r-'f'-- Tl Thf Wtath«r ■ '-irtr,: Wi*tk«r Bii^a rarmrt n»iidy, cmllMicd wwm THE PONTIAC ^ Home Edition ★ ★ ★ • PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. WEDNgfcAY. MAY 4> 19.60—32 PAGES Sorry Tony/ No Escape lly EARL WILSON LONDON - TU iaid h«re Ip the pube of Loniton that joung _ Tony Jones in a tender moment promised Margaret, “I’U take youlsway from all this royal^ Ja».” For tha1^rash remark, If he really made It, young Antony Arm-strong-Jones should soon find himself in Meg’s royal doghouse for failure to deUver. Because, far from helping Meg escape, TONY Tony’s trapped nqw In the royalty ritual himself. ^ Today, with "wedding fever" spreading through England and everybody getting a little hysterical about Friday’s royal nuptials. It was clear that At Buckingham Palace have taken over Tony’s future. SORT OF A SYMBOL While TQnp woa't exactly become one ^ of (he Crown’s Jewels, heis^leitlBed-to^— be sort of a symbol of “Look how nicely we Integrate with the commoners" .. . Democracy, I960 style. Meg has a “retirement pUn” which included a nke folksy visit to America. ' That appears to be pigeonholed Indefinitely. Instead, she’s going on for probably a long time with the same old royal razzle-dazzle ... ^ Cornerstone - layings, flag - raisings, gnd royal garden-parties where It al-. most always rains, driving yOu inside sultry tent irbere your drlilks are served without Ice, are to bo Meg’s lot indefinitely. And Tony, who wanted to be the , Boy Beatnik of the Buckingham Falaee Annex, will bo at her side ... or Just a couple of steps behind. ★ ★ ★ "Margaret.has been mad to go to America for several years," a really close friend of the Princess told me. "She wanted to go everywhere In America—to see the whole lot.’’. 'ALL sqE TALKED ABOUr She read hungrily, about It, she questioned people. “That’s all she talked about-a«blng America.” But now that Tany!s-JaJba ana— of the instruments of the Empire, J he’s got to he taken around and i held up for Inspection at more fit;,/ Queen Elizabeth Is said also to have helped apply the squeeze, convincing Margaret that she coiridn’t withdraw , .. “retire.” ★ ★ * In'fact. Tony Is seen as possibly giving Margaret a new social importance. “If they remain simply the Royal Joneses, they aould be very popular," points out the London Observer. Tops Ike s *56 Indiana Mark Victory Boosts VP'sCampaign for Presidency Sen. Jack Well Ahead of Total Accumulated by Kefouver Mwintlng returns from: Indiana today gave Vice President Richard M. Nixon a two-way boost in his drive for the presidency^—a clear-cut popularity victory over Sen. John F. Kennedy and; a bigger vote than Presi-i dent Eisenhower rolled-up in the 1956 primary. I Nixon’s triumph was the most decisive scored in Tuwday’s party votes. Protest Civil Defense Test Grant Waterford Federal Water Aid Plans lor an 8- to 10-million dol- had^approved the township's bid ,lsr water program In Waterford! lor financial help. Township were spurred today byj UnoMoiany lafermed el the aimouttcemeirt of -a *100,000 Broomfiekl'a edws, Tewuablp Su- With 4.107 of the. 4.261 Indiana; I precincts reported, Nlxoi) had 395, 519 In the Republican count and Kennedy 346,652 on the Demo^at-kj|l^. ’Ihnt pushed Nixon past I the %i,913 Etstmhower got tour years ago. Kemwdy, however, was well ahead of tte UZ,Ht Sea. Eatee Keteuver e( Tenaeasee got in Indiaiia'a IMS IK^raHe voting, and Kennedy bneken took Mon i.vatem for the entire town- | ifc.t. ship of 4S.7M people. federal loan for preliminary engineering. ’ ,. Rep. WUIlam S. $rBqmfield (R-OnMimd county) d< ' ington, D.C./thi^ School Vote Crucial pervlaor lamer Joluwon prided that Dinas wonM now nwve the Rreotlou of a Mg Johnson said that an 8- to iq-milllon dollar revenue bond issue to finance the progran# would be up lor approve ‘ months. But, as votes seeped in from' 'Tumday'S balloting, other presi-l dential candidates counted vie- Tbe bonds would be paid through an increase in water - bm Johnson said hetdldift htNW yet how much. Actual eonstruetto Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota won bis first Denw-^ fltutic i^niary in the light-voting _ [Dishdet of Cohimbia. An eaqwfded, Kennedy won nB Ohio’s deiegateo to tko Demo-cralle Nnlional Osaventton. Students' Future at Stake By NARVEV Zt'CKKRBERO Take It from a businessman who knows, the kids are going to have a tough way to go in this world if they aren’t basically grounded in a good ed]Ucation. , Businessmen, says Howard O. Towers, former president of thTTontlac Area Chamber of Commerce, can appreciate fully the school system’s need for the 2.8 mill increase to the voted tax rate which will be presented on Monday’s ballot. "I can’t see how anyone could, vote against anything that would Improve our education program,” says Powers. “Yon gel what yon pay tor lly of —------------------ — weUs asM storage tank* ia •cfeednled tor geptomher of next nmagement wHh the HHFA. Construction costs are estimated at present at *8,817,000. Supplementary costs are expected to push the total bill considerably higher, said Johnson. ♦ w ★ The go-ahead signal to begin prellminaiy engineering will be given Imibediately. Johnson said, to the township’s engineers.'Johnson ft Anderson. This is the firm that prefpared a survey of the- war ter situatimt for the federal agency. The general ontlhw of eon-stractfon plnns were disclosed In December when the ’Township Bonrd nppHed to the PTHA for pinnning nid. The township summed them up to -the federal govemnifflat in i Republican delegates la that In two nonpresidential primaries, the Results focused m issues as well as personalities. RIOHT1ST8 LEAD 1. Connect all the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) . BALKS AT ALERT — All unidentified riiortt-clad New York womaa is arrested by pidice as she violently protests taidng shelter in yesltr-da/s nationwide dvtl defense test. She was one of 25 ob;|ectors to war and nuclear tests who Wtew . ItiSled IR llkttgan. AT nwMw arrested in Oty Hail Park lor refusing to triie tbeller-, Tb* alert was part of a three-day test madiBess to respond to an enemy attaoir. CRRetals theoretically 902,762 persons were For LowJneome Oldsters, Says Ike Offers Health-Care Plan WA§HIKgTC»! (F-The Eiseh-States RlghU candidates adminislrhtlon today prp- Loyalisl candidates in (UabarnSj^^^^ *i200 000 000 annua 1 primary tor Democratic presi-jP°~, . » ’ ’ j- , dential electors. In Florida, alfederal-state . medical ca*e States Rights rhan and a racial swu" for the moderate won the right t Indiana Js traditianally Re-pnbueaa. bnt Kennedy had cem- he would outpoU Nixon. The two canthdatei were on separate ballots. Each bad what political obaervere earlier described as minor oppoeition. Bat that op^osi^ took heavy cbi^ This gave Nixon Indiana’s. 32 (Continued on Page 2, CW. 7) j pay *24 a year Participants Married couples with an annuall , . i income above *3.800 would not be' The plan contemptotee thM the eligiblo-fer the program, or single states would woric out detailed pro-persons with more bian *2,500 income, Secretary of Welfare Arthur S. Flemming outlined the administration plan to the House W'ays and Means Committee which is considering a variety of pn^sals tor health programs for the aged. prm-Me appnxlinateiy I* mIBton isrtims. A state could, UHr instwee. pefMMs « and ever whn hnve provide foi; the health ca» Ilndl4ii ressMircca with the appor- thitjugh a private insurance coro-tnnlty al tkktag atepa which, R fptay, or the state could run Its taken, will ennhle them ta e^ own program, wttk the heavy ecanamle hnrdea Filling Station The ower-all coaU would be aidlt 50-50 between the federal government and the states. flemmlag expreaaed belief would take periuipa two yean, to get the prapeaed prupwm lato gram that Is deatgned ta aeUev* Just one abjective—nnmely. He said the coat during the fiscal year beginning July 1 to make reac^ for the program would be about five million dollars. ’That 'states to belp them develop the Ward Will Build 2-Story Store in Shopping Center Outlets» in Waterford Expected to Br Almost All Ready by 1961 Montgomery. Ward * Co. will be one of the major tenants In the proposed shopping center to be built at Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake roads In Waterford Township, the company announced today. w w * Details of the mUhlmiliion-doi-lar center are Mill being witii held pending architectural design and completion of leases with prospective tenants, safi WUiiam ^ Cciuheiiaoii, partiiee in the AtoW— Management Co., Detroit, develop- MsntgMnery Ward A Ca. said H wW bnMd n twwstsry depart-nieni staiw to the 1 ’The store is expected to open in the fall of 1981. according to Russel] P. Bygel. company vice president and north central reatoa general manager. Gershenson said moat the other stores idanned for the center will be competed then also. # ft > - He said details of the center, to be built on the TMcre site at the northwert corner of the intersection, are Mill indefinite because It isn’t decided yet whether the center wlQ be of a nteU tyw dedgn. I Montgomery Ward has signed a lease. Ward’s Poitiae ttoiv) Is the •Sad annonaced under the cem-paay’e current expnnslen program. Te date. S7 ef these stores have been opened .for tor bnstness,JR of them In simp-ping centers simllsr to the one pinnned for Waterford Towa-shlp. The Pontiac Press announced construction of the center April IS when it learned of the record- ■ ing of deeds tor the property in the Register of Deeds Office. ‘FAST DUTRIBimON’ "Customer service will be handled through our central fadli- , ties at the Allen Park distribuBon oenter,” Bygd said. “The Water- -ford store will haye the advantage of fast merdiandise delivery from both the Allen Park and the Chicago distribution centers.’’ HOWARD O. POWERS Sun, Warm Rains to Bring Flowers Sunny skiet and warm rains tor the next' five days will bring leaves and flowers apoppiii’ as high temperatures continue in the 70s. Normal laws for the period will be near 50. ft ft ft • ' Ihuraday’s hijSi wUl' reach 75, the weatherman says. ^Temperatures wUl be a little cooler Friday but warmer again about Monday. Fredpltatfoa will average Mornir* southwesteriy winds at seven miles an hour will increase to 14-20 miles late today, dimfliish tonight and become south te south-. tm at 14-22 miles Thursday. ■ , ft ft ft, ’ Fifiy-tWb was the lowest record-ing 'm ta cask re-, ceipta and employe tax money as ke took the money to Ike hank From tke moment she took the stand her nsnal Jaunty air vanished and she began tiylng to hold back the tears. The couple had hem married te years. Arnaz did not contest the divorce and was not present ' Toffowing The' polygraph test late yesteiday, Jostock down and told us he made up the! story because he didn’t have! „.....l.. [• (Continued’on Page 2. Col.’ 2) In Todays Press b Uojad nrlooi.' HEOOES on *TCE PRESIDENT-Vice t>fesl-dent Nixon, looking met a ’campaign train’ at the World Trade Fair in New York today, put H one fdot on the bandwagon of Gov, Nelson Roc^eller. NBxon said the New York ptvernor "hftd tremendous support” among Republicans and should make his ow'n decision on whether to tun for vice president. ; ^ ( tl.te ■ ■ Dscros'j ww. f>-to - ■ ■ tow*. Mtol samiers'................. lift bajiu iit»- _ RHsoa. Earl .............. ( K ■* rpM Bes Bt»sw* womm s rages .................. reported today twn soldiers have hoea misatag tonr dhys from a desert senrah team tai Libya. The men an mensbero of a team tmrekhig for Ute n-maias. of tour erewmen te dm U. S. bomber Lady Be Good which erashlaaded ta tim Nortli Afrieaa dmert In IMS. CAFE CANAYEBAL. Fla. IB -> Tecimlonl dUficHillea today forced a one-day poetponewaent In the lannohing te a hag« bal* leoa eommnnirattons sotelOte tram this mleaile test eentor. The shot had been schedntod to- WASHINGTON (AP) A federal grand Jury te Miand. Fla., , ehnrged today the Mgiri te an ! American private ptaae to Cnhn tost March SI mss mraaged hy : the Castrs gOv.erammt. The Jury named one te the Anmricaw pi‘ ‘ ! Into absard, and a rfpramntatlve I of the Cnban Air Farce la Mteiiri I altil- having aeted ns ngenia^. - i , • VWO ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. AVEDXESl)AY. MAY 4, 1060 Dems Seeking Peace at Convention Friday By OBOME T. TRUMBVIX iR. Grawl fUtpidi could be the scene o{ a peace parley Friday night as two tacOone or*the Oakland County Demecratic party try to unite for tl^e good of t^ party. Cbuoty chainnan Cafkw G. Ridi-amaan hinted at the paas-thei;>eacc four delegates aad two altenaitee the MIcMgea delcfatloa at the Natloaai ConventloB duly n to 1m- Aagelee. The party’s ooml- ’nw Ug question Is: Win the reet of the tribh tisht opf Sita ol the summit wfll Be The pR^jtltod Ifotel where the Oakland County Democratic Committee will have 145 delegates at the two-day spring state convention. It will be tte laigest single delegation 4here. Out of the group wilt emerge To date, there are 18 local Dem-Rwts bidding for die six aoats, "this'ti one of the largest number of delepite candidates we’vel^!^' had, considering the distance they'll have to travel and at their own expense," Richardson said. Surrounding the delegate contest wilt be a posi^ible continuation of the test of power between the so- Staff Psychiatrist Raps Pontiac General Hospital Dr. L. Jerome Fink. posite direction." At ttie 'time^be said this, Rich- pro^de Mne .wchiltrlc beds as promised, according to Fink, was cited as the root of the complaint. "Psychiatric patients at Pontiac General Hospital," Fink further charged, "are cloaked in snper- ed by an aura of ignorance . Dr. John Marra, medical di> P^residenf s Inifiafwe Amazes Republicans WASHINGTON (AP) — Repi^ 1km lea aaid today President Eisenhower is showing an Inereaa-ing tendency to take action on Ui own as his term nears Its end. They said they were amazed at the extent to which he is any takhv durge of l matters. In W past, some Rqi>ub-Ucans have felt that Eisenhower Too often todc a nonpartisan position avoiding pdttkal battles. The latest examine they cite in- . Donegan, a member Oft die Subvecrive. Activities Control Board, and PaUl A. Sweeney, a Justice Department attorney, to the Federal Power Com-mi«don. OPINIONS NOT SOUGHT . JU^blican eongreasioaal leaders bad been asked to check on the names of four other men they told were being considered as pos- _ Dr. Mana, lish admittiag procedurea. The nine piydiiatric beds have been avaOidilt for dnae patknta who have been accepted as quaUfM ■ > an Ora. '■'*..........-■■■■.. Fiidt a^ also, hi hia report, that the hoqiital Is guilty of in- TELLB or CASE One patient was removed from Pontiac General Hoqdtal Fink’s advisement that the patient but a "quietly withdrawn cata- ‘Hw eoie cited abober’- aaya Fink, "is tyiNcal of the primitive and archaic attitudes of pre^ dice home by these gestkiilatars (d the gavel who choose to kagp themselves blindly unenUglit- pital were informed on Dec. that nine psychiatric beds were ready for use, . ......w w ♦ "To date," says Fink, "not one psychfotric bed has been made available. lUs myth of the nine psychiatric beds stands as a scathing indictment of the medical integrity of those physlclana and administrators who at present govern Pontiac General Hospital. , WWW "Nine psychiatric beds, scattered. bn three separate floors — complefod on Dec. 22 — now are occupied as private rooms by Rooeevelt Hotel ofice from Frank J. SerawsU, who, Richard-said, was behind him—this time. w * * At the county convention in Pon-tfhc last month’ it was Sierswskl, Richardson’s probHie and branch manager of the Femdale Secretary State's t)tQce. who unseated his boas for convention diair-mamhiB in a floor fight which can sf IMS. MeanwUle, there was little ing on in the other camp, directed by veteran State Central Committee meiliber Mrs. Harriett Phillips. Huntington Woods housewife'and staunch supporter of Lt. Gov. John B. Swainaon for governor. -R was leanied. however, ADa Phillips will seek to give George J. Fulkerson, candidate for pioaecutor, the gavel as Grand Rapids convention chairman. Mrs. Phillips obviously would like to her favorites win the six contested The bay in Birmingham ' \ , Club Threatens to Sue Beverly Hills Zoners WASirarCTON BOUND Washington junior high schools departed this morning for the annual trip to Washington, D. C. Pcfched alep fliefr tagfige as fliey awaited the P*bBm PrM« rk«u bus to take fliem to the railroad station in Detroit were (from left) Dorothy Boyd. Madlaon; John lagrigg, Washington; Ruth Leacher, Washington; and Ernie Humphreys, Madison. The group will retton to Pontiac on Sunday. notified of the shift. sible nominees. They saST fl»8ej«n«*“l ^ surgical patients, but four were dumped overboard and. ^ available to. the proposed Donegan and Sweeney named iP'y*^**^*^*" •»vice. without their even having been ^ * ’ — - - "Organized medicine must cor-. rect such situations immediately M- it will live to bide its face in shame tor Such inefficiency and downright intellectual dishonesty.’* Marra said there have been ‘‘many'' ps.vckiatrie pntlenta aa-lag the beds since the flret of Fulkerson, a Birmingham tMor-ney, didn’t attend Mrs. PbUlipa’ secret "party oiganizatiaii'’ aeaaiaii in Pontiac last Tbuisday. ♦ W '#1 TIxMe bidding for the national degate posts an: Richardion; Mrs. Phillips; BIrs. Fayr Moskowttz, Hunting ton Woods; Robert L. Fenton, Oak Park; Mrs. Mattie L Baker. Roy^d Oak Township; Howard M. Arnold, Royal Oak; Charles D. Arnold, Ha-zd Paric; Mrs. Mikhwd Burns. Wa-tnford TViwnship; T. C. Holland. Pontiac; Mrs. Margaret G. McCaU, Holly. * * ♦ Also Jean Lee, Farmington; Mrs. William Cletiuxums, Bloomfield Tbwnship; Roy Duncan, TVoy; Dr. Howard McNeOl, Bloomfield Hills; Mrs. Pauline Mott, Royal Oak; Mrs. Cynthia Nelsi^, Davtsburg; Mrs. Helene Gottfried. Royal Oak; and Harold Julian, Berkley. about 11:30. * d His wife was not at home when |he fire occurred. TYiwnahip firemen said .the came wu qareless Fair Weather General Over Eastern U.S. By Ikn Associated Press Stonny and Mcd wea plagued Bortherii and western sections but it was pleasant Weather again today in most of the eastern half of flie country. strong winds and hail, pounded parts of north central Texas. Oida-homa, Kansas, Nebraska and Iowa. Snow lai in parts of North Dakota and ahoweri sprinkled areas in the cool belt in the Dakotas, Minnesota and the northern Great "We can’t accept violent patients ecauke we aren’t equipped to han-■fdle Uiem,^* Marra said. "’The nine psychiatric beds are aivallable tor psychiatric patients as long as they come under certain classifications. all along. We are set up to take acute patients that can be .handled in the hospital but who are not vlMent and whom we can m home after a reasonable time. But once a patient is diagnosed as being in need of institutional care, we have to remove them. Gas Station Robbery 'Hoax' Alter Lie Test The Weather ^continued From P«^ one) i5"^.I;‘i‘.^ienough money to cover his daily A'*il®«o«nf payment to Speedway Pe- aim taSar account payment to Speedway F unifki taS troleum Corp.,’’ said Hazen. ^^Lovett tanpentari prfcadlof I i ' At a a.n.; Wind rttocitj S m. Dlr'aettoa; Soathwwt fun MU WadnMdar at 7:3t p.m. « Oua rlmn Thuridar at t:zl a.ia. i "We searched the station and m: found 8599 hidden in the attic. .1, 'Maur revealed. Jostoefc Mid he planned to use : this and D.M* he would hnve received In himiranoe to pny the company, detectives said. The gas station owner said he Waterford Man Dies in Blazing House A 59-year-old Waterford Township miui died last ^ when fire turned his home into an oven. Burgess B. Harris of 1123 Cass Lake Rd. was dea^ when firemen pulled his^*^------—— body from a rear bedroom ^ , , Grant Waterford Federal Water Aid Bear a conch in the Hvfaig i when he went to M.’’ tnld Chlet Ebner Fnaghoaer. "The brick iand aluminum siding house was dosed up tight, and the smoldering couch touched off pine paneling in the front room, the house became a huge oven," he said. furniture MELTS ’The front room was gutted. The intense heat peeled paint throughout the house and melted plastic chairs and fixtures in the kitchen. It took firmen only five minutes to break into the bedroom where they found Harris’ body. "He was lying on the floor between hia bed and a window, which might tndlcnto he had eome to ■ pfadaeii. Fifteen firemen answered the alarm. The Maze was extinguished in about a half hour. Mrs. Lewis Clement of U4D Chw Lake Rd. turned in the alarm w4ien she saw flames in the Harris home across the street. ★ ★ # Firemen said they found evidence that Harris had been drinking heavUy. tied his feet, blindfolded and of directors in Chicago. himself and then chained his-hands to the steering wheel Pontiac State Police Detective Sgt. Frank Barkman administered the lie t^. “^.Pontiac Motor Tour |Train on 5-Ddy Schedulo _ . PonHac Ifotor Wvison's i jsifbUT ti«lo, transporting annually ( !! M ^ !1 « mmw than 15,000 visitors through I . ________ .. 3 the V-8 engine and car assembly I tt wK o?£w H 8 operating Oti a five^ I si Nfartork fs M Schedule-. ‘ g aw# “ Tour departure times incluile: 3 8K; ^ ^----------J phoning 1------- 8 hs axtensioo T76 in Pontiac. MERRITT D. HILL Gets Post . on National 4-H Branch Merritt D. liill, vice president of F'ord Motor CO. and general manager of its Tractor and Implement Division, has been named to the National 4-H Club Committee on Boys and Girls Gub Woric. ♦ * ♦ HIU, 965 E. Glengarry Cirde.^ Birmingham, was elected to the position yesterday at the annual meeting at the committee’s board 5 in Vice Raid iPreedonBond j 2 W(^men and 3 AAen I NabM at Allagad'SitB 1 of AAoonshin* Sales May Miss Part of Valuation Lift "Stota Tox Offkiol Hints Oakland Won't Receive Full 13 Per Cent Boost A^stkte tax official hinted today that Oakland County might escape part of suggested across-the-state 13 per cent hike in county (Contimied From Page One) water toriems (there are eeven of them) and tie them together into 2. As a new part to the system, lay new distribution mains and side laterals throughout those areas where none exist at present. 