Tht Weather VOL. 119 NO. 92 THE PONTIAC PRESS Homo Edition ★ ★ ★ ★ F0!NTIAC. MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. MAY 25, 1961—60 PAGES INTERNA-nORAL Doctrine' Introduced by President Group Arrested at Lunchroom MONTGOMERY, Ala. Ml—Four white college professors and three Negro students were arrested today while i trying to eat at the white lunch counter at the Trail- ‘ ways Bijs Station, A deputy sheriff took them Into custody while they were seated at the lunch counter. Also arrested was a Negro Intergration leader, the Rev. Wyatt T. Walker, Pulls Marshals Out of Alabama State Taking Protective Action, Kennedy Says: leave Only 100' executive director of the Southern Christian Leadership conference In Atlanta. TURN DOWN BAIL Shortly before their arrest, the integrationists had bought tickets for Jackson. Miss., where another group of white and Negro riders was arrested Wednesday. WASHINGTON (AP) - Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy today withdrew the major portion of the force of U.S. marshals sent into Alabama last week to help halt violence surrounding the "Freedom Riders." As of this morning, there were 666 Imported federal officers at « Maxwell Air Force Base outside of Montgomery. Kennedy said that all bat 4of these wonld be retamed their home posts during the day. Kennedy said "a number of factors influenced this decision.' He said these included the continued presence of the Alabama National Guard in Montgomery, the protective actions taken by the Alabama State Police, and "the assurances we have ceived from the Alabama delegation—Its senators and congressmen—as well as from leading citizens and officials and finally the strong legal action we have taken in the last few days.” With a plea for a cooUag off period falling on barren ground, the *7 "freedom' iMers" Jailed In Jackson turned down offers of They declined offers by the National Association for the Advancement of colored People to make the Jl.OOO bail for each. Car Sales Beach Best Selling Rate of Year in May iCalls ior Big Spending, Man on Moon by 1970 By MERRIMAN SMITH WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Kennedy personal- DETROrr II*—First .reports of I new car sales during the middle I third of May, issued by the com-i I panics Wednesday indicate the best selling rate of the year. Ford Division of Ford Motor Co.! said its dealers sold 45,000 Fords, i Falcons and Thunderbirds in the!, , , , j j *. i „ May 11-20 period, highest daily |ly placed before Congress today a “freedom doctrine” rate for any 10-day period since I calling for vast new federal spending including $7 to $9-imai * ! billion to seize space leadership and put a man on the American Motor, said it, .. , Rambler tales totaiod u.ios cars I Special messEge on what the called “urgent na- compared with 9.167 in the first tional needs,” Kennedy told a joint session of the House !?,«■ ^:and Senate and the nation I« !.«...« r w, 1. Uie United Statea Lee lacocca, Ford Division gen-i eral manager, pre^cted industry t R C 6 S an “extraordinary sales for May would run 550,000 in- chsUlengc” requiring new eluding imports, highest of the! . • 7 j year to date measures of hardship and Auto production this week wUl sacrifice, closely approach the high mark There must be additional effort (or the year with 128,184 passenger j .. cars scheduled for assembly, Auto- self-restraint by all citizens, 1 motive News reports. i including steps to hold down on un- j Two weeks ago the industry built justified wage and price increases, ! 129,530 cars in the best 1961 effort, the President said in his nationally The total dropped to 123,652 last televised and broadcast address. I week. In the comparable week last TO HALT DKTEBFERENCE The legal action referred to the order obtained from the U.S. District Court in Montgomery enjoining the Ku Klux Klan and others from interfering with interstate travel through Alabama. persal «( Om> major pertiou of the imported marshals. Deputy Atty. Gen. Byron White, who has beea la charge of them at the Air Force baae, srlU return to Washington before the end of the **y- Police officials In Montgomery apd Birmingham face a federal court hearing next Monday after federal authorities asked an injunction against them as a result of the racial strife. U. S. District Court Judge Frank M. Johnson Jr. scheduled the hear^ ing here at the request of the Justice Department Wednesday. Police (Hficers were accused of failing to protect "freedom riders" from white mobs. Named in the suit are P o 11 c e Conunissioner L. B. Sullivan and Police Chief G. J. Ruppenthal of Montgomery and Police Commissioner Eugene Connor and Chief Jamie Moore of Birmingham. The Justice Departm^Rt has adopted a hands off attitude toward ‘ the arrest at Jackson. Miss., of 27 white and Negro "freedom riders.’ In Today's Press Lose Control Two Eichmarai persecution survivors lose control of selves, interrupt trial — PAGE tt. Rostless U.S. Spending by Americans bi-dicates restlessness, Insocur-ity-PAGE 41. For Health state pollution must end -PAGE 7. To Protect Public Probe for dishonesty in American Stock Exchange— PAGE *7. Reforesratiorl Michigan has lumber, paper mills, too—page; 60. Arm News ...........66-Sl , ...ss ... 6 SS-» neaters... .1.. TV ft RmBo' PrograoH . “ 'a PagM .. ....49-47 The NAACP planned a mass ral-1 ly In Jackson Friday to protest JAIL "FREEDOM RIDERS"—Fifteen "freedom riders." passengers on a second bus that Mississippi Gov. Ross Barnett questioned Atty. Gen. Robert F. plea for a cooling off I arrived In Jackaon, Miss., Wednesday, are load-! ed into a paddy wagon outside the Jackson bus AP rboUfax station. The fifteen entered the white waiting room and were arrested for being in violation of Mississippi law. year it was 142,5%. period on “Freedom Riders" to GM Entry Cuircndy First nett claimed the attorney general "We don’t want tourists to stay away," Barnett said. "We can assure the traveling public there is no danger in Mississippi. This Has Miss Centennial Lead Margaret, Tony Are 'Expecting' I To carry oat his recommendations, the President songht almost Sl.7 union in new lands. This wonld involve ndded federal expenditures ot $794 million In flscnl 116$ and send the federal budget deflcK to |S.S bU- Princess Is 30 and He Is 31; Reveal Date to Be Next Autumn state is as peaceful and quiet as any in the natkm." Barnett said the "freedom riders" probably were i because they failed to stir up trouble in Jackson. All eight were charged with a breach of the peace. Ontside the has stalioa, a crowd of several hundred wMte per- sponsored by the General Motors Gills’ Qub is leading the OMrtest, centennial Headquarters announced today. dee the bayoaeta of Natlenal fear white men and four Negroes were led oat ef the terminal and pat la a ■heriff’s ear. A Miss Centennial Chndklate place after the first of four weekly Bnimle Alee, sponsored by the return periods ended last night. Metropolitan Ctab. Veachel Bilyeau was in first Next the keen eempetltlaB are Ellen their sponsors are; Abb Taylor, sponsored by the Exehaage dab of Psntlae, aad Green Li^ht 1$ Given to Shopping Center Delores McCbnneU, Brothers the Brush Chapter M; Marilyn Opdenhoff. West Pontiac and Pontiac Kiwanis Qubs; Mary Jean jSavu, St. George's Roumanian I Church; Rosalie M. Jones, Oak-{land County AFLCIO Council. jAlso, Julie O’Brien. American Business 'Women's Association; Discounting a warning that downtown might suffer, ‘'“y planning commission last night gave the green carpet^m“cL^’'K^"i esTo minister for the station, the proposed $2-miUion OlenWOOd Avenue Shop- Legg. Pontiac General Ho^ital; njno center ; Joan Knowles, Kennerly Standard rS, , * ij iv u X J Service; Shirley Pantel, Daugh- Developers said they would get under way whenever ters of Penelope and Order of the City Ckimmission acts on zoning changes. Thisj^'i^' should take about a month, with no hitches. LONDON (I* — Princess Mar-mnklnv ^ A"* baby ^ ‘be fall. Kensington Palace an-nounced tonight. j ♦ * ♦ i The child will be fifth in line of Jeannette Cockle, Tranqufl succession tp the throne. Belles of Pontiac State Hospital; But the President said in his message that he was not requesting additional taxes to finance the requests. SPREAD OVER 8 TEARS The additional $7 to $9 billlan Kennedy said would be needed to put an American astronaut on the moon and bring him back would be spent over the next five years. Negro minister for the station, the segregation-challenging riders had promised that others would take their places if they were put in JaH. Those arrested besides Walker The Rev. WIIHam 8. CMIIa Jr., chaplain at Yale t’afveratty; the Rev. Gaylord B. Nayee. amlst-ant protesMT at the Yale dl-vtoHy aoheel: Dr. David E. Swl^ profmaor of rellgloB at Wesleyu profNMr of reHgkm; George B. Smith, a Yale. Clyde L. Walker. Smith, Carter Jones are Negroea. Princess Margaret and Antmy Armstrang-Joms, then a society photographer, became engaged in 1960 and were married a little over MaJ. Mtn Oriflia, pteas sw-retaiy to the royal hoatehoM, husband are deiigtited.' The couple c^brated their first wedding anniversary May 6. The princess Is 30, her husband 31-The official announcement from Kensington Palace, oouple have their London retl-dence, said the princess will be at- Other spending figures envisioned , by the new program in- Planning Director James Bates unsuccessfuUy urged First Congregational chur^ Mary Leonard. Pontiac Women’s tended during her confinement by Chorus and Chancel Choir of the;I^ Evans, Sir John Weir and that the planning commissiem adopt a policy protecting I Cynthia Kmchko, Drayton Woods ^town ud rullns .ny more big topping centers 'SU ’aS'H aSST within the city, except perhaps near the city limits. He * ‘ * said that any regional-size*-------------------- is too small to successfully support big commer0fll„centers. «it- shopping center, such proposed on Glenwood, would ftdvwsdy ftffect-ihe side of'dawntown! success of the multimllllon dollar effort to the central business district. Bates said, in effect, that Pontiac la mbmittlag a fov-page pro-poaed. policy statement, concurred la by David 8. Geer, the elty’o Bloomllcld Hills planning eonsBltant, Bates said he wonlda’t be surprised If Ike pfauning csmniission tnmed It Always Work to Do Judy Johnson. NaUonal Secretaries Association; Carolyn Tucker. Daughters of America, WO-HE-Lo Cbuncil 96. eMSPOKn VTUJL OUT Sidney Swindells, N o r t h s i d e Community Oub; Carol Lyons. GMTC Emfiloyes Federal Credit Union; Mary Jane Puertas, Italian-American Oub; Cynthia Jane Sach, Blue Stor Mothers of America; Virginia Elmy, Homade Food Shop; Shirley Hutchison, Tel-Huron Shopping Center; Lynne Cavetly, I realize there are a numberChapt^l. of pressures to locate this centerj 01®** Pl«cencia. Federal Depai t-within Pontiac," he said. ,ment Store; Judith Palen, Navy At the heart of the policy state-1 Mothers of American Chapter 355; lent-waa this preposition: "A llm-!Mary Robertoy.- WatcrtonLTi>wn-ited number of consumers c.7n ship Junior Chamber of Com- 8 merce; Jo Ann Elkins, Brothers of ’ the Brush Chapter 28; Carolyn Smith. Newman A. M. E. Church; Joan Broadway, Neisner Bros, and Sir John Peel. All three attended Queen Elizabeth when she gave birth to her third child. Prince Andrew, In February 1960. The subject 6f Margaret's first child hu kept the London gossip columns agog almost.since share-turned, tanned and happy, from honeymoon last Only Wednesday she attended Commonwealth Day reception at the Guildhall in London with her husband. She looked chic and trim in a loose fitting pastel silk! tod lor a labor retialaiag prngrawi — to teacli new oocapnItoBal ■kUh to hnndrtNla ol thonianda af ' limaaf He aanounead a shake-tm ol dvB defenae and said fills wouU be tab-panded under control of the secretary of defenae. It was ( that the administration planned to spend about $300 million for this Foreign aid—economic and tha President’s contingency funds, $75 million. National Aeronautiea and i^wce Administration $330 mUllon. U.S. Infonnation Agency, $2 mll- Commerce Deparlment for weather satellite, $19 million. Small Business Administratfon, $88 million to increase its lending authority. In March, Kennedy submitted a $84.2 billion budget. Today’s recommendations increase this 984.9 billion with a deficit of about $3.5 billion compared to the earlier $2.8 biUion.' coat and a matching pleat skirted Today's announcement said; “It is announced from Kensington Palace that Princess Margaret is expecting her first child in the autumn and therefore will under- tContinued on' Page 2. Cbl. 5> take no further official engage- strides—time .tor a great American enterprise—time lor this nation to take a clearly toading role in space achievement." Starting off his addreas, he (Continued on Page 2, Ool. 3) ■A- ★ ★ JFK to Beef Up Army's Forces Wants Added Troops for Deterring Limited, Nonnuclear War WASHINGTON (E - President Kennedy 1s revamping the whide combat structure of the Army to makh it harder hitting and faster moving, and to bolster medianizad strength in Europe and deploy I forces to both Europe and the Far East. In outlining his program today in a special message to Congress, Kennedy said he is directing further reinforcement of the armed torceg ability to deter or fight non- Hw aatlaa’a nadear atreagth. mended In his prevtoas badge* mesaage, Munrid be adequate. While he Intends basic structural changes and modernization of weapons for conventional war. "I Had no present need for large new The only maigwwer Increase he lanthmed was for the Marine Ootpe-to raise it from a presently aulborlaed strength of 170,000 to level of 190,000. Even here, he would leave the structure of tbs corps unchanged at three di-viskme and three air wings, using the extra men to provide "staying Kennedy eald he baa directed Secretaiy of Defense Robert S. McNamara to "undertakt a complete reorganiiation and modernization of the Army’s divisional structure;” to step up its non- Ity and "to provide modem medianized divisions in Eurc^e and nmy airbome brlgadea in both the Pacific and Europe. Damp and Cool Weather Seen for Area Tonight Scattered showers are forecast for the Pontiac area late today with temperatures turning cooler tonight. Tlie low will be about 44. ■Now- itls time to take tonger warm up a^dh ^turday with no The weatherman said Friday will be cloudy and cooler with the high mild 68. Temperatures will rainfall in sight. Morning southwesterly winds at miles per hour will become stronger at 10 to 30 m.p.h. shifting to northerly early tonight Fifty-nine was the toweat recording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The mercury reading at 3 p.m. was 72. Predicts TB Spread by Current Victims aNCINNATI (It - The 30 per cent of the population now Infected with tuberculoels will produce 80 per cent of all the new cases within the next five years, a health official said Wednesday. Dr. Oarmee D. Barrett ef the Monroe Oouaty (itOdL) Health Departmeat gave the predteltoB In a speech at the annual eon- He urged the use of scientiBe methods to keep track of not only all active tubercuknis cases but also of all peraoiw who rcodt to the tuberculin test. e. A DUBK lA/iT—Ziiigineer uuiora .iuuiimi a tery on one of the Station No. 5 trucks. All fire truck engines Ivroger UrugStOrOS are dweked three times weekly. Much of the trucks’ equipment DETROIT (I* - Kroger Co. said is checked daily. This is one of fiw many vital tasks whldi keep p^edm^y it will enter the drag-Pontiac's fire fighters busy Around tiie dock. For photos and | gtore (told this year with the story on tha city’s smoks ehteti I Page IT. ling of 10 stores. Tta PRINCESS LOOKS ON — Princess Mip*garet looks on as her-husband Antony Arm-strong-Jones (left) was greeted by \Hsoiunt . de L’lsle, governor general designate of Australia / AP nwtoftx at Guildhdl, London. Announcement from Kensington Palace in London today said the inrincess is expecting her first, baby in the falL Dr. Barrett said it was of th* utmon importance to check carefully all contacts of known settee ; in searching otR hidden tuberculosis. suwtvn. Owrfv'A f* jf - < TWO THE PONTIAC imSS. THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1961 JFK Cabinet to Receive Johnson Report on Asia VVASHINCJTON (AP) — Vice th^ doierniin«lion to have wi preodent Uyndon B. Johnson re-jev^r saprifiC'e* wt: called for ports to the Keiwedj' cabinet to-! * * * day on his first-hand conclusion At Pirsident Kennedy’s invita-that embattled Asian countries tKjn the vice president arranged can «'Bi their struggle against to make a repoit to the cabinet communism if they are properly in a morning meeting ill the suWKirted with U S. adx’iee and white Hmtse In the aflermxm., aid. I Johnson leports on hia trip to a! * * * 'cloeed meeting of the Senate For-* tock from a 3.000-raiIe trip eign Reiations Committee. All that tocdi him through a half-dozen other senators have been invited .Asian countries! Jidmson told a to sit in. news conference late Wednesday. Mggigi' APPEO.AC'H .“(jDmmuniam is not riding a tide ' ' (of inevitable triumph in Asia. In| ingredientt for a successful ITalks on Alcohol Fail in Schools The Day in Birmingham 1961-62 Budget Hearing Set hr June 5 Evening Educators Don't Know Birmingham - a public heai^ Dennis, n. of 2«-'park st„ wui be \A/U^* !>«»«»«»'1961-62 2 p. m. Saturday at the Manley- Whot to Twch, Claims ,^1 year budget has Burial will State Board Expert !!>»■ • p ^ School Aid Passage' Predicted by Tonight be in Acacia Park Cemetery. I u j . fftanneuc' D^uhl* ”°!o,k Center Hoiqiital. Royal Oak, cation in the schools is a total ** *6^'**9 I*’*"'’’following a long illness, failure, an expert told the national'<«■ J’***'' PTA convention today, because ^0. confused about! adults are alcohol. , rate of «I8.M for each SI.Me of Ralph \V. Daniel of the Mich-j asaeooed valaatloa would be re-igan Slate Board of Alcoholism I quired to balaace the iiKreased said this country stBI has not budget, fully adjusted to the repeal of pro-j ^ ^ . » hibition fo 1933. . ^ rate is possible, according to dty WASHINGTON »-Tbe Senate! debuted Pmident Kennedy’s $2.3b-| billion public school aid bill today with leaders predicting over-whelming passage by tonight. Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont.. said be planned to keep the Senate in session until the wte was reached. Several [long speeches against the measure' member of the ___.... I Society of Oirisllao i Snuutn Re^blleaa h IM).\AIJ) C. B.AIDWIN the lands WT vdsited. Asians have resistance to * Communist terror, ij j both the wUl to resist tyianny and pnKsures against tlw HpaQC \rnQAIC said in a prepared speech. 'Centennial Citizens free natfons of Asia, view, include adoption of '’shirt sleeve diplomacy” by L’.S. representatives. a stepped-up akl program and extensive soi ial reforms within the countries. , He foresees the p&ssibility of a summit conference of President Kennedy and Asian leaders— [though that would be sometime in the future “We have placed the edara- a. Wagner, principal of ton la aa aalalr pooltlaa beeaaw High School, that the achool again we do not let them haow what has been accredited by the Nottt they thould teach abeut alco- icentral Association of Ci^eges qnd •w* • • • jSecondary Schools. ’Many teachers with strong con-! The high school has had contin-Countywide Post Goes ^ 'Ctlons about the evils of drink ;uous accreditation since 1912. * n ^ IJ r B IJ teaching their biases as; Areordlag to Pief. Leoter W. to UOnOlO V.. DOldWin though they were the whole truth.j Anderoou Michigan h. i nUiaatd contenttons the program would not lead ta fed-She had lived In the area 48■era! controls'over education, and years, comity (rom Marietta. ; declared tlie thiee-year authoriza-Surviving are her husband, a tion in the bill was just a begin-daughter, Mrs. Bernard F. Garie- ning. two sons, Uoydj "Year^ter year this will snow-, _ and Raymond L.|ball,” he said. "This just openst u V. » "xl three grandchll-!the door to let the bUlions flowf Word has been received by Ross dren freely ” ■We have, by law. assigned to " iiyrrease in as- daughter. Mrs. B «r schools the responsibUity of »»»^«JV*tion and nontax reve-ipy <>f Royal 0»k; caching about alcohol.' Daniel; “t»m the state. B. of Ludington Throughout his trip. Johnson ported, he did mil em'ounter a eni of the Rmbester Community single request for l’..S troops to .Siiwols, will serve as president of ■*;** OKOLTS Periodically, teams of inspectors be sent into the aiea and he de- the Oakland County Association of "Some scbo(|>ls evade their re- visit thg local school and investi-clared there is no plan and no .School Administrators for the 1961- sponsibilities by bringing In out-|gate the physical facUities, organ-intention at this time ■ to dispatch m school year. siders from temperance groups or;izatlon of the school, its curricu- troops there ^be association of school super- **‘^*‘«n ^P* •««>"« «»rajlum, and visit classes to judge the * * * lendents and assistants meets reg- Present their points of view. effectiveness of instruction. The fact is. Johason said, that ujarly to discuss and take action “A few ... a pitifully lew . .. ' J'"***' **** school also is ** on mutual school problems of a< u«ehers are d J i quired to file an annual report ^ iwith the assoclatiM. ’’the free nations of Asia havi the manpower.” WTiat they want local state, and nJilkmal nature. I from the United .States, he said, ____ is financial support and technical ^J*“**" ^ The Birmingham Ambulance Cb. guidan^ l^t wiU make it pos-, ;«lucafion can tta teacher teach|has been awanled b one-year con- .. Speetal Kdueatloa fommhlee. something in which the P»rents}tract to provide service to the dty. sible for their own forces meet an unscrupulous enenr whose stcK’k weapon is terror.” A. FlJIbl) BLAKEAI.EK AT6rT Knows of No Planned Antitrust Action ’ He now is a member of a state-; don’t believe. [Wide committee appointed by the ----------------- superintendent of public instruction ^ i to study Michigan needs in higher, 1^611]6S LsTanam As a member of the FoundationiO//©r©Cf CollSn of Mu-higan Stale University Oak- land. Baldwin ha.s served on ^v-DTlDe lO LOnVCn |The local firm has held the contract since 1£9. The Mrmlngliam company was the highest of two bidders for the service; the other being the MM-west Amhutanre Co. of Ponliae. Talk to A Fkiyd Blakeslee about NEW YORK (AP>—The Ameri- w w w the city of Pontiac and he’U tell can Telephrw «n.v •'omplaini ’ began his law practice with his father Elmer in 1913 He served Dies After Accident as proaeoutor for the county from 1921 to »24 TRAVERSE CITY le - Paul W With the state attorney general sjR^hard. 58. dairy f a r m e r and promote the freedom doitrine. office, he bandied the hgal side *'*'*‘'' ** OH COTS acquiriiw property tor the Edsei;Cft^*.'’ Board of Myation. died presiderrts gone before joint Ford and Toledo-Detroit rxpreas- sessions of Congress other than 'Continued From Page One) ’ Vast Spending Plan rContinued From Page One) Son, Neubei^BI e," Asks Antismog Sharon .Vfooie. Phi Alpha Kappa fChapler of Beta Sigma PW: Paui-Ino Verbiaa, American Federation of .State, County and Municipal! Employea. Local 100. AFL-aO;’ and Starr Hodges, St. Jooephj Mercy Hospital. when he backed his tractor over; an embankment Polue said he fell into a rock, pile. ways. Bloheslee. of m «. Irsqusta Road, wna active In eanaty Be-pnbHraa peitttfs. having aerved as rhnlnnaa from |tU to IMI. Schools in Woterford and a niemher of the Male i en-Iral reanndttee tram Itai to iMl. Looking back on the growth of to deliver stale of the luiion'mes-sages This WHS in 1947 when President industry No returns were repoHed by thee sponsors In the ronlest. -I— R v..k.r<»r rvnr. uui accumulsled on the Wedi^ay she ha. Mked th’; KinS;: WASHINGTCW tf* - Sen. Mau- Tniman announced ihe ’Tniman Doctrine of Foreign Aid" and in poiiutliw fumes. “ advance tickets sold all , , ... iT’.n when President Fiisenhower ^ to CiOSB BOforB Holiday outlined his Middle East Doctrine. ]g Mrs. N’eubeiger sent letters to to the Centennial State Sing and! ..... . ...“■ c™------------- *s manufacturers of ears and' While the lengthy,’prepared mes- trucks asking them to install the ,h. «»v "ri.i,«,u. n«.ni. dsv orerediu Menu.rial Hav ***'' **'>M*W*'d a* "f ‘‘’dra- devices to protect public health. . *re scheduled the city, Biakeslee said t^ people ^y MeniortM W.v. ordinary state of ihe union mes- for eveoiii performancea-ln Wis- ‘‘ ■“ IMI ypt WIIHam A. ynnek of PresMent* emphasis wM ^ pt^WHty p^r stadium during the June 17-34 the Walerfmd Tmrmdrip tehoM ^ ^ ^ ^ H legiMatioa being Introduced U celebration the maiHiractnrera dnn'l net vol- Fifth Army Band Concert June 17. PiHillar wRI have whool Mon have changed completely I guess it s because 1-W ewiyhody and his dog in tli day* ” he remaised. The Weather on foreign affairs and the problems posed by international rela-. Hons lo the cnndtK i of the Amer-lean government celebration neWET COUNTR 1# f*a . 1 .1. Purchase of a coupon or a imiiaiive. sne saw. it WOUW he, , , candidate nt the aell. Hr sp»ke parttouUrly of hi. to the candidate of the aell- (orthromiiig meetings la Parts "M^nsible legislation to prohibit , j organization with French Preiddeiit Hiarlea transportat^ in Interstate de Oaalle and In Vienna Anatrfai. of vehicles without the j with Hovlet Premier Nikita R. khnisticliev. - protective device. ” The coupons are exchangeable for tickets to the spectacle. Full I’.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy today with Kattered showers and turning cooler this afternoon and Fn«n<-e evening. High today 74. Clondy and cooler tonight and Friday. Low tonight 44, high Friday 88. Southwesterly winds He said he wanted (o talk with Khnishchev lo make sure the, WrSnnS . T..re Rtpidt nuaiari M 4S JtekMMitllK IS IJ VI IS Lm AB|>l«t - “ 71 IS MIsal a 77 «S MUwauk** .. .. IS M Mr* Orirsoi IS 71 54 11 Ms* T»rk 71 “ 77 SI Okrb'm* C 7V U 41 PhlladrIphU 71 71 IS Pltuburfh 71 55 71 Mlcbmend 71 Hoatliii PrllstOB ■rr*T»r» » WASHINGTON if) - A special [J White Houk (XNnmiukm today re-II commended an early merger of T M II feuding imiona of pilots and flight ___' ■■ ]• engineers on the nation’s airlines. ___ MV) SMtti* ’ II 41 The group also called for a cut IndMnipoU. 7) 47 W«bln,l.a 71 M j„ He expres.sed lavish friendship,CuboB InVOSIOn w a*tlrtiet*t4»*iHM magniftevnt leader’ of Cold Wor PeoH Horbor ling and'tand concert hnve n * * * ATLANTIC CnV. N. J. (UPI) Hth!>r t IM P^ P*'^ I# antnntan sfaitan Stntes. oald WeduTwdny the “Cn. ^ ”*«*»« MOm Wagon, ban adventure may prove to bo I" *1^ vehicles will be given the Pearl Harbor of the eoM *'»'■>. "inners, who need not be, war." present when they win, have theij-j Komalo toM the riosing of choice of either vehicle, the gitb aaonal ronvewMon of the * * * ■ ■ Pennsylvania Banker* Aaaaeia- Coupon purohasers save 30 cents lliMi that the ab4»rtlve Invasion on the admission price to the spectacle. The ixiupons will be theiravailable until June 14. when the, contest e|o,si»s. ' Kremlin buss undeistamls ’Amer-H-a s enduring concern for both free0«n Pfcg. 30 MIDOL TAOLETS 69c QUINSANA POWDER ... ‘.S Pack of 100 — Par AntacM TUMS far Hm TUMMY .. »< Largs 2*/k-Lhe. — Pratacts ClotMng EXPELLO Moth Crystals ^ aaad^aaaaaaaaaaaanaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa nnuiK : mvbuie MAGNESIA EyR-Wask fii 73* Tkn^ te 69* ^*1 Pack M sse Centennial Spectacle Rehearsals Tomorrow Friday. May Id. In Ihe bo.vi' gyennaalnni nt Ponliae Central High Rebaol — S:M pjn., high whoal giri dancerai 7 p.m., flvll War scene; 8:U pun., prtaclpnl piayem. naasannnaaaannnnnnaaaaaaaaannnnaaaaaaaaaanna Per Muscular Achat and Paint mm. “j; HEET LINIMENT ............ fTi 79* D’CONRsaelilAglPRUF DRISTAN NASAL MIST . WLDROof NAIR TONIC •aannnnnnnnannnnnnnntnnannnnnnannnaaaaaannnn FASTEETH POWDER Rag. S1.I2 76* n BABY NEED DISCOUNTS Ha Nixiag or Stirring of Uquidt -siraarirramissiT TONIGHT—FRI.