Open by teaming his 800 handicap bowling with Nagy’s 636. ruSioAVi What Allen meant was that he appreciated the backers of his tour and he was ready to fepay them for their confidence In him. Of the $21,000 he earned, his share after paying back his financial obligations to thdii amounted to about $4,000. "Now I’m ready to start wlnnlnf for myself," he noted, “and I have the confidence In myself to win. This would be as good a place as any to prove I can do it.’’. At One of his big feats just recently was the 300 game he bowled in New Orleans. It earned hlpi a diamond ring and a $100 Ifonus in his victory. "Why, if I should be lucky to win here in Pontiac again, I might even think seriously about staying here. I would get to wondering if this isn’t my lucky place." ★ ★ ★ But, after his 581 iii the pro-am iMt night, he wearily yawned and said, "But, before I think of doing atiy winning I better get some Sleep." That was more than 16 hours ago. He should be well rested for the opening round of the PBA today. Chicago iA) “" autia# I, York ^N) 1, aaiULTi icIniMtl I Ion' 0, night Angabi (N) I York (A) 0 ivanwi City 1 ......... Dolroll 3 San eranclKo a, Ciavaland I, 7 Inninga, data, Fla a. Datrolt at i^(N) va. Mil at Varo at St. at Miami, Chicago (N) v PhoanlN, Aril. Chicago (A) va. San Pranclaco Mlnnaaota at Orlando, . Ciavaland at Tucaon, HOCKBY AT A OLANCB By Tha Aaaacialad Piaaa NATIONAL LBAOUB rUYOPPS ISSDAY'S RBSULTS achadulad. TODAY'S OAMSS ■ "THUs'sDAY'S OAMSS lo at Montraal, lint gama of Datrolt at Chicago, II Tigers Plan to Reduce Camp List POMPANO BEACn, Fla (AP) - "Well, I got a look at all I wanted to In one game,’’ said Detroit Tigers manager Charlie Dressen ’Biesday after hIs team lost an exhibition contest 941 to the Washbigton Senators. « Dressen used fo^r pitchers who hadn’t seen any action this spring in the loss to the Nats. Liston's Finances Probed WASHINGTON (AP)-Senate Investigators turn today to Sonny Liston's financial adviser for an explanation of why the former heavywelghtwelght champion signed away promotion profits from his fights and apparently got nothing in return. The stock In Inter-Continental Promotions, Inc., brought others $100,000 In dividends from Liston’s title fight last montii with Cassius Clay and may be more Lefty Doug Gallagher pitched^ , the first three Innings, right-1, adviser. Jack Nilon, also handers Larry Foster and Bob jf, asked atout Dustal each hurled two and BUI conh-act with Liston which Paul pitched the eighth inning, i the manager’s 50 p» I nr#M,g„n HWn't arl Beaubien of Pontiac (right). They finished out of the money, though, with 1190 pins. Bowling on the same pair of lanes were Clarkston’s Ivan Betts (next to Allen) anil his pro partner John Coder. They had 1303 and Betts won $75. PBA Pro-Amateur Meet Scoreboard PRO-AM PRIZS LIST Team Pro Am Hep Ttl. PriM 1. Steve Nagy \ <3S-57S-22S-143« MW - Chuck Roehm, Pontiac t. Buu Pazio «W-M7-t6S-143l $400 . ruiier. I. Buzz Fazio Jim Clarkson, F S. Bob Kwolek Polly Tate,,,.... t. Rich Nielsen M4-579- 17-1330 tlW Jack Coenis, Saginaw ». Mike Totsky 413-5W-130-131F $ 75 • Wayne Place, Ravenna ■* "ack B" ............. - ffl9 rlaCCy Kflvonnfl g, ( Bkmdollllo «52-434-»3-131l I 11. Ed LubanskI Mary Ann Christoff, Pontiac ». Tom Fowler 613-517-154-1316 t 75 Frank Yob, Wyoming 11 Tom Ballstrerl 577-57M53-13W Bob Clark, Dearborn 14l Tom Parrish — J im N 11 SHI Pace . 600440-165-13W 175 : AI Matthews 11 John Coder 602-557-144-1303 % 75 Ivan Betts, Clarkston 11 Tad Hoffman 653-IS4-16Z-I299 Ray Joslin, Roseville . 11 Rich Nielsen 664-532-103-1378 $ 75 . a Tate, . . .. 20. Joe Talayka . 573-547-174-1276 Jack Thompson, Orahd Rapids 21. Jim V Or. 22. Ed --------------- 533-563-178-1275 $50 Or. Harvey Ooldberg, Lansing .—..... —--------- ise 62IH<1'172-T273 t 50 iveirn kesier. Lake Orion 21 Wayne Zahn .. rSis.567-i3S-1272 $50 Frank Drum., LansiM . SI At Saves ....... 670-01- ST-1272 | 50 ■sAvIsdenkA-»*«•'"...... ’ 25. Don Carter ^S75-616-177-12W $ 50 605-503-180-1255 $ 50 P.M. $OUAD PreAmHcp TH. . .................. 557-503-175-1255 ni Gauld, Pontiac Fuller Gordy 553-536- 57-1155 Jim Emons, Detroit Ray DlSanto s 585-534- 76—1218 Bob Fuller, Washington yito Calola _ ■ |f7-448-l50-1145 Fred Catrbto, Grand Rapids Tom Hennessey 687-540- 42-1267 Joe Smith, ' Saginaw >. Sid Lay 586-506-105-1177 John Janezarek, Pontiac Ralph Brunt 817-547-102-1268 Burt Hensley,' Pontiac Rill AAlll*^ ' Jimmy Bonfigllo, Pontiac Glen Blakesley Jack Morris, Pontiac Jim Schroeder Ralph Puertas, Pontiac Lee Schoemith, Detroit Jack Rosencrance ii'irv^u"*' Clinton Yerkes, Pontiac Ev Collins ; , Ray Brancheau, . Pontiac GTOr^f Howajd^ ......... <27-601- 0-1228 ...... 570-447-261-1 '600-512-171-1283 606- 515- 78-1220 638W7-108-1233 577-466-105-1165 603-555- 45-1233 <13-470-157-1342 656-470- 70-1236 607- 536- 15-1155 , Crake, PonSac Harry O'Neale Steve Ollseck, Clarkson 573-561 45-1301 553-476f157-1235 642-536- 72-1271 61iai3-72-1176 II Hamisch tin H6Hon, L . 651535-158-1253 Bill Pointer, Pontiac Ray Koehler ............ 651275-300-1230 Jimmy PueiTas, Pontiac ' 571511177-1267 Norm Klllmer Robbie Roberts, Pontiac Don Scott 651551* 75-1281 Marla Reynolds, Pontiac Per Stone <30557-7ln*M«H ^ appears these four may be among the first to go when the Tigers start to trim their roster. And there is sure to be more than there four players missing, by the end of the week. ' ACTION DUE I Dressen and General Manager James A. Campbell were scheduled to discuss matters after Tuesdayfs game and said they Would have an announcement "in a day or two.” The Detroit manager said he would not send a player out simply because he has <’had a poor start. "You wouldn’t ship A1 Kaline out, would you?” Dressen said. Kaline has collected only four hits in 25 trips to the plate in 11 exhibition gaines. He hit one of the three Tiger homers against Washington. “It would not be fair for anyone to say that we should use our veteran players and try to start winning these games,” Dressen explained, "we have to give all there younger players a chance. How else would we have known that Willie Horton would'develop so fast?” ager. WILL TESTIFY Nilon and his brother. Bob, were scheduled to testify as the Senate Antitrust and Monopoly subcommittee resumed hearings on circumstances surrounding Clay’s Feb. 25 victory over Liston on a controversial technical knockout. The subcommittee headed by Sen. Philip Hart, D-Mlch., seeks to determine 4irhether federal regulation is needed for professional boxing. Another phase of the hearing Is aimed at learning whether Liston’s underworld ties, revealed in previous sessions have been severed. Garland D. C!herry, a Chester, Pa., attorney, told the subcommittee Tuesday how Injter-Con-tinental was organized to promote Liston’s championship fights and give Liston a share of the promotional profits. RIchgrd Macintosh, Pontiac John NIckall ... 578-531-162-1253 Tom PadllK, Pontiac ^ Harry Smith 601-530- 8—1212 sonny Wheatley, Grand Rapir “------ **------ stU Monroe Moore Ray Pace, Andy Marzich Jack Burch, GrOnd Rapids 7- 75-1187 Snow or Swamp Can't Stop Mets NEW YORK (AP) -There’s snow in the dugout and center field is a swamp, but the new home of the New York Mets is going to be ready for the baseball season. Most of die 55,000 seats are already bolted in place in the five tiers of stands. The infield grass is growing. Bulldozers are churning in the outfield, filling in the mud . puddles. “We’ll be ready. The parking lots, the escalators, the restaurants, the drinking fountains, the playing field-all reaefy by April 17,” said Rick Praeger, a part-sVi'o engineering and archi- 5 0 0 ol ................................— 4 0 0 0 ; Hinton II .... _________ .. Alyca If 2 0 0 0 Dustal p 0 Skowron 1b 3 0 10 cDemetar 1 AM m n »T.Brown 1b 1 1 0 0 Paul p 0 <08-573- 78-1253 Lock cf 2 2 11 Wood 1b 4 Hunt r1 4 0 1 2 B Phil'ps 3b 4 Bromley c 2 0 11 Oyler ss 4 Kennedy 3b 4 12 2 Roarke c 4 r,«nmn«i ■■■ Daniels p 2 0 0 0 Gallagher p 1 07-4^147^1184 byalentina 1 0 0 0 Horton rl “'-•-'k p * “ * “ ■hllilps 5i30 P.M. SQUAD I***"-'.. ProAmHep ISaScMca Riozik ^ 6«6» Jack Blondollllo 652-502- 52-1206 dD. Phillips 10 0 0 Lee Lmat, Saginaw., Roebuck p 0 0 0 0 Dm Cermak . 541 505-147-1176 -s---- Nlta_Korrey, Lansing Telals 31 710 5 Telals isH&r ^ &.n«s. McGrath Named Clarkston High Cage Mentor 'Annunzio --/s, troy. Auglo D'Annunzio RlA_Qulnn, Grand Rapids Bill Bunetta 650-573-<3—1256 John C. KoskI Jr. . Mike i^ltroff , ..........551-473- 51-1125 "—y Martin, Utica lavas ........670-477- 84-1251 i-QuozInte Faulkner ....... 617-511- 37-1167 Don Mantl is giving up the head basketball coaching post at Clarkston after 12 years to ml:-.: HardW Watson, .. Mel Henderlite ...... 528554-138-1218 Walt Zumbrunnen, Pontiac ISSteewi^iaglniw Ed Olszewski .. .... 551-552-136—1171 Pa|eD4,Coll) ....... iSutnSli become assistant princi- _ E—Roarke, Wood, Dustal PO-A-Oe- * “ — 3811; Washington 27-14 DP-Galta- Blaslngamo, I 2B-Oyler, ...................... Wood! Roarke, Kennedy, Brinkman. . IP H R BRBBSO Gallagher r 3^. 3 2 2 2 1 Foster 2 5 6 5 3 1 Dustal 2 1 0 ,0 2 3 gaol I 11 1 0 0 Donlels 5 5 3 3 1 3 RIdzIk 3 2. 0 0 1 ,2 Roebuck II 00031 WP-sDenlels LP-^ostar. ^BolkL.Oellaoher. HflP-Brumley (by Oelleghor). WP—Gallagher U — Drum-tnM^DInwro Umont, Stevens T—2:24 tectural firm that designed Shea Stadium. And so in a little more than three weeks^ baseball fans, those famous New Yoric Mets — Choo CJhoo Coleman, Rod Kanehl, Larry Beamarth, Amado Samuel, and all—will charge Out to play in their new playground. PLAYS SHORTSTOP Amado Samuel??? He’s a shortstop, Virginia. !Ibe result will be a combination of the worst baseball team in the National League — 10th twice and favored to be 10th again—and what appears to be the finest baseball stadium ever built. There isn’t a post in the place. Every seat is pointed at second base, or the ^yard-line for football. The Jets of the American Football League will also play ' here. * ★ * ,★ The box seats all swing on, rails to new positions for football, "nie operation takes about 10 to 15 mihutes. The worst seat in the house is better Ihan most seats In other stadiums, and more colorful, orful. ’Pie seats are painted in shades, pf green, blue, orange and yellow. \ it There are no bleachers. And for the next two years, fans who chn’t stand to watch the Mets my more can always Cherry, secretary of the firm controlled by Bob NUon and his other brother, Jim, said Liston was given 60 per cent of the firm’s stock. He insisted that no other fighter ever before had ,J9een given a share of these profits. Cherry said that Jack NUon became Liston’s business adviser and the fighter relied heavily on Niton’s advice. Cherry said u. jjjj jnjprgggjQn Liston PARTNERS He teamed with attractive Judy Wlnocek of Dearborn for a 1428 handicap total, only eight pins off the winning pace. had almost no understanding of business matters. Cherry said two weeks ago he was surprised to learn during talks with the Internal Revenue Service about profits from the fight that Jack Nilon was receiving M per cent of Liston’s purse as a fighter. OTHER MANAGER He said Liston already was paying 10 per cent to his manager of record, George Katz. Cherry said last December Liston signed away 275 of his 500 shares of stock In Ipter-Con-tlnental. iqjparently without getting anything In return, to San) Margolis. He identified Margolis as a Philadelphia vending machine operator who had "helped Liston when he was down” and the man who brought Liston to the Nitons to organize Inter-(tonti-nental. Later, Margolis signed over 50 of his shares to Salvatore Avena, a Philadelphia Attorney who had' figured in the formation of Inter-Continontal, ClLei^ ry said. Oierry said he checked with Jack Niton, to see if the transfer to MargoUi was legitimate and went ahead when Nilon okayed it. He said, he didn’t call Liston because the fighter didn’t understand financial matters and to caU him would have been a waste of time. Reliefer Sharp os MSU Tedm^ Trims Va. Tech sports system. James Davld-1 assist McGrath. pal. He wiU continOe as atii-letic dlreetor. ■ A tt ^ . - ■ Harry (Bud) McGrath, Maati’s assistant for the^ last two years, has been dWat-ed to the head basketball Job. Mel Vaara is switch | n g from the h>$h school aUiletic _________ _____________ department to the jitnior high itaice one iJtiie 21 escalators ciut and go -watch the World’s Fair across‘the street. BLACmURG, Va. (AP)-Re-lief pitcher Dick Proebstle held Virginia Tech to . two hits and one run, in six inningsTuesday as Michigan State took its second straight basebaU vict^ 10- Proebistle relieved starter Doug Doubrei in the fourth Inning Ydth the Spmtans ahead 7-< 5. Junior outfielder Dick BUlings led the: 13-hit MSU attack with four hits and three RBI’s. Joe Porrevecchto hit a solo hoffiter ,^nd a 4 double. The; Spartans meet North Carolina State at Raleigh, N. C<, today.) i Ry JERB CRAIG Youth and experience blended, Tueadny night and won the $5,000 Pro-Am event preoedlng the North American 0]^ at 300 Bowl. ^ ★ A ★ Chuck Roehm, 24-yeaivold Pontiac resident, paired his 000 handicap total with (he 038 actual president Steve Nagy of the Urofesslonal Bowlers Association to take the $800 first place check. For the veteran Nagy of Birmingham It was his first time with a winner in the Pro-Am competition that precedes the PBA Opens on the nation-wide tours, Late this morning 00 men began rolling the first six games of the North American Open tournament, followed by another 80 men at 2 p.m. They are gunning for some $31,400 In prize money. Detroiter Buzz Fazio, like Nagy a member of bowling's hall of fame, was the top producing pro last night. He hit 000 actual pins to boost two amateur partners among the Sheill receive the $400 runner-up check; and Fazio’s other amateur partner, Jim Clarkson of Pontiac, won $200 for finishing fourth. Clarkson, president of First Federal Savings of Oakland and Pontiac’s March of Dimes bowling champion, had 080 with handicap. He has only been competitive bowling a year. Third place went to another county amateur, Union Lake’s George Fuller, Paired with Mike Chiuchioto, Fuller had Oil actual and 818 with handicap for a combined total of 1419. He’ll collect $250. In all, 26 of the 159 amateur bowlers will coUect prize money. The low paying total was 1288 for $50. Fuller was one of three amateurs to outbowl their |Jro partner and win money. He was the only amateur with a 600 actual series among the top 26. Jack Topham and Joe Foster, both (d Pontiac, were the only other amatears to crack the 600 mark. They had 002 and 601, respectively. Pontiac city councilman William Taylor competed on the 10:30 p.m. squad last night with New Jersey pro Teata Semiz, but finished well out of the money. ★ ★ ★ Two Juniors bowled on the first squad. Jimmy Bonfigllo was only five pins away from the cashing total wJUle Jimmy Puertas lUs 58 ^tlns away. TONIGHT Both 80-map squads In today’s North ''American Open will , boAl six-game blocks this evening The llrst will start at 5:3$ p.m. and the second at 8:14, p.m. Tlje order will be. reversed for tomorrow’aif concluding 12 games «(2 bloclfo) The four blocks will deterinine the 16 bowlers in Friday'^ head-to-head matches. A A -A The four survivors from Friday’s action will move into the nationally televised finals Saturday aftenwon. The second Oiird and fourth bowlers wiH clash for the right to meet the Friday night leader of the $4,000 first place chrek.. ' i 'hi: 1y Included in the 16(hmai) ( lineup are 10 amateurs. ' h i // ) J . . - f’ ■i, 1 ; \ . ■ ‘ - ! 1004 Scorti Quick KO UONOKULV UP) Rl»l»g young Johnny Sanlua of Honolu^ 111 KHired ■ ono^punch knookoiit Tuoartny night In 32 hocoiuIr of Uio flrat round ovor Oourgo Oroene, of Dotrolt, at Ctvlo Au> ditorlum. 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GRAND OPENING SPECIAL! “To The Next 15“ WEEK COURSE INCLUDES: • SAUNA STEAM BATHS • UNLIMITED VISITS • PERSONAL SUPERVISION • SUNTAN ROOMS • MECHANICAL MASSAGE c StudioB Coast to Coast COURSES FOR ALL 'A' Special Courses for Older Men MFM idr Special Courses for Wtung Men SfY Body Builder Courses By The AsHwiatod Prase Rich Jordnn of Fannvilla, n 6-foot-7 guard who lakes great pride in tlie fact llml he can \ II baakcllmll as well ua some of Ills tnller opponcnla, heads the MIdilgun Class C .Ml-State baskethall team announced Uxiuy by Tlie Assoidat-ed Pmas. riLK lk)N^A(!: WKl()Nl<;Hl)Ay, MAljlCII U Black Hawks Fretting Ovei; Detroit ■Ar Ar Ar Nevf Haven Stalwart Named io All-State Joining .Iordan on the first team were Dick Schrumpf of Gallen, Dwight Lee of New Haven, Bill Collins of Mount Pleasant Sacred Heart and Jim Biglinm of Crosse Pointe St. Paul, 'llic Class C team, as selected In a statewide pull of sports writers, Is the smallest of the four teams pIckcHt. HIgham Is only 5-9, while Schrumpf, at 6 10, Is the tallest. ” 55 POINTS Jordan, the only junior among the top five, scorwl 041 |M)lnts this season while hilling on more than half of his 8hots—261 of 520. He also scored 55 points in a tournament loss to Middle-vUle. Sclirumpf averaged more than 25 points H game through 20 reg-ulur-season contests and is an excellent rclK)under, He scored 05 points in one game. One of tlie top college prospects in the state, he has been contacted by every Big 10 school. Ix'c, who gained ajl-stale mention as a football halfback last fall, was New Haven’s top .scorer with a 25.5 average and is a strong rCbounder. Collins, a good shot from outside, averag^ 25.6 points 4n 15 games for Sacred Heart and was thp team leader in assists. He was held to less thon 10. IMilnls only twice In a throe-year •aroer. Lick, Cay lord and Ken Adam-skl, Capac. TKAM LKADKIl Blghnm is considered by many the top ‘‘small man" In the state. His team leadership carried St. Paul through another auccessful season and atate title bid. As was the cose with the first team, the second team selections in this class came from all partstof the state. AU ITATI CLAII c eiSlT TMAM gim* IcIlMl rilH . tchrumrS, O.ll.ii .............. (fr, ........ J, Point# P#ui R. Jordon, pr— - Named to the No. 2 squad were Duane Kohlenberger, Addison; .Ion Fryitell, Houghton; Deam IXiistermars, Muskegon West Michigan Christian; Tom I- BMChV'"f#Khn»rV^ Opr«#,, Akron-0«Jr9rov*i J*lin#r, 8«m- ir, CapAci Alnoair#, KlonoakI, Saylnaw a. Maryj Jonaa, Ann Artor U.) Harndon, rllanll Rpoeeveiij MaeSaban, Vpillanll rn eopa, ^nllac M. AAIcna#ji HoManci. rti; tef >» fern BOWLINC They shuffled the standings again last Wednesday In the Huron Bowl A Ixiague and there could be a repeal tonight. Tony’s Tigers took over first place by sweeping eight points while former leaded 500 Bowl dropped eight to Oxford Mattress which was paced by Ed Stasiuk’s 224-210-645. The night’s high game honors were clalmwl by Cecil Stapleton. In Huron’s Friday Ladies Matinee l.eague, Charlotte Bishop bowled 205—541 and Naoma Johnston hit 510. Last Thursday at Wonderland Lanes, the HI-IjO Ladies recorded a 215—587 for Laura Cheno- BLAOKWALLS 4f..$44 Plus Tax and a RKappabI# TIra ■ II 44 — WHITEWALLS EXTRA — Sixes 7.50x14 ond 6.50x13 20,000 Mile Road Hasord G u o r o n t e e. Now Treads. Retreads on sound tire bodies or on your Delco Superide Shock Absorbers.. . ^8^^ Ollsr ExpSros April 4, 1964 PETE’S SERVICE CENTERS 42 S. Teiegroph weth, a 554 for Ethel Smith and 205—514 for Lou Horner. The Tuesday House I.«ague last week at 300 Bowl had a 2.50-232—620 performance by Gary Crake, a 277—634 duo by Bob Hukka, and a 254-242-0.54 effort by Cliff ‘Thompson. The same day the GMC Americhn |.eague posted 220— 604 totals for Bob Frick, and a 141 triplicate for Bob Sn-kels. Wednesday’s ‘‘300" action saw Cadle Burrell and Charles Walter hit 247s and Bob Yates 258 in the Pontiac Motor Inter-Office League. The Ladies Classic that day had a 550 by Mable Fields and an 850 game by the Terry Machine team. Season Series Won by Wings on Home Ice Play Start! Thursdoy in Stanley Cup Semii; Different Styles CHICAGO (AP) -You would not tliink the Chicago Black HOwks would fret too much over the Detroit Red Wings In their Stapley Cup aemifinul scries which opens in Chicago Stadium Thursday night. The Hawks finished In second place, 13 points ahead of the fourth place Wings. And the Hawks scored 27 more goals and yieldevks captain Pierre Pllote. KANSAS CITY, Mo.JUPI) -The nervous liasketball coach may have a resort to tranquilizers under a major rules change adopted by the National Basketball Committco of the United States and Canada. The change, was announced Tuesday by the 119 - member L;ommittec, basketball’s governing body, along with nine minor changes and a recommendation that the players benches be placed on the same side of court on each end of the scorer's table. Lorraine Cloutier hit 227-201— 592 in the 300 Bowlerettes League; Frank Goodson had 212 in the GMC Federal circuit; and Joanne Craher (211) and Elmer Rau (207) led the 300 Mixed bowlers. May Halt Move to Dethrone Clay "rhey always try to keep one or two guys playing behind our defense when we hOve the ^ck in their zone,” he added. "This draws our defense back and breaks up our attack. You have to play back, or they will hR those buys with a long pass up the middle.”, Chicago Coach Billy Jleay has an answer to the fact that the Hawks failed to win in Detroit. "Sure we didn’t win there, but neither did they win in Chicago,” he said. Detroit gained the season edge over the Hawks by tying two in Chicago, while the Hawks were able to score but one tie in Detroit. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)-I Edward Lassman,-. president of j the World Boxing Association, jsaid Tuesday he is “recom-I mending discontinuance of any I thought of title withdravral’’ from heavyweight champion Cassius Clay. OPEN WIDE! Lassman demanded earlier this week that Clay be stripped of his title. “The matter of withdrawal developed numerous strong representations by members of the WBA who felt that ciroum-sfances were reflecting unfavorably against boxing and stirring up much unrest in the country,” Lassman said. ' Pull your dusty suitcases out of their hiding places and get set to go/ Where? ,, , When? i i * How? Talk to the friendly young lady at your Auto Club office. She’s an AAA traveb counselor and an expert at leading you to carefree vacation travel. She can Handle just about every travel detail except packing your I At the close of the 1962-63 sea* son, WIBC membership totaled 2,453,783“women bowling in l08,-851 leagues in every state. 10NE PLAN fAufo" ONE COMPANY FIRE ONE AGENT 1 LIFE . • Natlenwld# Mutual Int. C«. AT THE PONTIAC MALL Home OHieo; Ceiumbui, Ohio Consistent Play on Golf Circuit Helps Nkklaus DUNENDIN, Fla. (UPI) Consistent Jack Nicklaus,. who picked up a $4,000 check for a runnenip spot in the Doral Open last weekend, is leading all pro golfers in 1963 earnings with a total of $17,500. The unofficial list of money winners released by the Professional Golfers’ Association ' Mason Rudolph and Arnold Palmer in the second and third positions with $13,947.92 and $12,643.75, respefctively. Juan Chi Chi Rodriguez is fourth with $U.651.43 and Billy Casper, who collected $7,500 for his victory at Doral last Sunday, is fifth with $10,112.50. Rounding out the top 10 are Rex Baxter, $9,006.25, Gary Player $8,490.00, Dave Marr $8,424.49, Paul Harney $7,-595.00 and Jacky Cupit $7,-495.25. Clifford B. Fagan, committee secretary, said the new rule will attempt to control decorum of the coaches, players and attendants on the re- Azalea Golf Starts With Pro-Am Play WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP)-A $2,500 professional-amateur tune serves’ benches during a f game, A coach or other offender, he sold, can be removed from the game if Ills behavior is Interpreted ns disrespectful or "baiting” of the officials. It will control the coach’s bounce from the bench. A technical foul will be called if the rule is violated. RULE DRAFTED Although not yet put into official language, Fagan said, the rule was drafted to prevent action by non - playing participants inciting spectators to un«^' sportsmanlike conduct. It is'^ hoped, he said, to create a hotly contested games. Adoption of the rules ended a more healthy atmosphere at two - day session by the committee comprised of representa^ lives of Lhe NCAA, National Federation High School Athletic Association, YMCA, Canadiaur Athletic Union, and Canadian Amateur Basketball Association. up today sets the stage for Th\......................... lursday’s opening round of the $20,000 Azalea Open Golf Tournament. fifty professionals, each paired with three amatieurs, made up today’s field in play over the 6,744-yard, par 72 Cape Fear Country Club course. The 16th annual Azalea Open, a 72-hole test, runs through Sunday. Jerry Barber, who won last year for the third time in 11 years, will be challenged by Billy Casper, Tony Lema, Bruce Devlin and Tommy Jacobs, each a winner since the new tour < V Broncos Name Foe 5 KALAMAZOO (AP) - Michigan’s Cazzie Russell and Bowling Green’s Howard Komives were unanimous choices on Western Michigan’s all-opppnent basketball team announced Tuesday. Bronco players also picked Ron Miller and' Les Hunter of Chicago Loyola and Bill Buntin of Michigan. Michigan State’s averag home football attendance in 1963 was 65,319, third highest in the, nation, surpassed only by O^hio State and* Louisiana State. CORRECT AU6NMENT SAVE FAR MORE THAN IT COSTS ~ AND BRINGS THE PRICELESS PEACE OF MIND OF KNOWING YOUR FRONT END IS SAFE AND READY FOR HIGH SPEED TURNPIKE DRIVING! Save Part! • Save Lives Wo'vo'boon doing complete front end service for 31 years and still take pride in doing itwoll. Special thru Sat. With spring and hard summer driving on the way, you can’tumake a better invost-safety. Full $8 370 South Saginaw Correction At the South Exit of the Perimeter Jtoad Pontiac FE S-6136 Fagan said most of the minop changes were Interiiretive administrative. “The fans probably won’t see much difference in the game," he said. -7 Set Meeting : to Organize Softball Loop Persons interested in taking part in the Waterford Township men’s softball program are urged to attend the fkst managers’ organizational meeting set for Mar. 30 at 7:30 p.m. in the Community Activities Building, 5640 Williams Lake Road. The Waterford Recreation Department will sponsor two leagues — Class B for advanced players and Class C for Intermediates. ' All league games will be played under the lights at the Drayton Plains softball park. Tentative starting date is May 4. The team fee will be $80, along with a $6 fee for each player. Items On the agenda for the Mar. 30 meeting Include prac- tice dates, sponsor prlwitieO, player-re........ player-residential requh*ementO and uniform requireihdhts. ; Further infixmatlon may be obtained by tailing OR 4-0376. No Financial Gain •but Pride Profits 53 Although Ron PlaskeWics did. not win any money in last night’s Pro-Am tournament aj^, 300 Bowl, his morale had a big, boost. - The young Saginaw bowler was teamed with the great Don Carter on the 8:30 p.m. squad. Carter had a 595 actual series, which Plaske,wicz matched. f laskewicz then had the thrill pf signing a half dozen autor graphs for bowling fans that a#'., mired the 20-yearoId idMi* stayed.even with Carter; «', 'Vi - \ -U fV/ II [f I :' f Tryout' Set v by NBA 76ers . i V : ' ';il'-' '\ 'v ' ),■' '"'''' ’i;»••' IHWriAC VRK88. WKDSKHUAY. MAHCir tlS, 10(14 V' '? . V ■ I 'I,;., A » V,. \ Bjr UnIM Prew lateraatloiMl Tlwy am aiMtng “operation revar»al“ In Philadelphia theae daya, and if the show Is a hit, th^’U take it to Uoaton for a tryout. The company in charge ia the Philadelphia 76era. who Tueaday night completed the firat act by defeating the Cln* cinnati Royala, Itt-lH, and evened their National Banket-4>all Aaaoclation Eaatern Dlvl-alun playoffa at M. ★ ' w * The 78erB finished the bru-lar season in third place while Cincinnati was second. As a result the two teams are playing a bestK>f-flve series to deter- Pro-Amateur Keg Results (Continued from Page I>-2) Jill HAillp, Lamina John Hooaoy Jr. .., -50M47-..m» tuiilfla, Orend Rapidi' Faraoilll ...... 47f-51^ f»-ll« Wtliha m, Soalnaw mbiwik,l .. .410-535- 40-1314 5l7-443-ie5-)l52 '*5*7-555- 15-tlll r.Or.nda.pTdl;"'^*^’*" fBTnh.m,>ra.l.nd‘”“‘-“-'”’ ..........S5S-427-*l4-nOI rd, Pontiac .... 554-S11- 30-110* Muikaoon llll Karach ...... S53-434-145-II47 “-hard Lovt, Orand Rapid* Karach ... ........SiHra-1*0-1311 . . a Bonnall, Pontiac John JtUflOlOro ......ai*-433-319-l340 I, B. Woidrop. Midlton Hotahta Silly Hardwick ........5*r-S*3-UI-l2T5 Marvin Oiwalo, Clawion Krillot ......... ,544-407-r»-U33 Don Harrinoton, Laming Jof Krl»|ot ... .......544-504- 4-1154 Davji Hollbryn, Dotrolt BUI Allan .............501-4*4-04-1143 Kan Dalrolt Oraham^JjcCwn, Dotrolt ^ I^broWtkl Bkk Kannody. Lap Pf " Morrli Ftddar, 0 BUI Pica ... raui PoUca, Poni irUrS-n'BfeT.Oh -■-n Pitch .... S7O-S54-135-I350 S04440-iea-1331 atl-55*- 54-133* ... . .................504-550- 73-1335 n Oannii Shjkany , ^ .........55S-5SO-I17-’333 jf«la Shaw, Prultport ......... IdTombrowikl ........... 410-511- ?5-t1H Addlion Wloolni, Mutkeaon BUI Allan ...............511-504-105-1100 Carl Beaublan, Pontiac Doo Spada .... 550-433-103-1113 Mary Lou Wllion, GreOnvIllo John Coder ............. 403-51*- 40-11*5 Irvlna Atkimon, Muikoon" BUI Johmon ............. Ray Undarkraod Don Ctrmak ......... Floyd Fortin, Ortonvllla .501-475- 0^1150 541-544- 51-1134 llilO P-Mr SQUAD Taam PtaAmHcp Ttt. Mary HarrI* ......... . , 430-474 -73—1174 Oarald Schltnallannlng, Cantor Lino J. B. Blaylock ...........S7e-3aB-aa5-1101 Phil. Row»ion, Pontiac. Joaia Konnady ........... 400-543-133-1144 Alyin Slazlok, Grand Rapid* Bob Crawford .............534-452 -40-1034 Bob Sllvorthom, Groenvlllo *‘"‘“rt McLobeblln 554-430-171-1145 mine which will meet the Boston Oeltlca for the Baatei^ Division titia and a berth in the NBA hnaia. The catoh Is limt the fifth game, if aeoataary, will be played ea the Reyals* home cowl. The iabte-toming hope of Phlledelphia ia the result of last year’s playoff when Cincinnati, then the third place club, upaot the 76eri (then the Syracuse N«-tlmiHls) in five gemes—with the clincher coming on the loi court. SAME PATTERN This year'B playoff is follow-ihg the same pattern to data except tiiat the roles are reversed. Cincinnati, which won the opener at home, hosts Philadelphia tonight in the third game while the vialtlng St. liouls Hawks attempt to wrap up their series against l^tkers III toe Angeles. The Hawks are 2-0 in the Western Division semifinals. Hal Greer took the spotlight In Philadelphia when the 76ers' all-star guard dropped in IS points in the last quarter to break the game open. Greer's free throw with 6:32 remaining snapped the game's ISth tie and gave Philadelphia a lOl-lOO lead. w w ★ Greer then proceeded to score seven straight points and pull the 76ors Into a commanding 106-102 lead with but four minutes to play. Philadelphia earned its winning margin from the foul line, sinking 36 of 42 as compared to CIncy’s 18-20 effort. Oscar , Robertson paced the Royals with 30 points, but the weak Cincinnati bonch, hampered by the absence of guard Adrian Smith, contributed only eight points in the entire game. Smith Is expected back tonight. Title Hopefuls OK Elminafion Tournairteht Plan NEW YORK (AP)-All four contenders invited to participate in an elimination tournament to determine a challenger for heavyweight champion Cassius Clay are enthusiastic over the project, a spokesman for the New York State Athletic Commission said today. “All four — Doug Jones, Eddie Machen, Cleveland Williams and Floyd Patterson—told us ^by telephone or wire that they were all for the tournament;’’ the spokesman said. “Jones, Williams and possibly Patterson will appear at the commission meeting Thursday,” he added. “Machen is in California and said it waa doubtful he would attend.’’ Clydft Wltham, Oroanvllla Jo4 Mory* “ Warren Ntw D)ck Hoove................ ^Herm Oykitre, Grand Ri Art Lake Jack iano - y LaCfa . 5^15-340-1345 594-544-100-1350 ■'K1. -99-1135 542-554-144-1342 Gary I________ __________ DannI* O'Lonnell , 479-540- 43-1049 Caqr May*, Hiiel Park Fred Lanina...............540-511- 40-1137 Bill MIIUI, Dataoit Clyde CIIH I 541-498-10O-1239 401-440 -*1-1123 . .454-424-171-1351 Hallii, Pontiac ____j Lucbl ............. Hubert Baldino, Balding John Till .................553-444-133-1241 Sbirlay LIptkl, Utka Mika SaiTiardzIla Jr. Donald BItbey, Pontic. Al Sava* ..................574-574 -40-119* Thomi* Zlmnlckl, Pontiac Jerry Back ............ . . . 420-524- *4-1337 Frank Rlcevuto, Pontiac Billy GolemblewskI . Bill Roh, Grand Rapid* Don John*on ...............575-45*-! 74-1033 Gen Bailee, .Utica BUI Grenier ...............54^554- 94-1192 Ralph Puartaj, Pontiac JOhnny Meyer ............ Eathar Burch John Quinzi .............. 423-471-145-1359 BUI Taylor, Pontiac Teeta Samir .. ..........n 539-4*5-153-1147 Jerry Rlgonen, Lake Odessa ^ , .519-54*-75-1143 . .592-403^ 40.^.1359 . 590-59*- 40-124* . .534-531-159-1324 . .45M71- 9^%-1231 . 543-422-201-1114 I Mattlla, L y Rosland . , Roy Ro*Il _ Jack Topham Carl Babb . Walt Conta, Pontiac Andy Rogoznica .... Jim Irish, Greanvill* Eddy Patt*rton ...... Ray Lindquist, Rochesl.. Day* Sout*r ..............435:439-1*3^1357 Darrsll Mauldlng, Ponllac Dale Saavoy ............ ~ Ray Avarlll, Kant City Skip vioars , . ,. 453-415-142-1239 BUI Aspanwall, Pontiac Al Horkay .............. 599-442-177—1218 Beverly Russell, Greenville JertV Brinkman 542-535-195-1282 Donald Barone, Dalrolt Carmen Salvino............545-447-132-1144 Steve Massl, Detroit I Only I I list Richard Lewis ...... Joe Biglar, Ponllac - Bob- Moreo .......... Jim Rahl listed with' " ri* with ’’squad ir* dona li-541- 90-1245 . 44«yi»-114-1238 Rodent Control Head MIIWEAPOLIS (UPI)-Clar-ence (Ki) Faulkner has been name^ supervisor of predaht and rodent control of the Bureau of SpcKt Fisheries and Wildlife, which ndw has conltrol pro^ams under way in Michigan'and 16 qther Midwestern states, j' ii, , J . .,* ■ .. AYithout a Name Kqline's a Star ’ lakeland, Fla. (AP)-De-troit Tiger baseball star Al Ka* line was stopp^ by a fan after an exhibition "game Tuesday and asked if he would pose for a photograph with the fan’s little girl.' “Sure,” said Kaline, lifting the child to his shoulders. The proud father made the picture and then asked Kaline: “Could I please have your name?” lA the Outtlm “Ttai! With DON VOOEl.-Outdeor Editor, PmHm Puss SAILING HIGil-Harold Schram Jr. (left), 2345 Winkleman, Waterford Township, and Allan Crawford, 1428 N. Cass Lake, found the sail fishing good on a recent trip to Acapulco, Mexico. In addition to the two OVk-footers shown, Schram, Crawford and their wives caught and released several other sails. 'They also caught bonito and mackerel. Tax-Reverted Land Sale Set Approximately 270 parcels of tax-reverted land in Oakland (bounty will be offered at public auction on April 17, the Conservation Department announces. Sale will be held at 10 a. m. in the Oakland County Service Center. Offering consists mainly of platted lots but some small acreage units are included. Some of the lots have houses or other bnildingB on them which are in poor to fair shape. According' to the department, the lands were deeded to-the state because of 1959 tax delinquencies. The former owner can reclaim the property by matching the top auction bid, as the statutes provide. ★ ★ ★ An officii sale list, giving legal descriptions and minimum bids, can be obtained at the Oakland County Service Center. Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below,, has been taken from John Alden Knight's Solunar Tables. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cov^r during these times, if you wish to find the best sport that each day has to offer. A.M. P.M. Day Minor Ma|or Minor Molar Thursday . Friday ... Saturday . . 3:15 9:25 3:35 . 4:45 :i6:50 ,5:30 11:35 ! 