3. Build sufficient rtevated stor-ge tanks to serve pre tidpatod future needs. The towosUp pfaaw te caalinae lelBg weO water i ~ ~ irfO drill Mcne new mm said. Johnson said the township would retain financial and le^ help to work out details for the bond to He mentioned the names of Louis H. Schimlnel, the Pontiac municipal financing expert, and Claude Stevens. Detroit bonding at- Kmmnfield said he was pleased that the federal government was the township "on kucb a vKal subject as water." ★ ★ # He explained that the federal money is made available to communities that can't afford to budget large sums tor planning. # # # rile revenue bond iesue is to include funds with which to/i>ay_ the federal governmenty he laid. , The preseqf time - taMo cage bondlag plans te BIRMINGHAM - ri»e Beverly HUIs Athletic dub has instructed its attorney to file suit against the Beveriy Hills Zoning Board of Appeals for the board’s failure to peh-mit construction of a private swimming pool, club spokesman Edward Dolan announced today. # # * The attorney, William F. Neni, said he intends to file the suit in (Sreuit Ojurt Friday, In tfo tulf toe” club is groleir 'tog toe SMtfng bMrd’s "taUnre to pndeH to# rights of toe nma* her roeldoMs of Beverly Hills to Ms decision to deny the ehib’s petition Ip bdild and operate a ■ w I m ni I n g and recrentlonni dub," Dolan Mid. The proposed swim club'would be located in the r* Southfield roads area. ,♦ # At the Zoning Bqard of Appeals meetings on A^ 11 and 25, argu-mente for and against the approval c- 3 heard. Seventeen of the 34 property owners in the area objected to "the 1 club, fearing noise, hakards to ^Idren. Tito, petithB to MU ma d# nied becanM of the strong ob-JeefloB sf more than M per cent of Iho property owners llvfaig wHhto m feet ol the sUe. Dolan said the club, jn fiUng the suit, is interested only to "expedit-iiig a just deeisien ae te wbetiier the club can build and operate its facilities on the propottd site. . # * # “The 300 member appheanU who are residents Beverly Hills have not been justly considered by the Zoning Board of Appeals," Dolan A 1.9 operation mil)age proposal June 13 adwot el^ion ballot. Board of Education members agreed a < meeting last night. If approved, the funds would bring la fMl.m to additlMal ' would he ned te e< teach.' On March 28 votm turned down-a request by the Dchool board for It additional 4 mill tooeaae. # # d At Bwt tfawarTwBiU' po^ IncreoM would have pr«> vided instructional Impraymenta; high school Ubrary booln,. and i. stronger in-eervice training prd.« ^m for the faculty. None of thg, propoeed 1.9 ntiltote would b«' EUMid for this purpoee. # r The School heard le alaa hop*f h« to reallso a UMSrMVtagto aext year hy imvtof whool hoses make triple mm tostiad ft deoUe nms. The additional run for driven will mean a cut ol six bus driven from the stalL ' _______schettolee will also be revamped because of the change. Netoea M. Aroher Service for Nelson J. Alriier, 45, of 30300 Franklin Rd., Franklin, be at 10 a.m. Friday at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Mr. Archer filed rijesday at his home following a short illness. A graduate of the Walsh Institute of Accounting inrietndt, he was a cnnsuitant to the oude oji production industry. He was a member of the Alpena Lions Gub and the EP.O.E. Lodge 505 in Alpena. SuiTiving are bis wife Marian; a daughter, Barbara Ann of Ft Lauderdale, Fla.: three eons, John, of Ft. Lauderdale, Peter an^'-James, at home; . his mother; Mrs. Ann White of Birmingham; Nixon Outpolls Kennedy in Indiar^a Primary Vote Edward W. Kane. State Tax Commission secretary, said he didn’t "suspect" that Oakland would get that much of a raise as part of a statewide idan to put property assessments on par with County equalization officials are fighting the increase. * ♦ 4 According to WiUlam B. Grab-endike, director of the equalization department, such a boost would be unfair because the county has kept assessments—at least jw relates to real estate—in line with 50 per cent of actual cash value under present ecoriomic conditions. Hto staff hat fixed toe worth tt the eooBty for tazi Torpaaea tills year at 6L6PM6tJiL fioma officials Bay the state might to- (Ctoitimied From Page One) voice on the first ballot at ^ Republican national convention and Kennedy Its 34 votes first ballot at the Democratic, convention. Keaaadbr’s epponeata. Car Daly af Chicago aad Jaha H. Uthan Daly campaigned In an Uncle Sam lui| on an ‘‘America First" platfonu and Latham called for the end of pditical conventions. CALLED UPSET Republican National Chairman riiniston B. Morton called Nixon' vdte a "trmencktus -upset vle-tmy.” Kennedy supporters, however, said their man he could win the state in' the November election. * In the District af Cetombla, The Tax Commission will release: Hamphroy had a deeMva edge s figures tor alt counties Monday, over Sea. Wayae NkrM at Oro-What Oakland’s 1980 tax rate gon to i ill be depends on this figure. | deattoi pr But a Democrat unllgted on tht, ilM. Adlai E. Stevenson, also -showed he bad support In the nthr. tk>n's>capit^. . > A slate of convention dele--, gates pledged to him held socond' place behind the Humphrey riatlA riiere even was a possibility one:. Stevmson* candidate roi^., cap-, ture a delegate spot. . . ~ to^ DUIftol of --------- vote : He is aa aetiv# pariietpaBt la a trustee of the MleUgaa 4-H Active in leadership nrfes in youth groups. HiU has served as vice president of the Detroit area (Council of Boy Scouts, on the ad-vtoory board of Junior Acfaievmending to«r in tiw New Worid to find plmty of wptlr work needed at home. ★ ★ ★ Seventeen tatiauinc dayi In Canada, the united Statee and the Fiench Wept Indies have built his atepe towtrd pei Alieria, s firm coone 1 high. Now he_________ PmMimwMM the need far bold Frtnee's dathenifig fgfp crisis. * A ★ ' .‘Ihe eg-ypsrdd president smiled broadly as he stepped bom his plane after a iShour flight from Guadeloupe. Standing at the nrap were Premier Michel Debre and the rest, of the cabinet. AlxNit Mt Of the'zlne needed fm-U.S. arms during Worid war n ctaobe from the mines located M the field. CORONET VSQ BRANDY Says Dfiig Hearings' to Harm Diabetics NEW Pt»T OPENS - Pm1 Huron Monday welcomed the German freighter EUse Schulte as the first ship to arrive at the newly constructed port facility. The dty built and leased to a local ar Phatotai fifm the 500-fo6f concrete wharf, two gantry .cranes, a warehouse and truck and rail facilities. The ship is picking up 1,600 'tons of I^chigan-grown beans. Insignia Retires, too flew gas-inflated Ugfatereia»aki ships before they were dropped DAYTON, Cttiio tn — Air Force from the Air Force Inventory, and hearii«s will cause irreparable harm to eome diabetes paltiente and that Sen. Estes Kefairt'ar ' 'U>-Tehn) la to blame. Kefauver, chairman of the Senate Antitrust pnd Monpoly sub-comniittee said' be would comment during the hearing on the letter sent him by Dr. Janies M. Moss, director of the GeorgHown Unt vosity Hospital DiabAUc Clinic. Moss-' critici^d what he called headline hunting in the inquiry, contending it is frigfatening patients away from their doctors and causing them to stem using all medkatioii. They may become invalids as a result, he added. This Dog Doesn't Know Where His Loyalty Lies ROANOKE, Va. W — Cai^ Cbleman, a blind veteran, says he finds Only one fault with a leader dog furnished him by the Veterans Administration. T have to tie iq> Smokey bdme I can spank one of my four children." 2 the ALL-PURPOSE ' ^ ALL-WEATHER perfected 4 HAIR SPRAY Uncle Earl Is Watching, He Warns Legislators IBametts 150 NprHi Soginow—Next to Seers YOUR SAVINGS GROW FASTER WHh 4 % enco Tuesday night he would be keeping his eye on the Legislature from a Baton Rouge Apartment NEW CHILEANS, La. (AP)-A sandpaper-voiced Gov. Ekri K. Long says he doesn't Inteifd to stray far from the political scene when he goes out of office Tues-« ^ Moda I«wh the sovamor's day. ------■- "ni be watching you,’’ the 64-yeaiKiId governor said. Pounding a dak t review Jobless benefit cases. Mrs. Long is Democratic na-tioitai committeewoman fttmi Lou- Castro is Minting on Ambassador Cuba Sounds Out State Deportment for Okay to Send Official WASHINGTON (UPI) - Cuban Premier Fidel Castro, whe once said he would not send an ambas-sadw to Waisihihgbm Cuban relationa iminoved, has quietly sounded out the State Department on such vstep. Gsstra’s government recently sent n conlldeotial message here ' ' ry approval tor the post of former Cuban Primo Minister Jose Mira Oar-donn, who has n nooid of hlend-Haess toward the United States. Although pualed by the move, the State Department was pleased and was expected to grant tU approval in a few days. Normally, this would be foUowed by a formal announcement of the SS-year- THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MAY/4. 1960 Tp Officials I EnterPrison j 2 in Truman Regime,^ Xonndly, Caudle, Stoii Two-Yeor Terin* I NEVV YORK (AP) — Two Tru-' man administration officials surrender today—Matthew J. Connel-; ly In Nhw Yojlt Qty and T. Lamar* Caudle In Charlotte, N.C.7^0 be-, gin serving two-year federal prls-i OB terms. I ■n>e two,men were sentenced for attempting to block an income tax evasion prosecution of Irving Shefca, a St. Louis shoe m«nufac-i Their four-year legal fight to avoid impriaonment ends with! their surrender at the mar-, ahal’s office In their home areas.! ' ★ * - I A petition for a pardon by President Elaaihower has been drawn up hy hwne town friends in be-| halt Of Caudle, a resident of Wadev' Reports Good on'Minuteman' I ICBM k> S«t by '62 but Army Mdn Clalnw i Anothtr Typ« l4««ded LOS JtNC,FLi;8’ (VPl)j-The Air Fbrce announced Tuesday that the Minuteman Intercontinental Ballistic Missile wUl sUrt flight tesU at Ctyw Canaveral, Fla., this year and ahould be combat ready In the summer oi 1962—six months ahead of etrtler schedules. Smultaneously, an Army gen-' asserted that big strategic missiles will not be enough to prevent a Russian attack. ' He saM he doubted Amerioaaa will be able to deter er bluet a I Red mlaalle attack la the IW-7f i period unless II rapidly developa i MaJ. Crim. 0. J. RiUand. Air iF(m bailiatic divlaion command- THKY SMiriALr - TV disc jockey Dick ttei V«t6«i Blocking 1N* of Stat# Groups on Ad» LANSING »-A measure to end the authority bf moat state reguiale advertising by the professional or trade groiqw under their ctmtrol was vetoed yesterday by acting Gov. John B. SwatnaOn. gan Retailart Assn. The State -liquor Control and Corporation and Securittea com-mission would havo |wen exwnpt- More than 32 biUlon cotns of aU types havq Been producMl In the united States since tht federal mite, system was established about 160 years ago- MSUO Admitted to National Extension Body .Ion Assn, has voteStosdm t igsn State University Oakland /to ito mem^rship, it was araiouiKM OM as part of «tote MSUO was, voted lido aismber-ahlp due te Its extensive sduh S!^' ucatkm program Interests. ^ * ★ ★ In Its first year of operaliw, M^O baiT'canduiEled n.Mnu».. H. -to V»»» «rMm ^ hto. - He replied, “When you and I can explain women. Mr. Oiairman, ident Truman, has declined comment on what further action—if any—he planned to take. Caudle-probably will go to the at Tallahassee, Fla., and Connelly to a similar institution at Danbury, conn., the Justice Department said. Adrian Cleric Chosen DENVPR an — The Rev. Dr. John £. Marvin, of Adrian, edHw , . . of the Michigan Christian Advo-jduring the month of April, cate, has ‘ of the Methodist Press Am., at a meeting In conjundjon with the diurcfa general conference. we can explain why even the dlder ones like ray ttirff.” ices’ missile progress at the^«-nual meetlng-of the Avlatloo Writers Assn. *. * * .... Edwards said that tbe Nike-Zeus, tn Vtwk down enemy bal-— llstlc missiles, "could go Into lim- 6 Men From County Enlist in Marines The Pontiac Marine recruiting substation has anwynced that it enlisted six Oakland County men The Pontiac recruits were Russell A. Carilne of 35S Fourth St. James D. HiU of 342 E. Rundell St., Ronald A. Strevel of 1619 IJoslyn Ave. pnd BMlle G. Travis of 291 W. Odlumbla Ave. • A ★ ★ The other men were Douglas Hall and Teddy G. Quillen, both of Lake Orion. All are now undergoing basic training at .San Diego. CaUf. The natlon'a mote Important de-poaits of chromite are in Stillwater and Sweetwater counties to Montana, according to the United Statee Bureau of Mines. Ited production now " The Defense Department has insisted on further development work Ix^ore authorizing any production. ^ Rltland aaid that progress the Minuteman intercontinental, missile has been lo rapid that only one more test of the flrst-teage rocket engine will be neceeeary at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. The late shot will be on this Fri-| day. be said. He eald the fun flight test- program tor the 6,30a-mUe missile wi" start St Canaveral "late this year. SPECIAL PURCHASE SALE OF NYLON Carpet Your Cro4it is IflttonHy Approvotil No Bonkt — No Finonco Compony You Poy Right ot Gur Storo 17 [.Huron St. 18 W. Pike St. Lovoly Lingtrio for MoHior NYLON / LACE TRIM Oonfortable seetate teioot with nykm lace bodice, adjoslabte ttraps, 8 inch Ombre nylon lace bottom. Whits, Pink. Blue. SizM32tQ.40. Scr««n Stttr First Quality NYLONS SEAMLESS 15 Dwier Medi, er Rerdtr Nykoe. No aeed to wony ■MMt croakBd leaiittl Sweet- ___ i|iee,LiialiBli]iLSiM9ioll. S fr. 2*89" Full Fashioned 60 Gougo, 15 Donlor I Sheer dress hose with kg-flettering slim, dark atems-Makes lovely kgs look eve> lovelier. Sweetspiee, Loib Blush. Sim 9 to 11. 3 pr. 2.29 NEW SUMMER HAHDBAGS Plaitie Leather dretsy with fiM and white ShMT nol*wy tof MoRmt 18"x70" SHEER BTOLES WrapymTeaKtaiheer I lovehnaw. Solid color: I White, Black, Red, f Turquoiie, Pink, Mint, L, Oram Lemon, BeiM,. Royal. Brown, ulac | Cotton or Nylon APRONS 100 EA. cottons. So well m.ae „ attrecrive. M^ thoBfhtful ................... Cotton GLOVES Belii, BhSA YaBow. Make your package outstanding and individual GIFT WRAPS M«BinniiRBiipi.......i»6 MBI««IMHl1b..r...a9c ■taiOfeMlif.ltetStc igBtlvIii________.jOt ...16c HALF SOLES $169 B Pf..An. lAea'i, fimmn't, Chihh'. Leether ■er CeeiResHiee jfetaaer'e Bliee Rep^jvph^ Wotek Bmdi «f low m 2^ NEW SFEIDEL Twiit4Mkx 4^^ HeisBer's Watch Repair far OiMtar AN Silts Mm's ood Btys' 99 Black Only -y-T- t ■ ■ J~ \r *iitis yusii^c ^ yvLLfi\,ij.yuAi, mav 4, ittuo ii VK MAKING DDUK CUTOFF - Thre* Michi- gan State Highway Department employea study more than two years of acquiring land and plans for construction of new cutoffs on Walton making studies to eliminate "No Left" turns W^^rewra Weinpw —irem the Dlxte; construction began this Uke ttMd, to the west of the highway. After week. A mid^July completion date is scheduled. Sees Tighter College Standards Study Hard, Says Hatcher SAGINAW (It - It’s g(^ to take a strong academic high school course to assure acceptance at a top college or university in the future. Dr. Harlan Hatcher, Uni-versity of Michigan president. says. Within the past two years college entrance standards generally have gone up. Colleges have the word "selective" to del their practices. Dr. Hatdier among the first to define "seleo-tive" flatly as meaning those academically trained in high echoed. The SaglMw News wrote to both Dr. Hatcher sad Michigan State Univenrit; la an attempt to get a cleir pictnn of wKaPs In store for Junior and senior | high school students wh try to get Into college llvo or ’ six years from now. The same kind of survey was j con^ted three years ago. At tl time the colleges hinted at wl is occurring iW, but reirainod from saying it as bluntly as Dr. Hatcher how says it. Although colleges still say they are requiring specific subject matter for en- trained will receive serious consideration at the top schools. "It Is my strongly held i vietion." Dr. Hatcher said, "that hv choosing only academically ! qualified high school students. "As a rule, I would say tha most ccdlegcs are hot considei Ing a return to strict subject requirements as a-eendkion of ad-; mission. However, they are requir-^ ing, and imquestionably will continue to require study in depth; in certain basic areas. Usually, j this means three to four years, concentration |n such fields as sciences, languages and so forth." NOT BY GRADES AtONE Dr. Hatcher said grpdes alone, will not be the criterion for ad-mtsslon. More ,c»ll«^,.*».f®*) .'"ir.amfeiiMriifln scores on hational examinations,' such as the College Entrance Ex-{ aminatlon Board tests, and rec-; ommendations from the high school. The U. of M. starts the' CEEB tests In 1961. ■*' I|r. Hatcher revealed the U. ; of M., at Icaat, can be highly eelec^ve. "AppUcafleae for ad-miasieH," he said, "are up to per cent at this time ever a | year age. In all prebabUity, de- | Paul A. Miller, MSU provost,' explained his university's stand on; entrance requirements. He saW, MSU’s policy "roughly" assumes' adimittance of students from the top| third of their graduating classes; without serious question. although< each applicant is given personal i attention. Some are taken from, the mkkBe third, those in ^ ■ ef third usually are not a(hni * * A iHe said: ^*Onc finds a tightening of academic standards in the colleges Flint Namei Commission to Administor Race Low rUNlMD-The City OommisBlon has named, a 15-member human| T^tioi^ commisteon, headed by ai woman, to admteister a contro-! versial ’city ordinance. I The ordinance is designed to pro-| jjwt against discrimisation. It hasi teen fought by a real estate group; irijich has been petitioning tor aj leferendum. Mrs. S. S. Stewart Jr., pr aent in civic affairs., was named; etafirman of the commission. . TM memberi include repreaenutives! of tstoiness, the clergy, professions; and universities. This means that the preparation in the high schools must ^, increasingly related ‘ in the way of adequate preparation in academic subjects." He doubts if MSU wfll become rigid abtett raqifiring ctertam subject m a 11 e r completed in high' school, tmt says MSU will con- tinue to "strongly urge or recommend" the aca^nilc courses of English, science, mathematics, and languages be covered in high school. a * A ITalT adds up to“one thing if Junior’s going to college, he’d better hit the books, and hard. ForestLawn Refuses Ashes Caryl Chessman's Urn' Poses Problem but Hisj Attorney Moy Fight RAFAK.. Caltf. ««d haw H l(ipt wp mobtorel Thm-piM terry in e cwtfe«-0t slip cover tbei doe* OB end eH wMiowt fuM. Wathoa like/towel... pretoate ped fre« iflcmdaB^tofa Larfi extra deep shelves (20' wide gtk*'lleap) > tjfetime steel constructiocL ». Chromate piate finish, >. Can be irtstallad |n minutes. ' . * Additional ahefves-can ba added at any tima 9 Each shalf tested to ovar 50 lbs. > Mounts on anfvwli or door. Weito't Wedoat ... Siraef floor mMOTHSmi NO-MOTH 95F gg> With Reefct-Gallcr’s NO-MOTH hang at the top of EVERY cloMt you know diet your dothes arcMfe fraa moths. NO-MOTH Af«r etf rUgiy ef moth life — moth eggs, stoth worms, and moths. Reefer-Galier't NO-MOTH le a huidr device tkmt rcieaaai a puagendy fragnnt vapor which ' penetrateaeverynookaiidcraaiiy —leaves no clinging adot — dodung may be taken from dw hnngeri nnd worn imoMdiMdte, NO^O^ is ReUlabla. THE PONTIAC PRESS « WMt^Huna SttMt . WEDNESDAY, MAY 4. iMOl OvtMd ofMl Loeat^ by Th$ Ponttae Prtu Compemy Pontiac. Middgtn bahold a. fmumt I I ViM PrMMnt knd •atlMM tiimftr imOHMLO tA PoMlitor Weekly Roundup of Editorials From Press Staff Members {Editor's nott: The editorials printed today are toritten by mem-ben o! the editorial department who. are orpnarUy employed in -other capacities,) ★ ★ ★ ‘Glance’Aspect Unfair During Olympic Trials PoQtlac’s Hayis JoMtt seems to be a sure thing to make the U.S. Olympic hack team and compete for world honors at Rome, but there is a big IF cbm^ted with his lifetime dream. That IF concerns the Olympic trials coming up in July at Palo Alto. California. ........★ It is very unlikely, but IF Hayis would have a bad day at the trials, his great past performances would 'mean nothing. Such a fate fell upon one of our top ski Juippers during the trials ioT the winter games. Many officials of both track and skiing iiiavc been against the trial system for their iVOTt, claiming showings in major meets should be the determining factor in events based on tima andLdjs?