—SAT. Main Floor DISCOUNTS Nalioaafly famous Sraods CIGARETTES RECUURS Per CARTON Plus 9e Ta* KING aad FILTER Per CARTON Plus 10c Tan 231 240 ChooM from IretlMit tmokM m --------- —Cam*]*. Lack)**. Ch**t*rtl«M>. Pall Mall*. Viceroys. Kent*, and otiwr aaaaaaaannnnaaaaaaaaa 'Bitt-Proof Hood' on LA FENDRICH I CIGARS RONSONOL Lishtor Fluid Ragnlar 28c _ ICC a .. aaaaaaaaaaaaanaaoaaaa GilbarTt RCVRIUE' Alarm Clocks Factory luaranKtrd Plu» f aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Caaniaa larMORr Pocket Watch MIT rORMULM 12 2^ OLYCRBINE 8UPF081- BABY POWDEB TOBlira. Begnlnr 48e d>Qg | Begnlnr SOc Bfennans OAi pnek af Nanrlek irs. itOT famnna annthlng powder Oaf n southing powder MENNENS BABY MAGIC ! Begnlnr 81Ad vnlne. the mnii SlJ.95Vnlua “ :.„r 'Waatcl*!' brnd^TlS*' , . Pad. tai. -J- — Cows Are Sounded Out to Measure Beef Quality NEW YORK' (UPli - Sound|u«.K.»u «, «« wave* are being used to measure sells for about 15,000. the quality .i I j .. package for boxed products which “ !®P®ns and closes by a new design. Decoration Doy Specie Is LADIES'—MISSES'—GIRLS' Spring and Summer Shop SIMMS Tonite 'til 9 All “Specials" in This Att/ on Sale TONIGHT UntiHond FR1. ond SAT.-y A. M. to 10 P. M. DISCOUNT DEPT STORE Have Money-Left-Over When You Shop and Save at Simms Ploy Shoe% 197 FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1961 Mayor Miriani iWanis Con-Con .Held in Detroit iRobbedof$6,Radio, iCab Driver Reports A SS-yearoid cab driver baa i'lported to Pontiac police that he DETROIT Ma>-or Louis' Miriani wants the state constlttt- __ ^ u j tionai i^nvention Oct. 3 tor '*^|Sahdra Dee Expecting He said he felt something, possibly a knife, pressed against the back of his neck. The robbery was the third reported on cab drivers in a week. Cost of Uiring Likely to Hold Through June troit. Miriani said Wednesday he wlll| „ HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Actress send an Invitation to each of thei 144 delegates to be elected thla!'*‘«‘‘ ^ as tne conventkm ctiy^ ^ ^ ^ at.eioped last December. Saginaw and Wilson streets shortly' WASHINGTON (AP) -Living I costs were unchanged in. April for the second straight month and government experts foresee continued price stability until June or July. med amendment to the state law governing the eligibility of candidate s Vernon L. Schiller, director of financial management, check'xl with officials in Laasing late yesterday “to satisfy my curiositv ' “I was told that the law inquiring candidates names to appear on the roll had been repealed in 1950,” Schilier said, “Candidates must own property and pay taxes, .but their names do not have to appear on the roll." Brow-n had filed ti court suit to contest his ineligibility since lie owns pnqierty and paid ta.xe*. Brown accepted news of his eligibility with mixeil reactions. ' I'm happy to be legally eligible, but it's too bad the administrators and their attorneys had to vvfiit| until I filed suit to find out how the law read. " he said Uxlay. “I wonder what wnnM hove | happened If I hadn't filed suit. Tw'ii leniis on the school boaixi will expire next month. They are I'unently held by William H. .Vndei-sqn, lioard vice president, and .Tames R. Jenkins, both of wtiom will seek re-election. Other candidates are Willie .S. Downes, John W. Graham and Victor P. Suit Tlie two who poll the highest ntnnlHT of voti>s will win the two seats. A dozen nations, including the United States, Australia. France.’ Britain. Japan and Russia, are participating in a four-year pro-| gram to fish thf. fndiaii Ogean for .scientific data. ROCHESTER'S LEVI Headquarters miTZELFELD^S DEPT. STORE—312 MAIN STREET Downtown Roehestor OL U8171 NEW! Two-In-One GRILL features changeoble Long and Short Legs Ki'osqe’ the original cowboy jeans from the Far West! EITHER WAY... YOU GET AMERICA’S FINE8XJEANS Mod* of the hoavloot donirn loomed —LEVI’S •leluelve XX donim—to outwear thorn alll Stitchod with extra-etrong thraad and rainforead wHh Coppar Rivets at all strain polnUI Tailored elltn and trim, with yoke back and eurvad waistband for porfact fit ovar tha hips I Guaranteed —with this 110-yaar-eld, werM-famaue guarantee — a new pair PRR If fhiy TAKE YOUR CHOICE - NOW ~ AT YOUR FAVORITE STORE I iriii: rUiMiAiy iUuKMJAV. MAi J3, l»«i HVK SHAWS "Michigan'* Largejt Itwtitr*' for perfect quality BRYAN J175 Wedding Ring 150.00 USE YOUR CREDIT A YEAR TO PAY To gymboliw your love forever choose fcnnous Keepsake Diconond Rings — finest in qualify, beauty and value. 24 N. SAGINAW STREET Pontiac State Bank BMg. RIDLEY S225 Wedding Ring 1125.00 MoscowfapeB Play Up Alabama MOSCOW (API—Moscow newspapers gave promipent play today to articles and pictures about the race troubles in Alabama^ Pravda headlined its article "America's Black Day" and said: "Progressive peoples all over the world denounce the crimes of the pele in Alabama.” Komsomolskaya Pravda, the official youth newspaper, said: "1^ cism is the shame of capitalist America." MariSyn Monroe Slated for Minor Operation HOLLYWOOD (UPl) - Marilyn Monroe, the No. 1 blonde in the movies, was scheduled to undergo "mitjor surgeiy" today at Cedars of Lebanon hospital, doctors said. “ B checked into the hospital last night for what her physician described as a mipor gynecological operation. He said she probably will be released FYiday. Among men, firearms is the commonest method of suicide. Poisoning outranks with women. Postal Inspectors Try to Find Stolen Guns DETROIT Wv-Postal inspectors sought today to round up 23 deer rifl)B8 and shotguns stolen from the mails and sold to persons in the Detroit and Bay City areas. ■ Paul Sgro, a Michigan Central Railroad mail handler, admitted stealing the firearms and 22 others which have been recovered. Sgro. who lives in Ecorse, pleaded guilty to theft charges in U.S. District Court and was released on $1,000 bond pending sentence. ' Postal inspectors quoted Sgro as 8IG.VS OF SPRING—Oarkston's Pine Knob fourth and fifth grade school children will present their first spring concert at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the little theater of the new high school. More than 70 voices will blend together in the two-part presentation. The second portion of the show is entitled "Wedding of the Flowers." r«ntue rreM Ph»U The one-act operetta concerns the marriage of Lily of the Valley and Johnny Jump-up. The wedding takes place in the garden of flowers (live) under toe direction of Mrs. Sophi^ Gemolas. Shown above peeping from petals are Barbara Taylor, Wanda Frankenfield and Joyce Pine. saying Tie ^ the firearms for 130 or $40 apiece but cannot recall toe names of alt the purchaaert. / / • lunches • coffee Downtown • donuts Pontiac 7:30 a.Bi. lo 6 p.ai. Moa. and Fri. lo 9 pan. 29 N. SAGINAW I I Industry Must Get Up to Date Hill$ Group Hears Talk on American Business and the Solution Royal Weddings: Princess Birgitta and King Hussein By The Associated Press Royal families in two widely separated nations paused today for wading ceremonies. American industry must modernize, and labor unions must always I work for production of a better article, if our democratic system is to survive, said Deputy Asst. Secretary of Commerce Eugene P. I Foley in Bloomfield Hills last night. ♦ ★ ★ Foley spoke at a dinner meeting of toe Oakland County Democratic Business and Professional Association. "The Industrial plant in this ! country is gradually growing obsolete," Foley told the 70 diners. 1 Foley cited the declining economic growth rate of toe United States and loss of American ability to compete in some world markets because of wage discrepancies as causes for alaim. I a flag-decked Stockholm gay spring mood. Princess Birgitta of Sweden.‘'24, was mar- NOW C YEARS OLD V AT NO INCREASE IN PRICE Notosft OLDE ried to Bavarian Prince Johann Geoi-ge of HohenzoUem, 29. And at Amman, Jordan, King Hussein. 23, a defiant descendant of the Prophet Mohammed, wed 20 - year • old English commoner Toni Averil Gardiner, who will be neither a queen nor a princess. Gray whiles, which sometimes! grow to a length of 50 feet, have! been observed sunning themselves: at ebb tide in only two fe^t ofj water. $0^48 $094 A MEAT J. W. OANT ^ rt.( t> 4/* n. MURBON ... FAMOUS »NRS c»A« »Mi SINCE ItSS ITUIMT ROBIION WNItItT • lA PI00E,..«JW^. (0., UWIEIiaitRI, INI. Why Hunt All Over Town? 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Thhd Floor Fboaa FF 4-25J1 [tprecOiis The exciting new version of our Lepre-con classics! Fashioned of glove leather they're cloud-soft and laughter-light. They>e sure to be an essential part of your casual life. In white or bone, sizes 5 to 10, N and M. Also in orange and Womea'a Sboea ... Sfreef Fleer CHILDREN'S TENNIS SHOES only *3.49 '1 CUIdraa's Sbea* .., Secead Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS Hnron Street raURSDAT, MAT ». JSO. School Board Candidates Reflect Growing Interest It Is gratifying to see that a number of persons are seeking two seats on the F* So was enr group of 179 dtisera who went ohnpty to toar oomo- ’★ ’ ★ - ★ “Today the income tax rates paid by the American people range from a low of 20 per cent to a high of 91 per cent.” David Lawrence Says: Public Schools Challenge Kennedy It is only by offering die abno-lute in education as we have in the past that we can gamer the tope in stodenta who win caiTy the fame of our schoeds throughout the work!. Of course, retarded children have no voting power and no powerful lobbyists in Lansing to look | out for their interests, so cut them ' down, too. The only way Michigan will :ver regain its economic balance is to get rid of one-half the politiciani and put the other half to work. There are too many horses at tbe public trough. Fog-Bound (Editor's Note; If the writer who signed Us letter “E.L.’’ will {dease submit his name and address &*r our files, we will be most happy to print his letter.) The Man About Town WASHINGTON - The Kennedy administration now faces the acid test of consistency with respect to its announced willingness to go to the courts to assure “civil rights” for all citizens 95 Grandchildren Pontiac Parents Have t^e Most, As So Far Reported May M: Memorial Day; wet decoration day, as some clothes n to think. LAWBENCS Xn our quest of those with the most grandchildren, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Hubbard of 11 Olngell Court, are Uklng over as leaders. They have 99, including 49 grand and 90 grea|-grand. Lesumlng her trade In Pontiac when she was Miss Rose E. Bnnnaster, she lived to become Michigan’s oldest printer. As Mrs. WUlUm H. Cushing she died Tuesday at her home in Flint, ' after following that trade for 01 years. irrespective of race or creed or cUor. For, if it is unconstitutional, as President Kennedy has stated, to give federal funds to elementary and secondary schools where reUgion is taught, then the latest piece of evidence which shows what is happening In a large number of public schools presents a challenge to the Department of Justice. In the May-June issue of “Religious Education," the official publication of the Religious Education Associatioo-an organization in which all creeds are represented —there has just appeared the re-■ulU of a survey conducted by R. B. Dierenfleld, associate professor of education at Macalester _CbUege, St. Patti, Minn. His article is based oa the answers to a qnestlaaasirs le- coUeges and universities, even though sectarian, but not to such schools at the elementary and high sdKX>l level. A few days ago the Supreme Court of the United States added to the puzzlement on the subject by declining to review a Vermont case in which, although a 1915 state law i»ovides that, where there is no public high school in the district, tuition grants shall be furnished for attendance at schools “to be selected by the parents or guardians of the pupil”—and that these tuition payments may be made directly to the school or to the parents-the state court held that such payments to parochial schools is in violation of the federal Constitution. federal government of a civil disability in matters of religious conscience. Clan there be any doubt that this is • precisiely what the administration is guilty of in offering educational funds only under conditions repugnant to the individual conscience of millions of the citizenry?” (OopyrlgM ItU) Oo to the people, m ytm flnal- Jl _ _ ly did abom the hIh tax. aad |Mnil6S yea wUl Had that U is jmr gnap ”^"t Is again v * ' ‘ When you butt in, don’t be sur-We need better'««1 mom edu- ^ " «« «« “ cation and It does seem that you * A ★ American children a and your cwnmlttee can best un- .hiure. ...... a. derstand from experience how American per cent yes; 57.26 per cent Astronauts Are More Than Spacemen Our national morale can be strengthened by the lives and activities of the American astronauts, according to The Hillsdale Daily News. The News says In part: “If you could follow our astronauts ypu might be struck by the fact they all carry bulging brief cases. “A brief case is a pretty mundane piece of equipment for a spaceman. But these men are a far cry from the happy-go-lucky flyboys we associated with hold missions in times past. ★ ★ ★ “They are s|^ technicians, who constantly think and talk the language of the specialists. They are tightly woven into a complex team whoM heroes actually are legion, but seem destined mostly to go unsurtg. ★ ★ ★ “Possibly the biggest lesson we can leam from Alan Shxpasd and his six colleagues, the Project Mercury leaders, and others, is their utter dedication to precision. ★ ★ ★ “Even tiny errors can yield anything from total failure to miles of miscalculation. They have erred ... many times ... but they always seek new precision. ★ ★ ★ “Shepard, standing in for all the heroes as the first one to be thrust into space, personified this characteristic so vital to the American people ^ in theti’ I like thorn closing words In •Thirty Tears a Pontiac Paator,” telling about the life of tbe Reverend WUliam Henry Marbach, now retired and living at Bensenvllle, 111.: ’’Pontiac is the elty In which be has spent more years of his life than in any other place. Having served the heart of Pontiac from a church which Is located in the heart of Ptmtiac, his heart will always beat with tbe church and the community of Pontiac.” ’’Are baccalaureate services conducted in connection with high school graduation? Results: 86A4 per cent yes; 13.16 per cent no. DEVOnONAL SERVICES -“Are Ixmieroom devotional services held in tbe schools of your system? Results: 33.16 per cent yes (all schools in the system); 17.06 per cent yds (some schools in the system); 49.76 per cent no. •Ts BH>le readkig coadacted In (to schaala ti yoar syslenir Re-Bulte: 41.74 per eeat yes; MJ6 Dr. William Brady Says: Activity Helps Victims' of Parkinson’s Tremor A Massachusetts correspondent adults. Children under 16 should says my pamphlet, ’’Pariclnaon's coffee,-taw coeqn, In Tremor" rsometimes called paraly- my opinion. She says that everything higher than a buck and lower ihan a S900 un ahouU get new oOon to make them easier to Identify. She’s against tbe tnKtttional.k)^ green of the 12, 19^ |9D and $100 bills. The new frontier is looking for the neamlnbow. Mrs. Smith has her practical reasons but, I’m convinced, she suffers from a basic misconception afflicting many women. ’Ihe tMng wrong with money is not the sameness of tts eolor but the material. It’s too light, for one thing. It goes too fast. It bums too eatily, espedaily in women’s At that, Mrs. Smith has her courage. She must know toe ia ^agriag into the prejudiced toads of a tiny but vocal minority of 16,743,219 men who have been aU I Today, as la our annual custom we chronicle the anniversary of Oakland County’s Saddest Day May 25, 1886. It waa 69 years ago today that a cyclone swept through Us northern tier of townshlbs. killing 43, the largest loss of life In one day in the history of our county. Others were maimed for life, and the property loss ran into the mll-Uona. Not looking for many fatal traffic accidents on Memorial Day is Sheriff Prank W. Irons, who points out that the most of such unfortunate things happen when a holiday Is mixed up with a weekend. However, he will have extra men to watch the step-on-lta. “Are religious boUdayi observed by any kind of activities in the schools of your system? Results: Christmas 87.92 per cent; Easter 57.82 per cent; Thanksgiving 76.76 per cent; others 8.04 per cent "In your school system are say public school classes held in church buildings? Results: 7.76 per cent yes; 92.24 per cent no. "Are there any members of religious orders teachinglnthe public schools of your system? Results: 5.76 per cent yes; 94.24 per cent lio.” 'The totixw’s sumniaiy reads &i part: "The American pablte estoel oanaet to charged with being a ays agitans or shaking palsy) seemed an answer to her prayer. “My daughter,” ■he w^ot^ ’’has shaking hands, halting walk, body inclined forward., bend elbows — alii to keep her bal-| ■nee, I suppose.! Last fell her 9- dr. rraoY yeareld daughter asked: ’(hrandma, did mommy cry a lot when she was a little girl?’ I said. ’No, Doris.’ She said, ‘Well, she does now.’ b* aniwerad bj Dr. ■ ■ . 'wiinkleprool. recession-proof, and Frtu, pgouaeT&hicaD. woman-proof, lOe per cent waab- (OepyitgM IMl) able twoway stretch. What tote NEEDfl HTBETCH Instead of worrying about new colors, Mrs. Smith would do better to search for a new material, perhaps a fireixxxd, weather-proof know •rtothing about money. One can almost hear them grunt from coast to coast. It’s not enough,, they’re saying, she got her name on the dough. Now she wants to change tbe color. Next year she’ll want to bring out a new dripdry eight dollar bill. After that, she'll surely want to do tbe whole thing over in chintz, early American print. English tweed, French lace,^jSpanito suede or a haunting hitemational uon-obJectlve smear. That’s .what they’re probably ' saying. They, not I. What I say is Mra. 'Smith has failed to come to grips with toe ultimate problem in her idea. She has not suggested tbe new c^ors for the new money. Can she? Dare she? Can anybody? Case Records of a Psychologist: Don’t Neglect Duty to ChiWren “My daughter is probably under a nervous strain because of her husband’s illness, though she does not show it. One thing in her favor, ■a youV pamphlet says, is that she te wry aflttve aro^ hw home, never one to sit Idling . . AnyoM wife ParUnsoa’s licm- PersonAl*-point "Tests Mod parento don’t delitontoly (or Good Parents," enclosing ad Hto Diekera' Fagtoi and temck their ehiMicn Ip stoil of swear or drink or smoke or to eyaloal of fee oppostte sex and todolgo to flBcIt affeln. Wi But many parents “^nlt” need- ed training even before the kinder- garten age. This involves moral training, so nem he guilty having your chOd send you sudi a letter as Jim’s mother received. TMm your ehtlinn te Sonday ootool where geneiora toachers tiy to phurt ato ■ bra to tto soMs o( yaar youngs- r.” he added, "y emotions for so many But 1 prefer to wait until my let me down. ^ ^ enough to make his "You never sent us kids to Sun- own decision about diurches," day school and never even tauitot many parents say. us to pray. That is wrong. ■So thon. T stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents (non-profit). Use them to avoid being a delinquent parent via sins of omis Sion.' Discuss these Ratii% Scalo at PTA, too. For a copy of my firae parapUet, "Parktoaon’s Tremor," send a stamped, self-addressed wvelope. A.-J One woman writes she recently heard coffee is a tong. If true, te one cuptul'cach rooming harmful? le one better off without any at all, ve^ of etemfly, and I didn’t even know how to commence or what to say to the Loed. “Pleaee correct this error wlth Sis and Buddy befon they get ■way from yqu, lor It ia an awftd legal adoM to teach Mm toilet hxMte or tto OM et a toothbnnh. or fee meaalng e( etop ighto M wt oc TMf ronuM i”ref lltehiKton. tnelottat » \tm$ 4 •« of iMpwtnghxm; ttnd birthday. “Ta flgM teraptatton a teBow moot train Jnt as a praUM does — or fee adds 'wiH feviw A cup of good coffee Contains perhaps IH grains of caffeine^ Caff^ stinmlatea bmln, bsart, kidn^ A cup Or two of eoffee each monlng is healthM lor most sensation to face death and not even know how to speak to God.” Teen-age delinquoicy Is beliig spotlighted widely in America today. PARENTAL DEUNQUENCT But we have an adage in sopited psydKdogy feat> states; So see that he is likewise tutored in morel “stoplights” even before the kindergartm W-PAUNTAL OBLIGATION AQ good parents riiould teach a child to pray and to attend dm n^, as wdl as return thanks for bis food at dis table. Do you? It not, you are a ddlnquent pjr- “Bad kids nsua^ have bad par- ent, gn^ of te of omterion. •aura a u loral B«wf prii to SU.SS a raw; WJ5A*]________ B to* UnlUd eutw I13.M I « late Bt I V ai ana 't- PONtlAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 25, 1061 SEVEN People as Well as Fish Need Pure Water for Health <»«*" • •'"‘•ijn thu. th. Mcond (hr<« iterlH. Homer Dowdy, toe-»»“.* »* *“ "tat By HOMER DOWDY FUnt JoamaJ Written (or The AP Michigan’s growing communities must take care of their sewage problems not only to keep fish alive in the streams, but to keep peopie alive and healthy in their new ranch homes. Last summer in the village of Ponen, near Alpena, an epidemic of hepatitis caus^ wldes|H%ad concern. In the months since then, epidemiologists studied the Posen case and have pronounced the liver infection as due to raw sewage in drinking water. Poaea has private wells and septio tanks blasted out of Hme-stone, the porous rook a good conductor of water. “Widespread sickness developed wlrth Poeen wells became charged with overflow from the septic tanks," said Donald Pierce, sanitation chief of the State - HealBi Department. In the Grand Haven area, as In much of shoreline I^lchigan, sand is the conductor of contamination. BOIL ms WATER In other communities, roadside ditches'are the conveyor of raw sewage.' For safe drinking, well water needs to be boiled, juri like the mud-hut villages of Haiti. On highway M2l in Genesee County the State Highway Commission maintains one of its prettiest roadside parks. Picnics are popular along a pond crossed by a rustli; bridge. But every once in a while a retired public health nurse living nearby drops in or the picnickers. “1 Just wanted to warn yon," she tells them, “not to let the children get near the water. Yon see, this pond U stagnant and Is fed by the seepage from aepHc tanka of the subdivision up on the hlU." That Inoculations keep epidemics repressed is a lulling factor. People think it can’t happen here in this day and age. If you drink raw milk, you’re sure to contract disease," Pierce says. "Unless waste pollution U controlled, there will be disease.! Shut off the valve to the sewage plant and I can tell you exactly! what will happen.” ★ ★ ★ ] But in the growing suburbs there seldom is a valve to shut off because there is no plant When sub-| urbs grow up that are bigger than. good-sized cities and have no pub-' lie sewer system, health officials believe the state is facing potential' Dr. Otto K. Engelke, health officer of Ann Arbor and Washtenaw Cbunty, believes conditions are ripe for statewide repetition of the Posen epidemic. To Ray Fry, city manager of . Midland, there is another good reason for stepping up pollution control. He agrees with state officials who say a river can take Just so much sewage effluent before the Impurities "kill" that stream. more room It will leave in the nttabawassee for IndusIry'B sew- In line with this. Midland is adding secondary treatment of its sew-a^ in a new and separate plant that will be ready in 1963. Communities faced with the need to build or add to sewage treatment facilities usually explore possible new methods in an effort to cut down on the tremendous costs. Midland, which proudly calls itself a city of experimenters, is workii^g with Dow Chemical Oo. in the hope of coming up with a cheaper treatment method through chemistry. Lagoon systems requir- ing no outlet and depending on dry-air evaporation have been tested by smaller cities, gs have Algae-purifying ponds. HAVE LITTLE HOPE But Water Resources Commission personnel hold out -little hope for new methods of any significant proportions. Becoming common is the practice of a city doing nothing about its pollution until the state hauls it to court. The city then can be ordered to abate. Bonds to cover cost of the work are ordered by the court. Such court-ordered bonds bear lower interest rates. Hard-pressed locai officials say every little saving counts. pay for their sewer systems. But In the mala, they have had to come up with money from their own budgets, sometimes upping water rates and tacking oo sewage fees to do it. SHOE REPAIR COUPON SPECIAL! Tor Womoa, Boys sad Moa HALF SOLES $2.70 ValM Gsauiao Oak With Coupon Only .. Ossssa 5^79 p,. . A dictating machine with i mote microphone and tiny transmitter that can be used up to halfi a mile away has been developed (or businessmen who have to move| around a large plant. ALL WORK GUARANTEED Thun., Fri., S. S. KRESGE'S Shoo Repair—Bsssaisat Downtown Poatisc Stars trouble. PICNIC GRILL Has IF' toy ts cluaa griN. StMrit II' higti on ttarty wsuRkt irss 10 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator G.E. Famous Dial*Defrost Model What 0 low, low price for olL them bi{r lemutat; full-width freezer - chett, chiller troy, adjustable door shelves, egg shelves, mognetic safety door. Big-family capacity. Famous G.E. dependability. NO MONEY DOWN FREE HOME DELIVERY FREE INSTALUTION goopAear SERVICE STORES 30 S. CASS Cor. OF LAWRENCE EE 5-6123 Open Every Hight Until 9 P. M. ExcRpt Sot. 'til 5:30 P. M. BK 2-DAY SALE-FRIDAY 9-.30 it B-SAT. 9:30 to 5:30 FRLSATHIIliy TERRIFIC CLASSIFIED SPECIALS! LIVING ROOM MODERN SOFA AND LOUNGE CHAIR. Beautifully styled and and expertly tailored in strikirtg upholstery. Comfortable reversible foam cushiorts. Truly a fine suite you'd be proud to own Now at the d ladder Can be used as 2 separate beds or bunk style. Perfect for the boys' room. This C ^ ^2995 BEDDING BUYS FAMOUS NAME Innerspring Mottreu Matching box springs same $1995 ODD CHESTS — Many styles, finishes. We're clearing out all left over chests in stock. Perfect for that extra room^ or the summer cottage. Some real bargains at . $1995 ODD DRESSERS—Many styles to choose from. These beautiful dressers come complete with mirrors. Save plenty now , $3995 3-PC. HOLLYWOOD BED OUTFIT Famous make! Innerspring mattress, box spring, washable plastic headboard. Legs. Complete $3995 MISC. JEWELRY 17-JEWEL WATER. PROOF WATCH Choice of Ladies' or Gents'. No Money Down $988 DECORATOR WALL CLOCKS. Large 30 inches in diameter. Beautiful brass construction, Elactric movement. Perfect for your living room. Always sells for SIA95, now . $g88 lOO-PIECI STAINLESS STEEL service for 12 dinnerware set. Top quality, made of the miracle metal that defies wear. Never stains, rusts or tarnishes. Always sells $1^88 for 24.95, now . . IO®® 45-PIECE MELMAC DINNER-WARE SET.'Service tor 8. 25 pieces decorated in lovely flower basket. Not imitations, but genuine Melmac. Usually 24 95, n $1788 SUNBEAM FRY PAN. BIG DELUXE SIZE. Model number FMC-L. Complete with cord, controls, lid. Regular everywhere 24.95. tIiLftfl Now only .................... #|0®® CAMERAS & EQUIP. KEYSTONE K20 COLOR MOVIE CAMERA. 8mm. Brand new model slashed in price because of special factory' purchase. Ustially sells for 39.95. Now . . $2488 POWERFUL 5-TUBE TABLE RADIO NEW! complete color MOVIE CAMERA Includes projector end all TELEVISION OLYMPIC WOOD TABLE MODEL TV — Floor sample slightly scratched, but otherwise factory fresh Large screen. Regular price $iLQOO $129.95, now .. NEW 17" PORTABLE TELEVISION SET Carrying handle Disappearing antenna. $0000 Compact styling '^wW Famooi APPLIANCES NEW 1961 SPEED QUIIN AUTOMATIC WASHER. A real bargain hunters special. A slight mar forces us to sell it as a floor sample. Deluxe features. Take it aWay for only .... F138 NEW 1961 M AYTAO CA-PACITY WASHER. Porcelain tub. Famous gyrafoam agitator washing action. New 1961 model, just arrived to sell at a special price of . $8800 21" TV, STEREO PHONO, RADIO COMBINATION. Lowboy styling. Slightly floor-marred cabinet. You get full warranty and service policy with this beauty, Reg. 319.95. .