1:55 i2:40 4:30 12:20 7:15 1:05 8:00 1:50 Removal of Bounty Approved by Senate LANSING (UPIJ s- The State Senate voted Tuesday night, to remove bounty payments for red foJc, bobcats and coyotes. A A A The vote to discontinue the /f5 payment on fox and bobcat waa 25-7, while the $15 reward for coyotes was oppo.sed 26-7. The measures now go to the House (or approval. Similar repealer efforts in previous years have been unsuccessful. Continuing the bounty payments has long been opposed by the conservation department on the groundsf it does little to control predators. The Con.servation Department' estimates repeal would save tiic state $250,000 annually. A ★ . ' * ' Another bill passing the Senate could boost the conservation treasury another $250,000 annually if finally enacted into law. It was the bill passed 30-2 which would require both males and females to possess fishing licenses. Currently a wife fishes free on the license of. her hus-bapd. ‘WIFE-FREE’ Backers of the measure said the “wife-free” provision was discriminatory against single women and widows. Other outdoor measures that passed the Senate unopposed and were sent to the House included: ■A A A —Pfohibit hunting in Clinton Township of Macomb County. —P.e r m i t .the use of glass traps to take\minnows in Little Traverse Bay. —Authorize the conservation Nicholson Starting to Hit SIrikeouts Hamper Ex-Bonus Player By the Associated Press Six years ago majOT league scouts, check books wide open, flocked to Daye Nicholson for bis signature. Last se American League pitchers, mouths watering, scurried to the mound fer'his next strikeout. * ★ Tils signature- was expensive id only one scout got it, but his strikeouts came cheaply and just about every pitcher who faced him got them. For he fanned a record 175 tones, or once every 2,6 times at bat. The '19M season may not be any different for the Chicago Wlfee Sox’ 24-year-old strikeout artist, but at least he’s startoig pif the spring in an uncharacteristic manner. . His eighth-inning/ two-run trip- : A If' • r i le that powered the White Sox to a 4-1 exhibition victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers Tuesday was his fifth hit in the last four games. The hits included two home runs and two triples and brought his average to .258 for the spring, which is considerably higher than . his .210 lifetime mark. A A A'" The Frank Howard story; meanwhile, is nearing an end, at least for this spring. The Dodgers said Tuesday the huge outfielder, who had talked of retiring, will report to their Vero Beach, Fla., camp this Friday. “He hasn’t agreed to terms,”! general manager Buz2ie Bavasi said, “but we are offering him a raise and I don’t think we will have any problem.” In exhibition action, the New York Mets nipped the New York Yankees 1-0 on Frank Thomas’ eighth-inning single. Bob Glibson helped pitch St. Louis to a 12^3 victory over Kansas City, BIG BLAST San Francisco edged Cleveland 9-8 with the aid of Orlando Cepeda’s three-ruh homer, in the first. Rookie Rich Allen clubbed two home runs in Philadelphia's 7-1 triumph against Cincinn|iti. Pittsburgh made four errors, which helped Milwaukee to a 3-1 victory. Washington won its third straight game 8-3 over Detroit. Camlh) Pascual permitted just one hit in five innings as Minimsota do^ed Houston 6-6. Rain canceled the game between Boslon -and the Los Angeles Angels. i .. J, - commissioner to designate nil more than 100 miles of the state’s 1,000 miles of trout streams for restrictions as to type of lures used. Rainbow Season Set April 4 I'he trout aeaion will got off to an early start April 4 for spring-run rainbOi:w fishermen. Drown trout are being added as a bonus.. AAA The Conservation Department has designated 48 streams, all but three In the Upper Penln-suin, for the early opener. Hie regular trout Reason will get under way April 25. The Grand Traverse River, Thunder Bay River and Whitney Drain will be open in l,ow-er Michigan. Only short ■tretcbcH of these will be legal waters. Tile Wliltney Drain (Singing bridge), south of Tawas, also is a favorite of smelt dippers. The smelt arc expected to run there around April 10. Next month’s early trout opening Is timed with the peak period for trout spawning runs which originate in the Great Lakes. It Is aimed at giving anglers an opportunity to catch rainbows and browns before most of these fish move back into the Great Lakes. Downstream migrations normally tul^e place soon after the start of lar trout season on AprI ...... -Bughlng Whllsllih RIvsr _..n Irom Highway M-28 bridge, ALPENA COUNTY; Thunder Bay RIvsr oelow 9th Street dam In Alpena. ANTRIM COUNTY: Elk River below '""a'r/nAC COUNTY: Whllnay Drain In lac. 9, TION, R7t. . BARAGA COUNTY: Falli River down U.5.F. *1 W.S. lamprey Weir m sec. TSIN, R3IW: Silver River down ti Silver Falls: and Slate River down li Slate Fall!. CHIPPEWA COUNTY; Pina Rivar d: 1 Highway I ;T COUNTY; Bear River down vgggggggaagagaa*ggggagggaa*gggggggggggaga*ggg# from Lake Straal dam In Psl dam nlmv* mouth ol rivsr), trorSJ.'n’U'w^Xlp down from tails In sac. I, T Llttla Carp RIv- ^.....- *" Fails: MspI* Cri lac. II, T49N, I leia River down •RAND TR ?aS gown troqt Traders down from brMo* In 'Ji rns^iC w SRIS^COUNTVi .......- hrMs* --------- --- HOUGHTON COUNTY: Stir Crssk down from brhfe* balwMn lacs. II and U'.tT.'oTO Wa1&r:'«!5 RIvir. south branch, down from oast ilna o» lie. 10, tWN, R34WI Orayaroat RIvar down from mouth ot Dear CraMt Mcounn's Creak down irom old log bridge In NW W of lac. II, TS4N, R31W| Salmon Troul RIvar down from Rad. ridge Dam: and Big Travaria RIvar. KEWEENAW COUNTY: Elg >f|sy River down from norIb line of Uc, 14. TI7N. R30W: B4pl4 SIvir down Irom dam In vlllaot of Baola RIvar: Fanny 11004 Craali down Irom Likt Fanny Haoa. Oratlol Rtvar down from bridoo on black lop rood botwOon Itca. 19 and w. ®)XaC K*NAc'**COO^ Y; ‘*'^RQ“lIftTTl’*cW^ Ciro "RIvar down from a point I.OOO toil abovt moutb: Chocolay RIvar down from Higb-way M-21: Big Huron RIvar: ’ and Iron River. ONTONAaOM COUNTY: FIraelaal RIvar « from N( ..... Irom Kanoii BrMaii Bid R lv*f WN J.h. ' A Lim Ontonagon RIvar down ••>... ,vmv,.v.. ol tail and middle branciMi: middle branch of Ontonagon River down from Aeala Falls: wsil branch of Onlonagqn River down from Victoria Dam: SItapIng RIvar down from railroad Iraslla In lee. TSIN, R43W. Elk Measure Progresses LANSING iAP) - The Senate has given Its preliminary nod to Michigan’s first elk hunting season. It advanced to voting position a bill authorizing the Coniserva-tlon Commission to establish o^en seasons for elk in parts of the northern Lower Peninsula. The Senate amended the original bill to reduce the originally-proposed hunting license fee from $50 to $25 and to restrict the licenses to 'Michigan residents. The only serious opposition heard on the Senate floor came from Majority Leader Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit, wlio objected to the residence requirement. “How do we know other states won’t take offense at this end relailate by making their hunting seasons restrictive”? he Wayland, sponsor of the measure, said his bill was a pilot program to test public acceptance and kill off about 200 elk. He said there has been a “population explosion” among elk, which poses a threat to the food supply of deer. Each elk, he said, displaces three or four deer, AAA Elk were once wiped out in Michigan before hunting was placed under regulation, and about 40 years ago, 21 animals were Imported from Wyoming to re-establish the species. From this initial stock', the herd has grown to nearly 4,000. FIGHT RBIULTI WEMBLEY, Ingland (UPl) - Bril :urvls, 145, Wslsi, I ■ ------- - :h*rnl*y, 130, England .......... .... tana. 13484, WilSI, OUlpalnIttf Jo4 Rtflu I37W, NJgirls, 10. U BEACH, Fla, (UPI)-Chlco ----- 130, Miami, knockad out Wlllla McCrta, 13«, Miami 3. NEW YORK (UPl)- Bob Caiildy, 1S3'/t, Lavltlon, N. Y„ slopped Johnny Torres, I I54W, Pillarson, N. J. 4. "mI'a Sen, Frederic Hilbert, R eggee#e#,ee##aegg#eee###ge##egg#geeg#gi*M|ee#e#v NEW ALL-WEATHER I^OKWITH "NO LIMIT GUARANTEE No limit on months. No limit on miles. No limit as to roads. No limit •• to speed. For the entlro life of tho tread. 3-TNYLONAithTUFSYN Super-durable Tufsyn is the toughest rubber ever use^in Goodyear tires. NOW ONLY 6.00 X 13 tubelasi blaqkwall plus tax and tirg gff ygurcar. MONEY POWNI FREE MOUNTING! HURRY! ALL TYPES! BLACKWALLS! WHfTEWALLS! TUBE-TYPE Blackwall SIZE Price* 6.70x15 $13.70 7.10x15 16.25 7.60x15 17.70 TUBE Blackwall SIZE PrICB* 6.00 X 13 812,25 6.50 X 13 13.30 7.50 15.80 8.00X14* 17;95 8.5QX14 . 19.70 LESS Blackwall SIZE , Price* 6.70x15 $15.80 7.10x1*5v 17.95 7.60x15 \ 19.70 8.00x15 ' 22.35 8,201(15 22,35 WHITEWALLS Onlyk2«)MOREI Deluxe FLOOR MAT DRESS DPI COVER DPI EXTRA HEAVY MOLDED RUBOERt ^PLOIFDL "COSTOM" STVUNGI • Finest quality we can find—best price we can offer • Full-contour • Fijte most U. 8. cars I • Choice of black, white, blue, green, brown or red , ■ . , r ■ Regular Price $483 50%! >HURRYI LIMITED QUANTHYl fiO GO coodAear GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE | CUT TIRE 30 S. Cass FE 5-6123 | 508 N. ^erry FE 8-0900 \ Open Friday'til 9 : Open Friday'til 9 j ............’••••I.........................................; 1',' IV,, THE PRESS, WEDNESDAV, M AH(’II mil Are Nongraded Schools the Next Step? UfiHlJH J. NAtiON, Kd. D. AlnerluM'* ichool orKHidKittlon li on tho vorgo of « long-iioodod overiwul, U hnon'l had on« for ■ hundred^ .yedra, and now it'a time ugitop tinkering and do a ooniptoU Jub. A few achoolN are ehowlng the way by awtlch* Ing (0 a non> Sradod ayatem. li Under Iho prei*-' . ent 13 - grade UK. NASON Kchome, everyone Ir fenced to move once a year-Home ready, ROifu) not. Pupils sometimes gel out of step as early ag the Rooond or third grade and make little pro- gresM In aiibiuHiuent yearaT A breakdown In learning roNults -a llitrd of tliQ aludents eveih tually drop out. Whether tests are made in Florida on the east coast, or In Washington on the west coast, tlie results are the same. Flghlh grade pupUs vary In p«r> foimance from second - grade to first • year college level In knowledge of word meaning, reading and jirllhmetical rea' Roning. We have tinkered with the RVRlem, but special classes for the gifted and remedial closseR for tile slow learaiifs have done llltle to reduce llie tragic dropout rate. Rents a completely* now aitproach. In an Issaquah, Wash., Junior high for example, there art f I v’e levela in m a t h e-matics, reading and English. The same student can be In a high group in one subject and In a low group in another. Entering students whose por-formanuo In arithmetic tests Is below sevenlh-grado level are place. *Ml, bu PcMcleu*. OaM^a, AMkNu. Jnnalhon, bu. AlHOat. MclntOib. bU, AppMi, Mclntotb. C'A, bu Appi*i. Narthcrn tpv, bu. Applui. Norlhprn Spy, C A, •Mtl. top CpblMa*. HorttriMlIth, pb. b«M. , txfft. epliiMi, ll-lb, tai V PotpiMi, so-lb. bog R*(Hih»i, bipck Radlihoi, holhouM, pi. bchi. Rhubard, holhouM, bos Rhubarb, hotbouia, dot. bch. J.^ utoipa, Top^ Poultry and Eggi lOIT POULT* )-Prlco» paid >. I qualMy II '•s”i5l' fe 91 . whilti ’* .ROIT ao( -......>)-igg PI I Odirall by flrtt oaraoiT poultry DiTROIT (AP)-Prlco» paid par pounc at Oatrolt for No. t quality llva poultry: Hbovy typa ....... *— *•**■ t) rotilart i and tryari 3-Rack it 33. DRTROIT loot DCTROIT (API-igg prlcai paid par --- .... «... (In. 33"4I; largo 34-40) ....-------- ... .......... Rrovma Orada A astro largo MVy.37i largo 34-3S'.Yi niadlum 30'33i Chacki 35 3t. CHICAOO BUTTiR, *901 CHICAGO (API - Chicago Mtrcantlla eschanga- Buttar itaadyi wholaiala buying prlcai unchangadj T3 icon AA ilVi, n A i i M C i II M B S ; e« C 51 ifaady to Ortni wholaiala b prlcai unchangad to 1 hlghar/ tO par or battar Orada A vyhilai 35i misad '■ madiumi 311 itandardi 30''n dirllai chacki 37. CHICAOO POULTRY CHICAOO (AP)-(OSOA) Llva poultry; Wholaiala buying prlcai lowar to higher; roailari M-TO'/T; ipaclal tad While Rock tryari ta-ia'/9; barred' rock I ivestock DRTROIT LIVItTOCK DBTROIT (API - (U8DA) (;allla 400 Choice itaari ilaady, cou/i itaady, not enough lalai lowar gradai itaari to moil aariy iala'i lowi, hardly — — In iu|>ply to tuMy^^—***' barrowi and gllti 15.00. Vaalari 50 high choice and prime 33-34, chol g^^33.(^.(I0. early h 9 300 Unchanged, I ~ Hogi 1-3 300-33P 1-3 130-330 CHICAOO LIVilTOCK CHICAOO (API - (USDA) 4,500; bulcheri luHy itaady; 1 lb bulchari 15.00-15.35; misad . ... ^ttla 1,500; calvai none; ilaught itilri lully Itaady; (our loadi prime 1,1) 1,175 lb 33.00; bulk high choice and prln 1,100 - 1,3*0 Ibt 33.35-33.75; bulk Choli 1,100-1,300 21.35.33.00. anouOh to adi teat trend; a short deck chol prime 113 lb ilaughtar Iambi 3 Stocks of Local Interest Plgurai altar decimal polnli are alghihi OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS The following quolalloni do not ndcei-larlly repreient actual Iraniaclloni but are Intended as a guide to the approsl-mate trading range of the securltlei. AMT Corp .........; . . . . . . . , . 1.4 9.2 AlMclatad Truck .. . .........13.4 13.3 Bhi-Dlcator 5.4 4.3 Bfaun Engineering ........... 41 43.4 chlieni Utilities (Tlesi A .....33.3 23.7 Diamond Crystal .............-. 13.4 14.5 Bihyl Corp. .................. 40 71 Mbradal Products ........... 7.4 0.5 (Mhawk Rubber Co.............. 34 30 Michigan Seamless Tuba Co. 30.4 32:3 Ptonear Finance ...............0.1 9.1 Sefran Printing ..............13.4 14.5 VOrnori Ginger Ale ........... 4.4 7.1 Wlnkelman'i ................. 11.7 13 VVblverlne Shoe .......... 33.4 34.2 Wyandotte Chemical 40..4 43.7 MUTUAL FUNDS Bid Askad ANillaled Fund 0.50 9:20 Chemical Fund 13.31 14.55 Cammonwaalth Stock . . '' I7.47' 19,09 Keystone Income K-1 9.52 10.40 Keystone Growth K-2 5.41 4.12 Mass. Investors Growth .. 0.40 9.40 Mass. Investors Trust 14.15 17.45 Putnam Growth • .9.34 10.25 Tgievislon Electronics 0.15 0.00 Wellington Fund : 14.00 14.22 Windsor Fund 15.10 14.50 Treasury Position ligondln^date ^a y March 30, 1943 07,435,054,047.17 304,052,171,237.51 Gold Aisets- 15,443,244,093.72 15,070,047,413.43 Xri-Includes $343,009,403.05 debt not subject tf statutory " NeP change -.1 Noon Wed. 01.3 102.0 07.7 Prev. Day 01.3 102.0 07.0 Month Ago 01.4 101.9 00.3 Year Ago . 00.0 99.9 09.1 1944 High . 01.7 4 02.7 80.4 1944 Low . . 80.5-101.5 07.3 1943 High .-82.2 102.4 09.5 1943 Low ,.. 79.7 99.5 87,5 .American Stock Exch. Ptgures after decimal points are elghti Exchange fi Creole P . Flying Tiger . Gen Develop . Tn*^ Kaiser ____r Indus . Mich Sugar .. Mohawk Air Syntax ^hnico Buyif39 Creeps In / Active Mart Shows Recovery NKW YORK (Al*) Stoel* amt *avlng*>nmi‘li)Bn holding (’(mi|)«nU'N weift aCrong tn a ipcovory wlik'k miirkof curly tlilH uflpmiMin. TiTKlIng wu* ttlllVP,^ (Jiiln.s of k«y .sloi’k* laii froni fi'uctioiiN lo u imlnt or holler. A wide asNorlniont of lONor* wibs KenUered Ihroughmit tlie list. The market wii.s hesitmit amt mixed III early liiiillng hut gradually moved alieud. Huy> Ing crept In after three day* of "coiTectloti" of a MUNlalried advance to a string of record peukM, Wide tTaliw were made by mime Hpeelally-'iiltuaUtd iRRue*. MKHfiKIt NI<;WS Among tlume were Bullock'|i. ttif' big Puciflc Coast retail oiganl/allon, wtilch hounded aliead about 8 points on news of a proposed merger wttli I'ederuled Department Stores, wlilch easeil, Motors, I'ubbcrs, mull order- retail*, chemical*, building materials ami drug* were generally higher. Ralls, oil* and non-fcrrou* metals were mixed. Anoiher wide gainer was laiken* Steel which opened on a delayed block of B.IXHI .shares at 58, up 3'/4, holding most of the gain In later dealluKs. Prices were mixed In inoder-alc trading on the American Slock Hxchange. Corixirate bonds declined. U S. (iovernmenl bonds were slightly higher. The New York Stock Exchange IMI ’ ' • IV 34>3.^ *3 I9»9 liv4 N*W YORK (API -Following l| i of lolKloft itock Itonioclloni on Iho York Stock Exchong* with noon pr —A— A|iboML Admhal AHo 17W 17H 1714 Prod I-.illogCp llg J!lf.‘!l’ch“'!'.o’ Allll2h»l'''*50 42 44'4 14 54 J t)u, * IS tL' ABoKh 50g Am Brk 3 40 AmBdPar Ih Am Can 3 Am Cyati 2 I 371. 37l« 371. SKDort .37a 1 I Pw .44 YIf"§ .90 AmMolori la AmPholo .33 A Smalt 3.20 I lOlt I0'4 iOlx Anacond .50a AnkanCh ,40, ArmcoSt :i Arm2ll<^ I.OOo ' 5) Ji'v 4^' 44» l44» 14'* ' 73'/i n*t I I 50 50 : !V; Fora D 40 Po»l Whaalar FruIRf* 1.504 0 Accapt 1 Gan cig 120 oInEler*2% OPubSv 24a OPubUt 1.20 GTalO.EI :00 GallyOII lOa Glllalla I 10a GianAld ..50a Halllbur 2.40 HamPjp 1.20 _n_-j T. f; 3i 4 33'/l 3! 1 S94« 51 10 23'A s: Xat ,04g all .941 Bath StI 1.50 BIgolow 1.30 Boaing 3 Briggi Mfg BrIggtS 1.40a Brlaf My .80 Brunswick BuckeyaPL 1 7 7i,'j 71ii 744 - iij Bullard .3Sg Bulova ,40 Burlind 1.40 Burrdughi I Cat Fnl .40f CallahM .17f CampSp 3.40 CampSoup wl 4H CatarTr 1 Calaneta 1.40 Cencolnst .50 1 117% II 9 39'/4 : 3 3554 3 11 53'/J 10 42% I 4 21'/4 2i 21 - 12 1054 10'/> lO'/i 1, 53'.'4 S3'/4 - 17 ( 5 .31% 31% 2 Carle Champs hOO Chmplln 1.20 Checkar Mol Chat Oh 4 ChIMII SIP I ChPnau 1.40a cm Pocll 1 ChrlsCrII .461 Chrysler I CIT.Fin 1.40 CItlesSv 2.40 ClevEIIII 1.20 Coco Cola 3 CoIgPal 1.30 CollInRad .40 20 43'.. I 3'i x5 5l’r Inj; FanOj 3a Inlerlak I 40 IntBusMch 5 InflHarv 2 00 I 23% v23% ■ I 5744 57',V -f I 53'/4 53'/4 IntPap l.05b Ini T8.T 1 ITE Ckt .ISg ) 32',4 31% 31%i - 34 54% S4'/4 54% -I Taxaco*2.2o'** t;::g?uT".sv Texinitm .00 JohnsManv 2 i ' 42'/4 43^1 + Vt I 75% 7454 -F I 39'/t 29451 -I 37% 3044 + ■ ?Tv4 ll - ThIoKol 1.131 TIdewai OH -TlmkRBear 3 -----1 W Air 1 35% 3554 3554 - '. 4 44'4 r 30 30'/4 .3 10 33 : 41 P'/4 ! i 1354 13% — '4 ; 1544 15'4 4 '/4 3% 2% - 44 17 3954 29'/4 3954 Llgget18.M 5 Lionel Corp Litton In 1.90f LockAlrc 1,40 LoneSCem I 44 4744 44 47% -H% 10 37'4 SO'-i 37'% 43 2154 21'/4 31% -1- '/> Loral Eleclr 1 55',r 55% t 3 CBS 1 Gas 1.32 Col PIcI .531 ComICre 1.80 ComISolv. 1 23, ,10'/4 18, 10'/4 - >; 30 2l'4 28'4 30%:-:'.,.’ 2 2I'/4 21'^2 21'/4 .... 25 39 30',i 30% ,. ComEd 1..„ ConEdls 3.30 ConElecInd 1 . ChNGas 2.._ ConsPw 1.50 Container 1 Coht Can 2 ^Snt"Mo?’^40 Curl DanRIver .00*' Deere 1.20 Del&Hud .30e Dent Su^ la DenRIoGW 1 DefEdis 1,20 23% 24 + I Del 5 Disney .40b -Ols Sea 1.00 DomeMln .80 DougAir 1.4U Dow Ch 1.80 Dresser 1.20b duPonI I.SOd Duq Lt 1.34 0 259>/4 258% 259r/<'+l ' EastGF 1 EasIKo 2. EatonM 1 EipondS 1 41 35% 34% 343/4 r 70'/j "70'/j 70'/j 30 127'/j 1243/r 127',j EI0.MUS .05e ElAssoc 1.35t EIPasoNG 1 •EmersoriEI 1 1 44% 4454 — |. ErieLack RR EvansPd .lOr Evershro ;75 ... -I-.3 -.2 -.1 . 431.2 140.4 150.0 3 , 431.0 1.................. .. 435.4 142.4 150.* 3 .. 425.1 159.1 151.3 ! .......344.9 .130.9 143:4 J ...... 435.7 142.4 1S2.2.3 4U.4 150.7 148.9 i ......407.1 152.5 151.1 4 ..'.,..,341.1 121.8 134,9 2 Falrb Whit FaIrCam 50g Fairch Strat Fansleel Met Fedd Corp 1 25 .24% 24% 24% + 9 454 .. 454 4% - , 39 . 29% 291/11 29'/4 + \ 50 25% 25'/4 25% + 5 -TtF— .. FerroCp Flltrol leu FIrestne ■ l lo FstChrl 1,97t Flintkt .80 5,. 43'/j ,43'/j 43Vj '101 45% 44'/i 45% -f1% . 9 24'/j 24% 24% ... - 'i ,!K 19% 19% -I- % MackTr 1.80. MadFd n,I3e Mad Sq Gor MagmaC ,25e Maralhpn 2 -----Id 1.15 MarMId MactinMar MayDSt 2.20 I 32% 32% - '. 12 3454 34% 3 Nat Bisc 1.70 12 41 NEngEI 1.14 NY Cent .50g NYChl SL 2 NiagM Pw 2 NorPac V40a NSIaPw 1.34 Northrop 1 ' NwslAirl 1.20 I 51% 51'/ti 51'/2 + 10 19% '19% Occldehf ,25r, Ohio Ed 1.90 OHnMath 1.20 OtisEtev 1.80 Outb Mar .40 'Qwenslll. 2.50 7 50'% 50 50 - 1 PacGiE 1.10 Pac Petrol PacTAT 1.20, Pan Alb 1.20 ParamPIct 2 ParkeD 1 PeabCoal .00 Penney 1.20a PaPwLt 1.40. Pa RR .50g 18 17% 17% 17% -F 7 -95% 95'% ,95'/j + ^P— 31% 31'/l 31'% - .91 -II'm 1 ' 5 303/4 3059 30% 128 75'/j , 74.'/4 75'% 3 59 , 58% 59 Pennzoll 2 PepCota 1.40 Pfizer .80a : Phelps D 3 Phlla El -1132 PhllaRdg 1b PhllMor -3.40 PhilllpsPet 2 ProctiG 1:75 Pubikin .341 Pullman 1.4d PureOII 1.40 12 05 85 05 4 7'%- 7 . 7% . 22 MVi 34% 34% - 82 45% 443% 45% + —R— "fi Reading C RekhCb .4-, .. .. . , RcpubAvla I 4 13% 13',k 13% - % 5.roVTio2 Raxall .SOb RaynMel ,51, .... ........ ReyTob 1.00 37 405y 40'/» 40% + '» 57 40% 395s < s«hV^ '”4»nii%i . 8Sobr Corp I x2 lots 14% 145s I Tul f.79l 40 4} 4l% 41% McB 4 135S 13% 13% -f Syil 13 14 14 14 . II tk ir i 4 20 % 305i ; 14 34% 345s : Sihanlsy I t^M'^"43l * |COllP(lp SNrlft SearsR II Oil 1.50 SbtllTti Sherw \.... , Sinclair 2 tmSih'^ AO * e.;. ■“ isA .... SoulhnC 1.70 SouNaIG 2.20 Sou hV 2.00 Sparry Rand Splagal 1.50 SquaraD 1.40 St.ilay 1.20 SIBrand 2.20 Sid Kolliman SKI Oil Car 2 SKIOIIInd 2b SIdOIINJ ./Da 12 72* ANOTHER MAIICII Another group of about 2,000 students march^ki on the Capitol building and sent In two representatives to Pr|imi(!r Choi PoiFstm with a set ■Yif questions about the Tokyo talks. Karller today several lliqu.saml stuilcnt.s were blocked by riot police about 200 yards from Park’s residence. Home Minister Urn Mln-yung conferred briefly witlf the leader.s and led two infp the prei(idcntial mansion whore they saw Lee Ilii-rak, the president’s chief secretary. ') il'/t 52% ! T 3 10% 10 V SiqilOh 2.401 SlHdabakar Sun Oil lb Sunray 1.40 SwIltCo 1.80 6 ,24'/g 245S 5 37% 3/'% ; 1 29% ; ) 7% 73A , 57'A — 77% +1% 235S -F '/• The students said later I.ce promised to set up a meeting between Park and student leaders this week. More than 10,(KM) students joined in the demonstrations, which were held for the second straight day to denounce Park’s handling of the Tokyo talks and to demand that they be suspended. Similar demonstrations were staged in Pusan and Taegu, Korea’s second and third largest cities. 79'/l 00 - '- Trahiltroh TrICbnt ,35* TwenIC 1.07( 1I4 4!% 3 Un AIrL 1.50 Unit AIrctt 2 Unit Cp ,35* uS»r oltanga officials would slrais floor trading action that would Ntahlllee a fluctuating market and would keep such trader* frhm dominating the market for a particular olock. VERY MINOR lUlIgKN 'The SEC foels tha/l the liquidity and stabilizing roles of floor trader* are very minor, but their opportiinllleH lo make quick killings Very real and for that reason harmful to the Interest of the general public on the outside looking In. Exchange figures show that normally some 850 members are on the trading floor. Al)oul 34 of thorn spend most of their time trading Just for themselves, while 70 more are fairly aL*tiye In this, and over the course of the year nearly all members on the fliwir do some trading on their own. 'nuit, sny.s the excliange, Is free enterprise, (icltlng the general public to see this Is (he ta.sk cut out fur exchnngu officials. . Record Easier Sales Seen, as Tax Cut Makes Impact By .lACK LKFLER AP Bunliiess News Writer NEW YORK - Easter buying appears headed for a record, helped by a boost frpm the income thx cut, Merchants say most of the effect of the tax reduction is psy-cliological because taxpayers liuven’t rcnlizcd much as yet in tlie way of savings. .Stiopping got off/ tz) a rather fast start hecaiW Easter falls early this ycw,'y»nd was I’c-porled picking up steam as the holiday approached. In New York, J. Gordon Dakins, cxeeutivc .secretary of Hie National Uhtail Mercliants Association, said reports froth around the country indicated a 5 per cent gain over last year althougli snows, floods and tornadoes liampercd shopping in some areas. TAX CUT Dakins said the tax cut was one element making it possible to sell more goods, Peoplj have fewer wolries and more cofifi-dence in the future, he said, and are spending accordingly. Most of the money, as usual, is going into apparel for the Easier parades. New York’s department store chain, Gimbel’s, .said business has been ‘‘quite good” compared with last year. The warmer weather has helped, according to a spokesman. The discount department store chain, E? J. Korvette, Inc., said the early Easter has tielpcd boost sales. ‘‘Pre-Eaker-^^ sales have /achieved a most satisfactory level in all ready to wear categories,” said David L. Uunlch, president of Macy’s, New York. An Associated Press survey of major cities indicated the buying trend is up in most areas. ‘‘On a day for day basis we are beating sales recorded the same number of days before Easter last year,” said Geoffrey Swaebe, president of the May Co. department stores of Los Angeles. “We are looking forward to the impact* of the tax cut being very good.” decided EFFECT Another Los Angeles retail ex- News in Brief A warning ticket was issued yesterday by Waterford Township police to Paul Kileley, 149 N. Avery, for storage of junk cars on his property. The ordinance violation must be corrected within 15 days. 1 A fiberglass canoe stored in the garage of George Dean„J371 Windiiate, Waterford ToWhship, was reported damaged yesterday by vandals who struck it with an ax. John Palmer, owner of Palmer’s Hardware, 1%1 E. Auburn, Avon Township, yesterday re-|j&fted to the sheriff’s department the theft of $175 in merchandise, including over a hundred boxes of shotgun and rifle shells. Thieves forced a rear door to the building. Assorted tools valued af $175 were stolen from Mazza’s Service Station, 253 ,E. Pike, the ovmer, Rudy Mazza, reported to Pontiac police yesterday. Rummage and Bake Sale: Sat., Mar. 28th starting 8 a.m. 128 W. Pike St. Social Brethren Church. —adv. Rummage Cheap --5 477 Montcalm. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thurs. Fri., Sat5- —adv. eculive, Valle G. Young, presl- , dent of Buffuins Department Stores, commented that "the tax cut has liad a very decided effect,” A spokesman for a leading Del roll department j store 'reported ‘‘business Is very strong and has been running strong for three or four months.” The high I'ttlc of automobile production halt swelled tlie money supply tliere. ‘‘There’s a normal increase compared with the pre-Easter season last year—a little ahead but nobody is crowing,” said a Boston merchant. Teacher U nil Sets Strike, if Needed DETROIT (AP)-Thc Detroit Federation of Teachers decided Tuesday night it will strike April 15 if it still considers a strike necessary after an April 8 advisory election by Detroit teachers on what bargaining plan they want. The school board proposed earlier Tuesday a secret ballot. April 8 asking teachers‘whether to, (1) keep the current negotiation plan which allows the DFT and., rival Detroit Education Association to submit grievances to the board separately; (2) adopt a representative committee of teachers made up of teachers from both groups, or (3) have all Teachers repre,-sented by one organization. THIRD PLAN If' the city’s 10,000 teachers adopt the third plan, but the school board refuses to enact it, the DFT would strike. The school board has said the vote is only “advisory.” The DFT has demanded a collective bargaining election that would result in either It or the DEA being named sole bargaining agent for Detroit teachers. V Lodge Calendar Pontiac Shrine No; 22, Order of the White Shrine of Jerusalem Installation of officers, Wednesday, 8 p.m., 22 State St, Open - to M'asdnic affiliated members and friends. Bonnie Radcliffe W.H.P., Martha Reaves W.S. ... —adv. -hi ril' : ' - ; ’-j ; , TItE rO>J\TTAC PBE3S. WKDXWSDAY, MAHC H 2J (( "V,: ■r'.Mi'5' ■V Jirki, Deaths in Pontiac ‘Area dBOaaE MEREDITH G«orge Mi/redlth, 63, of 23 Lexington died yesterday after an Illness of two years. He had been employed by Cook Plumbing. A brother survives. Ills body Is at the llunUxm Funeral Home. I4MTER R. PINES fklrvlce for Uster R. pines, W, of 69 W.'-Kennott will be 2 p.m. Saturday In tbe McWilliams Funeral Home, Rogers City, with burial there. Ills IxKly will be at the (>)Hts Funeral Home, Waterford Township, until 9 p.m. today. Mr. Pines died yesterday after a long Illness. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Duane Bade <»f Aplenu ami Mrs. Michael Mertz of Rogers City; a son, I^estcr Jr. of Itog-crs City; and six grandchildren. Also surviving are eight sisters, Mrs. Delbert Pbllllps, Mrs. Melvin Rogler and Mrs. Marshall Vallad, all of Pontiac; Mrs. David Swansey, Mrs. James Stevens and Mrs. Ralph Harnack, all of Waterford Township; and Mrs. Leo Schef-kie and Bernice Pines, both of Rogers City. MRS. DAVID L. SISK Prayers will be offered at 40 a.ip. Saturday In St. Michael Catholic Church for Mrs. David L. (Annie L.) Sisk, 81, of 25 Palmer. Requiem Mass will be offered at 0:30 a.m. Monday In St. Michael Church with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Her body Is at Donolson-Johns Funeral Home. Mrs. Sisk died yesterday after a three-month Illness. She was a member of the Golden Age Group, and the YWCA. Surviving besides her h u s -band arc a daughter, Mrs. Jessie Watson of Pontiac; a grandchild; and a great-grandchild. NANNETTE TAYLOR Prayers will be offered at 1 p.m. tomorrow in the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home for Nannette Taylor, 13 ^ day old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Taylor of 263 S. Shirley. Burial will follow in Oak Hill Cemetery. Nannette died Monday. Surviving besidea the parents are a sIsteF and brother, Dorothy and Charles Jr., both at home. MRS. THOMAS A. McKAY UNION LAKE -r Service for Mrs. Thomas A. (Emma M.) McKay, 77, of 2081 Union Luke will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Bell Chniwl of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Burial will follow In Woodmere Come-teiY, Detroit. Mrs. McKay died Monday after a long illness. Surviving are her daughter, Mrs. John R. Daly, and her sister, Mrs. George A. Snelllng both of Union Lake. MRS. WESLEY «. MUNN AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Wesley G. (Clara E.) Munn, 67, of 354 Reitman, will be 11 a. m. Saturday at the Wil-,Jiam H. Potore Funeral Home, Ilocliestcr. Burial will be in National Memorial Gardens, Ll-vonlk MrsXMunn died early today after a''brief iiiness. She wak a retired employe of Jam HandXCorp., Detroit, and a member Of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary. Surviving are a son, Emery, with Whom she mode her home; a sister; and two grandchildren. Britain to Give U\S, JFK Memorial Land\ LONDON (AP) - Prime Mil jster Sir Alec 13ouglas-Home qn-' nounced twiay Britain will give the United States an acre of historic Kunnymede as the site for a memorial to President John F. Kennedy. Election o Shoo-In Reuther Gets Pay Raise ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. m~ Walter Reuther was re-elected unanimously today as president of the United Auto Workers Union. .TLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) —Walter P. Reuther, with a pay raise in his pocket, is expected today to be reelected to another two-year term as president of the 1,125,000 - member United Auto Workers union. Reuther, who has headed the unioh since 1946, is not expected to receive any major opposition from the nearly 3,000 delfegates who Tuesday night raised the president’s salary over the next three years to $26,000, an increase of $2,239. The delegates also are expected to reelect Secretary-^ Treasurer Emil Mazey and Vice Presidents Leonard Woodcock and Pat Greathouse. OFFICERS’ SALARIES Others to be named include three executive board menlbers, a trustee of the board and 18 regional directors’. The delegates raised the salaries of the otherjifficcrs, board members ^rtuTnearly 800 international representatives after approving a batch of new contract goals. After 5^ hours of discussion, the delegates gave their approval to a goais-setting resolution that includes earlier retirement and larger pensions, higher pay and shorter work weeks, and longer , vacations and bigger overtime penalties. In the resolution, Reuther re-(ceived the kind of^ flexibility he won in 1%1 when the three-year pacts expiring Aug. 31 were negotiated. ■The 44 delegates who discussed the resolution spoki more of “improved working conditions’’ and “better pensions’’ than of wage increases. Nowhere in the resolution is a specific figure fixed for any monetary goal, and the word “profit-sharing’’ does not ap- Kids Happyjl Schools Out j lor Easter i Most Pontiac area schools will l)Ogin Easter vacations at the cloae of K^hool today. The holiday recess will run through the beginning of next week. Hi Trinity Lutheran Kehool students were to get today off because of report cards and return next Wednesday. Pontiac and Waterford Township public school students began their holiday at the close of school today and will return next Wednesday. Catholic school puplTs in the Pontiac area also get out May, but return on Monday, April 6. Emmanuel Christitu) and Seventh-day Adventist Schools will recess at the close of school tomorrow i and reopen Tuesday. Order Higher Court on Traffic Charge A Waterford Township man yesterday was bound over to Circuit Court following an examination on a charge of leaving the scene of a personal injury Occident. He appeared before Waterford Township Justice John E. McGrath. Edward E. Lynch,' 36, of 6865 Hatchery, will be arraigned in % higher court at l:30>p.m. MoMay. He is free on $100 The Oharge stems from an accident FVb. 29 in which a 14-year-old ^destrian suffered a broken arm \ Russia Aids '^men With Loans, Aid\Vow MOSCOW (AP) - The'Soviet Union has granted Yem^ long-term loan, delayed ment of earlier loans and prom-ished free aid, a joint communique said Tuesday. The comm'unique.Jsguad after talks between Y*m6nPresident Atxiulla Al-Sallal and Soviet officials, said the Soviet Union supported Yemen’s effort to oust Britain from the Aden area just south of the little country on the Saudi Arabian Peninsula. Turkish Troops Hold Big 'Practice Landing^ ISKENDERUN, Tqrkey W-Turkish Air Force squadrons and troops joined naval units in a big “practice landing” today off this southern Turkish port 100 miles north of Cyprus. ^ Official sources said 21 warships, 9,000 troops aboard two freighters and an undetermined number of air force jets participated in the annual exer- GM Scientist Dies in Toronto TORONTO, Ont. (DPI) ~ Edward V, Ripplngllle Sr., 77, a retired Geitoral Motors aclentlst who holpod build tlio world's first successful mechanical heart, died yesterday. Ripplngllle retired In 1052 as asslstunt general manoger of the GM researm pulled a gun minutes later. After a while the gunman took over the driving. Calussi said the men took his car, a wrist watch and $31 before dropping him off in a field near Avon Road shortly before 11;.30 p.m. Ex-Convict Warden Won't Quit AUGUSTA. Q«. Ml - Although Urn warrtoii at Richmond County w<»rk camp has a criminal record Including a life sen-toheo, he says lie docs not plan to resign. The warden, Millard F. Good-ing, confirmed lost night that ho was senteiuHSi to prison (dr between 19 and 20 years, amt again for life — both service station roblierieg. He iius been warden at the prison camp since 1956. The Augusta Chronicle disclosed Gooding’s prison record and raised Ihe question whether he Is legally qualified to retain the Job. The disclosure arose following a dispute lietwean Gooding and ItIWimond Comity commlHslon- srs. A rolallvely new and (lBnge^ IS ty|>e of vandalism in the Pontiac area came to light today In an appeal from Homer D. Hoskins, manager of Pontiac Municipal Airport. “We have encountered an Increasing number of minors tres-posshig on a 1 r |> 0 r t landing areas, breaking or (-urrying away glass globes nnd ottior parts of runway nnd taxlwny lights,’’ Hoskins said. He pointed out that trespassing on runways and taxi-ways is “very dangerous” for (he trespassers ns well us being unlawful. The state law' provides that anyone tampering wltli, breaking or stealing airport marking devices, or anypne fomul with, sucli devices In his |H)SHessloii, ts guilty of a misdemeanor. (i(K)ding sold he had given slate corrections director H. H. Burson Information concerning inadequate supervision of prisoners at the Richmond County work camp. 8CIIEDUI.KD MEETING Burson has scluxlultHl a meeting 'lliursday with Richmond commissioners concerning the prison camp investigation. He Was unavailable immediately for comment on tim disdosuro of Gooding's prison record. State pardon and parole board records show that (Md-ing was sentenced on an armed robbery charge Jan. 12, 1938, and, began serving his time IS days later at the Brooks County work camp at Quitman. He was paroled on June 14, 1945. He was employed as a machine operator at the Richmond County work camp Nov. 11,1955, and was named acting warden in January 1956 and later was appointed warden. Gooding said the county commissioners knew of his prison record, and he attributed its disclosure to a dispute between himself and the commissioners. to immission Eyes End iblic Housing Ban Vandals Peril City Airport Break, Steal Lights Vital to Operation LANSING—A home rule enabling bill for Michigan's five most populous counties was kept alive todny by a surprise move In the Sehute. A snowballing vote to debate the bill saved it from a procedural (leatli on the Senate table. 'Dio bill still must clear Its final Imrdle in Bio Sohato by mld-nigtit tonight., Any hiliN nut pasNcd by the Semite tmliiy are dead (his NeNKlun. 