_ tanee. That cwtainly seems sensible when you consider how much of a shame it would be for srane-one of Jones’ high caliber to miss out because of an “off” day. Larry Snydir, who will coach the American thlnclads, has galled the Pontiac Central graduate “the world’s finest hurdler.” ★ ★ ★ Jones, has certain^ earned such praise with his complete dominance in the hiAdles against the best In the country. He whipped eg-Olympic ace Lee Calhoun for the “umpteenth” time Saturday at the Penn ‘Relays ' hitting 13.6 again, which is well below the 14.4 qualifying standard. And we can’t forget thq hitchhikers, who at times stake claim to IMr lanes along the curb. Ws have to believe that PCH’s students have had traffic safety taught to them since grade school. No doubt they still get reminders of same at CentraL Yet what’s going wrong? Where y has all this teaching fallen? ★ ★ ★ Any driver who has shaken with fear for several minutes after a near calamity with one of these errant scholars must wonder. The answers seems to lie with the students. ^ Voice of the People Readers Continue Debate^ About School Tax Increase Smm Ago m u A tbM gnder. was pta MbSU ^ ' MMiotai because ot the financial iitustloo of the ^ what I want to happen to my two diUdren opportunitlet, I itrongly urge every conadentlouf parent to *UPP^ taermue. It’s our reaponrihUlty aa parents to aee todays ch£ make good dtlzena of tomorrow. We w^t a with quality teachers for our chUdrea Do your psrt. Vote *yes on .Monday. „ ------- Webstar PfA ' jEaices, taxes, taxes. We!» sldi yo^ o^ i^airiaa fsmify, you Of tbe wofd, but «• pesponslbte figure on loinoctow. citisens, wa must hear, talk and Oraadfather kf. M Ul bWMie U • nMlit. OUw, ^ ^ hgiiMM feel it wlU be more money to ^ fjj organiza- misuse. ^ tions operate that way. V w« vote agaliisl the prepoeair Or wtU taey Just have a little have? We pareate had Jsat maat he taught Hfe laa’t a big bed of reaee. fleme ot as are getag wUbout Ihtogs to make a eomlortable home lor our chtt-dm, while thSy. are getttiig so accustomed to the Mg, beautiful extras at sehool they loak down Take Quite a Tailoring Job the san Come to the PbOtlac Township meeting on Opdyke tonight at 7:30 and get out and vote'. As a mother of fiireq, small children. I feel we must vote lor the miU increase. It seems a very ■mull sum to pay compared to the ''•lue diUdren will get. The cost of operating schools -- books, material, uirtceep - has gone up with the cost of living, and we need the Increase to keep them up as toey are now as well as to make Improvements. I •*®P* . _____ parents will consider this issue iur wet havteg careflffly and vote for thr tax In-crease. merit schobstically, atMeticallyo' and in other fidds. Come on, PCH students, let’s bring those walking standards up to the same glorious level. rLawrence -Saysr Riots Are Communist-Inspired Can’t We Leave Odors of Flowers to Nature? Every year at seed-planting time we are annoyed by the same thing. This is theJUst chance we have ever had to complain about it in print. ★ ★ ★ Some years ago the experts in the plant world replaced the rather acrid fragrance of nasturtiums with a sweet scent and completely de-scented marigold fediage. Now you can grow sweet smelling nasturtiums and odorless marigojds. We protest. We likeif the fragrance Nature gave both pfainta Well agree that the new double sweet smelling nasturtiums and the hybrid marigolds are beautiful specimens. But we miss the originals. ★ ★ WASHINGTON—If It Just a co- "The techniques followed .by the incidence that mob violence and Communists parallel those taught militant denMXistratians ara occur- in special schools tor international riiw against gov- Communist agents in the Soviet emments in Ko- Union. j rea, Japan and By allying themselves with politi-Turicey, which cal groups in power, the Commu-happen to be nists have succeeded in minimizing "Leaders of the Comnnuilst parties of Colonibla, Venesaela, aad BoHvla have beea ia Moscow where they have received In- log tli« handling of mobs and "The success achieved by i Dst the mobs they have incited. WAX Of ADVANCE* e adequate for anti-American incitement will encourage them to further efforts of this kind on a larger scale.” ★ ♦ w The immediate reaction in offl- form of pro-Comuniat warfare lor which studems from all parts of the woiid are specially trained in standpoint? preparatfona far in advam* tor temerCM^^ their inspired riots, through pro- clal quarters here to the recent liiste that mob vocative mass meetings, leaflets, riots in Korea was that they were viAiene* i. ■ broadcasts, cartoons, newspaper "spontaneous.” articles and even assassinations.. . (Capyi^t imj Someone in Voice of foe Pele criticized the Qty Cbmmission for spending more money on the City Hospital than the taxpayers voted. The sanw person wanted to pan the School Board because they asked for enough at the start. That person better make up his mind. It’a better to ask fpr tee fuD amount at oae tfme tbaa to do like the City Ctemmlssloam, the Haipltm Ihtaj^iaA docl^^ They asked three mlllloa. Which dwy got, and then speat thro mlllioa aayway. The School Boatd is dteng an iKHiest Job and we should respect them for asking the full amount and not doubtecrosstaig us. A. D. Chessman Execution Instigates Letters O.K, So fl»y sUuighterad Cheai-num and 1 lapptae that makes everybody happy. F« ahame. J. P. Chessman finally got Just what be had coming all the time and ha made our courts a laughing stock in the eyes of the wlxde nation and probably the world. After the Owatman mess, wa need a new legal System. Maybe we can come up with one as good as the savages have in Africa. Our courts and laws fumbled so badly and so long wa emM. up odlSl'.iaiil- Jurori BOdia lion Judges all self appointed and all passing final Judgments on the Chessman cAse. Pbooey , . a rose by any other name He could pack his bags j*ight now would smell as sweet.” But if you if the squad were picked on records, were to take away its fragrance, but the confident Eaatem Michigan would it be the same rose? Changing senior is quick to admit anything can the scent of flowers may be an ac-happen under the present setup. “I compUshment in the horticultural could stumble over the first hurdle world, but it upsets us. We wish the and lose,” he said. There is also the experts would expend their energies possibility of injury or illness. elsewhere. ■ ★ ★ , ★ , .................................... Hayes has sach big teat as the The Man About Town Compton Relays, the Hooston Re- ----------■............. lays, the Nathmal AAU and w- js ' w-w* ‘ -gjr NCAA meets coming op boforq III the Big MOnfey the trisb and feels he can get his time down to is.4. Martin Laner ^ Suggestion Awards Drj|w o^ Cermany holds Last August in the Senate of the United States a special report.was issued under the title, “Communist Anti-American Riots.— M<* Vio-lence as an Instrument of Red Diplomacy.” It was prepared as a result of a stall study authorized by the Senate internal aecurtty subcommittee, and was ordered printed at a meeting of the committee. It is singularly* prophetic. grim report It said in part: "The traditions of American diplonmcy are i«nedicatcd upon peaceful negotiation with duly authorized representatives of other nations on the basis of solemn agreements and treaties, in accord with international law and usage. "Our intmnatioQal relations do not contemidate and seldom anticipate efforts to force toe hand of governments through mob action Dr. William Brady Says: Home Still Safest Place for a Baby to Be Born I hear talk about does the School Board really need this and does it ----Twdly need that, etc., etc. The — School Board figured out what was needed and then asked ioc h and ------ they are all honert people so why -cesilon ronte, The Amdated Praia viU^have a team of 20 newunen and 13 ftootographen coverinc the atory of the Princen MarKaret wedding Friday. Two Pulitzer Prize Winners head the lineup. Eddy Gilmore will report from Inside Westminster Abbey fpr afternoon papers. Reiman E. Morin will write the story for mon^ newspapers. Gilmore's, commentary during the weddii« ceremony will be bulletined from the Abbey. Because of London’s dosed streets during the wedding ho more will then be sped—hy siieed-boat on the Thames—from the abbey to the AP office tw his w^ up stoiy. ★ ★ ♦ Another key newsman taking part in the‘Wedding coverage is Hal R. Coo|>er. who has been in on every major story reporting the drama-packed changes in Britain in the postwar era. Alvin J. Steinkopf, an AP newsman who has reixKled events from the start ot Wc»ld War II dirough Vatican consistories and royal cwtmations to the siitking of the Flying Enterprise, also will be on the team. Ooolin Frost, formerly reporting from Wa^w, will be another in the lineup. BY THE MINUTE Ihe wedding schedule ,wUl include these highlights—an British summer iWe, wtQch Is six hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time. ArchWahop at Canteihurr wfli, inrahoonoe Princess Margaret and Antony Armstrong-Jones man and 12:30 pjn.. appraxhnately-r'nw service ends. The royal family starts back to BiKUnghlm Pal-for file weddiiv breakfast. }0:55 a.m. — The bridesmaids leave Buckingham Palace by car for Westminster Abbey. Antony Armstrong-Jones and his best man follow in another car. 11:03 a.m.—Queen Elizabeth II and Queen Mother Elizabeth leave Buckingham Palace in a state coach, escorted by household cavalry. 11:15 a.m. ~ Princeu Margaret and Prince Philip leave Clarence House in the ^ass coodi, escorted by household cavalry. 11:25 a.m. — Princess Margaret and Prince Philip arrive at the Abbey. 11:30 a.m.—Twelve silver trumpets sound a fanfare and the marriage service staris. 12 npoh, approximately — The 4:15 p.m.—The newlyweds leave Buckingham Palace cat for , a pier near the Tower m London. 4:30 p.m. — The newlyweds board file royal yaeiit Britannia, moored in the Thames. 5:15 p.m.—The Britaimta sails for the honeymoon In file West Get tha Full Story INDIANAPOLIS W - Mr. and ...j. Leo S. Miller hoped everyone understood when their 13-year-old daughter Carol Sue said the family was eating cantekmpes from the garbage. The melona sprouted from some seeds Miller buried along with other garbage to fertilize his' lawn. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON FUINS A owifry fkof^iig fMir a HmIihmi . •. I»r you, «l Mtrol's! irS NATIONAL BABY WEEK 5, n r Sand 'em to slumber in style with HANES Hang’s print pajamaa 200 Soft, cuddily lummer sleeper*. 3 pia^l prints trimly tailored of washoble cotton. Sturdy snap-fasteners. Sizes 1-3. Shop nowl Gown, colorful print, snap front, roglon sleeves. Trimmed with rib-bm bow. infant's. 1.49 Trwiniiif ponts, shirt. White cotton knit shirt, 1-4 yr*. Font* also cotton, 1-4 yr*. 2/1,19 Dress-up topj^r sets for the sand box brigodt man-tailored dio- per sets, creepers. Oirl's ^ qq diaper sets, novefty trim- ww med. lined, cotton pos- ALg Ms, prints. S-AA-l-XL. 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Shop! 01x100 er 72x100 er fitted Mi, 1.00 atteO twfai, 1.79 42x14" eeoro, 49a JMor Soy: at Fodorol's Give outdoor furnituro o gay now outlook! FEDERAL'S PADS, COVERS FOR ALL Plastic print 4 pc. glidtr sots Gey Springdale florol cushion reverse to solid. 3 seots, 3 bocks, 66" long. wipes clean. 14.f Sun chniso pnd reverses to soTid. 7.99 Metal choir pod Matching ylnyl print, round, tqybre top,. ' r Lev# soot pods 2-section bock and seat, vinyl print reverses. 8.99 Reversible print vinyl choir pods, round er squnro..... 1.00 84" heavy plastic glidar roincooH, ekMic hams.......... 1.99 1-pc. multi-stripa stoomar choir recovers, t^yl ...... 1.29 3-pa. vinyl strata yacht chair recevors ........... 1.29 3[-pc. full length vinyl stripe lawn choir recovers.. 1.69 Gay ossortmont of woshoMp plostic outdoor piHovrs....... 1.0D, .■V'V- '■r THK PONfj AC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. MAY 4, im Walled Lake to Act on Health Peril Lake Orion OKs 1960-61 Budget $100,000 Figure Does Not Include Rubbish Pickup or Water Rates LAKE ORlOti-^A SIOO.OOO budget fw tfie 196M1 fiacal year has been ai^raved by the Lake Orion Village Oouncil. This figure does not tadude water rates nor nib-Ush collection. Hie Council voted to add two mUls to this year’s tax roll to pay for garbage and rubbish removal In the vlUage. Only a few minor dianges were made in the budget since it presented April 18. sun at canoera to local ondals W that the dnage Is ^ faced arMk aaother year of del-e coat at The Oouncil has decided to sedc bids on cleaning and painting of the water tower. They will be opened at the next regular meeting May 17. Climaxing months of study, dog ordinance, similar to the one now in efieet in Leonard, was adopted Monday night. SHELBY TOWNSHIP — Two Shelby Township youths were ai^ rested here last night for allegedly threatening a couple parked in a lovers’ lane the night before. To be arraigned in Justice Court today on charges of assault were Gerald Richanfoon, 19. of 5281 Wil^ by St., and Robert Wilson, 39, of 49424 Dequindre Rd. They are accoeed by Detroiter Henry Vlaeeat, tl, of braadlali-log a rifle and beer boMee at him and hb girl Mend as they aat In Ms ear near Warsaw Park Vincent tdd sheriff's deputies the two men drove up, trained their lights on Us car and challenged him to a race. He said be refused and ! away the other car in hot pursuit. Tile Detroit man said the pair finally forced him off onto the shoulder of Hamlin road, left their car and ordered him out of his vehicle^ ^ Instead, the couple drove ^way and. as tiiey were fleeing, Vincent said he saw the driver race Us car and pull out a rifle. The couple eluded tbrir pursuers, bgt not before they made a note of the license number ot the car. Council Pledges DrainagePelief Walled Lake —■ ini’ mediate steps will be taken to relieve a health hazard created by improper drainage in a sub^vision here, city officials prtnnised last night. Asking for assistance from City Council were members M Tri A Subdivision Civic Assn, who claims that drains in front of their homes are filled with stagnant water the year around. Spokesman for the group Frank E. Richards. U7;i Beta Rd., " Council that the drainage jpoUem results when water and waste back 1 septic tanks and flow into the drains. nishings that made up^a living room at the turn of the century, three members of the West Bloomfield Township Players lUiearse for their production of "Yeara Ago.” Written by Ruth Gordon, and ba^ on her life, the story tells of a 17-year- fmerally the same proUems as teen-agers of today. Major lUes in the production to be given Friday and Satuitlay at 8:30 p.m. at the West Bloomfield High School, are Shirley Bunnell as Ruth, right, and Shirley McGraw and Richard Pedicini as her pareifts. He explalned'that the subdivision is constructed on a heavy clay base that does not permit normal absorption of water. Connell said tt would notify 400 Attend Meeting at North Central ThSby Supporters Elect New Officers Area Youths In utfacr city council action last night, the request of Police Chief James Decker to use one unmarked car during daylight hours was granted. AVON TOWNSHIP - New officers of the Senior Associates of Nwth Central Christian College were elected at the group’s annual meeting last night. Scune 400 members attended the session in the college cafeteria. Mrs. A. J. Kerr of Livonia was named president to succeed ^rs. George Ford of Royal Oak. Other new officers are Mrs. Melvin Parsons of Lincoln Park, first vice-president; Mrs. L. D. Parker ol Walled Lake, second vice-president; Mrs. Robert Dunn of Royal Oak, recording aecretary; and Mrs. Donald Worten of Trenton, corre-spmdiiig secretary. The post (d treasurer is being filled 1^ Mrs. Philip Rideout id Clawson, and serving as reporter for the coining year is Mrs. 'nxMo-as Jones of Pantiac.. ne Associates is sa orgaaisa- RCA Reports Color TV Sales Boom City Detective Back Pontfoc Police Detective Thomas C. MHchell has returned from the 16th annual Arson Seminar at Pqr-—due University. Mitchell, of 44 N. East Blvd., has received a certifioate ol attendance as a representative of the Pontiac Police Department at the seminar,. The seminar is conducted by the Purdue Safety Institute. Enrollment for the course was about 2S, with 25 states and several foreign countries being represented. John L. Burns, RCA president, tol^ stockholders at the company’s 41st annual meeting that sales color TV receivers showed the greatest increase of any quarterly p«iod in color’s six-year history-40 per cent ahead of a year ago. Circus at Walled Lake to Aid Rotary Projfcts RCA, Barm mM, plans to double color TV production capnetty at its Bloombi^on, Ind., plant. All other operations of RCA mov^ up in the first three months and the company reported record sales and earnings for-rihe period for the second year in a row. NET PROFIT IS MILUON Total sales amounted to S361,- 200.000 for the quarier, against 8321.800.000 last year. Net profit was 813.000,000 after taxes, against $12300,000. WALLED LAKE-Tww pel ances under the "Big Top’^ill be staged tomorrow bjT iHe Mills Brothers three-ring circus to raise funds for the Walled Lake Rotary Club's community service projects. The circus will be set up shortly after dawn at Haggerty and Richardson roads when nearly 100 motorized untU Rdl Into town with a troupe of 500 persons. Performances will be given at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Band Boostan Selling Calendars in Avondale The Avonale Band Boosters have lamched their aecond annual community sale of birthday calendars. Ft^ raised will be used to purchase band uniforms and in-strunMaU. ' . Carlyle Bragen has been elected presifhM for the 1980«i school NahMd to serve with him were Mrs. Erben Hupp, vice-president; Mrs. WlQiam H. Biriiop, secretary; Hd Mcs. Homer EMn^ treasurer. NEW YORK (UPI) -Color television is booming, fladio Corp. America's first quarter report showed Tuesday. Burn* cited a spurt in computer systems with deliveries well in advance of schedule. Sales of portable radio and television sets rose sharply — 72 per cent tot radio and 115 per cent for Am ol Mends and parents of ■tudeats at NOOC whose aim Is purchase of ings for the new college. Last ni^t the group held an auction to raise funds for current projects, foremost of which is paying for the new 40-passenger bus tor the college. Other proceeds wlU be used to make a monthly donation to the library fund. Auctioned off last night were a painting,' a gdd-sprayed shadow box lecture and a black lamb. of the program was the piresentathm of five mlcro-ocopes, costing $800, to scioBee professor Mrs. fitephaa Bilak. I behalf of tho stodent body. Featured speakers were two other students,. Linda Kincade of Rockford, Hi., and Rodney Grantham of Crawfordsville, Ind. "They both spoke on "What North Central Oiristian College Means to Me." A vocal sextet from Ford Avenue Church of Christ, Detroit, and the Giris’ Ensemble from the-college /urnished the music for the program. RECEIVES OiyP" — Accepting the gift of five microscopes for North Ontral Christian College from the school’s {Senior Associates organization Is, left, science professor Mrs. Stephan' Bilak. Th{ presentation was’ made by Mrs. George Ford, president of the Associates, before some 400 members who attended las* night’s meeting in the school cafeteria. The college is on Avon road, just south of the VUiage M Rochester. Rtsidenti of Subdivision Soy Foul Wertar Stayi by Homes Year Around SRAJtON K. DELANO DIANE K. TEBRT DIANE K. Y08T Share Valedictorian Role 3 Kays Top Oxford Graduates OXFMID - Three gtrls, all with file middle name of Kay, are sharing honors os valedtcUMans of the June gradua'ting class at Oxford Area Community High Schotol. rnh-ert* weuM be cut to handle the Bow ol water and waste. I bo made They are Sharon Kay Delano, and new Diane Kay Terry and Diane Kay Yost. All have a schiriastic point average of 3.S. A fourth gM, Lila Stoddard, Is salataiortaa, with a peiat aver-ago of SJ. Sharon DeLano’s extra-curricular activities include Future Teachers Qub, of which she was presl- er of Tomorrow” In a national Odn- Diane’s parents are Mr. andjlrs. Roy E. Terry of 2l89 Noble Rd. Also musical Is Diane Yost. 17, who was p member of the Choir three years and to now a member of the Junior Music Club. ilenUmthe4ltto grade. UMn Oub.J—^ M toe ol which she Is vlce-prerident this j ^ J* ^ year, library staff and play crew. She also is an assistant leader in the Girl Scouts. Sharofl, who to 17, is the daug^ ter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. AOOOMPU8HED MUHCUN Diane Terry, 17, to an accomplished musician in addition to the other activities she has at schoed. betooga to the de Bot have culverto under driveways that the city would LOn NTODDARD Narros Onb, Ushera CUto. JoMor MihIc aub. Latia Chih, Youth tar Christ Chib. Student ConucU, Glee Cinh and CMr. She also Is a member of the Senior Girls Trio, the Senior Giris Ensemble and the Mixed Ensemble, |dus being named “Homemak- aafety aide live yean and this year “ is a voluntary swimming taistiuc* tor at the Pontiac YMCA. Diane to the daughter of Mr. and Mra. Preston Yost of 35 Park St. USI ALSO LUNG Lois Stoddard also hu a long list of accomplishnmits. She to a UMinber ef the Cheir, Otoe Club. Mixed Eaoemhle. Senior Trio, Junior Mnsle Onb. Vrii- Decker told Council that the unmarked car is expected to be used for only several months in hopes of skn^ down teen-agen who are using roads tor “raceways.” To Break Ground for Church in Farmington Twp, Holly Voters to Fill 4 Education Posts Permiarion was given to use an numarked car after It was do-cMed that toe vehicle must have don’t like the idea of having an unmarked car on the street, but there arp occasions w4ien one necessary," Mayor Waldo ' said. / Proctor ASK MOVDfO ORDINANCE Also last idght, Oty Attorney Albert Herzog was directed by councilmen to draw up an mflin-ance that would regulate house moving intdpnd out of. the city. The ordtamace will be deotgoed to regulato traflle movement la toe city wiMn a honse to being moved. The proposed ordinance was brougtit to the attenfion of the Coundl by Chief Decker, who said the city has not been notified in several cies'when houses were to be moved in the area and traffic problems resulted. FARMINGTON TOWNSJHP Ground will be broken Sunday at 4 , p.m. for the first unit of the Antioch Evangelical Lutheran Church at Farmington and 13-Mile roads. Oneet speaker wUI be toe Rev. Frwk P. Madsea. prerideat of toe Michigan Synod of the United Lutlieran Church In America. The Rev. James E. Hcnneberg-er, pastor, will officiate. 