*199»5 bbdios & smio TRUE STEREO AM-FM RADIO-PHONO COMBINATION. 4 stereo speakers,’ 4 speed automatic record changer. Powerful AM-iFM radio all in beautiful! high gloss mahogany console Only . $9900 PORTABLE STEREO PHONO WITH 2 EXTENSION SPEAKERS. D^al channel, 4 speed operatioo: fust arrived frerrv factory. Must see it to believe ........ $1995 6 S P E A KI R, 2 CHANNa STEREO PHONOGRAPH. Auto-mafic, 4 speeds. Powerful output. ^autiful blond wood console. Full warranty and service policy. 1 $148 A steal at ....' PHILCO WRINGER WASHER OUTFIT Includes Philco dependabla washer plus 6-month supply of Tide and laundry basket. 30 GALLON CAS WATER HEATER. Fast recovery, fiber-glas insulation. Baked enamel finish Full guarantee. Now have hot water 24’hours a day. it' *4900 WINDOW AIR CONDITION. ER. 6400 B T U. cooling. Can be moved from room to room Easily installed in casement 0 double-hung windows. Automatic thermostat. Quick 2-speed operatiof On sale .... 5158 GE, ADMIRAL, PHILCO, FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATORS Completely recondillorted, GIANT 13 Cu. Ft. ADMIRAL 2-DOOR REFRIGERATOR. FREEZER. True zero degree separate freezer section. Automatic defrost. Brand new 1961 models. Full 5-yr. warranty and full I year semice. Selling for ridiculously 4228 YOUR CHOICE OF ADMIRAL. FRIGIDAIRE oe LEONARD R|. RKSERATORS. All big family, size models with deluKa appointments plus -full factory warranty and full 1 y gre going at----- WKC, IO« 1Y.SAGI1YAW...FE 3-7114 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1961 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 23. 1961 Soviets Help Egyptians on Aswan Dam Pro/ecft-rs; I utttkerm hMil M'oriiers bendlig over > km- » you t labor, narveyed tt iMumto m ^ rooring pit of bUck granite:cnunbUng down in wbite doodoi^ J'^P^* uvem ino only five days ago. churaing white-and said. "I like of fine dust under a blaiiiig sun. '™^“ | even have to watch t it here.” ! The dynamite blasto had left the'Sl »’*»'■*»« ^ACHlNERy | ♦ * i Slipoukha, 44, stood on the mck-.s. 3.99 |A8B 2 14.99 1. $0 60 I 52 Sr S2" I 52 by 70" i IS.99 V.I.M O.OO i. GARDEN TOOL SET 4 9. 3 $1 Three steel hand gardan toolt, ftowal, ah G^a« Ibop . . . lower Ural DINETTE CHAIRS a. ‘7.88 padded Mati,iMeki,-^wt 21. CHEROKEE BEDSPREADS a ‘4.00 FLOWER SONG SHEETS Ug. 3.99 |A44 Reg. 4.99 $044 hvin BiM L double sigg IP EMBROIDERED SPREADS 4.99 v«lu. $liai6.99 v«lug |A88 twin si«t IP double sise 9 White, pink, ^ or ll^embroidery on Oraporiot . . . fearlh floor EMBOSSED BEDSPREADS a ‘4.44 SPRINGMAID SHEETS 3.0, d.U. T I SHORT RANCH DRAPERIES Tstf '2.00 KNEE CAPPER SHORTS *2.99 WOMEN'S CARDIGANS Solid cofprs and prihts wi gporlfwo *3.99 ulky knit Ben-Loh iweaterslh sizes 38 to 42. Drooa gecoiaerfei . . . giroot floor HaaUoa . . . Spoof floor REMINGTON TYPEWRITER *77 Si- 89.95 Now, famous h^nareh modal, with tab, at 90-dayj^uarantoe. QUALITY HAIR BRUSHES '1.99 ■ KoAoearp fp.01 flaor Speciol . Exeallont quality genuina hog bristle hair brushas. Cowpotiea ... Strool fidor •OYS',COTTON MIIK » 27' Cotton knit arid print combination, Whita, 2 tg 8. Soya'(teUrwoef Socoed floor. BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS '1.27 PUSTIC DINNIRWARE ‘16“ 45-pc. frelon decorated dinrforwar*. 3 pattarrr^ JACQUARD BEDSPREADS '3.88 PRINT PILLOW TICKS 66' COTTON TIER CURTAINS *3??r '2.44' Faathorproof pillow tic V ] - ^ ; a TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, THUKSDAY, MAY 35, 1061 Loan Changes Receive Veto Swainson Rejects Bill With on Objectibn to Higher Interest Rotes LANSING av-Gov. Swalnaon has \«toed a bill to miUce major chai«ea in smaD hian lecislation. includinc incmaing the loan, limit from SSOO to S1.S00. Sira&iscn noted diat the earnings of the nnall kian industry have been steadily increasing since 1944 and that more companies , get into the business every year. *'Tha ueatlaaed •ea’Borale health e( themaB '• he sale, objected that Mgl interest rates would be slowed on small loans at or near the 1500 level, where the majority of the loans are made. He alao objected to autbevisatian of the Bale of credit Ule insurance to borrowers, making tor increased costs to those asking tb OPF08BD WK UNIONS Union groups have been against the bill, which was generally opposed by Democrats. Eight minor bills were signed into law by the govTinbr. They would: —Provide for continuity of re- Receives Permit for $14,000 Addition EX 80LON DOES - George Wharton Pepper, former United States senator from Pennsylvania, died at his home in Devon, a suburb of Philadelphia, Wednesday at the age of M.' Winkleman Brothers Reports Sales Gain Brothers Apparel. Inc., announced a 7 per cent saiei increase totaling a gross $27,550,-685 during the flscal year ended Jan. 28 at a stockholders meetint in DetnUt Tuesday. The increase over the previous fiscal year netted earnings tlrement system service credits $471,684 as compared with $467,186, for public employes who transfer Albert Cohen, vice president of the jobs between unitt of government, j firm, revealed. —Make (kai«es la the FInaB- { “Per share eandagt were M cial InstllattniM Act, lacladlac i eeats oa a .greater aamber of eMmlnadag maadatory flltag of j ealstaadiag skaiea aggregatbig Hats of bMk steeUMMera. | 4T7AM as eampared to $1.11 oa i«.i to JBnmWeto to tor!*••***■ certified copies million. making a total of 43 Stores now in —Substitute a flat $20 annual payment for mileage fees now Shareholders were informed that paid on the operation of motor,the company has sold Its install- buses. ____ment accounts In jireparation for —Convey for $1 to the AMVETS adopting an Installment method of land owned by the state in Ros- reporting credit sales for federal common County. .income tax purposes. -Authorize the sale of state-1 * W * owned land in Wayne County to the' Shareholders re-elected all direc-Croation Catbolk Charity, Inc. tors and Isadore Winkelman as _Substitute an annual flat rate president. They decided in favor for mileage feet now paid on diunp of his relinquishing the coposition trucks. ot treasurer to Anthony Vinci, vice ---- ---- ' president, however, and re-elected The Collahua>a Indians of South other^«icers._______^ America are known as the drug- „ gists of the Amazon. They make 2 Holly Twp. CottagOS w^ientc^hm^iiwfrom^ Ransac^^^ bv Vondds barks, a tonic from sarsaparilla ' rooU and a powerful poison, cu- Break-ins at two sununer cot-rare. from plants of the sto'chnos, tages in Holly Township were he-family. ing investigated today by sheriffs ■ I department ^ ' Windows had been smashed and .ulura] glass from broken bottles strewn j„, throughout the cottage* on Bush POBLIC 8*ta IH* Ch*Trol«( 8i>. WfO . SerUI tts ---------- - ■ > b« Iwld Mr- -• »)B1. tt >U I. ' Mtchttsn DStPttm] BsM I lUCTIOH NOTICI U electors of the Vlllue of Lol I. Oakland Caimtf. MldU(aix. , off Grangehall Road. Vandals had written foul words in coal oil on the walls and celling of one of the cottages, set a tj. Mlcblna. an match and foUevtng' quntioa viS enbrnnutd to material. *niia cottage belongs rou f,Tor the eonfirmfiii of a fran- Francis Teiiimlngs of 14418 proaer pole,, towerr. main,, wire*, fripai. l>on BlOwns of 1552 Falk Road. f^MIce I, berebp gftm. that irtlfi c”rt“la‘",5r(l'’vui4‘e ”f"UkJ ■"* ”• "" ™itage8. set a teniui. ouia^ Count!, tfichiru. an match and bumed the words into fh. mafprial ThI. erft.o. h-Inno. dUlrtbutloii coirtltlM, an^jwi^tlon, of yiUan CeuDcll of »atd Villa*. nlfwmIS" «d towTJship. Both own- 'Li?eve'r“'’'to*2n discovered the ransacking d fran-1 when they checked Tuesdaj- 3650 Dbda »Onray bi Waterford ISMied---------- it thtaw The addition now under construction, is of cement block. R will have interior paneling match the present building, and will fnat 40 addittonal djnen. G«h Education Pott Or. Adams succeeds Arthur H WASHINGTON « j-Keanedy named Dr. Walter Adams of Lansing lifidi., to the United States Advleory Oommlmtnn M So manr planned that a world-wide tracking and cataloguing system has been recommended. OKN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 AAondoy IhrouQh Serturdoy JUST SAY; 'CHARGE ir AT FEDERAL'S TAKE Ur TO 10 MONTHS TO PAY . . . Now's the best time to buy a week's supply of famous... ^ '0. iX;’ Buy this famous Wsbeor rtcoidor s free camora 319»* Wobeor stereo high fkMHy tape recorder. Records 4~ frock stereo tapes, ploys bock 2 ond 4 track stereo tapot. Includes Keystone 8mm movie camera. Buy now, sovel Man’s atfilatic shirts Swits-rib cotton with — to reinforced neck, thoul- J Z der seoms. S-M-L-XL. etiaria w Man’s athletic briefs 3..2” Hygenic, double-thick seat, athletic support. Leg opening. 30 to 44. Man’s boxer shorts 3-2” Fancy patterns or stripes in Sanforized br^cloth. 30 to 44. Boys’ cotton T-shirts AAode well to withstand 3S active use. Reinforced Z Z** neck. Long tails. 6-18. Charea it Boys’ doubfa-panal briefs White cotton with elos- e« tk waistband. Double J I**’ JL* panel seat. Sizes 6-18. Chafe* Men’s locker T-shirt Surrey rib cotton in white, blue, olive, gold, block. Raglan shoulder. |50 7.97 Radiant movie Kreen 6“ 9.97 tcreee 1.04 29.9S Kreae 27.01 SMS Kreee..33.04 ‘Revere* 8 mm movie projector 99“ F1.S zoom lens, forward and reverse con-iht. Savel Men’s cotton T-shirts 2” ite cotton. A Extra long toils. S-M-L. ^ X-l T-eMrto .....3/3.91 FEDERAL DEPARTMENT STORES DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS •Ifctors of said viltacr latptctlon .. .... . *1 utd flKtioa t>« •> folio*, Conflrmtac *rtnt of frtnrhi.o to Thf Detroit Cdlaon Compabr for Iho purppM of th, froetton. ceutructlon and maln-tmaacf of tovert. polo. m,ln> wire, condulU. apparatuK. etc rfuutilt* Sof tbf traonsfulon. trtniformlni and dls-trtbutiec of ,l«ctrtctt! for public and d*r of firction. _ RXOIBTRATIOM NOTICI Tbf Board of ft^latriUon *111 . VilU*f Cirrk* I h«rfb! cmifr Ibat tbf abof* and forffOln* IS ■ truf ropy of rraolutlon, »?,optfil by the Vtllafc CouDcll of tba V lllaif of Lake Aufflua, Oakland County, Mlrhliian. at a rsfular mrettni held on Monday, the ISUi day nf May, 1M1. ROBKRT W HODOB ! VUlayo Clerk _____ SUy IS and S8. INI NOTICE op' PU«jc~ilALI , Notice la heraby fleen by tba undar-•Knad that on Wednnday. May Slat. INI. at le o'clock a m. at OMC Truck a Coach Dtrlaton. S7S Oakland Ato-nu«, Pontiac. Mlcbltan. Oakland County, publU ,ale of a 1»M OMC 3SW Pickup Truck bfartaf Mrtal No. PX-S8Tt. will be held, for caab to U>y ht*beat bidder. IntpKtlon thereof mav be made at STS OakMnd Artnut. PontMc, Oakland County. Michigan, the place of ctoraae. Dated: May is. ISSl TkLlOW MANCFACTURlNa ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION 18J18 W 7 Mile Road. i Detroit 3S. Mlchlyan By L ENOW ALL May J5........ vlU antertaln b I and ipactficatlona may ba S3S Branch Street. Pontiac, n Monday, May ». INI. Blda icd at S:d0 p m. Juna 18. INI. EOT B. lacAFEB , Exacutlve EMreetori May S3. S8 and S7. 1881 NOrnCE OP 8P1C1AL ELECTION land County, silehlfan: Notlca la hereby alren tl Election wlU be fwM on 1 . •tit. INI at the Tovnthip Opdyke Road, to eiUbllih AMtaament Dlatrlet ' - ; a Bpadal bday, June Rail, 2080 a Special I purnoac of -----------eonafruetlnf ■a Inatalllny culrert, along in the aforemenUoned aubdl-l .. I0.522.M. '-‘-let be « o p«y HNIcc TdaUre tha pona: On tl the MUa abell be _______ th* forthoon and aball be_______ until t o'elodk In the afternoon and no lonstr. B**rr eaallficd elector preaent *n4 Ik — *•'- —-• •*- - Pfoacrlbed I ba an^ I ORETA V. BLOCK / Clerk, Stay 25 and M, INlI •ROUND •SIRLOIN •SWISS STEAKS Fflmous A^s gjjj Kodak Bruwnia C-3 kit. only movia outfit 47“ 96“ Comaro, flosh, cata. Fully auto, comara. matar and Instructions. proiaetor. Frolactor Eosy to UM. Shop nowl Mmsfiuld muviu sIaks JUB CENTER pi»Kd#ji» Aft CHOPS 7 RIB CUT—SLICED FREE SPARE i>n. RIBS ZSi*^ TASTY TURKEY LEGS u.29« 6 Lb. Boxag #199Tosty GRADE 1 SKINIESS nSNKS guii5'|N Boxlay's Supar Spaciol GRADE 'A' URGE EGGS LEAN, LOIN PORK ROASTS “•39* BAZLEY'S OWN—WHOLE . _ _____ i5AMs45h$^t3^t89 BUTT PORTION . SHANK PORTION CENTER SLICES RAZLEV E—/ CASH MARKET 1. 78 N. Soginow StrMt ' \, :tlt& PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1961 ELEVEN CENTENNIAL DRESS — On Friday old-faahioned dresa days, Mrs. Sarah UtUe, 481 Bartlett St., wears this audientic gown from yesteryear, with abundant lace matching bonnet. Out on Range Brand X Good as Any Other AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) — Cattte brands have become the sign language of the Southwest. Cattlemen attending the recent convention of the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association in Austin pointed out that a good cowhand at roundup time might possibly know many as 50 of the brands on sight, and could figure out 100 moi Historians say branding is a peak on the piaias of the Amer- The first brands la Texas, when it wax still a part U Mexico, were simple crosses burned into f flanks of longhonu by vaqueros. Later, letters and numerals were added for good measure, and reading the brands might be com-pued to reading hiero^yphics. Brands can be read in one three ways — from left to rig^, top to bottom or from the outside An esiample of the left to right brand Is the “2-FAT," adopted by a rancher who was with his own waistline. Rancher Pete Coffin adopted an ontside-tn brand, marking his livestock with a “p” eaciosed tn the ontilne of a eoflln. An example of the top to bottom brand is the top of a running Into a “J” for the “Yes Jennie" brand. The rancher said the brand reflected his vocabulary with his wile. Sometimes a well-known brand on a herd of cattle has been pnxrf of Identity, as when the foreman of the South Texas King Ranch showed a Cheyenne, Wyo., banker a herd with the famous "Rumring W" in 1884 and cashed a check to pay off some cowhands. Another famous Texas brand was the "XIT" which was the trademark of a ranch covering 10 counties. Hie brand stood for "Ten In Texas.” Ckttle owned by the state of Texas are still branded with a “Lone Star." Can Stand Pressurs AKRON, Ohio (UPD - Seagoing tanks are being equipped with flexible fuel cells that will ' not rupture even under pressure 10 times the pull of gravity, according to the firm invt^ved In developing the odls. HAPPINESS For reol joy, Ihere'i nothing like a new Sdrwim Jaike—Hw beif “PimWWehaVfllBlI^^ race/s, sturdy mlddlewelghfs, three-speeds or oootfers, oil dns oad eok)fi->fPMR $24.95 •• $tC.9S BwdgoMorms, tea SCABLEm llcycbSHibbrRwt 10 I. UwraiKO FI tlM Erse PotUag la Beerf Boys' or girls' Murray bikes, 20-24-26" sise ly mode frame, i bfviM RiOfV* Boys' rod/whHsf girls', blue/while. Sturdy. . 1t,99 29 99 R«g. 159.88-12 ft. boat of lightwoight aluminum 139“ Cor top, weighs 90 be., takes 7U HP motor. Giont 5 pc. dintttt y-witli inlay tops *66 Shart tlotva dmt shirtB 1“ Mf. 2.99, 3.S0 Man's 2.98 twill pontt 238 'CHARGI ir 1st guolHy cotton, SanMzed and wosh-oble.Pull cvt,pre-cuff. Tan, gray. 30 to 42. Hsrfc ^kt$ UpL Tots', girls' playsuits 1“ 'CHARGE rr Reg. 3.99. 3-pc. {o-maica and top sots of cotton. Ooy summary colon. 3-6x, 7 to 14. Wash 'n hang thtar pantli 99c 'CHARGE rr 42x81" Trulon and Du rot on wash 'n hong ponols. 42x81* size. Snow white. Spociol swimsuit splosh 6“ 'CHARGE IT Prom o famous ber boy-ieg. 32-38. Also many sheaths. •aj. Ruibtr ng. TM. Your chalet! Luggogo tola 82. 'CHARGE rr Timely savings for and 21" evor nBef. •84" s'liNer •IT'srilmmi •24" Mhemi Fki VS. tm 10"trkyelo 999 Spring action fold-o-buggy. C h r o m o bo^, tubular framo. Capri's, baby dollsl Cool, eaiy-caro cottons; gay trims. 4-14. Gay, washablo colors. Rovarsibla slylesi 18x12"..........1.17 22x44"..........1.99 trollor for ploywoor. Colors. Sizos SJA-L, Wx69H" print floral, foam Riled. Aflstal simlr ped....1.99 Reg. 3.59. White , Removable slots. NoturaJ finish wood frame, easily mounted. PuH framed. FEDERAL'S-DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 —Mr 'i »»V K AilK FUMIAC: THUKSDAV. MAY 25. 1961 ■2fc; ,V ■ «P Pk*t«tai C'ABU: CAR REDDINti-Patrick Gregor> . 24. of St. Louis, Mo., places the ring on the finger of his bride, the former Susane Beltrand. 18. also of St. Louis, as they are married on one of San Francisco s famous caNe cars Wednesday. The Rev. Fred Rusher, tlefti performed the ceremony. Looking on is caUe gripman Albert Ward. The wedding stunt was dreamed up by a press agent to publicize a movie opening. They’re Very Good, Too ^ Mao Writes Best-Sellers for Home Consumption TOKYO (LTIt-When it comes to writing. Communist Chinese leader Mao Tse-tung reputedly is no slouch. Even objective western sinologists testify to the literarj' ex parlors of Red China’s homes, much as the Bible is found in many Christian living rooms. In addition, a passing quiilntance with the contents off Mao's writings might convince an otherwise stispicious Communist Party cadre of the owner’s sincerity. IndiralioiM (ended lo show that many persons have been hitting the book* lor a lltlle Sorlallst knowledge. This is just what the Communists want. Another factor would lend to motivate readers. "Most of these people were illlt-ernte and showed no interest in irading in pre-Communist days." Yagi >yiid Now that they have learned grammar, the masses are •si for reading. With only those Ixxiks and magazines ap-' proved by the Communi.st regime; available, this too could account for .Maos popularity. Fanous lake TYPEWIITER Including CASE and —ONEFUttr-YEAR GUARANTEE JC^ jewelers Oti« S. Sogin«w St. FE 5-5731 FRIDAY! SATURDAY! Gel in on Hin Month's Big Sweep of Savings! Don’t miss a thing . , . Penney’s has ■valued galore for you, your family, your home! Ladies, find fabulous savings on slips, hosiery, new fashions . . . men, now’s your chance to stock up on shirts or even get that new jacket you’ve wanted. And, there are dozens of exceptional buys for boys and girls. Huny! TOMORROW AT 9:30 A.M. DOWNTOWN STORE THIRD FLOOR 60 only . . . RAYON NU SCA’TTER RUGS Practical 27 x 48-inch siM ... do not mat . . . non-skid....................... 27 only . . . CLOUD-SOFT DACRON PILLOWS Sanforizod zipoff covors , , . non-cdlorgonic 2/*5 s $300 *26 8 only . . . 9x12 ROOM SIZE RUGS 5 rayon tweeds, foam bocks ... 3 colonial braided rugs............................... ............ 21 only . . . LIGHTWEIGHT SUMMER BUNKETS $2** Simnar CoHeis ReRMi! • sheers • broadcloths 1 group . . . READY-TO-HANG DRAPES Erinleil^toft# . . .Tottd fibergTos ... 48 x 84 or 90-inch ... REDUCED... ...... ^200 yards . . . BETTER SUMMER FABRICS 1120 yards EXCELLENT PRINTS ... all woshable . DRAPERY PIECE GOODS to 4S-inrii widths $500 2Ta.$l 2Ta.$l 3T SECOND FLOOR 60 Only ppp. u^60 only . . . REDUCED . . . COTTON DRESSES Misses' and half sixes . . . cottons . . . $900 IfS cotton plaids or prints................. 060 only . . . REDUCED! MISSES' COTTON BLOUSES .Sleeveless . . . roll-up sleeves . . . prints . . solids ... 32 to 38 . $]50 Sweaters • bulky knits • Pen-Lons • sizes 32 to 88 ' 36 only . . . REDUCED! MISSES' SUMMER SKIRTS 1 Printed cotton plaids or prints . . . pastel woolens $388 ml, . . . COORDINATED SKIRT SETS Matching blouses and skirts . . . excellent fabrics s 10-18 ............................................ 3* |24 only . . . COTTON CORD JAMAICAS . ^50 only . . REDUCED! GIRLS' SKIRTS . . acrilqn-royons Entire Stock Girit’ DRESSES • sleeveless • short sleeves • better fabr.es 3-6x 7-14 •jea 2^ 100 Pain —Ileii’s- conoN SLACKS • sheens • cords • sizes 30-38 ^^50 only . . . GIRLS' BOXER JEANS Prints ar.d checks . cotton twills . . . sizes 3-6X 1100 only . . . GIRLS' COTTON JAMAICAS Cotton cords and plaids . . well tailored . . • gl20 only . . . GIRLS' BLOUSE AND SHORT SETS Coordinated 'cottons . . . well made ... si to 6X ............ . SLACKS $200 $200 77* «]00 TS $]00 MAIN FLOOR A ^|36 only . . . BOUFFANT HALF SLIPS ^ Nylons . ... tricot tops . . . extra full . . . beautiful $]99 p 200 only . . . REDUCEDf WOMEN'S DRESS GLOVES Excellent styles . . fashion colors , moo ^^jlOO only . . . MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS . ... REDUCED! sleeve cottons . . . knit polos . . . colored shirts ....................... |18 only . . . MEN'S SPORT COATS . . REDUCED! Wools . , blends . . . tweeds . . . patterns . ^9 only . . . MEN'S ALL-WEATHER COATS Iridescent checks . . raglan sleeves,. . . V* length *15 *13“ ^ 270 poin . . . MEN'S KNITTED BRIEFS Comfort cut athletic briefs . . . combed cot- pa tons ... 30 lo 40 ................... ^ ^ TOMORROW AT 10 A.M. MlRACLt; MILE STORE FOR MEN 41 only . . . MEN'S SPORT COAT All wool 3-button »iyl» . *15“ 89 only . . . KNIT SPORT SHIRTS 100'o acrilan acrylic, machine washable. Size* SH44 I S, M, L ............................. I j 36 only . . . COTTON CORD PANTS Slim tojpered look, sizes 29 to 36 . *300 34 pair . . . MIN'S DRCSS DXFMDS Several smart styles. Broken sizes. Black and $^00 I brown - • . sizes / to 11. B, C and D width*. I FOR WOMEN 64 only . . . SHIRTWAIST DRESSES Better cotton fabrics In prints and solid A I colors. Broken sizes in misses'emd half sizes g I 96 only . . . ARNEL TRIACETATE, COTTON BLOUSES I Seven colors to choOse from including A^OOfl white. All sizes 32 through 38 ... ^fl 79 only . . . MATERNITY JAMAICAS AND TOPS^ Assorted colors and fabrics. Broken sizes $200Ea.j 47 poir . . . WOMEN'S DRESS HEELS Combination lasts SV: to 9. Broken sizes and 4^ OOI colors A A and B width ............... ^ ^ I 120 only . . . BABY DOLL PAJAMAS 100% cotton batiste, wash, 'n' wear finish. Sizes APAAA | S, M, L. Summer color* ............... | 76 only . . . WALTZ LENGTH GOWNS 100°. cotton batiste wash 'n' wear finish, Siz*i ? S, M, L. Summer colors ............... L FOR GIRLS 34 only . . . KNIT PAJAMAS Just right for camp. Priced to clear. Sizes 8, 10, 12 20 only . . . COATS AND SUITS Fabrics ot wool and laminated knits. Reduced to 80 Only Fmb Decofative Pillowf Shredded foam urethane filled. Corduroy xip-olf covers. 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Sizes ‘/j to 3 —......... j / KK 157 Only Entile Slock Udies' Knit Speitiwear 3" 36 pkgs______GAUZE DIAPERS Soft, absorbent and wrinkle-ire*. Package of 12. Size^20 by 40. Come early ................ 12 only . FOLDING HIGH CHAIRS Triple-ploted chrome frame. Washable, padded 1“ *io«« FOR THE HOME 25 only ... 27 by 50 SCATTER RUGS Cotton pile, skid resistant back. Assorted /CP* colors ............................. 5 only ... 9 by 12 FOAM BACK RUGS These room size rugs ore 50% nylon/50% rayon. Chestnut and grey . ▼ < # 15 only . . . WHITE PRISCILLA CURTAINS 100% cottwi. Drip-dry finish. 80 by 81 . $2^^ 8 only . . . COLONIAL CRICKET OfAIRS Hardrock mople — reversible cushions. brown or green ....r. ■ ■................. Plyhide <^pholstery — walnut deg*, turquoise, on| whit*, black or tongerin* ................▼ I 36 only . . . METAL TV TRAYS ITorcd d*sign*r Hghf or dark backgrounds . . *1“ DOWNTOWN RENNET'S STORE HOURS: Open Mondoy, Thurtdoy and Fridoy 9:30 A.M. fo 9 P.M. All OHier WMkdoys 9=30 A.M. to 5:30 ,P.M. MIRACLE MILE fENNEY'S STORE HOURS: OPEN DAILY THROUGH 5ATURDAY/ 10A4M.T0 9P*M. _______ V.-.... ' • ^ i /■ THE POM'IAC PKKSS. TllLRSDAV, MAY 25, 19«l THIRTEEN ^‘ntUe rm> I'lT ON %’OIR NKW rti»WKRV BONNBT - The posey-sliidded chapeau worn by Mrs. Clay Parrett. 2100 E. Walton Blvd.. Pontiac Township, was her own creation and may turn out to be tile fanciest hat of the ('entcnnial. The authentic dress she's wearing is certainly one of the oldest of the Centennial. It belonged to Mr. Parrett s gi-eat-grandmother. FLOOR SAMPLE CLURANCE of DAVENPORT BEDS jr opportunity to buy fino, dual purpoM Fvmitur* for your living Ion wHti daopirtg comfort for Tvio Pooplo. Nationally known mokos. r rogulor low pricoi to tho bono, »o hurry now for your bolt choKi. SERTA FOUMMED *159“ SERTA PILLOW ARM FOLO O-RED Top grade nylon Prieie c< cutMont.. . Reduced to. . MB#" FIVTIXIF'YV the Family Can Miss ^ ^ .... Penney’s Carnival of Memorial Day Savings! Cotton cords go everywhere everything from shorts to shirts for toddlers on up! A. For men I New-Iook in combed cotton interest shirts. 2.9« For bo.vs I Surface interest pn combed cotton knit shirts! 1.98 Combed cotton knit sport top dramatically striped. 2.98 0. Mandarin collar pullover in (’limbed cotton knit. 7-14. 1.98 E. Toddler boys cotton striped |M)l(i shirt in .sizes • ■> to 6. « 98r For men! Combed cotton ripple cord slacks go easy-care. 4.98 For boys! Cotton dress slacks go easy on care. ;i.98 Combed cotton ripple cord walking .shorts. 10-18. 2.98 Big news Jamaica length shorts. Cotton ripple cord. 2.98 Tab front boxer .shorts in cotton ripple cord. 2 to 4. 1.79 BOLD STRIPES SPARK NEW BOATNECKS! COTTON DUCK CONTINENTAL PLAY SLACKS! ^ STYLE IN OUR CALF LENGTH! ’ WALK SHORTS! NARROW RIB WEAVE ON WALK SHORTS 100% COTTON RIPPLE CORD WALK SHORTS COTTON TWILL CALF LENGTH PLAY SLACKS Surface interest knits ... all combed cottons. Novelty Boat-neck styles, » | length sleeves and new point- For clambakes or sail- A^utomatic wash 'n' . ing . . . your cool cot- .. wear, needs little iron-ton (lucks fit in! Get ing. New-look st.yie rofie belt, continental | boasts extension pockets, and vented waistband, side tab.s. I Smartly styled with t all - around elastic I waistband, zipper fly, - matching snap-fasten-r er top. Boasts wanted .All feature separate elasticized waistband, d e c o r a t i ve metal buckle, attractive new tunnel loops. Ghoo.se Carefully tailored with rope belt, regular belt loops, 2 set-in side pockets, the extras you want. 4 ■'■■■eoloiw.- ....-....... , i III' . . )98 >98 >98 98' 1 >98 10 ta 20 DOWNTOWN ONLY 249 Op«n rrick FURNITURE H4 OAKLAND AV, PENNIY3-MIRACLE MIU: Op«n L^ery Weekdoy — Monday Through Sofurdoy 10:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. PENNEY'S-DOWNTOWN: Open Mondoy, Thursdoy, Friday 9:30 A,M» to 9’00 P.M. All Other Weekdoys 9:30 A.M. to ^:30 P.M. / ' FOrRTEEX THE PONTIAC PRES^, THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1901 Priest Teaches the Catechism With Guitar and Western Songs to write further religious soi^ based on musk of the Argentine “xamba." a slow and melodk folk musk popular here. There is little doubt he wiU be successful. Leaving his tiny, cell-like room in the dturch after the swarmed over by children stiout-ing, “Sing us sdmething, father, something . . Castor oil is an essential ingredient of many industrial products hem paint, Hpstkk, hair interview, he was immediateiyjdtessing, n>-lon, typ^Titer ribbons. BUENOS AIRES iUPl»-Grown-ups may’ frown, but the kids lo\'e it. and so the young ikiest keeps strumming on hij^guitar and tmeh-ing catechism to the tune of cowboy music. Charrh Aires, picking a«l a niekidy on Mn gsi^ and hnpre\Mag l>Tirs with a Far West flaver and re- ••Go41 has made me live in Buenos Aires in 1960 and not in the Middle Ages.” explained the, Rev. Alejandro Mayol, "T had to adapt myself to the real needs of the time, with the modes and tastes of the age " Usually he is surrounded by children. The 28-year-oid priest, who wa.s graduated only la.st year from the seminary, got started on the guitar almost by default. Father MayoTs method of adapting himaeU to the ttaueo was throagh the guitar. Now he is a taniUiar sight on the sidewalk "I am deaf in my right ear.” he e.xplained. “and at the seminary they kicked me out of the choir ;for my very mode.st musical aptitudes. Nonetheless. I arrived at the conclusion that this ’failure' on my part was aggravated by the DR. HENRY A. MILLER Optometrist 7 North Stfgirtaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 "Better Things in Sight" Contai l l.enscs Open Fridoy Evenings — Closed Wed Afternoons lack of musical training and I decided to learn an instrument. "Someone told me that the guitar was the easiest to learn. 1 managed to pick out a few .sounds but, my technique was somewhat more primitive than the 'Neanderthal Man's.” Soon after. Father Mayol recalled a phiasc bt St. Paul’s: "The gospel should and can be predk'ated in a thousand different ways and in infinite tongues ' Father Mayol then decided to fuse his guitar to‘the gospel. “The majority of persoM,” he said, “are eonvlared that a priest has Ike oMIgalioa to always be solema and piearh virtue by uslBg the terrifying images of belt, thus mbbiag life of all the beautiful and lovable II has. "That's why now. when they the Far West, they are astonished. The oedy exceptions are children, and in them I saw my success.” So far. Father Mayol has written 16 songs with a western flavor but dealing with such thefoes as the Ovation, the Annunciation, and the ResutTf'ction The only thing lhal bothers the personable young priest Is lhal so far he has been forced vith youngsters here. Just as western musk Is In the I'.K. Now Father Mayol is plamung two-cycle Automatic Hi’«tilarlv at f)-\anr .