11io liomo rule bill would Implement n provision of the constitution by enabling voters In Oakland, Wayne, Macomb, Genesee and Kent counties to decide wheUior they want charter government. As It is now, countlds can only * Sr “It also croates a danger (or pilots,” Hoskins noted. “The removal or breaking of runway lights could easily catiso a landing aircraft to crash.” ll dskih s said seven globes were taken-In one single Incident recently. Although he had no figures compiled on losses through vandalism, Hoskins said that taxiway globes run about $7 each and runway globes, $15 each. Gas Truck Is Hit; Man Dies in Fire DEARBORN (AP)-A tractor-trailer truck ramRied the rear of a gasoline tanker, killing one driver and touching off a fire visible for miles today. The driver of the tractor-trailer was killed. He was not immediately identified. The tanker's driver escaped with minor burns and a station wagon driver escaped uninjured after ‘^driving through walls of flames” on the 1-94 freeway in Dearborn. County Horiiie Rule Kept Alive in Senate carry out those functions of government that are approved In. the Uglsiature. LIMITED DILL The bill was limited to counties having a minimum t>opuU-tlon of 350,000 AS a eompromlse. It wouldn’t have cleared a senate committee oiherwhte. The amended bill scraped through committee without recommendation, which automatically plained Bie Issue on the senate table. Teamster Vote Backs Hoffa Senate minority leader Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit, yesterday moved to qualify the bill for debate. When the necessary 18th favorable ballot was cast, several senators switched their votes to support debate of the bill 27-6, HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP)-The Teamsters Union has given its president, James R. Hoffa, conflden(!6 vote and authorized Its members' to contribute funds for his appeal against a federal jury-tampering conviction. The decisions were reached Tuesday at the closing sei of a quarterly executive board meeting. PASSED UNANIMOUSLY Hoffa, who presided over the closed session, said both resolutions passed unanimously. The board decided there was 'no obstacle” under the union’s constitution or policy to establishment of “voluntary rank and file defense fUnds” In support of Hoffa’s “current legal struggles with a vindictive U.S. Department of Justice.” CON-nNUING FAITH It declared “continuing faith’ in Hoffa’s stewardship and pledged continuing support against, “assaults on his constitutional privileges and ctoli liberties.” The committee, headed by Sen. Milton itaagthart, R-Grand Rapids, aIno Insisted that all preseat County elective positions continue to be filed by partisan elections. City Commission Hails PCH Chiefs The City Commission offered Its own version of Hall to (he Chiefs last night—a resolution landing the Pontiac Central High School basketball team for Its “fine showing” in tho Mayor Robert A. Landry voiced commission sentiments, stating that “Yon don’t have to win all the time to be a champion.” Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH with UM* Worry »ugn or SI _______IM foist to a£,“a.£ „.... Xortobft Thispl_, Bummy. cxwx. p«sty tssit or Doasn't 001 UM houmo It's wooiino (n»n-ootd|. UhsoXs ’’plots odor” (dsniurs brsotlil.Ust rAdTUnii ol druo ouuutois svsrywbsrs. DOWKTOWN PONTIAC OFFERS Federal Imblic Housing, banned in Ponliac\by a c i t y ordinance since 195^.may get some new life at nej^week’s City Commission meeting/ Commissioner Dick M. last night offered an which would repeal the 1955 vor-' dinance and allow for expansion of present pjblic housing in Pontiac. I ordinar After considerable debate on whether the action would open all areas of the city to possible public housing projects or only allow expansion of the. present project, commissioners decided to defer any action one week. City Attorney Williatn A. Ewart said he would draft the necessary papers. Ewart said Election Time Vote Liquor Petitions Turned Down By DICK SAUNDERS There’s something about upgrading liquor licenses that’s akin to purgatory in the minds of most city commissioners at . election time. This old political axiom that matters relative, to liquor are frowned upon at-such times was evident at last night’s. C i t y^ Commission meeting'. \ - It started slow but built to a point at which Commissioner Loy L, Ledford unveiled some 86 petitions containing more than 1,506 signatures requesting that the commission okay upgrading all qualified tavern licenseis in’Pontiac-to Class C status. The petitions had been sponsored by owners of both taverns and Class C licensed establishments in Pontiac. ★ ★ ★ ■ Ledford gave the petitiiMis to City (Jlerk Olga Barkeley and. then offered a resolution calling for the City Commission to request the Michigan Liquor Control Commissfon (LCC) “to upgrade tavern licenses, where qualified, to Class C” in the city. VOTED DOWN His resdution was defeated by a 5-2 vote. Ledford and Commissioner Dick M. Kirby voted for it. Mayor Robert A. Landry and Commissioners WiUiam H. Taylor, Charles H. Harmon, Winford E. Bottom and Samuel J, Whiters opposed the resolution. . . ’liiere are 17 existing tavern licenses in Pontiac and about 37 Class C licenses, Taverns can serve beer by the glass. A Class G establishment can serve liquor. ★ ★ Ledford said he thought “it would dear up a lot of doubt in some minds to have the state decide who is qualified and who is not. SOUND BASIS “That is the basis on wWch a tavern license should be upgraded. It shouldn’t be a political tool,” he added. ' After the vote, Ledford com- * mented, “I guess that separates the men from the boy8.”l The move climaxed a series of earlier actions on individual PHiuests for upgrading tavern Whiters, who, like Ledford, is npt up for reelection, clearly adopted a haqds-off policy; TWO DEFERRED He moved that requests for upgrading tavern licenses at the Trojan Lounge,. 72 Auburn and Club Tqnidad, 18 E. Pike, !‘be deferred until the April 28 meeting,!’ , That’s the first regular meeting of the “new” City Commission. The election is April 20 and all seven commission seats are at stake. Kirby didn’t think there was any harm in giving tentative approval to upgrading since “any final approval is based on state inspection and approval.”' However, there were no ofh-er objections to Whiters’ suggestion so action was deferred. Another request for a new SDM license at the Liberty Bar, 85 N. Saginaw was deferred pending, a State Supreme Court ruling on whether or not a nearby,beauty academy was a school under the state law prohibiting placement of bars within 500 feet of a school. Whiters said he’d like to see such matters deferred until after the election "because I think we’ll get many liquor requests in the next few weeks.” A moment later/ Ledford put all 17 on thp block. ^ r the commission Would first have to repeal the 1955 ordinance prohibiting any more public housing in the city. Then, the commission can act on a revised ordinance .which, in essence, would pro-m|)it any public housing development other than an addition io the present project,” Ewart said. FAVOR ADDITION Commissioners indicated they would favor adding to the present project, Lakeside Homes on Pontiac’s south side. Roy B. Mac,Afee, executive director of the Pontiac Hous-ing Commission, requested the revised ordinance. “We are badly overcrowded he said. “Many families that need four-bedroom units afe forced to live in*two-bed-roora units. “There are no vacancies and have been none for a long time. We have a long waiting list and need to expand to handle these people.” MacAfee said that the revised ordinance would “ 0 n 1 y empower us to study and pro-* additions. Any expansion would have to be approved by the city commission before we could build a single unit.’” NEED HELP WITH YOUR INVESTMENT PROBLEMS? ...CALL FE 2-9275 Watling, Lerchen & Co. PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. PONTIAC, NICHiGAN MenUm New York St^ Yv'-’ ,v ■; ^ ARKINQ p ^ DOWNTOWN furnished by ^the followir^ merchants Q ARTHUR’S 48 N. Saginaw St. BARNEm CLOTHES SHOP 150 N. Saginaw St‘ BOBETTE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. CONN’S CLOTHES 71 N. Saginaw St. GALLAGHER’S MUSIC SHOP 17 E. Huron St. MeCANDLESS CARPETS 1,1 N. PenvSt. OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St. FRED N. PAULI JEWELERS 28 W. Huron St. SHAW’S JEWELERS 24 N. Saginaw. St. WARD’S HOME OUTFITTING CD. 17-19 S. Saginaw St. PONTIAC ENGGASS JEWELERYCO. 25 N* Saginaw St. THE PONTIA^ press 48 VY. Huron Sit. CLOONAN DitUQ C0< 4'72 N. Sagino# SR WYMAN FURNITURE 17 E< Huron St. T8 W. PikuSt. SCARLETT’S BICYCLE and HOBBY SHOP 20 E. Lawroneu St. UOIES’ FASHIONS 74 N. Sdginaw^ 'y i V ■A 'Vl't ih; \i ■ A' + h'l 'r' ' V'\ IV'-', ' Fh ”r; ’■ ... THK PONTIAC PRKSSA ^PyESt^AY, MARCH iS, 1064 Parents and Teens Can't Communicate fSmr’i Note •« m 4i th« md 0/ fto0 dte|ia(o/i«f by (ho tKWfcmol ropor(or 0/ Untitd Pn$$ International defiUno uHth the pUght of AmoHcan youth,) By HARRY FBRGU80N WA8HIN(iTON (UW) •• Oforii B • r n i r d Slwiw onco Mold It' would bo « hotter world "11 por* onto would only roollM how they bore their children." He ttruck bt the heart of one of the major cauaoa of juvenile delliMiuency <— the inability of many parenta to communicate with teen-agen. The cold and iinpleaunt fact Beema to be that mllliona of American children have either a reaigned attitude of tolerance or outright contempt for their parenta. Caae hlatoriea ahow that ia eaperlally (rue In broken bomea—one of (he prime fac^ tori in Juvenile delinquency— la that about one in every five American marriagea enda in acparatlon or divorce. But the problem aiiio exiata In marriagea tiiat appear to be permanent and happy. One of (he aigna of (lie timea is that currently in McCall'a Magazine an article by Barbara Lang advisea teen-agera In all aeriouaneas on- how to bam' boozle their parenta Into thinking everything ia all right. FEEL SECURE It la neceaaary, ahe writea, to make parenta feel aecure and her advice indudea; • Talk to your parenta. "A friend of mine named Geraldine didn’t talk to her par-enta for yeara becauae abe knew they wouldn’t nnder-atand her." But when Geraldine reached 17 ahe decided to talk to her parenta without really aaying anything, telling them trivial thinga. She reported her parent! are now happy and no longer give her third degrees on what ahe has been dohig. • Shield them. If, for In-atanoe, you have a date with a boy who drives a hot rod, tell your parenta he is Interested in me^anlcal engineering. • Ask their advice. This will work only if you follow the advice they give you and, therefore, you should ask their opinion on things that don’t really matter to you. Like whether you should serve an onion or cheese dip at your party. WASTE OF’HME It is a waste of time for par^ ents to shower money and gifts on teen-agers in the hope of keeping them out of trouble. Rich kids become delinquents, too. A teen-age slum boy who holds up the owner of the corner candy store with a switch-blade knife may be doing It because he wants money to buy food. Children with too much money don’t have that excuse, dnd they commit senseless acts just for the thrill of violating the law. GAVE EVERYTHING “I know a boy whoke parents gave him everything," said Philip G. Green of the U.l?. Children’s Bureau, r ‘‘They spent a lot of money to buy him a snappy new convertible. He got behind the wheel, drove three blocks and saw a battered jalopy stand- ing at the curb. He got eat of hi! new nenvortible, gel Inin the jalopy and dmo away. ) wasn’t Imnrov-(transporta- iag his method of lion. He was jnat ^ kick eat of doing Mmethlng illegal, and when bo was caught ho showed no rw> Rich children sometimes commit mass vandalism. w . w w ^ A recent example of It was at a debut party outside New York for Mias Fernanda Wanamaker Wetherlll, RENTED MANSION Her parents had rented a nearby mansion where the boys could spend the night. After the dance was over (he boys retired to (he man-Nlon and wrecked it by swinging on charidliera, throwing furniture out on (he beach, and breaking windows for a total damage of $10,BM. About 100 boys were involve, but only 11 of them wilt be brought to trial, and the charge will be malicious mischief, an offense that does not carry a burdensome penalty. American parents currently are under attack for overcodd-llng their children and forcing them to do foolish things for the sake of status. SUMMER CAMPS Martha Lear, In her book ‘The Child Worshippers," cites the cases of mothers who put brassieres on 11-year-old girls and send their sons to summer camps where French Is taught so the boys can come home and say “Bon jour, mama." And some mothers, she , writes, don’t know when to leave their children alone and ^e quotes one of them: “My son was In bed with a cold. I had lots of things to do, and I felt guilty about being out all day while he was cooped up In the apartment with just the cleaning woman for company. “So I canceled my lunch date and zipped through my beauty parlor appointment and grabbed a cab home and rushed into his room and said “Okay, I’m ready now. What shall we playT’ And he said % don’t know about you, Mom, but I have homework. Can’t you find something to, doT’" AGE OF P8YCHUTRY This is the age of the psychiatrist and nobody can say for ants take a strictly psyohlatrlc approach in their relations to children. Miss Lear finds some of It to be rkHcnloas and quotes ■ mother to prove Iti “My friend had a fight with her husband In front of their S-yoar-old daughter. She’s very psychiatry-minded and she has been worried sick about its effect on the child. That kind of thing is contagious, “And even if I’m saying to my husband ‘You bastard' which our b-month-old wouldn't ,understand anyway, I say It softly and with a smile on my face." Tomorrow: Beatlemania and assorted enthusiasms. Civil Service Workers County 4th in State Oakland County now ranks fourth among Michigan’s 83 counties in the number of state civil service employes and the also of their payroll, according to State Personnel Director Franklin K. DoWald. TTio payroll here amounts to pM million annually for 1,385 employes, he said. The state’s total payroll In 28 counties where It exceeds 81 million annuaUy amounts to 81U million for 88,881 civil service .employes. A recent study showed most state employes outside Lansing (Ingham County) are accounted for by state hospitals and prisons and the department of conservation, highway, state police, Michigan Employment Security, liquor control and bureaus of social aid, according to DeWald. ★ ★ ★ Ingham County has 7,248 civil service workers at an annual payroll of |47.9 million. Wayne County is second with 4,681 employes at $28 million. ★ ★ ★ Third-ranking county la Washtenaw with 1,399 employes at 88.13 million. Closely following Oakland County are Kalamazoo County with 1.827 employes at 87.3 million and .fackson County with 1,201 employes at 87.5 million. Man Robbed in Own Auto A Pontiac man was robbed of 840 last night by a bandit who. hid in the rear seat of his car. Manuel Perez, 53, of 1430 VInewood told Pontiac p 011 c he had just got In the car after taking a companion home at 48)4 Orion when a towel was wrapped around his neck and twisted. The r 0 b b e r took the money out of Perez’ wallet and then fled on foot. New Super Jet Reported to Contain TfX 'Defects' WASHINGTON (UPI)-A congressional source said tod^y the supersecret All plane is equipped with a type of In-fllght braking device that was cited risky in the rejected design for the TFX warplane. ’The source also said the 2,300-mile-an-hour All also includes parts made of titanium four times as thick as those proposed in the losing Boeing Co. bid for the TFX. The extensive use of titanium was mentioned by Pentagon civilian chiefs as a risk factor in the Boeing design. They said they preferred more conventional materia-ls proposed by General Dynamics Corp. The existence of the All, fast-3t military plane in the world. Was disclosed by President Johnson recently. It was built and flight tested in utmost secrecy. Johnson revealed that the All was made of titanium, a metal resistant to the extremely high temperature encountered in supersonic flight. The braking device used on the All that was called risky in Boeing TFX’s design is known as a thrust reverser. Thrust reversers and titanium were two key points of dispute during the protracted and often stormy hearings last year by ihe Senate investigations subcommittee mto the disputed TFX awaid. LARGE PROCUREMENT The contract, one of the largest In military procurement history, is expected to exceed 87 billion. General Dynamics won the contract to build 1,790 of the Navy-Air Force Supersonic planes, despite top military preferences for the rival Boeing bid. The congressional source declined to be identified.' DOUBLE-D Discount Center There was no elaboration whether the thrust reversers the All were comparable to those proposed by Boeing but rejected as an untried and risky design feature by Pentagon I civilian chiefs. SERIOUS DIFFICULTY Sen. John L McClellan, D-Ark., said m an mterview yesterday that General Dynamics was having “serious difficulty' m meetmg Navy weight requirements for the plane. Mcaellaq is chairman of the investigation group. He said he still intended to resume the TFX hearings, but not until after the Senate civil rights fight, which may last into June. ' t if ‘ ^ ! yi''/ ' \ it * f * fl. 4 f * . Ibe senators said there was a possibility the Navy might reject the plane if the wfeight problems were not solved. ' I ' OK Resolution on Voting Age State Senate Moves to Extend Franchise LANSING (UPI)-Mlchlgan’s 18- to 29-year-olds were the farthest along In history today toward getting the right to vofe. While the fight for the under-21 group is still a long way from being won, backers of lowering the franchise age scored a major victory in the State Senate By a vote of 24-7, one more than the two-thirds majority needed, the Senate passed el resolution calling for a constitutional referendum election on whether the voting age should be lowered from its present limit of 21. Sen. John Bowman, D-Rose-ville, one of the sponsors of the resplution, said jubilantly, ‘We’ve had the question before us for years. But this is the first time it passed either House." W ★ ★ The resolution, also signed by Sen. William Ford, D-Taylor, has been kicking around the Senate floor because of various delays for more than a month. VOTES NEEDED It now must receive 74 favorable votes in the House in order to^t on the November ballot. d there was a chance the resolution would carry. , , . -.. “If they (the representatives) let it out of committee we have a chance,” he said. ★ ★ The resolution came to a vote suddenly and without debate after the Senate had been in session for several hours. REPUBLICANS OPPOSE Seven, Republicans opposed the resolution—William L^ppien of Saginaw; Thomas Schweigert of Petoskey; Aimer Porter of Blissfield; Frank Beldle of St. Clair; Arfliur Dehmel of Unlon-ville; Emil Lockwood of St. Louis and Milton Zaagman of Grand Rapids. Bomb Explodes inKpshmir NEW DELHI (fl - A bomb exploded early today in the state assembly building at Jammu, in the Indian-controlled part of the disputed state of Kashmir. Nobody was injured; The bomb, which cracked the building’s walls and shattered windows, was the sixth to explode in Jammu in recent months of violence and tension in the state «laiiped by both India and Pakistan.' ; / Dealh Notices [ wort l>v Jjj* CottV •vtnina. oHor wnkh ifmi hf will bt Sogwi Clly t*r Mrvl«« inolhtr ol Mri. JtuI* wattani ■Im lurvlvwt by ^. trandchlld XHI loHn. f untrti Horn*. TiMortt %trvkt will jjt hold Ikturdty, cRrcV jnhriwJol'' NAK1NB1 Ctftrtidry. Dtby llinritira win iit In tltlt «t lilt luntrti horn* dftdr 3 p.m. thli tlltrnoon. Card of Thaaks I WISH TO THANK OUS faiBNDS -'tllvii for flw klmtiMii Ui In llid low of our hutbond tnd fdftior Chtrllo C. Brooki. Wo alio wdnf to fh»nk Rov. Roborli and hli itogar* ond Hunloon Runorol Homo. Mn. Charllo Brooki and torn, Ma;~£nr6 y r~iraitibr^ praaaai hli doapaif tbonka and aln-eara oppraclaflon far ffw kMnoaa ihown durlno hh parlod of orlof ovar tha daith ol hla wito, Lillian, to all fhair frianda and ralafivai. CHURCH OROUPS AND OROANI- rou UM SM » N. Itorry lu can afford. SBb MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 PONTIAC stato Bank Btda. PS S-MM fR¥~5lA6AX TABl.lfi marly Dax-A-Oltl). Now nama, •ama formul* —-------------- " ^ Sroi. pttijji. lama formular only I flic. sirnT. ■* 1. pitifli. __________ Pay Off Your Bilii 7M City Adjustment Service WklNS PRODUCTS will dotivor or mall anywiiara. Ordori^.of ts or mor# boafaaa froo. Claranco H. Smith, ISO N. Parry, Pontiac. PH ^^W. -BOX REPUES-At 10 a.' m. today i there were replies at | The Press office in the j following boxes: 11, 12, 24, 29, 31, 38, 44, 8«; 58, 60, 61, 64, 66, Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Preu Want Ads aOR PAST ACTION NOTICa TO AM aacsivao by i aje. WILL as puBLisHao THa POLLOWINO DAY. 2. S2.0» S2.4S t3.S4 4.88 8.84 13.44 Pontiac Praia Box numbort. Tha Pontiac Press PROM I A.M. TO 5 P,M. WANTADS ARE FAMOUS FOR "ACTION" _____JN)' Caa^i^ , ^nwaod^mananfly. Call OA »WS. ^March IS, (tlS. I will not ba raaponilbla nr any daWi con- ■ wi wixr GLADLY ASSIST YOU . . . • to erdar Wanf Ada • to wrlla your ad • for any Intormaflon about Claiilflad- JUST DIAL PONTIAC PRESS 332-8181 ASK POR CLASSIPIBO DBPARTMSNT LAROB SABLB COLLIS, LOST IN Iho vlclnlly ol Opdyko. Rtward. CMid’a pot. Piatia call 33HS4y, OSTf - VfR7~tAIRSl”TV8IIV colored mala ralrlavar, raaamblaa Polar Baar, wandarlno S W from torlnji^S "Prfnc#,"^chHd^**'paf,'’v’l cl n Cf y S^jd Lk. and Tawgrato RB*. PS ^^^ia chackino out at*S*yonVSd *■— ...1 Plaia, batwaon t- I. OR 3 4M1 or PS lO^m. COstTAAfA bP La6V'» RIKBTKi& Blattaa: aluminum framat. OR 3-J184. Losf i BRifYANV, i-VOAA-bLB. Loaf naar Parry Park. Howard! FB 2-5310.________________ lT)$Y, f’bmalI 8»AVlTo^iir"C*r, whito foot, Laoofa Rd., naar PontiacjMall, rawarft. M2-4SIS. _ LOST MONDAY IN WAtBRpSWB, Oarman Shaphard (iwilca ogl, mala, moifly black, brown n Itgi, itomach ,—•* ---- - - ■ of moulh. Hat on choko' chain collar with llcanta numbar 1127. Young' dog vary friandly. OR Howard. / lost; FEAteriHoTiiHieffrR — -)uppy, '------------ ■ d Squa I. Raward oNarod, no quaiflont atl^. Phona TR t-0»iy.__________________ sfHAYETi'FRbM" MM CMuHTOA! Rochaifar, I monthi old Irl-colorad Oorman Shaphard mala, llcanaa No. 2IS20. Howard. UL 2 2757. Help Waated Milir 4 WBLL DRE5SBD MBN, PART-full tima. Utt of car nacatiary, S15 par avaning commlailon. 825- |i20 TO 1130 Weekly A MAN NEEDED manultcfurtr. txptnslon (o W^k furtr. Cal alactrlcal —.......Rounda, tonight OR 34l»22. ATTENTION DRIVER SALESMEN ESTABLISHED ROUTE guarantRed salary SECURITY WITH NO LAYOFF PAID TRAINING > LIBERAL VACATIONS INSURANCE PENSION BENEFITS This position ( todOhg'’ 'wiihout JOm to 35, marriad pnd Apply In parson, f t.m. to t: Thurs., March 28. IM Howi MILLS BAKERY ATTENTIOnT "RETAIL SALESMAN noodad batwaan IS and 2$. Salary and Commission. Will train — Sea R. E, Kinney, 142 N. Saginaw. A mature! AASBITiOuS YOUNO -----d 28 for larga national sales flnemca company. Bxcallonf advancemant potanflal — axcallant company banaflts. Good starting salary. Profar man In Drayton Plains arer ‘ ------- 4474 Olxia area, but ni^ nocastary. Plains. k, 51 tv— _ ......... _________J shift. 15 MllaOoolldga araa. Equal opportunity amployao. JERED INDUSTRIES, INc!, Ml BORING MILL OPERATOR BUILDERS TOOL MILL IkC TrSWito " ■ BLOOD OOffdRS UROENTLY NEEDED s7..»A!;«:a«M Caunjiy^l niimiifKiiiToiiiTr' ?'.ss.8“.S".Kr ajSK "XimmKf Phtltll ~ MUST EB IXPiai- rS-apiwrsra- FAhaiNtiW ~*"T8fC TllWYlAe CITY OF PONTIAC PoHcs Patrol Men. Salary t4,NS- -MOtf Minimum haiahi. Of , waight 147 ibi, aaa 21. to 30. military or poUca oxaorlonM to maulmutn It yoari. High schCol grtouato or aquHlvanl crodili. Michigan rtal-danl. Apply ptraonal City Hall, 31 S. Parka SI ■“ eUAlM AblBirif fgAiRtl If you aro willing to ilart at tha boilom and work long and hard. boiiom and work long and I and ara batwaan Si and 4Q. you may quality tor our Claim Adjustor Training Program, fng with law anforcamant jsarion-nal. Ooctora, Itwyari, and athar prolaiilontl paojita In adluiting You must bo willing to work tong 1.— .... —whatavtr oacrl-•qulrod to cam a Isrmi^ s caraar In h raquirod qualllloi may writo to: Parionnal Dlraclor, Farm Buratu Iniuranca Ca., 40M N. Orand Alvar. bikB«T SACaiMAOiiriKaiiii. anca nacatiary. thorough training program, tiw commliaton paid on ta^ salt. Call Flint Il2-7lf- (filHTWeHiinrhPlRAYBIO^ IS VMrt oM, full tIma. aitfV Tala-graph and Mapla Rd. _____ b R rVTiT" PfiA" riTAlCHHIb routa. Cellini Claantri. 450 Wood-“• “ ‘ iitar. OC — CAruAW^muAATii^ wantad. .Rial opportunity witl Farmari Iniuranca Group. L «-434 ...............XI ... LI 3-3151. •EXPERiENciB~l!niiir'TAOCk drivors, dapondablo, Apply 21 Con-groii Sl.i Pontiac. establIsmed^^TT pacts of oporaling an aitabtlshad homo sorvica roufo. Must bo mar-rlad, pralar agas from 25 to 50, alio muil llva In Pontiac or dost vlclnlly. Salary plus commlislort and bonus. Excollont rotlromont plan, Must hava good past work, V record. This Is itopdy year around, omploymanl. Wrllo Box 105, Pon- rxpiRrfNffD~irA 76 a “ap: pllonca lalaiman. Pull llmo on tales floor. Tht Good Houtoktoplng Shop ol Ponllac E'xPERiENCiD WOOL PRESSiR! Wardrobe Cleaners, 1038 Baldwin, IxpERliNfiF ceSamiC tilR by Ih# hour or |ob. Shell Covering, 3284 Djxlo Hwy., 4?3-120f,___________________ BXPERlENC'kD OLASSA^, AUT6 and Homt Ownari, Immtdiato o^lng, PE 4-3317.____________ Experienced CARPET SALESMEN wIcS *' Hudson's ‘iMMYMiNTldR' I llkt to I inlti working 4 houn ing, Call Mr. Dpi#. V FB ^W43 tonight oi 8 SAW AND LAY^SUt man, rougnari, aluminum siding, production housing. EM 3-2731 help help Our business Is booming, wa. need —*'t help. Orlllmen, but boys, I tor cor hop. Apply Big Orivo-lni. Tolagrr— ' X, Dixie Hwy, and. $1 . Awly In parson, m„ 2 p.m. : 7 p.m brive-lni, folagraph ____ Huron, Dixie Hwy. and StUrLaka ,Ror- ----- - HOW DO WE Keep up the tremendous growth ond expansion we have enjoyed the past 12 years? It isn't easy — and unless I can find 2 ambitious men tp replace the last 2 that were promoted from the Pontiac Area, my boss is going to get roughlll , ' You can help me out -„ ^expose yourself to the wonderful opportunities open. Be available to be pushed up our ladder of supcess. Let Me Worry ABOUT YOUR QUALIFICATIONS. Let Your Wife Worry Hila WaattMl M«la J|W6Ra jA¥i'tom‘WoRK, ■ "TXyJHTjtWNginAAU C'tavaTicaraal^ withltr^"ail NEED EXTRA MONEY Men and woman batween 21 and 50 yrs. of age needed to deliver telephone books In the Pontiac area. Must hove automobile with public liability and proparty damage insurance and oa available at least 6 hours par day. Call 548-2703 for oppointmsnt between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. MdCHAN l6 W AliY’f b,’~3.CAl ...WiWTAA'OtALia Man to no body shop oitlmatlng and bumping, and/pr to manoga body iliop In. Iho tuturo. Bond rtiumo to tho Pontiac Praii Sox 415. 6i*PdRT0ijitVT*5jrVi5DROi^ to Isarn tha drapary, paint and carMr opportunity It you havo th* nKaitary quallticatloni and wish a parmanant posliton. You must havo a car as you will ba raquirad to work In both tha Rochaitar tnd Birmingham itorai. Yw mull ba through with tha military sarvlco. wrIto Ponllac Praii Box 12. “ - PARf:TIME“^— Mon 21 to 45 naadad at enca to call on aitabllihod cuilomori, 15 FRyNTBllS f^RUSi mulYiliyh and Gordon Proti. 353-7141. “RErRUlfSFORTfiS'ARD" POLICE DEPARTMENTS Watortord Township, Michigan *.. .......-ml of Wotortord %^1 vw * ---- dopt. Must bo roildc Township 1 yoar . ippllcallon. Ago Dipt, Ago 21-» f.. _____________ Applleolloni rtcolvod until 5 p.to MarchJfjJMf Salesmen Wo havo axcoltanf opportuniflai tor txparlancad man on a full-lima parmanant bails In tha tol-towlng^ dopartmanlsi Furniture Carpeting Shoes Building Materials Garden Shop APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. Montgomery Wared PONTIAC MALL AlflW0i,’PHYSICALtV~AeTrvW, *- driva, naadad tor part lima maintananca work In aoclal agoncy, Must ba avallabla to work brokon hours. Call FB 4-3375. SALESMAN Pull or part timo man for salot work In Pontiac araa calling on Induilrloi and Institutions. KE iifvlCi STATION...AttSNOANf, mull ba at ItasI 25 yaari eld, mKhanlcally Incllnad; must havo IhTrt I ,...■ I»RE$8 OPlRAToRnoR lull end part'llmo. Apply White Way Laundry, 345 H. Nfrta^Mllt ba oxperlanced i , fabricating I. FE ^105. salesman WANTED Mlaimon«*«tod tor now and us* housas. Wida awako man who wan to maka abova avaraga incom Expreloncad full tima man only. DON WHITE, INC. 28fl pixlo Hwy.________OR 4-«4» SALES MANAGER WANTED ________ 4a^5020. BENCH HANDS »ly Ih person only. Joda li IS Inc. 44 N. Park St. ’ SALESMAN WANflD” DRIVER, EXPERI-oncod driving lamis. Apply 7940 Cooley Lake Ril, Union Lake. WASTED: MAN FOR lawn MAIN-tonance work. Apply 4773 Dixlo Hwy. batween 7:30-2 a.m. or 4-4 WANTEb, AMBITIOUS MAN, ME-chanically Inclined for garden equipment laiai and eervice, managerial ability, rafarancas raquirad. dry and dry < of age or older, nmn-rieo. nign school education. Pontiac Laundry Co., 540, S. Tatogra^. t horses. OA 8-2821. h actwol education and I laam a good trade. . d resume and phone numbar to occupant, loto W. Umg I dasira t Please ear numbar to.............. Lake Rd., Bloomfield t ALTERATIONS AND * R B P A I I lady for dry cleaning departmen.. see Mr. Metrick at 540 S. Tale- graph. _______. . _ BXPERI- WwiHd y ITv« in. r^ny*. M« wtMt. MA Hflp WpiM ytmtlt TfiK WEDNESDAY. MAHCU 2H. 1004 I } • ■ V •ABVIITTNK. I CHItOi II •••, llgm MuMnwrti. Own porintlon, «W-Wf BiAUfY^FiMAT-flR >0*' manT. gi3i.w;aa’ £gOK. BAHlWATBr^SlfirB wao**. 4iH)rl’A-H*m« Uiint*. m cufii ...... MwMn I irHl I p.m. ■“ "“11?. IW¥I AWTStilHTl BBUtt dllll?.’------ sr.'feM.sr^'' mtnl. Apply In pnnpn. T«wn A Apply ... . , Country nfwr 7 p. W, OIPiN63CltI”Wi • i»jr». MTr"?6H araa^i. «[•.*.■* “ nowilp^ PMI MKWIt ••It •W'J-SKWJF"'* iiT< pFST¥NWb fIaWi-.;l*n. outrtniMt) w$g» plui com-itilkilon. Hoiipllollijllon liidurontt, iiMtn. Phlilp'd BMuiy ^«ion. y iMALFT^icr »ANtlO: ¥A»¥-•liior, full IlnM. rtjyij, ] nl9hU| d Iraniporlatlon o dtifBRAL, NoFooitiRoT i1¥b in I3S, Thun, ana avary olhar Sunday off, 9 chlidran, raf. MA S-IIIM. 6IBL td tAKI CARB 6P 9 •mall chlldran durlno day whlia Molhar works. 9M-9M3. 6II(L‘6riyii66i¥A0ie IS/e^AN, aoma night work. 499 Orchard taka Ava., Ponllac. GIRL OVBR ■■i8"¥dR™dBNSRAL Drug Siora work, ralarancai ra-nulrad. Oallaghar Drug Stora, 7S44 Highland Rd. at Wllllami taka Rd. OBNBRAI. OPPI murad. ago r* Housewives Ragular part lima and lull Hi ayaninp ichadulaa ara avallwla, APPLY PBRSONNRt DIPT. 1tol|i Wiiitfd fmth 7 NBiriAURANt-DISH ^ M AC til N ■ oparator, ovar )A tuirilma. ^^Tklagraph and l^tla Roa4»9 CARL L. BILLS SR., FLOOR SAND- PE 9 fAyloR, Pl66E laying ng and finishing. 29 years 'lence. 339-«79._ __ SNYBeR, FLOOR* LAYiNG, finishing. FE 50999. Garage Doors AUTOMATIC DOOR OPERATORS WOOD-OARAGE DOORS^METAL SALES service Retldantlal Commercial Temcraft Overhead Door 400 Oaklailb 335i3990 Hay Sleighridei ILLS FARM - _ ... -. .renbig — Hay-Slelghrldes In fresh clean air. Homemade spaghetti, salad, garlic " ' " " ‘ drink. Pirfect local a per|m. brochure. 48l' Uako'CMrge 'Road, Oxford, 498 1411. . ^H^ing Seiyice OIL HEAT SUPPLY. 72 N. SifiK-ley. PE 8-3941. Pontiac's only au-thorliad SundStrand and Wabilar oil pump rebuilding station. Incom# Tax Service 9 YEARS TAX EXPERIENCE. William J. Sourlall, 4734074 ALL WORKING PEOPLE9~tA5(K. _I3 anc( up. J. Schimke. OR 3-9943. Ucensed Builders NEIDRICK BUILDING SERVICE - no. Garage. C L TERA9S. F Glass lOMOa TALBOTT LUMBER Installed In doors and wln-Complote building sorvica. kland Ava._______FE 4-4995 .Maintenance Service A 8. B MAINTENANCE . Residential — Commercial Complete Janitorial Service ^Floors - Wli^ws • Walls • Carpets . . . .iI NTING, DECORATING, plaster repair. Free est. 1099 disc, for cash. 8S2-0420. PAINTING AND DECORA-24 years oxP; ^RMS. Frea as- tlmates. Ph. UL 2-1390. : EXPERT PAINTING I 6RIPFIS BROTHERS- d dyorating. OR 34049 TANNER S. TANNER DECORA-tors. Expert Paperhanging. 473-0334. WALL-WASHING - MINbh RE-: Reasonable prices. FB Vim & ftano Tnidng ^ ^ PInstfring $ei^ Heating, Supplies PLUMBING, HEATING REPAIRS. , Furnaces, boilers, conversions, 24-hour service. MY 91121, OA 8 3424. _^Emerson Plurnbing 8. Healing, Rental Equipment BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS ....... PAPER STEAMERS ^Dfj^LLS - POWER S Wallpaper Steamer Floor tandofs, polishers, han landers, tyrnaco vacuurn claanar Oakland Fuel 8. Paint, 434 0 J Lake Ava. FB 5^150. EXPERT ROOFING, SIDINO AND gutters. FE 5-1094. ________ ^F'iNG and repair EXPERT workmanm^.^ By^ Superior Days lOOFS'rNEW, REPAIR General Maintananca FE 44444 Hi-Fi Service A-f TV-Radio Services. HICKMAN______________iFE 8421 FLORES TV SaIeS-SERVTce” Rebullts 819 - L 13 Myra “ - REBUILT AND GUARANTEED TV' S19.99 up. Obel TV and Radio. . -..— — . .... pg 4.4945 Tree Trimming Service A. E. DALBY TREE SERVilgr Tree-slump removal. Elm spray-Ing-trlmmlng. FE 5-3009, FE 5-30ii3. General Trie Service Any lire |ob. FE 5-9994, 490-9997. MbNTRlSsrWEE SIRVICE T reo removal-trimming. 335-7850, Trucking your price. Any tii LIGHT HAULING, GARAGES AND basements cleaned. 473-8043. CrCHFlJidviNO, TRASH HAULED Reasonable. FE * ' I, grading and gray-d loading. FE 2-0403 Trucks to Rent i-Ton pickups iw-Ton-,1 TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Trallen Pontiac Farm and -Industrial Tractor Co, _ 82 S. WOODWARD FE 44441 FE 4-1442 Open Dally Including Sunday IW-ToniStakes Upholstering thGmAs u^oLstering --W. WALTON BLVO. FE 5-8888 BLpOMFlELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls and windows. Reai Satisfbe-tion guaranteed. FB 2-1431.______ WoPil-Ceko-Coal-FMl ANNUL COAL-THB IDEAL FIRB-uMod fuel, iaasoned- wood both tor fumaco or fireplace. OAKLANC FUE^i^ PAINT, 45 Thornes St. iOR care of CtlllDEEN ssrzi'An CHILD ’ WuNtui Mtusek^ OMi 29 AljCTION JALE t^BRY 8ATIIR; .......tm OF tiEiTonriijyii to cere for 4 children, eget 14, In motherless home. After 8. FB S9874: parmanant ernpktyment. i Plash Ciaamwe, ^ W, Huron, lEles Help, IRirte-F^ l-A TIMB. OpiXirluni 10-13 iiuurs cnnvanlenca. CARBBRI BY KAY Ml 4 3S41 EVELYN EDWARDS Mailman 24Va E, HURON FE 4-0584 Initructloni-Scheeii IBM TRAINING teopiS/lflixi courses avalleMo, Approved by Michigan Slalt Board of Education. Free placement eiili' -Krae perking, IlnanciM erri tYSTEMS INITiniTB 9474909 'WANTlDr fRMNlESl ” Study at Khgol or al home MACHNIST TRADE TOOK I, DIE MAKING-DESIGN ENGINeeRINO-ORAFTING AIR CONOITIONING-RIFRia. AUTO MECHANICS You can EARN as you LEARN L Michigan Allied liislltulo, I Chicago, --------- ■“BiiSEL UnOINI MfCifANiti •1 CARPENflR, ALWINOM ilD-f| ^40lo'”' cARpENTER-TsiierwsMraii altar S. PE 3-0007. CABINETS, paNElTMo, “TIONd. _ FE 9 9998. CABiNET PANELIN0'*'SWB' IE modallng. Burl Murdock, FE 9-784L service; MINOR light laullfng. FE 44419; I ciiAN got VOTiTrAse- Work Wanted Female 12 i R ON IN 0'5 E R V IC E." "R E F Er-/ences. Mrs. McCowan. FE 9-I47I, fLEANi'NO and" WALL WASHINO. _ FE_4-9943 or FE 9-3034 _____ “ironings FE 9-9214 BEFORE 9 P.M. WANTED IRONINGS, “MaVTBR, ELECTRIC MOTOR SBRVICB-RB- _ _______________________ FREE iSTTMATBS ON ALL WIR-Ihg, will financo. R. B: Munro EloctrIc Co, FB S443I.__ Dressmaking & Tailoring 17 I Tax Serrite 19 ACCURATE experienced W. R. BOLIN open all year 10 W. Huron,^R^m 990 _334-9334 ■ "accurAte-oependablC keys s. nackbraaan FE S-9997 ■ INCOME TAX, BOOkkEEPiNG" Notary. K. Hetchlor. 83 and 89 avg. 591 SECOND FE 5-3876 IN COME TAX REPORTS PRE-pared, Baldwin-Walton- area, Mrs. Haywar^ 1^ 4-7035. LONG FORM ITEMIZED iN YdUR *' *}L— —....... Convalescent-Nursing 21 l-A MOVING SERVICE, REASON-ablo rates, FB 5-3458, FB 9-9909. A MOVING, CAREFUL. - LdVt rates. Equipped. UL 2-3999, 838- Bob's Vdn Service MOVING AND STORAGE REASONABLE RATES Complete Insurance >ERT TOMPKINS____OR 4-1 cheap. Any kind. I A-1 PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON FE 44384 EXPERIENCED PAInTiNO AND papering, free estimates. 482-6774. EXPERIENCED PAINTER. FB 2- PAINTING, WALL WASHING. NO ‘ too smalt. Rate reasonable. ■ - PAPER HANGING AND PAINTING Mark Nelson. FE 8-1899. . ____ INTERIOR DECORATOR, Papering. FE 84343. wallFaper _____ove6 by painting and dacoratinq, wAshIng, paFUr raL^aMting. No |ob -too small. Television-Rodiu Service 24 HAVE YOUR RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE YOU SHOP Tratnad service Man, Baasonable CALIFORNIA DRIVErAWAY Planning to go West? Drive oqe of ---------*- ------- We jjtfll sharp ireexpenses. M & M MOTOR SALES 2527 Dixie Hwy. OR 4f HOMEOWNBRS SIS.SS anUus Sdalet Ag$i^, FE S-Seil^d^dO WunM CklMiwii tu ImN II LICENSER HOflflE, DAY AND ^ay~ajylianiias, all OE I' wici^-^RNifORl 'ORtiiTuEi " Dash for' fOrjirtuki An6"7 W^TJ^i^UAiV »iO AH6 cmiT. '■ ................ ^ ELECTRIC MOTOR, W e One iar«e refriMrater < ar. TV Fetltew or cor H H.F, rTit parfabie lypawrilar enJ othar bush hats mechinea, OR >474/ or Ml 7 1444. ' "Wanted iiniy traitor lor transporh FOfdl^RoMsIw. PR aTlili II u,6og Fdn uusineis purposbi, r, will pay Inlamsi ghu Oil. Raply 9- OR 3 BEDROOM RANCH, raga, 8196 prita ranga. Ratponsibla local busintii adults. In or — Ponllee. Lease 1 or 2 yaars, 9317 el9ef ’ - — irsinn ---- tmmadlals poiiat- Sion. FB 9-4IM. feXECUTIVi WHITl COUPl B BE s»,ss0irr.,^'^ FAlHiR AND OAUGHTIR OlilRfe ty^ront^tewlfs>om^|^ar,tmsnl. VOUNO C«0Pi:i, M“ SllNIflHO or srTwklng, dtsira small unfurnished houaa or apartmant, Waiar-lord, Drayton area by April 1. OR 4-1949 attar 4,^^ 3 6u¥G' mAn ‘BiSiHT"RSbM^ft Drayton Plains, xi.ngham, call colls SharajJvji^Qv^ 33 WOMAN TO SHARE HOME, CHILD walcorpa. EM 3-1409 or .. atlar 9. ______ Wanted HeeTISiate 36 y OR 4-BUOROOM, BA9BMBNT, anA 9 p.m 16 ACRU9 OR MORir ON 0^6 road. State price and location. Raply Ponllac Proas Box I‘ 'CASH / 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS - HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT 19 Oaklami Avo. FB 9-9h HAVE BUYERS need listings For top markoi prico and courteous action call WARDEN REALTY 1 TO 50 9!U-7I97 BRTIES AND LAND CONTRACTS. Warren Staut, Realtor 196 N. Opdyke Rd, FE 9-1149 Dally till S MULtIPLE I.iSTINO SERVICE ALL CASH Gl OR FHA HOMES rmtty inywfwH \ paymtntB. I even behind listings, no r4c ..... modlately. Dally and UN 34339. b'uVers IYAITlTi¥n«¥'NllTr9- and 3-ba<8room homes. Call us for fast results. Reagan Raally, FE 3-6194. BUILDER ntaat mrs In Pontiac, offor, no commission, 4244979 R^l Value Rm JOHNSON SAYS. Wafeh our sold signs all sOver town. List your homo with u8. We have the salesmen .who can sell. Win trade. AUGUST JOHNSON REALTOR 1764 $. Telegraph __________FB 4-9533 GEfRESULTS WE NEED listings. Call us today for quick tale and top market value. It .It's rbal estate, we can tall III . V/HITE, INC. 2891 Dixie Hvry. REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" WANTED . 1 cm get you cash tor 2 bedrooms with extra lot or Pa8l JONES REALTY FE 4-9590 ApartnMirtt-Funiiihed 37 Ta'nd Rd'. An’'otlTltl#TTncruded.”'?h.’ ** - LIlay, 473.1190. SUM Highland private entrance. FB B490|), 2 ROOMS, PRIVATE 123 DWIGHT STREET •OM, UPPER, PRIVATE. 0 drinkers. FE-2-1998. 3 ROOMS, 814 St! CLAIR. FE 2-7413. Near FIshar Body. 3“ ROOMS carpeted, NiGE, PRI- furnlshed. FE 2-3271. ROOMS AND BATH, INDUlkE 9341 Pontiac Lk. Rd. ATTRACTIVE 3 ROOMS garape/ no ChUd^nHIg Carpviva mnq wood oanaltna. ^ 4*4213. ' NEW FURnI- ONE BEDROOM tura. $150 per month, nouns '”’^HB FONTAINEBLEAIi APARTMENTS FB 5-0934 FE 8f8692 THEY'RE LCOkiNG FOR YOUR-WANT AD -IN THE Pontiac Press , Miom 332-Siei 17 '■XXX, FUENISHfD AFARTMINfr WE rent, Wali^ Lake eioe. 484 IHI Aportmeiitt-UafuniMied 31 Alberta Apartments Only l¥ M9II WEBiTER Sch66l AEIA. lllO room iowar. Garaga, Gat hsat FT9'i4rf^n^7r ... air wndiHanad, madsrn ilovt and ------- .jlit-in J------ window tills, hot _________ lissl, plasiered palnlsd wells, oak floors, plenty of narking. An act# ........... wim hented swlmmlti KV‘‘r'52t5!r,«aiiri end piny. ... peis, ■'oVVve’ n'Jl' Weir 'll block yml of Blliabeth 1 te Fontainebleau Apartments CONCORD PLACE LUXURY APARTMENTS RLOOMFIEI D HIM I ADDRESS Immediate Occupancy ‘The UMImela in Prlvele living' Chrysler 2 FURNISHBD MODELS OPEN POR YOUR INSPECTION daily and SUNDAY If ‘ JENTALS from $150 .. opdyke Roedt Drive oui ward le Square Lake Rd. II lo OpdVke Road. Wo will I CALL FE24SII 0 GREATER BLOOMFIELD REAL ESTATE CO. 4438 Telegreph Roed 2 neoRooMi, oAi hrat, newly decorated, available March 30, security deposit, reterences required. 176 mo. J91|L<^'*"*' **'’* " >BIDR0QM “HOUSI, OARAOE, lanced jiarC 196. 4Sl-4694._ _ 9"r60MS, BA'fH, GAS HEA'Y Ed ulimiet. U7. InquIrt al 199 S. Bdllh. 999 PER7MdNfHrfiSRTH>AlY"6F Ponllac near Northern High. 3 bedroomi, gas heat, separata dining room, irawly dtcoraltd. A R^BAL VALUE 434-9979 Bb'ULbVARb'HEidlHjfS - r Bedroom Unit -17$ Por ASonlh Contract RetIdanI Manager 944 Beat Blvd. at Valencia ____ FB 4-7933 S59 I chlldran welcome. L*ro9 dining A*RlfAL VALUE 4944979 Wai;lEB"“l A k"ir~TilbR06M. available April 1st. “ ...... Walking dislanca to tar and athool. LI 9- 42 LARGE CLEAN ROOM FOR OBN-llaman. Private oniranco. 949 Nal-ton. FE 4-4371 RbOM ~ANb OR eoAEb, 'fiSvi Oakland A^. PEj4-l994. - tLEBPING ROOM OR RfiftATlliit) board, no drinking. FE 34936. Rooms With Board 43 I WOMAN, KITCHEN PRIVILEGES. Cap alter 16 p.m. 338-4311, OENfLiMiM'“-r *M l A^^ lor. 334-MI6. loWly HO/MB. PRIVILloit, tlx-callent food. FB 8-7999, PRIVATl”R5&Mf'wTftT"H 0 Mil cooking, 84 P|X»ler. Rent Store! BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER 3906 S. Tolograph Rd. 45'x50’-15'x50' Excellent Locatloni’Avallable Acres of Free Customer Parking SPACE AVAILABLE FOR -r- Dairy Store — Dry Cleatwri Florist — Flenco — Furniture Hobby — Meat Market — Music -- Photo ■— Plua —Sporting Goods — Toys '—'—‘ TO INSPECT STOREROOMS, .CALL MRS. GAYLE EDWARDS, FE 9-9903, OFFICE LOCATED AT SHOPPING CENTER. BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE A PRESTIGE LOCATION One of Michigan's buslast and fash est advancing shopping cantors. Now leasing stores of 750 tq. ft. Very reasonable. This desirable location Is the right spot for your business to succeed. For Inspection contact Realtor Partridge, — 1050W. Huron St., FE 4-3581. - Renf Office Space 47 l OROONO'FLOdR PRESTIGE LOCATION for your oHIco studio or business. Bloomfield MI na c I e Mile. Free paved parking. Thousands of customers at your door. For Inspection contact Realtor PartHd^e,............... NEW, MODERN SUITES OF .. flees overlooking lakt. Telegraph “ " ----------1 Tom Bateman, FE Road. Contact 1 I Bosineie Property 47-A 26X46 MODERN BUILDING IN THE new Fontainqj^au Plaza. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 3526 PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 9 to 9 FE 3-7l63„ M.L.S. OR 4-6497 . or Offices. Win lease alt or dh J, C. HAYDEN, REALTOR EM 3-4404 16751 Highland Rg. (M99) 3-BEDR00M""BRICK HOUSE, WA-ferford Township. 91.500 down. OR 3-BEOROOM BRICK, EXCELLENT iocallbn, large lot, 812,956. 84768 evenings. 3-BEOROOM. I'/k BATtiS, 6aSE- kltchen $14!500?*N6 sr;: buUt-lns, rtS,W"wllh Sl,9» _____<79 BlklntOrd. 3 BEDROOMS, LAROB L6t carpeting, full basement, lake tlagai, SIS,9“ ■' ' 3434701, 676 3-BEDROOM, IVk BATtlS. $14,000. 30 down. Wachal. FB 94443. '3-BEDROOM Mixed Neighborhood Full basement Nothing Down-$62 Mo. Model: 37 Nj Easf Blvd. InrM Ifncwf lots, ges hi JOTl'^ca^lIng amf drop BEDROOM, IBATHS, GAS HEAT, d^bki^^arage, In town. 818,800. 4 ■ ROOMS, ' 8306 DOWNr^Tli-ltV rmim, onrAge, o7488 Wfst $U¥UWiAr Oy* "A?lT't ITHUR C, COMPTON I, || mo W. Huron Si, OR 17414 Evas, OR 14198, FE 3-7018 Mixed Area^ New Homes iiiCK kw'*'wb'aI tV rnV«"a**lliiMiSth' siwnkwm I ba ratinan4'44l. PONTIAC REALTY nr Baldwin fi 14171 5T6UT StWfT ■ Mixeci Neighborhood WESTOWN REALTY , 490 Irwin ott Rail Blvd. FE 8 2741 allnrnoons. LI 3 4477 Evas. NEW 3-Bedroom Full Basement Nothing down - $62 Mo. Modeli 37 N. East Blvd. isamani, i-car fltraM, Vk-Kr# I. 819,7*0, larms orTada. TOP RBALTY 87S8IM TRI-liVir” MODEL - Ott Joilyn ftaturkM lha larga sliding glau door, spec levs ciosoia, flAly insulated, a big T on your lol or ouri. This Is a MUST. WE TRADE NO MONEY DOWN Trl'laval ^cr ranch ilxrlar hn I your lOI. IWodtl open 104. G. flattleyTium^^ W * *Y9»7 iM^89 J814981 ____ _________ N6RTH“ir6E"3:6iai66Sl,"HA*iD. " lloori, qarpating, 19,990. FE YOUNG-BILT HOMES 9 7907^ NO DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTOAOE COST NO PAYMENT FIRST MONTH I'Dll basement, 3 bedrooms, 20’ family r from, model at 479 Kinney r Blaine. Open I lo 9 dalfy BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS OAKLAND PARK AREA Displaced by Ponllac Motor pension? 2 bedrooms, full be.... aluminum storms, rimodalad kitchen, new lawn, gas heal, 2-car jl^a^. 89-900, £n Ntlson, FE ^crawfMd 3 BEDROOM HOME, Idoil kitchen, a woman's drtam, largo base-mani, i'H car garaga, trumlnum siding, 82,900 down - " mo. Land contract. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP, 2 t room homo, gas heat, 2W garaga, lOO x 24S' lol, 88,900 Itn See It today. CRAWFORD AGENCY W. Walton FE 8-2304 409 E. FLINT fOWERlNG OAKf alight... ......... 7hlla Lake, hardwood — eat, Uk-car garage, 90x190' lo close neighbors. Only 88,990. HAGSTROM REALTOR ) W. Huron OR 44198 C. 0. BALES, Reoitor 8210 Commerce Rd. Ion Lake ; EM 1-4109 - paved brick ranch, dining ...... ....... iMd^Ing dogri^Jo patio, family room OPEN DAILY 2 to 6 SHAWNEE LANE - NEW COLONIAL. Live In luxury In 2700 square foot Colonial.... " "---- -■ formal dim X J basement,, b It to Jayne HaighfiV wvs Lane. We'll bo ^app^^to Elsala. After 4 call FE 4-1704. RAY O'NEiL, Realtor 3520 PONTIAC LK, RD. OPEN 9 . FE 3-7103 M.L.S. FE 4-1704 ROCHESTER AREA 3-bedroom brick ranch, etti garaife, tiled basement, 1W b tiasirjgr*''- ‘ --------- EASY TERMS NOTHING DOWN MOVES YOU IN OCCUPY IN 30 DAYS 2 bedrooms, $8,000, $42 mo. 3 bedrooms, $8,750, 844 mo. 3 bedrooms — garage 89,700, 8X 3 bedrooms — garage 89,750, 87: 3 bedrooms — garage, 89,990, 87 MONTHLY PAYMENT INCLUDES all taxes pnd Insurance LOTS are Vx acre JOSLYN ROAD TO FLINTRtDGB (2 miles beyond expressway) turn left at school to office (2 doors from school) OPEN MON. thru FRI. 10 to 5 and Saturday - - ' SYLVAN LAKE RANCH Let us show you this lovaly room, a family room, and a 2-car attached garage on a beautiful, lol which completes the picture for this lakeside home, only 82i‘ CHAMBERLAIN 31S00 Northwestern Hwy. . 9 0-9100_______ 449-9704 Templeton 4-room ranch, large living roi natural fireplace, wall-to-wall c peting, tiled bath, 9V4-car gari 100 ft. frontage on canal wi large boathouse. Priced to sell. WEST SUBURBAN Lovely 2-bedroom, complek...... ern, clean as a pin. Beautifully carpeted living and dining room, cozy kitchen, tiled bath, nice family room. Garsha. Large -spacious Ibwn. Lot Ioox395. Immadiato possession. Sacrifica ft 813,900 i $1,500 down. RaasOAabla Wrms. DOROTHY SNYDER LAVENOER 3343819 large o^leiitena ham* leeeted kIMen, : IS Tn Ihh a faelures. In this o DON WHITE, INC. Attar 4 cjM^.^^HIncklay S^oolhousB LalciT t bulM on 14 canal tots at 8 Open Sal. and tun Waakdaya by tppl. 6. E. McUod & Co. WALTON _ —...tii with tui baeamanl, tear $9390 down, Evarything complahi. Tha ballar BILT homt Is a MUST on your list. NOTHING DOWN New 3-Bedroom Home $55 MONTH EVERYONE QUALIFIES WIDOWS, OlVORCEBS EVEN PERMNS WITH A , V , CREDIT PROELEM FEATURING) WALL-TO^ALL^C^AJRPBTING ....... -I', !D CAEINIT MSm SEPARATE DINING R CALL ANYTIME DAILY, SATURDAY and SUNDAY , RJEAL VALUB^,^^______|^I7S NEW HOMES Full Basement $00 DOWN. $68 per Mo.. Excluding taxei and Insurance OPEN 10-8 DAILY SPOTLITE BU)0. CO. NORTHWEST PONTIAC NEW SUBDIVISION Large 3-4 bedroom homot, tut basomont, gat heal, hot water, bafutiful kitchen, fully kiiuleled, all city improvamenta McImM from tha low price of; $69.50 MONTHLY Excluding taxes and Insuranca SELECT YOUR HOMESITE NOW ZERO DOWN OR TRADE 01 — FHA - VA Model Open Doily, Sunday 11 a.ni. to 6 p.m. 301 WEST YALE Call R. 6, (Bob) CLEMENS 3M-7555 MICHAEL'S REALTY WE 3-4206 UN 2-9931 SOUTH BLVD. AREA CITY^OF PONTIAC Cheaper Than RentI NO OTHER COSTS NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME ONLY $55 MONTH FREE CARPETING CALL ANYTIME - ANY DAY REAL VALUE 89*4975 LARgl ■' ' ' Lake . . Privitagee on Lakt Oakland. SPACIOUS RANCH—WELL, I 6UBSSI 34x7S ft. ranch home with 14 x 27 Thare's_^a FAMILY ROOM 14x90, , three 12x14 bedrooms and t 14x1S Tlty room. OAK FLOORS, PLAS- JRED WALLS. Doir'-- ----------- Very nice setting 144x - homa-prfeed r Woodlow... Yes, '( BUT ^ MUCH MOREI.. bullf-ln. _ __ ... The ground level’ U____.... has a fuN bath, kitchen, laundry, a den, and a 11x27 RBCREA- , TION ROOM WITH LUOGBROCK FIREPLACE. Gft heat. }4ar garage. Ideally located In Walklne Pontiac Estates. A OE-LUXE HOME AT $24,950. Call for Show- ing I Humphries, FE 2-9236 inswer, call FE 2-9992 ' .. N. Telegraph Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE SELDOM FOUnO ,ivs;»?'r. a ?saj«: SS4.93 mo. .plus tax and bit. HAO-ifTROM,realtor, Hurtq, 4; I »V n ^ 1 II It;, , . ' , J- ',11 I ■ •' i* ,» ■ ' , .V-:’'-'‘r>" -y,lo. fib NtMN A"i; " :,'v A ■' , »\ 'I ''tik-.'-K,'/';'r"" If '*',1 ’ I;"' s ii \ I;'*' RORABAUGH s: ----- . joi!ANTinirs»nwii>Nir , I bUnoitH — room hr I rnqr», •xlr* larst. Oil hwri. ........r •«•••. LM » K w. A M«i ham* or Mcallant Ntwtijllam UL 3-3310 WHAT MORE suit r. -.................. *M Uii*^ Ttr^-**T' **"" rim hwlIrTn , larpa, iMOIod t 0«r<1*n h(Hr«*, hatio erlll. 10 MUCM lur Hall (Sc Young }4t I, WOOdwam Ml t r*M GAYLORD :JL —4* (mn.n.J tn m*W tru» A-l BUYS Droylon Ploini Idtol piac* to ralM * famll] oWar h*m* naar *a»ol and pln«, jMroam. alomlnum a Rin«, J^room, atomlnum aldlno. Ill baaamanJ, largo carpatad llv Ing room with alona llraplaca, aap-arala dining roam, good hilchan, gaa haal, allarnad garaga, larga lai tanrad on two hMoa, lU.aW, tl,)M down itioa coala, Ntar FIthvr Body r IMM, I Ih IIKIUIII Clorkifon School* Iroom ranah, brkh Irim Iran' llv (locoralad. ail.ioo. IIW l In, monthly paymanla MJ S liiui taaai and intuiama. hor V,A. R*i>«|a*aa* haal. 2 living room, I2xtt' dining iimr 2c4.r garaga. Price u firm, cr buy on contract or morigagt. NORTH OP 175. Ranch buUt In 1942. Vary clean horn*, 3 spacious bedrooms, carpatad living room, ,ga* heat, Tharmopana sliding door lo pallo. Only *1,244 lo piasani morigag*. *74 par month. NORTH OP OAKLAND, y*U will nn, full baiameni, t GILES REALTY CO. B 5-4175 221 Baldwin Av*. Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE . UNIT INCOME IN PONTIAC _ ■ ........................ opsratlon - *15,500, I IT VOURSEUP SPECIAL -oom huui* -- small barn --- out buildings — on lolly -- *9,00( r* land avallsl ENJOY GRACIOUS LIVING - In this stalely 4-badroom home -huga^ living room -- jltn 2 tiraplacas - largo Irw, anaueu praillg* area ot Holly -- UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE >445 Olxl* Hwy., Clarkston 25 2415 Evas. 425-1453 CLARK E'S AREA. 3-badroom Aider tananca. Saparet# c _— ....................j#(f* ol cup. boords. Slava, retrigarator end DIshmasIrr Included. *7,420 wllh *1,000 down on land conirgcl. PONTIAC LAKE RD. ONLY *5,950. 2-bedroom home wllh carpeted living room, large kitchen. 90x110 It. lot, close lo church end school. Roasonable^down payment on land COMFORTABLE 2-BEDHOOM BUNGALOW with glasshd-ln friont porch — IVj-car garaga — lovely idlchen wllh loads ol new cupboards. Largo lot bordering streom priced lo sell. Union Lake arer CLARK REAL ESTATE TO BUY, SELL AND TRADE 3101 W. HURON FE 3-78*8 Evenings coll FE 5-3498 or OR 3-1975 Mulllpio Listing Service IRWIN _________ , Oddly slt- edroom brick bungalow basement, large living II basement, Ian Ih Wget-oCk tirot jllbln range and i *500 DOWN. 2-bedroom bungalow wim basement, breezeway and garage. Features living room 13x19, lake angelus MEADOWS -bedroom brick rancher with c Retod living room, l')7 baths, basement with recreation r«'' 2-car garage, lovely corner l( KENT established in 1914 , !2-loot carpeted it family room, roomy klfche heat. Garage, Handy to bu w at *13,500 wllh *2,500 down. AUBURN HEIGHTS — 5-room and bath With roomy kitchen. Oil heat. Part'' basement. Garage. Possible trade, for larger home. $7,500. $2, / Floyd Kent ,lnc„ Realtor -too Dixie Hwy. el TeleSraph FE 2-0123 or FE 2-1984 NIGHOLIE I heat, Vacant. I Including CLARKSTON AREA Three-bedroom bungalow. Living and, dining area. Kitchen and utility room. Oil HA heat. Vacant, Big lot. Lake privileges. About Eve. call MR. ALTON, FE 4-5234 HAYDEN NEW HOMES 3-4 BEDROOMS TRI-LEVELS BI-LEVELS RANCHES I Included Full insulation. IVj Car Garage Family Room / rmY lly K|it« OMmn iMNNiMw.TJAe.a I'll go to some college around here so I cfiniie close to my record collection!" BEDROOM HOME IN DRAYTON Plains, on larg* rornar lol, lln-Ishad basamani In knotty pin*. Call OR 3 507* tor appolnimanl. STOUTS BEST BUYS TODAY Hurry-Hurryl long, sharp ear Oakland living .............-...... I larga dining araa, garbag* disposal, oil heal, alurhinum etorma and acraana, aluminum porch awning, ipaclou* lot. Only *500 rioxun ig T Norlharn High araa, 3 spacious bedrooms, finished lamlly room, n-y balhi, zoned gas heal, kitchen with built In oven and range, spacious 50x130 lot, fenced bach yard, newly blacktopped alreel. Only *13,900 wllh easy larms. $9500 Total price on this well located 4-bedroom lemlly *“ 1 beths, sbparal picture windows, ment, gaa heal, fenced ' yerd. Walking dlatanca lo tiac Motor. Easy larmi. Drayton Solid built 5- om, gas l... only I8,t50 wllh terms. West Suburban )Slom built 2 bedroom home, ten planning, spacious living om with larga picture window 'erlooking scenic lot, select ma-e flooring throughout, walk- asement, hot board heal, many other delux tealures. Priced at *12,500 wll Warren Stout, Realtor 50 N. Opdyka Rd. Ph. FE 5-81 Open EvesMIll 19------- wpmi cves-VMi a p.m. MULTIPLE LISTINfa SERVICE DORRIS ROCHESTER SUBURBAN, attractive rambling brlc.. ....... home wllh 2V7 baths, wall-plannad kitchen with bullt-lns Including —- bright' chaerful bedrooms, ,2 EXCLUSIVE pioneer HIOHUANO eye *PP“''-----' "" ---- ______ throw fo lake. Attractive fireplace, bath and half, high dry ■basement, screened terrace, attached garage, nice lot, vAeant. ST. MIKE'S AND NORTHERN DIS-TRICT. *9,500 home on FHA fernria. Excellent condition InsIda and piit. modern streamllnad Kitchen. Qihar selling qppointments. /'' *250 down. Vacant, neat/i------------ attractive 2-bedroom,--' bungalow with select oak floors, nice tile bath, well planned step-saving kitchen. Anchor fenced ............. BEAUTIFUL SYLVAN VILLAGE, long, low and rambllng. Certainly describes brtcK^^-room ^ranch living are/Sl Well planned khchan, room'^ k^ps the rest of the house . /conversation piece. . phofe of restfulness m /■gant bedrooms, 23x24' gi..„. / enclosed breezeway, Anchor t< / In'. 7C V ISO'. *19,975. DORRIS S, SON, REALTORS 2534 Dixie Hwy. , OR 4-032 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ANNETT Bloomfield Brick Adams Road arid S. Blvd. subdlvlslori of nearly new ranch homes. 4 bedrooms, IVj baths, fireplace, lamlly room, 2-car attached garage. Basement, gas F"* ---------- Heart Parochial 500, terms. Bloomfield Ranch . Kdgerock° fireplace, dining Kitchen with stove, refriger.o-llshwasher, washer .and bath*, 3 bedrs^-patlo. 2-cpf Iteramlc bath on second / llopr. Full basement. J. C. HAYDEN./ ■■ Open Daily 9 fd 4 EM 3-4404 10751 Highland Rd. (M59) drive. Carpeting ar Included at *22,5C down, plus costs. . WE WILL / ‘ TRADE Reqltors 28 E. Huron St, Open Evenings and Siifnday' 1-4 FE 0-0466 'wr. WOODHUIL LAKE FRONT Lovely six-room laka front h In axcallant comllllon, living n dining room, nice kllchati,^ two iarga*’uilllly, qa**liaat,''u?-raga. large lot, nice beach IISTSOO, TERMS. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY-WEST SIDE six-room lamlly home wllh 1 large rooms, 3 br biilh op. Three root ful? basement, ’ garage, 815.900. ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES r»#-ig9l '"w1. Three-bedroom, aluminum siding bungalow, axcallant condition, nice " '----m and dining room) klfeh- Dlrch cuMboarda, large ulll-iiy, new carpeting, gat heal, aluminum norm* and acreena, two-car oarage. Three Iota. Priced at *12,-900 wllh 81,.500 down and *80 per month. Will lake huuae trailer ai trade. Shown by appointment. 1. Full price *10,950. Can John K. Irwin AND SONS RF,ALTOHS 313 W. Huron - Since II Phone FE 5-9444 ' Evening* . - Call FE 5-8l Val-U-Way BRICK COLONIAL In Bloomtiald School disirict. bedrooms- Large living room v llreplace. I'j bath*. Full bi menl. Carpeting and drape*, price Is only *14,950. And you can move right Ini *90 gloves roolft home, ri. On Fourth SI Gl SPECIAL R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 3«_Oaklariil Ave. _ Open 9-7 ARRO /' why TAKE CHANCES? 1 YEAR WRITTEN GUARANTEE on, material and workmanship by E. J. DUNLAP, LOCAL REPUTABLE CUSTOM BUILDER, any size, any style. Prices from *11,-400. and bp. Your present home, lot or land gontract may w,eil --- -- - payment, special WATERFRONT - Alumlnu/tl sided home, fully Insulated, 3 bedrooms, 1 with bulll-ln bunk and chest, 2 bathrooms, large paneled fam- ily room, garage, basement, (13, 400, terms. / BLOOMFIELD HILLS ' 5S THAN *2,000 DOWN ori ' ■ 5 3-bedroom. f ’ ' ------- ,......- —Mn vanity/ Plastered walls, parquet tloorS. loads of' storage space, gas poi'-lm-eler heat, well - landscaped Jpt - payment. EAST SUBURBAN, 2 STORY, c . / room home, carpetittg In living room and 2 bedrooms, larga kitchen with vent fan. Northern High area, would consider land " ‘ tract as down payment. LAKEFRONT IN WALLED L-,...-School district. 5-room ranch home In good neighborhood, 2-car attached garage, aluminum storms, end screens, spacious fenced yard, garbage disposal, 2 septic tanks, “ water. Edtier hurr-y. /' PHONE 682-2211 . 5243 Cass-Ellzhbelh Road -MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE FE 2-3................. 3 fSmIlY income .'i- EACH -HAVL 3 rooms and bath, all private and furnished. Brings In *40 per week. Has ga* furnace end new hot. wafer heater. Total price *9,-500 with $2,500 down. Phpne 338- 4054. l ESmILY, WESfSIDE. _ FE 5-0494__________ I-FAIV(iUY' APARTMENT BUILD-*30,qOO^Ol2l_FE_4-^B4._ __ =/UR 2- AND ^family INCOMfeX by owner, ranging In price ,'frpht $5,900 to *4,900 each. Low 0^n 1 payment tb right party, WTIt« Box “_Ponflac Press. looking Walter* L™......... 2 sandy beaches«/docklng BO'xtOO *750. Low/down/ easy farmX M' 2-0940. By ^ REALTOk PART^GE "IS TKE BIRD TO SEE'/ SYLVAN LAP' FRONT —,, —„ 3-bedfCr..... fireplace, gas/fired Wot beat, sewer./water, .lirgi. , /foom carpeted, / L a-F g e picture/ window fa'clng the - lake, large ■ il*tlc kitciv' ..........................^ --------,.....(tch/n) 2 baths, dergro^d aprlpklpr systern,/100' 3-bedrpdm, ranch ^le, fireplace, all (dirge rooms, /bmzeway — t'/j-ear garage.. Atross road targe lot, shade. *16,7511 fAU*"jON^ REALTY Ukt PlrtMrtv 81 NIC! IICI CANAL t-BIOROOM. BAII- mani, garaM.' DT*4Xi«inli »r *•««• -'c&'Act'uiirwsiir *13,(MX*,70(1 dm TAYLOR UKE FIIONTS ■had* and (rull Tr.M8-.Bi cliidai shad* and fruit gain prktd al 05.5M home. Located « » good aamly beat and boat. Only (II COOLEY LAKE - Lake front ailala laaluring approxlmalaly Hz acres ol land, rncluda* brick ranch Imma with } car altachad garaga. Naw wall-to-wall larpallnu. In-‘ lacanlly radacoralaoi Pull ll*,450, term*. pric* I Evas. EM 3-74 Loti ■ AcrEayo ACRES AND ACRES ACRES WITH 1,163' of i ironlag* on oaod county road, »rlvll*gai. 13,350, Clarkilon, 1-75 a mimili It A*^"! M50 (IK il for Worst*, *3,200, C. PANGUS, Rdaltor Lako Lot Ri'w ---- ... large lake Waterford Townihip. Surrounded nice home*. *6,750. Brewer Real Estate , FE 4SI8I LOT, 50X120, Ij BLOCKS FROM ry St. on Roblnwood. Inquire Roblnwood. owner. FRUIT TRiBS, BOOM FOR FONV. ",500. OR 4-0725. NORTH CUARKStON ARBA~" acre parcel ol tine gardtn toll ar main blacktop road. Only 20 WAm'ltAL'ESTATE7 2950 1954 M-15 al Bald Eagle Laka RocheStBr area ' ' '7 acra rettriclad homaalla. Near High School. 03,300 - WB'LL TRADE. NIX REALTY UL 2-2121 VL 2-5375 SILVERBELL ROAD" 110x140, S280 DOWN ome traai, ga* on tlraal, axcollani drainage, g^ wRlI, In tha neighborhood ol lino homo*, Ladd'* Inc. 885 Lapeer Rd. Perry (MJ4) POOD AUTOMAT. ThI* uniqua highly profllabi* automatic I *— your naw-found i II be no holding Open Sunday, 2 to 4 Sate Farms 0 40-80 140 ACREAGE. big bi 4^ badrooiTi*. Home and I. , Sander*. Rap. I C. PANGUS, Realtor 2 Mill S ...ACRE FARM NEAR LAPEER. Good bulldInO*. Private lake, Peter Oberle, Broker. 438 Monroe SI., Lapeer MOhawk 4 227$. FARMER'S FARM, 120" ACRES tillable. 5-badroom modern Jfi’l^ ting*. Sicl SIckna** foreqt Realtor. SS2;4284 i z . 588-4594. _ _ _ FOR TRADf OR SaCe" NORTH-ern Michigan beat or dairy farm, 80 acre* or more. Modern buildings. Must be teen lo appreciate. Trout ttraam, paved highway. With or without slock and aqulp-__ment. Call FB 4-0112 altar 5 p~ ■ LAPEER"COUNTY SPicrAL 42 acres, flowing well, larg* 20x50 Need* Inside trim. Mk50 comWna^ year. Chicken h 14,500 V CLARENCE RIDGEWAY REALTOR >8 W. WALTON FE $-7051 _MULTIPLE LI^TIN0_SERVIC£^ rIaItciF partridge BIRD Sale Property 57 Brick Building Centrally located, approximately. 5,000 sqbare feet. Ideal tor warehouse, or storage. Lots of parking /Brewer Real Estote A FE 4-5181 /_ /” REAltOR PARWIDG^ 'HS THE BIRD TO SEE" 2 STORES IN excellbFit location WITH apartment,! only $4,000 down payment -llNTERESTED PARTIES ^ CALL/FK 7-5102 FROM / 12 NO57N TO 4'P.M. n BUD II Dixie/Hwy, f rontage Arid Loon Lake frontage t... , one parcel) IBS feet on Dixie, , 'Highway by 100 feet deep, ' zoned commercial) balance ol parcel extends to Loon Lake with 125'feet frontage on the lake. Also 4-room - frame home wllh full basement, gas heat and hot water. All for $32,5"" let us .show you today. Neor Drayton Plains / Approximately 4Vj vacant acres, , partially fronting on W.W “ Blvd. near Sashabaw . zoned as acreage. / "Bod'' Nicholie, p6altor. FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M/FE 2-3370 Sol6 or Exckdnga , -IIEOFORD .rfoWNSHrp' room f^e ^brlcl^.has everything (.akeXrea/KeI-8755/ , ^ /INDEPENDENT 'SQUARE'" ///sHOPPINN'CENTEF / y^\\\ Build fo/8ult or lease, com-^ plefely modern and exciting ,Coi / mercial development: Afifinfl Doctors atfd Dentlsta. 334-p*f4. BUSINESS OPPORTONiry FOR, A man^r woman- I HEIGHTS beer SToSe. yeary/Hlgb net profit. ____ A-.j'/equTpment, good owngr/'retiring, *12X100 d slock doi^. Ryan, g4S-4S2S. f SHiJtP FOR SALR AEA-s,/pBUst ■ ---- '■ ■ ‘lt#IMngl**«niinW' • f0*01^ alter*^***"*"^' baTemAn DIXIE HWy. BAROAIN Corner lot on OIkIo Hwy, «' k IJ wim imatl ihop now industrial zoning rule*; ^oTwWiJ ^PHOlNir MOTEL. If MiMy »• iMii *jl WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $1,000 “sfAi-fWaV' NO Pontb| Jla^ta ^B(M5l( ■ - i CASH Loans to $3,000 110,000 ixxil. WIU accapi t MICHIGAN ConsolMala ynuT BUI* with only Nipay ovar a cunvanlani term Phont or Apply In Parson Family Accaptanca Corp, OUICK CA$H"BaNS“*''” UP TO $3,000 la avan though not fully modern ally In two daya lim*. Business Sales, Inc, .. -IN LANOMBSSBR, BROKIR 1873 Ta[#jra^^___PB 41582 Partridge ''Is the Bird to See' Rtallor wllh 33 yaari' axpfrlanca C' BAR THAT DOMINATBS thli mlxad nalghborhood In Pontiac. .........ling ------------------ (>«erln|^ wlliril^odb downT iTap llvaly' eiflR, PARTY STOBII, In Clawson, i.ong oili....... calltnl past record. Moilly bavar- relrlgarallon. momh I........ ■ Sacrillc* Conitrucllon Co, FB 3-7033. Swapi . ^8 Thar* \ you M on term*, t INTERNATIONAL TRADERS CLUB COAST-TO-COAST TRADES 1050 Huron, Pontiac FE 4 ” TAVERN " Ne, 000 — Good Oakland County bar wllh pro** ^k*. Town ol 2,I(W populatinn. Statewide—Lake Orion SALE OR *TRAbe loo" C A Reilaurant and Sunoco tarvlci ■tion wllh wracker (both fully a 2 cabin* all located on 5 of ground, paved Hwy. to St..... Down payment or 3-badroom home or your equity. $15,000 full pri reply Hoollhan'* Norlharn RI. Atlanta, Mich. Atlanta 7IS-4.53I. SERVICE STATION FOR LEAife 10 mite* watt of Pontiac on M59. Small amount ol capital required. Dealer training avaliabla. Phone Holly, 473-7161. SOFT TcE CR eAM " ANb“T66D, Lake* area, liberal terms. Reply MINK stolil, almost Nfw, CALL :iJS. SUCCESSFUL BEAUTY SALON lull operation need* Parinar. Good Income tor two, will ton»lrler 14,000 parinerthip *8.000 lull price. Reply Ponlloc Pro** Box 25._____ TO BUY OR siellTa BUsTfll!! Call NATIONAL BUSINESS BROKER 1043 Orchard Lake FE //WANTED party store Ih Oakland County. Buyer cash walling, call WARDEN REALTY 3433 W. HURON 333-7157 Sole Land Contracts 60 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. Sea us be WarrEn Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyk* Rd. FE 5-8 ____9P?B_ Eve*. *tll 8 p.m. Wanted Contracts-M^ 60-A 1 TO 50 ' LAND CONTRACTS Urgei|^tly^ wanted. Sea ui bale Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. opdyke Rd. FE 5-8145 Open Eves. ' I 8 p.m ‘ CASH For lend contracts, equities mortgages. Don't lose that ho Small mortgages'■available. C. Ted McCullough, Sr. 482-1820. ' ARRO REALTY 5143 CASS-ELIZABETH RD. CASH’FdR" LAND CONTRA H. J. Van Well, 4540 pixie, Hw SEASONED LAND CONTRACTS wanted. Get our deal before you sell. CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSN., 75 W. Hurpn. FE 4-0541, LOANS , *25 TO *1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO 30 E. LAWRENCE FE 8 / MONEY TO LOAYi Lt)ANS TO $1,000 'Irst visit. Qulcl^ IrleniT Usually ly, heipf FE 2-9026 Is the number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. ■ 202 Pontiac ‘ “ ■ ■■■ lo 5:30 - LOANS' Tp $1,0bO Wa glva you ftia full amount In cash, lhara li nnl a penny to pay for appraisal, aurvay or abalracf. You ar*o now racalva a free ergdit Consolidate your oobfa. ur oobfa, pay la Improvamanfa VOSS AND BUCKNER, INC. MShtbAfs'bi) ■■•6i«i’ with iSO-tool fronlaga. No ap. praiial taa. B. O, Charltt, Iqul-tab^ Farm Loan Sarvlct. 1717 S. Talaoraph, FB 4-0S2I. HOMB "ovVNeRtr™ “ CASH UNLIMITED excluilya plan. Ramodal your home. Pay uaal or current biiia. CoiHQlldaie Into on# low monthly payment. And extra caah II you 1955 CHBVROLBT STATION WAOON f"e ?9077*' **'**** *”***'■ isi BuicK,"NriBni66T6fi pair) Swap lor gun or anything of equal va(ua._PB 4-4322._^ CASH FOR USED TV'S WORKING or not. 332-0347, (fOCA-COLA COOi;iR,"BA8”tbP’, 15-caia tlia, aullahia lor homo, ra-alauranl or gaa alatlon. *100 value or Irada. oA 3-8089. OUARANTleb USBb'Twilfllftt, 17.50 up, WE BUY - SELL— TRADI Barnea-Hargravas Hdw*. 7« W. Huron SqIb Clething WOMEN'S Dr' TiEhl-)LOI ClOTfl-" Ing alzaa 10-12. 343-3423. WOMEN'S DRESSES^ AftbTCACk aeli, 2-3 off ragulsr price. Crinolines for chlidran, all alias, Va oil. Sports coals and lackals, W oil. Jim's Salvage Outlat. On lha corner ot Alr4>o>t and Hatchery Rdl, FB 4-0ei8,___________ Sale Household Ooods 65 DANISH MODERN WALNUT double draitar. In axcallanl—brand naw condition. Only used 3 months. Price *80. Call FE 5-1400 altar 5:00. 2f BEAUtiFUL■ 'NAME BRAftb bedroom aulles. Slight freight damage. Save' almost halt. Eaiy .---- . I—., ixargaln Home, FE 8-9098. I. Little Joe's Baldwin 3 USED STEREOS AS LOW slightly used Portable TV,“Ilka new, *99 at *2.00 par weak, icratchad wringer washer at *2.00 3 RbOMS OF BRAND^Nlvr'FOR-nlture, living room, bedroom and dlnetta - all lor *295. *3.00 wook-ly. Pearson ' Furniture, 210 East Pika. FB 4-7M1,___________ fx12 LINEDLUM RUGS . PLASTIC TILE 2 FOR Ig.. JZINYL ABf »T©» (RANOOlWrSe ee. CERAMIC TILE 5c aa. ASPHALT TILE (RANDOM) 4C #a. THE FLOOR SHOP 225S ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD FE 4 3 ROOMS OF NEW BEAUTIFUL FURNITURE WITH , NICE^ RANGE AND REFRIG-BftAT(jR. *319, ONLY *3.50 PER WEEK. beautiful Frelze covers * 99.95 Early American solas wllh 3 cushlohs, extra lengfh .... *147.00 Matching chairs .............. ( 45.00 , 8-pieca Colonial living Plenty of factory seconds, lots ol used ranges- and refrigerators. Evoryfhing at bargain prices. EZ TERMS-BUY-SELL-TRADE LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE Open 'til 9 p.m. Dally, Sat. 'til 4 1440 Baldwin at Walton FE 8-9098 5 R60MS“6F""FUHNlfuTl"E; MUST go, 4$ Augusta. ____ 3 :iNCH~ELECfRIC"~S"fOVE,""*40. Automatic washer/ $30. Davenport and chair/ $30. I0l2 LaSalle. i"Inch 'usEp'''rv; *35. walton' TV, FE 2-22^7. Open 9,-9. ,515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn. ' 58 YARDS BEIGE"“NYi;6'tr'rNb — carpeting, 18 panels i......... tibergle* drapes. FE 4t4343. B APARTMENT-SIZE' ELfeCTlirC. range,_ *25. OR 3-3440. ________ AUTOMAtiC F)ASH|M dTaL ZiO- ... ,,---Ip ---- ----- Does fL..., tical sewing by dialing. Payments of $5.20 per month ,or full price of M521 Necchl-^trta. FB a'utomatTc washer, suos-sav-ir and dryer,,-*49. Wilt sell sepa- ■ ■afely. Easy Spin washer, *18. 19 4. Josephine. . / ABOUT " ANYTHINb Y'OU WAN? FOR THE HOME CAN. BE FOUND AT L and S SALES/ A little out of the way but a ’ lot Ias3 to ' |iay. Furniture and . new and USED. Vlfit our trade dept, for, real bargains, . , We buy/ sell pr trade, Come out and look around, 2 acres of fra# \ parking. Phone FE S-9241. Open Mon. to Sat. 9-6) Frf. 9-* ^ .24,MONTHS TO PAY v 4 mtle* E. of Pontiac or 1 mile M^t''?Sog“='‘"’'» APARTMENT SIZE ELECTRIC E refrigerator, auto., defrost, 2 dr. able, Stop In or phone F uoksc g/ AiiTn i ro lUCKHER / pLNAMrF OTWIPAMY finance' Company ./■ WHE«E/YbO CAW BOfti^w Up to $i,00Q' / '/ OFFICES IJil , PontlacrrDra'/ton Plains—Ufle#^. .Walled Lake ' ' CRUMP ELECTRIC AUBURW_/_______J=e 4-3S73 AUfOMATiq'z.tG-ZAG SEWI NG~MA-chjne m' Ipvely „ cabinet. Button-holes, pvarcasts, etc. Taka .over payments/ of *6 per month/ for 7 mont/fs or-, *42 cash balance. , Unlyersfal Co. PE 44)905. ■' Bi^'a DOUBLE BEDTMATCHING a™**er with attached mirrof, \ti A.W*a> >-rlK f—birmlnflham //TEAGUE FINANCE CO. ,M2 N. MAIN / ^ ROCHESTER" ROMIO 214/'£,/ST. CLAIR LOANS *3!5«JO *1,000 ; UrVE^JOCK HOUSEHOLD r- 3 GOODS L 0 A N S // / *■ *25.10.. sung-'/ / Insured,; Paymant'/Plan ', V BAXTER I«. LliVIM(j^gTONe ■ 40,1 Pontiac Stale . / FE 4-153^-9 , /rv>' 'SHa 1sprlnB liw. week? Living' Room Bargeiins Brand new 2-plece llvltig room, 2 iL'i" *,*®'S*' »«ee tables ?!’.4/'7 decorator lamps all for 'MORE BIG BARGAINS fust ^h^S^„^t-rr*llT^p‘'^,•x°1^ »14«"dp.^2jU I. an «. . Visit rugs, most psaRson' 23* Retwean C7ty‘‘Hall ahd pSig { 1/ IIK. A(: V\um\ WKI)N>KSI)y\V CAUNIVAIi My Dick Turner eiMpl’ i»(j^ *toS’, Tio. »9. 10^iO5D«l«()vlF VlffdlBAm* WA»H«ir*M"bRY bi’ iiWi»idt»Atob, lyiTAbiii for collaipo. Rooionoblo. ON i-HW dASINAfON InM. f>|tlOlllATON bAf'CHfli. »«, AUTflMSTIfc wotliof- Ml. Will domonilroto any lima. MM Lalalla Huron Oordofli. Ian Ml, l«. Ill Auburn. PB 1-409.1. KOINffAr Nib, CbMNLBtB, BA by M. Cliaap. PB 41147. ■ " aAart t Dlula Hwy. 47M41I kIRBY VACUUM,' LAfK MObii llnoar porlabla ........... Naw porlabla lypawritar . Nacchl com-'* la Mto. ilg-zag IW.SO Curl'a Appllanpa _ OR 41101 KiNMORB WASHBFaHITBWWC 4100 aa«h. MIk. PB 1-0714. h buiial and cornar china ti toAoie’iHifP bArRANbirwRv good. PB 4 M74. MahMXIIY ■ YAlifir 6R UM~ANO 1 drawart. now lannoa dlih, an-llqua waihbowl. Ml 4-OM). VaYTAO WRIN6BR WASHER, uaad 4 moptha. PB 51371. MbGilWFl CjlAbLirTTOFreHAiR, pair mapla chain, daik and chair, lablaa, nnlac. OR l.f444. REW and USED~£ARABtlNb FOR aala. Many aaiarlad hraldi In ehooaa from. Alio lavaral roll andi and ramnanla. Salad from alock. Wa al....... - tr'A.Vt UM B. AU-^ ... on Troy carpal Si I Rd„ Rochai OUR NEW location' BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO. 4470 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS-6V3-9441 VISIT US AND TAKE ADVANT-*"1 OP OUR SPECIAL LOW 9 PRICES. BEDROOM ShTS-ROOM JBTS-DINfT" P AND MATTRBSSBS-LAMPS AND TABLES - HEADBOARDS, BED-FRAMES AND CRIB MAT- TRBSSBS.......... rIR B lUteRSTol ,””siir "dll ’ HUT 7i gaa alova, SIS. V. HarrI B S-1744. REIUILT APPUANCES" Maytag Wringar, - Spaad Quaan Wringar S5S Ralrigarator, Ranawad Prlgldc . ___________ Dallvarad, Inalallad Elactric rangea ALL GUARANTEED GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP ol Pontiac FE 4-IS55 SI W. Huron St. . .. irpmiRATbRr-W" WVER, atovo, tnlacollonoous. OR 1-4170 FE S-447I. Wny do without tha thingi you naad lor your homo? Furnitura, car|)otln|) and oppllsncoa. SIO " ' ^ I aecond chance. SIMMONS TWIn HltlE-A-BEO aofa, apodal roaa fabric. TV awlval 'Chair, apaclot gold fabric, 14“ RCA TV awlval baaa. MA 4-3154. Twin bR6s,~ chest an6"nT5ht 2 matching chairs, 50 yards „of gra^^arpetlng and 2 pr. drppas. Twl N'XBbiTCOMKEfirMiff C cheat and night stand, I, library table, 9x12 rug, " a. 454- special S20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Conalaf o*. S-placa living room aulto ables. I cocktail tabla ai 1-olaca bedroom suite v Innarsprir iprlnpa I I size bad with mattrass and box match with 2 vanity rormicct tod TaoiOt i uooK«;aBe<< i 9x1i ruQ Included. All for 1399. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. ' U B. HURON FE 4-4901 ■ ..... •"! 1-1150 . $49.50. Used automatic washer , --------- Used TVS from ............ $19.95 SWEET'S RADIO S. APPLIANCES 421 W. Huron St. 334-5477 WE TAKE TRADE-INS. FAMILY 0 Furplahlnga, 1135 Dixie Hwy. WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE AT OUR 18 W. PIKE STORE ONLY Odd upholstered chairs . $4.95 Twin size bed complete 5-pc. dinette set . . $19.95 2-pc, living'room suite . Guar, oledric washer' ,. 34-lnch electric range .. Guar, aladric refrigerator . $34.95 EASY TERMS $39.95 $49.95 FE 4-IB44 6S-A LAMPS, HANGING, AND TABLEf Chests ^nd commodes? wrought ,— .... -^--Y-Knqr HoMv. ' fj 10345 oakhlll. Holly, ^ Antiques, ■ 7-5l9r, Hi n, TV & Rqflol 2MNCH MUNTZ TV, GOOD CON/ pfiTtran C'lA ‘I'M.OfMI '. ' system. 33g-3ei1. LIMITED^^^ME ^3NLY®FRf fe V every TV purchased, one/lO-piece set of-'Melmac dinnarwara. Prices stad,/at IW.9S. _ 0. F. GOODRICH STORE 111 Perry / FE/2-0)ll ^or Sale MIst^iwoMi 1-ROOM combination WINTER apace heater /and summar air conditioner. Parfbct fir That added ♦amlly room or bedroom. Buy now end savejs per pant. . Phillips petroleum Co. 8425 Orchard Lake Rd. 482-3000 1 week only Js" Peg Board ........ -.-v ,'V." standard $2 54^ ^ M . / PONTIAC PLYWOOD / 1.4W Baldwin FE/ 2-2543 /a 250-GALLON OIL TAHKS, *>S hwarar$i2*alith. 'TlWr T4|ACtll:AaV ■ oil lahki oil apace lOjNllon ol I»f»eri ifoubia laundry I $«0i 2313 Joilyn, FE $-4912. )4iiioFo6faX . _ jio'i’VooeHtiiNl*^ TOHORSif •"* patinum 4dlamond wadding *175^ 1900 diamond, ring, $49L te*' IWf/aXRDBH^MARk^ 4 BOBBI, il lnth powor real, OR 3>st9S. '♦*|oWLSarItAM W6BBi, Tf-A ^.“■AWIPUI. IINGBE, CAAitJlf, W^j^Ulppad lo monooram. fan. ijjw; Chi Bine. j;f„Y,,.WONDIR blnatlohV hr,rhlh.ir,"Sir, hll'-Ing chalPy Daiilnatz f>aiw Miaovt w 4S.... .*-4 a'a $71. _____ g^nvaland Was, Hulty, MIchliian. fctbROOM Fafi»IT,’BLACk’ CHIR. Bottle Gas Installotioii lOOpmmd ryllndara ar Co., PE BATHROOM PlKtURBS, OIL AND gaa turnaeoa. Hot-------------- toller. Aulomatic I Hardware, alac. llfingi. Lowa Rualoieum. L.p;^.r®R7‘ Bro"'fi:.'T^''%„,,,„,r‘w.*';iur''oii b‘ro;k s n' iiDiwALk poe ri; lalning walla. Cow mtnurt delivered. FB 4 3371, CARPEli “a“ "PRiorTr"MAkE them a baaulllul sight with Blua II.. McC and lass Carpal, camPIir,* EOat "and'^aTlIr, rofrigoralor, dtop traoia. Alter 3, 424-71M, rtia, aoora, fuel on eno lani^ g mower, aluminum Ixial. fE COMPLETE STOCK OP PIPE AND ale service. Montcalm Supply, IM W Montcalm. PE 5-4713. CUSTOM OabWITS’ FORMICA . INSTALL THEM YOURSELF PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES ♦J7 ORCHARD LAKB RD. 334 4319 ~~ ANCHOR FENCES ' NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 iXTRA HEAT FOR THAT COLD room - gaa tired baaeboerd tits ytoar^windows, $120. Thompaona, OTSifOON'tr"NOCWl'YPIWR i T- - .4 ed i e. , i,.“SK FIREPLACE FUEL FIREQUiTS, IS LB. BAG - 45r PACKAGE COAL, 4 PKC. -- $1.10 ■ PINE COMBINATION DOORS ■ COMPLETE WITH SCREEN AND BTORM 10"x00" OR 34"x|B" 4- 112.95 WObp'STOliN^^^^^ BLAYLOCK COAL 8, SUPPLY CO, II Orchard Lake Avo. F^3-7I0I *OR BusTy' CONCRETT i^LOORS Use Liquid Ploor Hardener FORMICA COUNTER TOPS Expert Installallan Free esllmales • Fail Service Sheet Formica, metals, cemanis lor Do-ll-Yourstll Ciislameri ' KITCHEN INTERIORS 3117 W. HURON _ _FE^B-1813 fuirrrfl ping pong, TAt^LS ____ . ___ paddlei, Gaa Incinerator, 145. EM 3-««. GAS F U R N AC E,' USED, Li KE N EW. al bargains. Thompson's,. 7705 M OARDBLi tBoTs, LABBiSiTMiSb. Homs, 5|l day, 45 Augusta. HAND-MA^.^ ..P. A",® ' ^ Clothes. 673-9554 betwoon 8 i HOT W/ATER HEATER, 30-OALL6N ___ Consumers approved, _______ value, 139.95 and $49.95, marrid. Michigan Fluorescent, 393, Or- H01 waYer “iAafSoARD i elal SI.39 per It. Thompson, ! KBNMORE DRYER, 550, OIBBSON Electric range, $75, antique aette, $15, pressure cooker, $5, rollsserlt, 0 gorden I. 338-4a34, irden tractor, i LAVATORIES, POMPlEtE, $24 value, $14.95. Also bathtubs, I lots, shower stalls. Irtagula terrific values. Michigan Fluor cent, 393 Orchard Lake. MODERN COMBINATION GAS ANI wood range, MA 5-1808. MEATS AN D'OROC'ERIIs All rtetlonally advertised brands, saving up to 40 per cent. Soqp, sugar, coffee, flour, butter, cake mix, cereal, soup, vegetables, fruit juices Baby food, 24 lor 99c Cut up friers, 1< ir 59c Free Home Delivery Call for free catalog. We reserve the rights to limit * quantity.' Call 447-1577 tiRNAMlNfAL IROW pBRCh AN6 1570 Opdyko 4-43^1 =REE,\ PLUMBING BARGAINS FREE, Standing toilet, t17.95> 30-gallon heater, $47.95; 3-pleco bath sets, $59.95. Laundry tray, trim,, 119.95, shower Stalls with trim, $29.95;. 2-p)Wl^_llnk, $2.95; pLovs,, $2.95/ 172 S. Saginaw, FE 5-2100. •PRE-FINISHED HARDBOARO PANELING ,, Riviera Walnut, -4x8 ..... 84.1 Vx" Sylvan. Walnut, 4x8 .. $4.1 'A" Chateau Cherry, 4x8 .. K( DRAYTON PLYWOOD ixle HYvy. — — SALE.' USED SWEEPERS. UP-rights, $7.20 up. Tanks, $14.95 up. Guaranteed. Ba^tles-Hargraves Hdwo. SINGER 'automatic ZIG-ilAO Makee buttonholes, blind hems, etc. In 9 months at $6.70 per n or-’$41 /cash balance. Univers; FE 4-0905. SUMP PUMPS, SALES, and repaired. Cone's Rl 8-6442. TALBOTT LUMBER Paint closeout Sale /interlor.-Laytex, enamel and Plastra Tone $1 to $3.50 gallon. 1025 Oakland Ava. FE 4-459$ THE SALVATIOhl ARMY , Everything' to nrieof your /leads. Clothing, Fumftura, Appliances. Two WESTER|4 SADDLES; BLOWd hl-tl. 852-48451 TWO-LAMP, 4-FOOT FLUORES- bonchei, shops,, 119.95 value, $10.90, marred, call factory showroom. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake: ________ US^ bicycle AtlD WASHING mjirhlnA«. "Osrhun. machines. , SL40 |/SE GLIDOEN PAINTS FOR DBC-$2.45“/ Ol-- ... ........ you did. Warwick Supply Co., orchard Lake Road. 482-2820. VANITY AND HAND BASIN SET $19.95 gas automatic water Heaters,' S&. . Thompson's 7005 M 59. WEDDIN6 ANNOUNCEMENTS AT I discount prices. Forbes Printing AIR COMPRESSORS LUBE EQUIPMENT awm^-^oiroiriLK^^ A FEW LIFT Fiends and Organa IW.00 lo ItOO.OO oH MORRIS MUSIC Acrosi lrom*Tol*HJroif** ****)* I 2 0J4; rent AN ORGAN LOWERY - CONN • GUI BRANSEN. Special rental plan available on above organs up to 6 months. All rental paid will apply to purchase. Piano lessons included. GRINNELL'S Down town Store, 27 S. Saginaw St. FE 3-7168. .RENT A NEW 6RINNELL PIANO Ic lessons Included $2.00 PER WEEK Grinnell's New Wurlitzer piano with bench, ebony finish, $495. Wiegond Music Co., 469 Elizabeth Lake Road, FE ■ 2-4924. Piano tuning and organ repair. REBUILT PIANOS FOft SALB: 5 lo choose from. 338 0110 allarnoon. salI'^oitari , AecoROiONs Loantra and lessons. FE S-S418, UPRIOHT RIAN0s,^“‘l9,8d ■ lAett while they tail. GRINNELL'S Oownlown Store, 27 S. Saginaw. USED ORGANS _ LOWER V^fUktWHpigirASBfsfEY NO MONEY DOWN-NO PAYMENTS Til 1 MAY SEE US' BEFORE YOU BUY GALLAGHERS MUSIC CO. Open Mon. and FrI. till 9 p. 18 E. Huron FE 40.M4 VOSE RiaNO,' IXCELLENt CON-dlllon. For procllca or hall. FE 2 4201 or FI 5-9439. Music Letsoni 71-A ACCORDION - GUITAR LESSONS Solas and Service OR 3 5.194 CLARINET AND SAX LESSONS “ .......... "I Clarinet; Alto, 'fanor.oi Ihsiructlon Including basic thaor FE 4-8537 alter 4 p.m. LESSONS AVAILABLE FOR 0 U .. .. GRINNI - Store, 37 S. * _ SI. FE 3-7148. _ BUALi'fiED PIANO 1 tisfRUCtIONS Droyfqn Plains arts. OR 3-0192. Office iquipment 72 Ooneral Printing jronre, FB 2-0135. ADDING MACHINES Priced to aeill Wide .selection of --- ■ raLjnd.llonod mathlhes, all makes. Terms ii DESK, METAL, 7-DRAWER. 482' writer,' American mode; $198.50 plus taxes and old office machine. 332 7841, Oenerel Printing.________ Store Equlpiiieiit 2 DAYTON MEAT SCALES, 4 MOS. old.' 1 National cash register -(Changemeker). FE 5-3888; Sporting Geudi APACHE- CAMP TRAILERS - ALL 1944 models on display In htatad showroom. Apache factory homo town dealer. Open dally 8 a.m ) woods, 8 Irons. Brand g. $140. Jim, FE 2-8181, _____/ before 5 p.m.__________ ___ GUNS BUT --~SBI.L -- TRADfe Repair, Burr-Shell, Telegraph 5 SHOT AUTO., 12 GAUGE, . . vent rib, S15S - grads 1 ). 424-3945. BUY-SELL-TRADE GUNS, lyke Hardware, 1940 Opdyke. I GOLF clubs" FOR $AL|. FILL DIRT .wanted, Walton between Joelyn end ( FE 5-0615, _____^ PEAT HUMUS Fast Loading Daily ply. Sand, gravel. Wodd-CooKokeFuel AL'S landscaping WOOD OF ALL kinds, tree removal. We deliver. FE 4-4228 or FE 4-03SS. PetvHuntfng Dogs MO. GERMAN SHEPHERD KC .RURE WHITE german Shepherd male puppy, OR 3-8154. KC REGISTERED BASSETT' hound, male, IVk years old, $50. AKC WHITE TOY POODLE, F Stud. 425-2517. KC GERMAN SHEPHERD PUP-pios, pet . and /show stock.- 4S1.'8748 after 5:30 iwilU H 2i$. lOlljt n II "But there MUST be someone else Wtih Janie, Mom! All of a sudden I’m getting D’s on my homework!" P^^^fln| Degs r Easlfr. 82 ai. FE S lveiW>li, Troy, isb'flvallna. \huntlng alock, AKC rag-..larad. 8>«;4945. BATHItio At^ ORO'OMINO, RiCK -Jllvtoy, 481-... DACHSHUND, 1^*$ CHILDREN, 4 months old, 'mala, rad, EM ;I00I2 \ 000$ tRAINED. DOI ItOk lalTM'B I, BOkFOED, 1-2444, IOULAS DOGS-DOGS-DOGSl No monty down, II .25 weak tuni's Pat Shop _ FBI Easter Bunniet-Bantom Chickens Ail Pal Shop, 55 Williams. PF GERMAN SHORT HAtR RORRifS, 9 weeks. Reg. UL 2-1171. GERMAN SHORT haired POINT- E S.83I7. mixed COCkER, BRITTANY POP, tree to good home. OR 3 0210. parakeet, baby males, 14,95, 305 First, Rochoslor. OL 1-537]. FART GERMAN SHEPHERD PUP-pies. Reasonablo. FE l-Slll. POODLE PUPS. TOY STUD SfRV-Ice, dying, pick up and dellvary. OR 3 4170 or FE 1-4475. POODLE CLIPPING STAtlDARbS, 1 A 10. 473-5404. p60Dlbs, parakeets, ' 'CANA- .... Bird Hatchery, .tG, P U R E ‘ wH iTE ' 6E R Shepherd puppies. 700 / REGISTERED rier. Call anytime. REGISTERED FEMALE PEKINESE 3 years old. OR .1 3054. TOY POODLES 332 43 OY POODLES, ■LOVEUy' D A apricot, RoolAttf'Vd* thots, tralnitd. OL \-6747. Auction Soles $75,000.00 CONTRACTORS, INDUS-' Farm Equipment Auction. March 31 — II a.m. las ■■ owners ol)'Clarkslon rarm auppiioa on MIS cornir ol Oak Hill Rd. between Ortonville and Clarkslon. ■ ------" tionsd — ------- ssday. Mo lorto by tt 5 Loaders, 1 Backhoes, . ........... Trailers, Graders, Tamper, Trencher, Tool House, 17 Farm Tractors, Diesel and Gas, Plows, Combines, Bslors, Picker, Conveyors, Spreaders, Blowers, Garden Troctori and much mlscellanaous of. oil dascrlp-lion, somthipg tor everyone, “ Terms — Melamora Stale Clerk. For complete list wr phone Perkins Sales Service, Phono 415-9400, AUCTION SALE-MARCH......— 11 o.m. Complata lino ol machinery ol L. J. Ousperson Farms — and Dozers, Draglines. Albert W. Leufh and r tractors and mochinery. 35 Massey Ferguson, 8 hours. 40 tractors, tools, 85 Massey Ferguson, 45' Massey, 4-70 John Deere. 720 John Deere, 2 Motors, new 2000 Ford Demo, 971 Ford Diesel, 7 older Fords, Industrial Loaders (5-40) International Diesel Power steer- - shift » , 414 p Inlernatlonol Crower with log loader, 420 John Deere Industrial with loader, 3, point hitch. 5 disks, 4 culllvolors, 4 corn * planters, 8 plows, 10 drags, Massey Ferguson grain drill. Fanmall M-Mollne and plows, 4 grain drills, rubber tires, Allis Chalmers Bulldozer H07 -(INDUSTRIAL). '57 '/^l-fon Ford, pickup, Insley Backhoo Va yard. Dragline attachments available. -Unit Tk yard with, Jimmy Dlaitl, 34 tt. Boom and many more. Robert ^lark, owner, ph. MA 9-9376. Ray 395-4985. , Auctioneer, Copac. Phone EVERY FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY 2:00 P.Mi Sporting Goods—All Types ; Door Prizes Every Auction We Buy-Sell-Trade, Retail 7 Days Consignments Welcome . BAB aOCTION Dixie Hwy. OR 3-27i7 --------------- MARCH 28, 1944........... CLARK'S FORD TRACTORS-One mlle"^Eost 0* Fenton. Complete line machinery of L. J. Cusperson Forms will be sold plus Industrial equipment. Draglines, truck and --------tractors and machinery many more tractors and machlr of Albert W. Leuth, Contractor Builder. 40 tractors, tools, 85 Massey Fergusdn, 50 Massey Ferguson, 35 Massey Ferguson, 4 John Deeres "70'', 720 John Deere, 2 Malors, new 2000 Ford demonstra-, tor, 971 Ford Diesel, MInn-Mollne ’1", Industrial loaders, 540 International Diesel, power steering; ternetlonol Crawler with log loader, 420 John Deere Industrial with loader, 3-point hitch, 5 disks, 6 cultivators, 8 plows, 10 drags, 4 grain drills with rubber tires. Massey FerSvson grain ................ .hoe, W-yard dragline, attachments available, unit %-yard with Jimmy Diesel 34.ff. boom and many more machinery of . all kinds. Robert Clark, Owner Ph. MA 9-9374. 1010 M87, Fenton, Mich. Roy ToKh, Auctlonaer, phone 394-4985, Capac, Mich. __________,__________ furnishings- |ust out of storage, thcluding but not limited to the tolldwlnj: few antiques. Including miscellaneous. refrlgeCators, electric ranges, bedroom suites, Including -u—.- -nens, — nes. In dining' chrystals, suite, shotgun, chests, 3 TV's, sei dias, several box lui> u, silverware, dishes and laneous. All must go.. ' BAB AUCTION \ 5089 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-271,7 AUCTIONS WCDNESDAYS, ■ncyclope- clothlng, mlscel- Long Lake Rd. 7 PldHti-TrBti'Shrubi 81A A-l TRIII SPRUCE, PINE, FIR, hemlock, mugho. yews, end maples Dig your own. Bring tools and burlap. 2912 SItelh. l milts west ol Coihmorco Vlllogo. Delly. 414 0415. SYWEbREENS. SHADE TREBl ARABIAN, 1 WELSH ITALLIONS tt stud. Reg. NA 7 3911, MILlY'S SlOiNG SCHOGL 13450 Ntal Road, Davisburo, 434-4941 EQUITATION, JUMPING, DRESSAOE Groupi walcoma - ANY ' H(Il?MAtlfeD‘“J?Nr»l ilBy-Orfllii-PEEtl ALFALFA HAY, TIMOTHY ANC straw. Milford, 415 1718. OOOD CORN. 2215 GARDNER RD, 9xlord. OA 8 9231. Poultry BABY RABttITS, CHICKS ducks. Also garden and .. ... seeds. 3421 Gregory Rd. FE 4 8594. BLACK SWANS, PEAFOWL, OUIN-eas, gaoso, chickens. ME 7 5199. I 1,000 CAPACITY CHICKEN brooder, electric. IN. Clean. — SeshabaW, Clarkslon. BOLEN GARDEN TRACTOR’ WITH disc, plow, culllvalor, rotary pinie, good OR 31591 TRACT iquipmeni IT'S McCULl OUCH Ifl chain taw bargain da,.. ... models number 440-440-740.|40'940, I. Oiler with each purchase of a CUllouch modal chain ta ends March 31. COME IN TODAY I KING BROS. FE 4.0734 FE 4.1642 PonllaC'Rd. at Opdyke A/tObEL H JOHN"' SeiRS TRAC-lor, A-1 condition. Davit Machinery John Deere, New Ideal Ortonville. 7 3292, Travel Trailers ?4^‘ ' AIRSTR^AAA LIOHlSSffiOHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed tor llte. See thorn and gat o demonstration at Warner Trailer Sales, 3098 W. Huron (plan to loin one ol Wally Byam't exciting caravansl. Are You Interested ... BUYING A '43 MODEL TRAILER BELOW COST? II to — coma out and ste them 2*I7-loot; 1 IS-foot; 1 27-loot A: lair; 1 14-foot Tawas. All s) contained. ELLSWORTH 4UT0 and TRAILER SALES 457/plxle Hwy.____ MA 5-1 _MIRACLE MILE, FE^ _____________ NEW ARIsfd SLIEPS f $895 NEW Tawas 14' $1,49S. GOODELL, 3200 S. Rochester Road. UL 2-4550. -;Niw’’WINNEBAGO pTcK~UI CAMPERS "Tharmo-panel construction 30; cant lighter, 1-ploce FIvetted walls. Right campers and vacation tra SALE - RENT F. E. HOWLAND 3255 DIxIa Hwy. OR 3-1456 Quolity Travel Trailers - TRAVELMASTER -— CENTURY- EASY BANK RATES », TOM STACHLER > AUTO AND MOBILE SALES Open Tues., Wad., Thurs., Sal. 'I.. . Mon. and PrI., 9 to 9. Closed Sunday -Huron St Phona 332-4928 TROtYw600 SALES & RENTALS Avarn's, 23150 Telegraph Rd. forth pt 9 Mile _______________^?J-_6-W3l FANS, CREES, FRANKLINS AND STREAMLINES Skampers on Display Special On 22' FANS and FRANKLINS Holly travel Coach 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771' ~ " Dally —" ~ WOLVERINE truck CAMPERS and Sleepers. NeW and used $395 up. EMPEROR Tent Trailers, $449 up. Jacks, intercoms, telescoping bumpers. LOWRY Camper Seles, EM 3-3481. ____________ cation. Supplies and service. Jacobson Trailer Sales and Rentals. 5490 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5981, 8x38 STEWARD, 1-BEDROOMl Excellent condition. Phone 673-0974. 1958 PALACE 10 X 50 2-BEDROOM washer-dryer. Alr-conditlon carpet, awning. $2.900. FE 8-4402. FORMOST—MOB IL E HOME ' COM- CY, MIRACLE 7______ _ ______ ) SHORTS MOBILE HOMES Good Used Home. Type Trailers 10 PER CENT DOWN. Carl wir end hitches InatallM. Completei II I ftf *nH iBMfU \ ' I 19 BEati^AccEitarlat IXPURt MOBlLU HCTME REPAIR aarvics, tree esilma($s. Also parlt ahrM'Viief.inc^4'iri!:i:' Is Hwv„ Oreyton Plains, OR i-lloi Instant Travel ino X'Trallirs: ........ UP truck campers. Just In, 5 new "Oem" Ireveleri. Instant Living Sea the nfty Marlattl SO lo 48 II. 10 lo li tt. wide. Aloe axpamlos. Oxford Trailer Sales jplle soulh^M ako^Orlon Parkhurst Trail«r Solos FINBIT IN MOBII B I IVINO 15 TO - ‘ ■ PeaTiirlng New Mcmn- {?udr.nd’';*o’ Ncalita belt way lietween Orion and Oxford on M24, next In Allian SUPER SAVINGS SPREEI THb monay you save will be your own! 944 MODELS, 10 PER CENT DOWN Pontiac 2 br. 50x10' Pontiac Tlpnul • DETROITBH, l-Br., axpandci .......... tavlng prices. Used |0‘ widsa i low es 8-JSO down. Ideal tor lal (oMages. Bob Hutchinson . MOBILE HOMES 4301 Dixie Highway OR 3-130] Drayton Plains Op4n 9 to 9 Dklty Rtnt Trallar Spact DON'T RENT, BUY. 4S..........- ---1, 8W month, black ?r6s,'?i?>'’Rprof^3T29ir NEW ADULT SPAf^SS Pontiac Mobile Monw J*ark. tlrBs-Auto-Truck 92 NEW FIRESTONE NYLON TRUCK TIRES $.00x14 ..................$14 CALL Dick Curran Stor* _____ 111-7917 48M041 Flrastona ttora, 148 Huron Auto StrviiiE 93 V8 ENGINE OVERHAUL $85.00 This Inciqdes rings, rod bearings, prihd valves, tit pins, Dogla:~ Inder walls, gaskets, oil and_ Also factory rabulll onginti guar- r 24,000-mlle. JSu- iomatlc transmission rebuilt $: Open 7 Kr engine REBUILDERS 18725 JOHN R 892-2477 CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN car. Cylinders rebored. Zuck .... chine Shop, 21 Hood. Phono PB 2-2543, Motorcyclfi 95 ALL n£w 1944 HONDAS Electric itarter - 225 mp.g. ALL NEW 1944 TRIUMPHS Low down payment — easy terms ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICE 230 R. Pike FE- 2-8309 HARLEY DAVIDSON, 125 C.C.rCOM-plelely reb(;llt, ^40, EM 3-437' MOTORCYCLE,’ m4 HONDA. electric alarlor, excellent condl------------- EM 3-3127. K. & W. CYCLE YAMAHA COMPLETE 64' LINE Boots—Accauorlat 6 • FOOT CENTURY, VI, Tktt mahogany plank. Ilka now.' 82,000 with custom trailer. Coll .Scotty, 15-FOdf sTlYERCRAFT Fl’iiR- —.................../, 1550. OR . 15.FOOT VVOLVERlNE LAPSTRAKE With 50 -I H.P. Evinrude electric ilort, Riverdate Tandem trailer and boat cover, excellent condition. 425-4901. 1943 CENTURY 16-POOr INBdARD with 170, h.p Intercystbr ---- 73 hrs. on engine. Ft 2-3 CENTURY TROJAN Cass Lake Marine > Road Casi-Ellzabeth . ____ 682-0851 CLINTON BOAT MOTOR, 5 H.F ■lesl otter. OR 3-3595, X Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center Authorized Dealer For MERCURYS — 3.9 to 100 h.p. LONE STAR BOATS GLASTRON and MFC Boats 15210 Holly Rd. Holly ME 4-4771 Open Dally and Sundays ■ ALL-WAYS a'BETfiR deal'" ' BOATS^MOTORS MERCURY-SCOTT MCCULLOUGH Trailers — Marine Accessories CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALE-' E. Walton - ■ - -- .. BOAT TRAILER PLUS TWO 1 loot, boats, $95. 482-3308._^ EVINRUOt 36-HORSE /VIOTOR Electric starter, boat and tralli $500. FE 8-4484.__________ EVINRUDE motor Boats and Accessories Wood, Aluminum, Fiber glass "Hard to find but easy to deal wit DAWSON'S SALES- TIpsIco Lake MA 9-21 MY 2-4024. NEW 1943 IS-FOOT FIBERGLAS boat, trailer, 40-h.p. electric r-‘-complete, $1,250. 12-Ft. Aluminum Boats ...... 400-Lb. Trailers .......... Big Discounts at Buqtaanar QUALITY' INSURANCE-FOR ( ____ motors and boats, Includes tree trailer coverage. BRUMMET AGENCY, --------------- ------- "■ JOHNSON SALES -..SERVICE Boats — .Canoes— Trailers Foote Hitches and accessorlas Everything for the boat OWENS MARINE SUPPLY 394 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 2-IOi THbMPSbN 17 FT. ALL CONVBRT-Ible canvas, plus mooring cover. No motor or trailer. $795. Ml 4-5959. JOHNSON MOTORS "King of the Outboards" THOMPSON BOATS “Queen of the Lapstrtakes" SEA-RAY & M-F-G "Finest in FIbarglas" STARCRAFT BOATS 'JAmertca's Most Popular" PINTER'S MARINE N. Opdyke (9-9) FE, 4 Tb Buy, Rent, Sell or Trade Us4 Pontiac Press 'i! , WANT ADS 97 New aiid Used Tnielii > lOt New a^ Ueed Core IM Kettler's Marina l^srvarWood toale Mirro aluminum Johnson motors Comploia sarulto A. parts Opa.r‘MS!r.'*r......... and Fr****! 10 N, Was'liingJon OA a-’ " ____Hantei/^Agancy;______ Michigan TufWraft Sales' Cnmnlata llna of naw and i—^ |e| rxials hy Tiirbnrratl, lylvan ..... ...... Splto-Skl lhfto»rd als, r‘^ BARI Y BIRD SPBCIAI I 2527 01X11 HWY. OR 4-0308 bviR 40 eoAfi ! ON DISPLAY DorMlIs ----- btisll - Rllmlnalqri • Duos • Lor Stars Aatoiratls Sail Boards Fiinlodns and Canoas. opIn ’'PAUr A. YOUNG, INC. D30 DIxIa Hwy. Drayton Plains Marlna^^on ^Lwn Lake TONY'S MARINE TBRRIFIC DISCOUNT Shell Lako, Qsnava and AarocraM Baals and Canoas. 25 per cant ott on all heals and 1943 ivinruda motori. Open 9 to 7 p,m. " Will aNV dial Kwf'i tto4l« - Moturt. L«k« Orion WAtt LAKE and SEA MARINA AUTHOHIZBD DBALBR CHBIS CRAFT, CAVALIBR, SEA SKIFFS ^ CORSAIR AND THOMPSON OWENS CRUISERS i!!: SHE*^**' IS h.p.-« $7,3,V). Woodward al S. Blyd. FE 49M7 TURN A KEY-PUSH A BUTTON AND GOt Hours ol anditas tn|oymtnl with a LARS0N~DU0-HYDR0DINE BOAT Powarad by a 1944 EVINRUDE MOTOR Low Prices wlTR'l'Dr*"^*'" ''’i'’A»'^*>f.;®M5 1944 HOMBLITE motor Harrington Boat Works "YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER " 199 8. Telegraph Rf 3321033 WantedJ^ri'Tnichs AVERILL'S but got the bast" at ikVBRILL'S .• FE 2-9ri 2020 DIxIa_FB 4-4894 ALWAYS ’buying" AND PAYING MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS. ASK FOR BERNIE AT- ^ BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH |t(C, tl2 S^ Woodward 'AI 7-3M TOi- t FOR CLEAN ’CARS” Oi buckje Economy Can, 2315 DIxU WE NEED CARS TOP DOLLAR FOR OOOD CLEAN CARS MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 431 OAKLAND AVE. FB 4-4547 LLOYDS BUYING Good Cleon Cars 2023 Dixie Hwy. GLENN'S 952 wait Huron St. ---- -------------Ft 4-1797 : 1939-1943 Ellsworth AUTO SALES 7 Dixie Hwy. Hilltop Is Buying iai Cars Factory Official Cars "Top Prices for Top Quality Can' 942 Oakland Ava._______ FB 4-9941 SPECIAL PRICE PAID FOR 1955-1943 CARS. VAN'S AUTO SALES 4540 pixia Hwy. OR 3-1335 Mansfield AUTO SALES ARE YOU.BUYING A NEW OR COURTESY CAR? WE WILL BUY YOUR LATE MODEL CAR WE.,PAY MORE. 1104 Baldwin Ave, 335-5900 M&M MOTOR SAIES Wa ^■^^j'j'Oher prices for sharp 2527 Dixie Hwy^ k Cari-^rucks 101- TO 5 JUNK CARS - TRUCKS wanted. Top dollar. OR 3 S459. TO id JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS wanted. OR >2938. Used ^te-Truefc Parts 102 REBUILT MOTOR AND TRANSMIS-Slon tor '57-'5l Buick. OR 3-0479. New and Usad Trucks 103 Better Used Trucks GMC 1955 CHEVY ,1-TON PANEL-HYDRA- matlc, $195. ..Call OL 1-4302. only $B795. WE SELL TRUCKS. “ GIVE SERVICE. 1962 Econoline BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since _ ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 1957 F-800, 194) GMC 4-CYL. DIE-set motor, approx. 50,000 ml. or motor, 4-4 yds dump twx 10.00X20 tires, 2-speed axle. Las Klalr. OR tlay*, FE ^9950 ■■ 1943 CHEVY PICKUP WITH cyl. engine, standard transmission, heater, naw condition, 8,000 mllbs. Don't miss this special I JEROME FERGUSON, Rochf$tar| F 0 dealer: OL 1-97U7" w ,wwJ •v«filny«. I boD0« U f^oot vANirtt* .........ir EM 3 ""' 1242 RANCHiBO PICKUR. WITH bio 4. angina, radio, healer 12 OMb"* F Ii HO* u"|'?» N?'yo«hMlsr PORP Dealer, OL I 97ll »M 6oDOI t»ACtoe; WITH'air brakes, t spaad axle, S-ipaad Irani-mission, V-8 engine, Iracigr setup jSr’oMB 'F*^RO?8*ON‘I“Xchiitsr FORD Dealer, OLWn^________ 1954 Ford - F 600 Cob-Choiili ) ih V $ shori wheel base, healir, 1959 EUECThA i^blTMiTOMAT: " .......... ‘a BEATTIE HOPICJ AUTO SALES 48 uakiami, Pi 9-2311 1941 CaBILUC, TUHQUemr*.!, —-T 4, PE 4 "'" our FORD DEALER Since 1930" I PIXIE HWY. IN WATENPbHD AT THE ITOPI IOMT , OR 3-1291 aImO 1958 CMEVROlST w- $100. AT's Maralhen, 125 n8kl8nd. 195« eHiVY iTAtfWS “ ’WAOlON, Oeed llrsi. Oood molar. $78. BM in pickups. No mnnay down. lUCKV AUTO SALES SPRING CLEARANCE • cab pickup, nearly ■'"* ..... $1795, s-‘- 157 CHBvMOI-eT CO'NVERTlBL*. good condlllon, 3*«psail lloor shltl, 383 V-8 •ngina, OLJ-1378. 19.57 CHEVY, 4 STAfION WXbbN: 4] FORD pickups. $495 u| 3 FORD Bconollps vsn4 54 42 FORD dump trucks, $295 ^ BIO OP N»w Trucks John McAuliffe, Ford $10 Oakland 4 1956 For d */$-Ton Pickup with tiactriclan ullllty l>ndy. Only BEATTIE 1951 CtUVY 4-ObOR HAiPTOP, power ilaering, rebuilt 388 angina good cond. OR 1-1144. ' 159 CbRvBtffe, 4-liEfBr'PbSl-jracllon, illvar blua. 230. 81,900, I9.» CHEVY 4, 2DOOR, VTITY c«, FE 3-7242. M. Rijuglna, dfolar PORVfTTB, 4-SP’REBVi’fSPS: , .J H.P, A l, FE 2 J878, 1940 CllKYROLl’f STICK ' 5, m UON'8, 477 S. Laptar Rd., Orlon, MY 2-2041, I960 CHEVROLET BEL AIR” 8-door sedan, V-l angina. Power-elide, radlb, healer, whilewalls. Raven black tinlah. Only 11,095. Easy terma. PATTERSON OHEVROLET GO., 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. ___ 140 CHiyROLBT - bIl air, 4 door, VI, powargllde, low mlltaga. No run, cell 421574s. _ )4i chKyrolet impAIa 4-' v-S, Powartjiida, ... FORD DEALER Slnci on DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD Hemt of SERVICE after the Sale- OR 3-1291 I CHIVY j-Tdir in iiaka toidy, 4'ipead on, 920x10 ply tlraa In- Iwloa finish. 'Only' 51,495. Baay terms. PATTERSON CHBVRGLit CO., 1000 s, woodward aye., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. iMrcHfyv i»ii»ALA'"c6Nviwt. with automatic transmission, . sngins, power sltarlng and brikas, Immacuiala threuineut." I>lfl.... - anc^mlrrera, CRISSMAN CHEVROLET ROCHESTER __________^J)t M72I Auto Inturunca 104 AETNA CASUALTY 525.000 llabllltyi S1,250 11.000 death Mnellt; 020, rad motorist coysrege. $12 Quarterly road servics. BRUMMETT AGENCY Miracle Mila FE 441 Next to Pent lac State Bank ■ iGOOb NEWS " Concelpd or Refusod, Wa can provide fIrsMIna covar-sgs and protection plus yearly premium reduction bas^ ■-proved driving record. CALL NOW FE 4-3535 '^"*"%ntl.« Supierler Rambler________ ... »*ceSSitWfy^AI? V terms. PATTERSON CHBVROLB' CO, 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAAA. Ml 4-2735.___ ALFA ROMUO, LbADEb7‘tl,72i Superior Rambler 550. Oakland " “Tr-4'ROAD81 .. irNAULt:.....6Kg 6wMKh. Best otter. 051-0014 attif 4 p.m. 1940 VW BLACK, 2-bOOR ii^DAN, radio, whItewOlls, good tlrei, 49,-000 miles. Reasonable. PB4-7S79 after 5. 1, EZ I I price, V Cooper Motors 4270 Pixie, DrOyton Plains 1942 VOLVO "544" 2-DOOR. BEAU-tllul red, 4-spaed, fully equl wlth^AM-FM radio. Excollenl dlllon; Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER ■ -------- ~~ S-4531 93* MOA .Cb0Pi,,'Wlhl WHlSirS, radio and haatar, naw tiret otter. MY 2-4543. Renault OLIVER lUICK and JEEP t4l BUICK INVICTA 4 POOR i?;25P« izsHf. •sH 4 4142 days.............. t42 BUICK IPECIaII^ I DOOB, with aulomatic transmlsalan, radia, heslar, whilawall. Balra liica. ena ewnar, naw car tradd, SIM down, p«' .».smss.i Patterson Ic, power Itaaring, br ^Mn^rar.^latairanl 124 tMfVRbUT, RMUICf'IN-gina, body talr. 272. 140 I. Coflki Y TOOpH, Inish, full PI Marvel Motors I. Ft 4-1344. I HARDTOP, 11,795, Russ lohnson 3 4248 1941 CHBVROLiT, ilL AIR 4-doer hardtop txcallOnI condition. 374 First, PonllBC,________ IMI chevSoleT IM^ALA ebti’. verllble, V-8 engine, powr— power steering, radio, whilewalls. Slivkr with f lerlor' and black top. Only S WARD AYE.,, .BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. ' '• 941 CHeVHbLET’irbbo’R, ra’dio, healer, whitawall tires. Economy engine. Abiolually no money down. Payments ot 87.25 par weea. See 941 CHEVY ImP/LLA 2^60R hardtop. One-ewntr. 11,300 qr bast otter. FE $-4924. I’bREBNBRiiTit-Ion wagon. Standard .....—. ..jafar, l-lona blua and while finish. Only 51,293, laiy PATTERSON CHBVkollT BIRMjNOHAM^a _ PONTIAC ' CATALINA S-b6o1i hardtop, 4-spato, 5100 end take overpayments. FB 0-2205. 12 noon 1942 coRVAiR Tdo’^oooFiioij^ Powergllda, radio, heater, whits-wells, Btige tlnlih. Only $lil9S. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 5. WOOD-WARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. 1942 CHEVROLET KeL A(R 2-DOOR l?'*LrlnBl'"?5dlor®hMl^^^^ walls. Silver with blue 'interior. Patterson Chryslar-Plymoulh-Oodga Trucks lOCHESTER OL 1-0550 ____I ond haajhir, automatic transmission, a *t -ownar, low mileaga, trade and only $1295 VILLAGE RAMBLER Mr 6-3900 44 $. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM HOME OF THE TOTAL VALUE DEAL axcallsnt condition, ^______ _____ ,ilue, $2,200. Ml>2400 1962 CHEVY ii, tidvA: OR 4-1492, oyenlnQs. 1963 CORVAIR MONZA 1943 CHEVY II 4-DOOR, SIX, STlCK, radiOy baHmI condition. ih49:;i. Ml 7 9 GOOD CONDITIONS Ar» ) OLIVER RENAULT u looking for t car that will RENAUlV'*DAUPh"nE*'^' $1490 RENAULT RS S'' $150 Down on above ears, low low payments OLIVER RENAULT , ,, 40 E. Pike FE 4-1502 1959 VW Sunroof Radio, heater. Like new. ONLY $845. J Homer Hight , ^ PONTIAC;vBUICk-CHEVROLET Oxford • 7 *' ----- 1958 Lloyd Marvel Motors New and Uud Cart authorized liquidation price $197 ESTATE STORAGE COMPANY, FE 3- 7 E South Blvd. at A 7\r^ BUICK SPECIAL, 4-DOOR, real good condition, 482m740. 1951 BUICK 4-OOOR. ONE-OWNER car. No monay down; i , LUCKY AUTO SALE^, I ‘"Pontiac's Discount L«rt" >93 S. Saginaw , PE 4-2214 1940 BUICK ItiVIcnrA 4-OOOR hardtop, POI7J ‘Mfrhjp; brakes .......... 004-27S2, 1944 CHEVROLET SUPER SPORT convertibla. Midnight blue metatic, .. "" —' “ the floor, 7,i»q Autobahn Motors, Irlc. AUTHORIZED VW Dealer 'a mile north of Miracle Mila " 1745 S. TelagraOh___ FE S-4531 HASKINS Spriilg Specials 1963 TEMPEST 2-Door with slick shift, radio, whitewalls, $1595 1960 PONTIAC 4-Door. sedan. Power steering and brakOs. Radio, heater. Real nicel $1095 1960 CHEVY Impolo 2-door hardtop. Power steering, radio and heater. Copper finish. i> ‘ $1295 1962 OLDS 4-Door maroon finish, one owner 1 » $1995 1960 CHEVY Wagon “ :k shift. Rl $995 1963 MONZA Coupe' . 2H5oor. Radio, heater. Dark blua finish. Under warranty! $1895 HASKINS Chevy-Olds mi IV-12 ' Xi'V Mansfield AUTO SALES 1104 BALDWIN FE 5-5900 and FE 8-8825 '64 PONTIAC CATALINA noclurn 6IU*, '63 CHEVY IMPALA lUPFR SPORU (nnvmllhl*. 4W, 4 tp«*d. «ul«mAll( . '63 CHEVY IMPALA Mtrdlop, |Mw«r, «,000 '63 PONTIAC CATALINA rOoor Hirdlao, vanlura trim, |iow«r, 11,000 nillas. '63 PONTIAC '63 FORD 500 XL I'^Door Hirdlap, power. 14,0 '63 PONTIAC CATALINA '62 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF '62 BONNEVILLE CONViNTIBLB, powor, whItt, '62 CHEVY IMPALA >-Door Hardtop, rad, real aharp. '62 CHEVY IMPALA SURIR^tTORTS, power, ilivar '62 FORD OaiiNla, Convtrllbia, v-l, aulo-mallc, '62 PONTIAC CATALINA t'Door Hardtop, Hohi blue. Ilka '62 PONTIAC SATARI WAOPn!" O'PaManpar, burgundy '62 CHEVY BEL AIR I-C^r, t-cvlindar, automatic. '62 RAMBLER Wagon,' chroma luggage reel 4, atick, radio, haatar, J},00 '62 MONZA 4-Door, automatic, buckal i '61 COMET '61 TEMPEST 3-ipaad, Ilka new. '61 CORVAIR ', automatic, while, a '61 PONTIAC '61 TEMPEST automatic, 3.000 actual '60 PONTIAC 4-Door Hardtop, p »,000 mllai. '61 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-Door Hardtop. Thli la a ona-^ner car with 14,000 actual '61 PONTIAC CATALINA '61 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-Ooor Hardtop,, power. '61 TEMPEST -Paasengar Wagon, rack on top, owar ttearing, automatic. '61 CHEVY IMPALA 0?D '61 CHEVY 4-Door Hardtop, power, n ■ '60 PONTIAC t-Door Hardtop, Irl-power '60 PONTIAC ^Mr' Hardtop, mahogany with '60 PONTIAC or CATALINA, power. 60 CHEVY IMPALA or Hardtop, V-8, automatic. '60 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, V power, onerowner ci »,000 actual miles, n -■ with white top. '60 CHEVY IMPALA '59 CHEVY 4-Door Bel Air, 4, automatic. '59 FORD WAGON 4-Passanger, power. '58 BONNEVILLE Hardtop, power steering irakesi trI-power. '57 PONTIAC 4-Door Hardtop. '58 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERtlBLE, Mansfield AUTO SALES . 1104 BALDWIN FE 5-5900 and FE 8-8825 '/i-i Mm K 1*14 CHRVII nil WINDtOR, ..........equip matio tranamlislon la KS w jarlor li immtHulala. A fine — firming can mat has loam cared for and It la ly---- writing tor. a full year, arranged to suit your put low price only Wl. BIRMINOHAM ..7 Chryslar-Pfjimoultt IJJ S. Woodward_____^__f CHRVtil.ER, CROWN iaL.{oi«;w.t,do43 VALIANI, V lOO, WllllR SIDE well liras, radio, henler, defroster, slenderd shill, white, must sell. FB 2-1492, ^ 1943 P L Y MOUTH OFl-VEDBRE hardtop, 303 engine, slendord .... Ml 6-3900 I. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM ME OF THE TOTAL VALUE DEAL 19113 c6MET CONVifttlBLB, “ 4-speed, whimwnlli, radio, heeler, bucket seels, one-owner end Is like new, low down peymenis. BILL SPENCE Chrysler-Plymoulh.Rambler-Jeep Clarkilon, 4473 Dixie MA 5 .M4I 1943 COMET CONVefttiBLi WitH Ihe big 4 engine, radio,' heeler, leclory otilclel carl 11,995. JER-OME PEROUSON, Rocheiler FORD Dealer, OL 1-971). 1940 OLDS, EXCELLENT CONbl-Lon, S27S. Cell allar 3, 4S2-2097. 955 OLDS HARDIOP, POWER 4145. I5« OLDS 4 POOR ’ hardtop "04," fleeulllul 2tone finlih, rum like new. Lull price only 4195. SURPLUS MOTORS T S, Saginaw LE 8 4034 1940 OLDS Oil 3 DOOR utomellc, radio, heoler, lull pow- II CADILLAC 42 SEDAN JEROME Motor Sales Park* IW^^fORD^ money di I ENGINE, Cooper Motors 4270 Dixie, Drayton 940 FORD 4 3000R, STANDARD SHIFT, VERY NICE, I FE 3- — H Riggins, Dealer. FALCON 2-d60R,' GOOD 280 S. SAGINAVY FE 8-0488 ,____ 1961 OLDS Wagon Sqper "OS", 9-passenger wllh radio, heater, autornallc. Low-mlleagr one owner. Yours lor.ONLY $1,995 BOBBORST LIncoln-Merciiry 520 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM IV" , 'I..';, J; I ',1 f ' ^ 'I'''..;; . ' I ;mio i»(j.vnA( r m ss wkunrsdav,'maiu ii ii.i; imii 'aIiHIKEi, ' ' , "'(V I i “l. ‘ i ' ' 1' r ,1 V" l) \ '1’ ' Vi’/i MAHMAflHlfeE lly Anderaon ft |<«emln|{ "If you oiiii’t keep ttui cookie Jar fllliHl, nu> on’ Moiamydukti Ih koIr’ to!" 106 Miilors, (124 31 4 5V59. 1943 PLYMOUTH 4. 2 DUOR, RADIO, standard, like new, unly tl,495. Alex Motors. 424-3192. IV44 PONTIACS. BEST OFFER takes them. OR 3-1402. 1954 PONTIAC,'OOOD CONDITION, Hydramellc, power steering, radio, FB 2-7029. 1957 PONT4AC SUPER CHIBF 4 TER80N CHEVROLBI CO., 100(1 S. WOODWARD AYE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4 2735. 950 Star chiIfI real good I95H POfitlAI^ ’station WAGON, like new. No money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Ponllec's DIscounI Lot"' >3 S. Saginaw FE 4 2214 159 PONTIAC 9 PASSeNGRR WAG- mallc*’*Only "m-OW mMes,*' excellent condlllun. OR 3-0.542 >59 POIFTIAC CATALINA sedan, Hydramellc, 4 door. Otte owner, excellonl condition. EM 3 0204 alter 140 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 D06r, Aulomallc iraiismlsslon, radio, heat, er, power steering and brakes. Patterson ^(:hr|5^er_.piymoulh-Dodae^TruckB^_ 4DOOR, r> be seen at 132 ELRun'delf, I Barnowsky at EE J-5794. ■ FOR p ST AT I ON W^AOON, 1940 FORD CONVERTIBLE,. AUTO-malic, I, power ateerlng/ 11,345. DON'S, 477 S. Lapeer Rd„ Orion Standard transmission. S59S. Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER ’/i rtrlle north ol MlraCle Milt . 1745J. Telegraph _ FE 1-4531 1940 FORD 4.* STiCk,' EXCELLENT _COndltlon.JI700._FE 4-3404._ 1940 FORD VyAGbN,'V-8rAUTOMAf- I. FES- V940 FORD STATION WAGON, V-8 Automatic. $495 full price, “"lI)cky"'auto sales "Ponllkc's Discount Lot" 193 S. Saginaw FE 4 194b ’T-BIRD, 'maroon, A 'VER Y S20 S. Woodward Ave.’ BIRMINGHAM , Ml 4-4538 ...OLDSMOBILE OYNAMIC 88, power^ t2i000 miles. OR 3-0049, ■pACkARD 1955, i-DOOR CUPPER cgstom^jjood^nglne, brakes, tires, 1959 PLYMOUTH belvedere’ 2-door hardtop, VO englrrf, automallc radio, heater, whitewalls. Spotless throughout. Only $795. Easy t( PATTERSON CHEVROLET 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., MINGHAM. Ml 4-2735.________ excellent condition, S995, FE P TO $5 A MILE, YPUR . SAVINGS BY DRIVING TO "THE BIG LOT" stark HICKEY FORD 14 Mile Rd. E. of Wobdward 588-4010 1959 Cadlllic Coupe DeVlIle. Turquoise and matching interior. soft-ray glass, (4-way seat and windows, a Ivery low mileage, spotless,, one- dupllcate. mileage car. Your choice, $l,895r . . 1941 Sedan DeVIHe. Fawn color with matching Interior. 4-way seat and windows. A 1942 Fleetwood. Air-condltion-ing. Cruise control, soft-ray glass, door locks, vents and 1942 Cadillac Coupe DeVitle, All factory equipment, low mileage, (l) In «u>,«r mjo green and (II 1 gray with re< T;^95 1943 Fleetwood Sedan. Silver frost green. Cruise control, alr-conditioning, AM-FM dio,' soft-ray glass, padded gold naugahyde top. Still in factory warranty. Cost $7,757 1943 Sedan DeVlIle. Nocturne blue and blue. Air-conditlon-ing, all factory electrical equipment. Still In factory warranty. $4,395. WILSON,. pontiac-cadiuac^'^'" 13S0 N. Woodwbrd Ml 4-T93II Birmingham, Michigan OLDS F-B5 4 DOOR, WITH aulomallc transmission, rartlo.i heofer, power steering, one c........ down, S5I.24 per monthl Patterson 196r5LbS F-85 Cutlass Low monthly payments. BOBBORSr Delivered NEW 1964 PLYMOUTH-VALIANT $1754 reclional signals, front arm res' cigar lighter, 101 -horsepower cylinder engine, frdht seat belts. OAKLAND LLOYD MOTORS Inc. Lincoln—Mercury Comet-English Ford MONTH-END ' GM SALE 1943 P(3NTIAC Coupe " "hn iclual miles. 4-door hardtop orfiy 1943 OLDS 1943 CHEVY Blscayne 2-dc 1942 OLDS 88 Coupe, power 1942 CHEVY impala Coupe 1941 OLDS 88 4-door hardtop • 1941 PONTIAC Catalina Coupe > 1941 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF sedan 1940 BUICK Electro hardtop 1940 PONTIA Catalina sedan , 1940 CHEVY 2-door, stick 1959 PONTIAC <-door sedan „ 1959 CHEVY Bel Air V-8 Small Down -Payment le in! TERMS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET 10 ROasonable Offer Refuse! LLOYD Lincoln-rrMercury Comet—English Ford 232 S. Saginaw FE 2-9131 jrSkes, $900, Ml 4-1098. iO PONTIAC, 4 DOOR, CATALINA', lyrdamellc, power, low mlleogo, 11,195. OR 3-2711. 51 SIX PASSENGER CATALINA w.iqon, Radio, he.iler, power brakes miles $1,400 FE 8-3470. 41 PONTIAC 2 DOOR SPORTS coupe, Hydramatic, power, radio. trim, excellent condition, Priced !ery reasonable. FE 2-7458. 