'The building will be a one-story "contemporary Gothic” ttnicture with facilities for worship, Sunday school, social occasfons and an office. It was designed by Begrow and Brown Architects, Birmingham. The contractor to Misch A Sons, Birmingham. I Ototrictfitrlirthe prtts JunciJTo elect four members to the Board of Educatim. To be flUed are two exptitag three-year potto and two aeW four-year p^s. Voters In the Holly Area School The two three-year terms are held by Buel Starr and Robert Brummeier, pcesident and vice president ol the school* board, respectively. The two new four-year terms will raise the number of school board nmtaen to seven, os required by recent state legislation. Candidates must file their petitions by May 16 at the superintendent’s office. Athletic Asoa. sad Future N She riiared the . Hearts Were Young i "Our i Gay.” In She took part bi the Junior and ■enior plays, has held offlees in her class and on the Student Comi-cil and also waa recipient of tha DAR "Good atizen Award.” Also 17, Lois is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oatk Stoddard of 70 Pontiac St. New Hudson Fence Co. d-FT. CHAIN LINK FENCE All Steel Rosts 79* FT. INSTALLED Tormlrwl Post* Extra |asy -Term* Science Working on All-Purpose U.S, Satellite LOS ANGELES (AP)-Sdentlsts are working on plans tor a large satellite with instruments that can be plugged in'or pulled out for The National Aeronautics, .and Space Adm^jistratkin said ^ design to part M a prdiEram to avoid he cost of building aeparate aatel-lites for each new type of experiment. ~- Dr. Abe Silverstein. NASA director of space flight programs, told Aviation Writers Assn, the satdlite is called a space bus, tparontly because the experiments—passengers—get on at specified stops. It requires 18 barrels ol water to produce a barrel of oil. Elvis Presley helped the tec- slace hto Army. diseharge "en-Joylag one of the largest advance snles of aO Bme” according to National Broadcasting Co .'RCA’s radio and‘TV subsidiary, shouted record sales and earnings for the y*ur. He Had the Answer . HARTFORD. Coon. (UPD—i Asked whether thoe vtas any-| thing he could have done to pre-i vent an aeddeat, the defondantj court case replied, ’’Yes. 1 have I THURSDAY, MAY Sth Ar CIRCUS GROUNDS cdidd have suyed home, ” NATIONS arid Ricliafdton Aaods-— Naxf ta CommafCB Drive-In y — 2 RBrOIMJUICES — 2P.M.ariSr.R. ■ :.,v tHB PONTIAC PBESS. WEPyBSDAY. MAY liXH) Nnns I Britannia Already Hag Luggage Mhg's Yackt Awaits Wedding LONDON (AP) - PrlBCMi Karat* ■ homyinooii yacht ateaRiM majaatlcally up eariy today a»i^ anchored in a dty tlona marklni tha royal weddinc oi th« decade. London #at In a ftver^ excite* bright with flowers and hustling with praparations for the wedding Friday. * # ★ The royal yadit B r 11 a n n 1 a, waited in the Hiadow of the grtm eld Tower of London to taka Ma^ gaiet and Antony Afhnstrong-Jonea aboard for a Caribbean Renewal Supporters Rap Ike's Foreign Aid ceae, all onefiece of them royal blue with detachr Seme of tbe honeymoon luggage already la aboard the Britannia. British society and visitors here for the wedding readies magnificent gowns for flw glittering ball Quean EUabetb U will give to-nigU at Buckfaigham Palace for her younger sister and the ait-pho-tographer she will marry in West-mlnstm Abbey. The ban will laundi a tbrowday whirl of partieo and official funo- faports. of the weddta)||' prepara- Newspapers gave over pages to By gOffN KOENIO iR. WASHlNGTCm (AP) ~ Baekerp Of a 251-mUlion-dollar area re-dev^ment blit reaorted to a rarely used procedure today in an ' to get a Houm vote Thousands^ of troops got ready to move into the city to line the two-mile route from the palace to Westminster Abbey. Great brnks of red and yellow tulips blazed in frorit of the palace and in Parliament Square. / Final daubs of paint i splashed on a towe^ng, 60-foot arch in the Mall, the stately thor- Tbe attempt a a a mpt fonowed $ ,i day Special message urging Congress to pass his own legislative recommendations but hold down spending authorizations. Supporters of aid . to deinassed areas brushed this aside with a retort that flie President ^ipears tl)e pressed, areas abroad than thoae at home. oughfsre down which ^ wedding wItt pass to and from the Abbey. Thursday night the arch will be covered with 60,000 roses, half of them fresh from.4he English countryside, the rest artlfldal. 'They compliment the second name. of Princess Margaret Rose, c-. At the Royal Mews grooms were readying 16 of the Queen’s horses that will drav- the bridal coach and other carriages in the wedding ixocession. For each traffic fatgUty in the United States there are 35 persons injured and about ISO vehicles badly damaged. Recekitly the bakers of b6mo bread obtained the RECIPE FOR O^CONNELL'S IRISH OATMEAL BREAD AKip IMPORTED mOM IRELAND THE NECESSARV DELICIOUS IRISH "^WMEAtrSOTIOV^THIB^BREAD IS AVAII^^ YDUR HDWN. it comes IKI an ATTRACTIVE YELLOW AND SREEN CEUOPHANE WRAPPER TO INSURE FUVOR AND I FRESHNESS. AND YOUR FAVORITE STORE HAS IT! Law Not Amused, rrvJjt.’SSr Good Humor From the Tap Elftcted in flint .CTTYAHOr.A FALLS, OMo i' (ITD- The Good Rumor., mas | FLINT lili-Dr.'Ralph S.<«tolle added another Itae to Ms lee |m, obsteheidan. waa elected prcai-eream and ether Imsea deUca- ig^it of the Flint Board of BduM-elea and as a resall was arrested. (Ion at Its i iskm. He succeeds Walter E. Mott, Lyle kmlth. *1, was arrested {regional public rolatlom director prhea police twmd sat that In I (or (Joieral Motors Oasp. MAYPOLE CARNIVAL — Waterford Township’s Lambert School camlvaf will be held from exhibit. Besides a bal« sale, tewing booth and 4 to 8 p.m. Saturday. James Flihwild, Mrs. outride pony rldrih^lBere wfll be a (mmeromn, James Yoder, fair chairman. Jeanette Ho»w spook room, a mackbar. and the all-time favorite •and Julie CYary test out the decorative Maypole “Pocket Lady.** Tba public has been invited. Southern Trucker Chicago Ry The Associated Prese CSiicago police today sought a gang of Negro youths after a white southern truck driver Was stotiM and beaten to death. James Jewell, 30. of Chicago, said his ixother John, 37, of Memphis, Teim., stopped his truck after a rock was hurled through a window and the Negroes attacked them. John JeweD died In hospital Tuesday. O’CONNEirs Irish Oatmeal Bread ANOTHER QUAUTV PRODUCT PROM JfoOIBl lAXERS Racial Violence Flares Over Nation grated but Negroes had boycotted it and sought aervice in the other Another big department st«e, the Diamcxid in (Jiarleston, W.Va., bowed to Negro demands after two years of boycotts and sit-down demonstrations. "Cooperating with the mayor’s commission on human relations, | the Diamond is making iu eating facilities available to all customers,” a atatemcat from the stata's largest store aaid. Other Chaite- had previously opened tervlca to Negroes. [j Leaps Into Den In I Atlanta, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Negro leader in^ the current south-wide series of||,Q Pof LjOn sit-doA-n demonstrations, said the, ^rr next campaign against segregation —Out OK may be "in tiie Whrie area of voter registration.’’ He declined to give details. All three restaurants in San Antonio's biggest department’ store were closed after a white man slapped a. Negro demonstrating against segregation. The white man, Eugene Nolte, owner of another restaurant, and thp Negro, the Rev. Earl Graham Jr.; were arrested for disturbing (he peace and released on J25 bonds. Officials of Joske's department store, scene of Negro demonstrations the past tw’o weeks, said the restaurants would stay NEW YORK (AP) - Robert Smith, 38, a laborer, vaulted U| guard rafl at the Ontral Parki Zoo and patted a lion on the head ; Tuesday. The king of beasts snapped. Smith pulled his hand safely away and patted the Ikxi again and again. There were screams from flw' gathering crowd. The lion began to roar. Two policewomen, drawn by the commotion, pulled .Smith back over the railing and, charged ' mchict ‘ with disorderly c 71 N. SABINAW ST. PORIC^LE iuPORK^HOPS-^S. ■7 RIB CUT r 1 PORK LOIN sliced] 00^ «!lj TENDERLOIN a a. PORK QQ° ROAST pa. Whole—Cut Up Free PORK Q LOIN Of. ^STEAKS NONE 1 j FRESH LEAN 100% PURE GROUND ^ A BEEF SWIFT'S BROOKFIELD CREAMERY v C BUTTER STARRING IN RENNET'S SUMMER DRESS CARNIVAL MOTHER ond DAUGHTER Fenney’s jiragenU ooe of the greatest acts in its tremendous show of fsshitms mother and her understudies lighting up the scene in smooth cotton broadiiloth (machine waahshle at medium set). St:^led to draw rave notices with Schiffll embroidered cummerbund, intermission for sleeves. Play of colors white with navy and red. One of the many fashion ideaa at Penney’s Summer Dress.Carnival. NOTE TO DAD: Wouldn’t they look wonderful In these on Mother’s Dayl ^595 ii«M 10 to i^t «^98 5s>98 ■rlto 1 DOWNTOWN PENNEY'O pen l^enday end Fridey 9:S0 A. M. I 9:00 R.M. ^tl Other Wetkdeyi 9:30 A.M. to S:S0 P. M. MIRACLE MILE PENNErS open Every Weekday- -Menday throath S^rday lOKM A. M. ta9:0()P.M. TitB POI>rtlAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MAY 4, 1960 Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas DAVm Aluen blakb TIU>Y-Servl0tt fl>r Daivld AHen Blaiw, thrM-montlMld mo o( Mr. and Mrt. fUytnond A. Blake, ol 110 MdCiidey 8t.. will be held at 2 p.Bk toiDonrow at Price Funeral HMne. Bpriel will be In White Oiapd Memorial Cemetery. Th« baby died yesterday at St. Joaeph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, after a brief JUneas. Surviving besideB his parents are three sisteri, Joan, Cjuthia and Kathfeen, an at home; grandparents, Mrs. LaVerna Blake of Dehvit and Me and Mrs. Carl MacDonald of Port Huron. LEON L. CBETAL Leon L. Cretal. «, ot 78 E. Bevttly St., died this morning at Pontiac General Hospital after an illness of several werics. He was an employe of Pontiac Motor Diviaion for 30 years. Surviving are his Wife, Jeimie; his mothw, Mrs. Zoe Cretal ol Pontiac: a daughter, Mrs. Charles Furlong of Clarkston; two Eugene L and Lloyd A., both of Pontiac; two grandchildren; a sis^ Hir. Mrs. John Pemberton old Wayne State Uirfver-sity Ekiglish professcMT won SSOO with hif volume, "Heart’s Needle." It was his first book of poems. Snodgrass, who has taugirt at C o r n e 11 University among otiiets, 1$ a graduate ot the State University ol Iowa. the national party organization aiv nounced Jolntiy today that they will aerie re-election tills year. ★ ★ A Mrs. Margaret Price, Ann Arimr. and Thomas H. E. Quimby, East Lansing, will be candidates for election as national committeewom-an and committeeman from Michigan. Mra. Mildred Jeffrey, De-t, will run again tor the post alternate national committee Elections will take idace at caucus of Michigan delegates In Los Angeles July 10, the night befenre the national convention. pens---------_________:____ Michigan’s delegates to the n»-tional convention wdU be named Saturday at a state convention in Grand Rapids. *■) » ' 'St?" A K .a# inyvwr step.. You get energy more quickly from PkmeerwiidrBffi: Chief lugar than from any other food. They actually help give you more vigor and vitality that make work eooiar ami play more fun. Yon eee ■ugar euppIiM energy to the body faatar than any other food. Let the big red ‘''Mkdugan Made” aeal on every red, Mute, and bhie bag remind you that Big Chief and Pioneer give you more flavor—faater energy.jJ'ake home. Big Chief-or*Pi9i>eer fugar noKt time you ahopf ...iWVr rtgftf fo Mil MICHIGAN MADE PURE SUGAR grown aiM processed ia Mkhigan by Michigan peoplB Sunday f: iVa Mrv4 «aw Am wa and iea creom ot our iw Driva-in Service Window, we hove Corry-Oot Service for Dinners ond Sondwiches. Phone yoiir order in * . . Your order will be wolfing for you to pick up. Also Pop ond Picnic Supplies ORCHID CORSAci Special *5*^ May 8th Mother’s Day No Finer Giit Than' from Jacobsen’s Fresh From Our Lake Orion Greenhouses . . . Beautiful Fresh Cut ROSES Priced from Sweetheart Roses m Milk'Glass Pink or $rOO Red O Order today tor Mother’s Day Delivery. Your flowers wfU be carefully selected, delivered anysriwre promptly, and charged to your account. Call your order today, 24 hour phone service. Spring Enchantment Bowl of Roses $0195 BRASS BAROQUE PLANTER . rutty "triso Planted f CORSAGES Fresh from our refrigerated Counter where you can make your choice. Carii and carry. Priced From •1 50 Permanent Flowers ... delicate pink or talisman roaes . . . dec for I gg-PORK STEAK. . .‘'39' r PORTION or FRYING Rli AND RACK ATTACNID CnICKEN ItooiJKK^^OJ "Peapla hava been afraid to "Tliey feared potMcal reprisals and aodal ostracism, eapecially in Southern California,** Davis said. . Deputy Secretary Of State Walter Stutler gaJd Davia and an anti-death penalty group named "Pod-pla Against Capital Puiflahment, Inc." had until Juno 30 to get 430,4S3 signatures on petitions to place the bant pn the November gcnaral election ballot. The Japanese beeUa is .tn the larval stage tMs time of year but emerges about July 1 as an adult, beetle, the depai^meht said. The insect is knowfi to feed on iso different types of vegetation. TWBLX^ THE POXTIAC PRteSS. WEDXE3i)t4Y. MAY i. I960 ^ Hot Apple CheesS Bread Fragrant and Delicious Bewaring! Cheese Will Better Eggs H«« Is a hot bmd go good you’ll bt temptecf M iMlK a whole meal of It. Certain It is you’ll aerve it cut hi great iquatM, fre ig!) Or, serve It aione at a %'|tstpeN° a*cupt gritM"fiuMrp chcddsr chMM '<^p sillk fully spoon over dough. Sprinkle ------" - egi: a'- Dissolve yeast in lukewarm water. Scald 14 cup milk: add butter, .. ... ^ ^ sugar and salt. Stir until butter is It's a simple bread to make. Just njtrtM. COol to lukewarm ■■ egg and milk to bind the tapping, j l.aBt touch . . . poppy seeds. Thenj into the oven to bake. • i plan ahead so that it will have thelyeast. Add to flour and mix to a time to rise that all .veast breads dough. Knead on floured board demand. Worth the extra time, about 3-4 minutes, though. Jiat try it and see. cover. to Cheese Hot Bread '•"cto Vmrm palce mPI dsp- (bmbine apples, brown s cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves, mer 5-8 mim|tei until .most of the liquid has evaporated. Oral. Care- with Gheese. Beat egg; add K cup milk. Spoon over cbeese. Sprinkle with poppy seeds. Bake in txd oven 400 degrees, SOBS gilnutes, or until done. Serye warm. Makes 18 servings. All spring plantinif should be timed according to the date when The statistics, too, bear out the leellipg that Spring and cottage cheese go hand In hand. 'The Department of Agriculture says that as Winter gives way to Spring, there's a jump in output of cot tage cheese, and it continues into early summer. The numbers also show that as a nation we're eating more and more cottage cheese each year, and today we eat at least twice as much per person as we did 10 >'ears ago. ★ * ♦ makes .! welcooM addithm to some hof daiisa. too. Fpr examplo, next time yOu arsmUe eggs, have soitoe cottage diease bhody, about one-quarter cup of cottage cheese for 'each two eggs. ScramUe the eggs as usual, and Just at the eggs have thickened, mix in some cottage diedae. Serve at once, perhaps on toast, and you have a main course that's hearty, hot, nourishing but light as. Springtime itself. kUUiig^ frost-encfo to your kicality' You’re probaWy accustomed Veteran gardeners can tell you] using cottage cheese in salads. Qnmed Clams Used in Old World Soup Eitgont Prun* D«isert A hearty soup put together in Jigtime for a short-order cook. (rMd)t-te*«st ityl* Mm (TH euBMi) mlBMd eltm* kttCM bMVB «up ihlalv •llMd MSUlou yrasi* ■ topi iBelodid) this, better than the weather|c<»nbined with fruitis or with green: bureau. . 'vegetables. But cottage cheesel A dessert elegant but simple is prunes plumped in sherry andi served with a plop of iwwti whipped .cream. Arid prunn will .alwayf' be ready for -this ha^, terv'ing if kept on hand plumpii«; in aherry In a crock or in I the new Sunshine Jars. Turn soup into a medium-aized qauoepan; add liquid from clams; reserve drained clams. Heat soup 'gently, whisking several timea ' |do not boil. Meanwhile cook ' in a skillet until crisp; remove tol absorbent'paper to drain; crumble.' To baoon fat In skillet add |cal- llona and brown lightly.nkybva with atotted apoon; add Wallfons to aoup with drained clams and crumbled bacon. Reheat but do not boll. Add salt and pepper to taste. Makes 4 servli«r OK to Cook Frozon Moot Without First Otfroiting Frosen meat may be defroeted efore or during cooktog. The method of defrosting does not rto-ticmiWy aftect the flavor, tender-ess or Juiciness of the meat cuta-★ ★ , All meatt, fresh or frosen. should ibe cooked at low to moderate oven rmrstiirei F. tO ___dSS^F.). Defrosted meats {are cooked by the same methods All ONE Qualitr... for Outdoor Cooking lasted in their own sweet juices as they turn above the glowing coals ,. . taste-heightened by a wisp of smoke and your favorite sauces . . . these plump Wrigley birds will barbecue to perfection. White and tender in the right places, drisp-brown where you want 1^. Co get the charctoal! It’s chick-n-cue time again (And better get enough broilers for the neighbors who will be attracted by the appetizing bre«zes wafting from your backyard) 0acka^e(l Tfhat Specials Ready to Broil ofBar-B-Q, Grade 'A' Split without Giblets Indoors or outd<^, these top-quality broiling chickens . . ‘ from the country’s finest scientific poultry-producing regions . . . will please your palate and save you money. Split' for your added^convenience.________________ : Sliced Bnled Bam^69«: Amokl't Sliced • Sliced Baton iSr? 491, lunch Meals Swift's Brooktieid Premium Sausage Sklisicss 491,. Peschke Mich. Grade 1 Skinless Franks Cut from 10 - 12-Lb. Avg. Wt. Loins aef Fen " 33< Paitpl Plastic Juice Glasses 2’° )$' Plastic Juice Pitcher 79* Cut from Tender Young Corn-Fed Pork S^resk -Sftskr Specials- • Fresli Lake Smelts ^ 10” * ■431,. • Pefch Fillets # Frcih e Cod Fillets PORK LOIN ROASTS ^ 29 451, Preth Heddock Fillets 491, Fancy Large Shrimif |C‘- Twhrleh led Ih. 59lb 691. I lb. (Rolling (Pm m Pillsbury — 5c Off Lobel oney^ on CJnese Snpwdrift — 8c dff Lubel SAVE 5-Lb. m r Nl.- !! r d . '1 Cake Mixes Shoitening OC|4 3-Lb. Can. OAf| Yellow, White, Spice, Dsvilt Food, Orange, Pinsoppls Of Cqromel _Pkg. GREAT OVER TOAST Hygrode Potted Meat HYGRADE QUICK MEAL TREAT Vienna Sausage HART CALIFORNIA Bartlett Pears Sealtest Creamed :'10‘ 139‘ 5 303 TOO Com I covntry assortment Good Taste Cookies reamed Cottoge Cheese 19' Get The Finest Quality Available At Wrigleyt Top Frost Frozen Vejgetable Fiesta. SAVE 6c Large or Small Curd 1-lb. On. SELF WRINGING SPONGE Per mo Press Mop EXCITING, ZtSTY Zion Fig Bars CLEANS EXTRA DIRTY DISHES FAST Dishwasher "'olP' WHITE OR PASTEL COLORS LUX Toilet Soap Mel-O-Spred Sava 'lOc Golden Morgarine 3^49' WRIGLEY 50 EXTRA GOLD BELL STAMPS WM PMfdMW ef $1.00 er Mew ■xcwt u*r. Win* er Clfawnet Miiwn waewnsWe •nly at WiifllaM ttiraui situreay, aSair ». This toa na cash «aim. UmH Om ear Cuatamtr. .V Mel-P-Cru$t Sliced Wlule Wheat Bread 2^35' SAVE 7c Oven Fresh Cherry ^ie ^2^49* SEALED IN FOIL LUX Toilet Soap i MILD CARE FOR LONGER WEAR LUX C^ntle Flakes MIRACLE COLD CREAM OAR Praise Pink Bar ' IMPROVED — FRAGRANT NjBw LlFebuoy Soap J FREE FACE TOWEL IN BOX Silver Dust Detergent ADVANCED FQR AUTOMATICS ''AD" Detergent EVERYBODY'S FAVORitt WITH SOUP Oyster Crackers ''p’ CRISP, TASTY. RIGHT ANY TIME RITZ Crockers Top Froit Frozen Cieen Peas 74" SAVE 22c Giont Stis • Mixed Vegetables — lOOz. • Cut Com — lO-Oz. • French Frlei»—9-Oz. • Succotash —^ 10-Oz. • Pots Carrots — lO-Oz. • Cboppod Spinach — lOOz. • Leif Spinach 10-Oz. 100 Your Choice WRIGLEY Only at M* s-u. 39* i SH0RTHM6 g| Limit One With This Copoo__ !C Pfppfrtd|« Farms Potfriti i«y ’rarneveis e Appla Stnidai e Aspic ar Cliarry e Appl# Dumplinft Your' Choice 11-ez fkQ. GEET RirSJER G I FXS 59< R WITH GOI-D BELL- GIFX SXA.IV1F»S '...V -1 :4 t". " . Trife PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 4. 1960 THIRTKEX for a King' describes Lamb Shoulder Roast lorimli Jingl. Lunb doem’t have to be Uand. You can torn it into a-royal fare by perking up. Ita flavor in all aorta tt araya. Try this delicious lamb shoulder rroipe to suiprlae your family and^ •iiiends. Pi»oven aeaaonlng with' gariic, augaiv ginger, doves, and . vinegar gives the lamb shoulder a flavor tfiat is strictly In the gourmet dass. Top dt this 'dinner treat by serving mint sauce as' ^ accom MM»* out dove (d garlic over the sIdn-Bide of the lamb dwulder. cot through the skin lightly to form small squares. Combine sugar, vinegar, ginger, and ground cloves and spread over surface of lanq), patting the mixture into and pepper and place an rack in shallow baking ★ * ♦ Roast in moderately slow oven, 335 degiees F., about A mlnutti per pound er to 175 degrees F. for medium and about 35-minutes pomnlL^r to t» da^ F. roll done.SrMB: Xbiitt iivv- GoRm Quick Bread an Unusual Loaf Almondi for Atparogut Btrook coltoe beverage Bake. Ini Tid pan In Hondy Refgronco Chart moderate oven (375 degrees F.) 40 to 45 minutes. . . It’s easy to enjoy warm breads braaktost often. Ooftee Spice that takes oiAy minutes to prepare. Why not give it a try? Serve it warm with lots of butter or margarine to perk up early niorning appetites. To make 1 CbOee Spice Loaf, sift together 3 capo sifted enriched Drink Milk, Grandma, You Nggd Mora Food Enjoy plentifiil supplies of fresh asparagus wigi a eavocy. buttgr flourai tablespoon baking powder. . n sauce like this onqe saute tup 1 silvered almondaJit H cup (l stfck) butter. When lightly browned, add H teaspoon s^t, 3 teaspoons ‘ ow Juice cucumber. Serve gus teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon cinna-. teaqioon ground yloves andeli tcaspoog allspice. Cream V« cup shortening and cup sugar until light and fluffy. Add 2 beaten eggs and beat w«U. Add flour mixture to creamed among A uniqu describing what trees,' shrubs «r plants should be pruned month by nwnth: throughout the year hu iseccntiy been prbitad. Varlatkms caused by geographical locations NEW Y(MU£ (UPI) - Some have been considered. Ibe shape ‘aenior citizens” don’t eat enough, of die calendar is desipred tor reports the Nutrition Institute, which fosters research on the science of nutritkto. A government survey shows that foods containing protein, iron and the B vitamins, niacin and thiamine, found in dairy producti, meat, poultry, and fish. Inade-j quate consumption of fruit and vpgetaWCT also causes deficiencies’ Add You may obtain this calendar Porter Company, Inc. phia 35, Pa. Send 25 cento tor, handling to Pruning Calendar at| the above addresn. I cup Of crushed pineapple* of vitamins A and C prevalent, to one pound can or jar of Har-! -------older pe(;spns. Ivard Beets. Heat and serve. WUlYouHelpMetoGetaJob? Our free Placement Sefhfice will be at your disposal when you graduate, and throughout your business career. The finest employers in this oreo call upon us to fill excellent positions. They ore offering more positions now them we hove graduates. Pontiac iBusiness Institute 7 W. Lawrence OvM SiJtlf roars FE 2-SUl« 1 Wriglejr r Completely Cleaned, Oven-Ready, Plump, Tender, Whole FRYERS Government inspected to protect your familys health . . . Govern-ment grade >'A'~to^etecf your pocketbook. Cuf-Uplnf 6 Semn^Piawf 29. Fresh, Oven Ready, Plump, Tender B lal., May 7. Wt iMarvs fha rlghl to Wt qaiagHts. Sno-White, Boneless, Frozen Roasting Chickens 39 c Ik Leg-O-VEal Roasts Rolled ond Tied Easy to Carve 59t Hardi-Pak, 2-Year-old, Northern Grown Anorted Varieties Rose BusKes , e 98= ■W5T AMi-rurpo5« I_ewn» ^ -q Grass_Seed ^ Tflolker's CDay Specials Golden Ripe For Finest All-Purpose Lawns NU-TURF Michigan's Finest — Foil Wrapped A" Pots Geraniums o69' ■ Wnppi^ African Violets 49‘ Bananag 10 Otaiwes^ yjTi’ e^t.39- Fresh Garrots 2^^ Orange Juice 29- fresh Green Asporagiis 59 California Tomato — SAVE 10c HnnbCabnp 2i^29r Del Crest — 100% Pure — SAVE 30c Instant Gafiee 3-Diamor»d Solid — SAVE 23c Light Meat Tima 4^69* Everybody's Favorite — SAVE ^ * TideDetogent ^29* Bauer Whole ~ SAVE 16c Tomotoes 8”!