\liiiig acliun. gel* dollie* eleaner. Navel ^^hop Sears TONlGin' ty™ 9TM. Pain Is Too Common in Asia for Complaints WASHINGTON (UPD - Ntarm aboard the United States hoepltal training ship Hope now on a teaching tour in Southeast Asia, have found that Indonesian patients never complain. “We have to ask them if they are in pain and then they Just tell us ‘yet’ or 'no.’ tl wrote to Hope headquarters In Washington. ^ About a mile of seven-foot tunnel was T"«d» under the English Channel In 180. Plans are nbw being mad- for a 23 foot double tunnel to carry electric trains. It could be completed In about five years at a cost 0l something over S300 Silverlonc Portable lO-ln. (ovcr-ull diagonal) T\ NO MOM V DOVl N 119"' Aiiloiiiatic control* keep voiir pi.imc hriglil ami clear. Krntovablc *afrlv *liicld for casv cleaning. 1T1 -ij. in. viewing area. Sloii-liiie cabinet. ■•■fl n llc|il., Scar* Main l loor ft Transistors for Fine Roreptioii ortabic Radio It ■iir(.linne Portable 1961 * f" , Stereo Phono Reg. 8t.9.-> Kcinnvable epeakcr. ';5.irl'f.iclioti gujranlecd or your inoiic) back” SEARS 1154 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5-tl71 '£ shop Sears Tonite ’til 9 P.M. 5 pre-holiday Homart '’Tilt-.4ction” Aluminum Windows p to 60 I'nited Inches charge It Reg. H.QSI F.itmded alamiaui Ue>ij;aed «ilh ea«y rlraaiag i niiad. Orcrlap ilyle.'.Save al Seal Inael alyte.................13.4 INSTALLED ROOnNG-No Money Down Alnminunk Storm Door Won’t Rnat Completely Installed by Sears Experts! You’ve never realized how beautiful your home can really look until you see your roof covered with HOJiART 3*in*l shingles! Only top grade raw maferials are used to insure maximum weather protection for yqiir family and possessions. Shop tonight until 9 p.m. . . . save! .I.'l'/s S«|. Ft. Bundle, Regularly 2.99, save .30c, . . .. . . . . . ,'2.69 Lverage 2 Honae With H Pitch t40 Shop’til 9 27“ Toui^t Chaigi h Ugbiwwifkt axtradad alamlnaO wmI twai, wm «r M«d fkiat. With ». SnUar. • OvdiiPUo N« MoMy Dwru. Mawrida, P«ny St l«t SPRINKLING SYSTEMS Grade ”A” Plastic Pipe ....I"xl00‘........13.30 ...7„30 I'a^xlOO’. . . 22.30 impulta Hcadt fraia .. 5.75 !• 630 Raia Jet Headb fram.. 3.95 la 6.95 Suialcaa Slari daa^pa.2Sc la 29e -, 1-HJ». Pampa aa» a«K..... 99.93 Now you can relax while your lawn n being watered. Plastic: galvanized tees, ellMtws, adapters at a low price. llarmoilv House 3-Pieee G>lored Bath Outfit f!hoo*e Pink. Blue. I .reen. (.ray, N ellow ' 189 NO MONKY DOWN Tridv modern Diamond Jubilee value: 5-fl. east iron tub. 22x 18-inch china lavatory, both with mixing faucets and drains, (^uiel. reverse trap toilet with matching seat. High )|iialiiy ... low price! COMPLETELY INSTALLED II III bill 11 inn II pp s<|. feet of plastic wall tile, 25' T-dc. fixture sel. rubber floor tile, T-pc. fixture sel. NO MONF.Y DO» N rii^mking and Hratinz IVpI.. Prm St. Raxrnient Guaranteed Cover Any in 1 Coat I-4itex Interior ^ ®flat paint aflll 5*1,. W Uharge ll Drin in t'i knur wilhoul paii iNvM •xlor. I^tvrly.colnrt leaisl ladinz. >• 4.79 Unddreoal.. . S34 ri«W 4-Bmah........5.98 a-Palnl Brash.2.49 Pafail Dcpt„ Mala BaMaaeat ^Ssitisfaction guaranteed or your money The Weather’s Right... and So is The Price! Paint Now' with Top Quality 3^aster*Mixcd HOUSE PAINT Buy all the paint you need and just say 'T.harge It" on Sears CHARGE ACCOl NT Take advantage of the good weather and thia low price! Use House Paint on all exterior wood aiding and trim to add . Ekdy id apply, it has diira- biIity,-eovefage, fade and weather-reaiatant properties equal to the best-aelling house paints. Shop Searg toni^t until 9 p.m. Save! • - Paint Dert., Scan Mala Basement back” SEARS 154 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5»417l w A' "T" THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 25. 1961 II V'VhV.N Failure of 'Visit U. S. A.' May Spur Some Action to Lure Foreign Tourists Own Cor is Ticketed by Honest Policeman NEW YORK (UPI) AmertMin ppoUbly* never heard of the welHntentioned ‘‘Vtait U.S.A. in 1980.” The trouble is that neither did very many foreigners —and that's who the campaign was aimed at. Being conservative about what some might call the ‘‘almoet complete bust” of the travet promotion aimed at luring more foreign visisors to this country, Eric Fried-heim,' editor and puldisher of The Travel Agent magaiine. says only that it "scarecely (|ualifies success." U.S. was heeded, it sometimes turned into less than an ideal situation. Fred Baufh of The Travel Agent spent some time traveling with a group of 80 upper-income Arab visitors who came on a tour from Lebanon. The Idea was conceived by the domeatie travel ladnstry and spearheaded through the Natioa-al Aseeetatloa M Travel Orgaa- The group from Lebanon, however. found getting U.S. goyem-ment approval to make the tour at all tteir “stiffest obstacle.' laaaohed at White House level with a proclamattoa hy Presl- There was much sound and fury within government and private industry after the campaign was launched. So what happenedt The Lebanese agency which ar^ ranged the tour reported that visa regUlaUons were difficult, and that the agency had to guarantee that all members would return with the tour to win approval in the first place. Well, tourist spending in this country from all foreign areas combined did increase by 7.5 per cent in 1960 over 1969. But — figures from a Senate committee official show that this rate of increase was less than that from 1958 to 1^. and, in fact, was less than the rate ai increase for any of the past six years cept one. What the committee flgurea mean Is that In this year of “Visit V.SJI..” foreign tourist spending here actually showed less growth than la years when there .Freidheim. who is very close to the travel Industry, assessed the blame this way in an editorial in his magazine; The executive branch and government agencies. Congress and the travel industry itself were to blame. BLAME8 El’ERYBUDY "Everybody is at fault." he said, and the reasons he gave were apathy, lack of appropriations and lack of unified promotion. And when the call to visit the fer, is establishment of a Federal Travel Office. Baum reported that many Americans they eneoaatered tn to care” and often woaldn't Uke the time to help thd foreign vis- One attractive 23-year-old girl was quizzed by U.S. officials about w hether she had plans for marriage tn the U.S. and »was warned" that her visa required her to return with the tour, although the visa was good for tw o As Friedheim notes, "The United States is one of the most difficult countries to get into." Vet Friedheim fe^ the ver\ shortcomings of “VIsH U.S.A. in ISSa” might be its greatest assrt —namely la motivattag oorree- Iry inta a "host aatlon,” so Ihlag it IsaT yet. The editor teels there's an urgent need tor this nation to become a major host to tourists. One, although not necessarily the prime reason, is that the United States now has an unfavorable balance of payments — more money is going out of this country than is coming in. A Senate committee figure estimates the 1960 travel deficit will run to $1,118,000,000. One answer which Freidheim. and many others in government as well as the travel industry of- SHOP! SAVE! AT MARK DAVJS lAMERA Mart KODAK POWER ZOOM ELECTRIC EYE 8mm REFLEX CAMERA ' RK. $199.S0 ^28°° loading camera with naw raflax focusing zoom Ians —> from telapboto to wida-angla. Fast fl.9 KODAK Smn ROLL MOVIE CAMERA Brownie canrtero with enclosed viewfinder, rapid cronk wind, fost f2.7 lens. Brond new comero by Kodak. *16" KtdackiMM Celer SMe ni« A *1” sa-Ris. B*o . .lt.n a Eodschroise. Ualt * INCLUDES: CAMERA, FLASH, FILM, LAMP BROWRIE STARFLASH CAMERA OUTFIT $g99 Processing of Kodachrome SminlOVIES Has SUKS. Hill. gqc MARK DAVIS lAMERA Mart 13 Nortli Seginow Sf. LOCKPORT. N.Y. (AP) -trohnan J. Paul Leyden is a liceman with courage perhaps above pnd beyond the call of duty. While ticketing automobUes forjMoonshining Flourishes overtime parking, he spotted a'_ -r li famuiar one - hi, own. Hi, wUe Respite Sugor Troubles parked it. and the meter NEW YORK 0 Htates. (iaiiada and Mexico hy Sears • Strong Tyrex* Rayon cord etni siruetion for wafer driving • Drive iiil«» Seam today for your new set t»f .ALLST.ATE tires RTM of Tvrfx. Inc llilllli SEARS NATIONWIDE TTRE GUARANTEE HoMMd iw all Sean Retail aed Mail Order rtarea ihraaiihawt dM IMtad Slala^ aka in Masira and Cmada. C GUARANTEE ^ If lira laila daring tha manlhly gnarinlee period, wa will, i-s al aor apliaa, either repair it without ca»t or in rxrhanga for the aid tire, give yea a acw tire er a refund, rhargtog ooly fer the period of ewoenhip. Soan camp^lars ad-veMia i iibiithTy gutriialea and adjuit aaly oa tkd rw OMining tread daring that pariatLChackbafon pm bay. All adjorimanli nada by ratail atoraa oro prarHad at Aa ragalar rrtail prica plot FedanI Eseka Tas, laaa trade-in, at Unie at rehira. ALLSTATE tires at these low, low prices The ALLSTATE €|»4 And QM Tire Nylon 15‘Month Guarantee 6.70x15. tube-type black ..UM* 7.10x15 tuba-type black ...IIJ4* ' *Pltn Tax and your oM tire attention^ truckers! Tyrex Light Delivery Tire for All Stop-Start Trucks...SaveI Tyrex 6-Ply 1£ I.A Other Bizes are Available A real economy truck tire that adapts itself to city or country road.s. Modern rib design. Aatn Aceessori^ Perry 8t Basemmt "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money \ back” SEARS 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE .54171 f I SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 23, 1961 East Germany's Communist Bosses Lead Gilded Existence ^ bll up on theU^nt. «>id the magazine. bo,m-U hot munmer day to make ItimenU listed wer, , movie tha-lhn «.b»rb »f Wandlltz. • . ..__. ' " ___________________________________________________________________________ _______________ banquet hall -and a well-itocked bar, western night did) [^le. hou^g area has been called the WandUlz Ctwwnu- not to be com- Pine Forest establishinents are emlMMt.T In Fetping. Klarer Km reported. It said the reception rom has a floor of venetiaa cTTstal. laid in a nMMuUc H the pared wWi 0»e “worlters* para-dtae” o( ordinary. E:ast Germans, according to a story related here. A dwcription of the splendor In which the Communist bigwigs Uve hi the Soviet Zone of Ger^ many was given to the West German Social Democratic Party magailne iOarer Kurs (Clear Come) by a man it described as chief architect on the regal housing project. « The architect, not identified, was said to have fled to the West. Accwdtag to thla account Ul-bridit. East German Premier Otto Grotewohl and 16 other Oommu-rdst bigaigs of the “aocialist" state where everyone is “equal,” moved recently to a new, dosely-gugrd-ed. 250acre living area in East is genuine or imitation Chippen-Berttn’s KiefemwaW (Pine For- dale. Grolewohl, in his little "pal-t full of ^ - -------- nHvscT fw Igenuin* Renaissance furniture Oratewahl Mid their '»>Wht quietly from dealers In M’m - adding he has one room in which , the walls are covered with Afri- The 18 families living in thejcgn ebony, area, he said, enjoy such luxur-j * it * l(»s toudies u marhle batHubs.i „„ the other i^lined walls, *”"^ihand. likes to bathe in luxury, wrth basements and attics, a mK; y* magazine said, and she has contained power systei^ central ^ ^ heating, and self-contained water colored crystal. Hilde (Red Guillotine) Benjamin. for private conifort, it was stated.! ★ ♦ * ' An the official Cbmmunlst bfc>-graphico say inbriCht and his cronies live "spartanlc'' lives. Ul-bricht la known to have one ipar-He goes for an 8 a.m. tun in the woods lev None of tte houses is furnished in nsodern style, the magazine said, and nearly all the furniture < la ■ m pdn I'™." ' porification systems. Another, grimmer fouch, is that the fearH justice minister, likes ... . . flA rJmar tlwk ninnn Bnrl ttnmptlmM to play -the piano, and sometimes sits up all night, nibbliiig at the keys, and a bottle of acotch, the account said. each home has a • study-strongroom" with a safe. In all but Ul-bricht’s home, the architect dalmed. there were two keys to each safe, one for the owner, one „^v-. —. for the secret service. Ulbricht'sj wedetw drinks safe has just one key — his — quantity at the area’a stole food the arehitect reported. ; atore, Klarer Knrs taid. while In addition to these luxury j none of Ike other thonsands of homes. Klarer Kurs said, the 18; om-h storeo to East Germany has nffieials enjoy the use of lavish I anything except aoelalisS brands. SEARS DIAMOND JUBILEE YEAR STOP BUGS ANDBUGHT on Your Roses Isotox® Garden Insecticide I 08 l.pt..2.9B l.q(..S.Iand David Bradley Chain Link Fence gives just that. It enhances the beauty of your home, the value of your property and heavily galvanixed fabric gives longer life. 11-gs. steel wire retains its tantness. 48-inches high. Gates and hardware, terminal posts are extra. Shop tonight until 9 p. m. ... save! Fmrtaig Dapl.. ferry St; BMrnmt «399 14-ft. Ski Boat Powered with Elgin ”25” Motor NO MONEY DOWN Regularly Priced at *119 Sport* model wi>h white fiber gits# hull, blue deck. 60-|n. beam, reinforced btlu floor. ^ indshield, upholitered teaf, hardware. 27.7 HP motor, apeedi to 30 mph. Reg. 8.69 5“ CJurgalt S-luhe "1" beam eoartraetiou dl.-iribute. weight belter — prorld*. ■ora comfort. 78x32-in. Offteld iito, weight Four nam-bored 2V|.lb. drop-forged oteel •hoeo. 27-Ib. nakoo. Half-Price Oil Sale! Buy 1st Can, Reg. Price Buy 2nd Can, Half-Price 3- 1“ New Trailer-Camper .. • Your Campsite on Wheels NO MONEY DOWN J. C. Higgint heavy 12.63-os. en ttw alarm bell sounds. Witida second they speed off. For the alarm is the call to arms in a new-ending battle. The combatants: Pontiac’i smoke-eatos versus the city’s dreaded enemy—fire! YOUR MOVE—"Peg Board" is a simple, but nerve-wracking game, with the outcome often in doubt. Many times the outcome Isn’t known until after the participants return from a fire call. Playing above are (from left): Fire- fighter Jerome Lauinger, 2733 Mott Ave., Waterford Township; Engineer Richard Mielke, 558 Rascob St.; Lt. Kenneth Eggert, 1280 Brambles Dr., Waterford Township; and Engineer CUtford Johnson, 4841 Fenmore St., Waterford Township. Airlines to Use Safety Device INTO THE DRVER-After each fire, hoses are scrubbed, washed, then placed in this dryer. ’The machine, which circulates hot air, will have . them ready for use again in 24 hours. Operating the dryer are Firefighters Jerome Lauinger, (left), 2733 Mott Ave., Waterford Township, and George Hilbom, 753 E. Beveriy Ave. WASHING’rON (UPD-The Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) proposed a rule today that would require the airlines to install a safety device on all commercial transports at a cost of nearly $18 million. The device is distance measuring equipment (DME), which gives a pDot a foolproof navigation backstop. It transmits a signal from the plane to a radio check point, which in turn sends back a signal telling the pilot exactly how far he is from that point. Such equipment might have , vented a United Air Lines DCS from going past a radio check point last December, a lew minutes before it collided with a ’TWA plane over New York City, killing 134 persons. COME TT GET IT-That’s day at Station No. 5. Dishing o Firefighter Ernie Bedford, 600 E. the call twice a breakfasts at home. They buy their own food lit the chow is and take turns cooking. The "diefs" change Columbia Ave. monthly. Bias Trial Is Called in Tuscola County bat OTT U^Trial of a dvU •uit cbarging a Tuscola County townsiiip board wtth diacrimbiatian Negro property owners was called here today before Federal Judge Frank Picard. Meet Land Devefop Bay has charged the township with refusing to approve proposed plats in its sifodUvision because the firm sold a large number of lots in two previous Uruguay Starting FuneJ to Help Buy Trpetors The board said sewage disposal problems were the factor in tiw rejectiona of the new plats. It rejected a propbsed tiiird select idat in December of 19S6 and again Met March 15. Select Claimi it has suffered of HJS.milUon fay tha ‘rejecticn. MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (»-A public subscription campaign has been opened to finance the pmv chase of tractors to be used in exchange for Cuban refaei prisoners. The initiative was taken by a group of Montevideo newqwper editors who called upon the public to givb generously in order to Ubende Cubans captured in the Gadget Will Measure Distance, Cost $8,800 installed The FAA’s proposed order wae as the alrllaes already had agreed to fantall DME In their Jets and prop-jets. Each unit costs S5,800^p1us about S3.000 for installation. The price tag for equipping about 2,000 ain-HW million. s timetable for -All Jets by July 1, mt. AU prop-Jetoby Jan. 1,1S«S. —An preorarised piston-engine planeo by Jnly 1, INS. —All other civil alrcmft weighing lt,SM pounds or more by Jnn. I, 19M. The proposed rule would not affect private planes of under 12,500 pounds. But the FAA said it believed private owners would buy and use DME "because of its important safety features." All U.S. military planes will be equipped with DME by next July 1. Memorial Service Set at Cemetery in Area Memorial services will be held iUe Cemetery in Waterford Township, with Rev. E: H. Dubois of the Andersonville Community The service is sponsored annually by the Andersonville Cemetery Association in remembrance of 18 men and one woman veteran of Worid Wars I and II, according to the asaociafion president, Uoyd Miller. Frank Habey has charge of the program. Special music will be provided by Mn. Carta Donaboo and Earl BONG! BONO! - ’That’s the signal which swings the firemen at Station No. 5 into action. Within a matter of seconds after the second ring, they’re on their way to do battle with the enemy —fire. Pre-Revolution Drinking Was a Community Affair sels when the family sat down to eat. NEW YORK (UPI) - Americana, before the Revolution, did not have individual drinking ves- Ex-Vet Commander Dies The New Y Law enforcement officers accused; man of taking a car about as I far he could withou^t leaving Tpxas. 'jtion Commission, said . stace 19tt the aneats of per- travelled 18 miles from the .spot He was charged with taking an auto from a used car lot and taking it from Port Austin to El Paso, about 850 miles away, before he was arrested. The used car lot owner said the man asked fdr the car for a It and didn't come back. it was tagged in the White River before being caught in the Arkansas portion of Bull Shoals Lake. i ^ •! ♦♦♦ parachutes .v The Miut-dowa ^^b^as a^ ^e said the distance was "un-lsemhles an autogyro. It has two tourist mecca benelifi Mi^, Jim usual" and a record. Normally, | rotors turning in opposite direc-Eknis of that mettopolis' -New,bass do not stray far from home. tk>m, requires no time fOr open-Everglades Hotel writes. , |moving only when water leveJsiinj and can be steered during 'descent. I fluctuate. IN DEBT! TlM« M M |M yw • CMHlTKllM will caasaMata yaar Nib. Al yaa aaad h Ifca 4a^ h aat af IbN. ta |at • Ont Plac« to Poy • Small Wookly Poymonft • Prottcfion of Your Crodif lUDGET SEHICE, kt. 18 W. Huron St. FE 4-0901 “Tha mag I beasn b 1 II was the “When KhnalKhev came to the L'nited Nations last September he spent a couple of weekends at the Soviet delegation's summer reai-dence in den Cove. FBI PATS ns WAV Testtmony by J. Edgar Ho lefore the House subcommittee on appropriatkBs reveals some astoo- "On his first trip there the local teen-age students lined up akmgi o the Soviet nalaaged Nadleaml far thellalaad la Ravaaa't famed i la My IMP when it apparent that Outra was IBamett; Havana would have been a natural lure for this group. Now it loaks to Miami, the closest city of ite size to many of these nations andltruly the most Latin American city in the United States. Last 3 Days!!! The FBI is smaller than a num-. ,j. „ .'“i her of city police departments .. . «on, (lOH^ self-made, pr^tively is less job turnover in theithese tourists. These peofde truly; '*^1FBI than any other government I like us. regardless of isolated or-; 'bureau or private firm . . . FBLganized political demonstrations, - agents located 17.430 stolen csrs'and they respond swiftly to the! ^ - 'last year (worth $26.5 million), ln-!courtesy and friendliness which we^ B forced iPii^- vestigated 753 bank robberies, 202 are capable of showing to them. : BARNETTS BIG MAY SALE MONDAY NIGHT 'TIL 9 P. M. IF ENDS MONDAY NIGHT! WE'RE OPEN YOU CAN'T GET IN FRIDAY or SATURDAY! flatterii«’to Khrushchev. EXTRA DISCOUNTS OFF GRANTS A REGULAR LOW PRICES Girls’ and Boys’ Wear Smart paranta sliep at Grants. Thoy know Grants hos tha latast stylat at tha lawast pricas. Yas, thay know a Grant Sala moans axfra savings. Our avarytfoy low pricas go ovoo lower f FUN-in-tho-SUN PLAY SUITS*V BOYS' PRINT WASH 'N WEAR BROADCLOTH SPORT SHIRTS • Taddler Sizes 1-3 • IHtie OiH Sites 3-aX Wash-and-wear cottons with gay, new trims. Fancy tiered rhnnbas for girls. 'He-man’ suits. Compora thawhars of 1.49 Smartly tailored shirts with top stitched collars. Permanent collar stays. Full-cut cotton requires itniniitium of care. 6 to 16. New Sava 3f % CHILDREN'S COTTON SHORTS Rogular 79c Sowfarised wauh-'*-weer»l e Twills, Cerds, Seerteckert e itripae, eelids, printa Sturdy easy-care cotton short.s-best-sellers even at original price! Stock-up at Grants' low price! Teu'd aspect fa pay 1.00 GIRLS' COnON JAMAICA SHORTS GIRLS' COMBED COnON BRIEFS y new, save 1/3 • Oeb«, Cerds, Peplins • All Letesl Pestelt e PockoH, Elastic Sock Absorbent combed cotton gives long wesr. Full cut. White, pastels, 6-16. All wash-’n-wear cottons. Stock-up on Grants* clss-sie-styled Jamaicas it new Summer colors. cool end smartly dressed at a!t times. MIRACLE MIU SHOPPINq CENTER SQUARE UKE RD. OpBii boily 10 A.M.'HI9P.M. HUNDREDS of SUMMER ond YEAR-'ROUND SUITS of GENEROUS SAVINGS DURING THIS SALE! All Citase-Resiitant Tnpicali and Walk V Waai Caidi Summer SUITS in $45.00 Suits ON SALE AT »33 The Same Wonderful Fabrics You'll See in $45.00 Suits ON SALE AT For cool comfort this summer, you con't boot these Tropicals! Handsomely styled in the new mid-tones of blue, brown and grey. They look snxirt, word off the heat, shrug off the wrinkles. Deliberately underpriced for this great feature. Get yours now and be cool oil summer long! laOlMi 6imI T*1m! tJUiODS "DOlIBBOOg" Summer SUITS Day Long! NE SALE AT 38 Graduation Suits Dacron Blends That Stay Fresh Looking All Day Long! IJsutdly Sfdd at $50 ONE SALE AT $< Lightweight summer suits in a fine blend of 55% Docron—45% royon. Regulor 3-button models with flop pockets ond center vent; in deep tone solid shades, slub weaves, checks,, neat patterns. Smart Wool Flannels, Hopsachings, Worsteds Regularly Sold at $55 ONE SALE AT .Students, get set now! Here's the smort Ivy styles perfect for your graduation and the Proms. Right for college, too. New greys, 'olives ond blues, natural shoulder styles with plain front pants. *43 LOOK UBP rmsH m wo! Men's $5.95 100% BAN-LON SHIRTS 5 popular colors in sizes small, medium and large. Washes and dries in a jiffy, no ironing needed. s __ *3“ /* Men's Dacron-Cotton SPORT COATS Wash 'n' wear featherweights for the hot weather, in the rnost popular plaids. Sizes regulars and shorts. ■ *2P* Men's $4.95 V. HOBBY JEANS You can't beat them tor garderr-ing, watching TV or just plain loefing, A great buy at tbit price. $298 T Hagger s Dacron Blend SUMMER SLACKS Wash 'n' wear tropicals in a nice selection. All choice colors, sizes r cie reoularx and shorts, too. * w a ^ Creasedlesistant • GABARDINE SLACKS Light colors and dark colors, sizes 29 to 42. A rare buy! $795 Nagger's Decron Blend SUMMER SLACKS SQM fg« Wash 'n' vyearJ^ropicals in better grades, plain fronts and pleated, stzes 29 to 44. Stock up now for 2 for $17 all summer. Tropi-Tex JDacron-Wool SUMMER SLACKS These are the finest, all choice! Be *15“ CALUNG ALL BOYS! AGES 12 TO 20 Boy's Worsted FLANNEL SUITS 3^^ Boys $4.95 100% BAN-LON SHIRTS Luxurious soft Ban-torn In 5 cool , colors. Sizes 12 to 20. Ctwck the low price and buy plenty. T Boy's'$9.95 Reversible SPRING JACKETS lust the jacket your son needs for chilly nights, for camp, then early fall. Colon he'll like, too. Boy's All Wool SPORT COATS Good looking, popular colon. With a pair of slacks they maka a smart outfit at a reasonable cost. 18" SID BARNETT Same as Cask! —Ne Carryiag Chatget! Optn Yovr Account Today] Open Friday and Monday Nights 'til 9 P,M. IBarnett’s 150 NORTH SAGINAW—Next to Sears ; ’.'iC t i-\ THE PONTIAC PRKSS. THURSDAY. MAY 23, 1961 Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths Waterford Mother, GEORCIE AGAR pewa Road died yeateiday at St., The Auburn Heights MOMS Unlti^ CfdSh A Waterford Townahip XIXETEKX 2nd World Speed AAork Cbimed fdr Helicopter Formerly a fanner. Mr. Shetlerj®^ * ®‘ **|« Morarejand her two smaU chUdren were day at Voorheea • Siple Chapel i leaves a daughter. Mrs. Kathertne Sparks-Grittin with burial following in Roselandj Newell of Poptiac Township; and Park Cemetery. la sister. Mm. Villa Tbtten of Ox- Mrs. Agar leaves four sons. Earl ----- N. of Pontiac. Leslie C. (rf South-; Service will be held at 3:30 p.m. field. George J. of Farmington and:Saturday at Sparks-Griffin Chapel Rex of Beulah: six daughtem. Mrs.iwifh burial In the Cole Cemetery Papl Guffy of Hadley. Mrs. Her-at Lake Orion, belt. Beauchamp. Mrs. EIsie| W’agg. Mrs. Edward Smaltz. Mrs. BEBBA I.. BAIXAGH William Welch and Mrs. Robert -Schnlti. all of Pontiac: 53 grandchildren; 78 great-grandchildren; 10 great-great-grandchildren; a sister and two brothers. Mrs. Agar died Tuesday at her residence after a long Illness. DANIEL OIJA'ER Daniel Oliver, retired plasteier. died of pneumonia at,the home of his daughter yesterday after a brief illness. He was 93. Mr. Oliver leaves two sons. Cyril neral Home. Auburn Heights. Surviving besides her husband lare four daughtem, Mrs. Charles Hdrger of Rochester. Mm. Robert Thor of Avon Township. Mm. Robert Croteau of Pennsylvania and ,Mre. Donald Farr Of Oxford; a son. Stuart of Inkster; four sis-tem: a brother; and 20 grand- auto accident at 7 attempted WASHINGTON (UPD-The Navy I has claimed a second world speed mother >*«>rd in a week lor its turbine-engine HSS2 helicopter. The SikomlQT-built ’copter flew 174.9 miles an hour over a 62- make a left turn from Sc will re- Survivlng are his wife, Emilie; [ MRS RA.snn-X H. SPRAGUE .--ov .. a daughter. Ruth at home: two! AVON TOWNSHIP-Service for vxibu*tad ‘ re^aledly‘"de^^^ sons. Ronald of Drayton Plains Mrs. Samuel H. (Bertha G.) Dayal’s removal charging him' and Gerald at home: a brother. | Sprague. 66, of 3225 Donley St., with extreme airogance to^vaId Max of Pontiac: and two sisters, will be at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Kasavubu’s government and par- Mrs. Anne Falk of Oxford and Elmwood Methodist Church. Burial'tlalitv toward the pro-Communist' Mrs. Martha Adorra in Germany.; will be in WhRe Chapel Memorial, rebel' regime of Antoine Gusenga Service wMI be held at 1 p.m. Cemetery. ’Troy. In the Northeas Congo. Monday at St. Trinity Lutheran < Mrs. Sprague died yesterday at ________________ Church with burial In Glen PMen Pontiac General Hospital follow- Cemetery, Mr. Schrubbs' body is ihg an illness of several months. Nearly half of Cyprus’ farm fam- at the Sparks - Griffin Funeral She was a past president of the ilies grow grapes for a living. Cy- Home. Zone 8 of MOMS of America andiprus wines were p<^ular in the : of Auburn Heights MOMS Unit-I Mediterranean in the 16th century, WILLLAM A. SHETLEB no, 19 and a member of the I2m- and l‘23.0(» gallons are still ex-William A. Stietler of 166 Chip-,wood Methodist Church. ported annually. SPECIAL SELLING! tfTL- The Send Pipit' Play Time! Class Time! Sport Time! Any TiiViel Reg. $4.00 S« camfortabla and practical rMi'M want aovarai pair at tliit low tP> eronn and Maak. 4 tn 10, DISCONTINUED MODEL PIANO CLEARANCE FLOOR SAMPLE PIANOS BROUGHT IN FROM OUR BRANCH STORES AND FACTORY TO OUR PONTIAC STORE Naw Spin«tt $398 # GRINNEU’S, 27$. Saginaw Sla • FEderal 3-7168 • Extended Terms Here It Is! GIGANTIC STORE-WIDE DISCOUNTS! DNTH ENDS> FRIDAY ONLY! 