941 tempest’ 4-DOOR SEDAN, radio, healer, .whitewalls. Solid rod llnish. Only $895. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIR-_MINGHAM. _MI 4-2735. _ __ ...LiQurbATioN Tot NO MONEY DOWN MAKE PAYMENTS FE 8-9661 SPECIAL^- 1962 fORD Falcon 4-i3oor PONTIAC RETAIL ■ STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 Shelton's Anniversary SALE SHELtON SAVES YOU MORE Ilf 1964 BECAUSE OF OUR RECORD-BREAKING NEW CAR SALES, WE'RE OVERSTOCKED WITH USED CARS. THE SAVINGS WERE NEVER BETTER - SEE US TODAY! Now and Ui«d Can wauun. Hyiliamaii w%lawti1ls,'’'soMd tnatilon 'Tin'ixh, Only $1,595. Poxy Inrmi. PAI-IBRSON CMBVROIBT CO., 1000 S. WOQOWAR D AVE., BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4 2735, 941 CATALINA CONVERTIBL’E, douhle power, I owner, PE 4 1/20. 1942 PONTIAC cATAlltJA CON-verllble. aulomalli tranxmlxxlon, power xleerlnu and brake*, on* owiiei, beaulllul aoqa marine, 82, Russ Johnson On M34 It 1942 TBMPESY malic Irammlisic I DOOR AU10 1942 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF, door liardlop, ^jJ**’**^^^ sleerlni i942 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF d brakes, one-owner 1942 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-verllble, hydramollc, power steer-Ing end brakes, radio, healer, whilewalls, Daytona blue, wllh llOhl blue lop. Only 81.995. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4 2735. T942 PONTIAC, 81AR CHiBF, 4-door hardlop. Ilka new. I‘E 4 ,1825 oiler 5;30 p.m. 1942 PONTIAC CATALINA ilARD-lop, $1,9501 J958 Pontiac Slardllef hardtop, $400. 171 Summll. FE 1943 TEMPEST LEMANS, 2 DOOR coupe, 3'24 engine, sland,ird transmission, $1,956. OR 3-8321. 1943^ TEMPEST STATION WAGON, OR 3-4051. 1943 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-1 hardlpp, hydramollc, power Ing and brakas. Only 13,000 mllas. Sold wllh a new cor aniee, Melalllc blue Ilnl4h. $2595. Easy farms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., lOOO S. WOODWARD AVE.) BIRMINOHAM. EASTER SPECIALS Come in and see us this week and weekend. We have some truly sharp cars to choose from. Chances are . . . your next car is in our lot right now. Why Not Come In and See It? GLENN'S Motor Sales. 952 W. HUROH -4gles by L. C. Williams Owiter: Glenn Douglass FE 47371 BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every used car offered for retail to the public is a bonafide 1-owner, low mileage, sharp car. 1-year parts and labor warranty. 1943 RIVIERA 1943 ELECTRA, Powar 1943 WILDCAT Convertible , 1943 WILDCAT 2-door ......... 1943 LeSABRE 4-Dooi —“BUICK ConveHIbia ,.,s’4,jiy5 BUICK 4-Door ..............$2,895 OLDS 98 ................... $2,195 1942 BUICK Electro ...... 1942 BUICK LeSabre ... 1942 PONTIAC Wagon , 1942 BUICK Special .... 1941 BUICK 4-Door ..... I94TBUICK 2-Door ..... 1968 CADILLAC DeVlIle ..$2,61 1948 ELECTRA Air .......$1,5! —■BUICK Wagon " 1943 TEMPEST 0 EISCHER -BUICK New end Uud Ctn . 106 1943 aWANO IMS 'PONTIAC'I (Sf TO'CHnoill trum. 81,49$ /ull piTca, no nuinay ‘‘""'lUCKY AUTO SALES 'Ponllaa'i UlMdunt Lgl" 193 |, Saginaw fK 4 22)4 1943 Pontiac 7|fAYidN wagon, f,r.klirtt«.‘W.ri wall lira*. FB l-SIII. 1943 GRAND PRIX dad wllh axlrat — ling alaciric —' wlndowi, «taarln4, teat bailti Kimitarly blua oVij 13,910. Phona owntr, FB S1813 tvanlngi. Mirtf S»U,‘1944 'OTO midniutit blua, 33ji, S295 up '54 Packard. 'S4 Oeiota. il95 «a. Many olhar* — lain mndel* Economy Car*, ■ GOODWILL while wllh red low mlleaga, old c< 1946- PONTIAC SR 195^ PONTIAC Starchief ...... Hydramollc, power •tearing, braka*, radio, healar, air condlllanlng, 29,727 mile*. One 1942 TEMPEST Sport* coupe, fire engine red, radio, healer, while-wall*, aaal belli, itlck ihllt, tool Nice throughoull Haupt Pontiac Npw 10f!> 1942 NAMIfLBR AMI$A$rSADDR CUI-limv eon, -all iniv^r, buck#! taali, l^.or^loa^ lFiW| akcallant gondlllon, ' IM3 NAMBlPN .CCAIIIC. now Suparlor Namhlar' ilO Oakland BLL SPENCE. Chry*l»r-Plymoolh-Ramblar-Jaap Clarktfon, 4473 Dlxla MA S-^l 1946 LANXflitl OR 3-3$if. 1911 STublBAkbR, oooiTTrans- norlalton, 493.7298.__ __ Liquidation Lot TMBIR Ni!^ADDNIIR 313 W. Montcalm oft Oakland PP 8 4071 RAMBLERS" RAMBLERS Under the Flashing SATELLITE 1964 RAMBLER, BONUS BUYS We have reached our quota and are in a special discount bracket that is unbelievable. Shop for price, then clear your conscience with a deal from us. ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Commerce, Union I el EM 3-4155 We Have Just About Every 1964 MODEL OLDSMOBILE Jetstar5-“F-85"s AVAII ABLE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY We Are Never (Knowingly) Undersold Houghten & Son ’"'"'’oI'oS-RAMBLBR Dealer (epllonally nice 1942 Bnmii--villa converllble. Sky blue wllh matching Interior. All top. In (addle hron/e w coupas, Automatic t iloni, (II gold and ( Your cboica 81,895. WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC SUBURBAN OLDS "Birmingham Trades" ■ 100% WRITTEN i guarantee Every car listed corries this guarantee. Take the guesswork out of buying. Get one of our Certified Used Corsl Bank rates. 1963 OLDS 98 l-Door Hardlopj, aJI Mwer. Four 0 Choose from.: - Priced - from- 1962 CHEVY 2-DOOR . 'Ith V-9 engine* automatic* radio* sater, whifewalls. Only $1795. 1963 OLDS 88's Coupes. Three to choose from. Priced from $2395. 1962 Ford Galaxie CouW with V-8 engine* automatic .-----power tteerlng and brakes. $1595. 1963 STARFIRE Coupe ■ aporls car supreme, all power like ne- and like new,, 1962 OLDS 9-PASS. II the goodies. Only $2295. 1961 OLDS Starfire Convertible, lull Uower. Sharp -one-ownet._new-car trade.- ^— 1963 OLDS Cutlass Coppe, automatic, console, buck els. Two to Choose from. 1963 PONTIAC Sedan Your old ear down, $59.7S pel 1962 OLDS "98" 4-Door Hardtop, lull power, and factory air conditioning. 1958 Chevy 4-Door WHh V 8 engine* automallc, radio, healer, whilewalls* sharp! Save! I960 OLDS Hardtops We have six lo choose from, 1959 OLDSMOBILES Hardtops, Sedans ~ All power equipped. Priced from S795. M ighty F ine USED CARS ARE THE KIND YOU GET FROM US See BOB YATES or BOB MARTIN 565 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM MI 4-4485 1942 TEMPEST 2-door , 1954 Ol $. 358 ' e S2395 i - BONNEVILLE conver 1959 STUDEBAKER .... 1942 MONZA 2-dobr , 1946 IMPALA 2-door t, 1946 LeSABRE 4-door .... 1946.CHEVY wagon ..... 1943 PONTIACS . .... 1942 IMPALA 2-door .. . 1942 TEMPEST 4;door ... 1966 CHEVY 'A-lon '..: 1948 CATALINA-2-doo‘r ... 1943 CATALINA 4-dOor / . 1963 TEMPEST 4-dbo/ -... ..... 1940 OLDS 88 hardtop ... S1495 1959 CATALINA sedan .... $1095 1943 ELECTRA "225" .... $3195 1964 RIVIERA .......... $4395 1942 FALCPN 2-door ... $1095 ‘ . $2595 . $1495 . $2095 SHLLTON PONTIAC-BUICK 22? N. Moin OL 1-8133 ' ROCHESTER, MICH. - POSITIVELY -NO MONEY DOWN MAKE PAYMENTS - SPOT DELIVERY Car Price A Week Car Price A Week 1958 CHEVY ... - $1.10 195^ MERCURY ... ...'.$397 $3.16 4-Door, V-8 '2-Door Sedan 1958 FORD ........ ...$197 $1.10 1959 NASH ..L... ....$197 $1.10 2-Door Hardtop Rambler Wagon 1958 MERCURY .. 2-Door Hardtop ....$197. $1.10 1959 FORD ...... 4-Ooor Sedan ....$397 $3.16 1958 PLYMOUTH .. .,..$T97 $1,10 1959 SIMCAm.... 2-Ooor Sedan $197 $1.10 (200 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM^PRICED FROM $97 TO $1997) KING AUTO SALES W. HURON M-5^rat Elizabeth t^alce Road §^4088 / 7. Dotible. ,7/- Checked USED CARS 1961 Chgvy Bel-Air ....$1495 Sletlon Wagon wllb V-l angina, aulomallc IranimISslon, radio, healer 1961 Chevy Parkwood .$1595 9 Faxirnger Wllh aulomallc iransmlsilon, radio, healar end while- 1964 JeepB Wagoneer .. .$2295 1957 Buick Roadmaster $ 495 4'Door Hardloo wllh 'power. ilaeiTng end brakes, oowar windows. 1962 Rambler Ambas. .$1495 4'Doar wllh y-8 angina, aulomallc transmission, radio, healer, powar slaaring and brakes and whilawalli. I960 Siudebaker Conv. $ 765 with aulomallc Irensmlsslon, radio, healar, wbllawnlls. yellow finish, and a V 8 angina. 1959 Ford Fairlane_____________$ 795 1959 Ford Custom..................$ 595 2'Door wllh rpdlo healar, 4'Cyllndar angina and all black finishi 1961 Chevy Greenbrier $1395 with automatic Iranimlislon, all new liras, and Is a 3-iaater tool Beaulllul groan and while, 1959 Olds4Door ......$ 975 Sedan wllh powar vSlaarlna and brakas, aulomallc transmission, radio, heater, whilewalls, bronie llnish, wllh malchlng trim, 1962 Chevy Convertible $2295 Imoala wllh automallc Irensmlsslon, radl6, healar, powar slaaring and brakes, whttawalls, tinted glass, orcllc white finish, wllh a white top and blua Interior. 1963 Buick Convertible '$1895 with the V-6 angina, standard transmission, radio, heater, whilewalls, red llnish, red and whita vinyl Interior, 1959 Buick Electra..............$1195 1961 Cadillac DeVille .$2995 Coupe, 2-Door Hardtop wllh 4-way power end laclory air conditioning, low mileage, real nice throughout l 1961 Buick Special....$1474 1963 Willys Wagoneer .$2795 This one Is complete wllh all standard factory equipment and snow 1961 Pontiac Catalina . .$1588 4-Door Hardlop with automatic transmission, radio, heater, power steering and brakes, linfed glass, whilewalls, light blue flnlsK I960 Buick LeSabre________________$1295 CONVERTIBLE w|lh automatic transmission, radio, heater, new tires and a beige finish. Real good black topi 1960 Pontiac Catalrna .. $ 1395 4-Door Hardtop with autoliaafic transmission, radio, heater, power steering and brakes, whitewalls and a burgundy finish. 1962. Special 2 Door... .$1495 1963 Riviera .$3595 1962 Skylark Hardtop .$1995 OLIVER BUICK 196-210 Orghard Lake OPEN MpNDAYS-THURSDAYS-FRIDAYS TILL 9 P. M. FE-'2-gf65 1-,' y' ^ J. r '■■■'.A TllK J’ON'J’IAC I’ltl'lSS. WUDNiCSBAV, MARCH »«, 1I)M ■'Vir/ ,P-W Television Programs- Prporami fumtth^ by itoNonil In ibli column arc lublcet to chonflc without notice. Lenten Story Bv'WooDiIimiAiB. , •/ ChOBwi i|~WJBK.TV ClwwMii 4-.WWJ.TV CVim.J y~V^X*ril-TV WTUI TONIQHT l;N (3) (I) Newf (7) Movio; «‘Teeh-Ago CevoRwn** (In Progrow) (9) Yogi Deor (B«) Now Biology •iHM7) Weather, Newi, liM (I) (4) NaUonal Newi (») Invisible Man (M) At IsMie 7i«r'(3) TV Two Heports (4) Opinion (7) Have Gun-WUl Travel (9) Lock Up (M) Searchlight 7:S0 (t) Chronicle (4) Virginian ^ (7) Ossie and Harriet (9) Movie; “Highway S01“ (19A0) Virginia Grey (M) Jaa Casual 8i99 (3) Project Two (7) Patty Duke Show (M) Great Books 8:M (S) Stump the Stars (7) Parmer’s Daughter (66) News About Books 9;99 (S) Beverly Hillbillies (4) Espionage (7) Ben Casiqr (9) Serial 9il9 (2) Dick Van Dyke (9) Horizon 10:69 (2) Danny Kaye (4) Eleventh Hour (7) Channing 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News Weather, Sports 11:26 (9) Movie; “Attack' (1956) Eddie Albert, Jack Palance, Lee Marvin * 11:39 (2) Steve Allen (4) (Color) Johnny Car- (7) Movie: “The Glass Web" (19M) Edward 0. llobinson, Uichard Denning 1:00 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Best of Groucho 1:15 (7) After Hours TV Features Profiles of 3 Artists By United Press Intemallonal chronicle, 7:30 p m. (2) Profiles of three elderly artists still at work; photographer Edward Stelchen, operatic Bclnger liOtte Uhniann, sculptor Jacques Llpschltz. PATTY DUKE SHOW, 8;00 p.m. (7) Patty answers a pen-pal ad in a teen magasine, unaware that it Is her boyfriend. FARMER’S DAUGHTER, 8:80 p.m. (7) Katy gets jealous when she seeks a publicity photo of Glen with on Italian actress. BEVERLY inUBILUBS, 9:00 p.m. (2) Granny^ omens say It’s going 'to rain, but the weather bureau says^ aH wet. lANNY KAYE, 16:00 p.m. (2) Guests are Tony Bennett and comic Howard Morris. THURSDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Funews 7:00 (2) News (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:05 (2) Fun Parade 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show 8:30 (7) Movie: “The Girl from Manhattan” porothy La-mour, George Montgomery 8:45 (56) English VI 8:80 (9) Warm Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry - Go-Uound 9:00 (2) Movie; “Gildersloeve on Broadway" (1943) Harold Perry, Billie Burke (4) Living (9) Kiddy Korper Kar-toons 9:10 (56) Let’s Rend 9:30 (9) Jack La Lanne 10:C0 (4) Say When (9) National Schools (56) Spanish Lpsson 10:15 (7) News (56) Our Scientific World 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Word for Word (7) Girl Talk (9) Chez Helene 10:40 (56) Friench Lesson 10:45 (9) Nursery School Time 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (2) Real McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Price Is Right (9) Romper Room 11:10 (56) Let's Read Abou People 11:25 (56) Focus on Behavior 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) (Color) MUslng Links (7) Object Is 11:55 (56) Memo jo Teachers 2 3 6 r r* r" r- r IT 12 16 u IS 16 17 til -K 23 U a K 28 r 33 r 36 J7 36 JT 44 45 46 il 46 56 61 62 56 64 66 ACROSS 1. Helen of-----' 5. Miss West 8. -—,Queen of Scots 12. Jot 13. Wood sorrel 14. Hebrew dry measure 15. Snip 16. Table scrap 17. Sinew 18. Fencing position 20. Edible mushroom 21. Florida islet 22. Melon 23. —;— Thatcher 28. Hiatched 29. Ailments 30. Victuals 32. Actress Lupino 33. Payable 34. Bridge positi(m 35. Plant- part 36. Sailing ships 38. Adolescents 39. Unit of illumination 40. Middle 41. Alexa^er’s girl friend 43. Samson’s nemesis 47. Self (comb, form) 48. linmature blossom 49. 'Timber wolf 50. Taj Mahal site 51. Presidential nickname 52. Kansas city 53. Temporary grant 54. Beverage 55. Mimicker //■ DOWN 1. ; TvrHchings^^^ 2. Character part 3> Auricular \ ' 4. South American 5. DOpresslve 6. Land measure 7. Consume Ib. Part of a Doric frieze 9. Greek Venus 10. Korean leader 11: Ship’s small boat 19. Negative vote 20. Reward ^ 22. First (comb, form) 23. Commands 1. Hebrew month i. Siren on the Nile 27. Paradise 28. River barriers 30. Swift 34. Epic poetry 31. Bone , 35. Chancel seats for clergy Man from Columbus 38. Sesame ' 40. Greek enchantress 41. Boer language 42. “Les Miserables” author p, Doris ^----, heiress 44. Noose 45. Competent 46. Venerable 48. Small portion Answer to Previouspuzzle 'niURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Your First Impression (7) Seven Keys (0; Take SO 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) Trutli or Consequences (7) Prather Knows Best (9) People In Conflict 12:35 (50) Spanish Ixisson 12:45 (2) Guildlng Light 12:50 ( 56) I.^t’8 Read -12:55 (4) News' 1:00 (2) Star Performance H) Conversation Piece (7) Ernie Ford (9) Movie: “Woman to Woman" (1947) Joyce Howard, Adele Dixon 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Hollywood Theater (56) World History 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Let’s Make Deal (56) Mathematics for You 2:25 (4) News 2:30 (2) Ilennesey (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:35 (56) Young Artists Work 2:55 (7) News 8:06 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Loretta Young (7) General Hospital Spanish lesson PfHW News 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Si.y (7) Queen for a Day — „ (9) Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Miaiterogers 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Movie: Bowery Boys (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Hercules 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: "The 27th Day” (1957) Gene Barry, Valerie French \ (9) Captain Jd ] 1 y a n d Popeye 5:15 (66); Industry on Parade 5:80 (56) What’s New 5:65 (2) Weather (4) Carol Duvall Build Gunboats for Viet Patrol WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S, Navy ia developing atweial “river war" lM»ata — n heavily armed version of Uie famous old gunboats — for possible use along South Viet Nam's waterways. Their mission would be to control these rivers, streams and man-made canals along wlilcli the bulk of the |^>pulutlon lives. (iovemmeht forces have BUCceedMl at liineN In flushing out Communist Viet 4:ong guerrillas, but they return Since the waterways are the supply routes for Istlh government and Red forces, it Is essential that they and the adjacent land areas be kept free of the Viet Cong if South Viet Nam’s war effort is to succeed. operated by high speed pumps, instead of propellers. A A W ^ The advantage Is that there Is no underwater propeller or rudder to strike snags or catch In lra|M planted by the enbmy. These present - day versions of (he old gunbont will be steel hull crafi, 36 feet long niid with n IO-hM>t 4 inch beam. To reduce the cliance.pf snagging obstacloH, a tunnel -like device will Imuso the twin pro-pellerH, eoch driven by two 225 diesel motors, Top speed shoukl be about 14 knots. More than 200 boats already have been dispatched by the United States to Uie embattled Southeast Aslan country, b u they are small and iptended primarily for quick transportation. OUTBOARD BOATS Made of foam plastic and fiberglass, they are powered a 40 horsepower outboard motor and armed with a single 30-caliber light machine gun. Both the Navy and Army WHY WEEPEST THOU? After He had risen from the dead, early on Easter morning, Jesus appeared first to Mary Magdalene, the sinner whom He had saved. Mary stood weeping outside the empty tomb. When she turned around, she saw a man whom she mistook for the gardener. ■ ' “Woman, why weepest thou? Whom seekest thou,“ He asked her. “Sir,“ she said, “if thou hast removed Him, tell me where thou hast laid Him and I will take Him away.** Then the man called her Mary and she knew at once that it was Jesus. “Rabboni,** she cried out, which in Hebrew means master. Jesus told her to tell the disciples, “I ascend unto My Father, your Father; and to My God, and your God." (John XX:17) Marriage Brfak Exposed by 'Candid Camera' Man Funeral Service Set for Ionia GOP Leader SARANAC (AP) - Services will be held here Wednesday for widowed Mrs. Mamie Boyd O’Beirne, 83, former prominent lopia County political and civic leader who died Sunday at a hospital in Grand Rapids. Her husband was a state rep» resentative in the 1920s. Mrs. O’Beime served three terms \>n the Republican State Central' Committee. By EARL WILSON NEW YORK-The TV Gonununity’s all gasping about the news that Allan Font (of “Candid Camera") and his wife Evelyn, a most gracious hostess at their Croton home, are contemplating a divorce .. . with Funt expecting to marry the vivacious 26-year-old who’s been hi9 aide and secretary . . . It’s ail quite amicable, and set ior this coming Summer . . . C’est la TV! Pat O’Brien surveyed the audience at Basin 8t. East and saw his son, Terry, who’s studying for the diplomatic service at Georgetown. Introducing the lad, Pat said, “Terry’s always been very tbCtful and diplomatic since he was a boy when he won a contest for the shortest essay on safe driving. What my tactful son wrote was, ‘Drive WIlSOin carefully. Don’t hit a student. Wait for a teacher.' ” Society, circles may be rocked on their heels (and they have a few) over the romance of a very glamorous name femme who’s married, and a celebrated, rugged, outdoorsy, indoorsy athletic type who was married but now isn’t. , . Robert Merrill and his wifje have, identical traveling bags. After a recent southern trip, they parted, his wife returning to NY, Bob going to New Orleans for a concert. Bob opened his bag to get a dinner jacket—and found some of the loveliest dresses. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . ^ Peter Ustinov’Il do the “John Goldfarb” film with Shirley MacLpine . . . Darryl Zanuck, Who couldn’t get a table on his first trip to ShdpHeaTd‘’s made it on his second visit. . . British actor Dick Bogarde (now in “The Servant") says Alan Jay Ler-ner talked to him about a Broadway musical. British trio at The Chambord: Alec Guinness and the George Sanders ... Olivia de Havilland, at a “Girl Talk” TV-tapIng, debunked the divorce talk; she’s returning to Paris (and her husband) soon. \ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: We hear some clever advertising man decided to call a dog food “Arf(—so dogs can ask for it by name. WISH I’D SAID THAT: “Our idea of a coward is a teacher who quits to become, a wild animal trainer." REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Time is that vast expanse between paydays” JAKARTA, Indonesia (®-For-eign Minister Subandrio left for the Netherlands today to seek better relations with Indonesia’ ormer colonial master and more Dutch business for the sagging Indonesian economy. Subandrio, who is al^o first deputy prime minister, said he would “lay the foundation for normalization of Indonesian-Hol-land relations,” which were resumed a year ago. Informed sources >aid Subandrio will try to persuade Dutch businessmen to resume bade with Indonesia, but he Is not expected to ask the Dutch government for trade credits. Subandrio is the first top Indonesian official to visit the Hague since President Sukarno severed relations in 1960 over WjBst Irian. Radio Programs- WJR(760) WXYZd 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPONfl 466) WJBKQ 500) WHFt-FM(94.7) TONIOHT «itO-CKLW. N«ws WJa, Newt WWJ, Newt WXYZ, Nev^t WJBK, NeWt, Robert Ev Lee WCAR; News, Joe Btcarella WPON, Bob Lawrence Show •ti5-CKLW, De>« Shafer WJR, Bob Reynolds WWJ, Sports •iM-WJR. Businesi, News WWJ, Business jf WXYZ,’ Alex 9*r WHFI, Music. % Moderns tits—WJR, Lowell Thomas WWJr 3 Stor Extra WWJr 3 sior cxrro WXYZ,/ iNewt, Spoilt 7tOO-Vi(xY« Ed Moroan CKLW^ Bob Sitgriat WWJ, Newt WC/\R,jjBoyid Cerenatr WJR, Newt WJBK, Jack t^e Bellboy TiOS-WPON, Ben Johnson . WJR,^Sports 7:s!i-CKLW, Tom Clay WJR, Dimension -8:0O-WJR, World Tonight l!l5-WJR, Stress Child WWJ, Lenten Sermon 8:30—WWJ, Music Scene t:00—WJR, Learning »;3*-WJR, Ask Prof. 10:00-WJR, Goldwater 10:30--JWWJ, World News tO:4S-WWJ, Music Scene ii:0»-WCAR, News, Sports WWJJ^-NOWO FInel WJR, Nows, ^ Uiltr-WCAR, Public Sarvica t1:3S-WCAR, Boyd Carender ,lJfJ0-WWJ, Music WJR, Music • CKLW, World WJBK, Marc Avery WCAR, News, Sheridan WPON, News, Arte. Wesi WHFI, Ross, AAuOlc t:30-WJR, Music Hall 7100-CKLW, News,-Toby David 7:30-CKLW, News, ,Dev« tiOO-WJR, Newt, B. Gu t;30-WJR, Music Hall WCAR, News, Martyn »:00-WJR, Newi, ..... WHFI, Newa, McL f:30-:^WWJ, Gtahd CKLW, Jod/ Van liOO-WJR, WXYZ, Pi News, Godfrey THURSDAY APTERNOOM UiOO-WJR, News, Farm WWJ, News, Fran Harris CKLW, Austin Grant WCAR, News, Purse. WHFI, News, Burdick IJ:30-WJR, Btid Guest ItOt-WJR, News, Art LInl I:30^WJRs Garry Moore J:0iF-WJR, News, Jim .. WWJ, News, Friendship Cli WJBK, News, Leo WPONi News, Lawrance WXYZ, Sebastian, MutijCj Trade Sought by Indonesian velop something to odd to the light fleet of fiberglass boats. The Navy studies, presently under the direction of the Bureau of Ships and the Office of Naval Operations, include not only hulls but propulsion systems. In addition to conventional outboard motors, the navy is exploring the possibility of using the so-called water jet power plants. These use a stream of water, Province Chief Killed by Cong SAIGON, Viet Nam Uf)-Vlet Cong guerrillas killed the chief of Dinh Tunov Province while he was making his official rounds yesterday. An American adviser traveling with him was wounded, an American spokesman said. The province chief, Lt. Col. Tran Hoang Qnan, was riding in a Jeep ^en gnerrlllas exploded mines atross the high- The Dutfih turnedthe territory over to Indonesia last May 1 after a 13-year struggle that began when Indonesia wOn independence in 1949. The Union was confronted with a national debt of 63 billion immediately after the Civil War. The jeep was thrown off Oie road. Another Vietnamese 'traveling with the province chief was killed and another wounded. Five Americans and one Vietnamese were wounded yesterday virhen a UtS. Army helicopter was shot down by Viet Cong fire during a supply mission 340 miles north of ^igon. Another helicopter evacuated them to field hospital. Twtniy ytars on th§ air-twatva yaara on TV! Join tha Nalaona for top comadyl T0NI0HT^(:HANNEL 7 BfHtn»or»d by CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY Lei That Extra 62.60 a Waak Bay Yoi a New BE 19” Porlabla TV froih ... lIP Hi TIRMI AVAlUaU MMaaipM 825 W. Huran FE 4-2525 UNUMITED SOFT WATER *3, PER MONTH Ve Servian All lUaUoa LINDSAY SOFT WATER GO. DMORfl of Mkh. HMHnS, iMk BSMawbamrit. FB14611 COLOR TV SERVICE ANTENNAS INSTALLED AND REPAIRED SWEET'S RADIO 4aaw. Huron 334-8677 CASH ► Lowest Rate on 1 st and 2nd Mortquy • Residential or Commercial - SERVING the Entire State . Money for Consolidation or Any Worthwhih Purpose ______________ 862-2313 LAKE MORTGAGE CO. 1 031 4 Puritan Detroit 38, Mich. PlMaw tend ccfmplwto dwtalls tot Nam*.......... New pep for tired husbands! / rtbmint temtkm caused by their Joba drain millfona of hna* bands of p ! pep and mergy they might otheryrise enjoy. • That’s why many leadi^ nutritionists recommend America’s great "bounce-back” food—energy-rich Kretschmer Wheat Germ, f, • Serve your husband this amazing food and tee what happmtBi Kretacduner Wheat Germ ia great for the entire/family.'DelickHii , on.eereah, eg^ paneakea ,or'juat add miiic and su^. Be aura tq get a jar... in.tlw cereal aeetioa at your food store. ’ ' '^Vi- 'V}'W r I”''’fc • ' ■ ' f '■ .' ■' ' ' .' .. . '■ " -J.. '| ■' « s l*(')NtlAC 1‘llKHHp VVKDNKSDAiV, MAIU’ll 2/i. IlMlV S. Carolina Dimocraft Bflilu Party Confab (X)I.UMBIA. S.Cf (ii - South Carolina DemocratN open tlioir biennial convention today to elect aiato offkrera and dele-gaUM to the national party meeting In Atlantic City this sumnoer. Oov. Donald 8. Russell gives the keynote address. Facing the ewi delegates la a rccommenda tion adopted yesterday by the resolutions committee that the General Assembly be asked to step up Its study of Soutli Carolina's voter registration laws. Auxiliary Head Diet ATLANTIC CITY. N.J, (Ain "Kalherlne May Allman, prcsl dent iit the American Mtdicnl Association Auxiliary In lM8-4» and the wife of Or. David B. Allman, past president of the AMA, died Tuesday In a hospi-lal. Pan 9*ntfifi BUi for Polict, Pirtmtn When Is Husky Not By JRANMARIK FI.K1N8 W i 11 the R E A L Avalanche please stand up? Avalanche Is the official Pontiac Northern High School mascot. As such, It Is her duty to t»e present at Northern's athletic events. But three cool cunlnei, Frosty, Snowy and Avalanche, have confused all hut their owners and a few local dog experts. The mystery hegun with a call from Mrs. Clifford Alger of Lake Orion. She asserted that r(H;ently published pliotograplm of the Northern mascot .showed It WHS not a husky. Mrs. Alger raises show dogs and has five (‘hainplons. 8o she [cH BRUID NEW 11" PERSONAl PORTABLE *93 [96 wm mSrn J • Only 13 Lbi. • Convtnlsnl Carrying bandit • Stordy ifttl A-framt • New video amplifier • Excellent sound from 5" oval ipeaker • Chaiiif mounted to new • Available in decorator colon Sylvan Stereo & TV Sales Opon Monday, Wodnetday and Friday Eveningi 'Til 9 2363 Orchard Lk. Rd. (Sylvan Conter) Phone 682-0199 ought tp know. And she said II was a Samoyed. PRIOR IDENTIFICATION Releases had identified it as, a Siluirlan husky But Iniorvtews with Ava* lanche (Northern's yearhoeki and athletic direetor Eldon Johnson disclosed that tl|( latest published picture of the Northern mascot, taken at a recent basketball game was not Avalanche (the nog). Who Is this ImjHister? Where Is'Avalauche? * aw Johnson was able to answer the second question. Tlie mascot was purchased as^a puppy by the yearbook staff and given to the school. Bui she Is Umi young to attend Ihe games and Is Htoylng with the athletic director. Avalanche will not be full grown until July or August. imposter ' Meanwhile t h e ‘linposter', four - year - old Chief Pontiac Snowhltu Is carrying on the traditions, Owned by Mr. and Mrs. James Karr of 1061 (Canterbury, she has been used as the Northern mascot for the past two years. A family friend and Northern student, .Sue Morris of 1386 lllghwoed Boulevard, brings Snowy to Ihe games. Arc the Husky mascots huskies? No. Both arc Samoycds. LANSlNfl (API - A bill In make it eailar lor policemen fireman to oollmH work's compensation for heart and lung disabilities was passed 23-8 by the Senate Tuesday. ' The biparllsan bill would pul the burden of proof on the employer in compensation claim Kill 24 Pakistanis on Border of India NEW DELHI, India (AP)-i 'Cwenly-four Paklslanls wero killed in a border clash near Utl, IHl milea west of Srinagar, onpltal of dlsputml Kashmir, official sources said Tuesday. . They claimed that Pakistani volunteers penetrated a mile and a half across the Indian side of the cease-fire line In Kashmir Monday night and opened fire on Indian border patrols. Of the world's total supply of sugar, about two-thirds comes frdin sugar cane. The other third Is derived from sugar beflts which (»an be grown sue-coNsfully In ewiler cllmalas, Optn Bfdg April I for Staff Road Wprlt UN8ING (API ^ The Highway Derwrtmenl sayS It will rblds April 8 on 48 oonalruiv and eprIpB maintenancu projects coSthig an estimated 86,8 million. Largest of the projects will be the paving on nearly five miles of the Orarid Rapids East-West freeway for 81.3 million. « f We May Have The Answer To ‘ Yonr MONEY Worries . . . »3000 Purchased from Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J, Plante of Bloomfield Hills, Avalanche is registered as a Samoyed with the American Kennel Club. So Is her stand-in, Snowy. ORIGINAL MASCOT The original Northern mascot. Frosty, is owned by Mr. and Mrs. Ernes t Mann of 5650 Fourth Avenue. STILL SOUINTING .(/ THROUGH OLD-FASHIONED BIFOCALS? Frosty reigned from 1959 to ’61 when Mary Lynn Mann attended Northern. Compare Before | You j Borrow! | On 2nd Mortgages and Land Contracts 8-4022 ! FAMILY ACCEPTANCE CORP. 317 National Bldg. Pontiac 10 West Huron j Although Frosty Is not an AKC - registered dog, she, m.)9t closely resembles a husky. While .Snowy and Avalanche arc both all white. Frosty is a ii]ulli(-olor white, black, brown and beige, |lic colorings of a husky. BETTER TEMPERAMENT Both Mrs. Plante and Mrs. Alger agree that the Samoyed is generally of better temperament than the husky. A Samoyed is usually white or light grey while a husky will be multicolored with white, brown, beige and black often mixed. Now if you’re still confused, the dog pictured on the top is Frosty, the middle dog is Snowy and Avalanche is on the bottom. You need Blended Lenses...«r,ended LENSES clirninale dial “lell-lale l)iTO(*al dividing line’" . . . make you look years younger! Willi Sears BLENDED LENSES tlicrc are no more, almipl jumps in vision, no squinling ami neek-eraningl r^on\e in today * . . ask for ^iriENDED LENSES, another [iroduel of the skilltMl ojitieians at Stuirs. The Optical Dept, at Sears KNOWLEDGE SKILL EXPERIENCE Eyes Examined By A Begislered Optomelrisl* *l)r. Emil Ondre, O.D. Optical Dept., Second Floor AVALANCHE Drowns in Icy Lake HESPERIA (AP) - David Chase, 8, fell through the ice of Burris Lake six miles north of here Tuesday and drowned. David was, playing with o|her school children. Skin divers recovered the body. Satisfaction GUARANTEED or your money back Shop Sears until 9 Thun., Fri., Sat. and Mon. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC PHONE FE 5-4171 College President Dies BEMIDJI, Minn. (AP) - Dr. Charles R. Sattgast, 65, president of Bemidji State College for the past 28 years and president.of Sioux Falls College from 1930-36, died in a Rochester, I Minn,, hospital 'Tuesday. * , Shop Sears ToiiiorroH. Fri, and Sal. for Easter Flowers Heklthy Potted Plants Beautiful for Easter YOUR CHOICE: Daffodils or Hyacinths Brighten the home and her life thi* Easter with beautiful, ■ sweet fragrant flowers; given to her by someone who cares. Choose traditional Lilies, hardy Hyancinths, delicate Tulips, Hydrangea or colorful Rose Bushes at a Sears thrifty price. All are expertly potted and grown from diseaserfree bulbs,. Easter Flowers on Sears Main Floor each Charg-c It Colorful Tulips.. Delicate Lilies . llydranaes . ... . 2.66 Rose Bushes . . . . 3.44 1.57 2.66 " Satisfaction guaranteed CT? A X? C or your money back” OJI/xIIVl) I)ownto\Mi I’onliac IMioiie i- i: 5-1 17 ! '' .1-^ f' JJ f Wtoffitr ii • ,| M,|,, WM»t*«r lurMw, (••TMUM Itounv or KrttOKlni ItolN f *r THE PONTIAC ? '.' ’ 'll VOU rn .NO. 4l' . ^ ,' ★ ★ ★•I. IWTfAC. SilCHUiAN. WKI)NltSl)AV, ^IA1U'II ‘4.^. IIMil ^ ft(J l‘ACKS ‘ ^ Slain From Ambush Area Ctiurches Schedule Services lor Good Friday Chrisliaiitt around the world this week are commem* orating the last sad days of Jy^sus on earth. Services | in the Pontiac area are listed below; The annual Good Friday' services sponsored by the. Pontiac Pastor’s Association and Pontiac Area Council of Churches, will be held from noon to 3 p.m. In First Presbyterian Church. Lyndon Salathiel, organist at the host church, will play "Adagio in A Minor" by J. S. Bach preceding the call to worship. Rev. Carl G. Adams of First Methodist Church will preside during the first hour. Speaking on the First and Second Words will be Rev. Dwight Reibling of Baldwin Ave. Evangelical United Brethren Church and Rev. Arlond N. Reid of Newman AME. Dr. Milton H. Bank of Central Methodist cliurch —-——---------------------“^will conduct the second Mai Arthur Is Making Progress WASHINGTON (AP)-Follow-Ing out hlH own promise "to do the very best 1 con,!’ General of the Army .Douglas MacAr-thur was reported "alert" today and making satisfactory projlirass In recovery from the shock of two major operations in 17 days. hour with Rev. Galen Ef. H e r s h e y of the host church. Rev. William Brady of Central Methodist, and Rev. Charles A. Colberg of Gloria Dei Lutheran Church bringing the message. The annual Good Friday .services sponsored by tlie Pontiac Pastor's Association and Pontiac Area Council of Churches, will be held from noon to 3 p.m. in First Presby-i tcrian Church. ' , Col. Donald A. Campbell, executive officer of Walter Reed Army Medical Center, said at 8:50 a.m.: "Gen. MacArthur continues to progress satisfactorily, indicating a better than average post-operative course^ "He is alert and convers-Ing.” Under quesfloning, Campbell said his language meant the 84-year-old general was doing better than the average of patients who have been through the same kind of experience. The new report .followed earlier word from doctors that while the outlook is still ‘-‘guarded,” MacArthur was "better than we had any right to.........hope I for.” Dr. Milton H. Bank\of Central Methodist Chut ' will conduct the second with Rev. Galen E; Hershey of the host church, Rev. William Brady of Central Methodist, abd Rev. Charles A. CMberg of Gloria Dei Lutheran Church bringing the message. I REASON TO HOPE I “There is good' reason to hope ( progress wilf continue'favorably,” they had reported earlier. However, U.S. Army Sur-I gcon General Leonard t>. i Heaton salt! he oould not say when the general would pass his crisis. 'i'he plans were to keep him in the emergency-equipped recovery room of the Walter Reed Arthy Medical Center, probably for a few days. .. «. ,i ■> i In Today's “ Press Ruby Lawyer I Third chief attorney to " pursue new lind of, de- ^ fense - PAGE A-10. ^ Cyprus U ‘Thant names Finn : diplomat as mediator ^ PAGEB-8. . . Discrimipafion Pentagon^urvey shows bias near military *'— I PAGE A-3. I Area News ......C-12 I Astrology ;..........D-5 I Bridge . . . . ......D-5 I Comics ...... .... ..D-5 i Editorials ........ A-6 I Markets ....... .....D-8 I Obituaries ...... .D-7 Sports .......... .D-2—D4 : Theatm ^........./. ."t-lS I TV-Badlo l^ograms D-13 i Wilson, Earl ,... D-13 : Women’s Pages C-1— Lyndon Salathiel, organist at the host church, will play "Adagio In A Minor” by J. S. Bach preceding the call to worship. Former Patient for Mental Ills Faces Charge LAWHENCIi: MOIIUIS LOUIS A. ABERNATHY Witness Says Man Reloaded Rifle td Riddle Youth's Body By ROGER SRIGLEY 'Voices Told Him to” Kill Somebody' and JIM DYGERT A 22 • year ■ old discharged mL'ntal patient yesterday afternoon, ambushed, shot, and. killed his former Poiitiac Town-sliip friend, k7-year-old Lawrence J. Mtorris. The man, l..oulH;,lV(Ray)'Ab-ernathey, kept loading and firing his 22-caliber rifle into th6 youth's limp body, shortly after 2 p.m., according to a witne.ss. “He’s my enemy and he’s had it coming to him,” he shouted in answer to Mrs. Edith Copeluiurs cry, "What arc you doing to that kid'f" Mrs., Copeland walclicd the slaythg from the doorway of her ht)me at .laoz ,Io8lyn, Pontiac TowJi.ship, some 100 feet from the shaliow ditch where Morris' body lay. Rev. Carl G> Adams of First Methodist Church will preside during the first hour. Speaking on the First arid Second Words will be Rev. Dwight Reibling of Baldwin Ave. \EvangeIical United Brkhren Church and Rev. Arlond N. Reid\f Newman AME. Presiding during the/ third hour V7ill be Rev. Edmond. L. Watkins, pastor of Joslyn Avenue Presbyterian Church. . Rev. Lee A. Gragg of Trinity Baptist Church and Rev, Donald Gabler of Bethel United Church of Christ, will be the speakers: Organists will include Roland Richter of Central Methodist, Charles A. Wilson of First Congregational and Mr. Salathiel. MINISTERS’ FELLOWSHIP Rev: Dob Engram, executive director of the ;Voice of Christians Youth in Detroit, will be the speaker for the annual union Good Friday service under the auspices of the Greater Pontiac Evangelical. Ministers' Fellow-ship. * Rev. G. J. Bersche, pastor pf Christian and Missionary Alliance Church, will preside. Worship will be irom 1 to 2:15 p.m. in First Church. Special music will be by the Gospel Echoes Trio comprised of Donna HirSch, Mr. and Mrs. Kyle Wiison. Other pastors participating will be Rev. Harold Gieseke of Bloomfield Hills Baptis| Church, Bloontfield ToWgShip^‘Rev. V. Li Martin of^Sunnyyale Chapel, Rev. Gordon Lindsay j, of Five Points Community, Rev. Horace Mpfry of Aldersgate Methodisl" TTie benediction w i 11 be pronounced by Rev. Robert Shelton, pastor of First Baptist. Mrs. Bruce’ Reh will be organist. ST. VINCENT DE PAUL Solemn Mass at 7:30 p.m. in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church Holy thursduy will con-. (Continued on Page D-8, Col. l) IN PROTEST—Carrying placards and singing as they went, an estimated 1,300 took part in a NAACP-sp9nsored march to Pontiac City Hall yesterday. NAACP leaders termed the demonstration a success' and spld they will press their claims of ..segregation in I o c a I schools, housing and employment practices. For Xiyil Rights Marchers Parade in Pontiac By ALLEN PHILLIPS ^ An orderly 1,300 persons marched to City Hall yesterday hear R o n t i a c Mh praised criticized for its handling of^clal problems. « CaVylng placards and chanting “meedom, freedom,” the crowd was less than expected by 0 a k La n d County NAACP leaders, was enthusiastical- - , \ . ■ Board tV Hear Exiiiange Plan Initial plans for an exchange of Negro and white teachers will be presented to the Pontiac School ^oard tonight. SuptT Dana P. Whitmer will outline the exchange plan and detail guidelines for its use. “Rules governing the pro-, grain will become board policy,” Whitmer said in Ijis written proposal. The exchange program, which will be voluntary, grew out of charges of “de facto segregation” in local schools by some Negro leaders. According, to Whitmer’s proposals, pa|®ipation in the program win be initiated by the teacher. Administrators w i 11 make the pairings of teachers and give^ final approval. .3 YEARS Exchanges will be for at least one year, but no more. than three. Teachers will be returned to •their original assignments after the three-year period or upon^ their written request. Problems and pertinent information of .the exchanges vHU be reviewed with the individual teacher mid principal at the end of each year.; School officials will encourage teachers to engage in tlrc ex>-change program' . ' Although the exchange plan is designed for the exchange of positions by Ne^o and white teachers, the plan is openito any twd teachers who 'Wish, to ex- change ^sitior ly described by them, as Ihe strdngest showing ever made by a local civil rights group. “But this demonstration doesn’t mean. a thing unless,, there’s a followup,” stated Charles Billings, NAACP vice president. “We plan to increase our contact with the school board and other community ipaders.” The demonstrators were pre-donjinantly young Negroes, but many whites, including Mayor Robert, A. Landry, -clergymen and Catholic nuns, took part. They were buffeted by gusty winds on. the half-mile ^alk from board of education offices. There were few sidewalk spec-ators. Lmiking over tlic many youthful faces in the crowd, Charles W. Cheng, ciiairman of the march committee, declared "We have failed these kids. But they are thri ‘freedom-fighters’ in Pontiac today.” Mayor Landry, recalling that Ponitac led the state 12 years ago in passing a fair employment practices ordinance, pledged the city will ‘continue its Icadcrship^in the civil rights area. "Every man haa-^a natural right to shahe in the benefits of culture, and to. receive a good general education and a technical or professional tl^aining,” he said. . Dr. Rigoberto Guzman, Pon-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Abcrnalhcy, of 1210 Taylor, Pontiac Township, a former Pontiac State Hospital patient, was charged with first-degree, murder. HEARING SET Arraigned before Pontiac Township Justice R. Grant Graham on the charge yesterday, Abernathey will face a hearing April 3. He was held in the county jail today without bond. His victim was spreading ru-mpra about his molesting small^ boys in the-neighborho^ Just north of Pontiac, Abernathey told -County .Senior Assistant Prosecutor Robert L. Templin. The Morris boy was walking from a grocery at Vinewood and Joslyn to his home at 3525 Joslyn when he wais shot from a shed across the street where Abernathey lay in ambush, sheriff’s Capt. Leo R. Hazen said. SHOT IN HEAD Moments later, Abernathey stood over, the youth, who was begging for his life, and calmly shot him in the head, according to Abernathey’s statement to Templin. "I want^ to finish the job,” he s^. Mrs. Copeland said Aber-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) By IIOGEH .SRIGLEY and JIM DYGERT lie was not the type wlto would hurt anyone, his mother said. He was never ‘‘psychotic," but had a "behavior disorder,” a spokesman for the Pontiac State Hospital said. But after a two-liour discussion last night, Detroit psycliiatrist Dr. William Gordon presented a different picture of 22-^ year-old Louis R. (Ray) Abernathey Dr. Gordon called Abernathey "dangerous, vicious, and disr oriented schizoid." lie said the man told him he was “driven by voices,” including God's, to kill 17-year-old t|iWi;encc J. Morris yesterday. The voices said if he didn’t kill somebody, particularly Morris, someone was going to kill him, Dr. Gordon (old County Senior Assistant Prosecutor Robert L. Templin. Yet Abernathey, according to neighbors, was often seen hunting and walking the roads with a gun. Protests Urged Yesterday, after years of being shuttled back and forth among parents, reWtives, detention homes and mental in§titu-tions, he used that gun. CHILD PA-HENT ' Abernathey Was one of Pontiac State Hospital’s first child patients, admiited in 1953. Prior to that Genesee Conn* ty Probate Court records show he was placed in a child welfare home in Flint, while his parents were In divorce proceedings, in 1947. He was a patient of the Pontiac institution until 1960, intermittently placed ip convalescent status and living at home. In 1958 he returned voluntarj; ly for six months, saying there was “tog much jbickering between his parents.” He was discharged aS "improved” April 6,1960. “I did it,’” Abernathey told police yesterday after he had fired bullet after bullet Into Morris’ body. “He, had it coming,” he said. "But I’m not going to hurt anyone else.” in Negro Leaders Spur Picketing and Sit-Ins JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP)-Negro leaders'called for "hit and run” picketing and sit-ins at segregated restaurants apd hotels in this tense city today. But it wa’s the unexmeted— some spark that might monate further violence—that had law enforcement agencies, city officials and residents on edge. A false bomb threPt was (he sperk that touched off mob violence yesterday at New Stanton High School, a s|Mrawl-ing brick school with 1,700 Negro students. Pupils filed from the school in prderly'fashion, but later white police and fire units and newsmen became the targets of rocks and bricks. • Off Firemen One %wsmap was mauled and a crir was burned before -order was restored. Demonstrations in downtown Jacksonville, staged with regularity over a period of weeks by . the National Association for Uih Advancement of Colored People have to date provoked no violence. ; Darkness yestrirday continued to provide the cover for harrassment by unruly elements in the Negro sections. Flames an gunfire crackled for the second night, but there was no repetition of the fatal shooting that Monday night claimed the life of a 36-year-old Negro mother of 10 children. ★ . 'Sr. Fires broke out last night in several Negro areas. SHOTGUN charges Shotgun charges splattered a. school building and a police Raim’ .Wonderfully Wjfet soaking rain: J ■That’s the way area fire fighters welcomed the inclement .weather today after a day of rushing from one grass fire • to another.' but it pushed near it,” the fireman said. / “We hope it will give us a breather, maybe even for a I couple of weeks,” , said one { Rontiac fireman. I The Pontiac Fire Department! harrassejd yesterday* with i '26 grass, fires. "Not a record. There' have been days in the past when the department Responded to over 30 grass fires. 18 WATERFORD FIRES Tn Waterford, the tdvmship fire department battled Ik grass fires, and, like P^tiac, t h e blazes were widespread and not confined to one-general area. There was no property damage as a result of the grass. fires in either Waterford Township or Pontiac. „ Firemen in Novi, W a lied Lake, Farmington and Bloomfield Township also spent Jmuch ipf the day fighting grass blazes. Jhosfe in Novi were confronted I by three large fires and a imm-ber 'of small ones. Among them was a blaze which swept, for a mile along the south side of 1-96. ' ' TWO-HOUR FIGHT For about-Two’ hours ..vZ bers of W Rochester Fire Department fought flames which spread over more than 200 acres nn Collier road before they were brought under, control The Lake Orion fire department assisted. Normally, according 'to firemen, the. grass- fire seaSon arrives later, «^sually in April but this year the grass has ^en extremely dry because of the small amount of rainfall and high winds. 1 i ' --I " t '/ Rocks, and bottles struck several autos, injuring at least one motorist. ifn Gteenwpod, Miss., another racial trouble spot, .Negroes planned to march on the courthouse today — despite warnings fiom city officials — to renew voter registration campaign which spawned violence when it iirsi stpriea one year ago. More Snow Due, Says Weatherman. ^he U.S. W e a t h e r Bureau aaid we’re in for snow or freezing rain beginning ti^ht. Temperatures are expected to dip b 25 to 30 tonight and rise : to the mid-30s tomorrow. Snow fliaries or snow is forecast for tomorrow. . L«ss than one half inch fat rain or snow is forecast for tomorrow, and' again about Sunday; Thirty - six was the low in the Pontiac downtown'area prior to 8 a m. today. At I p.m. the recording was 38. 1 : '* ' 1 ‘‘i", ' V ' *i^V‘ ■■■ 'ij ■ ■' ‘‘ ' ■' - 1 1. , ' . 7' U'/t V 'IV- , )' ,i — '.'T-tf*. ' » j,-,, \'f'. J ■ *. lV‘ a''Iv7 C8S, WKUMKSDAY. MAm II an. ttuu * ' ' 1 ' - .. .1 Fulbright Aiks N^w ibok^ by U.S. Cuba, hnama, Viet Nam Policies Hit WASHINGTON (UP!) - Sen. J. William Pulbrlghl, D^Ark., called today for a new li.S.Jgt^ at polk'lea toward mb*,' Pen-am* Olid Viet N*m. It* aeld the American people alumld ebatt-(Ion "myUw" for "rc«lltl#a’' In their approach to the cold war. Fulbright, citairman of the 'Senate Foreign Helallonu (,k»m. mlttoe, laid the United StaloM ahould negotiate revlatonH In the Canal Zone treaty with Panama . "oven though a commitment lo levloe the treaty n>ay bo widely criticised at home." He olio tald the time hud come to recognl/r that Fidel i'aatro’a CommuiilNl regime In Cuba In here to tilay Indetl- nitely at a “dUtaiteful Nince but not an Intolerable | Alihougl) Fulbright apiMurod t(t Imi bucking ttm admlnl«ira-llbn lln* on the two Ufin American hot spot*, he rejected pro-poial* for neutralisation of South Viet Nam. In VIel Nnm, he said, t It e "only two renllNtlc optlona" are expanding Iho war to Commu-(il«l-hel(l territory or giving Iwavler Nop|Htrl for the S«Hilli VletiiainCNe regime. ' lie favored the latter c(torxe, which Ik ('urrent adminltdnttlon unnounced polK’y. ^•'ullH'ighl'H views were c o o- Broomfield to Push Viet Morale Issue tamed in a major foieign ixillcy speech prepared for Senate' delivery. The addroNM appeared ah ■noNt i*ertato to luueli off re* l•ercuNNlon« ill many quartorN. lie Maid I he US. failure to liersiiudc Allies from trading | will) ihe Communist hl(H- was a gtXMl reason for "rehixlog our (two resl'riollons." Hot, he added, "there Is a Ixdlcr one the isdenllal value 4)f tuid(\ a mod-erale volume of Iriidc to non-slroleglc Items, as on lostru-n»>ol for reducing world ton-slons and strenglhcning the foundations of peace." Foihright s a I (1 I h c Jolmson administration shoidd seek to end llu* Ptinanui dispulc hy "stalliig |s)Millvely and clearly tliat It Is prcpuri'd to negotiate revision.^ In the canal Irealy and In submit such changes us are made to the Senate." WASHINGTON (UPl) - De- fense Secretary Uobert S. Me Numaru testified Before I h e House Foreign Affairs Committee today In supiwrl of President Premier Rues Teen's Attack on U.S. Eevoy TOKYO (AP) - Prime Miti-l.ster Hayalo Ikedn. In the first live telecast from dapao to the United States, expressed his country's "deepest- regrets" today for a deranged Japanese youth’s knife attack Tuesday on U.S. Ambassador Edwin 0. Helschauer. "On behalf of llic people of ‘' Japan, I express my deepest regrets for the ^ stabbing of Mr. Relschauer' by a Japano.se youth." thO gray-haired premier said in Japanese. a aid Johnson's |3.4 billion tor program. McNamara also faced grcsslonal questioning alKuit ex-serviceman’s charges tiiul the morale of U.S. milllnry advisers in Soulli Viet Nttin is vi*ry low, ^“There is no doubt whatever Helschauer was reported recovering and hia doctor said the' wound In his right thigh should be healed in about two weeks. U. S. Minister John Emmer-son read a message from Helschauer In which he said he wanted to emphasize that the "unfortunate incident —or any siich irresponsible incident —could have no possible effect on our. great partnership." Ikeda has accepted the resign nation of Japan's state minister for p u b 11 c safety, Takashi Hayakavva, who bowed out in a traditioiial'^Japanese gesture of atonement for the' incident yesterday' which shocked the nation. < Hep. William S. Hroom/leld, H-Oakland.Couiily. said he would ask McNamara about the morale charges leveled by for-nter Air Force Sgt. Alvin Morrison of Ferndalc, Mich., who recently returned from V i c I Nam to be , lionorably discharged. COHRECT TOTAI. In addition to the morale charges. Broomfield said Mor- : rison questioned whether the' •prretd total of American dead had been re|K)rted aiid claimed that the South Vietnamese were improperly using some U.S, military equipment. McNamara gut an advance buildup yesterday from Air Director David E. Bell, who said, that without our military and economic assistance South Viet Nam would have fallen under Commuist domination long ago." Tlie budget, which compares to a j-equest for $4.5 billion last year, provides $2.4 billion for economic assistance and $1 billion for military assistance. JOINT CHIEFS UNHAPPY "The joint chiefs are not hap-, py, BeU4old the House Foreign AffalrAcommittee, But this represents a firni decision to. skin this program dowh to the' bare bones.” Bell accompanied McNamara and Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor'on a recent inspection trip to South Viet Nam. ■PHESSINtii NEED’ l''oll>riglit said the Viidoumcsc i slloatlon "itoscs a prenslng i iiml for a reevuluation of American iKillcy.” In ony case, lie snjd, tlie Unit- States must “meet Its obllgu-tlons and fulfill Us commitments with re.spcct lo Viet Nnm." Fulbright called tor a “cua-dhl reevuluation of our Ciihun |Mliey even though It may lead lo dlNtuNleful conrljUNloUN." He said thare were only three options - an Invasion to destroy Castro, nn ecoiwmlc boycott to bring down his regime, tir "acceptance of tlie Communist rogiiiie qs a dlsugreeuble reality and ahnoymice Init one wlilcli Is not likely lo be removed in the near future.” • Fulbtiglit said “no responsible; .slntesmun advocates" invasion. And, he.said. It .seems clear that the U.S. iMiliey of strangulation by boyOotl "lias been a failure and lliere is no reasmi to believe that il will sueeqed In the fuliirc." awiase PrtH Phtti ilEMOVE CHAINS - Offlclala lather to reopen the county-owned parklni lot at Huron and SaglitoW effective 9 a.m. tomorrow. Tlie (Xrtinty tins agreed to honor free parking tickets Issued shoppers by downtown stores. Otlierwlse, rates are 25 cents tor first three hours and 25 cents each additional hour. From left are Delos Ilanflln, chairman of the County Board of Supervisors; Monroe Osmun, president of 'Downtown Pontiac Business Assn.; and Max Adams, Chamber of Commerce manager.'. City Marchers Parade’ No Hearing on East Side Rezoning * 1 V.V i' * » The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy and turning colder with showers and scattered thundershowers this morning, high 35 to 40. Cloudy, and a little colder tonight and Thnrs- ' day. Snow or freezing rain beginning tonight or ea^y Thursday, changing back to siibw (ir snow flurries late iptors-day. Driving conditions .becoming hazardous. Low tonight 25 to 30, filp Thursday in the mid 30s. Winds mostly northeast to east 8 to 15 mileif. today'and tonight bcc'onling northeast to north 10 to 25 miles Thursday. Outlook fo^ Friday partly cloudy and cald. There will not be a public hearing held on the proposed rezoning to Resi-dentlal-3 of 16 acres on r Pontiac’s East Side at^.. next Wednesday’s City Planning Commission ig meeting as previously I scheduled. . | Henry Smithy planning ■ commission secretary, today said that, persons who have received notices rif „ the hearing in the mail .should disregard them. i The area Involved isv j bounded roughly Jby F^ast Blvd'., Michigan. Tasnithnia and M59 freeway right-of-way. The 'notices,-Smith said,' were mailed after tlie City Commission referred the zoning request b ac'k to plaiincr.s for a rehearing March 10. 4 (Continued From Page One) tiac dentist and head of t h 6 NAACP’s education committee, wap cheered when he spoke nliout the murder of MUalssIppI integration leaded Medgar Evers and the church bombing in Birmingham. NOT VIOLENCE -"^But we do not advocate violence or separation of the races, or redistribution of Negroes over the United States," said Guzman. "We are bitter and disillusioned — but wc do not despair." Hitting a major theme of the march he described Pontiac schools as having "an obvious disparity of Negro children in certain sehools." He praised The Pontiac Press editorial Monday which laitT the blame on housing patterns. , “You and I both know housing discrintination exists In Pontiac," added Charles M. Tucker Jr., real estate broker and member ,of the city’s human relations commission. He said Negroes have a wider selection of housing than before, but ore still discouraged when they inquire about property in white neightnwhoods or try to qualify for mortgages. SUBTLE KIND “In Pontiac we have the subtle k i n d of discrimination," Tucker charged, "the gentleman’s agreement not to seH».to Negroes.” Ostensibly billed lo about Negrb employment, attorney and- former City Corn- grated city in America. If you've seen Pontiac, yoU’ve seen It all, he said to the accompaniment of assents from the crowd. Henry went on to make an appeal lor support of Freedom NOW, all-Negro political party with which he Is affiliated. "Put us on the ballot and you’ll see something happen," he promised. He said the party could work In a coalition with other major parties. Detroit NAACP President Rev. James Wadswortli took a more moderate tone, I)Ut wap adamant. He said It was a myth that Negreies must earn their rights. piuvii>,gf:s given “All of us have been given tliose privileges by the Constitution and by God,” he as.serted. Despite chill winds, most of tiu' crowd stayed to the conclusion of the 90-mlnule rally. Comcn-sys among NAACl' icadera was tliat the Jemonstra-Uon had been a success, bolli as protest and a springboard to press demands to end local discrimination In education, housing and jobs. —, Easter Fun Slated in Waterford Twp. Koreans Riot, Battle Troops Birmingham Area Nows U '■ Road-Building, in Area Brings Drain Problem BI|F)MFIELD Ah ute iMtrllon of rovafed with black TOWN.SHIP-tlu( towhsbtp with blacktop ltu rna«M, ■0 too virlll that portion coverod with water unless pretiaq-110 n u r y meusurtis are lukiai Anticipating a fl(KMl of proh-loms ns highways get longer, Wldc^r mui.imtro numerous, township officials are ^ow attempting to set up a cumpre-lumslve (Irnlnuge program. IWuch of their work will be with the Htale Highway Ito-partmenl. Preliminary talks were opened in l,anslng yesterday Itetween highway department ufticiats and Supervisor Homer Case, Water and Hewer Department H u p t. James A. Scott and township engineers. Tlie engineers at H ii b b e 11, Roth and Clark Inc. of Birmingham are io loigln studies to determine cstlmaUHl costa, Of Immediate c(uic*rii to llw townslilp is tile pro|x)sed s 1 x-lune exit romp from 1-75 onto Square Lakejjflfld. I TWO msTRinv I Hie two drainage districts in-! volved are fropi Woodward to ! Telegraph R o a d and f r o m I Woodward to 1-76 on Square I Lake Road. The state, working with o il V /ioJ federal funds, will be allotted SEOUL Soutli Korea (AP) enough to keep water off the -Troops used tegr gas today to | highway, block thousands ^f students | •-But there’s no point in their marching on Pr«mldont Chung | i,„||,i|„g drains and our doing Hce Park’s mansion to pro est L,,^ „ilng a c'ouple years concessions to Japan in Tokyo case said, talks seeking to normaUze Jap-! ^1,,^. supervisor proposes that 1 township and state cooper- anese-Korean relations. An army lieutenant and several soldiers were injured when tlio shouting mob tried to force its way toward Park’s lilllsidc mansion. ate now to- clear the matter up in advancjp. PROPERTY REZONED ward ahd Hcjuare Lake lias been roaoned at lb« raquest of iliD A A P MU|Mirmarkal chain, "As the lownihip grows and have more of a problem," Case said. "If we htsiied A A P a bnildtog- permit and the ramp were there, one had rain could flood Square Luke Case noted this location In one of ulHiut hIX prolileni spolH in tlie township, Cenlral to present deliberations are iKiNsllile mellKxIs of fl> iioncing drainage progrunis. TllllBE METIIODH "Thero arc throe ways could raise tlie money,” Case v said. "We could take it out of the general fund, but I wouldn’t want to do Hint. Or, we could assess the people In the druliiugo. dlslrld. "Or, wc could usseNN the township at large — a Ninall amount over a long period Of time." The third melliod Is preferred by the supervisor as the one irtiicli could solve all storm sewer problems for the lu'xl several years -- liiose now recognized and those cxpocle(| to crop up. i'’lr}it' however, the engineer,s must survey the situation and (•(line up with some cost esli-mures. Then the state’s fair share can be determined along witll tlie amount tlic town.slilp would need to bear. Case Said, WORK TO BEGIN Ho noted tiiat eonstnicllon of the 1-75 ramp onto Square Lake Road ■ Is scheduled to begin the last quarter of 1965. ‘We would have to have (lyr Combqt troops armed with Ml J rifles ffred tear gas grenades He noted that property near 1 method of financing determined the southwe.st corner of Wood-' by llieti,” Case said. into a surging crowd. The students rc|)lied witll a barrage of rocks. About 2,000 students from Hanyang Universjty.pre.ssed withiq arm’s^ lerigtli of (lie troops, called' out against demonstrators for the first time since Park liecame civilian president last December. City Egg Hunt SetforSaturday ANOTHER MARCH Another group of about 2,000 , ly lay an egg this weekend City officials are going to real- ^ Mrs. WHlianx Cabarras and Mrs. . r„.. _ James Wood. "students marched on the Capi- j #bout ■4,500 of them tq be exaCi. Waterford Township's annual Easter egg hunt for youngsters is slated ^turday at 1 p.m. on the Watertord Township High School football field. Children iq kindergarten through grade four arC eligible tol building and sent in two representatives to Premier jJMi Doo-sun with a set of questions about the Tokyo talks. . Earlier today several thousand studehts were blocked by riot police about 200 yards from Park's residence. Home Minister Um Min-yung conferred briefly with the leaders and led two Into the presidential mansion where they saw Lee Hu-rak, the president’s (jhief secretary. Parks and Recreation employes will be laying the hen • Oakland Park, in cooperation with the Northside Klwahis Glub under the ..|;hairmanship of R, F. McCarty, , produce In sheltered nooks ofi _ . four city parks early Saturday | • Jaycec Park, in coopera-wlth the help of cominfil'lity or-Uion with the Pontiac Area Jun- ganizations. The department’s annual Easter egg bunt for kids Is slated for 2 p.m. Saturdayi rain or shine, according lo I ior Chamber of Commerce un-| der the chairmanship of Tom I Vivian. ■ I MURFhY PARk • M\)rphy Park, in coopera- Lepnard T. Buzz, recreation j lion with the Pontiac Optimist ! supervisor. I Club under the chairmanship of In addition to the eggs, 650; Isadore J. Mintz^.; by toei T’he «ts eaid lator I^e|.„ajo-r prizes and more than ^ * J T.. i 1! nromised lo set up a meeting be- 3 non inHIvlHnallv w r a n n p d .GKsS ana maiipuw mlssloner Milton Henry won 'Waterford wrapped - ^ ^ ............. ^ tweco Park and student leaders candies will be made available ® *' ,1-1.—1. ' ................ . eratmg organizations. outward favor from tjie crowd chamber of Commerce, with a militant speech. ; ^„y “If 1 told yoii this was a v1o-| will receive a prize. Special lent land, You Wduld believe I prizes will be given for certain me,” said Henry, referring to j colored eggs, receot racial (iislui*bances in I* Parents are asked' to keep Cornmissioners reversed v their de^cision a week later and now, the matter won't coriie befo'r e planners again. Instead, if will come up for adoption at j a City Commission meet- 4 mg next montli. , Jacksonville, Fla., a subject evidently in the minds of many in the audience. He described the N e g r o's forcible migration to America, and the black man’s adaptability to a new environment despite existing hardships. .MOST INTEGRATED "And this is the most inte- Kennedy Half-Dollars Vanish Fast in/ Boston BOSTON (AP) - One million John F. Kennedy half-dollars were placed in circulation in New England "Tuesday and Federal Reserve officials said they were snatche^' up as fast as bank tellers could distribute them. this week,. : to participants in tlie Easter egg ' More than 10,000 students j imnt. joined in the demonstrations, i ★ * ★ - „ , ■ , , . ‘Which were held for the second' Boys and girls from pre- at home until »lr.lgl,t day to ;den«un«a Park', lo lO-ye^-olds can take part in the egg Jiunt. , grgani2attong an opportunity , JXOCATIONS IN CITY ‘ to hide the eggs for the enjoy- ' Egg hunts Will be held 'at the { ment of all youngsters. followiijg locations: ; ——..............;—t— ■ Beaiidette Pqfk in coopera-1 -France" has received''m oc e haQdllng of Jhh Tokyo talks and to demand that they be suspended. Similar demonstrations werei staged in Pusan and Taegu, Korea’s second and third largest; cities. More than 3,000 students demonstrated in Seoul Tuesday. Police detained 283 of |he demonstrators. and more than 150 students and policemen were in-Sjurfed in clashes. . ' rtw>(« E«3 —______________^___ T^en Is Slain From Ambush (.Continued From Page One) nathey walked toward her and S. 'M. Woods, 3394 Josiyn, then went back and several more times into the boy’s lifeless body. ’’He just . stood there and“ pumped 12' or 15 shells into him,’’ 'Mrs. Copeland said. Woods said as he phoned police he could see Abernathey shooting. BEST FRIEND Morris lived With his stepfather and mother, Mr. and Mrs. George Duguld, and grandpar-iS, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil £. inn, a few hundred yards •m the scene of his violent leath. He was not employed, according to Mrs. Mann. A KILLER .Abemathey’s mother, Mrs.. Johuj J. Nowicki, 50, said "There’s never been any of the killer nature in Ray." She said he liked to practice shooting at Later, Abernathey said Morris i a dump and once had a gun was his , former “best friend,” j taken away from him by police, but lately had been "picking on NATIONAL WEATHER—Snow is, due today from central Plains eastward , through upper and mid-Mississippi Valley f V into portions of Lakes region. Showers and thundershowers I A are likely to extend along southern Gulf Coast states. Rain •bowers are predictetf over the Ohio Vall'ey into the Virginias. fhe, threatening to kill me and spreading stories about me,” according to police. “He deserved what he got,” Altornathey said to Templin. The victim was dent at Madison Junior High School, Pontiac. He quit school a year ago while jin the eighth grade. , > Abernathey and the Morrto-boy "had spent a good many days together and were very, go^ friends,". Mrs, Nowicki said. Her son - was committed to Pontiac State Hospital ■ f r 0 m Genesee County at the age of 12 in i953„hy petition of his father, Hubert, of Flint. He was released in 1960 as “improved.’/ He previously had been, confined for mental illness at Eloise in Wayne County. ELEVEN SHELLS Hazen said his men found 11 Shell casings. Abernathey showed police how he first fired, from behind the shed and then went into the shed end fired four more shots. Police said the victim' ap-""parently didn’t realize immediately that anyone was shooting at him. He was first hit in‘the stomach by one of the shots fired from inside the shed, police said. The death rifle was a bolt action weapon that had to be reloaded after each shot. It purchased by Abernathey about two months ago at a Pontiac ■sporting goods store, police said. tion with The community coordl- than $9 billion in foreign aid nations division NAACP, | from the United States since under the cochairmAn^hip of 1946. -IN SALE! Sale of Eleotric Razors been planning lo kill Morris for | abouta week. SHOUTED IN STORE Vito Craparotta, 39, owner of Vito’s Market, ^210 Joslyn; ei^-plained that after the killing Abernathey walked into his store and shouted several times "I killeil a guy.” After the grocer smelled the gun barrel the two walked outside where sheriff’s deputy Donald Johnston apprehended Abernathey without resistance. Templin said he requested De-froit psychiatrist Dr. William E. j Gordon to examine Abernathey | at tW county jail.' 1 Abernathey tol|l police he’d ( i.i h'-. • 'Mr Service for the victim will he^ 1:30 p.m. Friday at the Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiac. I Surviving besides His mother are his father j Charles of Armada; a brother* Daniel Garner of Pontiac; and a sister, Clar-of Lapwr. .1 $2 For Your Old Raibr as trade-in On Remington Roll-A-Matic 25 JP'ith Trade-In Without Trad«-in Simms price 16“ Regular $29.50 list price — just in time for Easter gift giving. Bring in your old brand name electric razors (Sunbeom, Norelco, Ronson, Schick or Remington) and get $2.00 toward a brand new Remington golbA-Matic 25 electric razor — on the inside,-the most powerful motor ever in an electric razor. On the outside, exclusive roller combs for closer, more comfortable shgves. T- i r, ' ■A'- •' '^r'’ Juu II I. Tn- Til r".," .'V" 1 ■-'* A" '' ^ ■ A,.;' ■ I’IaC I'HKiHS. VVTJINKSDAV, 11' I ALAIlcji 2;i, im Parents bnd Teens Cari't Comrnunicate ftJilHor'ii A/o(o Wm i» th$ third 0/ /W9 dt»ixitvh«» hy lh» national roparter of United Pr$$9 International dealina with 'the plight of Atfierican youth.) By HARRY FRRiUJlION WASIHNOTON - (ieorp BI r rm r <1 NIiaw (nica NNte, But ^the problem alao exlNta In marrliig^H |lml appear to-be permanent and happy, One of lhe''Nlgn» of tlie times )a (hat eiirrefttly In Mefjaira Maga/lne an article by llarbarn Kang advlaea teemagera in alj No'riouaneNa on how to bkim boozle their parents into thinking eyei-ything la all right, f4nd nobody can say fur sure what happens when pur-ants take a strictly psychiatric approach in Hieir relations to children, Miss Ixiar finds some ol If (u‘b« rld|.eiiloiis and qiioles a niolher lo prove U; "My friend luid a fight wlHi her luisliiind In treril. of Hieir 5-year old diingliler. .Slie’s very tiMyclilalry-mindixl and she has< iieen worried xlck aixmt Its el ,fec( on tile cliild. Tlial kind of tiling Is conlaglons. "And even If I’m saying to my h u s h a n d 'Ymi Inislard' which oiir O-nionHi old woiildn'l imdersliind anyway, I say ii softly and with a stnile on my face." Tomorrow; Bcallemaniu assorted OOUBLE'D Discount Center in 11)47,310,5 man hours were required to produce on aulomo-bile, 'lids WHS cut lo 155 111 HMI'Z, I Corner el Saginaw and Lawrenee In Ponliae Slate Oank Building AiiuTicati parciil.s ciirreully! ' arc under allac.k lor ovcrcodii-I ling Hiclr children and' forcing ' fj _enneu9 AUMMYt fWItr QUALfTY^ FASHION ACCESSORIES!!! GAYMODE . . Am*rica's .Best Sailing Hot* Whatever type of hone yon prefer,] there's a (.ayiiiode faHhion that-K jiiHt right for you. Proportioned lenglliK, styles to suit every taste, we have them all. Whichever Gaymodes you prefer, whichever shade you- select, -you will be getting jhe best of the best. After all —it is the best selling hosiery in America! Siiet 8W to If. , Short, rnodium and long longtht - Colors—Pebble, Gala, Suntan ond White. MILLINERY GLAMOUR 398 to 795 1.25 pr. There has lo be one hat that’s just right for y«m . . . Chic clothes, pert pill-boxes, saury "sailors,” face framing brims aixLinore . .. G.Koose from tailored models or deva.stating flower trims. (!o|ors galore!, Have a wonderful time jiicking your favorite. DRESSY GLOVES Look neat all the time with a smart looking pair of gloves in your favorite fashion color. Favorite fabric too . . . .quick easy-care -nylon. Choose your length from our selection of dress-up long gloves, or s(iorty casuals, also stretch styles in your favorite fabrics. > ■: - - . SIZES 6 to 8 $2 AND ^3 lustrous patent What a terrific style collection! Squared off.designs, softly rounded styles, long and tall! Exciting new. shapes smartly tailored-in patent-plastic . . . with a dazzling luster that sparkles with' fashion'authority! Quality extras-toA like smart, handjles, roomy i rayon lined interiors, zipper pockets! - PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. Nationally famous brands plus great savings! WESTERFIELb SPORT COATS 22.95 connparabU valuo 2^.9S New 'shctliind-look' wools, wool-iind-Orlon* acrvlic ... 2 ai)d 3 button models vvlth side or center vent.s. Plaids, I'hecks, solid effects in liglit-to-dark shades. I Free alterations in time for Easter: GOLDEN EMBLEM’ WORSTED SLACKS 9.95 Permanontly croasod to $av coaly proseing bilht Gabardines, lit Jn plain front kmneJs, reverse K^sts and pjain weaves... pr i^ingle pleat model. Spring tones, 29-42. HERE'S WHY • Wt itll for coik only I YOU S.V.; AT XOIERT HAll • You lovt boeouio wo lovof FULLY LINED LAMI-KNIt SWEATER-JACKET 9.95 coinp. value 12.95 Won t sag, stretch or wrinkle because it’s 100% cotton bonded to foam! Zip-1 ront styling with cadet collar, contfasting color tiinv,chest emblem. New-shades, S-M-L; - FAMOUS WESTERFIELD* SPORT AND I X DRESS SHIRT 2.99 comp, value 3.98 Choice collection of . all the wanted fabrics ... all the popular ‘ models in all the-important colors! Sizes S-M-L-XL: neck sizes 14 to 119. USE OUR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY PLAN... NO EXTRA CHARGE , Plenty of Free Parking Open Sundays 12 Noon to 6 P. M. IN PONTIAC, 200 NORTH SAGINAW STREET ^IN CURKSTON-WaTERFORD on Dixie Hwy. North of Woterford Hilt i w ■L 'r. ^ . .lU . .1 "l ,Vi '■ ," ’,| V,r. ' i.>, V ' ' ' ' ); . , . <" 1 . r !•) f THE PONTIAC PRRSS, WKl)NK8t)AV, MAHCU afl. 1Qfl4 ess , ana Fmance le |lpW8|SSSS.N. ila'> ■:. W 'Che following ere lop prices covering eelea of locally grown produce by groiyora and aold by them In wbolcHulc pnokagc lota. Quotatlona are furnlahed by the Stroll Bureau of Miu-kela aa of Monday. Stock J^art Moves Unevenly Produce Nl-;w Y()IIK (AP) 'Hie aKnrk market moved unevenly In miMl-eralely active trading today. ('hungea of moat key Ht(K-kH were fractional. M(tvcH of a |M)inl or ao wcit* rare, Aneiiii, I vao(iTAai.ai t»a Horitrtdiih. pk. btM .b. , , „ Alrllnea, rails and oils showed ^i»"N 1'^ ” ‘'**'lfhtiy lower tendency. ■ ■ *“ Clieinicgla, atecia and aerospace iHSuea seemed to have an edge to the upalhe. Motors, rubbers, tobaccos, chemicals and electronics were Irregular. Nothing mucli in the way ot a relKKind from ttie lasf correction of historic lilghs was ex|HHrted by analysts before the three^ day Kaster weekend. Tlie stock exchanges., will be closed for ()o(kI Krlda^ Tuesday Ha* Associated Press average of (Ml slocks fell .8 to 300.3. Prices were mixed on the American Slock Exchange. (ialnors Included Dij^u ■ t.'untrol Systems, (ilannini Controls and Mead Johnson. Americdn Stock Exch. '■l8ur*i nfltr dttclm«l polnit m* iSaSII NSW VOSK (AP) - ArturltAn f SiiihAno* Irinittllnni Imlay: Crania P / KXX / Imp Oil / Ini N ..... Kaliar Indw Mich Sugar Mohawk Air Tachnlcolor Pulaloai. MMb. bag boa I, doi. bch. The New York Stock Poultry ^dnd Egjgs QITROIT POOUTRY liropaaimaailhl lydu wlliindlnvblaukl DflfRon (AP) (*rlca« paid p al Datroll (or No. I qualMv llwa Haavv (vpa hani IkiJOi lloblf I,... ....... roantri ivar 5 Iba. m-iki Vrollari - ■ whitai It'JOr Rarrad NSW YORK (AP)-Pollow(np li '—1 OjKk Iraniaclloni on Iro •kTia. DITROIT ROM __ jn at Oolroll by tirat racolvara "Bhilai Orada A lumbo »•«( axira largo WW-AOi lyga MVWar '"t?]