*’ Tast-D-Litf — Cut or Whole Beets lO^r TAst-D-Lite • ■ Pwk & Beons 10^ 1" Halt <5pWen CfeomCom 7^r Oi^f Favorite>Xut jr-;_SWc 8c . Gieen Beons Our Favorite Gieen Peas Paw Paw Pure Concord — SAVE 33c Grape Juice Dixie Homogenized Solod Dressing ^29* ^ Johnson's Glo-Gxit Wax - FrosHng Mix 8303 400 Gins 8303 fM Cans 4«-.r.|00 Bottles£ 42% |00 Cons j| Paw Paw Delicious Grope Drink 4^^ M®® Mission Slicod — SAVE 19c Racked By Del Monte Hunt's Tomato Paste iMTWEiKTocoiMimYOMtndFiuMnNi lia iwJ?J ,3y mm t SI IXTW 6010 BBl STMIIPS Encyclop a ^ Volumes 1*16 Stjll Availoble Offer Expirtf Soturdoy, May 7 WRIGLEY I lOP FMir KE (KM 5»miSewwe836B55ew NIX1MS0U HU STMIK WMi Pwehaae of 1 Beetle Any Sin VIIA-HUS VITAMIIIS [?i Hygrade's Beef Stew or Chili r? 3 ww B«ons Con WRIGLEY EXTBA 601D lai STAMPS With Rnrekan of I.Lb. aitM WRIGLEY BUTTER SttwrOM, Mb* t. TMt CWIpMI MB M CMh vahw. UmH Om Oar Cimtmmr. WITH GOLD E3ELI. GIFT STAIVIFG ■V' ^4 :: '4;- ■d a,-. FOURTEBy , WEDNESDAY. MAY EL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER ^ Plan to Attend the SPRING CONCERT presented by WATERFORD HIGH SCHOOL CHORAL MUSIC DEPARTMENT TUESDAY, MAY 17th in fh« Ttl-Huran Shopping Confer porking lot. Footuro lolocfiont from ' Oklohomo”. Public Invited — Free Admission 14 Stores to Serve Your Every Need— Stop to Todays • Qtmun'i Town and Country •# S. S. Krosft p Shoo Box • Sow 'n Suva Shop • Wrifloys • Montgomery Word • Oho Hour Volot • Cunningham Drug Store • Winklomon'i >• Tol-Huron Childron'i'Shop • Burton Shoos • Mytr'l Jowotry Store • Vtviono Woodard • Sanders • Ljnda Loo Apporol • United Shirt Distributors • Murray Sisters Beauty Studio FI 8-2719 ReiRember Mom on Her Day •with a gift she'll use every day . . • only $^99 Block Rod Light Bhio Pink-—Sius A to 10 OPEN DAILY AT 9:30 A. M. Opin Nightly Mon. Thru Fri.—Sot. 'til 9 F. M. Fun and Fabric^ I Glomo crepes—adorable printed no-iron fobrics, j so perfect for sunsuits, pajomos, baby doll nighties. | Woshoble—require little or no Ironing! [ SALE PRICED 37‘ YA EnbroMtrtl Lisei-Typs Fabrics Moke 0 wonderful sheoHi dress, or new glamorous $«it 4rr this-cteose t-esistontr-royorr-jond ocetote*-— so eosy to .work with, looks like a dream! 45-inchfl wide. Foshion shodes—tone on tones and multicolors. » ‘2.98 Yd. Jtrjrits. SEW ’n SAVE ~ TF.L-HURCN SHOPPING CENTER J COSMETICS Coming to Tel-Huron Shopping Center Cbildrcs’c Casm SHOES VIVIANE WOODARD Wotch for Grand Opening of m-iiiss A complete new line of notionolly odvertised girls' and boys' and infants' wear will soon arrive for the Grand Opening. WATCH THIS PAGE FpB FURTHER DETAILS (KiS Goyerhmtnt lhip#cted. Whole Grode FRYERS 1 BROILERS j ROASTERS -A Lb. 29‘ i-35' i ‘"SO' Pillsbury Flour Sealfest Creamed COTTAGE CHEESE 5 Lb. 9Qc 16 Oz. 4 Ac Bog— Ctn. IJI ivt DOMINO SUGAR 49. CLEARANCE STARTING THlJRSDAY! spring coats ^24 formerly $39.98 and $49.98 Juniors and misses! Sove on monotone, hopsacking or novelty weave wool coots in o world of fresh colors. Slim/full silhouettes, clutch and button styles. a spring suits ^24 formerly $39.98 to $59.98 Exciting fitted, demi-fit suits! Important 32" and 36" length woik4ng suits! Styles and colors sure to please. An outstanding collection for funibrs and (pisses. wool, rayon suits *17 formerly $19.98 to $29.98 Wod suits, rayon suits: in the fitted and demi-fitted styles you're looking for. Choice color selection for early shoppers. In juniors' and misses' sizes. Hurryf TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTCP a|5en' to 9 P- rn. mondoy, fhursday, fridoy, Saturday Very Speciol wash ’n* wear a HANOSOMI PUIDS • GUARANTIiD COLORFAST a SIZES 32 TO 40 » AVAILABLE AT BOTH STORES • V THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY. MAY 4, 1960 PONTIAC, MICIUGAN. FIFTEEN Area Music Groi^ Sets Member Drive A festive kickoff lundwbn will open Waterford Township avlc Music As8n.’s membership drive Thursday at the Community Center, according to Mrs. Lyndon Saiathiel. llie affair is set for noon to'l p.m. , Besides the regular workers already contacted, anyone interest^ .in pnmoting musical culture both bi the township area and other communities, is Invited to attend the luncb^ Janet A, Floyd Will Be Wed ■ on May 21 The ei«afcment and ^approaching marriage of Janet Ann Floyd , to Lee Klinesteker is announced by her parents Mrs. Ladeen Floyd of Southward street, Waterford, and Earl Floyd of Airport road, Waterford. Mrs. Warren Mikscfa of Flint will be her sister’s matron of honor at fifay 31 nuptials in All Saints Episcopal Church. Bridesmaids wiU be Judi Ter-rien of Lake Orion, Mrs. Ray Sdhapp ol Grand Rapkb, Jo Ann McDougal of Ann Artxsr and Sharon MacMillan of Sag- Participants will receive instructions on registering .new--^ members, and will be given complete npisic packets for demonstration purposes. Board members have selected a list of prospective artists available lor next-year’s programs. These inclixle William Warfield, baritone; Whit-tem^ h Lowe, pianists; the Rondoliers, a male trio; and dance artists Goya t Matteo. Organist Richard Leiberi, pi-anipt 4">paro Iturbi, the New Amsterdam stringed trio, and satirist - pianist George Ferer along with “The Uttlest Cir-cub’’, and Paul Draper, tap and moti^m ballet artist are among prospective artists for the smes. Cellist Leaul Weber, Mr*. Russell McBride and Mrs. 'Tccmsatbnfic Brides' Catch On Here By MADELEINE DOEREN .Reduced rates to the British Isles and friendly visUs witii one’s countrywomen are a few (rf the advantages of membership in the ’Transatlantic Brides’ and Parents’ Assn. cal. With Mrs. Dale Baumgardner, they became charter " members of the Pontiac chapter. Each entertains the other members in her home once a month. One of the mothers Mrs. Steven M. Strzelecki of ’Tilmor street, Waterford ’Township, - ywHtieft Tf 18 chil*«r^%H*“ are Michael and Matthew. Another son, Stev’en, is 18 months. Mrs. Bauingardner, born in South Wales, met her husband in England in 1951, and came to America the next year. They Waterford Township, who works evenings at tiie Inn. Mrs. Hidci m^ her husband in 1^3 while he was statimed with the Air Force near London. ’They were nmrriM the next year and camie to Highland with their three-month-old * Reservations are being accepted for the ’Tuesday Mu^-cate’i annual qtring lunchemi Tuesday at Pine Lake (fountry Chib. ’The deadline is Saturday evening. Accepting call* are Mrs. E. R. Biller, Mrs. A. D. Esier, Mr*. Ralph T. Norvefl and Mrs. H. G. Wooloock. chairman; Mrs. Chris Sloman, cochairman; Mrs. Hurrid Cre-gar, treasurer; and Mrs. Norman Moysey, secretary. Others are Mi^f. GOorge WUde, f ■ * ' the dub. Members will have weekly tournaments on ’Thursdays and three major tournaments dur- Mrs. George Shanahan, junior 'district golf; Mrs. Ray E^rt, rules oommittlte;.. Mrs. P- H. Pope, district golfers: Mra. B. J. Bergesen, social diairman; 'Mrs, F. M. Smith, handicaps; ai0 Mrs. Clyde Dearing, pubr lidty. TTie PresMent’s ’IVophy tournament will be played in June; the Director’s Cap tournament, in July; and the champim or quit-asking' the boy to entertain the guests. DEAR ABBY: A person who is very close to me is now SS years old. He was recently sent to prison tor 15 years. Can he draw his Sodal Security white he is in prison or not? MUST KNOW DEAl^ MUST: Sodal Sajurity “What’s your problem?'’ Write to Abby in care of this paper. For a peraenal reply, enchne a stamped, setf-ad- For Abbv's pamphlet, "What Teenagov Want to Know,’* aend 25 eoits and a large, adf - addressed, stamped envelope in care of Tha Pontlae ........... ....----------- Planning a Pontiac branch of the Transatlantic Brides and Parents Assn, is Mrs. Stevr.i M. Strzelecki, left, of Tilmor street, Wtuerford. Joining her in a . I'gptA of taeH' are Mrs. Data Baumgardner of Clarkst^— and Mrs, Phillip Hicks of Tangent drive, Waterford. Only women born in the British Isles are digibk for iimnbership. nmv- .blXTEEX_‘^ THE P0XTIA6 WEDXES^AV. MAY 4, CONTEMPORARY, COLONIAL and PROVINCIAL FURNITURE S{NCE *1017 Invites You To Our Annual Birthday Celebration ■frou-se Ji Thursday, Friday,, Saturday May 5th, hth'^and ,7th Celebrating our first anniversary tif our new location is highly gratifying ... because you, odr customers, have made this such a successful year. Our way of saying ^Thanks’ A money making affair is Eastern Junior High Schr^s **Fun Nile" ^ at tho - scheduled for Tuesday * is to present this 3-day event, presenting the latest in furniture and home decoration ... an art exhibit you*D mjoy ... and refreshments school. Anticipating all the projects their profits will buy are Mrs. George Caches, at left, of Moreland avenue, president; arid Mrs. Marvin McVicOr presontin^ an Exhibit of Scnlptnroy OU Paintings and Watercolors by members of IPcmtiac Society Bloomfield Artists Association of Raeburn street. Tuesday Is Fun-Nite at Eastern Parents, teachera and students at Eastern Junior Hiflti School will gather for ••Ftm-Ntte” Tuesday at the acbool. | Gaines with prises, talent shows, movies, refreshments and a white elephant sale are on the ag^a. Mrs. Marvin McVicar is general chairmani assisted by Mrs. George Gaches, kitchen; Mrs. Erie Kretchmar. dining room; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Botler, game room;l Mrs. Kyle Wharff, baited goods; Margaret Snyder and William .Sumner, tafoif show. Teachers wW be in charge of movies. Ronald Kasber is hamBing the pop and potato chip booth and Mrs. Raymo^ Ellsworth Is ^b* licity chaUbum. Cardigan Tops fUPI) — In swMters for spring, the cropfled olassic cardigan continues as a headliner. TVre’s also a trend to tunic-length sweaters. The new bulkies —' wool and orlon — feature lighter weight and lacier knits. Tm Dra't Bav« to Have (hwT Sail M Daadnfi Biiif Back Hail Cotof ii 30 Days EvraJUtor30~ 'Area Chuichwometi Set i May Breakfast Friday \ The Fellotvship ot Church Women of Waterto^ Township will conduct a May breakfast Friday from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. women of the Lakeland Preabyte^ ian Church. Lutheran Church o! the Gramhau win be in charge ofj The Rev. Roy Lailibert wtH moderate a paaH disrusnkli on “Obutk VocattoBo tor Women.’’ Reservationa may be miide byi contacting ^u^ wonifn'p S3X>up| prnQimUi or Mra. William Berg^ nuum of Drayton Plaiina. An offering wUl be taken to hdp defray breakfast expe nursery will be provided. ACTUAL IffOK ft Amt nCTUIE NAME ON lEQUEST WHEN AfPEAlANCES RATE . soran IS 8IIAT „ •a'KIt Panelists from various area churches will be the Rev. Robert| Adams, parish ministry; Charlotte Baird, parish ,worker; the Rev. William LaFouMain, specM ministry; and the Rev. B. W. Lanpher, mlaaion field. Get More Sun Oar Interior Decorator Staff WUl Be Glad To Counsel At IVo Additional CiMSt Devotions will^be by Mrs. Donald Andrews. 'Mrs. Raymond (UPD — Active summer playdothes make the most of sun: Brief togs expose midriffs. Backs are exposed as halter necklines, deep Vs and low-scooped tank tops became more popular. ModlM bOdni’a are in the parade of two-piece swim suits. *• tUa* Owl srMM* SaMraff. DaaStaM Malat »la *aaM ataM«< iBaHaiatoO. JSaetfS ta aktalaMr lafa. Na •H mt^Sksn "****' "** M SasMk It mW aa a aitaay haa (aanalat. Oalx ISJS. NATURAL HEALTH FOODS I Mt. Clemaas St. FE 44401 We have completed special room arraagements for this event and will be happy to assist you in adapting or achieving any of the interiors you admire. REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED Open Thursday^ Friday Eveningi *tU 9 p.m. 1680 South Toleqraiih Rc; :-ri Just South ot Orchard Lake Road 1 ' . . 4 NOW DO DISHS8 FASTER, CLEANER New Imperial DISHMASTER* A VERY PRACICAL and DESIRABLE GIFT! ' You are remembered and appreciated Bcmcs of times each day when you five her a Diidimaster! Shell have extra time to do the things she enjoys. • dumb any ha washed as they are wed! NEW FAaORY BRANCH on WOOOWARB nt SQUARE LAKE RD. MMONSTRATION. SALU and SIKVfCi pg g.gggi ■f THE POXTIAG PRESS, WEDXF.SDAV, MAY t. SEVEXl 5e Vague on Gifts You Want Openg Lid to Glamot Nothing Tops a New Hat By CMltT Bonr Dear Mm. iW: When people uk me what I would like for a wedding preaent, la It proper to give them a direct anawer by telling them what I really need or ahould ! anawer casually by aaying, “We could uae almdst anything." My fiapce thinks It is correct .to tell people what I want and says that they wouldn’t ask me if Oiey didn't want to know. 1 find It emharrassing to mention a speci-tc Item as I do not know what people can afford to qpend and if I do say something definite they might feel obliged to give it to me. Anawer: With no Idea of what they want to spei^, I thiiA iwer Is your own suggested answer perfect, or you might perhaps name several items varying in price fi-om the inexpfomive on up to the expensive. By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN There’s nothing like a woman Bd a hat! leas much of the time fortable and practical in many instances,'but nothing adds more (lamor than a glamorous hat. Also, a new hat Is a thne-tested aoarce of comfort aad encourage-meat to a woman. Nothing seems quite so bad when sue Is'wearing a new boonet! Actually, there are general rules to remember when selecting a hat just as there are when choosing a hairdo. WOlWS BOTH WAYS The hat you wear can be as flattering or as unbecoming as the way you wear your hair or apply your makeup can be. Here la some help. If your tee Is round, you ahould have Dear Mra. Post: Would it be proper for me to go to a dinner latrty dressed in a bus- should nut be too aamnir. If your face Is long, you edn wear hats with large brims. Round- _______ ^ ed crowns are good tor you. Avoid fo^s'^ auTt'when “all theVheT ;sl««ing up-and-down lines. Buy men will be wearing dinner stralght-across-theJtead, coats? This is the situation: !•*'»•' ... ' 1 received an invitation to a ! * * ♦ i dinner party at a private club, i, “ The invitation stipulates “Black ‘’^m will be llattenng. If you JHezi-HgweverrT am only yis-4haye-A-re^lng_chil^ ___ iting in this city and did not ^ing evening clofoes with me. i The “plcturo hat" or largo-brimmed hat Is most appealteg, Must I decline the invitation because of this? Answer: I would say that a dark ’ • ■ ■ ... dark blue bow tie would be permissible with men who are wearing tuxedos, but it would be best to telephone your host (or hostess) explaining your predicament and ask for his (or her) approval. these are uot for all womaaklud. The vbry thort woman or the' overweight, woman appears mashed down by a big hat, and as I have already said, (he woman -who has a receding chin should pass these by. | DON'T MISS TON j * It is very pleasant in the sum-i Deat Mrs. Post: I have In- mertiiAe to go to the swankiest' vifed a girl to go to my senior ist>ot8 with gloves but without a prom. We will be wearing eve- hat, and when traveling it is a ning clothes. I would like to relief not to drag along hat boxes. know if it Is necessary tor take -—But don't miss tlie fun and coni-a taxi to the place where the dance is being held, or could we go on the subway? My family does not have a car. I have been told that it is not proper to travel o nthe subway, or bus. when dressed in, evening clothes. Answer: If you can’t affohl to take a taxi, certainly go on the subway. It la neither improper nor unusual. TonfHMTOw: “Though Over 40. :You Still Can Ihiprove Your ^Figure." i Leftover cooked rice In the house? Mix it with well-drained canned tomatoes, sprinide With plenty of grated cheese and heat in the oven. Pick Secietaiy of Year Pontioak Chapter of National! Gneits «%re Mrs. Thurle Higgle. Seeretaries Assn., International, jMary EHen Kyte, Mrs. Juanita celebrated Secretaries Day at a i Garner and Judy Johhscm. dinner in Hotel Waldron. j —---------------- Chairman Mrs. John Duhean AA.nr,klA I presented Oakland Coiihly /YlOple LeOtS tary of the Year Mrs. Kay Rector,! LJ^I J I , •ecretary to Luke Uttie. president nOlu LUnCheOn of Ted’s Restaurant, Inc. la a Mextcaa theme, Dora Huron and Juan Fimsecn and company presented several Mexican dances and songs. A fasbkm I alan waa featured. Secretaries Week was initiated nine years ago. Local secretaries ’ of the Year will cofnpete for the ' national title during the annual; * NSA convention in Pittsburgh Juiyi 20-23. I President Mrs. lUrtierta Trayeri . conducted an initiation for Mrs.' Jacquelyn Cronkright, Mra. Kay! Tessamer and La Verne Martcel-wlU at last week’s dinner. 1 Members of the klaple Leaf Club were luncheon guests of Mrs. Dale Moats of West Iroquois road Friday. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Vivian Tubbs, Mrs. Lawrence Terrien and Mrs. H. T. Rombaugh. An afternoon of bridge followed planned entertainment. Autobiographies of Mrs. WUl-liam Bedard (d Drayton Plains and Mrs. H. J. Endries were heard. Past presidents will serve as hostesses at the June 3 luncheon at the hcrnie of Mrs. William McOure of Uinbis ave- Vtterly Feminine . . . MOTHER’S DAY UNGERIE ... to Suit Her Every Mood Appenzell-inspired embroidery and lace in lingerie and girdles ^nj^alte Because You Love Nice Things Choosft her GIFT from pur whole wardrobe of Api^n: .. inzell ' lingerie by the e^uisite delicacy of hondsome Swiss embroidery. ’ An enchanting new nylon tricot lingerie group by Von Roolte . . - oil nylon, except the embroidery. Figure-flottering foishions . . lavished with loce. . Motching girdle and bra . . . the girdle nylon, cotton and rubber . . . the bra— n^on, rubber, royon and cottbn ; . 1. in the freshest Spring shades. Not Pictursd, Mstching AH Sizss For Only ... EIGHTEEX THE PONTIAC; VRESS, WEPXESDAY. MAY k KnoxAlumni Will Gather Load alumni of Knox Otrilege, (ialeabunf. 111., «ill meet fof the annual dtouier Friday in the Unt-veralty Oub in Detroit. Reaervattons haw been made by Or. and Mra. Kenneth E. Ooi^ riipui. the Vincent B. I^’atkins. Mr. and Mn. Walter E. Lewit and Dr. and Mra. Raymond A. (QagUatdL all of Birmingham Cll^rri Van Dyke of Birmingham. paat president, dinner chairman, will attend with Mra. Van Dyke. Mra. Raymond E. L>'ort of Bennington drive, Bloomfield Hills, is alumni secretary. Group Studies Missionary Endeavors * Tweiily-seven ‘ members of the Marbach Study Group of First Presbyterian C3iurch met at the Elizabeth Lake home of Mrs. Elmer Barker Thursday. Mrs. Joseph Edwards of Milford presented a mlsstionary study of churches in Alaska, Puerto Rico and Cuba. Mrs. "^^enneth Nagley instructed the j group through d study of "The' Hynutbook of the Ageg" a series that deals with the Psalms. Mrs. Rohdrt C. Irwin gave the history of the ancient I^plms. Mrs. Robert Anderson presented the new concept of "Faith Giving’’ whjch would, presumably, replace other fund-raising projwts. Cohostesses were Mrs. Donald McColl and Mrs. Slephen Napier. Professional PERMANENTS Styled os YOU Like tl! IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON Off-On Worrying Morikey Business WASHINGTON (UPH - If you must worry and tie yourself into emotiona] knots, worry constantly rather than alternate between periods of strain and relaxation. This conclusion, drawn from animal experiments conducted at the Army's Walter Reed Hospital, Is reported in the Delaware Medical Journal. There was an excess of stomach acidity in research monkeys who worried off and on. There was no excess—believed associated with ulcers—when the strain was continuous. Alcott School Plans Fair Friday Night A hew and unusual ediibtt will lend interost to Alcott School’s i>TA fair from 5 to 9 p.m. FViday. bn dli^ay will be a U.S.' Air Force supersonic jet fighter with pilot and an Air Force missile. Arrangements were made through the cooperation of the U.S. Air Force Recruiting Station here. Novel exhibit rsora featares Include a collectioa of eoa-fiacated weapoM^ Ifan FsaUae , Poiire Departmeat aad is ariero-tolephaae, rouriesy of, Chairman Mrs. George Totten of Parkdale avenue examines the collection of hand puppets that will be sold at Alcott PTA's Fair on Friday. With her from left are Betty Traweek, 8, of Parkdale avenue; Claudia Combs, 10, of Parcells Circle; and Lucirida Suansey, II, of Merrimac street. Mlrhigaa Boll Telephoae Co., aad demoaWrated by fifth aad < sixth grade papUs. Mrs. George Totten' Is chairman for the fair which alto wiH include pony and hay ridet. Co-chairmen are Mrs. John Couture,. Mrs. Harry McCreary and Mrs. Lewis K. Smartt. Committee heads are Mrs. Charles Calvin, White elephant; Mrs. William Council, game room; Mrs. Ray Black, plants and gifts; Mrs. wililam Green, bake sale; Mrs. Raymond Wilson and Mi-s. ’Troy Ward, snack bar; Mra. Walter Schmitz, fish pond; Mrs. Raymond Baumbrass. games; Mrs. Henry Hardy, rummage sale; Mrs. Charles Dean, toys and comics; and Raymond Raumgras.s, weight guessing. Others are Mrs. Robert Pence, pop corn; Mrs. Smartt, pocket lady; Harry McCreary, hay ride; John Couture, pony rides: U S. Mrs. Theodore Figa and Mis John Couture, dinner; Snd Mrs. Edmond Vaughn. TRlT Scouts. Fish and ham dinners will be ser\ed from 5 to 7 p.m. i Candy Stripes i NEW YORK (LtPIl - Candy stripes are the newest fashion note In window shades. The ; stripes wre pink, blue, yellow or green on a white background. ’They look gtxxi with the Time to Have a Personalized Hair Style Whether it’s a new “fh fashion” hair style or a lovely classic, our beauticians know how to personalize a hair-do to flatter you. TOlNTrS 'S' Main Floor 35 W. Hurpn FE 3-7186 Sligbar Higb0t lot Tfur's Spocialitod Caro_ Looking as model as their planes ' afe 11-year-old Alcott schoolboys from left, Charles Bailey of Meadowlaun drive, Earl Slocum of Stanley avenue and David Lee Pej^der of Merrimac street with principal Mrs. Lloyd Adams. The boy$^ are excited about the jet plane that will be on display at the ‘Fair. Baptist Class Sets Breakfast Friendship Class of Bethany Baptist Church will sponsor its annual public May breakfast from 7 to 11 Saturday at the diurch. It It It Mrs. Robert^nyder is chairman and Mrt. Donald Wilson, cochairman. A miscellaneous bazaar will be featured vnth the breakfast. Baked- goods and handwork will be sold. Ifome made breads spark the menu. Vera Murphy Honored at Prenuptial Luncheon double as summer bedsprc-ids —now*- available in the sanw color stripes, the Window .Shade Manufacturers Assn., said. Beauty Clinic by Edythe McCulloch Vera M. Murphy, bride-elect fit David E. Crawford, was honored at.a luncheon Saturday afternoon. Hostesses were Mrs. Charles H. Crawford, Mrs. Max A.