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M.! HURRY! Come save on your Memoriol Doy and Summer Needs . . . We guarantee savings of Vs or morel'. . . Besides the bor-9i^-$N0F 9"'"* y"" 9^* "Holden Red Stamps" . . . and we pay for your • • • Be here when the door opens Friday 9:30 A. M. / sharp! $25 GROUP WOOL LADIES' SUITS END OF MONTH DISCOUNTS $10 $39 WOOL. 8 to 44 LADIES' COATS $5 COOL 8-44 SUMMER LADIES' DRESSES 5.99 lOB EVANS WRITE UNIFORMS 2.88 - $19 LoAioi' Wuhablo LINEN JACKETS 1.99 END or MONTH DISCOUNTS $10 LAMINATE WASHABLE LADIES' TOPPERS $ 5.99 WASRABEE Motonity DRESSES 8.00 TO $5 SUMMER LADIES' RATS 1.00 END OF MONTH. DISCOUNTS I NO-IRON ARNEL 8-44 DRESSES $ II END or MONTH DISCOUNTS 12.99 REVERSIBLE RAIN 'N' SHINE 8-20 COATS 8' 1.00 LADIES' COTTON BRAS 1.99 LADIES' HALF SLIPS 88< 2.99 BETTER LADIES' PURSES 99< END or MONTH DISCOUNTS 1.99 LADIES' BERMUDAS, SLIM PANTS 99' 1.99 SLEEVELESS LADIES' BLOUSES 1.00 1,99 LADIES' PEDAL PUSREBS £RO or MONTH DISCOUNTS 7.99 LASTEX LADIES' COTTON SWIM SUITS 88 99« $5 DisconninD Kuuuniiiu 1.00 END or MONTH DISCOUNTS I 3.99 LADIES' gowns—ROBES— PAJAMAS END or MONTH DISCOUNTS 2.99 LADIES' SPECIAL GROUP MEN'S JACKETS 2.88 39.99 BETTER MEN'S SUITS $18 ( END or MONTH DISCOUNTS 7.99MEN'S WASH 'N' WEAR DRESS PANTS 88 ( END OF MONTH DISCOUNTS 1.99 MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS 97' 1.90 Boyi' COnON SPORT SKIRTS 99< 1.A9 2-PC. 1 to 4 TOTS' SLEEPERS 87< 1.59 BOYS' 2-7 Boxer LONGIES 87< END or MONTH DlSCOtfHTS 89c GiRLS'-BOYS' PLAY SHORTS, 2 to 6 c 1.49 GIRLS' 3 to 14 BLOUSES 77^ END OF MONTH DISCOUNTS 1.49 BOYS' SWIM TRUNKS-1 POLO SHIRTS 99' 25c BETTER GIRLS' ANKLETS 17t I END or MONTH DISCOUNTS 2.99 3 TO 14 SLEEVELESS GIRLS' DRESSES 99 ( 1.89 BART DOLL GIRLS' PAJAMAS 77< END OF MONTH DISCOUNTS 2.99 INFANTS' BIRDSEYE DIAPERS 66 2.89 FULL, SINGLE CANNON SREETS 1.74 88c Qeality. Rayoa PANEL CURTAINS I END OF MONTH DISCOUNTS 59c CANNON HUGE BATH TOWELS 39' 1.69 NTLON rugs PLAID BLANKETS 99^ Ee. 69^ 5.99 FULL. SINGLE . ChMille SPREADS 2.88 END OF MONTH DISCOUNTS 19e WASHCLOTHS 19c DISH TOWELS 19c DISHCLOTHS 9' ^ 5.99 Gieap Priit ' Piach Pleat Diapti 2.88 15c Qaality WOOD CLOTBES RAN6E1S It GEORGE'S 74 N. SAGINAW ST. NEAR HURON Fm. stmur ' f ■■■.' V- TWENTY i THE PONTIAc PRESS. THI RSDAY. MAY 25. mi / X nADE\ I FAIR DlSCOUiltSI ■ DISOOUNiSf DISOOUNTSl 2tHKk441ytle FtmsyKraRia 244iL-4-C|eli REEL RIDING RIDING MOWER REEL MOWER ROTARY MOWER 99.95 Value 20” CUT 179.95 Value *139” Forward - Reverse 4 Wheel ’69” ’129*' CLINTON and WESTINGHOUSE STEAM and DRY INCH FRY PAN Fully Immersible $7«8 [ Briggs t Stratton) 4 CYCLE ENGINE 22” and 25” Full Cut IRON Reg. $17.95 Super Speed HAIR DRYER With Make-Up Box $29.95 Value Whisper Quiet — Dries Hair Soft... 4-PIECE CANISTER SET Folding 24x60 $088 Size Golf Bog PlotHc CLUB TUBES 6for*l~ 5 Irons GOLF SET CoflNiioto $44.95 Voluo •27.88 you CAN SI sum...irirt W^stin^house Hooks—Plugs—Leaders—Bobbers Lines — Veta Bait Boxes — Tackle Boxes — Rods and REELS 5-PLY LAAAINATED TENNIS RACGMIET $2^5 Reg. *6” Value 1200 GALLONS Just in Time for Summer Outdoor Fun- PICNIC TABLES Shakespeare — Regent — Garcia Johnson — Zebco — Others YOilSAVEINHdEn RACR8CT$12I PRESS I SKI BELTS ALL SIZES A Must Skiing DADS and GRADS Special Purchase! ZENITH LONG DISTANCE 500 TENNIS BAUS $|89 U.S. Peranylvania “Rawlings t^gye Exterior Primer Seeder...*2.99 Aluminum.................*2.99 Clear Varnish.............’2.99 Enamel Undercoating.......’2.99 , Interior Primer Sealer...’2.99 Semi-Gloss Enamel.........*2.99 Interior Ylnyl Latex....... ’2.99 TRADE*rAIR BiyllMr- SiviOr [AllSitiimitr Ntidi! Aluminum FOUHNS BOUT unas $9.95 $je88 ‘ *1# , HORSESHOE SETS Value 4SN0ES 2STAKES ■i Set ..to..- y THK PONTIAC PRKSS. THURSDAY, UAY 23, 19»l TWEXTYOXK REDWOOD FOLDING FURNITURE LAWN & CHAISE LOUNGE PATIO 5 Position Selector Vinyl Redwood Flat Arms — !28’’ x 72" Wood Vi" X 2V2—1" Highly Polished AhHninum — Folds Flat 4 brocti en«-pi«o» foot support • Now Moi-O-lockgrip hongori on glido and bwn ri^g $22.50 $iy| 88 Value Vinyl Redwood flat arms 26Vi X 31Vi X 17" seat. Wood W X 2'/2". 1" highly polished aluminum • patio legs. Model Shown $49.95 $9488 WITH SUDE Value OA $12.50 Value $T95 Model Shown $39.95 $44' LESSSUDE Value Li, Mi 2 INCH It bearings on swings • All welded one-piece_^ oirglide • Golvonite slide bed fully assembled at factory • Blazon's famous slide bed braces" • New'Blaz-O-Lockgrip hanger on cwrglide • Yellow Jacket vise clamps • Chain: 750-lb. test OuraHte DOUBLE GLIDER ALL 2 INCH 9 FOOT SLIDE-SWING SKY RIDE $0 A88 $39.95 VALUE Ouro/ifB 5 Web Chaise $gS8 Wide, heovy doty woven plastic webbing — green and white — turquoise and white — all with gold accent thread. BAR4)-CUEGRILLi one plated gri complete wit $(^7 24-inch size, Coppertone plated grille flared spit — wheels, complete withj^ hood, motor, spit. EARLY BIRD SPECIAL CHARKETS '•‘‘••a CHARCOAL Ac BRIQUETS 09 to Bags $5.50 CHARCOAL UGHTER FLUID 29< WHIRLY-BIRDS 2 SEA! $11 4 SEA' _ »17‘ • Pump bars are equipped with nylon beorings 2 SEATER and ore complete with tubular hondles and foot O O bars. Both hand and foot bars hove plastic cops, ey J | O O • Foctory pre-assembly and simplicity of design make assembly by customer easy and fast. • Tested for over six months in octuol use by A CCA TC D children. 4 Ot^cR Strong ertdugfi to hoLd adults. • Baked enamel throughout — bright colors red, green and yellow. Qt. Stainless Steel ' BAR-B-CUE T00Ug8° Hickory KNOBS or CHIPS S.BS' Rotary HOT DOGGER Attach to Spit On BBQ Grill Rotary BBQ SPIT BASKET Suit on W 1 Vw BB Grill ■ BE PREPARED HOT HUMID WEATHER AHEAD Portable Window Fan $1 88 FOLDIHD ADJUSTABLE CHAIR Regularly $19.95 , $49.95 Value CHILDREirSS«IDinllUY Plastic T»7S Variety of Choice } 20 Inch Multi-Speed Electrically Reversible Thermostat Controlled Safety Electric Eye Smart, comfortable, inner spring border wire cushions supported vinyl covering, filige pattern. COVER: Wide, heaver duty woven plastic webbing. 6x5x5 strops fas- ed rust resistant metal clips for poii-tivo attachment and easy replace- $1.00 Value S YEAR MOTOR WARRANTY jCANBE USED ANYWHERE TRADE«:^AIR T^VENTY-TWO the PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 2S, 1961 Canadian Joblna Fall OTTAWA m - CamdM'a pk>ytd Ml ApiO npremnttd 9.7 per cent of the labor force, doam from U-phis per cent in both March and iSwainson's Vetoes late, legar LANSING W - A legal battle M boura. He aakl thia hu bcmjat 9:22 p.m.. oat hotir and aeven acem^ nrtahi over a matter oi question whether or not Gov. Swalnson legally vetoed two bills passed by the 19Ci ;! legislature. the aeceplpd procedtae since he mtoiutet late, ha said, started with the House In 1929 aod . since VYvd I. Oias^ secretary of the Senate, v in 1919. One is the controversial j which would set jon the validity of vot«* registration. Local units ol government now have the option of a two- or four-year limit. The other would regulate the erection of partition fences near streams, rivers or lakes. House Cleit of Representativeo Nermaa E. PhUleo saU the veto •f the vetor registration bU was Into and tbe veto e( t [^Adlai Stevnnson Chosen National Father of Year NEW YORK l»*^Adlal E. Stavcn->n. who has three sons, one graiodson and two granddaughtera, waa picked today as the national lather rf the year. The national Father's Day com-mlttse said Stevenson was boo-ored for his “forceful and do-quent presentation of our country’s potion on key issues before the UnHed Nations.” 125WKTHUWN Philleo noted' a constitutional prty i vision that says a bill is passed ; unless the governs vetoes It within >!l0 days of receipt, excluding Sun-Ifdays. “ACCEPTED PROCEDURE j I%illeo Interpreted this to mean secretary ef state to bceene law, elfeottve Sept. $. Robert A. Derengowski, lega aide to the governor, challenged >is. He saht It was his imdcrstanding that the 10 days meant 10 full days and up until midnight of the last day. Derengowski said House rules provide for noution of the time a bill is sent to and received by the governor but declared: “H rules should hot determine die con-stltutkeial powers of the governor. GRAND OPENING H SPECIAL FIBERGUS All Purpose Chairs—Now This hit,,. Vi OFF FABULOUS EVERUSTING WE SPECIAUZE in MODERNIZATION Soles of Formieo ond Plywoods FOR YOUR DO-IT.YOURSELF PROJECTS ■«il» •nd Covnter Tops! D. & J. CABINET SHOP 7611 Hiflilsiid U. (M-59) OR 4-1220 Is Off Again U.S. Visa and Invitation Refused South Korean; JFK Has No Time SEOUL, South Korea (AP) Premier Chang Do-young’s again off-again flight to Washington to see President Kennedy appeared off today. The young general who led the overthrow of South Korea’s elsct-ed government last week was refused both a visa to enter the United States and an invitation from the White House. U.S. Charge d’Aftalrcs Marshall Grusn told him that Kennedy is too busy to see him before ieav-'ing for Europe early next week : Apparently still hopeful, the soldier-premier conferred for 45 minutes again today with Greea In-j formants said the diplomat tried I to explain to Chang why Kennedy was unable to meet him now and at the same time put new pressure on the leader of the military junta for an early return to c'ivil-tu government tn South Korea. DISRET..%RD PROTOCOL I Brushing aiide prMocOl, Chang i made a surprise announcement 'Wednesday that he waa going to see the President. It brought a I quick reply from Washington thati Idle visit was "not practical or feasible at this lime.” I Military censors prevented Korean newspapers from carrying {the SUte D^artmeiM's statement land most Koreans still had the Impreasioa Chang planned to de-: part as soon as possible. j to the State Sapreme Csait. The voter re^stratlon bill was presented to the governor May at 2 p.m., Philleo said, and the! veto message to the House was returned on May 22 at 3:45 p.m., one hour and 45 minutes late. The fence MU was presented to the governor May 9 at 5:15 p.m. and the veto message was received Senators Fail to Okay AAarshals in Alabama WASHINGT(»4 ID - Senators today argued over, but took no President Kennedy's dispatch of US. marshals to Ala-' ima to prevent race riots. No more than a dozen senators were on the flodt= during the debate, and only about half of ttiem took any part in the discussion. Sens. Jacob K. Javits. R-N.Y., nd Paul H. Douglas, D-IU., sponsors of the resolution, said they were fighting for law and order. Fmt fanlatt Diritf Ivf CWiRiRf • BISSEU CABPET SWEEPERS Regularly $13S5... Special BISSELL FLIGHT: 6 95 Onl •mder ebiMtt aaly 4* Mgii. Heavy gasge ly 14 AvollabU ot Thif Low Frict LES HUDSON handle. Cheke ef grten er rod. BegatarUJS 10 liRI S17W EXQUISITE BOONTONWARE PATTERNS DINNERWARE Foctory Run—Strvicw for 8 45-PIECE SETS formerly $67^. Complete Set • Made with special cart and aiHa meleniliie tot maaiaiam broah-aed-cMp 17 95 • WRITTIN GUARANTII AGAINST BRIAKAOI WITH IVERY FURCHASL ONLY 21 SETS AT THIS LOW PRICE SUPER KEM-TME Reg, $6,59 Got. All Colon IncMinf WWN Golloni—QiMrta—Pints NO AyailobU Thursdoy, Moy 25 LIMIT Through Thupfday, Juno 1 At tko Intorsoction of BoMwin ond Wolton Blvd. Noxt to AHos Morkot oral rUDRT uA MONDRT 9 JLM. to 9 P.N. 0 to I—lUMDIT 10 to 3 MUST HUH! lAfAREHOU^ — 4id thi N|W to K^yE or BE DISraSEB Wa wm Accept Any Offer VMa tomider^^ : -4UKE HS IN OFFER-- ' TniMiirlii ____ lyPllljlpn^ rmiay Mifl pivInKiy Hiipiw Osmun's Brings the Men of Ooklond County Another Greet Buy! THE POKTIAC PRKSS. THURSDAY. MAY I Strike Over Language I*" agaldst police kUlliigi|violent demonatratlon by Anai CALCUTTA, India Ub-Leftest language rioti In the lUte ol midenla demanding that Bei«a tmloiw paralyaed thle big city to- Aa«m. Police kiUed U penora in be reoogntaed as one of the state' day with a on^day general strikeIsilchar last week to bieak up alottldal languages. TWEXTY-THREE Now my Old Quaker Bourbon is 6 Ifears Old JERUSALEM, Israel (AP) Two Jewish survivors of the Nail pogroms lost their control durfaig the Ochmann trial today and shouted wild threats, throwing die courtroom Into turmoil. Presiding Justice Moshe Landau suspended the trial for 20 AT NO INCREASE IN PRICEI The disturbance came at the height of eniotion-packed testimony by aging Pinas Freudiger. a leader of the prewar Jewish community in Hungary, who fought back tears and aobs as he told of the persecutiort of his people. STRAIgHT noURBON WHISKEY • SS RROOf • OLD QUAKER OtSTlUINg CO., UWRENCE8UR0, INO. 2 Throw Eichmann Trial Into Turmoil By THOMAS A. REEOV Justice Landau tternly caUed Older and wamfed he would stop the trial unless the audience kept quiet. The crowd settled down, but a moment later a bearddU old man in the balcony, an orthodox Jew named Avraham Cassirer, rose to his feet, pointed at Eichmann and shouted: “You murderer — you iieast of prey — there are still Jew'S who have not been exterminated and they wil seet to your downfall." He, too, was ejected and the presiding judge adjourned session. All three judges retired from the courtroom. RESUME SESSION Outside the courtroom security police said the flr^ outburst came from a Hungarian native, Sandor Szilagyl. They itfosed newsmen talk to him i he would be held until he calmed 15 and July T. 1M4, After 20 minutes, the court resumed the sessHm and Freudiger resumed his story of th? Nail waf on Hungarian Jews which Eichmann directed personally. The deportations which decimated Hungarian Jewry, the last large single bloc of Jews left in Europe, were conducted at the rate of 12,000 a day between May The first time he met Eich mann, Freudiger said, he actually obtained a favor, the return of the sacred books of the syna- That was the last favor any Jews ever got from Eichmann in Hungary, the witneas declared. If bees should ever become extinct. some 100,000 varietlea o> flowering planta would diaappeat from the earth. Freudiger was cod and collected only when he identilied Adolf Eichmann, sitting in the glass-en-ckxKd dock, as the GesUpo officer who directed the deportation 000,000 Hungarian Jews death camps. 'SAVED YOUR FAMfLY* Suddenly a broad-shouldered Jew wearing a c«P Jumped up In the audience, waved srildly at Freudlnger and acreamed: "You have aaved your family! Mine was sent to death!" The courtroom audience of 7S0, wtny of them survivors trf the| pogrom, burst into excitement. Guards rushed to the man and hastily bundled him out. Eichmann bandy turned head to look at the scene. Fraidlger was startled, raised his hands to his eyes and wiped! away tears. Sports car spice never came in so many varieties...Chevrolet! Maybe you’re a fellow with more or less normal driving habits who’s looking for a change of pace. Or maybe you’re a red-hot sports car buff. Either way, you’ll find the fastest relief for that tantalizing itch in your driving foot at your Chevrolet dealer’s One-Stop Shopping Center. He’s got cars that run the sporting gamut like no others-nimble Corvair Monzas (2- or 4-door), charged-up Impala Super Sports (in five different body styles) and the kingpin of production sports cars, the Corvette. You can take your choice without chasing all over town. 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Thli ti Um srSt2it,r ?5r.*^«'ss-jssf Bjr nUNK OORMUS WASHINGTON « ~ DM Jeiry and Genurd Rs enlist toy fellow members of the American Stock Ibcchange as willing hdpera i their alleged maisi^ manlpuli tions of that ImporUnt market? *- TOs ie a question whldi Investigators from the Securities and Exchange Commission presumably will try to answer as th pneedures" of Os exdianis, the eecond largest in New York Oly end the nation. SEO in stodu is rigged markels between 1»4 and m PROUNO EXCHANGE Now the SEC is inspecting the exchange itself to ace if it gives mei^*hMbe^ (My SM The Res, father and son, have been expriled from die exchai^ by the SEC, which held they Illegally peddled nearly $10 million Edward T. McChrmlek, picsi-ent of the exchange, cays tte inquiry is welcomed and recent reforms will disoourage anyone from trying to imitate the Res. Beeasse (he Res got away wHh The ageaey is dooMy concerned “ ere BO ordl-nbers. They at the very heart of the market As specialists, the Res were re-sponsiUe for m^taining (air and orderly trading in about 20 stocks. They conducted the .“ bringing them a million dollars a; * A w .... .1 u V. ! Intinaates say the dissension . Tluit s what (oiks have been hasn’t affected the act. The boys tag ^ the ann^ment that|^^ and San Bem- the Kingston Trio te breaking up.i^^ ^ p»e news came witt a tei^ f”*" ter than ever- ’perhaps our nerv-ousness makes us perform even which didnt explain much. I better.” said Guard. They have * * * jnever been too chummy offstage. 1 The split is puzzling not only because the Kta^tons are one of they have alway displayed the ; greatest of affability onstage. The major issue appears to be UNTIL NOV. t inenr declaring the muslciana’ recognizes him as leader jof the act and sole remaining member of a previow group, the Kingston Quartet. But he says the Kinston Trio tag should die "siiice to sell it with other than I Ithe orlgina] trio would be cfaeat-Itag the public.** ItoImIo Firm Employes Couse Partial Closing TMJ3X). Ohio »-SchulU Die ICkstiinc Go. will shut down part of jits operation beeause some work ers refused to accept a pay cut. Some 65 skilled employes, mem-1| hers of Local 4. Mechanical Edu-|| ^cational Society of America' I MESA), unanimously rejected a I [company request for pay cuts o(!| to 72 cents an hour. Ailing Actor Jock Ookie Is Resting Comfortobly HOLLTWOCX) (AP) - CWae-ian Jack Oakie, forced lo drop out of the movie “PodwtlUl o< Miraclea** because pf a vims to- fectloo, is reportedly fresttaf c lortahly at home. His wile Vlctcrta said day hia lUness was eriotts.** , _ OaMe was replaced by Thomas iin Hoodom FHest LAST "CRY TIMES FOR TOMITE HAPPY" "PLEASE TURN OVER" Dav# (hiard, crew-cut leader of the triov wanto to aim toward bet-ric. «MS PW SONGS Handsome Bob Shane and stubby Nick Reynolds, plus the trio’s bearded manager, Frank Werber. jwant to stick to the pop songs *)Oy riAC PRESS, . THI RSDAV, MAV 23. 19M TWEXTY-NIXi Michigan forest products will|yie|(J." which means the amount be with us in a Readily increasing being cut must not exceed the and continuous supply, because amount being grown, so a con-that's the way of modem forest slant supply will always be avail-practices. It is called "sustained[able, no more boom-to-bust tactics. Michigai^ tpuriiit leaders, while'of visitors once the national sys-j 'The use ' of the Potomac Rtvt considering the 955 miles of Iree-ltem of Interstate and defense high- from the river's mouth at ways already in use within the|ways is completed, linking every peaks Bay at Alexandria, commonwealth and the inore-more major city of more than 50,000'trade route dates back tb.,)|l to come, predict a new avalanche I population. ’ ar ps«Mst fiRAHAM SIDELINED — Evangelist Billy confined there with a severe bixmchial infection. Graham reads the new English Bible in his Graham arrived in England Monday to begin a London hotel room Wednesda>'. He has been three-week campaign of revival meetings. Quality tailored DACRON’& RAYON TROMCAL SLACKS tapered kedy...fer p^ecHrlni'Rtl SNAP-TAB DRESS SHIRTS k^gukurly 2.89 ianferlxed CMiked cottons...svklte. Induding a terrific selection of convertible collar styles in cotton broadcloth and oxford. 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I woighM *5% m boerdt ef oomporoble weight, o SAO*Sv»(vol,fofWOfd,i«vono J&R AUTO STORES KT TR|» Froe-Mb Nonsf Or^ SBroemeisI Solid Nrosradlutlablo seat, mi Adi' nNnNa® tot HIiBG BOVB TIPBf IYIN9* 115 north SAGINAW STREET rasa rass rias of IYose THIRTY TllK i OX i lAC PKKSS. THl RSDAV. MAY 25. 1961 Scout - O ~ Rama Starts Saturday at Walled Lake WAIXED LAKE — Sixt>'^ive true intematkMud fla\’or as Nttm-scout tnHs representing more than ber 34 Ro\-eir Post of Windsor wlU 2,000 cubs, bo>- accMts and ex|dor-set up a camp site and display crs have put the finishing touches'campcraft and lashing. I OR their exhilnts and are read>- nRraaicn ix KILTS lor the aei'enth annual Otta'a's Dis- Windsor post will be dressed; trict Scout-O-Rama opening herejn ctriorful Hits. The unit has ai>-i Saturday. . ipeared in shows throughout Cana-j _ .__T t da, Ireland. Scotland. Wales, E.ig- The twiHlay thsplaj of contiiw- ^ ous public demonstration of scout- * ^ The>- also have demonstrated! Walled Lake Senior High School, Nearly SKMO \1sitws from England. Their leader is Skipper Oaklaal. Wa.vae and Maeomb Sir Willaid Gordon. are expected to attend ^ Department of the pvsgiam. Csasertaflea, the I'. ». Navy. ! The show this .vear will haw a Mchigaa BeU Teiephoae Ce^ the j ---------------------------Boy’s Republic and the COast j Gnard all wtH have exhibits at i Everyone Joiitt In Captare Bank Robber DETROIT III—A woman taxicab gett was jailed for luvestigation of driver, bank employes arid customers joined in capturing a pian who trM who trM to rob the Wayne Oakland Bank branch in^ Highland Park yesterday. Lonnie James Paggett. 42, had been overpowered by the time police and FBI agents arrived. Pag- Walied Lake C. of C.. Sen Dinner Wednesday out'of the with * people hariging onto him. WALLED LAKE — Hie Walled Customers standing in line at the bank jumped on the robber and onto him as he attempted to get away. The Walled Lake ChambA' of Cojnmerce will meet Wednesday for a 6 p.m. dinner at the Saratoga Farms restaurant in Novi. W A * After the dinner meeting, members will board charter buses that will take them to the Detroit Tigers baseball game. [^Cleanup Drive ALLEN RISK Romeo Farmer Oirffor Con-Con f . • -1 >iAII«n Rush Will Run on GOP Ticket for Third . OK.VTAL PROORA.M NEARS CTjOSE — A Oarkston school system fluoride treatment pro-■* 1 gram, sponsored by the Oakland County Health A highlight of the Scout-0-Rama| Department, will come to an end this week, will be an houMong stage showi with more than 260 pupils receiving the service. on by the scoots. Under the; program was conducted during school "hours ing _____________________________________ specialty acts. Post 36 of Westacres will put on n i authentic Blackfoot Indian dances. ^Q22jjj0 fQ jJQ Thev will be garbed in complete Indian regalia. ^ ^ FaTITlingtOn Twp. ’ Tj-picaJ of the displays ' the Pinewood Derbys which ^ '!!! FARMLNGTON TOWNSHIP - A Four Towns Methodist Church and . . „ . „ Pack 169 from the Beaumont "“I .School PTA. The derby is a series max the annual spring cleanup of races of model cars, made by campaign here, jtlie cubs. whid> wifi race down ^ twwer of trash. coUected ! ,long ramps^ ; rine. early this mooUi. wiU b* | J 1 afire at 9 p.m. by towaaUp | A beekeeping display featuring «4w will be m kaad to ; live bees will be shown by Troop; ^e that the blase docaa't get ;160 of Orchard Lake. Visitors will ^ eontrol. be abir to see the bees in glass-, , . ! encloaed hives. ‘ ! Heading the units which actual-'20 feet high and nearly SO feet; Iv will hTcmnplng will be Expkuer! wide, is located in a field onlM^ Post 100 from Walled Lake. ;Road between Shiawassee and [Nine Mile roads. DBPLAIS LUTED i tj,, cleanup drive was spon- ; Other unit displays include the sored by the South Farmingtan ^following: "Gun Safety." T r o o p Township Ovic Association. ;1T7 of Keego Harbor; '‘Painting," ----------------- Troop 35 of Farmingtan; "Wnler ^Safety." Explorer Poet 45 of Farm-Ag^UarH I alfO CC ington; "Trains." Pack 33 of Mn-A/ltllOlU LQIVC VeV iford; "Sooutcraft.” Troop 42 of: White Lake; "Chemistry," TToopI jlU of Walled Lake. (from left) at the Pine Knob school are vtrfunteer dental assistant, Mrs. James Hart, fifth grader Paula Deneen and Ann Massucci, dental hygienist of the health department. This service is available to all schools up on request of the principal or superintendent. Execytive Succumbs ORANGE. N.J. (AP)-Rudolph Eberstadt, 65, chairman of tlie board of the Republic Industrial Corp., died Tueeday alter a long illness. Says Aufo Workere 'Most Defermined' DETROIT » -Workers PresWent Walttr P. Reu-ther said Wednesday that his union was "never more determined" to win Important improvements in its contiacts with the auto industry. A A . A Reuther told delegates to a UA1* Fold Cbuncil meeting here that ngeotiators tor the union will stress Job security and improved pension and medical care plans. A A A Negotiations with the major aUto companies — Ford, General Motors and Chrysler - begin late next month. Gene Autry Out oh Bail James Wright, 34, of 718 E. Sixth |jp Qrunken-Driving Case St., Royal Oak, who also had been i in line, raced to a phone andi NORTH HOLLYWOOD. Calil. called the FBI. UaP> — Former cowboy singer Gene Autry, arrested on a drunken driving charge. waS freed Wednesday on $263 baU. AAA Police said Autry, an owner of the Los Angeles Angels baseball team, flunked a sobriety test after he wds stopped Tuesday night by an off-duty Ijighway pa-trolman. by toUer Am Ktatoh after he threatened her with a plastle revolver Ihet leeked Uk« the real thtag. Police were alerted after Miss Bessie Thome, 43, of Royal Oak, the cab driver, called her dispatcher and reported a man was Miss Thome said Paggett called her to a motel in the suburb and directed her to the bank. “He gave me $5 to wait for him." she said, “but when he came struggling out like that I got on our radio right away." The bank is at 13504 Woodwai-d Avc. 'Hit by $3,000 Fire Other subjects on display are, ORCHARD LAKE - Fire dam- • Archery." Troop 33 of MUtord: Age to the Orchard Lake Country-••Flrenuuishlp," Troop 107. Bay-, Club was ertimated today lay West lade; "Home Repalre,” Troop 116.,Bloomfield Fire Chief, Herbert Eagle School; "Radio." Troop-161 Morgan at $3,(»0. ^ Farmington: and "Dog Sleds,’’! The blaxe Tuesday afternoon Troop 163 Kendallwood. started in the Mtchen and <>read| *^ll«n Rush Will Run on a a a up through gr^ ducU beblndj S«ll other exhibits wfll Include the stove, aooanding to Morgan. • Topographical Map," Troop IW Employes at the dub on Orchard AAoCOmb District the Multi-Lakes Cbnserv-ation Lake Trail were praised by Mor-, Asaodatlon: •Basketrv," Pack 110,gan tor controlling thp fire imlil, --------- !■ . n«its." Ttoop 38 d south 1^; “Between 1908 and 1914, Ford Allen Rush. 58, of 85040 Dequindre -woodcraft." Troop 47 of Ne«- made the automobile industry a Road hu announced bis candidacy that could not tolerate pyg- u a ddegato to the state constltu- Gruber is program chw mles " observes one Michigan his-, tkxw eonven^. man of the Scout-O-Rama. torian. RuA, who will run on the Repub- ________________ ___________________________________________— .' lican ticket. Is seeking to represent Macomb County's 3rd District at the oonvention. ■a la a vtoe preaMeat sf the Farwefs* Petrotoawi Cwaperath-e aad the MIeMgM Uveatoek Es- ; chaaga aad a Oraetar af tha > Farm Barcu Mataal laMiraace Ca. aad tha Farm Barraa lito iMaraars Oa. A member of the Romeo Commu-Bity Schools Board of Education, tor six years. Rush served as its, president while the new Romeo Community High School was being constructed. AAA He served as president of thej Macomb Counfy Farm Bureau for 11 years. He has worked on the, State Farm Bureau's legislative; committee for the past five years, j Rush currently is a member of the Macomb County Welfare Com- A life-long Macomb County resident. Rush managed E F. Fisher's OBUSVE ANNU'EBRARY Mr. and Mrs. WUliam Watson of 13290 Rattalee Lake Road. Davisbuig, will be hono^ at an open house Sunday in ohaervance of their S&th wedding anniversary. The affair will be held in thc^ItovIshuiTt Masome Tenwle toonr - children. —2:30 to 6 p.m. The Watoona, who were married May 31. 