!!”’ ___ _______ I largo JM7; large SX-J*/ madlum J0-3J) chackt 2S-J7V». CHICAOO RUTTIR, ROOt CHICAGO (AP) Chicago Marcanllla ■ ---- ii,adyi Ixchanga Ruttar tlaad Jmylng^^ rkaj^ l ’ „.l W B 57l 4» c m. Eggi tloadyi wholoiolt buying prlcai ■ lunchongtd to I highori ■ 70 por cool or boltor Orada A whltea 35Vii mixad mrdlum^ 3) I standardi 30i dirllai ]7X. . chacki 27. CHICAOO POULTRY ' CHICAOO (AP)—(USDA)~Llv# poultry; u/halaaala buvlno ‘ orlcei '/> lowar to ' ] livestock ORTROIT UVRITOCK DBTROIT (AP)-(U8DA)-Conia Slaughter •taari and holtan alow ' talai limited (0 choice ileeri oh run, Holitein ateeri And trel.............. opened atoady faw loadt choice 1050-1150 lb aleert 22.00-23.00 I head high choica 1105 lb, ataora 23.0O-2S.0Oi law imall loti ctvpiea haMara 2t.00-2l.50 udiliy ------------ IS.00-1A.00. Hogi 400. Barrows and gmi under 25 c lowor. Heavier wAlghti and lb barrows and gllta 230 lb 14.JO-I5.OI); I, 11.75-12.50; 2 A 3 4 11.50. vealora 100. Not f Shoop 50. Staady •horn Iambi 21.50-22. •horn 20.50-21.50. 15.00-15.21 CHICAOO LIVRtTOCK CHICAOO (AP) - (USDA) -6,500; butehara gonarolty 25 lowar; i-z 200-220 lb butchers' 15.00-15.25 ; 60 head at 15.35; mixed 1-3 iro-230 Ibi 14,50-15.00; 2-3 *00-220 Ibi 14.00-14.50- 1-3 230250 Iba 13.75-14.50; 2-3 250-270 ..................... Canie 4,000; . Sheep 600; alaUghter •teadyi tlaugblor ewes we choice and prime 55-110 lb ter limbi 22.50-23.00. Stocks of Local Interest F'lgures otter decimal poinfi’ ore elghthi OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS The- followine quotations do not necessarily represent actuol' transactions but ar# Intended as a guide )o the aoorr ' mate trading range ot the securities. Bid Asked AMT Corp ..................' 6.4 . ?.2 Associated Truck 12.6 13.3 Bln-Qlcator /................. 5.6 6.3 Braun Enginearing ............41 43.4 Citizens Utilities Class A ...22.3 23.7 Diamond Crystal ..............13.4 14.5 . Ethyl Corp......... ... 68 71 Maradol Products .............7.6 8.5 Mohawk Rubber Co. 26 28 Michigan Seamless Tube Co. . 20.6 22.2 Pioneer Finance ..............8.1 9.1 Salran Printing ..............13.6 14.5 Varners GIngar Ale .......... 6.4 7.1 WInkelman's . ................11.7 13 Wolverine Shoe ...............32.6 34.2 Wyandotte. Chemical ...........60.4 63.7 MUTUAL FUNDS Attlllated Fund .............l Chemical Fund ...............1 Commonwealth Stock ..........l Keystone Income K-l ......... Keystone Growth K-2 ......... Mass. Investors Growth ...... Mass. Investors Trust........16.15 17.65 Putnam Growth .............. 9.36 10.25 Taiavislon ElectcOnios . .... 8.15 8.88 Wellington Fund' .............14.66 16.J" Windsor Fund ................15.18 16.1 Treasury Positipif WASHINGTON (AP)-The ,^h position of the treasury-compared with corre-spondlrig date a year ago. March 20, 1964 March Balance— $ $9,072,269,780.25 S 7,269,661,503.77 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— S3J24,045,616.14 77,450,404,622.19 WItbdrawBis Fiscal Year— 91,201,272,255.09 87,435,056,047. ’'~T*t^3lf^’,928,806.63 304,05X171,237. Gold Assets— . .. • 15,462,2444193.72^.15,878,067,413. .x-lnelude$ 8363,009,483.05 a|bf not subject to Atftutory llintt. . BOND AVERAGES CeiilRiM by The Aasoelatod Press to 10 10 10 ReHa Ind. util. Fgn. L. Yd. Not Change *.f .: .. - -F.i Noon Tuea. OIJ i02.0 B7.8 90.8 93.2 Prav. "Day 81.2 102.0 87.8 90.8 " ' week Aigo^ 01.4 102.1 87.9 90.fr AAonth aSo 81.7 101.8 88.2 90;2 Year Ago 80.8 99.9 89.3 89.6 1964 High 81,7 102.7 88.4 90.8 1964 Low 8.05 101.5 87.3 90.1 1943 High 02.2 102.4 89.5 91.1 1963 Low 79J 99.5 87.5 88.4 DOW-JONRS NOON AVERAGES STOCKS 30 Indus ................ Ol4.45i-0.84 20 Rolls ................. 191.84-41.04 15 Utils .................... 138.17-«.09 AS Stocks ...^. . ...7TT>_., 282.93+0.11 RONDS 40 Bonds „ 88.90+0.01 10 Higher grade rails . 82.95 10 Second grade -rails 90.87+0.04 10 Public utilities ....87.79+0.01 10 industrials ...........94.00 ... ewngiimS^Pm. ' 10 IS 15' 60 M. RiHa Util. Sloeka Net Cbonge ;.... +J, -.2- +J Noon Tuos. 4ni'161.6:flS0.-1 301.4 Prev. Day *..... 4».2 16M 150.3 301.1 WAok Age . r. . . . . 434.5 161.6 1S0.S 302.2 Month Ago ...... 423.2 158.7 150.1 296.6 Year Ago 363.1 1304 142J)' 258.4 1964 High. 435.7 162.6 1512 303.1 WASHiN.(VIX)N (AP) - ProHl-(linft JuhiiBon wan (iencrl^ today 88 very ho))eful that Con-greaa will act this year on leglg-latioii to provide health caro for the elderly fliienced througli 3o-I’lal Securltyv Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, the aiislstant Senate Democratic leader, >atd in an Interview that Johnson tiad VHHhed tile proNpects for Uie progrum at a Wliite Hopse .meeting with Democrallc congressional clileflalns Tuesday, ;Tlie President is very Interested In getting nctlon on this matter and intends to press for It," (fumphroy said. sensihi.e way Johnson told the United Auto-tnol)ile W'wkers convention in Atlantic Clt$’, N.J., Mohday: "Wo arc going to pass u medical assltance bill for the aged no matter how many months It takes. The sensible and prudent atiii lasting way to do this is llirough the Social Security Sysy tern." . KUCHING,-Malaysia (AP)-Malaysian troops have clashed three times this week with Indonesian raiders in Malaysia’s Borneo state of Sarawak, a Ma-la5^ian spokesman repprted to- The Spokesman said the .latest incident o c c u r red yesterday when a Malaysian patrbl drove a “25-man guerrillaN band back across the jungle 'border separating Sarawak from Indonesian iSorneo. He said the Indonesians were believed to have suffered some casualties. Road Death Toll 428 ^ EAS't/LANSIl^G (APj-Traf-fic accidents' have- killed 428 persons in'h^chigan so fal* this year,j provisional figures com-l-iled by state police showed'today. The highws^ ideath toll at this date last , year ^ 301. 'LBJ Hopeful on Medicare' Repoi;t He'll Urge Congreiiional Action This plcKlge wa.s open to' at least two different interpretations. Most members of ('ont gress seemed to think the President was conceding that ‘‘many months" — stretching into next year—would be required to get bill passed. Others thought he meant he wanted Congress to slay on this year to get the Job done. GOOD POSSIBILITY Humphrey sided with the latter interpretation. He said he thinks there is a good possibility that some arrai^ements jCan he made to get House action on the health care issue. I under,stand some changes in the Social Security laws are going to be considered," he said. ‘That would be a logical place to Include this program.” Tlio date President John I*', Kennedy tried to move the proposal through the House last .year but encountered fonmd-ablc oppo.sltlon from Chairituln Wilbur D. Mills,. D-Ark., of the Ways and Means (Committee. Kennedy had been assured of thfe votes for Senate passage if the House acted. Wall Btroel Is well aware that there still Is a groat deal of popular susplckfn as to what really goes on there. And SEC charges'of unfair privileges enjoyed by fliMir traders — members who buy or sell for them-.selves rather than as brokers for the publli!—are likely/ to get more public, credence- than are denials by exchange officials. IMAGE FIGHT A battle for a betthr public image may well accompany any fight with fhe SEC over tougher regulations; Exchange officials are aware that changing the Ideas most Americans have of some slock market proceedings will be hard. But to thAt'hnd the exchange Is suggesting Tnanges in floor trading ruleS^whlch may remove some of the public’s suspicions, although the proposals seem unlikely to satisfy SEC demands for either a stringent curtailing of floor trading or ending it altogether. The exchange’s board of governors also has just voted to raise standards for original listing of common stocks for trading and to tighten standards for continued listing. Teacher Unit Sets Strike, if Needed DETROIT (AP)-The Detroit Federation of Teachers decided Tuesday : night it/will strike April/tS if it still .considers a strike necessary after an April advisory election by Detroit teachers, on what bargaining plan they want. The school - board proposed earllier Tuesday a secret ballot April ft asking teachers whether to, (1) keep the current negotiation plan which allows the DFT and rival Detroit Education Association to submit grievances to the board separately; Yilj adopt a representative com-iriittw of teachers made up of teachers from both groups, or (3) hav( all teachers repre-' sented by one organization. THIRD PLAN If the city’s 10,000 teachers adopt the third plan, but the school board refuses to enact it, the DFT would strike. The school hoard has- said the vote is only “advisory.” •. ' ★ .Aw ,, The DFT has demanded a collective bargaining election that ,would result-in either it or the DEA being named sole bargaining agent for Detroit- teachers, Retirement Slated by Howard Johnson NEW YORK (AP) - Howard D. Johnson will retire June 1 as chairman of the restaurant and motor lodge chain bearing t-his name, his, son, Hoyrard S.; Johnson, said Joday^ The ydungel* JohU^on, t»resh dent of the chain, told~the New York Society of Security "Analysts that his fAthpr^ 67,,virould «ontfnue^ as an, advii^^nd^n- sultant. - SEC Crackdown Looms Rules Baffle Brews By tlAM lIAWfiON AP IMisIrbss News Analyst NEW YOKK-^TtM New York Stock Exchange is busily tidying up Ur rules and practices in preparation fur. what aome are bllllnii as a sliowdqwn fight with Uie Seouri-lies and Ex-chnngo Commission. But the exchange seems to have Its eye on public upiiilun DAWSON as much ns on thU threatened crackdown hjr the SEC. And that moy^bh very much on the minds of exchange president Keith Funston and otlier ex-cliange officials as they talk today to President Jdhnwm. PliliilliH « SlXCBSSful.h ........... .1 Irwming '■* Q). “I, have just inherited ;I20,(100. With this I would like to establish a trust fund for my children. Plepse explain what a trust fund is, where may I buy one, and how safe it is ip. the future. Will I be able to draw from it myself, even if it is set up for my children?" T.L. A) What you are considering is called, a living trust. Most such trusts provide for a bank as trustee; and you can have your lawyer write up the trust agreement so thpt you could withdraw funds from it if it ever became necessary. You don’t buy a trust — you turn the funds over to your bank (or some other fiduciary) to handle on an annual fee basis. A trust under these circumstances is very safe indeed. Your first step is to see youf lawyer, who must draw up your trust agreement and who will tell you better than I can its benefits or shortcomings. A Q) “I propose to keep some funds in the bank, some in Governments, and some in secute stocks. Perhaps you lyould explain the advantages and disadvantages of lopg^ term Treasury bonds as-dom-pared with savings-dSonds." . A.E. A) The’ main advmitage in holding a long-term Treasury issue, is that you get a higher yield than on a savings bond. A series bond is as liquid ■as any Treasury security, for it is redeemable at any time after two months of holding. An H bond is redeemable one month’s n o 11 c e- after months from issul date. The big advantage that savings bonds have over Treasuries that they cannot fluctuate, since they are always redeemable at face value plus accrued interast. Treasuries, on the other hand,. can. decline in price on any rise in money rates. ; , A major advantage..in holding series Er bond&J^i that^ you can defer reporting yopr interest for income tax purposes until the ib(>nds are" cashed or finally matin'©. '' ' . f I, * Copyrl^t 1N4) j • At 4 TIib iKiard further Just^pl-O' posed a plan to make It possihle to halt trading In natiopal emergencies much faster than tlie 27 minutes that elapsed between first news of Uie assassination of President John F. Kennedy and the exchange’s closing. The 27 minutes saw some of th® /Wildest trading In recent yehrs. Ihe new plan would hliuw a three - man committee to act rather than a seven - member quorunn^oMhe entire board. N|iir KULE^ New rules )tor listing require a company to have «00,000 common sliares outstanding, rather than the present 500,(100, with a maYkot value of $10 million for the publicly held shares, and earning power of at least . $2 million a year before taxes, rather than $1 million after taxes., 1110 SEC has attack^ floor' trading as giving the exchange the atmosphere of a private dub. 'The exchange defends floor trading as adding to the market’s liquidity, defined as the ability of^ a particular stock to absorb reasonable amounts of buying Of aelling at reaaonabl« price chaises. ^ ^ The new rules propoeed by exchange officials would stress floor trading aotlon that would stablUae a fluctuating market and would keep such traders from domlnaUng the market for a particular stock. VERY MINQIl ROLES The SEC feels Uiat the liquidity and stabilizing roles of floof traders are very minor, but Uielr opportunities to make quick killings very real and for tlmt reason harmful to Uie Interest of tlie general public on the outside looking in. , Exchange figures show that normally some 850 membera ace on the trading floor. About 34 of them spend most of their time trading just for theni-selvea, while 70 more are fairly active In this, and over the course of Uie year nearly all members on the floor do aome trading on their oiyn. That, says the exchange, la free enterprise. Getting the general public to see this is the task cut out for exchange officials. Record Easter Sales Seen as Tax Cut Makes Impact By JACK LEFLEK AP Business News Writer NEWv YORK - Easter buying appears headed for a record, helped by a boost from the income tax cut. Mcrdiunts say most of the effect of the ta» reduction Is psychological because taxpayers liaven’t realized much as yet in the way o^ savings. Shopping got off to a rather fast start because Easter falls so early this year, and was reported picking up steam as the holiday approached. In New York, J. Cordon Dakins, dxecutlvc secretary of the National Retail Merchants Association, said reports from around the country indicated a 5 per cent gain over last year although snows, floods and tornadoes hampered shopping in some areas^ TAX CUT Dakins' said the tax cut was one element making it possible to sell more goods. People have fewer worries and more confidence in the future, he said,’ and arc spending accordingly. Most of the money, as usual, is going into apparel for the Easter parades. An Assheiated Press survey of major cities indicated the buying trend Is up in most areas. “On_a day for ^ay basis we are bating sales recorded the same number of days- before Easter last year,” said Geoffrey Swaebe, president of the May Cd. department stores of Los Angeles.“We are looking forward to the impart of the tax cut being very gpod;”^ . DECIDED EFFECT Another Los Angeles retail ex-ecutive, Vaile (J. Young, president of Buffums Department Stores, commented that tax cut has had a very ^ effect.” PpnfToc Dealers, Tempests Set Sales Records Pontiac dealers made a new mid-March sales record, and Tempest sales set a new^brk for any sales period yrhistory, Pontia(i Motor Division report^ '■ ★ A ' , FtmI^ Vr Bridge, general sal^ manager,, said 24,619 pnits were sold during the KMiay period, surpassing by 30 per cent the March 11-20 record set last year.; ■ - ' ■ ■ ^ ■. w ,/★ > rf pf this'total, 8,231 were Tempests, an 88 per cent gain over a year ago, said Bridge.'lt was also the combined 17th consecutive 10-day sales record for Pontiac. Rata rioS STOCK NY lOpc RROULAR S, ■ . ,.20 ‘.. .07 0 W . § Rants ablt 5-15 . 6.1 „ ■+Vi*'|:{; Sr tl A spokesman for a leading Detroit -department store reported “business is very strong and hds been running strong for throe or four months.” The higli rate of automobile production has swelled the money supply there. N(j"w York’s department store chain, Clmbel's, said business has been “quite good" compared with last year. The warmer, weather has helped, according to a spokesman. The discount department ^slore chain, E. J. Korvetle, Inc., .said the early Easter has helped boost sales. “Pre-Easter sales have achieved a most satisfactory level in all ready to wear categories,” said David L. Uunich, present of Macy’s, New York. “Tuere’s a normal increase compared with the pre-Easter season last year—a little ahead but nobody is crowing,” said a Boston merchant. Five leading department stores in Dallas were unanimous in saying that the early Easter had accelerated sales and one reported that the “LDJ” hat, a 'modified lO^gallon with a narrower brim than the one fom by President Johnson was selling rapidly. News in Brief A warning ticket was issued yesterday by Waterford Township police to Paul Kileley, 149 N. Avery, for storage o| Junk cars' on his property,^The ordinance violation^jmust be cor-rected within 15 days., fibcTglasg canoe stored in ^ jarage of George Dean, 4371 iVindlate, Waterford Township, was reported damaged yesterday by vandals who struck it with , an ax. John Palmer, ewner of Palmer’s HaYdware, 1961 E. Auburn, Avon Township, yesterday/reported to the sheriff’s department the theft of .$!« in merchandise, includirtg over a hundred bdxes ” •" I ■ J . »: . ;. /. ■ , *\ I ■' ' ^ ,m ';■ ' ■ ^ ... " .. ^ ' ■ ,l ' '' V' I ,.-yi / ^niK PONTIAC PHKSH, WIUINK.SDAV, MA^C IJ 'i'i. IIHU* mii%i\L !l wyk i akQkiij Deaths in Pontiac Area qEORGE MEREDITH Gi»flrg« M«r«dl(h, es. of 2.1 LBxlndton troops aboard two freighters and an undetermined number of air force jpts participated in ;the annual exer- GM Scientist fx-Convief Diesinioronto He died at Ihc home of his son, Edward Jr>, who Is president and general manager of Frigidaire of Canada, Ltd., a tiM subsidiary. Hitchhikers Rob Ferndale Man, 21 A Ferndale man was kidnaped by two hitchhikers in Detroit last night and then forced out of his car after being driven to Pontiac and robbed. , David Calussl, 21, of 751 Jewel toljtl Pontiac police he had picked up the pair on Woodward at Grand Boulevard. One of them pulled a gun minutes later. After a while the gunman l(K)k over the driving. CalussJ said the men took his car, a wrist watch and 831 be-I'urc dropping him off in a field nerip Avon Road shortly before 11:30 p.m. Warden Won't Quit AUGUSTA, Ga. Ml - Although the warden at l(l(:hmond County w(»rk camp has a criminal record Including a life acn-tence, he says he d()«H not plan to resign. The wai-den, Millard F. Good. Ing, confirmed lust night Uuil he was seiilenced lo prison for between, 19 and 20 years, and again for life - belli service station robberies, lie has been warden at the prison camp since 1955. The Augusta (JiroMlelo dls-clused Gooding’s prison record and raised the question whether he Is legally qualified to re- Vandals Peril City Airport Break, Steal Lights Vital to Operation County Homaj?u/e Kept Aliv& in Senate LAN8IN(i A home rule en fcarry nut (hose functions of gov abllng hill for Michigan's five ernment (b«| are approved in moai |H»|mloiis coutilies Won kepi j Hie Leglslahire, ^ olive lodiiy liy n HUi;|)rlm< move | |,|ivii'|'|i;ii itn In Hie .Seimie A tftowinilling vole lo dehnle Hnr hill imved it from « procedural deaHi dll Hic .Seiinte Inlilo, Tlic lull null muni clfiir tin riiinr liiinllc In tlic .Semite liy mid lllglll liuilglil Any Idlln not piinsril hy tin-8<'nalr (iHiny arc dead lliln The hill wus llrniled lo I'oqn-tles liuviiig a minimum isipuln-Hon of ;i5tMKHi as a compromise. II woiddn'l luive cleared a sennit' commiHce oHierwise A relatively new nnd dangerous type of vniuiallsm In Hic^ PoiiHac area coma, lo IlghI today In an iippeal ifrom Homer D. Hoskins, mnnngcr of ,1'oiiHnc Munlclplil Airport, “We lmv(| encouiilercd an lii' ci’cnslng niimlier of minors Ires passing tin n i r p o r I Inmllng ureas, hreilfting or carrying uWay glnsN glohen nnd other pnrts of runwuy and taxiway lights," lltisklns Htild. panning on rVnwnyn Iimi* taxi 7"*'bdid. Wnyiie, Miiciunli, Gcii vvhicll milomallc- ' , ,, , ,,, esee ninl Kent coiiiitlen to dc- i.iiv ii'iiiccil iiic Inhiic iin iuh wnys Is “very dnngermis hir ^ f Hie IrespHSMers as well as be- ' ' ' Tlic homi' rule hill worilH i lilemeiit a |ir'ivi.slon tif Hie n I slilidion by emihling volery l Tlie ctiininlKec, lieiMled by .Sen, M 111 It II /.uiigiiiiin, It-(iniliil lliipliln, uino Innlstcd lliiit nil prcNCiit county cleC-ilvc ponlllonn cunlli|iiit to be flllcil by purHsiin cIccHoiin, The (IlscloHiire arose following a dispute between Gooding niitil itiebmond County cutnnilsslon- ‘ Ing unlawful. The stale law provides Hud anyone tamperirig with, lirenk-Ing or slenling air|iorf miirking devices, or anyome foiintl with such devices In his po.sHe.Msioii, Is gnilly of a misdemeanor. governmeni: As it Is now, counlle,s’cnn only Gooding said he liml given stale corrections director It. 11. Burson Information concerning inadequate supervision of prisoners at the Rlehmond County Work camp. . scheduled MEETINt; Burson has scheduled u meet-lag Thursday with Richmond commissioners , concerning ’ the prison camp investigation. He wus unuvuilublo immediately for comment on the dlsdosuro of Gooding’s prison record. Slat^^urdon and parole board records show that Gooding was sentenced on an armed robbery charge Jan. 12, 1038, and began serving his time 15 days later at the Brooks County work camp at (jultmun. He was paroled on June 14, 1945. lie was employed as a machine (iperator at the Richmond County work camp Nov. 11,1955, and was namerf acting warden in January 1956- and later was appointed warden. Gooding said the county commissioners knew of his prison record, and he attributed its disclosure to a dispute between himself and the commissioners. Commission Eyes End to Public Housing Ban Federal Public Housing, banned in Pontiac by a city ordinance since 1955, may get Isome new life at next week’s City Commission meeting. Commlssioper Dick M. Kirby last night offered an ordinance which would repeal the 1955 ordinance arid allow for expansion’ of present p.jblic housing in Pontiac. Art**" considerable, debate on whether the action woul/ ‘ open all areas of the possible public hou^g"^pfoj-ects or only allow expansion of the present project, com-i missioners decided to defer any action One week. City A t 10 r n e y William A. Ewart said he would draft the pecessary papers. Ewart said Election Time Vote Liquor Petitions Turned Down By DICK SAUNDERS There’s something" about upgrading liquor licenses that’s: akin to purgatory in the minds of most city commissi(»ers at election time. » “ - This old political axiom that matters relative to liquor are frowned upon, at; such times was evident at last night’s City Commission meeting. It started slow but built to a - point at which Commissioner Loy L. l^dford unveiled some 86 petitions containing more than 1,500 signatures requesting-that the commission okay upgrading all qualified tavern licenses in Pontiac to Class € . ■ status.' - . The petitions hpd^been spon-I sored by owners of both tavern's and Class C licensed establisb-ments in Pontiac.. " . I-',;,. ,,| '■ 1-^ -★ . it ■[ (||y| _____ . Ledford gave the, peQUotB to" .City Clerk Olga Rarkelpj then offered a Resolution calling for the City Commission to request the Michigan pquor. Control Commission (LC0^ “to up-grade taverp licep^s, where qualified; to t^lass C” in ;the city., , ■ -f '• ■ VOTED DOWN His resolution was defeated by a 5-2 vote. Ledford and Gomr missioner Dick M, Kirby” voted for it. Mayor Robert A. Landry and Commissioners William H» Taylor, Charles H. Harmon, Winford E. Bottom shid Samuel J. Whiters opposed the resolution. There «are 17 existing tavern licenses in Pontiab.and about 37 Class flC licenses. Taverns can serve beer by the glass. A Class C -establishment, can serve liquor. f *■ , lI ./a* Ledford'said he, thoiighi’“it '' clear up a lot of dbub't in some minds to have the state decide whoJs_qualified and who is noL_---'^'^ SOtiND BASIS ‘iThat is the basis on which a tavern license should be upgraded. It shouldn’t be a political tbol,” he added. , Af^ the vote, Ledford com-: mented, “I guess that separate the me,n from the boys.” The move c|imaxed a series of earlier actions on individual requests for upgrading tavern Whiters, who, like Ledford, is not up for reelection, clearly adopted a hands-off policy. TWO DEFERRED He moved that requests' for upgrading tavern'licenses at the Trojan Lounge,' 72 Auburn and Club Trinidad, 18 E. Pike, “be deferred until the. April 28 p^ety Tbiii’s tiie first regular meeting of the “new” City Commission. 'Th^ election is April 29 and ah sevcri com-. mission seatx are at stake. Kffby didn’t think there was any harm in giving tentative approval to upgrading since “any final approval is based on state inspection and approval/’ However, there were no other objections to Whiters’ suggestion so action was deferred. Another request^ for a new SDM license at the Liberty Bar, 85 N. Saginaw was deferred pending. a State Supreme Court ruUng on whether or not a nearby beauty academy was a school under the state law prohibiting placement of bars within 500 feet of a school. /Whiters said he’d like to see jsuch matters deferred*^until af-,ler the election “because I think we’ll get manyr liquor requests in the next few iweeks/’ ■ A ^moment later, Ledford-put ’all 17 pri the block. ■ , the commission would, first have to repeal the 1955 ordinance prohibiting any more p d b 11 c housing.iri the city. " . “Then, the . commisslpir"cah act on a r e V i s e d^dinance which, in essen^ would prohibit any pubh^ housing de-velopmenTother than an, addition to^he present project,” Ewaftsald. FAVOR ADDITION Commissioners indicated they would favor adding to the present project, Lakeside H.o m e s on Pontiac’s south side. "It also crcntcK a daitgoj' foi“ 3it.s,” Hoskins noted, "’i’he loval or breaking of runway lights could easily cause a land-' ing aircraft lo crash.” ) H k I n 8 said s(wen glolic.s were taken In one single . Incident recently. Although he liu/ no figures compiled on tossbs through vandalism, Hoskins said that taxiway globc.H riui aboiil 87 each and runway globe.s, $15 each. . ^ Teamster Vote Backs Hoffa llOLLYWtK)!), Fla, (APl-Tlip'TeaniHlers Uiilon has given Ipt presldwil, Jaita-.i R Hoffa, h confldetU'c vole and authorized Its members to con-; trihiitc fuiHls for lil.s appeal against a federal jury-lamper-Ing convjctloh. City Comntisslon Halls PCH Chiefs Gas Truck Is Hit; Man Dies in Fire DEARBORN (AP)~A tractor-trailer truck rammed the rear of a gasoline tanker, killing one driver and touching off a ftre visible for miles today. The driver of the tractor trailer was killed. He was not immediately Identified. The tanker’s driver escaped with minor burns and a station wagon driver escaped uninjured, after “driving through walls of flames” on the f-04 freeway In Dearborn. •' The dcclsIoiiH were reached Tuc.sday at the closing session of a’ quarlerly executive hoard meeting, PASSED UNANIMOUSLY • Hoffa, who presided over the dosed session, said both resolu-llons passed unanimously. The hoard decidect there was 'no obstacle” under the union’e c()n.^llllition or policy lo esluh-lishmenl of “voluntary rank and .file defense funds” in support of Holla’s "current legal struggles with a 'vindictive U.S. Department of Justice." CON'HNUING FAITH It declared “continuing faith” In Hoffa’s stewardship and pledged continuing support against, “assaults on hi.s constitutional privileges and civil liberties.” DOWNTOWN PONTIAC OFFERS Roy B. MacAfec, executlv^' director of the Pontiac Hous- ing Commission, requested the revised ordinance. We are badly overcrowded now,” he said. “Many families that rieed four-bedfoom units are forced to live in tWo-bed-room units. ^ ‘There are no vacancies and have 'bden none for a ton/time. We have a long waiting list and need to expand to handle these people.” ' MacAfee said that the r e vised ordinance* would “ o n 1 y empower us to study and'propose additions. Any. expansion would have to be, approved by the city commisstori before we could build a single unit.’” NEED HELP WITH YOUR INVESTMENT PROBLEMS? The amoiKleil hill scraped Ihruiigli coinmillee without-rec- Senale minority’ louder Hay--mond Dzeiidzel, D-Dolroll, yes-lerduy moved to qualify the bill for (lehule When the necesNiiry Hllh fa-voriilile hnllol was caHl, several senators swilelted Hielr votes to .sniiporl (lehiite of the bill 27-0. The city Commission of-lered Us own version of I Hall lo (he Chiefs last night—a resolution lauding (he i’ontlae Central High .School hoskethull team for ( Us “fine showing” In the / stiite loiirnnment. “i I Muyqr Robert A. Landry ' voiced commission senti- , ■ ments, stating that “You don't have lo win all the lime to he a cliuinpion.” Now Many Woar FALSE TEETH with LOO* Worry t, iHUgh ot WIMSS nOtmiht .........ixtti fe»r (1/ luwtiur* in___________ lllui)li>|i (>t WiibbOiiit h(iW« piHtm nrm«> »nd tm>r» oum-' (iirlikbty ThUi pl«M»nt powder nw no ‘yummy, RiHwy, pumy twite or leeiing. IliHiHivt nituee OHiieen It'e •Ikullne (noii-itnidi, ObeoKs "plute odor" (deiiluFe breetm , Uel rAH'rOOl'H at drug ouuutere ey wry where. ARKING furnished by OOWMTCiWN follomu^ merchanls ...CALL FE 2-9275 Watling, Lerchen & Co. PONTIAC STATE NANkQdG. . :, fONTIAC, MICHKMN jj[jL JtfdwUe Nine ) ARTHUR’S 48 N. Saginaw St. BARNETT’S CLOTHES SHOP 150 N. Saginaw St. BOBEHE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. ^ CONN’S CLOTHES 71 N. Saginaw St. GALLAGHER’S MUSIC SHOP -17 E. Huron St.-. » McCANDLESS CARPETS 1(1 N. Perry St.|:. - OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St. -- SHAW’S JEWELERS 24 N. Saginaw St. FRED Tl. PAULI JEWELERS ; 28 W. Huron St. PONTIAC ENOGASS JEWELERY CO. 25 N. Saginaw St. WARD’S HOME OUTFiniNOCO. 17-19* S. Saginaw St. WYMAN fIrNITURE 17 ,E. Huron SL 18 W. Pike St. THE PONTIAC PRESS / 48 W. Huron St. SCARLETT’S BICYCLE and HOBB^SHOP 20 E. Lawronco ’St, H CLOOHAN DRUG CD. - .*? 72 N. Saginaw St.; |. " GEORQC’S LADIES’ FASHIONS 74 N. Sagii|aw St. ' V . ■ V' /nirH'i'ilV"'. ^^4^ '■ ' ,'h.4 , r . ■' f ;hl Yri i^ll ' (. f ■" !f '!<>'" :i; ■ /.t iji *1 \i' ':'i rriK t’ONTiAC ruKss. w^;I)^M<'.sl)A^^ maucii 2.5. mn ■ I'y^'"''! /■ ; A, ^ ■ >1 ; 1 Exploiion 6amagei Building In Kdihmir WKen it's PNHX Mascot Pax B«n«(iti Bill ' |(j|| 24 Pakistaiiis on Border of India for Police, Firemiiii COLUMBIA; S,C,'(^^ -- South > Carollnii Deinocrnls oiJeh IIk-Ii' biennial convention today to elect ataie officers and Able (tafes (0 the national {tarty incab tag in AtlaiitR' City this auininriv When Is Husky Not a LANSING (Al») ,-y A. bill to Ava- By .IKANMAIUK IfiLKlNS j might to know. A’nd she said it , w i 11 ilie H H A I. Avalanche: wm« a Samoyed. {ilease sltind uit ' ' I'MBBt ll)H:NTH''ICA'nON AvuluncliO la the llcleaaea had IdeiiUfltHl It an (lov Dotiiilil 8, BnsHcll gives Ilia' Norllicrn High Sclimil maM> iHingy, the keynote address, l'’uclng Ihe ci|{ As sucli, it is her duly o - |„(,.,.vipv*s with Mill (ieiegates la a revonimcnda [he jireseni al■^Nnrl)ierns alh*j tion adopted yesterday by the leilccvenia,' resolutions committee that the i di r e e cool eairtneH, j (lonoral. Assembly Ite nuked to Avalumlie, step up Its altidy of South t aro i,„vr nudiised all Iml their | Una's voter registration laws, owners ami a tew loeal dog ' ‘ , e\|MTts,,, Auxiliary H«od Dios ; with a call | ATLANTIC CITY, N,.l, (Al-i 1''^'''“^''1 ‘ 'J/ - Katherine Mav Allman, pre.sl. . dent of Ihe Aimyican Me.li:;d nveiill.v lu.ltllshcd photogiaph Association Auxiliary in l!i.llM!i;Norlhern mascol showed and the wife of Dr, it.uid Jt Allman, past presidenf of. Ihej ^ AMA, died Tuesday in a hospl'*j Mrs. Alger ralse.s sliow dogs lal, ' I and has five chumptdns. So she laaelie tNorthern's yearbook) and alliletkv dlr«etor‘K I d o o Joliiismi «llselosed lliaf Ihe la* lest puhllshed pietare oi Ihe Norlhero mgiseol, taken at a recent linskeiliall game was mil Avalnnehe (the dog). Wtio Is this Imposter? Wliere Is Avalanche? BRAND NEW 11“ r?TSi‘ |j;::l|ggU| PERSONAL PORTABLE ....."JH • Only Lbs. • ConveniOnt Carrying handle f Sturdy steel A-frame • New video amplifier • Excollonf sound from 5" oval speaker • Chassis mounted to new shell bond tube • Available in decorator colors Sylvan Stereo & TIT Sales Open Monday, Wednesday and Fridoy Evenings 'Til 9 2363 Orchard Ik. Rd. (SylVon Centefl Phqnp 682-0199 .tohn.soir was able to answer lh(‘ second qimslion The mns-(Alt wM inn’chascd as a jiuppy by the yearbook staff and given til the school, Bui she Is loo young to attend the games iifjd and, flrefnen to colleel won men’s eontpqtiBatlftn for heart iHsed npsnsh and lung dlaabllltles was paHse by the Senate Tilesdav, i The blparllNan bill wniild pt i The bl|>arliNan bill wniild put j the burden of priKif on Uie employer In eoinjienNutlun claim leaHOH, NKW Dlljldll. IndlH (At*)-, Twenty-four ruklslanlo were klllpd ,in a'Wdor duah near UU; 80 itiUe’a west of Srinagar, eapllal of disputed’Kashmlif, official sources said Tuesday. They (?l«lmed that Pakistani Vdluiitoers penelrulml o mite and iP half an'ONM Hie Indian idde of the ecHHc-flre '^no In d^ashmlr Monday night and opeiud , fire on Indlui) border pulrolil'. Of the world's total supply pf sugoi', nhmii iwo-thlrds iioines from' sugar cane. The other third Id derived from augur beets wlihdi enn lie grown Nile-eossfully In cooler i''llmul(>H. Opon Bldi April 8 for Sfafa Road W?rk UNSING (AP) - 'Hie way Department says It will opeh”bldH April 8 dn 48 conatrue-,llon and spring maintenance {irojects costing an estimated 811,8 million, Ltargest of Hie pro-Jeels will be the paving «vi neni'ly five miles of the Urnnd Hojilds Iflaat-Wesi Ireoway lor $l,;t Nillllon. Ls staying with Hu; athletic rector, Avalanche will not be full grown until July or August. IMI’O.STKK ^ Meanwhile t h e 'Imposter', hair - year - old (Jiief i'onllae SKowhile Is ertrrylng on Ihe Ira-dillons. Owned by Mr, and Mrs, .liimcs Knrr of tORl Canlerbury. .she lias been used us the NoiHi-ern mnscol for the past two years, A family friemi ami NorCh-erii s t II d e ii 1, .Sue Morris '^of IIIKB MIgliwomI Bmilrviird, brings'Siiowy lo the guines. Are the I lusk-y .mascots huskies? No, Holli are Samoyed.s, I’nrehn.sed from Mr. and Mrs, 'I'homns .1. I’Innte (if'Bloonilield Hills, Avulanehe is registered as a Samoyed with the Aniei'i-can Kennel Club. So is her stand-iiul^now'y, OIH(iINAl"MAS(4)T The original Norlhern ma.scMil, Frosty, is owmal by Mr, and Mr.s!” F r n e s I' Mann (if .KiriO FoiirUi Avenue. f* )lay Hffrr Thr l/i.sAv'r lo Your MOSEY \\ orrios ... *3000 Compare Before You Borrowf On 2nd Mortgages and Land Contracts FE 8-4022 Tamily acceptance corp. 10 West Huron 317 National b\cIi. Pontiac Frosty reigned froiii IM.'ill (o 'iil when Mary 1-y n a • Muiiii allemhaf Norlhern, ( • ^ ■ . A I I li (I lug h Frosty is not ail AKC - registered dyg, she niosr closely i'es(;mbles a husky. While Snowy iincl Avalanelie are liolli all white, I''rosty is a multicolor 'wliTtCj hla<'k, brown j nnct beige. Hie eolorwigs of a [husky. • ■ - , ' BKTTFK rKMl'KKMKNT ! J3oih Mrs. f’lantc and Mi\s. [ Alger -agf-ce (hat Hie Samoyed | i,s generally of better .-temper-[.inenl than thq husky. A SaiTKiy.ed..is u.sUally white jAr light grey while a .husky will ,bo multicolored with while, brown, beige and black, often mixed.' .. •, Now if you’re still eorifused, the dog pi(.dun'd on the left is l''rosty, tlie.niiddle dog is Snowy and Avalanche js oil tlie rigid. Drowns in Icy Lake IIFSPFHIA (AFi David' Ghage, 8, fell througli the ice of Burris Lake' six miles north ol liere Tuesday .and drowned.: David was, |)laying with other •school ehildren, Skin divers recovered flic body. STILL SQUINTING THROUGH OLD-FASHIONED BIFOCALS? k7r-:'l You need Blended Lenses. .-I!i,i:ni)i:i) LlvNSLS (‘limiuale dial ‘Mell-lale hil'oea] (lividiiifi; line” . . . make you look years youu{i;erI W idi Sfiars IMjIvINIBvI) IjLNSI^S lliere are no imne al)rii|>l jiiinps in vision, no sijuiuliiifi: and neek-craninjj^I (joine in loday . . . ask lor BLl’.iINI)LI) LLlNSI^iS, aiiodier prodnel ol di(‘skillfMl o|>lieiaiis alySears. The Optical Dept, at Sears KNOWLEDGE SKILL EXPERIENCE Ly<-« lvxniiiiiM‘