- MOler, Mrs. James W. Crawford of Flint. -The affair was at the Charles H. Crawford home on Williams street. Guests were Mrs. Lawrence R. Murphy, Mrs. J. Earl Crawford, Carol Murphy, Nancy Crawford, Mrt. Alden M. Green. Mrs. Judson C. Howarth and Mrs. Dora Looney. others were Mrs. Forist Cotcher, Mrs. Weriey J. Crawford, Mrs. Russell W. Porritt. Mrs. 0. J. Young, Mrs; Stuart Braid. Mrs. A. B. Wait. Mrs. OrviUe Foster. Mrs. Robert C. Porritt, Mrs. E. Robert Rhodes and Mrs. Fh^yd Graves. Stroll dong in the CQptivoting newness and loveliness of these ^ exotic imports. Beautifully crofted straws and leothers, all with leather linings and leather soles. Sizes 5 to 10, N and M widths. .. you'll have cool colculoted control with these 'Inches Awoy' girdles .. «. Hi-waitt«d ttyU hot natural talent for slimming. Three inch eloitic waistband slims above the waist ... lets you breathe eosily. Patented front construction trims tummy, diminishes derriere. Faggoted-satin lostex ponels fore end aft, leno elastic sides eliminate unsightly teams that show through under soft fobrics. Whito figuro perfection with undroam-od-of comfort, in titos 27-36, ^ ^ 16” 'Omra* If Ao: k Shoftor tlylo 'Inches Awo/. tic panels, girdle, ponty, 25-32. 8.95 Enjoy a tlook silhouefta ikii springl Ut Fodofol'i expady frpinad corsatiara* fit you corracHy for comfort, figura fbttaryl , OHH EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday i; Pawataora AND Draytoa Naiai SSiSi-* RIMINI A. Nafarol atraw ..........................6.99 I. Wfc»a ar baiga laathar ... .............1.99 \ , C. WHJta ar baiga arraw, cack wadga........8.99 D. Whita or aataraf laatkar .. .’........., T99 , E. Wbifa ar natural atraw. . T-------..... 7.99 * " Wofle's Fetbiee feetweor Bowed Beads tNEAI — An, tnlrresftng necklace shown in the Paris coUectien of Jacques Gritle is made up of four rows of white beads tied at the back with large mvy blue bow. It was worn silth a navy blue suit. HOW TO CHOOSE YOUR SWIM SUIT First of ail, shop the mogazinee . , , find out what Is -t line, color and material. Never buy a euit without frying it on. Even though if te a chore, it 8 worth while to avoid a cosily mistake. If youre is the habft-of ’‘living" in your swim suit oil day long at the take, then be sure to own one Cotton suit with no tloys. In spite of fashion'# newest lad, ovoid two piece suits unless rou have an excellent figure Phene Cdythe McCuDMdi Beouty She^, FC 2-7431 Oh ... Those Women Drivers!... THEY HIT ’EM STRAIGHT BOWHTHE FAIRWAY IH • Fkxible Shank • Vnlined Softness • Genuine Goodyear SOLE gTTLKS ' Remevable Spike 8TYLE8-8lses 4 te 1# loN 8laes 4 te 11 , fgxSS AAA te C ... AAA te O ...........^,, 9 PAULI'S SHOE STORE 35 N. Soginow St. , , Open Fri. Evenings 'til 9 Serving Pontiac for 7S Years ■1 THE POXTIAC PRESS, W^XESbAY. MAY 4, 1960 XTXETEEX '*C 1 , Have You Tried This? Roll Bacon Inside Steak, Brown, Then Simmer By 9Uf^ OOmUL Ponttao Pnm Hmiw EdU< ROULAOEN By Mr*. HoUad 0(«ner Party Honors Mrs. Geiger Mrs. Ronald Geiger Dwight avenue waa honored at a stork shower I^Yiday evening at the home of Mrs. George Alexander of North Johnson avenue. ■ Guests were Mrs. Eugene Calhoun, Idrs. Peter Geiger. Mrs. ayde House, Margaret Wihnot, Mrs. Ronald Drake, Mrs. Norman Featherstone, Mrs. Wayne Nealis, Mrs. Roger Pomeroy, Mrs. Francis Mapley, Mrs. Alien Oine.. Club Slates Floral Event Flower arrangements Mrs. Parker Rockwell, Mi^^. Alfred Spengeman and Mrs. W'illiam ^er will be featured ,at Monday's lunchepn meeting of the Green Lake Women's (hub, aipirding to Program Chairman Mrs. Albert Stanker. The affair is set for 12:30 p.m. at the Community House. Ifostess will be Mrs. Alexander Ferguson, chairman. Mrs. Carl Nakkula, Mrs. Paul Teny.' Mfi. Donald Beyreis and Mrs. WiUlam David..... Shampoo Tips Florida still has large wilderness areas where hunters find Mack bbars, panthers and alligators. (NEA) - It’s wise precaution to shampoo your hair immediately after a shopping expedition during which you've tried on hats thid others have tried on before you. With lower prices prevailing on round steak in a number of stores this week, Mrs. Roland Dienter’s recipe for Rouladen should be welcome. Cut meat into stripa IH Otff one encounter with this charming lady sras all too-short Her Interests include reading, maU^ braided nigs and gardening.' b civic activities she waa dtoeen to do ■ publicity for the Pontiac Sym. phony and to help a new church get started. very thin. Roll each strip around a slice ociolly "MOTHER'S DAY" gift wrapped otT^orr-rpwps'’ □ ..................... □ T DAT. 1 PpUNB DBT (Mracy BMk OuniBtM) ORDER NOW BESSIE ALBERT 1MS3 Baa Jnan Detroit 21. Mich. Heavy Plastic CEDARIZED Mothproof GARMENT BAG WnM mtY TOKOAT or OVIRCOAT ■>>. OEAND or PKSSEO tniB offer good ooly om gomomH ( to prior to JEoe* Wodooodof. Map lllh) 26 CUT SOSOS STSUT ASHIOri SHOP TWO SHOPS OF GIFTS Summer Bogs are wonderful gifts! New roomy shapes to carry everything! Strows, Cloths, Vinyls, Heryip^ with Leather 3.00 to Shop Shore no-iron Tee-Tob Shirt, smartly (detqilecJ in ^5% Docron ond 35% cotton white and beige Sizes io to 38 2e98 Advertised in Readers Digest y Summer Robes . . . everything that's new! 12.95 that every Mother loves! In drip-dry cottons, _ smart prints and soft postels, detoiled collors/ turned cuffs, many with belt ties to make them fitted. 5.95^-9.95. GIFT WRAPPED FREE Our Gift Ideas! UmbreHas, Jewelry, Silk Scarfs Perfumes and colognes— Replique, Arpege, Chonel 5 Prince Gardner Wallets Hobe' Jewelry MOTHER'S DAY" IS NEXT SUNDAY! 'T'" 7g Lingerie Loveliness by Vm1?Qafle. She loves the best nylon tricot that is luxuriously trimmed. Summer Dresses 4 Cool drip-dry:cottons! Shirtwaist ond Sheoths in,prints ond summer postels. Usses sizes 10 to 20 lisses' sizes 10 to 20 14.95 4.. toamfosi^stockings the treasured gift for mothers of oft oges^ nylons of sheer beauty, nQ seams to worry obout. styles and colors 1.35 ^1,95 4.95 8.95 Kalf-Slips --“3.95 ^• 8.95 Gowns 5.95 ^-10.95 Beautifully Gift Wrapped Free ' . ■'4..T lV j#. ■"* r’-'..'-■■■■ ’ - J ' t ;; ■ , ■ ■ ~ . TWTtNTt ' ' ■ ■ \ :.r 'I', f', ::j- i A- THTB PONTIAC PfeSSS, WEPyESDAY. MAY 4, 1960 ONE CPI } WHOLE YOUNG N TENDER ‘ rRESH FRYERS I Baf-B*Q I Available at land Miracle • • • # VANILLA BCTRACT Bar-B-Qu«d Chickens TASTY fAM RIAOY PRESH \ North Perry Street I Mile Stores Only. 99' COMPLET8LY aiANtO Chicken Legs .. .39* Eviscerated Ducks “ 39* O-CEOAR POLISH A fine euoiHy ereem iwUdt fr yeur fumih- TENDER ALL WHITE - WITH RIB - FRESH OVEN READY BaTSVILLE Chicken Breasts . .".49* Turkeys .... 45* UNCLE BEN'S RICE WHOLE, HALF OR ANY END PIECE 29* SERVE *N SAVE SUGAR CURED Canadian*^Bacon .'".69* Sliced Bacon ... .'"".745* SUGAR COOKIES MlpunOam 6m. ■ugor lumihle eeokiw 35‘ POHEDMEAT One e« Ufahy's -----^ JuSSa? twin symbols IjniiijMTi (ooCe) of QVAUTYt 89* U4. DOVT. DRADfD CHOICI TINDERAY RIB ROAST *1^ U4. DOYT. DRADiD CHOICE TB4DERAY RIB STEAK •SSI.. 29* LIBBY'S BEER STEW INSTANT SPOTLIGHT TOtoff Lab.!.. I249< 17-3*49* r.lSli49?- I OMB%See llAAel I Second Con Free with Coupon from Thurs. Press I Temuto Pasta ■'ZSESsr* PROZM KROAM . . .e^se* Geid Medal I FROZW MP. CHICKIN OR TURtClY vamib I Pet Pies . . yooR choice 5^39< ^^rsatest Sale on Ear<£^ I NSai bdiy M 63* eORDON Samaga IhM baby Hnk RED RIPE Luscious sweet Louisiana strawberries-29* CALIFORNIA LONG WHITE SOLID ^ POTATOES 10-69* PINEAPPLE JUICE ProaoN Oota bfona 5 as ‘r SALE! CAW KAISER POtL EAT WHILE SHOPPING! HOT DOG IN A BUN GARDEN fWHT PIAS af CUT QRIIN BEAN5 'i» FRINCH STYU GRIIN BIANS WHOU KIRNIL CORNt» CRIAM STYU CORN ’«f in la-btCh wtdlk «I35* LESTOR. A. »1” lestare bleach at all Pontiac Kroger Stores RE6UIAR OR DRIP6RIN0 ■ 1 m, * .♦/ •f *• rfo? iMaVv \ c.T^y-■ 11« - „ T;,e PS .» HILLS BROS. 'COFFEE as 69' We reserve the to limU quantities. Prices and iumt effeetiae af Kroier in Pesuiac md Eastern Miriiitan thru SaLi Msir 7^ I960- None Sold to Dealers. I ^ . ... ....., ■■ ^ ' .A . V THE PONTIAC; PRE$a WEDNESDAY. MAY 4> 1960 Attend Y G®nference Over 1,500 wodien attended the Oentnl Region Conterence of the YWCA la«t weekend in Gncbuutt. Ohio. Included fai the Pontiac delegation were Mra. Fred Stimpert, president; Mrs. Reba Ross Netzler, executive director; Mrs. William Hewett, program' director; and Mrs.-Grace Carrothers, chairman of the teen-age program. Ri^prwieirtlng Y-Teen Qubs were Diane Bogner from Garkston High School iu)d Susan Owen, alternate (Me-, gate from Lake Orion Ifigh The'conterence, orte of five this apiing, waa designed to help "YWCA members prepare for the 22nd triennial convention in Denver n^ year. PARAMOUHT BEAUTY SCHOOL garellneats AvoUable la tier « Srealag Cl(i«es Wrile. pAoae ot cell in peffen ter free PempAIW PHONl FEDERAL 4-2352 HAIR FASHIONS ... for spring require * a Professional Permanent CALUE’S BEAUTY SHOP lie Nertb Perry Pontiac Federation of WCTU held its annual May breakfast Tuesday morning. Officers present included Mrs. William L. Carls of Joslyn road, federation vice president, standing; and from left, Mrs. Joseph E. Green of Royal Oak, Junior Past District President; Mrs. George W. Perkins of Royal Oak, 18th District President; and Mrs. John J. Little of-FrankUn road, Bloomfield HHh. J^lSA^UhiL Honor Sisters Installs Officers With^SEower at Doyle Home Washington Junior High Sdxxd PTSA installed officers at the final meeting of the ^ year Thursday. ' Mrs. Roland Steidiison presented the president's gavel to Mrs. Vidor Sutt Mrs. Arthur Barnett .win be motto vice president; Thuriey Allen, father vice president; A1 Thomas teacher vtee president; Mrs. George Keavy, secretaiy; and Anna and Rutii Garnett were honored at a shower Thursday evening at the home ot Mrs. Edward Doyle of Lyford street, Waterford Township. Coho^esses were Mrs. Ruth Kidd and Lois Kidd. Mrs. Lewis Jameaoa of Haa- Ihe group voted to support Pontiac Board of Education’s request for miUage increase. Dr. Russell Curtis of the Pontiac Board of Eduction conducted an open meeting. Joyce Sweet and Charles Mur-ptiy, teachers in the Pontiac School System, explained the secondary mathematics pro- See Cleaning DeiroTTsTf^on~ ley drive, Waterfoed Towaskip was a recent shower hostess, honoriag Rath Garnett whose engagement to Richard Leo Burton was annonnced last week. Cohostesses were Marcella Ooak-right and Morrene GIdley. Fifty members of the Waterford | Township Democratic Women’s Gub attended a demonstration of| home cleanto fonowing a business! meeting in a local restaurant. Brief talks wre given by Mrs. Louis Golden (A the State Centndi Committee. Wiilis Brewer, formeri Oakland County Democratic chair-1 man. and Oakland County Demo-| cratic candidates. Ctost Lutheran Church has been reserved for the sisters’ double wedding on June 25 ’They are the daughters of the Richard Olive Garnetts of Hobson street, Waterford Township. Edwin Rydell spoke (» acceleration of the science program and Kenneth Ferguson told of the present status of the modem foreign language classes. Dr. Curtis and Mdvin Stae-bler discussed the proposed closed circuit educational TV at Madiscm Junior High School These teachers ex- the National Detense Education Act would benefit Pontiac the new cafeteria by parents of the 8th grades. Cards Tonight ' J()bs Daughters, Bethel 40, is sponsoring a cup and saucer card party «t X this evening in Roosevelt Masonic Temple. Prizes and refreshments are featured. Gross Trailers tq End Season Saturday Night The Cross Trailers Square Dance Gub will close the season with a cthmer-daiKe Satiutiay at Willis School Sam Joan gave a brief wotk-sh<9 on advanced squares at an extra dance Friday. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Orin Gooch, the Robert Wrights, the Edward Bakers, Mr. and Mrs. Buster Raves, the Roy Ludwigs, Mr. and Mrs. Ha^ Specht, the Orvel Sniiths, and the William Russells, Fred Siqtpus and Emma Bentley, RusseU Lynch and Beatrice Riddle. The Augh Galloways came from Lake Orion for the evening. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hill were in charge of refresh-, ments. EUROPE THIS YEAR W* «m help YOB plan rour trip t# aflerxl uiailmius,. mt «ni— relaxation. _ _ •‘Let tie Belp Tea PUa Tear Trip'’ BIRMINGHAM TRAVa SERVICf oases rLFHMsa bbillt S» BaaUltaa f,.—.—,.. MI 4-nn Philatheas View Missionary Work The sFlrst Phllathea Gass of First Baptist Church met lor a . sdiool g^rl luncheon Tuesday at the church. Mra. Philip Adams led de- gave two" vocal selections. Sides of the work of Belgian Congo missionaries Dwight and John Slater werC shown by Mrs. Hazel Slater. The program was arranged by Mrs. Harry Haggard. For a Lifetime of Proud Possession > OMEGA I dilUaedvc Flor-eiUiM-AiiiahT The biwlwd-ffokl look immediately teu this Baa watch apart from the “gardsa-vsikty-. Youll wear this Omega with pride ... sad coBfldeace ... Is hs faihk» snd time-ti|htasas. t «1N, REDMOMI’S tewelers-Opiemetrifls f. SAGINAW ST. FE 2-3612 riie SMMtieiisI SSAPCVRL CUSTOM COLD WAVE $7.50-<$10 Complete with Sifting ead Calling ^o Appointment PJ ceded! Open Friday till 9 p.m. Beauty Salon 2nd Floor Pontiac State Bldg. -rr STAPP'S • . work with your doctor I SHOES THAT DOCTORS PRESCRIBE FOR CHttDREHf Here at Stapp's we carry these shoes in stock at oil times.-, When your doctor prescribes them, carefully trained shoe fitters accurately fill his prescription ond instructions. Above ore two of mony we hove for you when needed. At left, Sabel Pre-Walker de«on«d to hold the foot exectly te the poiitlort desired. Made to adept to a split easily. Made to-give the child comfort without strain during the prescribed wearing period. Right above. Our Sabel Surgical Shot. Open to assure the loot Is held correctly as dasited with the heal seated well Into the shoe. Made to glva a closer fit. Made to give the wearer smooth comfort durirsg the forwletive''period. Strap attufet positioning of the heel at all Hmei. Whea spitate ore required, osk ehouf oaf plea, we think If vary lair. We Accurately FHl Your Doctor s Prescription n t JUVENILE BOOTERIE Jl3 PP ' Lawrence Street (Open Mon. arsd Frl. to 9) Since 1890^Ahmys the Best in Flowers! Mother Flowers Sunday, May 8 Plenty o^ FREE Parking Combination Pans anid Boxes with Q wide variety of plants in each one Pm£ED $ ^ 50 Ldvely Selections of Azaleas Mums Hydrangeas Corsages Specia A floral delight especially planned for Mother's Day! Milk gloss Cup and Saucer artistically arranged with 12 sweetheart roses. Reg. $4.50 Value 4 Choicest Selection of Cut Flowers Roses^ Snapdragons, Carnations and Other Fine Spring Flowers! Pearce Floral Co, ..... 559 Orchard Loke Aventre, Opdn Evenings 'til 9-^:AAoth«r's Day 'til Noon Phone FE 2-0127 /Two Doily Deliveries to Detroit, Bloomfield Hills, BirnriingfKj.rh and Intermediote Points - V.‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MAY i, 1960 TWEXTY-THREE $ Health Ipsurance Instituteilive I oltfor ( wtvey reveiils |hat three out < T leesl Boston, Mass. Ur the largest capii>| jtal city in the SUtes. I Shop the Wholesale Way and Save Profit Foreseen Higher Edison jO«R» Davii-Gory Morriil 'Marriage Rift Reported Center Cut POT ROAST Ttidfi Cheice ' Cvtf 39i Club Steaks 59: Pr«id.nt ^ Ci.1., T.II. t of $70 Million Plan for;New Yorks Henry Miller Theater' I960 Conitruction , iMerrill met in HOU>’wood Sunday NEIW YORK Detroit Edison, night after retmning from a. run Co. profit sh6uW push steadilyiof their show in San Franrisqo 4n ,higher during the nekt few years.jan attempt to work out a recdncii-| President Walker L. Cisler toldliation, but'failed. I ithe annual "meeting Monday. | tv couple has two adopted chU-I “With revenues continuing thelrldren. Miss Davis has a daughter uptrend and with construction ex-|by a previous mai-riage. I penditures and related fixed coats' Noorly Bondoit BABY PORK BUTTS 29 4 Lb. Hygradds Finest Smoked Polish SAUSAGE 39 4 Lb. (4 Lb. Limit) PURE LARD 10 < u. FOR THE TREAT OF YOUR LIFE Delmonico STEAKS A Rsol Steok for Your Out* door Grill. 10^ Hi « ^iU Your No Mono]f Down^l2 E-Z Payinents WHITE FACE STALL FED STEERS Cut, Wrapped, Shorp Froxen end Delivered Free More Thon 100 to Pick From HIND QUARTER FORE QUARTER FULL SIDES 49l 43t 45i Hoffman's Oakland Packing Co. Retoil Store Openr'Thure., Fri. end Sot. 7 A. M. to 5 F. M. 716 GLENWOOD vFE 2-9114 Acrotf from Pontioc Motor Personnel Office HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Actr«s Bette Davis and actor Gary Merrill have separated, friends-report-ed today. holding at « comparatively low i^L. pQ Confirmations level,” Osier said, earninga in woniirmaiion* "the next few, years may be expected to show further improvement.” In the Nrst quarter •! IMS, Detroit EdlMB Uked profH to lll.IM.ai7 or 81 milt a share, from the $18,8M.N1, or 7S ceoto o khare, a year earlier. Osier said the utility plans to spend 70 million dollars on con-i St ruction this year, up from ^99 millions in 1959. But he estimated construction spending will average 50 millions annually during the next five years, down from the average of 75 millions spent diu^ ;ing the past decade. I Detroit E&on has one generat-'ing unit, with a rating of 325,000 I kilowatts, under construction. ' "With this additian,' Osier aaid, "our reserve margin will be adequate through the next few WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi-i dent Eisenhower has sent nomi-natiems for postmasterships in two; Michigan cities to the Smate for confirmation. Lewia H. \4aUs was nominated for postmaster at Gallen and Loraine W. Gardner for postmaster at Hartland. SPRING “FIX UP” Paint DISCOUNTS! nriRioR- I-IX7ERI0R WHITE . ... 81.69 83.35 i ; OOTSDC HOUSE rtlHT. tU dm... 83.05 84.95 i i UKTD rUT. *U dm..... 83.95 84.05 : ; IMTEIIOR i ' Llnolenns' ■ axlERDSS............. ........ 83.95; : fflU COVERlHG.................29* rn. ft. ; , vum FUSTIC. SPECIAL RUG tORDER 27" wMa 15c Rifh. Ft. SPECIAL ASPHALT TILE (M»n $3.59 CM* so SMITH’S TILE OLTLET 257 S. SAGINAW PE 2-7755 736 W. HURON PE 4-4266 Open Mm.,' Thun,JFii, 'Ml 9 Optn’Mn. and FrI. 'tit 9___ load is increasing steadUy each; year. Osier noted Detroit Edison' service area of Southeastern Michigan is growing rapidly. He said the population,.accordii^ to Census: Bureau estimates, is expected expand by 20 per cent in next decade against the T5 j^r cent increase projected for the "This growth trend, coupled .with increasing industrial diversification and nonmanufacturing activities . is most promising,” Cisler said. The utility executive added that Detroit Edisoft hat cut costs by about five million dollars a year' through a, new system of plant maintenance. Judge's Brothor Buritd DETROIT (UPI)-FuneraI service was held Tuesday afternoon I for Saul R. Levin, brother of F« eral Judge Theodore Levin. I died yesterday in Harper Hospital at the age of 62. Levin was a member of the State Correctiona Commiaslon and several bar asso-clations. He was a partner Detroit law firm. Enjoy your (Bolden IDeddino while youTe young! Choose the whiskey made golden mild and mellow for modern tastes Nay U NATTOKAL TAVXRN MONTH . . . visit the friendliest place in town (5oldd)1De55m0.. .five great whiskies wedded into one... blended with choice grain neutral spirits. You’ll like it. HAS HAD NO PEERS — FOR flTTY YEARS 8^94 $249 D wv .1*1 nff Kimi MR • R. L ran linitM a., iuim. fl ' gttiiiikj dorit miss ourMfe HlODl^nlHL! U.S.DJb. CHOICE QUALITY, TENDER, JUICY REEF POT ROAST...... CHOICE BLADE CUTS 39 TOM'S FINEST, TENDER RIB CUT FOU um nuT 29t TENDER LBAH^ « MEATY M FANCY, SOLID, RIPE HOTHOUSE TOMATOES.. 39i ib. U. S. NO. 1 TRXAS NEW ONIONS 3 19' SWAET, JUICY, CALIFORNIA VALENCIA ORANGES .... 49 START YOUR SPRING PLANTING NOW! ■■ ■ a QUICK TURF GRASS SEED5'.°t^ n 7c OFF ROHAN CLEANSER.... FULL GALLON JUG 39 eSAVE 17< 5c OFF GIUT GIANT TIDE.........^ 64 KRAFT'S SALAD DRESSING. MIRACLLWHIP FULL QUART • •••••• lAR,, 49 eSAVE 10* TOM'S FAMOUS—SotlsfocHon Guoranteod or Your Monty Bock 3 RICHTCX SHORTENING.. > EXTRA FINE DOMINO SUGAR....... 'BiS49*‘«-' CHASE ond SANBORN, HILLS BROS., BEECH-NUT or MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEEvac'an 69 EVAPORATED-HOMOGENIZED WUm .. t PET MILK.......................*1 TALL CANS STXR KIST—TASTY CHUNK STYLE JD DBr TUNA FISH... ...4*ans9d eSAVE 21* SHIDD'S CREXmV . A ■■ _ PEANUT RUTTER.. .f" 2j*'59 KLEENEX FACIAL TISSUE2%r 25' BEECH-NUT STRAINED lABC M RARY FOOD......... 1069* TOM’S Northwood Markets ns OBCHABD LAKE ROAD OPEN DAILY 9 A. M. to 9 F. M. SUNDAY TIL 5 F. M. '■ twexty^four THE POXYlAC PRESS. WEDXESEIAY. MAY 4. 