1906, in Breeders' AMOciation. Rush intends to act u a s man tor rural Interests if elected at the oonstitutlanal convention primary dcctian July K. Principal Named as Recipient of Citizen Award WALLED LAKE —E. V. Ayers, principal of the Walled Lake High Scho(4, has been named “the outstanding citizen" by the Walled Lake Rotary Club fw his leader-, diip in civic affairs and handling of juvenile problems. Ayen will receive kis award ; Jane > at the Rotary Cldi’a aa-aaal aporta baaqaet to be held at the Walled Lake Methodist , Also to be presented by the Rotary Chib that evening will be an; award to the outstanding athlete at the hi^ school. AH senior lettermen and coaches at the acbooi have bwn invited to' the 6:30 p. m- banquet. Hillsdale CoUege football coach Trank (Muddy) Waters wiU bp the Need ‘50 till payday? You can borrow $50 for two weeks for just 7(H The Associates makes loans from $25 to $500 on your signature, furniture or^ar. ■ Qw. tawaa-4 By the year 2000 it is now esti-, ma^ more than 20 million ,ppr- ; ■DOB to the United Sutes wiU be You're always welcome to our money. THI Associates LOAN COMPANY PenHoc: 125-127 N. Saginaw, PE 2-0214 Michigan Mirada Milt, FE 8-9641 Drayton Plains: 4476 Dixie Ifwy., OR 3-1207 laltTWI cSirtcS ■< Sq, mms tolaaeM ■* !• NS. ti|. 19«I Girls WUl Appear Only in^ Street Wear Miss Utica Will Be Chosen June 2 THlRTY-ONEi UTICA ~ PUiji have been completed for the annual Miaa Utica contcft to be held June 2 in the public qseaking room of Utka The oompeutioa is open to (Ingle girls between 17 and 19 years of age vtdjo reside^ the Qty of Utica or in Shelby or Sterling townships. A new format tor regtatraUoa Is bdag foHowed this year, ao-oordlng to Louis MugaJ, oeatest An aspirant fos the crown must write to Miss Utica Contest, P. 0. Box 62. Utica, giving her name, address and grade in school or occupation if she is out of school. For the judging, the contestants will appear on stage in street wear only this year, the committee has decided. Previously the g^ were required to change to formal attire before the interviewing was WILUAM DOEBLKR SU8A.\ UNSDAY Top Pair Named to Reign Over Romeo Graduates ROMEO—A nearly perfect scholastic average of 3.92 has earned Susan Linsday the honor to serve as valedictorian of Romeo Community High School's 1961 graduating class. Named salutatorian was WiUiam Doebler, 18-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Doebler of 369 Chandler St., who compiled a 3J9 average at die school. Sasan, 17, Is the daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Bruce linsday of lint Si-Mile Bond. She is a member of the National Honor Society, the Future Teach- Bird Chapter ta Fete Woman Grand Counsellor of Eastern Star District to Be Honored in Area CLARKSTtW - Mw. Uoyd Sib-ley. grand counsellor of District 5 of the Grand Chapter of Michigan, Order of the Eastern Star, will be honored at a dinner reception given by the^ Joseph C. Bird Chapter of Clarfcston June S. The dinner will be ser\-ed at •:30 p-m. In the dfaiing room of the Oarkslon .Masonic Temple. Later in the evening a program w’ill be presented in the chapter room, according to Mrs. Harold Fitch, worthy matron, who is general chairman. Mrs. Sibley is a past matron of the local chapter; a past president of the Oakland Cbunty Association, ers Association, student council and the Spanish dub. will be Harry Magahay. He will talk te the candidates Indlvodn-any while three eut-ef-tewa Judges screen them on tbdr ba-sis of poise, personality, charm, beauty and public nty. The judges will be Mrs. Oscar J. Sorenson Jr. of Rochester, 'chairman of the Miss Rochestwj contest in 1959 and cochairman in 1960; Maurice Vincent, Mount Clemens newspaperman; and Lne Winbmm, area news editor of The Pontiac Press. Bonds for Rochenlcr Okayed To Begin Sewage Project Rochester GAR Group .! to Attend Memorlol ' .* Memorial Day Program Is Planned at Clifford Cemetery Gfoup to Meet ROCHESTER - A |423,000 expansion program for Rochester's sewage treatment plant ia expected to get under way late next CLIFFCBftO—The Memorial Day program here will take ]dace at 11 a.m. Tuesday In fnmt of the Gifford honor roll. Participants will be the North Branch Band, American Legion and auxiliary. Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts and Blue Star Mothers. Veterans at World Wars I and II CLIFFORD — The annual meeting of the West Burlington Cemetery Association will be held at the cemetery tomorrow at 7:30 p. m. Congress and the Maryland wd Delaware legislatures have pas^ month. Village Manager Paul York said today. The State Municipal Finance commission has notified village officials that it will allow Rochester to borrow $325,000 In revenue bonds to finance the major share of the prciject. The balance sf the money wU come from a federal grant-ln-AUhoogh the federal grant The village manager said the expansion project, which will double the capacity of the treatment will start as toon as the bonds are sold. Revenue from the village's water and sewer systems will be used ) pay oft the bonds. When the project is completed, the plant will have the capacity to treat 2 million gallons of sewage per day, enough to meet the needs of the village for 2 years. ROCHESTER—Members of th^ William R. Everett Relic! I “ No. 227, auxiliary of the < Army of-the Republic. wlQ atU a memorial servloa tor all aokUers and sailors Sunday at the fh%|. Co^regatlonal Church. • After several generation.s of exacts approving restoration of thej York said the village was aa- iperimentation scientists have at Mason-Dixon Line markers; aured of recelvlaf It before the last successfully synthesized chlo- also will be on hand for the event, {through those two states. { revenue bonds are sohi. Irophyll. TTie service starts at 10:45 a.mT Tug Is ReflootHcl DETROIT »-The 35-foot tug Stuart C. was raised Wednesdhy '' from the Rouge river bottom near ' Jefferson and Brennan. The craft, ■ owned by the Michigan-Ontario .. Marine Service Co., sank Tuesfla^ while tied to the end of a barge. .It will be pumped dry, cleaned . land put back Into service. They will pick Miss Utica and her two maids of honor. The trio will reign over the Utica Lkms 15th annual Fourth of July celebration. The queen and her attendants will ride on the Lions Chib float in the July 4 parade which Ixjgins at 10 a.m. and in area parades on subsequent weekends throuj^-out the summer. Miss Utica also will be her city's candidate for the Peach Queen crowm in Romeo early in August. She will be competing with other area queens for the coveted title. In addition to her academic achievements, Susan was captain of the schoors" varsity cheeriead-| ers for two years and served on' the RoiAeo Youth Center Advisory j Board. She also was a member of the{ gills’ basketball team, the Ski Gub, high school band and Band Cbundl. Convicts Youth of Beating Girl Fined $50; Two Others Plead Not Guilty, Will Face Charges ROYAL OAK-Edward Vartabe-dian, 18 of 230M Senaca St.. Oak PLAN ON M8U park, ^'as found guilty of assav Both Susan and William plan to and battery in the beating of enter Michigan State University i5.yeaiM>Id girl here yesterday. next tan. WUliam. a varsity football play-' Vartabedian wia released after er. is a member of the ”R” Gub. I pajlng a $30 fine and $10 court Spanish Gub, the National Honor costs in Royal Oak Municipal Society and the debate and ski; Court. ‘^*“*’*- I Twa ether Oak Park youths. He afteuded Wotveriue Bays* i Stote at East Laaaing aad studied setenre at the Bunraer Institute at Nerthera Miohlgaa Cuilege. Besides their other activities, the ,two students also took part in the junior and senior plays tered pleas of eot guilty. Jack Lahtincn of 24668 Roanoke Road and Raymond Buchanan of 24616 Republic St., both 18. were ordered to appear tor exainliHitian-June 2 at 1.30 p,m. by Municipal Judge Keith ^eenhouta. Of the 143 seniors graduating this June. 34 have maintained a average or better. Ronald Ross and Jean Watte^ son. both 17, were selected as the outstanding students and given The trio was charged with beating Gary Kaiser, 17, of 700 Shepard Road, Birmingham, and his girl compnnien as they sat In a parked car early yesterday morning. Vartabedian admitted to polioe he smashed the window of special award for scholarship and leadership by the Romro Rotary Gub. , Lone Boss ut SMI W. M-Mile Road, naked sitting. The youths allegedly beat up Kaiser and forced the girl, a ward of the Oakland County Juvenile Court, Into their auto after striking her several time|. tourth In the clast academically. Jean, who ranked eighth, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willard Watterson of 7414 West , Wash- OES, and tor five years served as, Ington. parliamentarian for her own chap- ^ others whose scholastic aver-ter and for the Macon Gub in 1936. She was appointed grand com-mitteewoman of the Grand chapter of Michigan, and was further honored this year when the worthy grand nutron appointed her grand counsellor. The officers of the Grand ala^ ter nnd many of Mrs. Sibley's the car in which the couple w’as" 18 Brownies to Get Wing Pins Tonight ages were among the top 10 dude Barbara Dickens. Marilyn Kutchey, Jomph Klbbe. Bonnie' Lowrey. Edith FerreU and Mary _ ^ . 'Af RmU.'TliM TlWkrs urill Lynn Priest. Mon Killed in Warren as Shotgun Goes Off DETROIT (ft - Dale W. Cook. 23. was killed Wednesday night by of Brownie Troop 545 will receive their wing pins tonight and "fiy ' to the rank of scout. The 9. and KFyear-uMu will he presented tliHr eeout pins at 7 p.m. ceremenles at the darkstsn Methodist Church. — ----------- . , For fulfilling the 13 rcfluirements a shotgun in the hands of a friend, needed to become a girl scout, the They were training a hunting dog, youngsters will be rewarded v/-th The local chapter will convene > * in «ub- ^ trip to Camp Sherwood in Last 4:30 P.m.. June 5, for the trans- j Ur**" Warren. -______ prior to the dinner hour police the gun went off when he; Mrs. Warren Navarre is the I*ad-1 There wUl be no regular meet- tripped over a hole ia the ground, er of Troop 545 and Mrs. John Cm»-Ipgs during July and August. I He was not held.______________________rad U bolender.__________________. SPECIAL NOTICE New and Used Car Showrooms and Used Cor Lots in the following listed Oakland County Communities WILL BE CLOSED WED. ond FRI. EVENINGS after May 20th. Fonfioc Wolliid Lak« Rochtstar Cfarktton Lake Orion Oxford Wotorford Utico This policy Is in keeping with Auto Dealers throughout Southeostem Michigan ond being.effected to allow our employees more time to spend with their families. . PONTIAC AUTO DEALERS. ASSOCIATION ..i Exceptional Offer for Homemaker! Win This New WHITE Sewing Machine! YES! YOU MAY WIN THIS NEW WHITE! UnScRoMbLeMeNoW! Below arc 15 Scramblud words whkh oppiy to sowing. For example, the first word WESNGt, becomes "sewing." UnKromble eoch of these words and moil your corrected answers on this coupon to Shows, Inc., of Rochester, or bring your coupon in and place it in d speciol container. THE FIRST CORRECT ANSWER PICKED from the container will be grand WINNERI AN entries must be submitted before 5:00 p.m, Wed., Moy'31, 1961. WESNGI..................CTISTM.................EMDN.................. MOIREREDR. . AMSE....... REPZIP..... OERTUHTNLO. UTCK....... UNEDE .____ ___OOMRMNOA. . LMATAERI.... ---TARES..... . . . CHAMIEN. .THEIW.... . , MHE.... Addr*»s. a*y .State. 100 VALUABLE PRIZES 65-S50.00 While Certificates 35-S25.00 White Certifkoles ir tomilist ur. nul uligibl* to .ntor Contaitl D.ciiion of Judgoi final. Tho Winnor «uU bo | rnerciol Sewing Mochinesl NOTHINO TO BUY TO ENKR CONTISTI Factory Trained Service Mon for Home and Com- FREi Large family tixe Upright Food Freexer with the purchase of any 14 cu. ft. General Electric, PhMco, RCA Whirplool, Gibson NO MONEY DOWN 36 MONTHS TO RAY FREE General Electric Dryer with the purchase of this General Electric Automatic Washer. Giant 12-lb. capacity, all porcelain interior, fully deluxe, 2 speed, 2 cycle. 1961 Filter-Flow with 2 spin speeds, 2 wash speeds, water saver for small, overage or large omounts of hot water. Also fabric guid«> NO MONEY DOWN -36 MONTHS TO PAY FREE 1961 Arkansas Traveler fibreglos runabout with new 1961 Evinrude motor to be given dwiqr free. Nothing to buy to enter contest. Simply fill out a blank and complete In ID words or less “I like te shop In R4>chester because .. Drawing Saturday, May 27, 1961, at 3:00 P.M. Te be given.awsqr liy Rochester Merchants during Rochester Thrift Days. 336-33BMainSt. Rochester Asiaaa B« HBsasI Ban d BaftaM OL2-7341 0L2-4N1 . FREEPARKIN6 Q f R OCHE S TSR '-xj THE PONTIAC PRESS. THUKSDAV. MAY 25. 1961 MysteiyMan Tells ol Offer lYou on'13 Wanted’list! and Psychiatrists | Pontiac State Hospital will pUty ADAM AMES By Lou Fine $1,000 for Slaying AU In fun. the Centennial Keystone Cops today posted a list of the IS most wanted persons In Ptmtlac and promised at least some arrests by the time the Kangaroo Court convenes for the first time at 10:30 am. Saturday. Tberell be a set ef stacks and a portable jail on hand diirinf the proceedings on the courthouse steps at Saginaw and Huron Streets, Just in case some sentenoes are handed Ftmb Out Neus Wires deal, be said. ic state s Ins^ Others Include Thomas P. Oillotte. a Pontiac lawyer; s identhy "*^J**^;* Pontiac State Hospital Walter Olddlngs, city treasurer; L. Clare Utley, president of ously had been Cutting Tools & Supplies Inc.; Robert A. Oliver, president of peeled to be eoiied to the • today. Meanwhile. Watsons former t* MparOGS codefendant. Mrs. Ndle Lassiter. Uxg65 waited in Jennings Memorial Hoo-|. Ce^»l♦Mrrnr^ fo pital jSiTuSlerTo loma State 111 oOUtillUJia lU Pontiac branch manager of Associates Discount Corp. Hospital. Defy Segregation NEW YORK t»* - A Negro leader urged Negroes today to defy segregation In Southern airtine and railrxMd terminals as wdl as bus stations. A Michigan Supreme Court rulii«. handed doan Wednesday, settled a dispute between two Wayne Ooimty Court yidgw about what should be done with the beautiful blonde grandmother. RASHID ITWELD here to 750 ordered her committed. Gets 6-Month Probation Donald D. Bland, 28. of 203 W. ' _ Strathmore Ave., today pleaded guilty to reckless driving before Municipal Judge Cecil McCallum. James Fanner, nahonal. direc-i Congress of Racial I OUR ANCESTORS By Quincy Circuit Judge Carl Weidman accused Rashid of administering a "quick kirtd of justice,” and issued an injunction barring trarKfer. and FUrmer. one of the 27 "freedom' riders" jailed Wednesday in Jack- orandtan to CCXtE headquarters from Montgomery. Ala., prior to schtsluled mother hesring in • -wse. Tbr Ugb rMrt apbeid RaahM. uBow-Arrow Set Gone Goonan said be backed out on the deal with Watson and instead the theft of a bow and arrow | "split a bottle of wWAy" with get valued at SllO from the Osk-La^ter and "then I went bark tO| land County Sportsmen's Oub was ; Tennessee" , reported to sheriffs deputies yes-j Goonan said he was approached'tn^iy by Jack Hlmeisen, 6100 in Tennessee by Roy C. Hicks, one! Willies Lake Road. Waterford of three Chattanooga, Term., men'Township, currently serving life terms in -------- ^ ’■ Alaska and the now-famous Mackinac Straits I ■"* highways and and nm It I Intematlon- lor Mrs. LMter. ' al Jtok at Sault Ste. Marie. "It’s not,that we mistrust you. King John. It's j more businesslike to get things in writing: " Goonan testified that he came toi Detroit to work out detaila and' that Watson was tiw piottar. BOARDING HOUSE To Arraign Brothers in I Three Pontiac brothers charged with breaking and entering in the nightime were bound over to Qr-1 ctrit Court for arraignment Mon-, day following examination before Muncipal Judge Cecil .MrCalhim yesterday Arenaed la the barglary at tbe MoMe Ledge. SU Mt. nemewi tU., May IS. are Oairwee kcHb- ’ aer. Si. of SM Mt. Clrmean St. aad bh two brotheew. I.arry. 17. and Aatboey. 19, both of M Forest St. . Bond was raised from $2,000 to $5,000 on each of the three defendants. Larry Scribner already (aces sentencing on a charge of at-i tempted burglary next Monday.; He had admitted before Circuit; Judge Stanton G. Dondero trying' to break into a house at 369 S East Blvd. on March 30. MSUO Saluted bySwamsonm Michigan Week Gov. Swrainson today saluted; Michigan State University Oak-! land on the occasion of Michigan I Week. I OUT OUR WAY ‘TUt liMtitutton of lemming oocnplem mn Important podtlen in our state's ednea-Honal myatem.” Swalammi said In a telegram receiwd this mera-ing at MSUO. "The dedication of MSL'O’s students is heartening and gives promise of an even greater Michigan in years to come." he said. Swainson expressed regrets that he was unable to visit the campus during Michigan Week because of other commitments. Cited for Contempt in Lassiter Dispute DETROIT » — Circuit Court Judge Carl M. Weideman today the prosecutm-'s appellate division, fw ctoitempt of court for refusing to discuss a judicial dispute over Lassiter. HL Mrs. Nelle Lassitei Ttwina had refused to say any-thing about the case except that the Michigan >.5upreme Court issued an order Wednesday hairing Weideman from conducting' hearing into the commitment Mrs. Lassiter to a state mental '”W. SOMETHNSimS EIUXBa>UP a THWoenAiu A SOMBTHINS AWFUL'enu ..JN ftETRSSPECT... ^1 . nU9l WUUtlwa w 9|nssis -• Joseph Goonan Claims ing or the Michigan AsaodaUon of f< Wohon PromiKKi Cor.iN^^ ..d I Over 100 psychiatrists, clinical 'doctors and their wives will begin! registration at 9 a m.,/and then Mt. assemble to hear Dr. Walter H. ♦ W-. S ' “»> toclute »«K .KllT n.m« in 01d.nd Cunt, Gordon Watson promised him . law enforcement and the general public Is invited downtown $1,000 and a blue automobUe to The remain^ of the day wMI ^ dealer PaI^in (BiUI be devoted to lectoied^ a bnatoMi THE BERRYS By Carl Grubwt None of the spectators will be arrested. Just the “big guys." At the top of the wanted list are. ^ ^ ^ The wwnen will see a talent show ; Circuit Judge Frederick C. Zlem. Prosecutor Oeor^ F. -- »- u Fla t ivt performed bv patients and be en- Taylor. Sheriff Prank W. Irons. Acting Pontiac Police (Jhlef at T'' McCallum. Watson s murder and conspiracy ^ tilm. TV ★ ★ ★ tnal as the state's ’'mysteiyiPr°e^''.^.P[^^ witness ’ abt^s previously had oeen Cutting 1 i Dr. Robert Braun, clinical direc-; Oliver Motor Sales Inc. MlcMgas State Police deter- 1,0^ and Dr. John Hsu. assistanti ★ ★ ★ tives who weM * Ae LaasNer jcUiiical director ol male ' Also Harry J. Woodman, manager of OMTC Federal Em-1 slaylBg lasestigattoa «• .re in charge of program arrange Brewer. manager of Pontiac 1 __________________ j branch of the Secretary of State's Office; Floyd Baker, Pon- ‘ ,tlac distributor for Coca-Cola Co.; and Oaylor L. Herrington, ^ SO H^Me,PETE«-,ll I DIOi?rSAi"A WOftP/^ rWHEN MY WIFE , TWREATENTOTO COmi driver - safety Iranian priests of the ancient Zoroastrian religion wear masks He was placed on six months | while tending uicred fires in their probation and ordered to attend| temples. f MB8B /Np^LEk UTTlRaJVBV IMRKHMe----- By V. T. HamM» w & DIXIE DUGAN By McEvoy and Striabal CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner Twr'» oopi w» roor-Xm mul-tmt mu* aeiM PgSfT» M TF mi»Ty Xeo TFJMC MP TMOM M» ROM)09STOPM-nropposiTathRECTeN ^ ^ OPTWPII HMM-Mltroez CMIOgTaU'fMTM’CMti MORTY MEEKLE By Pick Cavalli cSSl^l GRANDMA By Charles Knhn DONAU? DUCK By Walt Disne >1 THE POXTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1061 THREE COLORS THIRTV-TRRBE New Hero Sandwich Suits Family Picnic Memorial Day would be a line time to Introduce the family to a new glamorou* version of the popular "Hero” sandwich. This dinner sandwich always boasts a hearty meat filling. The one pictured at the right adds slices of tomato and sweet onion, cucumbers and lettuce. But first the French bread Is spread with cottage cheese, mustarli and chopped chives. The top slice of bread Is omitted In deference to the ladles. ★ ★ ★ May 30 Is the unofficial opening of the picnic season. Whether you will serve "Hero” sandwiches or some other food outside, your meal can be a gay and carefree one If you do some planning and preparing a^ead of time. HeadleSs Hero 1 l-lb. iMf French breed 1 cup emeu curd eotUie cheese a Meipoons prepared mustard Choppml cUvee 1 1-ot. slices User sausaga Split bread lengthwise. Reserve top for later use. Blend cottage cheese and mustard unUl smooth, (Add 1 tablespoon milk. If desired, to thin cheese to spreading consistency.) Add chives and spread on bottmn bread slice. Layer with meats, onion slices, lettuce and tomato. Garnish with cucumber slices. Cut In 4 with sharp knife and serve as knife and fork sandwich. — ★ ★ ★ Pass additional cottage cheese or Thousand Island dressing, If desired, to top the “Hero.” Serves 4. (Counting calories? One dinner-size serving of the "Hero” counts only about'OS calories complete with French bread! Use a low-calorle dressing if additional topping is desired. Add a generous wedge of melon and ice tea for dinner on less than 500 calories.) Sesame Franks and Midget Heroes are smaller versions of the jumbo sandwich above. If you’re traveling to a picnic site, take along the Ingredients and let your guest assemble their own. Sesame Franks | fc. tkialPM fr«nkfurt*r« (g-lOl Mtitfd butter ' PMkage refrigerator bitculti Sesame uedi Prepared blue' cheeu spread Split frankfurters almost through and spread with prepared cheese spread. Shape each biscuit ^around a whole frank to completely cover it. (Dough will be thin.) Brush wlthi. melted butter and roll In sesame seeds. Toats on sticks over charcoal until biscuit is golden brown. Or bake in oven according to Instructions on biscuit package. Makes 8 to 10. Calorie count: Approximately 265 per Sesame Frank. ★ ★ ★ Midget Heroes For each Midget, allow: Bake Herb Corn Bread for Lobster Supper Shaved lettuce Salt and pepper Oil and vinegar dreuing Sound the dinner bell! It's time to eat out-of-doors! Warm weather is here at last and there is great migration to the outdoors at 1 thin alic* American cheei With sharp knife, split bun horizontally to make three | dinner time. Miioh entertaining is layers. Spread bottom with pickle relish; add one slice salami,!the patio, porch or pwl cheese and second salami slice. Add middle bun section. relaxed entertain- with tomato slice and shaved lettuce. Season to taste Dash'^^ ***** *** of us so enjoy. Here’s .Ith .ln«« »d oil ^»ln,. (Tok. . up from mUoronU and dash dressing neatly from a plastic squeeze bottle.) I nine air Cover with bun top. j grees F.) about 20 minutes. CooL Open comer folds of pan for easy cutting. Cut in 6 pieces; split hori-zontally; toast over grill or under broiler. Brush with melted butter, which has been combined with tarragon or dill. Makes 6 servings. Monosodium Glutamate ★ ★ ★ Calorie count: Approximately 260 calories per Midget. French Toast and Bacon Are Good Anytime ‘ Everyone enjoys bacon at breakfast. During the summer months, bacon combined with eggs can serve as a main course for li eon or supper, too. Bacon and Savory French Toast Nine slices bacon >i teaspoon salt 1 egg 1 teaspoon sugar 2 tablespoons milk 3 slices bcead Pan fry bacon slowly. Do not overcrowd. Turn frequently. Remove When the desired doneness is reached. Drain on absorbent ^per and keep hot while making French Toast. Pour off bacon drippings and measure % tablespoons of drippings into skillet. Beat egg with salt, ^ sugar and milk. Coat slice of bread with egg mixture. Brown on both sides in hot bacon drippings. Add more drippings to skillet, if necessary, to crisp and browm the toast,evenly. Serve at Makes 3 servings. Egg Nests and Baron One pound bacon 4 eggs Salt and pepper 4 slices buttered toast Cook bacon according to directions on package. Separate eggs (keep each yolk whole and separate). Beat whites until stiff but not dry. Season with salt and pepper. Make a ’’nest” of whites each slice of toast. Drop an egg yolk into the center of each. Bake In a slow oven (325 degrees F.) for about 15 minutes. Serve hot with bacon. Makes 4 servings. Brush Fowl. With Lemon Indoor and outdoor barbecw chefs will love this flavorful broiled chicken with its pungent lemony aitmia while broiling. The sauce is easy to prepare and adds a well browned coating to the delicious finished chickens. Select brMlers weighing not more than 2's pounds. Allow half a broiler for each serving. Wash the birds or wipe with a wet cloth. Dry thoroughly. If: they are quick frozen or Very cold, bring to room temperature before broiling. Barbecued Lobster Tails Vegetable Kabobs Tossed Green Salad Herb Com Bread Squares Fresh Fruit Plate Cookies Coffee All of the preparation for this delicious dinner can be' done in the house, then carried to the outside and cooked on the grill or barbecue. Lobster tails are licious cooked over charcoal are the vegetable kabobs. These kabobs consist of fresh mush- rooms, green pepper chunks, cauliflower pieces and wedges of tomato. Bake the com bread in the jnoK JO aSv){OBd e 8uisn u^qsiix favorite easy com bread mix-the kind that is mixed in the i^astic bag. Now brush it with butter spiced with tarragon or dill toast to perfection over the charcoal. Dip piece in barbecue sauce before^ ^ broiling. Preheat broiling compartment; place pieces of chicken on a rack, skin side down. Place under heat, with highest part of the bird not less than 4 inches the source 'of heat. Broil about 45 minutes, basting frequently with sauce Knd turning to brown lAtmon Barbecue Sauce Vi cup % cup water or coup Mock Melt butter; combine dry ingredients and add to melted butter: stir until well blended. Re-ipove from heat. Combine remainipg ingredients and gradually stir into the butter mixture. Return to heat and cook, stirring constantly, until thick and smooth. Makes about 1-1/3 cups, or enough for two broiled chickens. Coitee Syrup Makes Cool Frosty Treats LEMON BAMBCVE - Bnishiqg the chicken you cook on the outdoor grlB with a lemoh barbecue sauce gives the fowl a delicious flavor It will give the chicken a ddkata Im Serve with French bread warmed over the coals. Herb Cam Bread Squares 1 pkf. «MX eoTB bresd iMi ^ cup Bilik Less fat is needed to cook French toast if you bake it in a hot oven. Grandmom will remember Meat Loaf Surprise, made by burying twp hard-boiled eggs in the loaf. Your meat loaf can offer an additional surprise. If MSG goes into the meat mixture (1 teaspoon per “ of meat), it lends the loaf a robust "beefy” flavor, makes the meat seem juicier.' MSG brings out and blends the season-iiMS, too. MSG has no flavor of Its emphasizes the flavor other foods. Baked French Toast Has Delicious Flavor America Has Monopoly on Sugar Maple Trees Baked French Toast % tcaipoon wit I SUOM day-old bread V< cup oielted butur Beat eggs, stir in milk and salt, bur into flat, shallow di.sh. Dip each slice of bread in mixture, turning to allow both sides to take up liquid. Place on well-buttered cookie sheet and bi-u.sh tops of slices with melted butter. Bake in hoi oven, 5M degrees for 8 minutes. Turn alices nnd bake S more minutes until golden brawn. Serve hot with butter and honey or syrup. Variations: A teaspoon of grated orange rind added to butter makes a delicious topping or slices may be sprinkled with maple or brown sugar. Maple Syrup is as American the Red Man. reports Professor Stephen H. Spunr, University oi Michigan forester on U. OF M. broadcasting service—WUOM. There are no extensive “maple ishes” in Europe. The secret of the sugar bush was known to the American Indian and is one of the things we inherited from him. Maple trees are called sugar bu.sh because of the old northern Custom of referring to undeveloped, uncut or unmanugod woodlands as "the bush,” he says. ’The sweet syrup is manufactured in ,the leaves of the hard maple tree during ttie growing season and -stoi-ed over the winter the roots as a reserve food supply to help the tree start next spring. When ihe soil warms, water is absorbed and rises through the tree, carrying Ihe dissolved sugars with it. The maple sap is easily tapped and boiled down into syrup and sugar, says Spunr. Michigan along with a few othei northern states is a prime maple syrup producer. Only the northern maple tree produces sip in sufficient quantities for commercial