Canadian Liberals Ba From Our News Wires TORONTO—Liberals triumphed in the Canadian election, Emerging again as the leading political pj^rnidUst^OPearson the prime ministry almost in his grasp today. ; ★ . ★ . Prime Minister JohnG. Diefen-> baker, in effect repudiated by the voters, was holding on to the job the prime minister. That iWiM put Pearson, at 65, in line to take over the leadership he tailed to win in two previous attempts, 1958 ^and 1962. • I \ Diefenbaker said he will confer with his cabinet but indicated he intends to take advantage of his right fo hold on until the new Parliament lines up by parties, perhaps in six weeks. for the time being and possibly will keep it for weeks. But it appeared only w matter ref time before he would have to vacate the top Canadian Cabinet ministers lost their parliamentary seats in Monday’s election. ' ", ’ NO U.S. COMMENT In Washington, Speaker John McCormack said that the job before the leaders Of Canada and the United States was “to continue to strengthen- this historic friendship” between the two countries. McCormack .and other Denton cratic congressional Readers, following a4 weekly White House conference with / President Kennedy, declined direct comment on Pearson’s victory. At the last CObnt of the voting results, the liberals had 187 .. seats hi the House of Commons, six less than the 138 that means majority command over ail opposition parties. The Conservatives had 95 seats, the Social Credit party 24 and the New Democrats 17. Two seats remained in doubt. - Thus the Liberals appeared to have scant chance of getting q clearcut majority u n 1 e snb they could pull some,magic in otose Traces out of the returns from servicemen which are to be aiK nounced next weekend. One of the latest returns in today showed that George Nowlan, Diefenbaker’s finance minister, had squeezed out a victory; By the usual procedure,, the party gaining most seats names The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1903 —32 PAGES DELOS HAMLIN Supervisor Chairman Elected to 8th Term Delos Hamlin was unanimously re-elected today to! an unprecedented eighgi consecutive one-year term as' chairman of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors.! Addison Township Supervisor Prank Webber was jcted vice chairman in a Blue Shield DETROIT m - Blue Shield, acting four days after being denied a rate increase by Insurance Commissioner Sherwood Colburn, today filed revised subscription rates calling for a rate boost of pearly the same amount. * 'it1 ■ ★, it; The filing, made with the department of insurance at Lansing, called for a rate increase of 22.9 per cent. Colburn previously rejected ^proposed 23.9 per cent increase. Frank 0. Starr, deputy executive director of Blue Shield (Michigan Medical Service), said die new proposed rate includes an allocation for a 3 per cent reserve fund which Col* Starr said the new filing was submitted in order to ’’alleviate what the (insurance) department believed to be inequities throughout the original fate proposal.” ★ W w ... Colburn, in denying the original 23.9 per cent, proposal, Said in part die proposed new rates discriminated against elderly subscribers least able to pay. Detective Tells Details About Mali Stabbing Waterford Court! Gets Information at Preliminary Exam Pontiac jiolicff detective John Williams testified today in Waterford Township Justice Court that Charles jE. Hodges told him Adoise White was the first to stab Robert A. Greene. Williams testified at a preliminary examination. Hodges, according to Williams, said during questioning three days after the murder that White contest with two other township supervisors. Members^of the 85-member county governing board — includ-! stabbed Greene shortly after they ing seven new supervisors—also! arrived at the Kroger store in the were presented with a $17,145,898 budget propoaed for 1904. ft\ Hamlin, an appointed supervisor from the City of Farlnirg-ton, was unopposed for re-election. His was the only name' placed in nomination. Webber was elected on the first ballot for the vice chairmanship. He. was opposed by Milford Township Supervisor Mayon Hoard and Independence Township Supervisor Duane Horsfall. Forty-five of the 75 votes in the balloting went to Webber. Hoard received 16 and Hursfall 14. FOURTH WITHDRAWS A fourth township supervisor who previously announced his candidacy for the post, Cyril Miller of Avon Township, withdrew from contention before nominations from the floor began. ' Webber succeeds former visor Arno Hulet in the vice chairmanship. Hulet did not sock re-election in Bloomfield Township April 1. Webber Also is expected to take Hulet’s place on the board’s in* fluentlal Ways and Means pom* mittee when Hamlin announces (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Pontiac Mall shopping center. White, 79W Wan St., and Hodges, 174 Prospect St., both 22, are charged with first-degree murder in the March II slaying of Greene, 22, assistant manager of the supermarket. Williams said that Hodges related to him that after the three entered the store, they went the safe and White stabbed Greene in the stomach. White then took Greene in a back roqm, Williams said Hodges told him, and tied his hands. Then White said to Hodges, according to Williams: “When are you going to do something to earn your half of the money?” Hodges told Williams that he then stabbed Greene twice in the shoulder. White then proceeded to stab Greene and shot him in the back of the head^ Williams said Hodges told him. ■ * - * * While the preliminary examinations was in progress, Hodges’ wife was ordered held at St. Clair Hospital in Detroit for observation. Mrs. Hodges, 21, had been threatening “to cut people up,” according to Assistant Prosecutor Rob a at L Shipper, who issued a 48-hour mental health commitment order. — No one was injured in this three-car crack-up yesterday afternoon at Ottawa Drive and Huron Street. Elmer A. Linton, 69, of 1932 Ward Road, was crossing Huron Street to enter Thorpe Street when his car was struck by another (left) driven by Jack Hender- son, 19, of 80 Mark Street. Linton’s vehicle flipped on its side and skidded, backwards into a car driven by Mary Sue Delisle, 20i of 1075 Canterbury Drive. . Canvass Cuts Mew-Con Edge But Election Director Sees No Upset From Our New! Wires LANSING - The official vass of votes in the April 1 election is continuing to cut into the margin of apparent victory for the new state constitution. But State Election Director Robert Montgomery doesn’t believe the present narrow majority will be overturned by canvass figures still to be reported, vif *. $ l w The constitution is ahead by 8,608 votes with 13 counties still to The Oakland County Board of Canvassers yesterday reported officially 89,154 “yes” votes for the new constitution and 58,777 <‘no” vote?. This is a net gain of 93 “no’’ votes over unofficial Atty. Gen. Kelley Speaks 'District Plan Illegal' LANSING (/PI—Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley said today he believes the apportionment provision of Michigan’s new constitution violates the U. S. Constitution and will be struck down by the courts. Kellejr said that if a toult is filed challenging the document’! apportionment sections “I will ask the courts to strike down the provision.” Angust Scholle, state AFL-CIO president, has indicated he probably wjll file a suit challenging the new constitution’s legislative apportionment. At a news conference Kelley disclosed he has decided to up two legal teams on-the -question. ★ it , it 'One, which I shall lead personally, will take the position that the apportionment provision violates the U.S. Constitution,” Kelley said. “The other, headed by a senior member of tl will just as vigorously argue the opposite view. Both teams will have at their disposal all of the resources of this office,” ★ , Kelley, - a Democrat, aal'd he recognized his decisloh in the matter will be attacked as political, “but I do not intend to alter my legal judgment to avoid such an attack.” Tigers Roar to 4-0 Lead in Second DETROIT—Triggered by catcher Gus Triandos’ Ieadoff homer off the facing of the upper deck in left field, the Tigers scored four times in the last of the second to take a 4-0 lead over the Chicago White Sox here .today. DETROIT - Six rookies, five new faces and FloHda-bred optimism of manager Bob Scheffing lured an estimated crowd of 42, to Tiger Stadium for the 1963 opener against the Chicago White )X.v' Scheffing, in his third season as Tiger manager, has yet to gain an opening day victory in Tiger Stadium. He pinned his hopes today on right-hander Jim Banning (19-10), his winningest pitcher of 1962. The White Sox, as expected, countered with Ray Herbert, a ame winner with nine losses last >ason. The weather was expected to reach a high of 50 degrees for opening-day ceremonies with Gov. George Romney and Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh participating in the activities.-The Tigers came away from Florida with a 16-12 record, and manager Scheffing has termed team “toy best In' three years." < The probable starting line-ups: Rate Reduction Could Result From Increase Budget Review Likely in Departments Held at Minimum Afiocation By DICK SAUNDERS Pontiac’s Board of Tax Review yesterday set the. '—jeity’s 1963 assessedvJlua-tion at $308,459,500. The 1963 tax base is some $27 million above last year’s and $20 million more than the estimated valuation on which' this year’s city budget was based. - News Flash DETROIT un—The $l-mlllton libel suit brought by Teamsters President James R. Hoffa and h(s union against the AFL-CIO was thrown out of court today by a federal judge. In 1962 the total assessed valuation was $281,075,300. -Initial effects of the new tax base could be a reduction of the estimated 1963 tax rate, • revision of the budget or both. When they prepared the 1963 budget, city administrators and commissioners estimated they Would have a tax base of about $288 million in 1963. REVIEW DUE ,________ With that tax base, the budget would have required a tax rate ?, of $14.98 per $1,000 of assessed valuation. This was a hike of $1,12 over last year’s rate of $13.86. With the tax base established at $308 million, a $14.98 per $1,000 tax rate would produce about $300,000 more than required in the budget as adopted. .<. Commissioners indicated when they adopted this year’s $6.7 million budget that it would bo subject to review and possible revision after the tax board met. .Should the budget not be revised, it would require a tax rate of about $13.99 per $1,000 on -(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Anne Bancroft, Peck Win Oscars To Start in^October Estes to Head UF Drive E. M. Estes, Pontiac Motor Division general manager) has been appointed general chairman of the 1963 Pontiac Area United Fund Campaign. The fund drive begins in October. . • - ^ In accepting the post, Estes Said he looked forward with confidence” to an effective communitywide campaign to support the 54 agencies which depend on the fund for their I financing. . §. it it e I “The Pontiac United Fund per- I forms an/all-important service tq *• area residents and the results are extremely rewarding to everyone concerned,” Estes said. . * ★ * An active community leader, he is a member of the fund’s board of trustees and the board’s executive committee. He also serves as chairman of GM’s plant city committee and is a trustee of Oakland University foundation. In Today's Press Nation's Tribute . Churchill becomes 1st I honorary U. S. citizen today - PAGE 25. Freedom "Donovan secures re- j lease of 9 sklndlvers held In Cuba - PAGE ,7. Go Idwater Disclaims connection, j but allow! supporters ) stir draft intorest-PAGE | 11. turn in official returns. With vass, figures from 70 of Michigan’s 83 counties and unofficial returns from the remainder toe vote was: Yes 810,677 , No 802,067 The State Board of Canvassers held a round-robin telephono conference Monday after-, noon and instructed Montgomery not to release any further (ConUnued on Page 2, Col. 7) Area News ...... 4 Astrology 28 Bridge 28 Comics IS Editorials 8 Markets 84 '‘Obituaries ....... '25 Sports .. 20-22 Theaters 30 tv & Radio Programs 31 Wilson, Earl.... 31 Women’s Pages .. ..18-17 Clouds Will Cast Cool Shadow Here Partly cloudy and continued cool is the forecast for tonight and Wednesday- | Temperatures will drop to a low of 35 during, the night and rise to near 60 tomorrow. 