19f0 Tobacco Bootlegging Not Noticeable Yet LANSING (UPD - U will be |»x) or threo months before any major bootlegginH operatioRS in d-gar* and tobacco will be noticeable, Statp Revenue Commissioner Clarence Lock said today. Lock said many merchants laid lArge inventories of tobacco and cigars before the new^Michigan levy on these products went into eff^ Jan. 1 and only in the last n days or so have these stocks “We’ve had a lew reports of small bootlegging, that Is people bringing a few boxes of cigars from out of state to their neighbors and friends, but noth-big. any, bigger than thnt.” Lock said. “I don’t think we’ve had a fall test on whether the new taxes will bring bootlegging. We shtgild know ing goods from. Ohio o^re Lock said there wouldn’t be much jtrotit for bootleggon bringing goods from Ohio wher the cigarette tax is only a cent less •per pack than Midngan’s tlx cents. North Carolina is the closest state with no taxes. Safety Commission ObjiectB Legion Police Aid Scorned AT rhslafti H18 FARM SOLD AT AUCTION — Farmer Ralph Shlnaberry leans on a fence post on his 150-acre farm near Ilillsdaie, a part of which was sold at auction Tuesday to satisfy a county tax claim, ^inaberry has refused to pay a government penalty for planting one acre of wheat too much in 1957. He said if the government wanted to run his farm, then let it pay the taxes. However, his friends came to the restnje.’lwught a portion, of his farm, but dti not intend to hold or keep it. LANSING UR~A' suggestion that uniformed Legionnaires ride with, state troopers on highway patrol has received a ccfel reception from the State Safety Commission. ★ ★ ★ One dissenter e.xpressed strong disaimrovai yesterday. The pro-po^l was Sent to a study com-' mittee without further conunenf. ♦ ★ iW Joseph Kadans. Detroit attorney can Legion Safety Committee, suggested Michigan follow the lead of Ohio. “Uniformed members of the American Legion ride around with the highway patrol there,”. Kadaiw explained, “lliey serve as dm right ann Bm troaper.^ Kadans said the Lsgkm members receive 15 hours of training and help out with first aid rect traffic after accidents. public seems to think a lot ojf'ths idea,” he added. A.sbullar project for Michigma has American Legion support, he said. Harold Lillie, (Tiiwtor ol the Gwter Lansing Safety C’ouneti; raised the dissent. lie said. ‘Tve never yet s« program where untrained volun-jeers didn’t cause trouble. You can’t train a man for traffic duty in 15 hours.” • Truck Hit tb« Road HARTFORD, Conn. (UPH-Un-employment compensation benefits were awarded a driver who quit because his truck had several mechanical failures after be-ling driven 175,000 miles. An offi- * ★ W , ‘require anyone to be a hero or ‘The men enjoy doing it and theifoolhaisly. ” The Legionnaires are not armed and receive-^no.pay,^ he- said.-_____ Developing Portable penial Kit DETROIT OR — Mkhigan'a organized dentists are making plans t9 help older people who have tooth problems but aie i visit h dentist’s office. ★ h ★. Dr.fiA. C. Pringle, chaixman of the dental section of the Joint Council for Better Health Care for the Aged, said an emergency serv-being organized and AT PhetoM DRUBF HONORED ~ Allen Drury, author of “Advise and Consent,” Monday won the 1960 Pulitzer Prize for fiction. The story deals with Washington' politics. Drury’s book has been a best-seller since its publication last year, has been serialized and sokHo the movie* ancM*. being prepared for- the New York stage. “We are deveiopiiig an experimental dental kit, which wUi weigh uader M pounds and be ef Buitdhae sise but which will he equipped t6 handle any emergency sHnatiM,” Dr. Pringle said. Tile joint council represents the Michigan State Dental Assn., which is holding its 103rd annual meeting in Detroit this week, the Michigan State Medical Society, Michigan State Hospital Assn., and bom, aldfi ’* dental m^lnber. said d survey showed that 6 porcent of aged persons confined by illness to tbeir homes need dentid care, while 12 per cent of thoee in bospi-lals and nursing homei niid dental help. Mm Man to Help Bagwell Campaign LANSING «i-Robert H. Perry of Adrian will be state campaign co-oidinator of the run by Paul D. Bagwell as a Republican candidate Ibr governor. Perry rerigned from the Adrian aty CMudI and will take a six tnoM leave from Ms pwi as supervisor fer peroeunei aud public reluthMB ef the Bridgw pert Brasc Oo. ef Adrian. Perry, 38, is a 1M3 graduate oi Albion College. Hb la a former city hall and court reporter tor the Adrian Telegram and former manager of the Adrian Chamber of Commerce. ★ ♦ ★ He also has been a member o Michigan State Nursing Home ; the Lenawee County Board of Sup-asfc— - iervisors and-chairmait of fte co«n- W * * ity "Bagwell for Governor” cam- Dr. Forest McGitigan of Dear- palgn. ‘ ■PSTT ^ THE PpyTIAC press: ^^EPj^ESDAY. MAY 4. i960 TWEXTT-FIVB H Church Growth Behind Nation AT mUtoi COMPOHER WINS - t»ulitzer Prize winnAng campocer ffliott Carter, 51, of New Vork City, earned the international recognition for hia "Second S(;ring Quar- tet." tJ.S. farmi consume about one-t^yfntigth of -4h qulred annually. nlugi, to bring the total to 9.KL5,* Methodilt Membership Gains at Record Pace, but Shrinks Over-All But w hile that Increase was i-3 ^r cent, the .nation’s p— went up 1.7 per cent. One thing wrong, the report said, is that too many old mem-bera are/lropping out as new ones come in. Dietrich a Triumph in Berlin |had appeared in West Germany in the last days of the war with Itbe conquering Allied troopa. But there was only token opiwslthiB to her Titaday ^ht. .. Manistee Unit Helping DENVER, Cbto. 1st ministers are better educated MANISTEE (f* — Century Boat than m-cr before. Church pubUsh-,Co. has accepted at sales neg^ ...,1 ,* tlon offer by Manistee Industrial ing and educational work are /corp. aimed at keep- a p«ak. Membership gains areij^ jn the Manistee doub|e that (d any past period faijarea. history. But in the national per-j spectlve, the Church is shrinking.] The development unit seeks to ♦ Sr * j negotiate the sale of - Century s That was the paradoxical set of three Manistee plants with pro- facts put before the quadrennial ceeds going to the boat builder for Methodist General Conference to-,construction of a single new p^ day. The denomhiatlon is growingito provide more efficient produce at a record clip, but the coiintry's population is growing faster. | ★ ★ * j Buel B. Nave, Century vice pres- The evangelism board, headed ident and general managed, said by Bishop W. Angle Smith ofjif the. plants can not be sold Oklahoma City, reported that through .. Manistee Interests, the membership gains for the pastifirm will move elsewhere. Ap- ' tour years totided 50?,Ml, twice as|praised value .of lhe^»resem ^a*to i BERLIN (API - Acclaim for iMaitohs Dietrich stretched today from the most conservative West Berlin newspaper to the official' Cbnunpnist news agency. "Marlche’s Triumph" heedltawd ber Tagesspiegel, the city’s soberest morning new^Mper. "Fasci- ISa Z S: Wnce lik« fo Hunt, cy. Hat Plans for Trophies Before the performance, two men carried sigu outside the theater reading “Mariene Go Home’’ in German and Englidi. As tbs.AU-dienca emerged, about ao young pien chanted "Mnricne, get out of Ormany." Admirers in the street crowd of about 300 drowned them out with "Mariene! Marlene!" twentieth of 4hs motor fuel re- Tow yean toti^ 50?,Mli twice aS|Prai8ed value .of the jweseni many as in the previous quadren-ibas been set at $281,000. ’The glamorous grandma Tuesday night made her first appearance In Berlin in 31 years , and was calM back for two encores and 11 curtain calls. Mayor Willy Brandt stood up and led the ap-plnise when she sang Have a Tearin .in Berlin, favorite. The 1,800-seat theater was" about thtoe-tourths full. The high prices $23.80 tops — generally were blamed. First announcements that Dietrich final^ was returning to Germany brought letters to Berlin papers criticizing her because she JUNEAU. Alaska (UPU - The half brother of the Shah of Iran. Prince Abdol Reza Pablavi, plans to vlait Alaska tMs summer on a hunting and sightseeing trip. Prince Pahlavi is president the Game Council of Iran and plans to turn any trophies over to the council for Its museum, Besides Alaska, the prince tentatively plans hunting trips to Idaho, Montana, Nevada and Wyoming. He hopes to collect the heads of [desert sheep, big-boro sheep, elk, j mule deer, buffalo and antelope. MSU Faculty Slaps Hannah Over ROTC EA£T LANSING Qh-K Michigan State University taciUty group has censured MSU Prcstdmt John L. Hannah for failure to support the faculty .fai the controversy over rote usually serves 'as A* strong recommendation to the trustoes. However, die trustees voted 4-| ' tost month to retain the compulk sory program, although ordering survey of ROTC currlcuhira b s view toward possible ro> visloR. Hannah took no stand. Decision Split uenny ,m me comroveny over - , . •• compulsory military trainlngjOll AlCllie VuDOie (ROTC). in Hack Movie j|Hannah declined comlnent on HOLLYWOOD, the censure by the MSU chapter of'j^jgo^^ j AT rscuui HE MOVES IT - Marshal M. V. Zakharov, 62, former commander of Soviet troops in East Germany, is the new chief of the general staff for the Soviet army and navy. He has replaced Mar- shal V. D. Sokolovsky. 63, who has been reported in ill health. Sokolovsky led Soviet troops into Berlin in World War II. , An average intercity motor truck j |in the United States travels 4MW Imiles per year. Archto _____ ... _ split decision from the American Assn, of University ^he; critics Tuesday in reviews of Professors (AAUP) which- atoDjj,i, ^pbut as a movie actor, critfoised the school’s board oft . Heavyweight cham* trustees ®'’*^*"* ***^‘*^ Lion played Jim, a runaway slave, sentiment on the ROTC question, AdvMtures of HueWe- The actiqn took place at the jbirry-Fhm” • chapter’s regular quarterly meet- Variety panned the moviu Ibg. Prof. M. Ray Deuuy re- Lut said of Moore: ported last night. Demy, u pro- j^e brighter side of the j fpwior of psychology. Is piml- . . there is Moore, the ! deet of the^roiip which claliws heavyweight champim of the I **• towwbers. ^^0 brings the story ite " ! In February, the MSU academic lonly moments of reel warmth senate—made up of some 1.000 |and tenderness. Seemingly a' lit-'faculty members—voted 400 fo 248 tie ill-et-ease In the early rounds, in favor of abolishing the school's Motsre grows stronger as the oon-43-year-old program of compul-|test moves along and scores e sor.v ROIIC for freshmen end-knoekout In 4he^ lato round, hie ..sophomores. An academic senate]poetic parting with Huck." A REAL PRICE-BUSTING SALE. MACI-LUXi Tflllir' Values to ^7.95 • VINYL UTIX— RUBBER BASE • LUSTRE—SEMIGLOSS ENAMEL • CLEAR or SPAR VARNISH • RUIBERIZED PORCH und DECK «^LL-PURPOSE---- ALUMINUM ONE LOW PRICE! YOUR CHOICE . OOOD NEWS FOR THOSE WHO ARB BARGAIN HUNTING/ Carden Todis OMT v.i.» ^ BRASS SHEARS ... 59< Wheelbarrow 5“ JO-ladi f»Bt Wh«tL 5i Stmi-Pntumotic Amuricon Mod* HEDGE CUPPERS lUY $139 NOW 1 Piuiif SkMit AmsHcsn 69 Msdo 1 SHRIDDD PFAT MICHICAN rCMI ’LJ 69* GRid*R Rb* ibA MnUka Tour $169 Round Point Choico 1 |a. SHOVEL ■ TRAOi FAIR FERTILIZER 10-6-4 z PUNCTURE-PROOF TRACTION TREAD rubber tires on FNAMRED STFFl WHEELS WITH GLEAMING HUB CAPS CUTTING HEIGHT ADJUSTABLE FOR every lawn CLOSE TO WALLS TREES, ETC. [ EXTRA- I WIDE S J DISCHARGE -^CHUTE—CUTTINGS EJECTED SMOOTHLY' BAKED-ON enamel finish— RUST AND CORROSION-RESISTANT UNDERCOATING 20 SPECIAL PURCHASE! RR MuW-Spuud—5-Y#«r Wgrron^ PORTABLE FAN CMWtl IlMilic Mti ’19’1 TRADE FAIR 932 WEST HURON OPPOSITE HURON THEATER GOLF SET Complefe ^27^^ I GOLF BALLS GOLF CART I tommy Armoor, S M l Cory Mid4locoff leg. S9A0 Pm Dot. -1-1 TWgy^TYSlX I PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY.'MAY 4. 1960 "SUPtR-WGH!" t Wirto tiir! ' —--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Can’t help raving about the wonderful* flavor of these Chuck Roasts. Each is cut from grain-fed beef with no stringy neck portions included ... it’s about the thriftier taste treat you can serve. Deliciously flavorful, juicy and tender 1 TOP QUALITY, COMPLETELY CLEANED Oven-Ready Ducks "SUPER.RJ6HT" QUALITY Fredi Xrouhd Beef "SUPER-RIGHT" MATURE BEEF Beef Rib Roast 39« 49' "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY 29< 7RIB PORTION LB. LB. loin Portion . ...............“ 39e Cantor Pork Chops 79c 4th a SHi Rias »LB. 63< FIRST 3 RIBS ... lb. 73e FIRST 5 RIBS . . . lb. 69e * CALIPO^IA, VAUENCIA, 113 SIZI ORANGES ..59' A»r IRAND—OUR FINEST QUALITY JANE PARKER SPECIAL! Donuts I9< GOLDEN BROWN SUGARED OR CINNAMON DOZ. Moihla OroRjos Fnth Lmrors TANOJMer S 19c 49c , , , 39c Grapefruit Juice ... 4 99c AOr$ PURE VEGETABLE dexo Shortening... .3& 49c JANI PAIKIR, PLAIN OR POPPYSHO Vienna Bread 1-U. LOAP 17c diwry K.I 'iSiTJ 49e JANE PARKER ORANOI 4H-INCH £ - I-.-.- JANE PARKER ORANOI 4V4-INCH JA, Loyir Cakos or lemon deuoht size aye MEL-aBIT Amorican, Pimonto or Swiss GOLD MEDAL KITCHEN TESTED rfOCBBMO ^ffiwricon^ rimmniv aewt** HI m Cheese Slices ^ “ 39 MICHIGAN GRANUUTED BEET SUGAR 10 & 99c ■ffiSlL Sheb 2 39< ’ 39r swKT Marsiariia ... urel 4 cm. 89c SwHiyfiold Buttor ^mIty” . Qws 65c loTfO .... . •><>* 45c SILVERBROOK, FINE QUALITY BUTTER 55' Slkod Pio Applos eoMirocK , Pio Crust Mix 7-MINUn HAND fIlf *Sfiw . dexolaOil ... JHfy MIxm mniNO ... VhHk Pdisii DWi . .... la dioy Emh Spnob .. Mott's AM or PM PRUir RRINKS 5 MNs 39c . . VSl 10c 3 85c . .Sffi 45c 2 S!i. 25c .. 29c : 4 i-SSi 49c 4 S5! 99c Instant CoffN Wasson OH ___________ . .. . 5oiidwich Bogs twy homi . . . « 85c ni^ 51c 27c WEEK-END 1 Pound Print SPECIAL SALE CMHED vEcntna 8 99( bflIeeSah! FROZEN FOODS Atf IIAP OR CHOPPIO ,«,z IQj Spinach PKO. 2 33c Atf Swpat Pmi . g—lii BM— CHKRY, PEACH 22-OZ. rrmr nos orappu pko. ooc YOUR CHOICE A&P Golden Kernel Corn Reliable Cut Wax Beans Reliable Sweet Green Peas A&P Golden Cream Corn Reliable Cut Green Beans MUD ARD MEUOW bght O’CLOCK a 49c iSi U5 SAif ENDS SATURMY, MAY m MIX OR MATCH SALES A&P Canned Fruit . Fruit Cocktail Bartlett Poors MALVU Freestone Peaches nalvm Unpeeled Apricots malvm 5 1-00 Cereal Sale Trix • • c Com Kix Wheoties CheerioB • • • IH4Z. PAMAM , , , , ii-ot. Pnm. I04-OZ. PKO. 4 FKGS. 1*00 Letaar OuantHioB Sold at Rofular Rriio. .......-...-..... . 9- 4 PONTIAC AREA STORES OPEN MON.. THRU SAT. 9 le 9 IIS5 N. Perry S».. at MadRoMi It Oft Ubal Spy Sborfanlng 3 & 64c Twatve Incitai Wide Roynolds Wrap ’SS 77c •uy Them Tya Wayt ^ M&M Condios Ptaln OKePaontt/ Plain Only'' ’Sf" 29/ 49c WMi DWi Tatrd Broozo ’SS‘79c Zost Soap 2 c-k- 29c •alli She . Ltfx Soop l«-29c Seat at AAP RInso Bluo 77c P^au. Sadt^ ■ ,/ foh ' /?fi-'77c lama at AAP 2 'tt: «5c Regular Uaa CaihmQro Bouquot 4 *-41c t SaA Oakai S9a AN |»ricae in this •d offectivo thru Saturday, Muy 7th in all loeter.n Michigan AAP Super Markete 4724 Dfaiia Hwy.. Draytee PUine 949 W. Haiee St., nr. Tatefi^ Rd. 2S W. Pika STm Dewetewe 0^ Manday and Friday TUI 9 AOPSaMtMaikatialaaat... 437 Main St, Radtattar IS W. Flint, Mka Orton 7140 I. Mania, WoRad lake 210 S. Waadwird, Bimiiafliaai Adamt at B — • - CLOSED SUNDAY AS USUAL THt GSEAT ATlANTfC I FACIFIC TlA COMPANY, NC. 5uper Markets AMERICA'S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT SINCE I8S9 '.'1 THE POXTIAC PRESS> WEDXESDAV, >IAy4. 1^0 wum. TWEXTY-SEVEy An unpopular whtchWten greeta home handymen in the epring la peeUng paint on window tramea, aiding, or ahuttera. Home . craltamen. are warned not to pile new paint over auch rough, peeling apota until Wy have remove<| the old paint. Your refinishing Job will taat much longer il you^flrat amooth the area with your portable elec-' trie ^ aander, wipe thr aurface clean, then apply the new coata of paint. Power sanding blenda the peeled surface with surrounding sections that still retain their ' solid paint coat. It’s an accumulatim of two or more paint Jobs improperly applied that usually causes the surface to ripple, chip, and peel, and the problem is only compounded if rough areas aren’t smoothened. Marietta, (Mo, was a river boat building center during the early PAYDAY LOANS *God Beholds Not the Externals* Few Complaints About Church Dress NEW YORK « — How weU people dress for church? Do they stiU wear their "Sunday ....... worship? How do clergymen feel about confronting congregations in sporU clothes? Hm American lasUtate of Mens' and Beys’ Wear recently polled some tea priests, ministers and rabbis In the New York, area and found that three sal of tour have lew it any. cosnpiahits In fact, a number of clergymen expressed regret that pee worn in church. Nor should anyone attend mass in shorts. •’This Is a matter of respect to (Sod and 1o parishoners. We urge the ladies to come to church prbp-erly clothed and with reverence and modesty.'* , AVomen who dress improperly, added a Manhattan rabbi, should be, educated to know ’’that they should wear long-sleewd dresses to religious services and hats, that decollete dresses are in bad taste.” WMh men, he aaid,' *’U«s aud Jackets shooM be worn even hi warm weather.’’ "Although God lodes at the heart," said the Rev. John A. Gibbs of Alliance Oiurch, Mount Vernon, "ltds a sign of reverence and respect to dress properly when; attending public worship. ! our manners at worship. One! church encouraged pepple to ‘cornel as you duripg the sumerj months, Dress for the beach W| golf course became dress for worship. * * ♦ ‘"This createk,a familiarity whidiI takes lightly sacred things. Again’ a wrPM idea of Ckxl and of true; worship does lead to this lowering, of standards." The clergymen also offered a guideposis for church dress: "A person who has an audience with a president, a governor or some other great person tfkes care to look his best," said the Rev. Wesley D. Osborne of Searing Memorial Methodist Church, Albertson. L.I. "When we are entering into the inresence of the Most High, we should make our best appearance.' UMTED SHIRT RB UBTAUAnON-Men MSm «at|a,Kl soft po»irs form. -Spoon into Pour ^ high protein cereal slightly; com-;refrigerator tray: freeze. Serve greased casserole, btaie with brown sugar. Sprinkle sprinkled with almonds. Yield: 6 Place fai a baUng^iMui, add hel over plneapirte. ‘ Iseryingi. | (eater to pan to within ene Inch Combine cup sugar, W spoon salt, H teaspoon ground ger, 2 whole eggs; beat only^ mixed. Stir tai 1 cup cold milk and 2 cups day-old bread cubes. Add 3 cups scalded milk. Pour into a at top of eaaoereto. .Balw la n preheatod stow even (M degrees P.) iMi boon, 9t natU sal ctona. CM pllghtiy and ar- Wire Popper for PopOut at CookOut Meringue Beat 2 egg whites until they it^nd in soft peaka Add onedlx-teenth teaspoon salt and 3 tablespoons sugar, 1 tablespoon at a time. Add ^ teaspoon ground ginger. Spread over pudding. Bake at 300 degrees F. for 15 minutes, until meringue is lightly WASHINGTON (UPI)-Rlce is the most universally grown and most widely eaten of all cultivated grains, reports the Depariment o! Agriculture. _ a modem, twist oft the (rid-fashioned pop com popprt our grandfathers used la the 4*^ fireplace: Take it outdoors and pop com over yoUr charcoal grill! It's great fun for the kkh—, ter with these old-fashioned wire , top poppers they can see the “ com as it actually exploda. range Indoers. Simply aid a little cooktiw oil to oever the bottom of the pan. When the oil Is hat. add two or Ihreo “tool” homois. As I eaongh pop eom te oovpr the hettom ef the pan So moiw __________ >1 dto». ill it-4 wire top pepper salt ena he ad? I » ed right In the pappnr as soon as It Is ^ , be sure , to use gixid pop , oera . pop com that Is herme-ru-ily sealed air-tight and moisture proof to avoid disappointing "pops.” Grocers are now offering the okl> com poppers as premiums with popcorn. Get one; (lave a ‘- POiMiut.” It’s fun! A Jarring Noto BaUea are big eaters. The number of tan of baby food conaomed by one baby during his'first year is more, than 500.'Multiply this by the million baUes bom In the U. S. each year and you have' than 2 bH" ^liere^d TJone i^etter ^li an YJallonaf^A U.S. "Choice" CPm Fed Beef Steaks FOOD STORES VALUABLE COUPON nu WM Tkh Cpapen 60 Extra With $5 Furchasd or Moro (Nst tocinStag Mr, wia* *r elgarcttM) ■ uxSIrn Skt, Mtr t. STEAK 89* 'USDA U.S. "Choic*" SIRIOIN STEAK Lb. Sloci your ^ntxer ^att M »tr'f U. S. "CMtf ein nnfir~ Beef Sidea nu ^ 53V Beef Feres U.L "CMm' RIB STEAK UA. -CtMlM" SWISS Steak GROUND PrwU, MaXt ROUNO VALUABLE COUPON Beef Hinds are* U cbArg*—W« wUl (sl, trlat, frttier 63* Beef Riba 47* 69* I mmo \wwm • wwm • rwmr ^ , Croond MofiW “ S9* Tsp-Twto Smsksd Liver Sausage ....... «^5^ HvorMKt CmA. M.. 1 ' U SMkag*i M you tptemesUau. r —____________________ I __ fnn With This Coupon Chab Bologna ... . SO Sxtra Stamps 11 WMi PwchsM ef Oat V5 Osl. Ptowk I . JUICE DECANTER . . n«a«Mi this Msnwi at nummai sm atoru. C9mp0m cssirtr Sat.. May 7 L — Keyko I Top Taste Cracked Wheaf 1 Pinconning Margarine |! BREAD (Sharp Cheese 4^-99* 1 17* -69' VALUABLE COUPON Luncheon Meet Swift's Prem _______________1 I mi With This Coupon I SO ixtra Stamps , I WWi ParchsM ef 1-Lhs. u Mus sf I _ _ Fresh Ground Beef p tmm Badtani toi. caasaa at Natlaaal raoS ftaraa. L M ^ mb a| JVTnfn-ilTdill I** "‘"OBimMlHiatfMialwaH^” 1 Llesid Dsiertent Oisia's Prids Iwest sr SattonaOi m I c«.p«, , LiquM 2 49* Blsanhn.........3 29* . SO Bxtl*a had Stanzas Khdsn RssI esrdsn tesdi FrtLn I I WhippadCraani ^ 39* CutBreccell 3 Wothdoy Detergent GiantTicle 69* SMOKED HAM - r.r.Mlaaai tkb eaupas at Hattaoal r< k.... mmSvxs iaiTmSi ’JSa I MMhr't Thin ^ Spaghetti • «3 ^ S9 VALUABLE COUPON I ran W»h Thh CwiM. I so Extra "Ca Stumps | Whh PwrtWM •» s I-tA. tat ef I WINBSAD APPLES ■ " F-F.aaaaani thU caasna at NitiMal Fa«e Slaru ■ lr.r.___ krnmmmS' eg Temcrte Past#2 Orchord Freih Frosen Oremge 49* 31- 6 ^ 09* •V.