profit, says he. Maple syrup is a high cost product because it requires about 35 gallons- of sap to produce one gallon of syrup. Offer Selecfion of Cheeses With Fruit Lamb Casserole a Real Delicacy Few homemakers have time for elaborate cooking during spring cleanup. Yet mealtimes roll ’round Just as regularly and the clan always pops up as hungry as ever. New Taste for Peas in Pineapple Sauce If this is the condition In your hwne now-, or soon will be, you will be intere:^ted in this blue cheese lamb casserole. It is the kind of main dish that you can get ready early and store in the refrigerator until baking time. Shell 2 pounds fresh peas. Turn into a iCi-inch skillet with % cup water and Vz teaspoon salt. Cover tightly and bring to a boil. Lower heat and simmer just until tender. Push peas to one side: add 2 tablespoons butter to pan. Turn up heat and when bubbly add ^ cup drained pineapple chunks, Vt teaspoon grated lemon rind and 1 dewey-fresh fniit salad watermelon bowl, ah exciting flavorful new broad, a tray of tempting cheeses and a cool bev-ei)t^ . . . this fine combination is delightfully low in calorics and high in protein. To make the picture-pretty sal- from remaining cjus. I'^“It^rmelon and cut into bite-size pieces. Cinnbine with other fruits, Heat oven to hot (425 degrees F.) Put milk and egg into bag of mix. Squeeze upper part of bag to force air out. Close top of bag by holding tightly between thumb and index finger. With bag resting on table, mix by working bag vigomuly with fingers. (Mix about 40 sec-onds or until egg is completely Carrot Haters Will Succumb Squeeze bag to empty batter into special aluminum foil pan contained in package. (Do not grease Bake in preheated o ad. a scalloped wafcrmelon shell at bottom oi slice. Cut large scal-is filled with a combination of j lops in lop, edge of watermelon fresh fruits and the bowl arranged! on salad greens or washed waxyj Homovc leaves an dsurrounded ten of frosted grapes. ^ if ! except grapes. Spoon into w'atcr- ^ j . , . „ . , . melon bowl. Arrange sugar frosted Gouda Api^t Bread, the second gp^p^g around bowl. Yield: 10 to member of this cool party trio, is |2 servings, a welcome new taste treat . . .' a winning flavor combination of tangy dried apricots and sweet teaspoon lemon juice. Heat stir a minute or two, then bine with peas- Add 1 chopped pimento, if desired, and season to taste with addition^ salt and pepper. Yield: 4 portions. NOTE: When vegetables are cooked in heavy pans with tight fitting covers they need only a small amount of cooking water. The casserole will maintain your reputation as a skillful cook, too, for even though it is a time-saving dish, it has the elements of a gurnet entree due to the addition of American blue cheese, le Cheese Lamb Casserole ft cup butter I STMn pepper sarltc wit ----------ibled Americaa blue cbeew ibout 3 ounces) Brown lamb well in butter. Add green pepper and cook gently untU pepper is tender. Add noodles, tomatoes, milk and seasonings. Pour mixture into a l*s-quart casserole. Bake at 350 degrees about 20 min-ites. Then sprinkle blue cheese on top and bake about 10 to 15 minutes longer. Makes 6 servings. It’s easy to fall into the habit of preparing vegetables in a few mild Gouda cheese. TTiis fine bread is sa flavorful and moist, butter or other high - calorie spreads are not needed. An attractive tray of cheeses rompletea the .menu . . . Ameii-ean-mnde Bnby Ooudn with taiste good, they are apt to become monotonous if repeated too fre-| quently. j If your vegetables seehi to need; Weight wafehei-s pirfer the lift, now is thf time to analyze; American-made Baby Gouda . a"d the situation. You’ll find more va-'Edam cheeses riety will add interest. Here’ new way to glamorize carrots. ! Their flavor is enhanced with golden pineapple chunks and dill. Pineapple-Dilled Carrots During these warm relaxing summer months, parties are put together at a moment's notice. At such times, no one exjiects extravagant refreshment—just something quick and cool, please, like these three delicious coffee frottys! Coffee Cooler Synip V« cup laataat eotlw lb cup hot vsUr' 1 cup* dark corn ayrup W tawpoon- aalt 1 taaapooaa aanlUa Dissolve coffee in hot water. Blend in corn syrup and salt. Simmer 5 minutes. Remove from heat, "iiffisraisarfflrv! closely covered. Makes 2 cups. in refrigerator. Coffee-Almohd Sinidae: Pour coffee synqi over coffee Ice cream (about 3 tablespoons per serving). Garnish with salted almonds. Coffee-Ire CreAm Sodar Pour 14 cup coffee syrup into each tall I. Add 3 tablespoons heavy cream. Add a little ice-cold sparkling water; stir. Put 1 or 2 scoops coffee iro cream into eadi flaas. Fill glasaes with sparidirig water, itiRing. gratly to mix. H tmapoon lalt 3 tableapooDi butter or mamarti cup canned pineapple chunks ■ii teupodo dried dill Brush or pare carrots; cut into 3-inch strips about % inch thick. Turii into a 10-inch skillet with water and salt. 0>ver tightly af^ bring to a boil. Lower heat and simmer until carrots are tender-:risp, about 5 to 10 minutes. Trim ami cut onions Into thin dingonal slices. Remove cover from pnn (there will only be abont a tablespoon of liquid left). Push earrota fo oho Ode of skUlet. Add butter to pan, turn up beat and when bubbly Sift flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda and salt into mixing bowl. Stir in cereal, apricots and cheese. Combine buttermilk, egg axfi shortening. Add to dry in-gi^ients and stir just until all particles are moistened. Pour into greased loaf pan-OjtSjt 3 inches). Bake in moderate oven (3.50 degrees F.) until done, about 1 hou -. Yield: 1 loaf. minute or two. ■ ' Then gently combine with c^ rots. Seasm with' additional lialt and pepper, if de.sired. Yield: portions. Michigan is at the very top n;: thmally in state-owned public land. and nearly every bit of it is open Ibr honting, fishing, camping and igneral recreatiaif--and for pro-doctioa of timber, oil and minerals which figure importantly in the state’s economy. chualti** *’'*•*’ " cunned pineapple 1 cup frwh Mrawherry halvei Qit a thin slice- off of bottom (end) of watmnelon so bowl will 1 upright and level. Cut red itteat lh>m 'Inside of Wateirmelon leaving a Mnch layer b( red meat mOH IN PROTEIN - A perfect cool-off termehm- for yard or patio luncheons—Watermel Frait Salad Bowl, Gouda Apricot Bread, aiid an attractive tray of assorted Amerii cheeses. Coolii« . ; . delicious . . , htg tein . ^ . delightfidly low in calories. \ r- A, - J .fell/, THIRTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY> MAY 25. 1961 Riolled Oats Extend Ground Beef Patties EASY nUNCH IMSH — SauH«e nMde or brouKht Into Mlchl-gan must conform to • high ttendanl. It muat bo all moat without any flOer or organ meats incIwM. Bake some at this good sausage In a ^icy sauce for a delicious brunch dish. Brunch Entertaining Is Easy With Sausage rolled oats are Inchidad la foods donated by the U. S. Department ol Agriculture. For OUni, they're pfontifol; tatmers grow hondreds o< milUooa ol bwli-da «rt fonu every year. Other rsa-aom: they taste good; foey can bo used far any meal ol the day; and be oaed to stretch more axpmatn foods to make one pound ot moat do the wait of two. * a One example of thU la SOOTCH MEAT PATTIES. Cwnblne % cup of ground beef, fa cup rolled Ifa table^oona dry sUm milk, 1/S cqp water and 1 teaspoon salt. Mix theee thli«a together and flatten tado several very thin paMea. Put tat hot frying pan with a Utfle tat or oil and brown on both aides. Add 1 cup water, fa cup chopped cnkM, fa cup chopped cetory and fa cup chopped green pepper if you like. Shake on a 1““* “•* Cooking Has Own Special Language Whether you're a kitchen veteran Cover the flying pan and cook slowly for 90 minutes. Blend 1 tablsepoon flour with a little water and atlr Into pan. COok until gravy haa thidnnad, etliTing once tai a while. Makee enough lor 4 people. * * * Everyone likea eatmeal for breakfast, but If you want to change the taste a little, add fa cup of raisina to 3 cupa of rolled oata bMore you cook It. cook book, you may need to l»uah the duet oft your cooking vocabulary now ai^ then. Here le a list of Items and tlpa with cuUnary magic In mind. It'a a taaa! That meana to mbe by Uftli« li«redlanta and letting them fall back bito the bowl. Try a roU-toaa motion on a grean Mdad. using the salad fade and < _ Go to the bottom of tbe bowl with one while going up, and over, wttb the other. Marlaatlag Adde Plaver, and In the caae of meats, helps tenderlie too. Let food stand In a liquid, usually one with a food acid (at hunon Juloe) and an oU base. Ttane In tha lahrbMde depends on fiBvur and tendamaai daalred. ansar maana to eOok in liquid low boat. Hw mixture doesn't boO, Just bubblof In a lazy way. Sbpntartaii foods aueb aa beef stew dtvriopa flavor, maksa meat fork-ttndsr. You aImmor,spaghetti saueo to moUow tho flavor. I now Ingraditnts to a mixture thaCa beaten till light. Then air bubblat that make it wont bo loot C^lt down thro^ the mlxbiro with a spoon, whisk, or forii; go aercMa the bottom of tho bowl, up and over, dose to tho lurfaeo. Always New Cooks for Old Recipes Every once In a while there appears a recipe of such merit it be- Whoat amut, tha fungus that Mta wbaat growtri millions of dollars a year. Is expected brought under chemical control, dish is Tom CUpo Caaacrole. Because it Is delectable, economical, and easy to make, If you’ve never made this virtuous dish, here Is how to proceed; Use 2 cans tuna, the drilcate kind packed tat vegetable olL Mix the tuna with 1 can condensed cream of mushroom soup, fa cup milk, and 1 tablespoon diced ptmlento. TUm into a Ifa quart casserole, sprinkle with 1 cup crushed potato chips or com chips, and bake in a moderate over (350 degrees) for fa liour. Serves 4. Toost Cupi Hold Eggs to Bo Cooked In Oven Baked Eggs in Toast Cupa la a good breakfast Idea. It’S easy enough ftw tbe family good enough fqr guests. It’s also a dandy way to get the kids to eat lat breakfast egg. it * n nrst, trim the cruets from bread dices. Press tbe sUces into well-greased muffin cups and brush with butter or mnrgnrine. Break ______ In the center of each slice of bmad. Season with salt and pepper; then bake In a moderate oven (350 degrees) tmtU the eggs are ast, about 15 minutes. If you like, sprinkle the eggs with grated Parmesan, cheddar or American cheese before baking. Bnineb li a form of entertaining easy on the boatam and goads alike. For the bisO mother, a midweek brunch does not conflict wNh evenii« or weekend pbms for the family. And tor tbe working gfai Satuni^ naoming or ftmday-aflar-church are convenient tbnaa to have friends In. Brunch la also an easy meal to plan, built aroUDd c two main dishes and an ample supply 4 teaspoon ground mace and 1 tablespoon water and stir into the —miirfiiri. 1 tnj? minutes until tbs juice is deafntflSR from heat. Add 1 tableapoon butter or margarine and fa teaspoon - pure vaniUa extract. Ifa qfa raaserolp. Arrange frank-^ lurterf^n top of'KWs. r% maining pineapp^ slices in hal^ place on franks. Insert 2 cloves in I each pineapple half. Pour syrup jover all. toke at 375 degrees 45 minutes or until bubbly. Makes 5-serving#. * w ♦ Bean* ’n’ Beef S ikklnpaMii kulur 1 Ik. (raimd kM( 1 pkf. onioo Mup ,mli S tup ■»t»r 2 Ukicwpw prtpkrtd iKMUrd I UMpaoD* elder vioeter 1 tMapooa* krowB n|tr 1 1-lk. 11 Ok. eMt fckktd kttni Tile.. .. k..o. Heat butter and brown the beef| n a large skillet. Mix thoroughly rith all other ingredients exce|d| bacon. Pour into 2 qt. casserole. Garnish with bacon slices, bake 30: minutes at 400 degrees. Crisp bacon under broiler. Serves 12. Perennial Favorites A platter of deviled eggs is always a good "extra" to have at a ~RgBW»e|buflet -aapper;-Gawiisb -eaclk __ with olive, pimiento. anchovy or parsley spri^, and surround with crisp greens. Dsm o( IskMco Mix all Ingredients together bii saucepan. Heat through. Serve over^ buns or in a cradle of mashed potatoes. Makes 4 servings. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 25, 1961 PIONEER Michigan Made Pure Granulated TWO COLORS food Town and Poopla's Feed Merkett Open Mendey Until 9 P.M, Closed All Doy TUESDAY . . . Decoration Doy! ttsjJAY, MAY 'iS, I’JCi_ m WWW ____ THIRTY-FI\^ SAL? DAYS-THURS , MAY 25th THRU MON., MAY 29th 1961 ' WITH COUPON > I* SUGAR I^choiceA IWbim Peter's Tasty-Skinless HOT DOGS FARM FRESH CHICKEN PARTS LEGS WINGS •Aog.nd It- It- «i^r $tir CAMED HIM CHICK PICK A-PART ' 3 Drumsticks ■■ .STWght '«•' l<|l|C 3»rwth vQlb. ROASTING CHICKENS . . .u. 39e U. S. NO. 1 NEWI FLORIDA, SEBAGO I POTATOES I """ I SLICED BACON Red-Ripe-WHOLE Donviess Pork Catlets “^69 “^39' TOP FROST - Fr«**" SHc*A SEALTEST POPSICLES ad Ert LNOUn-FtP**" MEBCMCIIEN Tree Sweet LEMONADE Minute Murch's GRAPE DRINK POTATO CHIPS 39 FOR.“"‘-f SilMMLR MENUS DOLE-HAWAIIAK FRUIT COCKTAIL TALL NO. 303 CAN 9 With Coupon No. 303 Con 19c Without Coupon PEOPLE’S m food town THIRTY-SIX t"ir THE PONTIAC- PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1961 SmilM9« Ff • Swiimtf of Fihi "CIIM I U.W j__________ 11^ _ i ■ WTi.OW TP«li TTr« NTLON TriilLKSS tl«» mihace and Mfaty UyMTinpay FactM* Ntw Traads SILVERTOWN Quoli«y Tmttr CaormiaM *9.95 Pr*a*rllna««tT RatraadaMa Tifa «.70>1S. 7.50a14 MOUNTIO FRIi DELCO Fim ktttiT ClMck U» at taaf raw kaltary. Wa Fil«s for Con-Con Roco GRiWD RAPIDS (iP-Republican ational conmitteciiMn and fernitr j Michigan audHor gmaral and itate Sen. John B. Martin ol Grand Rapids filed a petition BAKED roil—There can't be any flshprmen more avid than the ones in Michigan. Some pretty good eating comes out of our lakes and streams. Cut your fish into serving pieces BE-(X>RE baking and serving is a simple matter. Aluminum foil means no dishwashing. EASY TERMS “MOTO-MOWER” Cut Large Fish in Pieces Bake in Aluminum Foil 'of heavy duty foil, securing it by crimping to the foil in the bottom boating one of our moat|each serving with additional II popular recreational activities, i tomato sause and a strip of bacon, [whole famil.es are becoming mm[wiftcn! And malty women who. POWER MOWERS':^*''' cornpUcated . - , , fish cookery task than following Mom by ;the directions on a package of frosen fillets, are now confronted |wlth cooking fresh fish right out water; sometimes great Icatches of them. Retsty Mewen . . $ 37.9$ ap Keel Typss .....$ 99.9Sap Ridhif Mewws ..9199.95ap Year Cfcaks af 11 Medals As Place in a moderately hot oven 375 degrees and bake for one hour. Remove the foil and continue baking until fish and bacon Is lightly browned and the fish can be flaked with a fork. Serve with the 'for Republican nomination as delegate to the constitutional convention from Kent County's 17th Senatorial District. a Wednesday Oregon Child DiM of Injuries BATTLE CREEK (B - Eighb-yaaMld Marcia .Hook of rural Oowlint diad at Battle Creek Com-mui^ty HoaiRtal Wcdneaday Ml traffic injuriea suffered Tuesday aftemocn. ite police aaid Mie was riding her father Hemuui when their car ran off a Barry County road about 10 milea aouth of Hastinga ' struck a tree. Restaurants Do It Take a tip from the many restaurants that now serve instant maahed potatoes. Besides saving labor, new instant mashed potatoes keep their pure white color and Buriy texture much longer than the hand-perled kind. If dinner ia delayed. keep instant mashed potatoes in a coverwl pan or casaerole over low heat. When you're ready to sene, your mashed potatoes will still taste fresh. YOUR REST RKE MIY! —S^cJuilLiul For Boyi and QiHi And how lucky they are! The flavor and moist sweetness of caught fish, pan-fried, broiled or baked, is one of the great treats of eating. You'll want to start compiling recipes for pre-| paring fish. Here is one given usj by Mr. Guy W. Hughes. FIxccutivcj Director of the Outboard Gub of! America, an ardent fiKierman and an export camp cook, for pre-l paring a large waUeye pike or musky. * * * Thcw are fiah which he catches at Leuch luUce near Walker, Minnesota. We suggest you serve this Idelidous baked fish with fresh peas and strawberries from nearby (arms tor a meatiorable feast. .Baked Xargp Valleya Pike nr . Northern Pike, or Musky (This is an excellenf way to prepare a large fish and to avoid the necessity of cuttint the fiah when serving it). Remm'e scales, clean the flak, and reoMVo hand and taO and Ihw. rut the flak tkrongk Into t to 9-laek-aide pieces, areoid- Poached eggs atop buttered spin-deiicious raisin-tomato sauce thatlach make a nutritious luncheon forms in the pan. jplate. HAWAII comes to your party when you serve Hawaiian Punch. Rosy-red or sunshine-yellow, Hawaiian Punch brings the enchantment of the tropics right into your home. Grocers have Hawaiian Punch in big fruit-juice cans, ready for you to chill and serve. Hawaii does indeed come to your party when you serve Hawaiian Punch I $2995 each piece so that the is on lop. Reason with $11.95 iro>rr and fill with with Tri«vclst Osluss . . . Sidowtik Ilka* with Traisisf Wktsit $17.95 up celery and a Httle sage or pot S3 Down or Trodo-In Ooliror* ‘fy "cnsoning. Close the opeirii N'ure with toolhpiek ' skewer. , SPECIALS ■ Cksir* — arris Line a large pan with heavy duty aluminum Pour tomato on the foil to a depth of about M inch and add H cup or more of aeedless white raisins. Chsirt, 4 for*....$10.99 Arrange the fish over this and top Dry-Iron ...............$9.95 Studsnt Lama Csffoomstic - U ni vorMi, capacity, isimoriihlo ..$13.95 Osoalifios iimiioef r^pgredieRt All on Hand If you're faced with a busy, busy day, simply put together a hearty Dried Beef Casserole” in thie morning -r- or the night before. Combine such family favorites as dried beef, mdaty ripe oHvea, tomato eoup and noodles with a few simple seasonings. Top with grated dieese. Cool, cover and refrigerate until hall an hour before dinnertime. Result is a delicious, quick and easy main dlsh-Tiy ripe oUvea, too, as pepper-uppers for soups, meat sauces, sandwhicb fiUingi and salads. Dried Beet Casaerole •a ehopMd r tuil powder vtMffwr Rdtier c 1 (4^ m. j I' Combine undiluted tomato aoup, olives, chili powder, vinegar, butter and finely-shredded beef. Heat thoroughly. Pour over noodles and mix well. Turn into shallow baking dish and top with cheese. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.I bout 20 minutes, until hcatet Makes 5 to 6.servings. v W«two FRESH-LEAN GROUNDBEEF OPEI DAILY Rnd SUNDAY Wrtn UMILI dllO wnUHlFR,oy^YandSATURDAY9A. M. ton P. M. DOZ. or 3c aedi LARGE SUDUSS GRAPEFRUIT Westowi Chflfefl ROUND STEAK 59*- WESTOWN CHOICE U. S. No. 1 POT SKINLESS ROAST HCTNCS U.J9C 3u,|9c OPEN ALL DAY DECORATION DAY T-Bone, Sirloin, Rib, Round or Swiss Steaks cqc YOUR CHOICE ...... Boneless Roiled Rump Roost u. Tie Round Bone Beef Roast Lb. 49‘ Boneless Sirloin Roost Tip “^89' ^gsGrade ‘A’ large ^*^™EGGS 39 cm ~n.cn 5-29‘ UJ.Ifo.l6oMoBllpi JIFFY BISCUIT MIX LARGE «kz. Bn 29 U. S. NO. 1 NEW POTATOES Solid Ripe Brooot-O'-Chicken Calif. Navel Tomloes TUNA ORANGES Mw u. 'ISc Flot 4||C Djk • 6rNtt Oniimi Finn—f iMk—Faical STEELE RED Wm * CvauBktrs aUj • Grsti Pt^pGis Y«ir 5® CMC* W CELERY APPLES Urge ICc Stalks 4 “‘SO! FOOD CENTER 706 W. HURON BEER-WINE-LIQUOR THE POXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 25, 1961 THIRTYSEVKN 10,000 HOLDENS RED STAMPS FREE ... Vh» Oar Stora for Coiifnf Dotolbll SALE DAYS—THURSDAY. FRIDAY ond SATURDAYl Frying Chickens I SPARERIBS 25* su 29c LB. CUT UP! Velvet Brand ICE CREAM U.39C LEAN AND MEATY SNOW-DRIFT SHORT'NING 69‘ d. Beech-Nut COFFEE “•59* 59 HAMILTON LARGE EGGS 39° PER DOZEN C One Half Gallon MIRACLE WHIP SALAD DRESSING 59^ iQt. Jor Colif. Long White POTATOES TOWN & COUNTRY FOOD MARKET THU.SOAT an. SATURDAY S:IS A.M. ta 9 tM. tiaa.sxESLM.MiwM:EXWEM:M;mM:EM.ta.i.ti.ti.vsasx£ Develop Good Food Habits During Pre-Teen Years Taste buds, like bones and muscle, develop as a child grows older. A child doesn't prefer food when born; his likes and dislikes are acquired. Therein may lie the story of the development of proper nutritional habits. With guidance from a parent who is well founded in the facts of proper diet, the development of a child's tastes can to directed toward foods which will make his adult life happier and healthier. This doesn't mean that all children should, or do, like to eat the same things. They're affected by the likes of their parentrf; friends, etc. But basically their food instincts are good. Contrary to popular belief, they don’t automatically head for candy bars and,ice cream. Studies have shown that, given a free choice, most children will select sufficient quantities of nutritive foods. Their preferences are deter-nolned by their age, their dinner-table environment, and by the color, odor, taste and texture of the food they are served. A study of the eating behavior of children conducted at the Yale Clinic of Child Development re-vetded the following facts: 'Finicky food habits and food jags are characteristic of the two-to-fpur year-olds. The live to sevens dislike casserole dishes, ihix-tures, fat meats and gravies. This age group preferred raw vegetables to cooked ones. The five year-old prefers plain food, such as meat, potatoes, raw vegetables, milk and fruit. By six or seven, he is willing to try foods and accepts food previously disliked. By eight there is a ravenous ap- petite and strong Tpreferences. At nine, the child usually has a keen interest in food and is positive in his likes and dislikes.” In another survey reported In “Nutrition In Health and Disease” by Cooper, Barber and Mitchell, It was found that the appettUes of teen-agers were usually voracious. According to these authors, “Enough suitable food will be eaten If it is made Bread Is Impprtant in Reducing piets The plain 'n' si/nple fact is that one slice of bread contributes only 65 calories to your total calorie n addition, home-baked bread, made with enriched flour, and the loaf from your grocery Three Are Better uidividual needs to maintain good health, particularly when reducing. Enriched and whole grain breads supply goodly amounts of niacin, thiamine, riboflavin and iron—and only a modest number of calories. Don’t deny yourself the good eating pleasure of your favorite breads if youlre reducing. Standard recipes for po|wv«N| call for . two eggs to om cup M flour, but if your eggs are smv it is wise to use three of theif Eggs help stretch popovers so .th* are high and airy. . _ * foods will satisfy appetite, and faulty habits of food selection formed In earlier years wrill often bo carried over into this period and prevent the taking of an nde<|uate diet.” Thus it appears that the pre-teen years are most vital in preparing the youngster for good food j habits. In planning meals for the young child, the parent should keep them simple, with a variety of texture and color. Exposure to new tastes can begin at an early age-six or seven. Exposure to proper} nutrition, however, can begin at; birth. NOW YOU CAN GET OUT OF DEBT WITHOUT A LOAN REGAIN PEACE OF MIND. PAY OFF ALL YOUR BILLS AT ONE PLACE, WITH WEEKLY PAYMENTS YOU CAN AFFORD. Payments as Low as $10.00 Weekly • Prof«cY Your Job and Your Credit • Avoid Gornishments ond Repossessions • Debt Protection Insurance COME in NOW or CALL for o HOME APPOINTMENT FE 5-9281 732 West Huron St. PONTIAC Just Opposite Main Post Office OFFICES IN DHROIT AND PONTIAC CITY ADJUSTMENT SERVICE THURS. - FRI. - SAT.- SUN.. MON. OPEN 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. -SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. VICTOR Heinz Decoration Day Offer! Save3(Kon Hamburger... Hot Do^ or Him! • HEINZ HOT DOG SELISH-Iots of diopped pickko in ieoty mnstanl sance-tloca Hrightiy things for hot dogs ai^poUto salsdl • HEINZ HAMBURGEB RELISH b a snappy blend of sw«et pbUes snd rich tomsto sance. Terrific on hamburgers, nest loaf, cold cuts. and spicy—haa what it takas to spark barbecued beef and apareriba, too! • Hcte Sweet Relish—a luacioos nnedley of ch^, dropped sweet inckles—gives come^nck-for-nroro flavor to aandtkiches! • Heias Indb Relish livens salads, sandwiches, picnic snacks! It’s a delicious mixture of chopped pickleo, onions, red peppers, mustard sssd, qncos! . 'V / Just send os 2 lahels from any of these tasty Heinz Relishes —we’ll send you coupon worth.30^ THIRTV-EIGllT THE PONTIAC PRESS. THTTRSDAY. MAY 23/1661 Potato Cubes Quickly Fried Oakland county has long been an IroporUiit potato producing re-gion. Tbe state d Micfaigan ranks lOth in the natkn with over S mil-Uon pounds of potatoes produced Potatoes are ao well liked and mdi a good buy that most fami* lies will want them at least once a day. They’re wonderful almost any way you caii jwepare them — baked, boiled, creamed or fried. Those who like the specially appetizing “French Fry" flav’or but lack the time for French frying, will appreciate a new recipe for •Quick French Fries.'- developed in a national test. Appealing cubes of fresh raw potatoes are skUlet-fried to a crispy, golden bro«-n in, a small amount of hot yegetatole shortening. Here are the simple directions: Qnkk FTwifh Fries cup ■awtuitst Pare potatoes and cut into (dices, tiwn cut into cubes. nrop’poUtoes into cold water to preveid discoloration. Remove from dtier and dry thorou^ly between cdean doth towels. Heat shortening in skillet until a drop of water sizzles in it. Add potatoes. FVy quickly, turning often with wide spatula, until crisp and golden brown. Drain on abaorbent paper. Sprirdde with salt and serve Immediately. Makes 4 serving*. Try Sweetbreads in Ham Dish Mere it an appetizing casserole featuring a V a r i e t y meat and cooked ham. Variety meats such at sweetbreads are ^ fun to serve for riiealtime change. Thia casserole also is an unusual way you can serve any leftover ham. Sweetbread OeBght ‘ Su“S.. QtKK FSENCM FRIES -> These crispy, quick French Frles-with a real “French Fty" flavor—are quickly preparitd by skillet frying little raw poUto cubes In hot vegeUble shortening. This wonderful way of preparing potatoes is suggested by a national test kitchen. Farmers have twice as much invested in machinery as doe* the entire steel Industry and live Onies| as much as the automobUe try. The southeastern state* h * v e Qyj^| abundant regions of red soil. Other e a s are in Africa, South America, Asia and the South Pacific. 1941. A number of vitamin-deficiency diseases have all but dis-Flour enrichment has arcom-Lppeared and the occurence of pushed a quiet kind of miracle| iro„ deficiency, anemia has been since it began twenty years ago in markedly reduced. This is the “quiet' mirade” enrichment brought about. Now, enrichment Fancy, Fresh Dressed Hygradc Fresh er Smaked Roasting Chickens LiVER SAUSAGE Skinlost Link 39i PORK AAc SAUSAGE Ovu. Grade "A" Lorge Doz. 39 EGCS Always Plenty of Free Parking at . . . Willhite »Kmt 4348 DIXIE HIGHWAY-near Sashabaw Road Droyton Plaint t Open Doily 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Telephone OR 3-6616 Open Sundoy 9 A.M. tQ 5 P.M. continues to perform — to build and maintain the good health pf America's families. Electric catfish are found in ihe Nile River. 1 lablftpoon I* ^ U&npim^clK»p«4 w 2 lablupoou bulur or i 3 toblrapooBi chtlt M mortutno vi tMipom Wm«t«£lto muco, “bspoon salt ■spoon popper bir.poono diced cup ir ublcsi jd ptmlonto -------- evnporotcd milk •roted Amoricon ctuou 3 Ubteipoonc mcUod batUr >1 cup toft bread crumb* Place sweetbreads, water, 1 tablespoon lemon juice pr vinegar and 1 teaspoon salt in a saucepan. Cover and sinuner 20 minutes. Drain and remove membrane. Break into small pieces. Cook celery and osJon In butter about S minutes. Add ham, sweetbreads, eWH sauce, Wor-reotershlre sauce. bread mixture over top. Add 2 tablespoons melted butter to crumbs and arrange around edge of casserole. Bake In A n»od-(350 degrees) 25 min- utes. 5 serving*. Budding Cradle Robber AUSTIN, Tex. (UPH — The evidence was overwhelming that a South Austin resident w a wrong when he told police that child who lived two doors awayi was guilty of vandalism in the neighborhood. ^ TV young mother at the "suspect's’’ house pointed out her son 7-week-old baby. OPEN TONIGHT TIL 9:00 P.M. A New Magic Formula SUPIR-VINYI-X LATEX PAINT Now Only ■lUrtbr a*bfb«U*e bbt BEOS GuL (• pMl *r blto»«. M*bl tar bay ty*« ^ Ntw4x7xy4”PnflaitlMi V-OROOVED $J95 LOAN PANEUMO 4| Aloo 4x8x14" por shoot SPATTER INUID teAOS LINOLEUM TILE lY'xir 12« #*. txlj Rs«n Only Ready Miked—Quality CONTROLUD EXTMIOR INTIRIOR PAINT SPBCIAL $]«9 GU PURE VINYL y'x9" Ei. fid SpMtMr pMtsm - 1st QunHty ^ SPATTO AlPMALT TILE 9z9x!4" 4^ Ea. lit WwlHy, Misvy Duty p* Vinyl WALL COVERING ATW SPECIAL PLASTIC * WALL TILE Ea. Unginzsd Csmnlc - 12x24" Sliest $|49 FLOOR TILE, mony colon ■ special Reduction CEILING TILE White 16'’xl6'* irreg. 