11 The outlook for Th"rsday It j more of the tame. . ,$r it ★ ■ | Morning winds northerly at five J miles per hour will shift to north I to northeast late today at 8 to 15 | m.p.h. ,, ’ I ! Thirty-four was the low reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 1> !a.m. The 2 p.nr. recording was SANTA MONICA Calif. (AP)-Gregory Peck, a four-time loser in the Oscar finals, and Anne Bancroft, an actress Hollywood once ignored, are winners of the mov-inamed the year’s best film Monies best actor and best actrAssIdky night at the 35th annual Afead- awards for 1962. Lawrdnce of lemy Awards ceremony, Arabia” wa'sjgrandfather, Ed Begley, and a J ALL SM&Fs —- Winners of top Academy Awards get together backstage last night. From left are Gregory Peck, best actor in “To Kill a Mockingbird;" Patty Duke, best supporting actress in “The Miracle ('Worker;” Joan Craw- ford, holding Oscar won by Anne Bancroft for beat actress in “The Miracle Worker;" and Ed Begley, best supporting actor In “Sweet Bird of .Youth.” , ’, \ ‘ ■ - v teen-ager, Patty Duke, won best supporting actor and actress honors. Miss Duke, who played the child Helen Keller in “Hie Miracle Worker,” is the first juvenile ever to win an Academy Award. Shirley Temple, among'others, have received honorary awards in the past. ..In a glamor-packed setting at * Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, the taciturn Peck confessed that he came to the show “prepared to be. a graceful loser.” it it h . “I’m just a little stunned about toe whole thing. It really staggered me,” Peck said, Miss Bancroft, who portrayed Annie SuHlvan, the tenacious teacher or the blind and deaf Helen Keller in “The Miracle ’Worker." was busy Monday night on toe New York stage — where she became a star after years in B movies. Joan Crawford accepted the Oscar for her. ’LAWRENCE’ CONQUERS Early in the night, as technical awards were announced, it looked like a sweep for “Lawrence of Arabia.” It almost was. The $12-miUlon movie of tho mysterious World War I hero won seven Oscars for (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) a THE PQNliAC PltKSiS^UESDAY^ APRIL ^1963 TWO BirrrringhanY Area News Rusk Pledges Continued Aid to SE Asians Unanimous Ballot Seats Commissioner as Mayor Congressman-Informer Hot Identified trust shown in asking me to do the Job and follow in the footsteps of one who's served so well the past three years. “There are some responsibilities I cann.it accept to the extent that Mrs. W>i)ett did,” ' He referred *0 the kisses bestowed on commissioners at Mrs. AVillett’s tort commission meet-ing. OTHER OFFICERS ^ Also taking the oath of office Wore new ^nMnissioner—Pavitl P. Breck and William E. Roberts, who is serving his fourth term on the commission. Another unanimous choice was election of Robert W. Page as mayor pro item, succeeding BIRMINGHAM - City Commissioners last night elected fel-low commissioner William H. Burgum to the pokt' of mayor. | iThe ballot was unanimous. Burgum, 48, of 1875 Winthrop Lane, succeeds Mrs. Florence H. Willett, who did not run for re-election.. He has served on the. commission for five years and was re-elected when his term citg J pired this year. -The new mayor said ho “ap i predated the confidence and ? WASHINGTON (AP)-Columnist Jack Anderson refused today to tell a congressional committee the In other action, the commission voted to eliminate the H cent twilight golf rate lit Spring-dale Park, ‘ * ★ ★ According, to Arthur F i t c h, manager of the course, congestion was caused by gblfers arriving before 6 p. m. when the lower (Continued From Page One) the $308 million total assessed valuation. This is a 13-cent increase over last year. From Our News Wires PARIS — Secretary of Stale. Dean Rusk today pledged a continuation of adequate U.S. economic aid, to Southeast Asi* in the • drive to combat increasing Coi munist threats in the area. ' Rusk tojd the ministers coun-«cil of the Southeast'Apia Treaty Organization (SEATO) that the American people are convinced Tis Spr Classes Vacations Spring and Easter vacations beckon Pontiac Urea school children this week. Pontiac pub 1 i c school pupils will get a rest from classroom . chores beginning at the cipse of school Wednesday and continuing until Wednesday, April 17. ★ Ht ★ .This includes .both elementary and senior high school sf Students at St. Michael 'School get off at. the close of school - Wednesday and return Monday, April 22. St. Frederick School pupils will be d 1 s m Is s e d at noon Thursday and return April 22. Emmanuel Christian School will close at the regular t i m q Wednesday and reopen Wednesday ^April 17. waterfqrd Township public ' school students will begin their spring vacation at the close of school Wednesday and' return, on Wednesday of next week. All Our Lady of the' L a k e s School students will start t h e 1 r vacation at” noon Thursday and return April 22. EARLIEST DISMISSAL Students at St. Benedicts School get off the earliest of schools. The St. Benedict youngsters were to begin their vacation at the close of school today and not return until Monday, April 22. of the. need lor .helping the Asian countries. He went out of his way to reassure the SEATO officials that United States has no inten-making large cuts in its as was indicated in a report to President Kennedy by a special investigating team headed by Gen. Lucius D. Clay. u assure tl % Tie Unit ®j* tioji of i ’ aid. as v The St. Benedict pupils gained an extra day vacation because of the pastor’s feast day, which is allowed any time during the year. Oakland University students receive a spring vacation break between senfesters. Class sessions end Thursday and the new semester-doesn’t begin until Thursday, April 25. However, students must register April 24 for the new semester. Warning of relations between France and the United States and Britain tightened the SEATO alliance as it held its second day of consultations. The meeting ends tomorrow. * l REBEATS CONCERN In his speech to the closed session, Rusk reiterated. U.S. con-cern he expressed yesterday U. S. Asks Soviets to Intervene, Page 7 about Laos, Viet Nam, Thailand and the Sino-Indian dispute. Though he pledged an, hid program of “adequate size,” Rusk warned Southeast Asian nations, they (bust recognize that each foreign aid program has to be reviewed in. the light of available funds. * He stressed that there must be what he termed -‘a sensible, reasonable program” that would meet the needs of the greatest number of people. Hie council was to go into the Laotion situation and its threat to neighboring Thailand in detail at another closed-door session this afternoon. ' / The prospect that the pro-Com-munist Pathet Lao would take over-all of northern Laos made the situation in the adji From Our News Wires DETROIT -^ Five persons were injured last night when an American Airlines jet-prop Electra with 52 passengers aboard dived to avoid colliding with an Air Force F101 Voodoo jet fighter. Southeast Asian kingdoms the major item before the council. Laos is not a member of SEATO, and the 1962 Geneva agreement which neutralized Laos in effect bars SEATO. .intervention there. But a Pathet Lao takeover probably would bring an increase in Red subversion in northeast Thailand and a Thai appeal for help from the alliance. Elaborating today’s speech by Rusk, conference sources said Rusk had described the Laos situation as very critical. They quoted him as saying the first objective is to stop the fighting and to learn more of what is going on there. Rusk said it was hoped, that s- <"» £o“tat Viet Nam would be turned out of Laos and that the International Control Commission, a watchdog body, could enter the area of the fighting for a first hand study, the sources reported. LAOS REFUGEES — Arriving in Vientiane aboard a Russian plane, Laotian refugees flee fighting between the Communist Pathet Lad and neutralist forces on the Plaine des Jarres, , where the Reds are battling for undisputed control of the north. On Boston-Detrolt Airliner Dive to Avoid Air The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Partly cloudy and continued, Oool today, tonight and Wednesday. High today and Wednesday near 50. Low tonight 35. North to northeast winds 8 to 15 miles. temperature . I,aw.lt temperature ... Mean temperature ... Weather—Partly aum AP Pkelelei NATIONAL WEATHER — A few scattered showers or show flurries are expected tonight in the northern and central Appalachians and into the southern Ohio Valley while a few showers and thundersjtorms are likely in the central Plains and parts of . the middle Mississippi Valley. Showers and snow flurries also are expected in the northern Plateau^ There will be showers on the north Pacific Coast. It will-continue mild from the southern . Atlantic Coast to the western Gulf Coast; cool from the northern and central Atlantic Coast westward to the northern Plains. The. near-collision five miles in the sky occurred near Syracuse, NY. The airliner, Americap Flight 465, was en route from Boston to Detroit. It landed at Detroit Metropolitan Airport five minutes behind schedule. The pilot, Mel Biederman, of Ann Arbor, took violent evasive action when the Jet loomed on a collision course, the air* * 'I::'"’"'' The sudden plunge came at dinner time. A passenger, Ralph Me-Kenney, 17, of Grosse Pointe, said dishes and coffee flew all over, the plane. ‘In the back of the plane, by the tail section, people were he said. None appeared to be injured seriously by the dive. LAUGHTER AFTER Mcfjtenney, a student It Was Quite an Experience' Local Resident Aboard Jet-Dodging Airliner ‘it was quite a frightening experience,” ‘Howard L. Cate, of 313 Elizabeth Lake Road, said today- “But I’d be glad to go'through it again in, order, to miss colliding with another plane.” * Sr Sr , Cate was one of 52 passengers on an American. Airlines jet-prop Electra that dived to avoid colliding with an Air Force F101 Voodoo jet fighter last night near Syracuse, N.Y. Cate was not among the five persons reported as receiving slight Injuries in the incident. “The flight was very smooth ind u n eve n t f u 1,” Cate said, ‘when all of a sudden the plane banked and went into a dive.” WWW The suddeh plunge Came at dinner time and threw dishes and coffee over some passengers, Cate said. He was spared because he had finished his dinner, and the stewardess had Just taken his tray before the dive.. Passengers who suffered the most were those in the smoking lounge In the tall section of the plane, according' to Cate. ' w w + He said the passengers afterward, joked about the incident, and the pilot apologized fojr ‘shaking up” everyone. Cate said he was returning from Rhode Island where he had attended his uncle’s funeral. tion from Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass., said the plane dived down and to the right. 'When it was all over, people laughed,” he said- . w .* w • ' w An Ampri™n Airiinas. . man said only four of the five reported " hurt required .hospital jjreatment. Biedermann said the incident was “closer than you like to have it,” but declined, to estimate how close the planes were to each other. , He said he could not go deeply into detail without authorization from his superiors. Biedermann, 41, father of three children and an American Airlines pilot for 20 had other close calls in the air during his career but “not like this one.” w w_______,5L_. HT said he was forced to put ; his turboprop Electra into evasive action to avoid collision. He called it a “ticklish situation,” but said he was not apprehensive at the time of the emergency. THRILLED -Anne Bancroft slaps her hand against her face in disbelief as she learns she has won- an Oscar as best actress of 1962. She is how appearing in a play on Broadway and wasn’t able to accept .her award in person. 