\ - fresh Pineapple at Its Best During May THE PONTIAC PRESS, AVEPyESDAY, MAY 4; 1960 twiInty-ninb I JfANKT ODELL Columbua not only dlMoverad America but ho tlw glvt us the tot habwB MOBVit ft siBe««|A^ It wss on Us> seoaad vc^afo' to tn the treeh etete the year round too, but Che peak months are April and Iday. »«. wwmm Ml mvvpvCQQa VQyBgf 10 America that he dlacomed pineapples In the Island of Guadaloupe. How this strange priddy ' ■ ever got to Haw^ Is stfil a mystery. We are prone to think It a native of our newest state. However, its ■ ‘ e in Kalian ton a foreign land.v Whatever its histoiy, pineapiae Is definitely an important part of our diet. We eat it canned twelve months of the year. It is avsdirihle W|ptds-pe»- Isslr1ini1i« p no tot hi to halt h dw better qsalUy. We always amuse people when we tell them to buy tenude idneapples because they are the best tasting. A female pineapide has a lot of pineapples growing around pull out easily, the fruit is ripe. Keep pineapple covered in the refrigerafbr; its fruity aroma may spread to other foods. Keeping an uncut pineapple cool will slow down its, ripening actioo. ^ gfsfi eonitost pliiapiile la er sdcln and leave I 1 CIV sugar. Stir until sugar has dlaaolved. Whip 1 cup heavy cream and fold into the mixture. Turn into 3 freestng tnfw Hce cube tn^). fYeeze only to a mush. Serve as Bagar takes the cailw oft the arid taste which makes your teagae Have ybu ever served fresh pineapple mousse? It will bring .a iMwath of spring to your meal. ■ Fresh Ptnnrspple lUouase Combine 6 cups (1 medium) finely shredded fresh ptneapide and remove from inner about N Only a little fresh pineapple left the refrigerator? Dice some leftover ham. poultry w piwk and 'aaute meat and fruit witil ec^ begin to crisp. Serve over hot buttered rice. The same meats, combined with fresh pineapple dtunks, make a ddkioiti aalad. Garnish wlds toated almonds.. IfSou can buy the little pbie-ae tiiem to aerv* the id-lowing fruit drink. You may aerve in tall gUsses but your guests will be Intrigued with the natural container*. Save this recipe to use on a hot summer day. (dasass or pinaapide sheila and add to mi. Gunlah with mfaft and berries, ttalrts enoughs for I pineapple abells or 44 4alli= *r. I BMt Of 1 Isfto rips troob pteo-p nskff oocosot m May Is Better Heariig Moath I Most Sofe b Fioundir 1= Visit Q Member Agency of the Anierican Hearing Society Near You or Write 91918th St. N. W.; Washington 6, D. C. - THIS AD SPONSORED BY The name ‘“hide” la applied tol= many fish in this country, general-ly to those of the flat flounder fam-|s ly. The sand dab, the yelh>wtall.ias the winter flounder, the gray and te lemon aolc are all flatflah caught != jHintil smooth and tn American waters; all are good s foamy. If no blender is'available, eating. Occasionally, of course, = put pineapple and coconut through'shipments of channel or Dover sole gs ih^ iood grinder using the finejfnMn Europe wiU arrive in this|= = blade or mince very finely using country, and the fine flesh of thisjs '' »*®wr*nc* »r. ronrmc, micnigan ^ ORWANT HEARINB SERVICE Pealiac's Oaiy Antbonsed Zeailb Heatiag Aid Oeoler Pillsbury, Robin Hood or Gold Medal Flour # Price With Coupon 39 5^33 VALUABLE COUPON Or All Purpoc* — Enrichtd NATCO FLOUR ! With This Coupon ^ I WOW I IOe the PerciwM ef CM S U. Bm af | field AAedel, Mliknnrf ftehia He^ er Nelee | nouR Price ■ eeppoB at NaUanal raa« SterH. Ca«- I pau axpiraa tat, fcy J. Ltait ana eaopaa par taaUlr. L mmm mam mam mm mm ^m m Rich Tomot^ Floyor Carnation or PIT MILK Pik-Nik Catsup APPUSAUa ..... 3*.f j^lMILAC... 19* BMO Coolfiy Lakfi M. tA Uiioi Uk* Id.. Biioi Ukfi 615 Efst Bird. tl Ifialya. PfiiUfic 3415 ElizdMUi Ukfi Id. & Binr (N-59). WttoiiHd Tw^ 4889 Dili* Hwy. at Waltm. Biaytai PUlif 1249 Baldwii aid Tyiilaiti. Pfiitiac Sylrai Uka Skoppiig Cfiiler. 2375 OickaiAUkt Id. at Middlebalt Pvrfi Granvloffid Doanino Sugar 5it.49< Top Trfiot ICE CREAM 49* • Cheeoiat* • SfrawbMry Vt-OoX. • N*apoiit«ii Ctn. VALUABLE COUPON 14*4-01.1 y Trie (IVi-Os.), Whaatiaa Fwalv V* (9ViOa^ er cHBERios: r: i||00 Sovfi 72c With Thb Coopon ond $5.00 Purehoifi or Mor« Cmatd IvoporfiHd NATCO MILK f|00 Garbfir'a Strolnfid BABY FOOD 11 's?41®® Hillside BUTTER Jt’s Jor X Jinedly Jredliedl Produce^ Hot House TOMATOES ^reskedt 1‘^roduce 39 1 Lb. Print Lerte Sim Sweat S JwIct Werlde, Criap fi tieah ' fiMIM* 49* Giwwi Peppers 2 ' 25 NATIONAL baem naaaw • rar nw™p w-w-. mm mm ' -7 — OrossSeed ... 5 tii *1** GrupefruH Learn She • Whh^ Seedleie rieeUe ^ . . . 3 " 39* FOOD STORES ! • -V , .. t THIRTY THR IPOXTIAC PRESS, WEDNESHAY, MAY *. 1960 Company Wins Verdict in Cigarette-Cancer Suit PITTSBUROH (AP)—A federal,‘Tobacco Co. reite^ their caie Jttdge today directed a Jury to re- Tm*sday after te^lmony from Dr. turn a vardict tn favor of Liggett j Leo Henry parland, an X-ray ipe-^ k Myeri Tobacco Co. in the etga-jcialist and«member of the Stan*' ratte-lung cancer civil trial In U S. I ford University Medical School District Court. .•--i.i*-- . A ♦ ♦ Judge John ,L. Miller Issued the directive after 20 dw^i of testimony. Counsel for the plaintiff ■aid he would appeal the ruling to the U.S. District Court ot Ap* Attorneys for Liggett i Mytrs KierdorftoBeFree Saturday, May 28 The gate* of Jackson Prison will open May 28 for Herman Kierdorf, who will have served just oyef M months of a 14o-.'i .years for pos-«e's,sion of a pistol filencer. Report Attack by N. Koreans Torpedo Boat Fires on Southern Nqvy Frigate in 3-Minute Clash Otto Pritchard, 61. of Pitt.shurgh claims he contracted lung cancer ................. .........SEOUL. South Korea nd .Sep. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn), aggressive young hopefuls for the Democratic preside|j The navy <-oinmunique pressed belief the Communists trying to land spies Ambassador Llewellyn Thompaon drew laughs with the remark that he had been studying Russian for years and never had come close to achieving Miss Fish-accent. ^ saboteurs In .South Korea to “take; Red ai^y dancers’, a IVmember advantage of' the Aprif 26 poHt-1 violui phsemblei a Balalaika ’ vlr- State Doneotion Dep. rtment officials ordered Kierdorf, 69. of Ma4-^ Ison Heights, paroled F'riday. Bdt they said processing and field work on his parole will keep, him in prison until Saturday May 28. I'ual r»mnination7ni^f face^^ ★ A ★ I tonight 1 flashes have taken, show. Were ottered by the Soviets . Kierdorf was convicted and sen-i . .. »*»' P“*'- »be party In Moscow's Artistic fenced after police found the si- ** **•**’ " '* first Red attack since the upris- Workers' Club. It followed the lencer in a bag belonging to the' '!•'*' Ing toUowirtg the March 15 presl-, regular performance of the former Teamstors official Just as '**"**"' reslg->ri.-an musi< al. they launched an investigation into, President Syngman - - ----- I .t«, !Rhj<,^ I , - Love Their Neighbor 1 arson 8: JO p.m. EST, will be canned on,rii^s« i jtelevision In 11 cities across the OlUl© rOUCG rOSl | HOLLAND. Minn. (Ft-NInefcen M. N. Danilov, uaistant Soviet minister for culture, toasted the Americans. He Mqiressed hope more American theatrical gioups would visit Moscow. Then tiw Soviets and Americans jltterbugged under a bust of Leiylii misic of a hotel orchestra whose wildest piece was a number called "OptimlsUc Boogie.’ the burning of Kieidorf's nephew. a Flint business agent who{ hour-long progp-am «f 7:30-was fatally burned in case In 1958. nation. It will also be broadcast, Now MflBy Wtor FALSE TEETH WIM Last Worry ■at, Mfe^usn or sp««s» without -roar of taasourv falaa tavth dropplns, alipplns sr wotobiing. FAaTlnrrB Brmfr als mora «om> fonabfy. Thia pleaasat pevdar aaa as Seoer, gasty tssw wr feelliis. Bttwdcaiifhig Hospitality Day Slated May 17 Sleep BHours-WakeUpTired? DlMSvsr Iks Mfssdsrful Of TMs Waman't Iras Tank I I After s good night’s sleep, do you stlU feel tired outf Often thU rundown fssUBf Is diis to "IroR-ilun-gry Blood" (’shams Iron dsfletsnev antmia). Tlien It’s needlsss to suffer such awful wssrinsss. Tskni^a g. Ptnkhsn Tablets, only Iron tonic made especially for women. Rich in Iron, Ptnkhtm Tablets start to stre^ben tout lagf^Thusqujckly item and the New York Times ra-; dip network. ' ^ n The Pontiac State Police Post : The schedule calls for a five- , ^ i minute preliminary statement hy^ hold Its annual "Hospitality each candidate. Da.v” May ITeis part of theobserv- I ^ ance of Michigan Week May 16- The order in which they speak I21. I will be decMed by the flip of a j roopCTi( fly the state fit] i coin. Then tho roodereto^ aws ^ ,,, director Bill Ames ef WCfIB-TV, - f%arleslen, where the program HospHetIty Day will see ortitaates. will a*k each ot thorn »P^n honse at the post from 18 ;_ln turn a questlea swbmitted a-m. te • I thi^gh the mall liy Weit W r offlw^^ explain depar i flnlaas. intent operatlona and there I This la the first major political be a display of equipment. !debate alnce Thomaa E. Dewey! "Vliltori are alwayi welcome at {and Harold Stasaen tangled vocal-1 the post but Hoapttality Day offers jly In 1918 in Oregon. |a special opportunity to look us ! neighbors i piclT(^ a Peter Pointes'Broker Explains Points 'If Jew Belongs, Thfn He Is More Eligible to Buy Home' . DETROIT fAP1-"If a Jew be-| iongs to gentile dubg, it's a signl he has been aceepfed" and he might be aMe to buy a home ln{ the suburban Groase Pointes. says Paul Maxon^ aecretarjl of the Grqaae Pointe Brokers Assn. j Maxon testified Tuesday at ai Michigan State Corporattona andj Securities Commilsion hearing onj a point-system used in rating | prospective heme buyers in thei exclusive Pointes. . A ♦ A TTw hearing was ordered by State Atty. Gen. Paul L. Adapta who said the point aystem waa ''•morally ewrupt." Ma.xon te8tl-| fled In it! defense. A'score of 50| is accepted as a standard passing grades A Jew would require 85 points. Negroes and Orientals are not rated at all, Maxon said a perfect score for bbtit Jews and gentiles Is lOO! points, but added that the ppintsi are spread dlHerenUy for Jews ln| order to give more emphasis onj churches, clubs and business associates. He said the scoring system was adjusted for Jews because "they icpresent a special problem." j AAA ! Maxon said a Jew Who Ameri-garet Leech won her second Pu- j canlred his name would get a bet- ^ litzer Prize for history Monday ;ter score than mie who hadn’t I with her book. “In the Days of | p:mlnent figures, regardless of McKinley.” Her first was in ’ nationality or race, might hu-xU I Bunche. a Negro, as eminent pePj Maximum depth of the Atlantic niit.ifVean it estimated to be 30.236 •>. point nwh w allties or backgrounds; IRw; PRIZE FOR 11'OMAN DIO YOU KNOW THAT It’i quite true that many people can actually «m better with KINooptic QH^ Lanifi than they can with fiaMss. f 'ThsM are uw newsst. most modem In the world... recommended snd approved by Issd-ing rnsmbfrs of iba optical pro- Easy to wear M your gli You'll be surprised hdw easy it is to start a new life with KIN-optie Contact Lenses. In for a free demon-straflon soon. Our experienced suff is at your service to answer any queslioni you may havql Ike, India Sign Huge Food Agreement over," said Sgt. Lorenz Ahlgrim, j post commander. ! Ahlgrim urged all area resl-j dents to "bo sure to come in and I get aquafnted with your State Police.” I remre strength and energy so you ',*uPP*y India wWi 17 mtlltons feel fine again fasti If your blood lot surplua grain—the largest is so s^d for iron that you Jurt it, kind in history drag through the day. get Pinkhsm I'sbleu from drug stores. Bee if deal FEMAli .AllMENTS-Lrdls g. Plnkhsm's Veertabit Compound 'Liquid) skQ brloff blssasd rtlitf fram diseemtMta of ckssgs-ef-lift, mestkly psla.______ WASHiNf^N (AP)-President He'll Stick to His 'Own (or th. Dan.. BALTIMORE IP-A slip of the typewriter at- the Baltimore Yacht Club sent a dance invitation to * * * Ballimore County Executive Chris- The agreement calls for the nan jj Rahl and Mi-s. Grady. United Sfafps to sell India 5*7 R^hl replied he would rather million bushels of wheat and 22 ,>s<-ort Mrs. Kahl. "ith all due -million bags of rice during the respect to the wife of Baltimore next four yearq starting July 1. Mayor J. Harold Grady. India will pay the equivalent otf-y p 11 c c^natm $1,300,000,000 in rupees for the ''®P» grain. Most of the money will be CAIRO (AP)—Cairo newspapers iloaned back to India tor its eco-ii..u^ «... .» n.. its c..nato tn. jnomic program. Iday^ Its opposition to any fbP ' WAA jeign aid to th* United Arab Re- 'We art fortunate in having this'public while an Arab ban con-means of sharing our abunda^," ,tinue8 on Israeli shipping in the Elsenhower said. 'Suez Canal. SfiecUilf MOTHU'S DAY IS SUNDAY liMriti* LARGE GREEN PLANTS on 24' Codor Bark Polos lb mom—Yfith lotre! Freth vibiw plantt with lar|c green folutge Jbt the home! ChooK from fo«ir vigorous Philodendron varietuir OonU-nun, Pertuium, Hastttum, or Pindurafotme-^e difflbifig on fascinating iZ4" totem poles, complete in itfrictive 6" plastic poe. floor fkmtor Urn Siomi.. • M.77 DOWNTOWN FONTIAC^TCL'HURON CINTiR-—OIIAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTiR-~MIRACLf Mill SHOPPING CINTER S. S. KRESGE COMPANY THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MAY 4. Ifioo TIIIRTV-ONE Cost $500 Million ,.. Then Canceled * Arrow Jet Causing Troublie in Canada OTTAWA <^) — Canada la to marr, there already la discuaslon is ^sign^ solely tjpr defense the mldat of a Idzzling controversy over defense policy. It all started with the Arrow—and In Cinadl that’s no Joke. A The Arrow is the Jet interceptor plane that the Canadian govern* nient developed at the cost of 500 million dollars and then Middenly cancel!^. That was 14 months ago. Since then the controversy has broadened to include the U.S.-built Bo-marc-B missile and has become entangled in U.S. policy as well as domestic politics. ★ A ★ At least one sea!! held by governing Conservative party in Parliament has fallen to die Liberals as a result of the Issue. It's a good bet It will play a major role in future elections. The dicision to cancel production of the Arrow has far-reaching significance apart from the loss of dollars. ★ ★ ★ It means that Canada left it- self only this choice; Either continue to rely on American weapons or get out of the air defense business altogether. That's where the Boiharc missile enters the picture. The government of Prime Minister John Diefenbaker has committed itself ----to-^raiia"Two TmflHmnro launching bases for this antialr-craft missile. Construction of one of the Bo-mare sites at North Bay, Ont., is expected to be completed in 1S61. Land has been purchased for the other site in Quebec province; « BOMARC BECVO CUT - In the midst of all this, the government faces the possibility that the Bomarc may hr abandoned ; by the United States, leaving Canada' with two costly but useless installations. The latest word from Washington is that the Bomarc program is being cut sharply after it failed in eight of Its fii'st nine tests. While the Canadian government has not yet given up on the Bo- If the Bomarc finally proves sucpessful, Canada will, dismantie its nine squadrons of CF1|^ Jet interceptors. There is some 'con-ceifi however, about relying entirely upon the Bomarc since it against manned planes and would be useless against enemy missiles. Canwia acquire three supersonic FlOl squadrons to replace the CFIOO units. But no decision Is Asked for More , last y e a r aiW asked broa^r. Citizen BeotS the Rop, ' programs. All Complained of liH , . _ Jjudg. Gnn., Soy» OK I W Eari IVoeser, United Fund; HOUSTON. Tex, (UPl'i-One of| EAS^LANSINO (API - FifteenLarae^fthat cttta can be expected In Judge Sears McGee’s District, state and 18 national health and!(n the two days of bu^et bear-;(i»urt returned his card with this welfare agencies are asking fhc:|ngs. “ ' {message written acros.* it: “Un- Michigan United Fund bud^t Com-1 -----------—------ able to ser\e. I can’t read or mittee for J4,2l6,432 today. to the United States trf the write. ”. ”rhe amount asked - compares VfTgin Islands was |25 million.' Judge McGee studied the caid. S-rs Slate United Fund by the U.S. government. Although many Canadians find tba dependence on the United States hard ‘to take, not a single voice was heard when the prime minister challenged the House of Commons: Is there anyone in thia House who will say that 'Canada, in order to assert Itself In the matter of — — ---------- ------- . j The US Air Force has proposedldefense, should enter into a field with allocations of J3,n4,510 last three times the price of Alaska.,then grinned and excused the, of expenditure which wiH run lntoiye»r- The Islands cover only IB square talesman. 'It’s nrt the best ex- Wliona and tens of billions of dol-[ The groups sought Increases miles ;while Alaska has 586,400 cu-se in the world. ’ he comment-lars beftme It is achieved?" 'ranging from 20 to 30 per cent over square miles. ’ ‘ t it’s novel.’’ SPECIALIZED SERVICE • TV • Hl-n • HAOIO • TAPI RiCOkDIM • P. A. SYSTIMS »OFFICi INTIR-COMS >W»COIt FACTORY SiRVICI BLAKE RADIO-TV CallYear'Good' In Washington Some Trends Cause Others to Decide on Gloomier Outlook NEW YORK (JB-Strong cross currents are keeping the stream of business chum^ up this spring. But business sentiment remains calm if cautious. The official view in WaiAiington continues to hold that the year as a whole will be a good one. The view' in some industries now the downgrade is that an upturn can come in the fall. Other indus- a year topping all others. it -k It Rarely has.the Iw'stander had a; wider choice of tjends on which' to base an opinion. hr k k ’The stock maritet has chosen the gloomier one. Prices have fallen from a peak at the start of the i'ear to a sb«rply low^er level to-day. ’The drop in stock prices has had an effect on the thinking of many businessmen on short-term prospects. There has been little noticeable effect so far on the totalf. of consumer spending. The sale of Brazil coffee accounts for more than 57 per cent of the tot^ umual export mariceL Wt coat flyiRfl wboo polkyholfUrt MOdbilRl Swnctime you may be in one of those. tight situations where yoa need a helping hand. It may be after a fire, accident or other misfortune. If the occasion ever arises, give us a calL lUk part Of our Job to take care of die insur-sncf details for all of otir policyhoiden. Thatcher, Pofterson & WerneP 7!l ilank BuiMinf Specially Selected SHCMl mOl Gifts For MOTHER’S DAY! Mofhor's Doy Is Sunday/ May StIu c/imce^ WOMEN’S 2-PC. SPECIAL TOASTER ___*7,88_____ 2-ilJce aiitomatic: chrome finish, toaster with .dial control and pop-up action. ColOted plastic trim. ibdtlcSUb..................UJI 16-PC. "MELMAC" SET Biothk/kDay ym Special # •# # Unbreakable "Mclmac" dihnerwarc— cup, saucer andtlesscrt. Floral. Ollier Diniier Sets . .is2.t9-*10.98 PiUOW SAI£ 2 .— s? for *3 Zipro6Fbarkcloth Of corduroy covers in poly foam, kapok or latex filled pillows. Round, square, box style. GHlltaMlnnlMi...3fcrSW 8.PC. TUMBLER SET 7n Gift Box •1,98 Heavy sham bottom^l^y^ rocTdnd Gtecian' column designs. Other GHt Boxed Seft $2.69-$2.98 snAM-miy mu • Heats in 30 seconds • Steams in 2 minutes • Set heat for any fabric • 9 even flew steam vents • Rust|>reef water tank • Lightweight—only 3 pounds • Convenient back hoel rest ^Q99 Specially Purchased For Mother’s Day Giving! Mother's Pay Special Crop Top Blouse-100% Pro-Shrunk Cotton Jamaicas—Rib Sheen Our eicdting spnng-into-summer 2'piece co-ordinates ofkr on-beatable qt^ity at a low price. The gay print sleeveless blouse has a modified scoop neck; comes in black, blue or gteea —jamaicas come in bhrck or white, in sizes lO-lR. So when you shop for Mom, stop at Kresge’s. "ARNEL”* SKIRT Stylish white ”Atnel’’ sharkskin skirt with all around knife pleats and hidden zipper. Sizes 22*^. SbcvelMS BImc Sale... HJ4 iBeM* PURSE SALE Mothar^a fa Day Special M9W W f«* In summerwhiteoreqoallyfiuhion-able hhd:, pla^ patent, Fceoch calf. Also vinyl, shell trim purses. I UoAer UNohk, .H.98 COnON DUSTERS Mothai'a f A OM Day Special A# W Brl^twoven cotton diedc gingham or pastel plaiddustec-Tailoced styles with patch pockRtt and color trim, loyoa Shorty Gowm ... $1.98 PEARL* JAMBOREE •1.00..CX £• Lovely single or mnlti«nnd peiui neddaci^ matd^g braoeletr-all with rhinestone dented cla^ Gift Jtewdry Set!. . . 59d.l1.00 Sitai 32^4 WHITE GIFT SLIPS For Mokhor's Day Half Slips: Lace trim, la AA dacron. nylon. cotton. lajpO Full Slips: Doubldskirt ^ a a a dacron-nylooKOtton slips. iZaW SPECIAL LAMP SALE 2 /.r *5 Extra ^ledal for this Week-«o(C Crystal msd white hobtutil lamps, high—ballerina or lace trim shades. Chip V Dip Sovim Sot... HJ9 s. S. KRESGE COMPANY THIRTY-tWO THE PONTIAC PRESSt WEDNESPAY, MAY 4. 1060 Chrysler Output Down in April production Dips by Ovor 10,000 Cars os DoSoto Loads Slump DETROIT (UPD—Chrysler Corp car productkm dipped in AprO, with 88.89S passenger cars produced compared with 99,065 in April 1959, the firm reported Tues- d«y. DeSoto led the slump. The com-|Hty built oidy 957 DeSotos last month compai^ with 5,830 in tiie same lAonth a year agix last with N417 Plymonths bnUt la April iiw. Far four rnontln tUs year. Plymmith bant 9i».7ST cars, lnelndli« r.«S VaHaats. Dodge output in April was 36,706 compared with 21,805 in April 1958. Four-month Dodge ou^ut this year was 148,041 compared with 63,704 in the same period last year. DeSoto four-month production tril trom 21,248 a year ago to 13,726 this year. ★ ★ ★ ’ Chiyder output In April B.813 %nd for four months thb year was 33,353 compared with 9.288 in April 1959, and 28,016 for lour months last year. late last month eamparad with XMl a year age A^. la the - ------ ------------ r, e,m e peried ef 195*. Passenger car output for four months this year was 407,594 compared with 276,862 in the same period a year ago. The company also built 6,141 Dodge trucRs in April and 29,087 in the first four months this year. Last year, A[r41 output included 7,301 Dodge trucks and 29.978 trucks in the first four months. A A # American Motors Corp. repented . Increased production last month over the corresponding month at 1959. The company built 4eJH Bam-Mers last meath eompamd with 40,tS5'in the same month a year ago. For foar nsoatho this year. jmCND DROWNS OUT PAIN — Madeline Coubre blissfully undergoes work on her teeth at a dental convention in San Francisco. Secret of the work is in the earphones and the control box in her hands. Dr. Wallace Gardner of Oomhridge, Mass., claims that sound blodu the reception of pain in the brain. In-stead of feeling Madeline heard a waterfall. •________________________' In Waterford Tomorrow 3 PTAs to End Season Three Waterford Townriiip Par-ent-Tead»er asmiations will end die sdxxd season’s ariiri^s t