79 So. Ft Vinyl Plastic, lit ouaRty ^ yj CAd FLOOR COVERING ^ METALLIC INLAII^ UNOIEUM TILE - 1st QssAty s* ^ Micu, VinyL UmIsum | A ^££ Counter Topping /4 wi ■ 9x12 LINOLEUM RUGS. Heovy Duty, SPECIAL ... $495 FREE ',Z ssriuMtss ss all II If you don't buy from US, WE BOTH loso MONEY! All Tik at CARLOAD BRICES wn PONTIAC'S LARGEST ARMSTRONG DEALER! FEBSin "flLE OUTLET toss WEST HURON ST. PONTIRC 3SISTERS SUPER MKT HOT Does 3“89’ Graf* Skinless Lean — Meaty SPARE OQ. RIBS 29' FRYERS 25 ^^Fnsli___ Dressed LB. Grade 1 —Assorted WATERMELONS Guaranteed Sugar Sweet Red and Ripe ICE COLD EACH 50 PICNIC TINE! OPEN 7 DAYS 9 A.M. it 10 P.M. Met ChMMgM SolH«Ct __ to MMrktt CendHioiis Fresh Ground—ALL Hbme^rown GREEN ONIONS 5 ^ Home-Grown RED RADISH 5 C Ea. PEPPERS CUKES^r.^TTTr ^^-la«~-' Frosh—Rod, Ripo TUBE TOMATOES... 19'-^ Californio PASCAL CELERY IS”-^ Toxos SEEDLESS 29'« GRAPEFRUITS CALIFORNIA ^ HEAD 9 '«25' LETTUCE £ xmmi¥=sumisr ORANGES 3«.S|00 HOT DOGS 3-95* CraiG A' Skinl^i FOOT LONG Fresh DOLOGNA EGGS 3'”*1 u.s. Grade A Medium -Mt^Tarpesr POTATOES 10-35' U* S. No* 1 Maine '..t ■ -T- GET BETTER FOODS FOR LESS WHEN YOU SHOP AT U.S. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 2.% 1961 USDA CHOICE Round Steak 69 THIRTY-NIX E lb. SALE DATES: MAY 25, 26, 27... Thursday—Friday — Saturday CPIMLITV. U. BOSTON BUTT Pork Roast PETER'S SKINLESS Hot Dogs 0 PETER'S HAWTHORN ^ BACON 4 9: PETER'S RING BOLOGNA3 9il PETER'S smoked LIVER Zh Q* SAUSAGEO HAMILTON GRADE “A" URGE MICHIGAN FRESH CREAMERY BUTTER « 59 MIRACLE WHIP Qt. Jor LEMONADE “ 10' REGENCY. FAMILY TESTED STRAWBERRIES 10 Ox. Pkg. 5I.99* CAMPBELL'S @ PORK, and W BEANS 11 DOLE P CDIIIT No. 303 Can rllUII With Coupon P COCKTAIL ^ ■- Without B Coupon 19c VLASIC STUFFED OLIVES 39‘ : KING SIZE 1 TV COOKIES • 39: • : NABISCO i Oreo Cream Sandwich Cookies • 12 01. ^ Ac pks. : KRAFT 1 FRENCH DRESSING 27‘ RED RIPE T0MAT0ESv^19‘ FRESH GREEN ONIONS BUNCH NEW ERA POTATO^CHIPS BIG 14-OZ. BAG We Reserve the Right to Limit Qaantities ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★> ★ ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★!★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ IN GINGELLVILLE IN LAKE ORION IN WEST PONTIAC T GUfiELUnUE SUPER MARKET 3990 BALDWIN AYE. CLOSED MEMORIAL DAY L.S. SUPER MARKET FELICE 331 S. BrOiAwiy. L«k« Oiioi BEER ond WINE OPEN MEMORIAL DAY JQUALITY MARKET 338 S. TELEGRAPH BEER—WINE—LIQUOR OPEN MEMORIAL DAY IN AUBURN HEIGHTS VILLAGE SUPER MARKET 1342 Aabm Bd., Aabnrn Heiylit CLOSED MEMORIAL DAY I DRAYTON PLAINS TENUTA SUPER MARKET 3515 Sashabaw at Walton BEER ond WINE OfEN MEMORIAL DAY ^ -t- JL T \ ■ : 7^ " Jr ..A THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY i5, 1961 658 Flying to France to Mo^ Lindbergh Trip WASHINGTON (AP) - An Air Force plane will fly to FYanee beta's solo flight to Paria. Lindbergh flew tram New Yoric to Paris in S3H hours on May 21, 192T. A bomber will fly nonstop Alleghany President >4EW YORK (UPIl-Texas millionaire John D. Murchison, winner with his brother of the •'proxy bsttl^ of th6 century/' Hmrsdsy Drowns While Fishing HILLSDALE « — Glen Earl Ulrey. 50. of Fort Wayne, Ind.. drawMd in Baw Besse Lake near here Wednesday when he ap- Kowneer, Kaiser Agree to Cancel Merger Plan NILES (l»—Kawneer Co. of NUm has announced it has agreed to cancel its plans for merger with were to iMtvo voted on the prapooed mergw eeriier this month, but a Justice Depertment euit charging the amaig^matiaii violeted anti-tnist laws forced poetponenaeat of the meetings. pertaining to peoceduWs ind opemtiota during the suit. Detroit brti« the Motwr Qty and Michigan being the auto state, it figures that most tourists would OK Issue in Allendale ALLENDALE VI — Voters of AUcndMe School District havt ap-prAved a flM.QOO Bond ieiiie and Friday at '•torloe t^ speed ot aound to commemorate the 34th anniverBary of Charles Lind- from Carswell Air Force Base. Tex., and reach Paris in an estimated five hours and'55 minutes. was named interim president of the Alleghany Cbrp.'s S6.BbiUion financial empire. parently fell from a boat while fidiing. Sheriffs men said he was subject to epileptic seizures. the Kaiser Mumlnum A Chemical Stockholders of the hwo Anns * * It The two firms said they were not able to agree on basic matters come on wheels. The same report shows that 90 per cent of visttore to Michigan come by autonK*lle. pend the preaeat Allendale Elementary School ‘ U.S. SOVT.SRADED CHOICE TENDERAY SIRLOIN U.S. GOVTSRADED choice TENDERAY 89 75 PORTERHOUSE ^ M xlVe IV '-r '5''iv'e Oi' f 1 Wi 'r'ljiiij' >'--v Ohiv .-f c LB. U.S. GOVT. GRADED CHOICE TENDERAY T-BONE OR C U.S. GOV7. GRADED CHOICE TENDERAY BONELESS TASTY CHUNK LARGE RUMP ROAST • 89* BOLOGNA . . • 45* HOT EVEN BURNING CHARCOAL 5 a 39* EVEN BURNING CHARCOAL BRIOUETS 10 & 69* DOLE Fruit Cocktoil 2 ^ 45* With Coupon From Todoy's Pontioc Pross TRESH^' Potato Chips 59‘ FULL 1-LB. BOX YOUNG, OVEN READY Beltsville Turkeys 39 ; r/RS so Extra T.V. Steeps WMCeupM 50 BXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON AN* PURCHASE Of ANY WNOll. HASP OR CANHI* O ham 50 BXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS ■ EOP I I TURKEY ■ PMtIat SKINLESS - SHANKLESS - DEFAHED SEMI-BONELESS Smoked HAM C COUNTRY CLUB-VANILLA, CHOCOLATE, STRAWBERRY, NEAPOLITAN ICE CREAM 69< AND SECOND HALF GALLON CARTON WITH COUPON 29 SAVE 10ld twin daughters of Mr. and Mrs. P*BtU« PrcH Ph«U Victor Gorpron, 2614 Marie Qrcle, Bloomfield Township fashioned a Centennial top hat for Panther. Bananas With Ice Cream fP [from heat until bananas are soft and brown sugar bubbles. Place 2 banana halves in sherbet dish Flavor Whipped Cream Dessert hard to top is Ice Cream Topped Broiled Bananas. For 6 servings; arrange 12 banana halves on broiler pan; brush with Vs cup melted butter and spripkle with mixture of it cup firmly packed light brown sugar and V4 and top with vanilla ice cream. The man offered us 50 dollars. "Are you crazy," my husband roared, as if he were defending somebody's mother. "This car is almost a classic. In three years, somebody will give you $5,000 for her.” Fifty dollars, the man repeated. We took it. went out to buy a golf car — a couple of tubes of aluminum, two wheels and a strap I to buckle around your golf bag. A late report on national spend-ng reveal that the rp.st of rai.sing •liildren is steadily inlreasing, and has caused a basic shift in family economic planning, jit is causing fewer people to trade in their autos every two years. SPORTS BOOMING Still, more Americans than e are building second homes for cations or weekends; about 100,(n0 of these "extra" hangouts were constructed last year. Eighty-five thousand families Bug-Less Barbecues At the last telegraphy competition in 1939. the champion sent 74 words a minute. Add '» teaspoon ground mace, 2 tablespoons each, cocoa and con-!>i<),g ^50 fectioners’ sugar and 1-16 teaspoon OBSOLESCENCE salt to 1 cup whipping cream. ThiS| ^ beats up to a delectoble whipped j walked out sUently. We both know cieam frosting for a quick cake. | what the other was thinking about I Can you shoo insects from your yard beforehand in time to enjoy an evening barbecue? Aerosol space sprays are a big help for temporary control. Spray about dusk, when mosquitoes move about, and aim the spray to drift through grass, biKhes, and otbo-vegetation. Repeat every few hours to help prevent insects from 1 putting the bite on your guests. Sports are booming. Belittling the notion that Americans are content to grow flaccid sitting I front of the TV set are the number of hunters and fishermen has doubled in the last decade; more than 100,000 people go mountahi climbing regularly; there are 20 million bowlers, and 40 million boat lovers, who buy 8 miliion boats and 0 million outboards a year. And the fastest-growing American amusement of all is para-chute-jtunping. Only 100 people took the leap in 1956, compared with 15,000 today. It’s all a part of the restless thinking in these days of insecurity and tremulousness over the future. You close your eyes and plunge .. SANDWICH BUNS — Put the minced onion on top of the buns instead of in the hamburgers. This is a terrific idea and new as all get out. Onion Mustard Sandwich Buns will probably appear on your picnic table often in the coming months. -and good for them Ddle FANCV FRUiT COCKDUL WITH THIS COUPON ON THE PURCHASE Ddle FRUIT COCKTAIL 70 THC OfAUfff Hr «och coupon you occopt outhorlxod oponi, wo will poy you foco voli 2< for hondlinp, providod M you ond youf cwttomor hovt ^ . . II oMhft offtrj ony otHor oppli- in comtltwloi frtaud, Invoicoi ihowinp your our* .You m«y rodoom only Ihrouoh coniinontet U.SJk. OdW mmm “walt disnbv prisents** evbry wbbk on the a.eo-tv network rW ■ ■ -I ,, ■r FORTY-TVVO THE POXTIAC THURSDAY. MAY 23. 19^1 50th Year Is Observed by Philanthropical Group By MARJORIE EICHER Women’s Editor, The Pontlae Press Marking thf iiOth year of the founding of Countrvaide. members of the loeal philnnthropic organization held a golden anniversary luncheon Wednesday at Edgewooil Country Club. Receiving a check from the group for Sl. ylK) for the new West Bloomfield Township library was Mrs. Richard YWCA Offers Camp for Two Age Groups The Pontiac Young Women's Christian Association will offer day camp programs for two different age gcoupfi beginning June 36. Each group will meet three days a week for a total of six weeks. Registrations will be accepted for two-week periods for families who expect to he on vacation during part of the summer. Both groups will be directed by Mrs. Andrea Bevan. recently appointed teen-age program director, according to an announcement by Mrs Grace D. CaiTOthers of Birmingham, chairman of the YWCA's teenage program committee Mrs. Bevan win be a.ssisted by junior counselors selected from the Y-Teen Oubs in this area sponsored by the Pontiac 'YWCA. Specialists in various fields win taHt to the girls who also will go on field trips to Cranbrook. Kensington Park, the John F Ivory polo grounds and Bob-Lo Island The program for younger girls, aged eight to 12 years. Know Your Fabric Qwe tke Qrad a hlHusicat Qifl! True STEREO Portable Mafpnavwx For the grtduate or for your own summer fun . . . a Magna vox portable Stereo phono! Just detach the lid for^/d 2nd speaker. The 4-speed automatic changer plays all stereo and monaural records, has multitone controls. tXTENEiCD ACCOUNTS AVAILABLE 79 90 d P«ntlRe PrrM PIibU Freund of Lone Pine Road (.second from left). Mrs, Irwin Sander of Warner Drive makes the presentation while speaker Mrs. Joel Warren of Birmingham (at left) and club president Mrs. Gene Mitchell of Alden Drive look on. A small but active group of women who call them-selves the Countryside Improvement Association observed the golden anniversary of the group’s founding Wednesday afternoon at Edgewood Country Club. I Originally conceived as an organization to clean up the beautiful countryside surrounding Pini and Orchard lakes after the usual Sunday invasion of Jitterbugs” (they were called ‘undesirable element' in the genteel terminology of half a century ago) the group in recent years *as seen its work taken over by maintenance departments of the township and county. Rather than disband a group whose historic roots are strong, they have for more than a decade been engaged in philanthropic work that considering they number but fifty members is truly mountainous. This year’s project was the raising of $1,500 to furnish the Children’s Room at the new West Bloomfield Township Library which is the culmination of a township dream of 27 years. ★ ★ ★ 'The new room will be known as the “Countryside Room” a fitting memorial to these dedicated women who turn the club calendar topsy turvy by meeting during the summer months of the year when other groups become inactive. Making the presentation at a gala luncheon was Mrs. Irwin Sander of the club’s Golden Anniversary C(»nmittee. Other committee members for the affair were Mrs. A. R. Dodge, cochairman; Miss Augusta Meiser, historian; Mrs. Harley Melzlan^ decoration; and Mrs. Edwin Dreyer, publicity. ’ ' GIVES HISTORY Miss Meiser prepared a history of the association, contrasting the Coutryslde and the activities of the club by decades with present-day living. She outlined the philanthropies the group has engaged in since World War II. They range from providing camping opportunities for underprivileged children to supporting the foreign student exchange program. President Mrs. Gene MitcheU introduced the afternoon’s speaker, Mrs. Joel Warren of Birmingham who has been active over the years in securing the present library facilities for the area. Mrs. WEu-ren spoke informally and with warmth of the events leading up to the presently expanded librEiry program in the township. She made a plea that the history of smaller segments of our lives— our families, our subdivisions, our cwnmunitles— not be lost because of their size and seeming imim-portance “... for they give us roots and identity as individuals,” she said. Mrs. Richard Freund, vice president of the library commended the group for their generous gift. Program chairman was Mrs. Elmer Boch, assisted by Mrs. Eugene D. Foley and Mrs. Ray Ridge. Wisner PTA Sets Banquet hr Tonight will b<* cTinduflPd .Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday under the title "Summer Fun " Girls of junior high school age will have their program "Best Foot Forward" Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday Women's Section (torn the Hills. ^th groups will have swimming Instruction in the YMCA pool. The younger girls' program will stress crafts, fundamentals of sewing and cooking and other subjects of interest to this age group Instructions In charm, dancing and baby-sitting will he given the older girls. Bulletins and hill det.iils abotit both day eamps are available at the "Y" on Franklin Boulevard. The Parent-Teacher Assof la-fion at Wisner Sch.-ol will stage a service banquet at 5 this evening. Mrs. Earl Price, publicity chairman, reports. "Tnc banquet is being given by the The weave of' a fabric can help keep the fabric clean. Home economists at Mic(tigan State University say smooth weaves shed dirt more easily than napped or pile surfaces. PTA to show appreciation for the fine service rendered to the school during the year 1960-61." Some 100 children will li<> honored at the program in the school gymnasium. Awards will go to the hoys' safety patrol, sponsored by Mrs Ruth Woods: girls' ser%-ice squad, by Mrs. Mary Lyons; .student librarians, by Mrs Florence Price; and audio-visual unit, by Mrs. Emily Bonham Also to receive Awards are Leslie Bibby and Charles Haun. street guards; lx*wis Hortier. engineer; Ray Runyon. custodian; anTt Mrs Ila ^Imcs. school secretary. D. W Fisher, ventriloquist, will furnish the evening's entertainment. Mrs. Wilbur Ilinspergcr is banquet i-hair-inan. Abby Says He Doesn^t Need You Mefhinks She's Filling the Bill By RUTH SAlTtiDElM BLOOMFIELD HILLS-That weather forecaster in the west who did so well for the Bloom- cently for its strawberry festival, had better come up with something just as good this weekend — and all of June too. By ABIGAIL VA.V BITIEX DEAR ABBY: I am a divorcee who is keeping company with a bachelor. He lives in an apartment with a woman he calls his "housekeeper." I have seen her and she a housekeeper she owns the man she works for. My boy friend teems to be afraid of her. I told him I would keep house for him. but he likes this arrangement and refuses to change. Do you Think I am being a fool? Why, when I offer to. keep house for him. does he need her? GREEN" eyes DEAR GREEN: Whatever he "needs for her," she is filling the bill. With his set up. 1 can’t figure out why he needs YOU! were you. I viould stop wondering and get a doctor’s opin- DEAR ABBY: Please tell "Must Have Been Crazy’’ that she has company. I am another secretary who fell for Saturday is the date of Dm HesgUee's marriage to George H. Roehm. And it will take place on the terrace of the bridegroom’s parents. Dr. and Mrs. Harold R. Roehm at their Lone Pine Road home — in the garden terrace, weather permitting. in the covered terrace if it rains. ated planters and sprinkling cans and picnic accessories which have been fashioned by a group of parents whom she persuaded to work most ef-the winter. St. Dunstan's Guild again will brave the eieroents, too when it will present the annual Greek Theater show at Cranbrook. For this affair. t(ie loyal audience either aits congealed with cold or braves the hordes of mosquitoes and June bugs which have just been waiting to open their season. I was 21 and he was 44. 1 had to have his child to grow up. I was married and so was, he. He said he loved me. I was blonde, five feet four, 36-25-36. He said I was per- Six Pages Today in Women's Section perfume (or fear she will de-tpct it on him. He says (kid-dingly* she i« very "jealous. " I have never before heard of a housekeeper acting like DEAR ABBY: My wife saves bottles, boxes, bags and rags, and also toys. I gave some of her toys to sn B-year-oW girl in our neighborhood, and my wife called the girl's mother and asked for the toys back. We have no chidren. My wife is 43. Is the all there’ "I WONDER” DEAR "1 WONDER: " If I When my measurements changed, so did he. This is all ancient history, and thanks to heaven, and an understanding husband, my life was not ruined. _ But please tell girls' who get a yen for their bosses to quit while they are ahead. OLDER AND WISER 4 CONFIDENTIAL TO ‘A GIRL WHO CAN’T SAY NO"; Better learn how to say “NO" now. It will come in handy later. COUNTRY FAIR Memorial Day. the Kingsbury School in Metamora will hold its sixth annual country fair with a bazaar and book booth. tStmchI concessions include pony rides, flair ponds, (and new to me> a "dr^the-teacher-in-the-drink*' game as well as skeet shooting. This should surely entice the children and their friends and parents to this holiday location north of Oxford at the corner of Hosner and Oakwood roads. Chairman Mrs. Carl Qen-dening will be assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Chariee Backus, Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Ray HI. Mr. and Mrs. John Yount, the Gus Eastmans, the Robert Myers and the Paul Frechettes. Mrs. Dean Bedford Jr. will have a booth of hand-decor- Bride-elect Patty Bugas came up from her senior studies at Denison University last weekend for the lovely luncheon given for her Saturday by Mrs. E. R. Breech at the Bloomfield Hills Country Guh. Mr. and Mrs. Breech have just returned from Arizona where they spent the winter. Patty will graduate from Denison June 12 and will be married June 17 at St. Hugo of the Hills Church, and a reception will be given at the beautiful new Bugas home in Vaukhan road. Another word to Mr. Forecaster — It must not rain June 1 for the Four Seasons Mart given to benefit Goo^Ul Industries by members of the Junior group. It will be in the gardens of the George T. Trumhull home, "Spring-' wood,” on Dunston, with booths under four large beige-and-green canopies. Last Three Days ~iSp11iig Shue Sale Now 25 to 50% Oft $88® -« ^19' Formerly $12.95 to $27.00 All sizes, but not every style in every size. Sdrry, l^ause redixtions Ore so great, no exchanges or refunds, rio moil or phone orders. \27 S. ^gmaw FE3-7168____ HURON Qt TELEGRAPH Thurs., Fri, 10 4o*9—-Tues., Wed., Sot. A civic citation \tvas presented to Mrs. H P. turner (center) 6f Devon Gables by the Bloomfield Branch of the National Farm and Garden Atsodation in recognition of the attractit>e land-acapping and abundant bulb display at- the tearoom. Participating in the award on the grounds of the Ipng Lake Road establishment are Mrs. Irving MacK^ zie (at left) andj Mrs. Herbert Mason, both of Bloomfield Hjlla. \ V 7 "Tv ■V-tTi-T V TfiE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, HAY 25, 1961 FORTYTHREB By MARY ANGLEMIKR More than 100 descendants ot pioneer families attended the 8f7th annual luncheon and business meeting of the Oakland County Pioneer and Historical Society Wednesday at All Saints Episcopal Church. Members met at 11 a.m, for a social hour preceding the lunch- Displaying a 100-year-old black wool shawl appliqued with velvet gar-^ den flowers in shades of red, blue, gold and lavender to Carl W. Bird of Ona-gon Trail is Mrs. L. Lee Dunlap of Delaware Drive. The shawl was imported from England for Mr. Dunlap's mother in 1855, Mrs. Dunlap, vice president, and Mr. Bird, treasurer, were present at the Oakland County Pioneer and ^Historical Society luncheon and bus^ss sessionjM 4fiSmntl. Episcopal^tiurch Wednesday. Talks on Leadersbij^ to Auxiliary Mrs. William Greenberg, president of the Sinai Hospital of Detroit Women's Guild was guest speaker at the annual luncheon meeting of the Women's Auxiliary to the Pontiac General Hospital at Devon Gables Tuesday. Speaking on the “Art of Leader ship — How Leaders are ^de. Not Bom.'* Mrs.- Greenberg told the auxiliary, ‘The right timing; and pleasant personality and exps-; rience are the three things needed! for a true leader." | R. Wood, secon^vice president; Ross Elliott, parliamentarian; and Mrs. Floyd cWpton, third vice'Mrs. M. D. Stapp and Mrs. Rob-president; MrsC Floyd Tinder, re- jert Glenn, auditors, cording secrttary;. Mrs. Hugh Lit-i Board members are Mrs. Miller, tie, correspming secretary; Mrs. Mrs. Leo Heenan and Mrs. Ray-Donald Ejkfritz, treasurer; Mrs.'mond Mudge. Have You Tried This? Chairman for the day was Mrs. P. Eugene Miller, assisted by Mrs. Clark J. Adams, ticket chairman; Mr . Everett Reese, decorations chairman; and Vera Bassett and Mrs. Fritz! Stoddard, hospitality chairmen. the guests who Inctaded Mrs. Harold Mack. prosidPut o( the Michigan AssociatloB of Hospital AuxUlar les; .Mrs. H. E. .Norris, president el the Houlheaslem District o( the MAHA: Mrs. Kdnin Mr.Namara, director of public reladoos at Pontiac Ueaeral Hospital; and Mrs. John Stewart, dlrortor of Pontine General’s The annual business' meeting, highlighted by reports from all committee chairmen, followed the talk. Mrs. William Dean, retiring president, thanked the group and gave a brief resume of the yWi Officers installed for the coming year were Mrs. Socrates Sekles,' president; Mrs. Clark J. Adams, first vice president; Mrs. Forest Filling and Frosting Are Important Parts of Cake 100 Pioneer Descendants at 87th Annual Luncheon During the busin<‘ss session Marshall Smith was re-elected president; Mrs. L. L. Dunlap, first vice president; William Ewart, second vice prealdont; Cart Bird, treasurer; and Miss Emiuh Howard, secretary. Serving as directors for the coming year will be Mrs. Donald Adams, Miss Jessie Brewer, Maurice Cole, R. C. Cummings, W. D. Flint, Joe Haas, Mrs. Harry Going, Ernest Huthwaite, John Linabury, Mrs. Earl Mastic, Mrs. Allan Mon-roe^ Miss Louise Paddock. Har-court Patterson, John H. Patterson, and Mrs. Harry Place. John W. Hiiiinger, manager ofi le Pontiac Area Cliamber of Commerce, presented the 212th show^g ot the film, “The Pontiac Story of Progress and Promise,” kince its Feb. 1 premiere. He said personally he hjul shown the film to 25,400 people. Professionally produced, the picture was made at a cost of $12,000. The picture portrays Pontiac IK the heart of a wonderland dls-■overed by the Indians yeaCK “Surrounded by hundreds of lakes and some suburban living, Pontiac is a city where 80, per cent of the people own their homes. They are a friendly people who work and play together. "Products are turned out here that serve the nation. Raw terials from around the world are used." Pontiac churches and explained the governmental system of the city which includes a city manager, commission and mayor. He said Pontiac operated on a “Pay-as-you-go policy.” As the story unfolds actor Brace Beamer, the Lone Ranger of radio fame, tells Michelle Bums, year-old Pontiac girl: Male Chorus to Attend Big Gala Sing in Ontario Other directors Include Mrs. WhMney PraH, Mrs. Arthur Selden, Mrs. John Stewart. Mrs. Ross Stockwell, Lee Truax, Mrs. John Windiate, Miss Mary L. Wattles and Mr. Smith. Members of the historical commission include Miss Alice Serrell, Mrs. E, V.. Howlett and Miss Laura Hunter. In introducing his life-long friend, Gilbert Davis, an attorney from Royal Oak. the Honorable George Dondero said, “Mr. Davis who will address you on "Michigan in Civil War" has a better Civil War library than anyone in the state." The speaker told of the tl MsrrM" Sifn e A MlnlnUra MnrrISft CnrtUlea *3995 u. Sttdgef rerau Awailablo C. R. HASKIU STUDIO Xi Beta Beta Chapter ot Beta Sigma Phi Sorority installed officers Tuesday at the Wood-hull Lake home of Mrs. WUliam Long. Cohostess was Mrs. Ray Slaughter. Assuming office were Mrs. John Whitehead, president; Mrs. Long, vice president: Mrs. Clarence Ball, recording secretary; Mrs. Walter Hiller, corresponding secretary: Mrs. Fred Rigottl, treasurer: and Mrs. E. L. Sturdy, council delegate. The group's aanual picnic will be June 8 at Avon Park. 1 ML CleaMM 8t. FE 4-tUS MRS. ROBERT BARNETT lAMAICA SETS — Colorful washable cotton knit shirts with coordinated appliqut on solid color shorts. Sizes 3 t^ 6X and 7 to 14, 379 _ 479 TENNIS DRESSES — The coolest, most carefree short dress with bloomers in checks, stripes or plaids. Sizes 298 - 398 SWIM SUITS to make a pretty nver-maid. In knit tank type or colorful cotton prints. Some with matching beach coats. Toddlers through pre- 3’8598 Young foiha ahop — lower level SWIMSUITS ANDW "SPORTIE SHORTIE" PANTIE BRIEFS 'Control what can’t hide! Exclu-sive Stay There* knit gives you light, firm, brief support under swimsuits - with an active stretch that holds you in, never holds you back! Porous, quick drying Stay There* tucks you in all over, bumps into sleek curvet, j Firm flattery under knit maillots, clinging dressmakers and short shorts. Style S-2: white, black. S M-U 3.50. EXTRA LONG LEG PANTIES It takes two for OMFStop sleek Giles otli> Ihfoly hiw-longth^^ . control HI the one and on(|f Stay There* knit. Blissfully cool, light, porous comfort with a free-and-easy stretch that holds you in, never holds you back! Even snug stretch pants won’t show a ridge or bulge with flat selt-efteing at waist and legbands, conceded garters. Style S-16, white, S-M-L, 7.95. '■■■SSf” HOW to PLAN a WEEKEND Play it cool ... in fun loving, easy - going summer weekend fashions. 10.9819 22.98 Pert new crisp fabrics that travel and wash with equal ease. Unusual prints ...checks... smart plaids and colorful stripes. White . . . luscious sherbet pastels . . . sheath , . . bouffants . . ., jacket dresses. Sizes for misses', juniors and youthful half sizes. of JUNIOR PETITES for the 5 ft. 1 «nd ur>der. Dna§ S«Im Soeood Float 52: FORTY-t’OUR the PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MAY 25, 1061 The German TtHffist Office says I .West Gertnany is so prosperous f that it must inqxx^/lDKign labor Mother Singers Meet I Adults Often See Selves in tattling Child The Pontiac Mother Singers met Ibr a dinner Tuesday evening with [Mrs. Roy Parden of West Strathmore Avenue. Color Conscious? The were icmtaded eC a renatai Is Jnae at the heme of Mis. Mm aa North lagiMW Wreet. Four birthdays were crtebntted. Mrs. Donald Richmond I-S9 SHOPPING CENTER OR 4.I51S (NEA) — If you wear pale yellow, keep the color from looking faded by wearing a noshine lipstick in any of the apricot, peach or honey pastel tones. With true yellows, wear lipstick shades in very light red or orange tones, such as strawberry or apricot pastels. Plans were made for a June 2T meeting at the Drayton Platais home Mrs. Alfred Hutchinson. Dear Mrs. Lawrence: Our T-yearold plays constantly i with another child who is a year i