1963 Oscars Handed Out “You’re operating strictly by the book” in sUoh crises, he said. A pilot’s reaction in such instances is “almost automatic.” name of “an anonymous congressman” who gave him information for an article titled ‘‘’Congressmen Who Cheat.” jl . |fr U ) He invoked the First Amendment, guaranteeing freedom of speech andjthejress, during, _a bfieT but turbulent session of the House Administration-Committee^ Accusations such' as' “Bluff and bark” and “You’re a coward’ were hurled peross the committee table as Chairman Omar Burle-son.D-Te*., rapped the meeting to. adjournment amid scattered boos from spectators. APPEARED MARCH 4 Anderson’s article was published March 4 in Parade, a weekly magazine supplement, for which Anderson is Washington correspondent. The committee decided to look further into it because, Burleson said, it made accusations of misconduct and unlawful acts on the part of members of Congress. Anderson offered to give other information to back up his claim that there are “cheats and chisel-in Congress, but he would not’ Identify the source of his information. The committee would not allow him to read a prepared statement after he refused to name his news source, f.... The Parade article made allegations that some congressmen have engaged in moral corner cubing, including profits on real estate transactions based on confidential information received by- congres-sional committees. raised a _storm at the Capitol. House GOP Caucus Holds Fate of Three Big Bills LANSING WP) — The future of the open occupancy bill—a basic part of Gov. George Romney's legislative projgram—and two other volatile issues rested' today with a caucus of House Republicans. The big decision wa^ lp H- whej^er the open occupancy bill, designed to eliminate racial ^discrimination in rehl estate transactions,4 would be .reported- out of the State Affairs Committee by tomorrow’s deadline. Also under the gun in the party conference were the parochial school bus bill and the explosive wage bill which both R-Kingston, said he was not sure the minimum wage bill — declared dead last week by Rep. Riemer Van TH, R-Holland, I bor Committee chairman would be brought before the cau- Romney and Democrats have tried in vain to pry loose from reluctant House GOP leaders. (Continued From Page One) sound, film editing, music score, color .art direction, cinematography, best director (Britisher David Lean) and best movie. Blonde Miss Duke, sweet 15 and a high, school Junior, was so stunned she could only sob, “Thank you,” before the na- e-govemor rtiade his final plea for each bill at his regular weekly breakfast with GOP legislative leaders this morning and told newsmen later: “I am confident of a good batting average on these pieces of legislation.” He said he has canceled planned trip to Washington morrow to be on hand for the legislative deadline for all bills to be reported out of the opposite house. The governor’s final plea for each to be rescued was to come at his weekly breakfast with GOP legislative leaders this morning. It appeared the most pressure would be applied for release of the open occupaney bill, written as a proposed law: to replace the so-called “Rule 9,” of the Michigan Corporation and Securities Commission, which the Michigan Supreme Court ruled invalid four months 'ago. As drafted, the bill would bar real estate brokers from encouraging, suggesting or recommending that home sellers select purchasers on the basis of race, religion, color or national origin. Since passing the Senate, the Hamlin Wins Term Backstage, she said that was all she Intended to say—“and I didn’t think I’d get a chance to say that.’1 ^ . ★ * Hr She clutched her Oscar to the bosom of her'green silk organza dress and said: “I will hold,onto it forever.” I State Affairs Committee, Rep, Lloyd Gibbs, R-Portland, said yesterday he couldfi’t predict its fate as the deadline approached. . * A GOP caucus decision pn the minimum wage bill, a House substitute for a Senate-approved measure calling for a $1.15 wage floor, was cdupjed with a demand by Democrats that the H p u s < Labor Committee be forced to report the bill put. * ★ a ★ House Speaker Allison Green, . (Continued From Page One) new committee appointments, probably next week. The 24 township supervisors and 81 city-appointed of the board will have until next Monday to review the record budget. They will adopt a budget then for presentation to the County Tax Allocation Board. The proposed budget includes $7,077,887 in salaries for county officials and employes. The figure represents a 4% per cent increase over the 1963 salary budget, but Includes no pay increases except normal increment and merit increases. ‘ ★ ★ 1 Jk The proposed budget includes $146,500 to pay for the cost of two additional Circuit judgeships expected to be created for the county this year by the State Legislature. The budget report also called attention to “the increasingly urgent need In the near future” for a north wing addition to the county courthouse, where a $1.5-million west wing was recently completed. Although no funds were allocated for such a wing In, the proposed budget, it urged “serious consideration as to the future allocation” of funds provided by a statutory .1-mlll building fund tax, committed this year to the first three cottages of a proposed Children’s Village. * * . The expected addition of two judges lends urgency to the need for more office space for county departments, according to county auditor Robert Lilly. The proposed budget exceeds the 1963 final budget by $1,609,096. Some revision of the budget appears likely, however, since several department allocations were cut to a minimum to keep the adopted budget as low as possible.' Board action was in sharp contrast with that taken by the 1962 tax review board. Last year’s board sliced |17.9|^®? a* million off the total assessed valuation recommended by City Assessor Edward Bloe. SUGGESTION CUT This year’s tax board cut Bloe’s recommended tax base of $310,-584,300 by only $2,124,800. The tax board’s final figures were annouuced after a month Of meetings at which the board heard appeals from taxpayers who felt the assessed value of their real and personal property was too high. v Bloe’s recommended total as-lessed valuation of realestate was $153,830,200 this year,, The board deducted $2,123,400 for a final total valuation on real property of $151,706,800. The assessor recommended-* valuation of $156,754,100 for tax purposes on personal property. The beard reduced this by $1,400 for a final total valua- As many as 40 persons were reported to wait, With some groups held up for an hour. City Manager L. R. Gare pointed.out mat this was not a move to .pull ’.in more revenue, but an attempt to erase conjes- .....fto. 1 tee at 8 p. m. ★ ★ Also* adopted was a resolution supporting tile annexation of the Springdale Park property to the city, of Birmingham. Presently located within Bloomfield Township, the property was purchased by the city in 1947. -^w-T«sohrtion^lP4ie^pa8sed“‘ on to the Township Board for consideration. Lyman J. Craig was elected last night to replace John S. Bugas as Bloomfield Hills mayor. Craig, mayor pro torn in 1962, has served on the commission since 1955 and was mayor in 1959. Bugas was defeated at the polls last week.__ 1------ New commissioner Louis J. Colombo Jr. was elected mayor prO tern. David W. Lee, also elected to the commission last week, was Robert J. Stadler was reappointed clerk-treasurer, and City Manager Elmer Kephart was* named assessor and representative to the county board of supervisors. In Its first, action, the commission passed' an ordinance which requires persons planning to excavate within the city to purchase permits. The city win then notify public utUity n( use 7S2 700 on Dersoual appointedex-officio member of Prepay. ^ the Bloomfield Hills Planning A major portion of this year’: board deductions was a $1,077,200 loss attributed to urban renewal demolition and clearance. Another $73,000 drop came from properties being condemned by the State Highway Department for highway right of way in Pontiac., ■ The big, over-all Increase was due largely to a jump in the per-onal property assessment to General Motors Corporation. Bloe recommended the GM personal property assessed valuation be set at $128,728,200 — about 40.84 per cent of GM’s estimate of actual value. APPEAL DENIED GM appealed for a ^31.9 million reduction of the recommended valuation. The board denied die GM appeal and left Bloe’s figure unchanged. • A GM spokesman indicated die corporation may appeal-the* board’s action to the State Tax Commission, but no definite decision bus yet been reached. ‘General Motors, has always been known to pay their fair share of the cost of local _ eminent,” said W. R#y Ransom chairman of the tax review board. The ordinance was passed to avoid fires caused by broken gas lines, according; to Stadler, public safety director.. . ‘Their figures have been broken down in the same way other industrial figures are handled.” Last year’s tax board granted a $15 million deduction to General Motors after the corporation appealed its personal property assessment as recommended by the city’ Canvass Cuts New-Con Edge (Continued From Page One) comparisons between the official canvass figures and news service tabulations. Newsmen protested that the board had no authority to keep the figures secret. Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelly, when asked for a ruling on,the innvassers’ order, said the can-.*•8 figures “are public records arid should be available to’the press.”, The canvassers then withdrew their ordqr. Area Man Named to Athletic Board •LANSING -- Governor' George Romney today announced the appointment of Dean Rockwell pf Pleasant Ridge to the State Athletic Board of Control. . Rockwell, Who will be the coach of the 1964 U.S. Olympic wrestling team, is the first appointee to the board, which controls boxing in the state of Michigan. ‘ "Is it tawful to give j j tribute unto Caesar?" Matt, 22:17 That Tuesday of His Passion Week . . . His down-fall still the High Priests seek I . . Their efforts they will not |e-lax. “Shall we to Caesar pay I the tax?” . . . They ask of Christ in hopes that He . . , Will speak some | word of heresy , Against Jehovah or do* j dare . . Some treason, 'but Hs bids them bear j ... To God due tribute and to pay ... To I Caesar his to their dls- j may. JULIEN C. HYER I , ITHfe PONTIAC PRftSS, .mE&DAYfr APRIL THREB Fund Lisft Due From Candidates Oakland County Clerk-Register Daniel T. Murphy today reminded all candidates in the April 1 election that April 21 is the deadline for filing campaign' expense State- Candidates for city and township offices are required by state law to file the expense vouchers with tjjalr citiLor township clerk by that date, Murphy‘said. The statements must Indicate die source of all foods spent in a candU date’s campaign as well as how die money was spent, Morphy ex- Committees on behalf of candidates and groups formed for or against the new state constitution also must file the expense vouchers. ad construction or improves a by the Oakland County Road. Commission will cover more than 58 miles at an estimated cost-of more than $5 million during 1963. The figures oh the county’s 1963 road program are included ip data compiled for theRoadftom-mission’s annual report, whirls scheduled for release next w^ek. Some $1 million of the estimated costs' will come from county funds, with federal aid, cities and townships Iccounting for the other II million. The program includes 29 projects covering more-than 46 mites in county primary roads at a cost of $47 million. their share of the cost of these,« are of and federal aid will take care < half the $765,000 cost of five < tiie 29 projects. The five | about 13 miles. Countywide groups must i return them to Murphy’s 1 office in the county court- I house . 1 Expense statement 1 forms are available at 8 ; city and township offices I I and at Murphy’s office. / I for soi Others may not be com| this year, according to Road mission Chairman '’*** Martlndale Street. John. Street, i The county road ■ Hii tililS Igesic I ef of’l DeWitt’i Pill., with poaitiva snsli action, bring fast palliative relict symptomatic pain, m back, joinlt and muscles. De win’s Pills arc mildly diuretic and help flush out unwanted wastes left by sluggish kidneys. De Witt’s Pills may he just what you need to relieve backache miseries and -help you avoid gelling up nights...' DeWitt's Pills ALWAYS 7E ■ END WdSSeMm See Our Selection Todayl . JSpiWKr 12?NmthSojinawSk fXFEMMI TOTAL PERFORMANCE: SiNBSmiON TRONIC TABLETS BflB&eHtC WWIUJHtt' »s»ss mdlieli. Tronic IIM MUT fc w>. | jimmJ , 98 N. Ssglntw 8t. -Main Floor\ YOU’LL KNOW WHY FORD SWEPT THE FIRST FIVE PLACES AT DAYTONA...WHEN YOUR ’63 FORD IS STILL GOING STRONG YEAR AFTER YEAR Daytona's bigs banked oval puts unbelievable stresses and strains on engine;, steering gears and frames, The Fords that won at Daytona took all the punishment this famops track could dish out over 500 miles of grueling competition without missing a beat. in this toughest of all stock car events; mechanical failures claimed over fifty per cent of the starting field. Out of twelve Fords entered, . nine wint the distance. Forcj took six faf the first ten places. Five-hundred-mile events like Daytona are a public demonstration of toughness, reliability and sheer Engineering excellence that are part of the hew generation of Ford;. A test like this can't be dtiplH cated bn anybody'*testing grounds—It's run right out In1 the open.’ Any car cah enter. But only the car that has the best tptal combination of strength, balance, precision control and road-clinging^suspen-Jjo4 can win .:. that's what We mean by total performance. v Visit your Ford Dealer before you buy any other new car. Here's what you'll find: a new kind of total-car durability, a new kind of handling ability, a suspension that is startlingly.smooth yet sticks to the road like tat. If you haven't driven oneJately, you can't really., know what a new Ford is like. Remember, if it's built by Ford, it's built for performance... total performance! „ solid, silent SUPER TORQUE cisteo DRIVE THE OARS WITH TOTAL PERFORMANCE AT YOUR FORD DEALER’S T00AYI SIMMS OPEN Tomorrow 9 mil to 6 p.m. Here’s Today’s FREE HAM WINNERS JEWEL FREEMAN 180 Crestwood, Pontiac/ EDITH ROBERTSON 173 Norton, Pontiac BELINDA SWINGER 2304 Middle Bolt, Pontiac AMY JOHNSON ' 118 E. Iroqois, Pontiac i JOE THOMAS 407 Newton Dr., Lake Orion WILLIAM FYFE . 22 Lexington, Pontiac . RONALD R. BLACK 1303 Cardigan Dr., Lako Orion EVELYN WESTOVER 89 N. Jotoio, Pontiac If yoor name is listed above,'simply coma Into Simms ajfvoftjo* tng departmont and pick-up your AAarroll Canned Ham. YOU Can Still WIN a FREE HAM at SIMMS - Register in Any Dept. Still 24 CANNED EASTER HAMS TQ BE GIVEN AWAY FREE—No purchase required, ju»t come Into Simmi ana get your free ticket anywhere in the store. Fiji It out ana deposit la handy container. - ' WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT Really An (hitstanding Purchase for YOU! Ladies’ Sport Shoes ■ 00 ★ STRAW-WEAVE FLATTIES ★ CANVAS SPORT FLATS if CORDUROYS —Values to $2.95 Your Choice • T Pair Your choice of'3 smart styles in these shoes. . . straw-weaves In black or white with decorative toes, canvas sports flat In black with rubber sole or round,foe corduroys In red or gold. One Ibw price in sizes 5 to 9.—BASEMENT WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT 9x18” Rubber Stair Treads Regular SOo Value-Now Ribbed rubber treads In .brawn or, black colon, Protects the steps and reduces noises. No limit. -2nd FLOOR RANCH STYLE MAIL BOX $2.95 value -- wrought Iron fjpish. Only 14 left. WALL .L PIN-OP LAMPS “ ■ BtS letyiq well lamg^ulb.extra. 27remain’. ■ . UJ Woven Clothes Baskets $1,69 Seller-Now Only As shown-side eorrylng ' handles. For laundry, toys 1 picnic uses. Limit 2. WEDHESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT American Made Stainless Steel 24-Po. Tableware 088 Mode In New England by New Engtond craftsmen — famous Wallac Bros., Set .. has 6 teaspoons, 6 soup spdons, 6 forks, 6 knives. - *■*' 2nd FLOOR 'FI$E-KIN6’ 7-Piece Starter Set Oven Ware Set $1.19 Value As shown — set has casserole with cover, pie. plate and 4 dessert/custard • cups. Alt In clear glass that Is oven-proof. Guaranteed ' by Anchor Hocking. —2nd FLOOR N«w Modern Styling — ALL PLASTIC Toilet Brush & Holder $1.29 Value At Simms'Only At pictured — drip proof, ruil proof plastic holder and toilet brush. ) 8-Inches height, Choice of decorator colors. —2hd FLOOR Really Clean YOUR RUu For EASTER: BISSELL Shampoomaster and 22-OZS. SHAMPOO FOAM, I7.9J r>!uo - Now As shown — trigger action applicator and 22-ounces of con-’ cenlrated loam. Easy to yse and gives 'professional ' like’ results on rugs and carpeting. •LlmltT.1 " riikiikAvimm 98 Ns SAGINAW-DOWNTOWN !V 1 X™ PONTIAC PRESS., TUESPAYV, APRIL 9, 1968 FOfrjR Developers Suit Elect Philip Southfield President tlves from Southfield to th e Oakland County Board of Supervisors wore reagpolntod tof Jhe ^comlnf-'TOaiC^They nre Mayor S. J a m e s Clarkson, Lloyd Gabler and councilmen Clarence-A. Durbin and Do-hany. Last n i g h t ’ s organizational meeting, following a precedent set last year, was part of the inaugural program for elected city officials. Held in the South- SOUTHFIELD - Philip B. Peterson was elected president of Uie Southfield City Council last night succeeding C. Hugh Dohapy, who deelinedtaseekra tlftlrterih. Peterson, Michigan Bell Telephone Co. executive, was elected in 1961 to a four-year term on the council. He is currently serving on three city committees — wage and salary adjustments, school liaison and finance. BARBARA J. HOSLEY The engagement of Barbara Jane Hosley to John Brana has been announced by her mother, Mrs. Marlon R. Sears, 2254 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake. The prospective bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Nicolae Carje of Dearborn. A June 22 wedding at toe'Walled Lake Methodist Church is being planned. field Senior High School auditor- At . the close of the session, Clarkson proclaimed -April 17 as Brotherhood Day in. the city. That date will also commemorate the City’s fifth birthday. , ■ Gov. George Romney will be OK Contract in Troy for Pumping Station TROY-A 2398,300 contract for construction of a water pumping station at the comer of 20-Mite and Dequindre roids was awarded yesterday to the F. H, Martin Construction Co, of Flipt. OXFORD — Thursday, at 7:20 p.m., the Oxford Methodist Church Senior Choir will present pn Easter cantata, “Hallelujah, What A Savior,” by John Peter- The mayor commented on the “tremendous growth” of South* field, already third largest city in Oakland County with a population of 35,000. the nod from his fellow council-men on the 82nd ballot, cast at a t w i c e-continued organizational G. Kellogg Jr. was elected mayor pro tern and Taylor, representative on the County Board of Supervisors. Taylor served in that post from 1965-61. After their 12-minute organizational meeting, the councilmen reconvened to name Clerk Shir- WALLED LAKE ~ New councilman Milton A. Parrish gained . two distinctions last night — he 'was elected mayor of this mu-’ nicipality and his. election took 'only five ballots,; » The fast action of the seven councilmen, five of whom were elected last week, gave apparent substance to the claim that “things are going to be different.’' The final mayoralty ballots were cast just six minutes after toe organizational meeting started. Last night’s figures compare favorably to the record 169 ballots it took to elect Marshall E. Taylor in 1961. Special Education Chief to Address Scotch PTA ORCHARD LAKE - Dr. Paul Thomas, special education director for Oakland County schools, will speak at tonight’s meeting of the Scotch Elementary School PTA. ★ ★ ★ The meeting is scheduled for 8 p.m. in the multipurpose room of the school, 5810 Commerce Road. _ LAST TIME Parrish is the last mayor to be elected by the Walled Lake City Council. Voters there last week approved a charter amend-ment.which provides for toe popular election of mayor. State Traffic Kills 372 EAST LANSING W/-» Traffic accidents have killed MS persons in Michigan so far this year, provisional figures compiled by state police showed today. The toil at this date last year was 310. Last year LouiS E. James got New Hardtop Beats Other Large-Engine Compacts in Los Angeles-To-Detroit Run another trophy for Rambler! A stock Yet top fuel economy is only one, of the*big American ”440" Hardtop with Flash- benefits that earned Rambler ’63 the coveted transmission and 126 horses under its "Car of the Year" Award from Motor IVjnd the famed Rambler Overhead-Valve Magnate*. AJ1 the other clear-cut superiorities ; on the most fuel-sparing cars in its in performance and comfort and doUar-for* sred the best gas mileage of them all. dollar value are spelled out in the /ms.’63 Car er did it over a tougher-than-ever Los X-Ray Books-now yours ter the asking at o-Detroit route, too. So once agate your Rambler dealer. .claims its right to the much sought Drop in and pick up your copies today, jj America’s Economy King. AMtrican Motors—Dedicated to Excellence RAMBLER SCORES BEST MILEAGE OF ALL CARS IN ALL CLASSES! . Winner of Mgtor trim Magazine Awml: "CAR OF THE YEAR" ROCHESTER UNION LAKE PONTIAC CLARKSTON LAKE ORION TROY—-The City Commission last night knocked the bottom out of a Circuit Court suit filed against ii by developers objecting to new zoning regulations on minimum lot sizes. ’In an informal poll, the commissioners voted 6-1 in favor of adopting a smaller minimum lot size in the R-1B zoning classification^ Trus— j'tee Clifford Sutermeister | Jr. was the sole dissenter. The contesting suit, filed in Oakland County Circuit Court by six land developers, claimed that toe City Commission’s Feb. 25 adoption of toe new zoning rule by a 4-3 vote was invalid. . .★ * * Developers based their case on p state law requiring approval by a three-fourths majority of the commission-elect when more than 20 per cent of toe property owners affected file a protest. , City Attorney Stanley Burke said today that although the informal poll itself doesn’t have any direct effect on toe suit, it lays the foundation for passage of a new zoning rule after a 7 Churches to Unite on Good Fr iday ,, ROCHESTER — Seven local churches will unite for a communitywide Good Friday service from n o o n to l p.m, at the First Congregational Church. Sponsored by toe Rochester Ministerial- AssOciationrthewrv-ice' will be divided into seven segments^ Persons may come and go between each section. “The Garden of Getosemane,” presented by Rev. Robert Her-manson of toe University Presbyterian Church, will begin the service. It will be followed by "The Ecclesiastical Trial,” given by Rev. J. Douglas Parker of St. Paul’s Methodist Church, with LSuren Frank as soloist Rev. Leon Dayringey from St. Paul’s will continue with “The Courtyard,” followed by Jack Zahn of toe Rochester YMCA and “Tne Temple.” Soloist during this part will be Mrs. Harold Sherman. Focusing on “The Civil Trial" will be Rev. Uoyd Boss of Abiding Presence Lutheran Church. Next, Rev. Robert Jacobson of First Congregation Church will present “The Road Calvary,” with Mrs. Laurence Kirkton as soloist. The climax, “Calvkry,” will be too meditation offered by Rev. Thomas Riddle of the Nazarene Church. An offering may be placed plates at the entrance to the nave. It will be used by the ministerial association in foe com- Replace Usual Service UNION LAKE - The Four Towns Methodist Church on Cooley Lake Road will replace its traditional Good Friday service with a Maundy Thursday com*: munion service to be held at 7:45 p.m. SWORN IN - Taking the oath of office for Troy Commission seats last night were new Commissioner Glen H. Houghten and incumbent Clifford Sutermeister Jr., who was re-elected to office. Pictured are (from left) Clerk J. Lawson Lockhart, Mayor Robert J. Huber, Sutermeister and Houghten. The ne^ commissioner unseated Roy L. Duncan in foe April 1 election to win foe second vacant seat. The commission set April 29 as this date" for Ih.e hearing. It is expected that a formal 6-1 vote will be received after toe hearing, thus making the developers' court stand (inapplicable. AVERT TRIAL This will avert the-long trial anticipated with only a 4-3 approval of the new minimum lot sizes. When toe zoning amendment was approved by foe city, Commissioners Robert J. Bar-gert, Roy L. Duncan and Clifford Sutermeister Jr. registered nay votes. Las t night, Bargert did an about-face and ..new Commissioned Glen H. Houghton, who defeated Duncan in the April 1 election, also voted in favor of foe new lot-size minimum. ■ ■■■.■%' ,* Although he had voted against-the amendment before, Bargert said he changed his stand to "keep us out of court.” The new stems from the State Supreme Coart’s ruling Inst September that foe half-acre minimum lot size, to effect here then, was d therefore The protesting developers claim that even the revised lot sizes are still too large for proper growth of the city. k k k The commission also discussed toe setting of house sizes night, but agreed to wait until the lot size controversy was solved before tackling the Iproblem. tn Walled Lake Mayor Elected in Six Minutes 3 Area Candidates Petition for Recount Two candidates forsupervlsor and one seeking to 1 clerk’s position — all Republicans — have filed recount petitions in three area townships. Leonard F. Terry, a candidate for supervisor In Pontiac Township, has requested a recount of toe six precincts there. He was defeated by incumbent Leroy Davie (D) by only INSPIRATION — Prize winners in toe poster contest for Rochester High School art students to publicize th* Jaycees’ annual Easter Egg Hunt Sunday, pose with the animal which provided them with their ^inspiration. They " (from left)JMelipda Combes, 16, a junior, third place; Sue Ozburn, 17, a senior, first; and Sharen Dyer, 17, a junior, second. The egg hunt, for children of elementary school age add younger, will be held 1 p.m, at Avon Township Park. ' 16 votes, 692 to 876. Davis was the only Democrat elected to In Brandon Township, outgoing Clerk Galen H. Whipple has filed for a recount of foe township’s two precincts. Mrs. H. Lucille Saundera (D) was successful to her bid to unseat the Incumbent by a; vote of 438 to 484. ★' k k Tallying 213 sticker votes to Grovetond Township, Republican candidate William Scramlin squeezed by incumbent Supervisor Earl B. Rhinevault, also a Republican, by two votes. Rhinevault has also filed a recount petition. to Brandon end Grovetond townships the recount can be started at any time, because the voting was done by paper ballots which were kept separate from the state polling. However in Pontiac Township, vhere voters recorded their choices on machines, the recount will be postponed Until the state gives permission to unlock the voting equipment. This will be After a final decision on toe state races is made. United Service Slated Friday in Clarkston ■ CLARKSTON — Area churches will conduct a united Good Friday service from 1 to 2 p.m. at First Methodist Church. Rev. Jack Giguere, associate minister of the host church, will preach. Choral music will be provided by the Wesleyan Choir of the First Methodist Church. Members qf the Clarkston Rotary Club will usher . ' k ■ | churches Include Participating chur C a 1 v ary Lutheran, Drayton sights Free Methodist, Firpt iptist, First Methodist, Resur- Episcopal and Sashabaw tolled Presbyterian. Mrs. Ralph Curtis will direct toe singers. The narration, consisting of Scripture readings which tell toe Easter story, will be yead by James McGraw. The tola parts will be sung by Barbara Mapley,Mrs. Joyce Wood, Harold Ehle, Murle Davis and Lee Shaw. Mrs. Elva Willows will play the organ and Mrs. Harold Ehle MU he at the piano. Immediately following toe musical presentation, Holy Communion will be observed. ★ k k On Bister morning services will be at 9:45 and 11:00 a.m. Sunday school will be held for the pr 1 mar y department only during the early service. Chalk up another trophy for Rambler! A Stock Rambler American "440” Hardtop with Flash-O-Matic transmission and 126 horses under its bonnet (the famed Rambler Overheed-Valve . Six) took on the most fuel-sparing cars In Its dam—scored the best gas mileage of them all, Rambler did it over a tougher-than-ever Los Angeles-to-Detroit route, too. So once agate Rambler .dalms its right to the much sought after title! America’s Economy King. FIVE PONTIAC STATE BANK MEMBER F,l'D, I. C. 1 §S * : t ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL* 9, 1908 with oar HELP! Make those Spring improvements with the help of an economical loan! You borrow at reasonable rates and well work out a monthly payment plan to suit your budget. Come in and -discuss your money needs with the Pontiac State Bank NOW! NO PAYING 4% ON 12 MONTHS SAVING CERTIFICATES CHARGE IT at PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE OPEN MONDAY thru SATURDAY \ . 9i30 a*in. to 9 p.m. FREE! FREE! - 6-Pack of Coke With* th« Purehata of a LARGE or MEDIUM PIZZA Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday Only Wheel's Pizza formerly "Th* Submarin* No. 2" 162 Baldwin Pontiac Chenille Bedspread 2^5°° This fashion spread is low priced at Penney’^! Choose white, shocking pink, velvet brown, bonfire red, Dutch blue, and light beige ... all cany-care, machine washable in lukewarm water. Twin and full bed sises. , Canilla plants ore. creeping rines that have to be supported. — Distributing System Gives You, WALL-TO-WALL COMFORT! Call Us Today! You Will Not Bo ; Without Hoot | Overnight! * . GOODWILL AUTOMATIC KEATINQ GO. PHONE FE 8-0484 Causp of Anyone's Allergy > \ \ * hT ■ ;: Guess SAVE ON INSULATION Anihmadon ImilitioB 2110 DM* Hiahwav 1947 BAKER, and HANSEN Ihiiirahcl Company INSURANCE -ALL FORMS- HOME OWNERS PAOKAQE POLICY A SPECIALTY Phone FE 4-1568 714 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLD9. PONTIAC By DR. WILLIAM BRADY The nature and cause of allergy is still a mystery and so there is a good deal $f speculation about the prevention, relief and cure of the exceedingly variable manifestations of allergy. . * * f Formerly we thought — or at jleast 1 dMo— that allergy and! anaphylaxis were virtually the same thing — hypersensitivity or! excessive reaction to. contact with or absorption of a foreign protein, that is, nitrogenous matter different in character from the proteins (nitrogenous materials] normally present in the body. Oh, well, if this is as clear as mud, it Is the best I can do. Frankly, Fni not so sore I know what I’m talking about. But then, who does? An allergy specialist might explain it, but his explanation wotddbe as far oat for me as my explanation probably is fir the casual readier. So shall we let it lie? in olden days, we knew that odors of flowers and hay or emanations from animals, such as the horse, dog or cat, brought asthma in certain persons. We regarded such persons as “neu-rotics.” A neurotic was a person With oversensitive “nerves” or something — maybe we had better tet that lie, too. - * . it •' * . Ragweed pollen in the air is the cahse of most cases of “hay fever.” Eradicate the ragweed that, grows in your neighborhood and you’ll have little or no trouble. If your town .or village, permits unrestricted growth of weeds, spend the late summer and early autumn someplace where the air pollen count is low, such as Denver, Santa Monica, Duluth, Atlantic City. „ GETS RID OF BIRD ! One asthma sufferer discovered that he was entirely free of trouble whenever he visited Atlantic City, but became wheezy again as soon as he.returned home -A he lived in Washington, D. C. Dr. Sherlock Holmes investigated and solved the mystery. “Get rid of your parrot,” he suggested. The man followed this advice, and had no more asthma. young man in love suffered from sneezing, watery running at the nose and some difficulty iu breathing every time he called on his fiancee. Sherlock solved this one, too. The young woman used a cosmetic that contained orris root. She dic- ing' it, and the lovers Jived happily ever after--Once I used a dusting powder in dressing a wound. The powder contained orthoform, a local anesthetic. Perhaps I inhaled some of the fine powder. Within an hour, my face was greatly swollen, my eyes particularly, and !my throat was so swollen I could hardly breathe. With these symptoms, there was intense itching of my whole body. An intramuscular injection of adrenalin ’ s o 1 u t i o n brought prompt relief. I believe that was an allergic reaction, not poisoning. * * ★ Besides asthma or hay fever symptoms, allergy is often responsible for hives, ec&ema and a variety of peculiar,and otherwise inexplicable' cases of erythe-ma, dermatitis, etc. Perhaps too most frequent manifestation of allergy is hyperesthetic rhinitis-sudden stuffing up of, nasal passages, sneezing and watery oozing from the nose.-This type of allergy makes a lot of people quite certain that they take “cold” from the slightest change in the' environment, from dampness or draft or of weather which' only they can feel. CLEAR UP ABRUPTLY •Allergic coryzas clear up as abruptly as they begin and this characteristic confirms the erroneous beliefs of many victims, for they ascribe the quick relief or cure to the aspirin or other dope they take or to moving out of the draft, stoking up the furnace, putting on more clothing or taking a "hot drink. You can’t argue with the knuckleheads about it. They know. In some instances, allergic coryza (hyperesthetic rhinitis) amounts to an impressive phe- Lester McClellan, 170 Preston t., will be installed as commander of- the Pontiac Commandery No; 2, Knights Templar, at 8 tonight in Masonic Temple, 18& E. Lawrence St. ™ • ’ t., ', J V , 4$ . ' i>, i ■> J Other officers to be installed are; John Watts, generalissimo; Lester McClellan Jr., captain general; Marvin Ladd, senior warden; Raymond Kerr, junior warden; Harold Noble, prelate; Carlton M, Spooner, treasurer; Leland Dennis, recorder; and Donald McFarland, warden. "★ - it * ■ Robert Morris will be installed' as standard bearer;. John Ousna-mer, sword bearer; John McCann, sentinel; and Robert Petersen, Harold Doebler and Jay] Teachout, guards. I Out of a clear sky; the victim will begin sneezing, machine gun style, and the more you glare at bim or say “Oh, come now," the harder he sneezes. It makes for what Riley would call a revoltin’ development. don’t know enough to explain the difference, if any, between allergy anti .anaphylaxis? But I’ll tell, you what little I know About it in the next piec% Atiout allergy; ore then one page alnlng to personal t |dlse>se. riiagno- kddreesed envelope Is ' sent to Pontiac Press, Pontiac. Michigan. (Copyright, IMS) Romney Cancels '. Thursday Confabs LANSING (A — Qov. Romney’s weekly “citizens’ conferences” will be canceled Thursday because the chief .executive will be out of town. Romney said yesterday he would likely go to Washington tomorrow for a meeting of the lester McClellan ; Local Commandery WilllnsfallOflicefi and welfare committee. This trip depends on action pending in the legislature that day, he said. The following day; when Romney formally would be in his of-fice for-'a morning of five-minute conferences with citizens, the'governor will be in New York. The Thursday cancellation was the first in 13 weeks since the conferences started. The United States has 6' per cent of the world’s labor force. Save Prospectors Trapped in Well Since Yesterday RUPEftT, Idaho (AP)-Rescu. ers succeeded early today ill bringing two part-time prospectors $afely out of a 600-foot dry well near this southern Idaho community where they had been trapped since Monday... The pair—Dasrell.Hamilton and Floyd GambrelUr., eachintheir late 20s—apparently yere uninjured and in good spirits. Hamilton got to the surface at 2:50 a.m-and Gambrel! followed an hour later. A rescue crew of about'20 used a winch to raise a bucket of tools which had gotten stuck . about 370. feet down'the four-foot wide shaft before a sling-chair device was lowered to the men at the bottom.1 The bucket plugged the well and trapped the men..... PENNEY’S ALWAYS rinpT QUALITY ^Miracle MII»for.yourj^H mmmm Shop Pei WEDNE mmM’i tt JIB <3/ DINNERS . . . CARRY-OUT and DELIVERY! • SHRIMP • LAKE PERCH • SPAGHETTI • Vx FRIED CHICKEN • ITALIAN SUBMARINE SAND, TREMENDOUS BUY! / THE PONTIAC PRESS IS West Huron Street TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1963 HUtOLD A. FTTZO*RALD President awl PabBiber Has VMMNoar ||] Pontiac, Michigan Joatr A. Run Soeretiry »nd AdvertUlng Director O. Uumiu kna . imi Advettnia* Khriushchev’s Power in Delicate Balance Cutting through the sensationalism that often colors , change In Soviet top-level government attitudes, there sterns sound reason to believe that Nikita Khrushchev’s policies are in conflict with those of the Communist party’s central committee, and that a realignment is ahead. The divergence of opinion lies in the area of allocation of Rus-' sia’s resources between military and civilian needs. ■ ★ ■' ■' Underlying it, however, are the forced to step in, it will bear watching with some interest. The best form of reverse lend-lease possible would hrthe so^utlon to the ' gambling urge, exported to the U. S. Castro said if Khrushchev had come to Cuba after withdrawing the missiles test fall, “I would halve boxed his earj& if this had happened, Nikita most, likely would have hanged puppet--Castro with the string used to make him dance. The world over, riots by college students are becoming more frequent. It is lamentable that So many members possible political and social conse- of the rising generation are uprising, querices of the diversion oj a much , * - “The only pertain way to avoid get bom,” says a philosopher. Now he tells .us! In many a case a soft answer makes the tough listener think the person whp gave it is chicken. greater proportion of funds to de-leiue need., which the premier has troJ"; Voice of tiie People: lAre Medical Shows Affecting Americans?9 Is an attempt being made to brainwash the American people? Too many TV programs are medicine, drugs, doctors, nurses, surgery and disease. Ajre we trying to Inflict the world with a nation of nypa-chondriacs? . ★ ★ Sr » Ml . Sociologists have prove* that * large percentage of people are affected by this-kind of influence. V • a.k. ■ Parents Gave Test Ninth Graders Our 14-year-old twins just worked Mr. Seymour Karp’s four problems correctly and in less than 15 minutes. jjfc This should help refute Mr. Karp's notion that the Waterford Township School System opposed in the past. Such a change, of course, would mean less for consumer goods and could easily affect the whole range of Soviet policies, starting with the need to reimpose some Stalinist controls in order to contain popular dissatisfaction that may result from the disappointed hopes of the masses. ★ ★ '■ ★ But the Cuban crisis and subsequent Commie backdown emphasized that the Soviet military establishment is by no means as formidable as the world had been- led to believe, and that' it needs to be substantially beefed up. That takes money. Khrushchev, in a speech to the central committee in November, | immediately after the Cuban in-: volvement, had reiterated there should be more spending* on consumer industries. But by the end of February, he appeared to have changed his view— or to have been made to change it. The Mtter versdoti is the ittbfl“lin- ftble. #.. This is just another indication; infrequently realized, that political sails necessarily shift with the wind in dictatorships as well as in democracies. ’ ‘Okay, Let’s Throw Him A Bone’ David Lawrence Says: Plan to Overthrow Castro Needed ‘City Doesn’t Need AnothefBar’ It doesn’t seem possible that some City Commissioners could be so short-sighted as to place another bar in a city block which already has one. This opposes all moral standards. Does the City Commission want to take all the business away from downtown? Jl this bar is allowed to go in the proposed location it will become another skid row. Downtown Stopper New Con Leader Thanks Workers I was astonished to read that The scale has been tipped by all Avondale High School appll-the honest weight of forward-look- cants had failed the test given at ing Oakland County citizens. We Ferry Service foe. I gave It to my are all thankful that the constitu- daughter who is a 9th grader it lion was adopted and are justly Avondale High. She passed it 100 proud that-sa many individuals .per cent. If they are. capable, stand groups worked to educate answering these mathematical v the people. questions in the 9th grade they As chairman of the Oakland should be mmp advanced ^after My husband and I are proud of our township and its forward-looking school board. Mrs. Paul H. Atkins 6884 Jerose $t. The Man About Town Fancy Footwork Two Long-Ago Hoofers Staged Walk-On Routine any way the use of American By HOWARD HELDENBRAND . troops or invading armies from The recent wave of toe and heel exercises outside, a plan could be de-that swept'the country (closely akin to the vis®d that would appeal today to hoof and mouth disease, in which you hoof a SfnKf mar and woman on the little and then talk about it forever) brings island of Cuba. The expression forth a few nostalgic thoughts from Harlan S. (Ding) Smith of 148 Cherokee Road. County Nonpartisan Committee the 12th. . for its adoption, I thank every I add my thanks to those which It was the students’ failure not the school’s. Proud Parent at Avondale High WASHINGTON — Strangely has to start with an organized relatives and friends throughout enough, a comprehensive plan revolutionary movement of sub- the island. They are all aware of that could really help to over- stantial size. the suffering that prevails and HHL, throw Castro and liberate Cuba Actually, the most successful the hopelessness of the future Gov. Roinney"and Mr. McLogan has never been formally pre* and far-reaching revolutions under Castro. of the State Committee asked me sented to the world by the United against autocracy in Europe and Given a chance to rescue their pass on to dll who are workers , States. Latin America and Asia in recent countrymen, this same standing for good government in Oakland Thp AlllMMC In conformity with International years have come Jreminsldethe anhy could quickly take charge co^iy. * law, and without' Involving in “rood forces. - and get rid of Castro. A whole In Cuba, the 200J)00-man army army can suddenly shift its al- Bloomfield Hills is an integral part of a large legiance at the behest of a few ...;.... population, and its members have officers. 1 Henry 5}. Booth Portraits By United Prase International Today is Tuesday, April 9, the 99th day Of 1963; The moon is full. Seems that back In 1910 — yon practically had to walk then — on n dun Saturday afternoon, he and n fraternity pal decided to walk; from Ann Arbor to their Pontiac homes. (The MAT could have thought of a lot better things to do on a dull Saturday afternoon.) Sof with no preparation except changing shoes and provisioning themselves with a couple of sandwiches, the pair set out over the dirt and sand roads that were then all the rage. • • At South Lyon,; the depleted commissary pas restocked with the only thing edible to be found — a box of saltlnes. That, my friend avers, was undoubtedly mi p_____i i the greatest tactical disaster of recorded his- bamDling JDlg 1 rODICin tory.-Because; soon after the crackers were . „ « . gone, the hikers were-desperately checking — . ■ HIBLi to British Government every farm house for an outside pump to capacity and potential of Cuba. of their concerted will could end the Castro regime. The plan would cost money — maybe a half-billion dollars a year for five years 1or more. But that’s a lot less expensive than the loss of human liver in even a “limited” war.” I Besides, ltl could hardly pro*| voke that awful! “nuclear w a r” LAWRENCE which is so often cited 'as the reason for American forebear-ance, if not timidity. The “liberation” plan would require, first of all, the appointment by President Kennedy of a special commission of Americans familiar with the economic Bob Considine Says: Man Who Chose Happy Over Fermi Award NEW YORK — Gen. Leslie R. Engineering Project, as it was Groves (Ret.), the realistic Army called, but keep his wool-gather-engineer Who chose Dr. 'J. Robert ing scientific team in one piece. Oppenheimer to head the’fti- One day he called Oppenheimer markable scientific community jn and said, “Oppy, you’ve got to that created the atomic bomb, get a new hat. Everbody now rejoices over the presentation of knows you by that pork-pie you By JOHN C. METCALFE Grandpa, as your trusting Chris . . . I am writing you because . . . On last Christmas Eve I learned . . . Parents are the Santa Claus . . . Now, 1 heard it while in bed . . . As they placed beneath the tree .. Presents which they saM/they bought . . . For my brother, Gray, hnd me . . . Grandpa, do not be disturbed . . That I overheard all this . .. . Since The meraiaf atols are Venus and Saturn. The evening star is Mars. . On this day in history: In 1883, till people of Peterborough, N. H., founded the first public library in the nation to be supported % municipal funds. In 1949, Germany carried cut a “blitekrelg” invasion of both Norway and Sweden. In 1942, Bataan fell in the Philippines. In 1953, the New York State Briton# are caught up in one of the world’s oldest diseases, and the Ration’s leaders are expressing cOn-ipern. ' • Gambling fever is rampant, and growing worse each day. * It’s not just the ponies or the traditional soccer pool that has the coppers disappearing from the tea caddy or sugar bowl. ★ ' ★ ★ Gaming clubs are springing up all over, with roulette wheels and’ one? armed bandits. Bingo has swept the British Isles with astounding results. ★ ★> ★ This is happening In a,nation with a serious unemployment problem Which la growing worse. The unemployment may be one reason for the upsurge in all forms of wagering. In discussing the annual budget, government leaders expressed a need for more taxes to drain , off some of the money being gambled. They felt that the betting is causing some of the problems which Uro government must face and that the gaming industry. should pay a bigger share of the expense of government. a ★ ★ slake their thirst. • • • But since it was then night, the watchdog guardians saw to it that little If any relief was bad. They finally reached the old hotel at Orchard Lake and hopefully beat on the door r. . no luck — the landlord was not to be disturbed.' Next they tried the Hodges home on Pine Lake, but it was too early on Sunday morning to find anyone awake. Finally, after 13 hours on the road, asylum was found at the former 0. J. Beaudette home on Orchard Lake. “0. J.” understandably thought the athletes had lost their minds, but the lady of the house, as you might know, was most sympathetic. She fed 9hd put them to bed. . By late afternoon, when it was barely possible to get swollen and blistered feet into shoes, the return trip was begun by inter-urban. • ’ • 0;. Well, as the philosopher said, If It’s not one thing it’s another — a generation ‘ later, students were swallowing goldfish! The commission would make a detailed report recommending a broad-scale program for the ra- the 850,006 Enrico Fermi Award to the brilliant physicist whose security c 1 i a r-ance was suspended a decade ago. “I can only repeat what I said at the time Oppy was banned from futher access to privileged information,” Gen. wear. They know when you come to work, when you leave, where , you are. You’re too valuable to be killed. Get a new hat.”. Oppy obeyed. He .went right down into Santa Fe and bought a new hat. Apork-pie. It’s- very idra *to knws 4rTi*-r Far* Grand Lodge, Knlghtssf Pythias: ents bring to us such bliss . . . became the ft* major fraternal Oh, I wonder what my Dad . . organization in the U.S. to ban And my Mother too would UBly committed a dls- would be for various types of hyiA act against the United workmen In Cuba. states. His services to this na- The program would, of course Mon were beyond price. I don’t be basically agricultural aud know what we could have done would outline the ways by which without him. If .1 Another Term Seen for Byrd the whole Cuban farm industry could be rehabilitated and what this could mean to the average farmer. Cost figures, however, would be Included for each segment of the economy. The whole thing is in line with the fundamental principles of the “Alliance for Progress” scheme that has been so widely publicized.' BROADCAST ON RADIO When the “liberation" plan for He has been “cleared” of charges that were never very clear in the public’s mind, which had readily accepted in 1945 the War Department’s official announcement, In the wake of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, that Oppenheimer was the prime wizard detailed to the four-year, -2 billion Gen, Groves as rugged a Roosevelt (Teddy) man as you’d want /, By PETER EDSON WASHINGTON (NBA) — The consensus at the black tie dinner honoring Harry Flood Byrd’s 80 years of continuous service in the U. S. Senate was that the Vlr-,, ginia gentleman apple grower will run tor re-election in 1994. If he doesn’t, all hell will. all his oratorical stops la an appeal that Byrd mnst ran for re-election, the withdrawal was withdrawn. And the crestfallen Kerr came to Johnson, who was then majority leader to ask, “Why do you reckon Harry changed Ml mind?” Johnson In turn asked his long- tor the Republicans, and also as a Virginian, because, as he said, his opponents hade Horae in Illinois had accused him of being a “fugitive” when he built a house near Leesburg, Vs., “a $350,000 estate,” they Charged, though it was pll on one floor. “The Senate has Just con- break loose in Virginia among Ume desk-mate Byrd and got the ferred on Winston Churchill the Cuba is ready for announcement, meet, was approached by «• —V • Hnnankaimor aim* rlnv snnn After Welcome reports about martins are Winging in, - Verae Williams of Drayton Plains, reported happily that ft short time ago he put up a house, and the next day spotted a purple martin atop it.. . just as happy about the whole thing as Mr. W. id -In Detroit is the MAT’S friend , Thomas P. (Tommy) Gillotto of 32 Murphy St.,.attending the opening ball game. Beginning with 1920, he has missed but one opener — In 1043, when he got hung The British Council >of Churches up in court.. . tsh-tsh-tsh. says some $2.3 billion was gambled last year, an Inorease of about 10 per cent Over the previous year. Stiff taxes have been tried before as a means of reducing betting, but many canes, the taxes have Just channeled the wagers into Illegal gaming from which the government derives no Income. If gambling" la creating Such problems that the government is it'11 Now, If the Tigers can just come up with a comparable' performance record, the championship gonfalon should be flying high come September. Verbal Orchids to— _ William Whitehead : of 198* W. Chicago; 82nd birthday. Mrs. Fred Lambert, .' of Birmingham; 88th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert F. Broom of 87 N. Paddock St.; 51st wedding anniversary. ,; “ ' i - * v ' it can be turned over, to the U. S. Information Agency and its numerous outlets tor radio broadcasting. A detailed report; covering as many phases of Cuban economic life as possible, should be presented In Spanish to the Cuban people. It should be expressed In the simplest phrases, so that the average person -In Cuba could quickly grasp what is really , meant. The mere announcement of the plan would Cause a sensation Inside Cuba, and the news of It would spread quickly over the island by word of mouth. But, it will b« asserted, the Cuban army has been trained by the Soviet's and is estimated at a strength of about 200,000. No revolutionist group is Strong Oppenheimer one day soon after his appointment as scientific overseer. Oppenheimer w a s emotionally upset, rare tor a man of almost Lincolnesque calm. He .said he had been approached in.a roundabout way by friends at the University of California, to provide them with information about the bomb project. Gen. Groves asked him for their names. Oppeiihelmer shook his head. Groves shrugged. After a talk with his security people. Groves repeated the request. Oppenheimer obeyed and named one or two. He omitted the name of his brother, who had joined the Communist .party fat the 1980s. • The general was not discour- the people who want to succeed him,” one Old Dominion official PUt It. . V*»U0 And if that happens, the famous Byrd political organization — the moat effective but the loosest-knit political machine in the United States, built around the personality of one leader-might well fall apart., Byrd will be IS to June. If he runs he will be re-elected, and he would be 81 it tin end of another term. But as Virginius Dabney, editor of the Richmond Times-Dispatch, said to unanimous applause: “I hope he runs for another term in 1964. Any man who can'climb Old Rag Mountain every year, wading younger men, is able to serve a sixth term.” cryptic reply, “I just couldn’t citizenship of the let Bob down.” ' “It was the only time,’’ Kora commented later, “that Harry Byrd ever paid a damned bit of attention to any of jny speeches.” United 'W# have *e' titles In America, bnt we have a nobility which has to be earned. And you (Senator Byrd) are of the nobUlty of These were just a couple of the highlights at the Smithfield (Vir- There were other tributes galore which the senator modestly ginia) ham and (Imported) cham- said later he did not deserve, pagne dinner which tiie Reeder’s though they filled his heart. Digest. gave for some 800-of_______________-Jt~i Byrd’s colleagues and admirers. At the end they gave the sen-to mark — a month late -*- the atqr a golden apple because, as 30th anniversary of his original Lewie laid: appointment to the U. S. Senate, March 4, 1983. “Just think of It,” aald the Digest’s executive editor Hobart Lewis, who presided, “Senator Byrd has been down here holding Mi finger in the dyke all this time. We wanted to title an article about Mm, ’Profile in Qonrafti’ but decided not to.** ■Ht . I ■ mm Bernard Baruch, now' 93, came again. And in that connection, up from South Carolina to honor as anything aald all evening. Vice President Lyndon Johnson the 7$-year-old Byrd with this told this story: 4 tribute: “If Dlogenes had lived Among those who went down to In this age, he. Would have put' Richmond to make Impassioned out his lantern and gone home, speeches that Byrd should change happy to have found ,hls honest Byrd did announce that he would retire W 1958 at the end of Hip fourth term, when he was a mere 71, But all hia cohorts and followers demanded that he run “We hope all your endeavors will bear fruit aad that all of yoar days will be golden.” “I hope these can be raised on toy trees,'1' said Byrd. Somebody had pointed out earlier that in all. his years as an apple grower, Byrd bed never taken one soil ooneervatton payment from the government mid had never sold the government one apple: That characterized him as well a,ged' He h®d the "Tes hia decision not to run was the man.” of those involved hours before in possession of adequate arms to do the Job of defeating Castro army. But this kind of argument as- < was not only to ride herd on the sumes that a revolution In Cubaa construction end of Manhattan blip. He sent Oppenheimer back to work.' 11 > Gen. Groves' enormous task late Sen. Robert S. Kerr, D-Okla. There were about as many Re-As ranking Democrat on the Sen- -publican senatora at the dinner ate Finance Committee, Kerr as Democratic senators, which might succeed to the chairman- was only to be «>q>ected. Because that’s (he kind of following and appeal Harry Byrd has. Sep. Everett M. Dirltsen spoke; ship if Chairman Byrd retired. Three days after Kerr pulled THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1963 serious concern has been con-j U.S. Embassyaccounts received veyed directly to Moscow within'by the State Department have re-the past few days. ported,. officials said, that the Llewelyn Thompson, special ad- Communist-directed Pathet army viser on Soviet affairs and for-has been reinforced with North per U.S. ambassador ii> Moscow, Viet Nam troops in the fighting made known the American posi- against neutralist troops on the tion in an unpubliclzed weekend central Plalne des Jarres. meeting with Soviet Ambassador C0MMUNISx CONTROL » Anatoly Dobrynin, ^hes from Vientiane, . Laos’ capital, indicate the Pathet 'Lao campaign against neutralist -I. Gen. Kong Le is aimed at giving Freedom ssht^** from protection of the Southeast -Asia Tfceaty Organization when its tripartite coalition of leftists,^neutralists and rightists was established last July. Nevertheless, the eight-nation SEATO powers agreed in Bangkok in 1961 that “if there continues to be an active military attempt to obtain control of Laos, members of.SEATO are prepared, within the trims of the treaty, to fake any action which may be WASHINGTON (APMhe Unit-del States has asked file Soviet Union to use ita influence with Communist N o r t h Vietnamese and Pathet Lao forces to halt the fighting against the neutralist army in Laos. • * *. ★ State Department officials disclosed today that Washington’s 5 Reasons Why Miller's can Save You^Aoney 'Regardless of Sales." 3 Floors of Fine New Furniture of Nationally Known Quality- appropriate Just one Hartford Family Life Policy protects dad, mom and the children. And most important, it grows with your family .. . insures children yet to come along (at no extra cost!) It builds up cash and loan values for dad, provides’ guaranteed Conversion privileges for mom and the children. Call us for details. U.S. officials said the attack^ could endanger the 14-nation Ge-: neva accord which guaranteed the neutrality of Laos after the little Southeast Asian kingdom’s bitter civil war. * j How effective Soviet efforts to \ bait the fighting may be remains : fo be seen. U.S. officials said < there is no indication the Soviets want to break the Geneva agree- without food ahd water. They said they were bound for Puerto Rico. The Cuban government arrested for seven weeks and would return ‘INFORMED BY CUBA* with them to the United States "I have been informed by the as soon as possible. Cuban government and after thor- Donovan, the New York lawyer ough investigation of the facts and who also negotiated the freedom after consideration of. detailed of the. Bay of Pigs prisoners, said documentary evidence collaborat-that Prime Minister Fidel Castro tag these facts which I present-agreed to the release of the skin- ed,” Donovan said, “that the men divers after Donovan proved them would be freed immediately.” innocent of any counterrevolution- Donovan said they would fly to ary activity; Miami, iFla., as soon as clearance ★ . ★ < for their plane could be obtained. ‘The government has informed ★ ★ ★ me that it has determined, despite The shipwrecked skin divers the suspicious circumstances of were identified by Donovan as the case, the innocence otthe rit- John W. Browne of Miami; Rob-pedition,” Donovan said in an ert C. Moran of lackftort, N.Y.; after midnight session with news- Charles E. Booher of Acookeek, Thatcher, Patterion & Wernet Pontiac'* Oldest , insurance Agency As far as U.S. obligations are concritoed, Laos removed itself Doesn't Believe He's 100 matter what other people say,” Murphy told a reporter. 6 !*»!!».SE»9“. breath, er obusblns .from recurrlns BronehlM Aethme er BrwehltU. start Uktm New, quick ectln* MXNDACO. It “The fact that they were shipwrecked seamen has been estab- The nine scuba divers arrived at Camaguey in an open boat Feb. 21 after two days at sea TROY, N.Y. (AP) - Reaching the century (mark in age usually is a source of pride, but not so for John Murphy, who, according to official,records, wilWpbserve 100th birthday today.*— ‘I still think I’m only 98 -noi The proper glams for your best vision depend not just upon the ability of your eyesto gee but also your daily requirements for sight. 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I rarely So all the women line) up Mrs. Thomas Gallant, Huron, Ohio, a former member of the chanter, was a guest. ,gpt I to dance with my/ own ^nuiroatid.' » - They all say, “Oh, you have him all the timet" They must The final tour for armchair travelers is 8. p.nv., April 11 In the Village Woman's Club lounge, Mr. and Mrs. Day ; Krollk Jr., Will give a talk; »• illustrating their motor trip | from Italy through Spain last spring. HIgnllghts of the talk include pictures of the Alhambra palace, ar\d El Greco’s ", home and paintings in Toledo, Spain. ■ j--)nh ■ Armchair travels are open , to, the public. Anyone Infer* ‘ ested In attending may inquire at the Village Woman’s Club. / t hit THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1963 FOURTEEN Not Conceit Healthy Ego Is Good Grace McCormick daughter; of, the Harold McCormicks of Milford, . and Roger Dale Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs, Gilbert ■ Williams of Emerson Avenue, Both are seniors at Oakland University, good healthy eg?H do not mean what others thin! about him and; that It is good to be conceited,;always seems t» be fighting for but unless a person Aspects him-ihls rights, self and believes in himself how ' % +' + , can he be free to have faith to Sometimes an individual who is life and in others? insecure draws into a sheU and W your go is healthy you can somewhat retirei from Mle. ‘ forget about it, just as you can . .. MA—. . format your body if it Is function- t Another may seam to be a tag smoothly. braggart and beeeaMt extreme- r/ ,y ^ ln orde, to get the at- Otherwise, you may try to mtiM he ^Vdtr to build your ego up with all sorts reWorce hlg ^ of weird conduct and reactions, tost as you would your health Some folks justsaem to be born with constant medication. with nice, normal healthy self- —*— ********* respect and selfconfidence while other* have to earn it with a$ larger outlook, *dtaphilosophic! Couple Repeats Vows in Area Lutheran Church To Talk on School Vigdis Mertensen, a student from Norway, will speak on differences in the education programs of her country and the United States at Tuesday’s 7:90 p.m. meeting of the Carl Sandburg PTA, Entertainment by the school Nancy Jane Radke ex-, changed vows with Seaman James E. Van Scoyoc of Norfolk, Va. before Rev. Mires and Ham Street. A pert, attractive widow, Mrs. Smith proves that a woman aver 50 om adjust to changes in her life emi fiat a job with which she it hippy. Moot to display merchandise to a customer is Mn. Winona Smith of Mechanic Street, m employe of the Thrifty Drug Store at Telegraph Head One area resident who proves this statement is Mrs. Winona Smith, an employe' of the Thrifty Drug Store on Telegraph Road, across from Tel-Huron shopping Something Special for Tots to Teens! SHOES FOR EASTER Going to the Ea*fer parade It twice the fun hi their new Edwards shoes from Bill Lewis, They are mother's favorites, toe, because she's sure of their high quality and perfect fit. The Shoo fon Chuohbh MADELENE GRACE MtCORMICK Name Group Chairmen Chairmen to head two newi auxiliary-sponsored service groups were named at the Monday evening meeting of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Auxiliary at the muses’ home. Mrs. C, J. Thomas will head the pediatrics committee, with Mrs. J. B. Van Cronkhlte heading the Junior auxilitary. ‘ Mrs. Phyllis Addison, librarian of medical records, spoke to the group on the number, problems and uses of the case histories. Volunteers from the local St. Joseph's Hospital Auxiliary will be In charge of the Import Fair at tho American Field Service Festival at Grosse Potato War (Memorial April 27. Imported gifts, handmade sweaters, foreign dolls, and patio accessories will be on sale. Proceeds will be used in the foreign exchange program of the American Field Service. Nett*** «f peWen •••Amu mini ncan Pontiac Area Dairy Quran Nurses Unit toHearTalk by Doctor Elliott Luby, MP, will speak on ‘Psychopharmacology” at the monthly meeting of the Oakland County District Nurses Association, 7:90 pm. Tuesday at Beaumont Hospital. Dr. tuby is a graduate of the University of Chicago and of the Washington School of Medicine, "e served his psychiatric reslden-t at Yale University, ♦ * ♦ For tho past six years, Dr. Luby has been associated with the Lafayette Citato, where he is wesentty director of clinical services. In addition, he is professor tf. psychlatryatWaynoStateUni-rersity’s college of medicine. All registered nurses are invited to attend the meeting. For further information contact Mrs. Allen or Miss Purdy at the Oakland County Health Department. thought (thus getting their values others will ilka us no bettor. We straightened outK with a deter-more or lees name toe value mined interest in others and, which others place on us. most Important, by learning to do So believe m yourself! Every something well, to excel in some living soul has so much to rat-category. 'tribute to dally life! EMPHASIS BANDEAU New Maidenform bra puts the emphasis oh perfect shape for spring outfits 200 'CHARGE ir Circle-stitched cups shape and accentuate, Vyrene®spandex front gives snug fit, beautiful separation, Have a prettier figure under all your new spring outfits. White 32A-38C. Shop Federal'* Todayt let our expertly trained eouetleret HI you % correctly for comfort and figure flattery. OMN IVIKY NIGHT TO 9 DOWNTOWN AND* DRAYTON PLAINS Use Soda oh Steam Iran If the inside of your steam iron appears to have rusted and is discoloring the cloths you press, disconnect iron, fill chamber with hot water mixed with a couple of tablespoons of sal' soda. L o t it stand, s w 1 s h it around from time to time. Repeat process until emptied tater looks clear. MRS. J. E. VAN SCOYOC at Easter time remember your loved ones with a box of Crocker's delicious quality candles. Have you tried one of CROCKER'S PRIDE. This delicious box consists of nuts, cordials, butter crunch, choice creams and other*. CHOCOLATE COATED NUT MEATS., lb. 2°° Choice nut meats embedded in our smooth chocolate ASSORTED $150 CREAMS lb. I A selection of choice Havers, smooth creamy and naturally they are coated with Crocker's favorite chocolate. 1 k Have you tried CROCKER'S SLOW POKES Sometimes called turtles. ’ • Aess you eon k*y anywhere.., Including here. Both Stores 2240 WOODWARD AVE. Open Evei. at Square hake Ra. 'til 9 and PONTIAC MALL Stine Saturday evening in the Lutheran Church of the Ascension, Waterford Township. White Chantilly lace over taffeta, for the daughter of Mrs. Marjorie Radke of Orescent Lake Road, was fash-toned with basque bodice and chapel sweep train. Red carnations rested on her lace-covered Bible and her-sift illusion veil fell from apsarltflura. i, w e w ' Arriving from Bellefon-taine, Ohio, to attend their cousin, were maid of honor Ruth Ellen Smith, who wore peacock blue taffeta with chiffon overskirt and junior bridesmaid Kathy Smith, who appeared in pink chiffon over satin. The 1 r. nosegays included white carnations and pink rosebuds. Bridesmaids Sharon Pardo and Judith Smith, wearing aquamarine chiffon and taffeta, held pink carnations and whito rosebuds. John Sinlthson was bes^ man for file'bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jamas N., Van Scoyoc, Pontiac Lake Road. Gerald Coo and Larry Warner ushered. The bride expects to join hor husband in England where he will be stationed. ' •* * f ' For the ceremony and church reception, Mrs. Radke chose a pastel blue chiffon print. Tie bridegroom’s mother appeared In gol d silk. Their corsages woe gar- "STEPPER" High while, % to A 16.99 "POLLYANN* White er patent, 4H to 12. $9.99 to $1.99 ‘Where Fit Comes First**; Ml oLewid9 Junior Bootery 1060 W. Huron 394-0725 j (Harem Ceptre, N«*t lo China Cky) || Shop Daily 9:30 till 6, Mon. and Fri till 9 OES Chapter Has Meeting Pontiac Chapter No. SM, Order of the Eastern Star, met Mon-day evening at tot Masonic Temple on East Lawrence Street. Worthy matron Mrs. Charles Mrs. Sylvan Clark will be general chairman, assisted by Mrs. Robert Byrnes and lira, Ctayton 79* EASTER „olf BASKETS F*°* PLANTS Original Arrangements of Permanent FLOWERS PROM 6298 — GIFTS — . MARWOOD MKT. 4Mi BALDWIN Am THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1963 FIFTEEN if | Sara Sub , , Wood, > ,3 , daughter of % Mrs. Dorothy Wood of Pingree Avenue and William L; Wood, Berkeley, , Calif., plans August vows ito Bill Oliendorf, son of the R. t). Olendorfs of Utica. Both attend Michigan College of Mining-and Technology. Personals SARA SUE WOOD Surgeon Warns of ' Broken Glass Hazard With warm Weather ahead,’ Dr. Ernest M. Freedle Jr., resident surgeon at the Shriners Hospital for' Crippled Children in Greenville, S. C., has a warning of special.interest to mothers of young children. Dr. Freedle warns that broken glass is a hazard to people of all ages, but especially children who should be taken to eliminate the possibility of broken glass on terraces and patios. One way to do this is to make sure that children leave bottles in the kitchen where they belong and carry beverages outtdde in paper cups. About 4,000 womeh have Jobs _ . . Ion Norwegian merchant vessels, often, fail to recognize the danger ships in foreign traffic employ ||fjU| j|w "" about 30 Norwegian women, in- until it is too late. The bottle or glass they may carry as they roam about represents a potential injury that could take much more than a dab of iodine to repair. Dr. Freedle points out that if the child stumbles and falls, he usually goes down still clutching the bottle or glass. This can result in cuts so severe that the work of an expert Hand surgeon is required, to repair severed nerves and tendons. Even so, he says, the chances are that the injured hand may never function in a completely normal way. As one way to avoid such accidents, Dr. Freedle recommends serving children drinks in paper cups. He also believes that glass containers should hever be permitted around a swimming pool. Even if breakage doesn’t result In immediate injury, jt is almost impossible to brush up every shard of glass from concrete or tile.' P'lfjL’fc L__ r-_________ By the same token, precautions Junior Club Tours Telephone Firm Sixty-eight members of th.e Junior Pontiac Woman’s. Club met Monday evening for a tour of the Michigan Bell. Telephone Co. Mrs. B. H.* Austin was chairman for the evening, with public information director, John Wilson eluding 236 radio operators. Linda Underhill, daughter of, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Underhill of Lake Angelus Shores and Laurie' Leitch, daughter of the Roy Leitch Jrs. of Lone Pine Hill, Bloomfield Hills, will spend their spring, vacation from the Univer-ty of Michigan in- Nassau. Ml W Mr. and Mrs. William. Belaney Of Chippewa Road will entertain Mrs. Belaney’s mother Mrs. K. I. Ruddock and her grandparents the H. H. Clays, all of Columbus, Ohio, for the Easter holidays. Jr. and Bobby of Vaughan Road in Bloomfield Hills. f1 ★ , Mr. and Mrs, Curtis E. Patton and daughters Denise and Beverly of South Tilden Avenue have recently returned from The Greenbrier at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. City Planner to Address Society James Bates of the Pontiac ' Ci ty Planning Department will speak to St. Michael’s Altar Society at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the parish hall. ■ * *ilpt ■ . Mr. Bates will speak dn Pontiac urban renewal projects and the downtown development plan. Avoid High Laundry Cost One luxury laundry in New York charges as much “as six dollars per yard for laundering fine tablecloths by hand! It doesn’t take much figuring* to estimate the savings if you 'learn to wash your-own “special!’ table linens Death Valley national tract in California has 1,908,000 acres, i properly, combining careful handling with warm soap or detergent suds a n .* .* ■ On their way to England, France, Italy and Germany are Mrs. George B. Heavy of Mohawk Road and Mrs. William Heavy of Detroit. They will vi§jt Mrs. George Heavy’s daughter, Mrs: W. M. Roeser and family while in Germany and also her sister, Mbs. Ralph Cross. They will return May 1. ■ * ★ ★ Announcement is made of the April 3 birth of Thomas Andrew Lochtefeld (Judith Kay Robinson) by his parents, the John F. Lochtefelds of Erie, Pa. Grandparents of the new Infant are Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Robinson of East IroquoisJloadr ... ........... Among recent arrivals at Hie Cloister, Sea Island, Ga., were Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Mills, Budget Special. . ,6-,75# 35 WEST HURON ® HAIR STYLING ™ Style Salon . . .. . '12M „p NEW/ REDUCE EAT and LOSE OP TO B LBS. A WEEK CAPSULEil EASIER TO TAKE AND MORE-EFFECTIVE THAN THE POWDERED AND LIQUID FOOD SUPPLEMENT, AND COSTS LESS INCLUDING CAPSULES SUITED TO YOU INDIVIDUALLY BY LIC PHYSICIAN, M.D. NO GASTRITIS OR IRREGULARITY WITH MEDICWAY CAPS. DON'T WET-JUST IATI *AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE, YOU CAN LOSE 5,50 OR 100 LBS. AND KEEP IT OM MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 FLOOR COVER IJICS DRAPERIES BEDSPREADS Oakland County's Most Complete / DRAPERY STORE I Over 20/0CX)^ards of Fabric in Stock Plus 5,000 Samples for Special Order YOU LL FIND IT HERE at the price you want to pay! PRICE RANGE 60‘ to $9;00 YARD CUSTOM MADE OR BY THE YARD Eypcirleliced Decorators to Advise You t— SPECIAL- DRESS PRINTS 20% rO off You'd* be surprised at the drapery fabrics sold, for making dresses. Buy mow .during this special offer on these beautiful fabrics. 1666 S. Telegraph FE 4-0516 Molls Open Mor day and Friday Evenings “/ i'tllV- Mom's $3"™J18 .From the very tailored to the, oooh-la-la, small oh large styles, the selection is our best ever. Let our experts assist in your choice A stroke of color puts a gay "new and right" stamp on any spring '63 wardrobe. $|A95 Black patent with gold, piping, black patent with black matte calf,- brown patent with bone calf. Patent Handbags $eoo to $J095 V SI.epk and smart, you'll -find the smartest new shapes and sixes. Choice of „ ., black, white,* and ‘ . jubilee colors. ; , HURON at TELEGRAPH Open MoV, Thurs., frl. 10 fo 9-Tugs., Wed., $at. 10 to 6 y Emm /)/; Spring ■■fir / Regularly to $55.00 -f / / *29!49 Here are the styles that are making fashion news . .. the silhouettes, the fabrics,.the colors that are new arid --different. High fashion coats inspired I by famed Paris creators -.. . classic coats yo’u love for so many oocg- . s|ons. And such fabulous colors; . yellow, apricot, white, pumpkin, pale blue, rich green, and of, course evetvsmart navy. The whole thriljtng spring-coat story Is here. T I ; 'V: V' tr STXTEErt- THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1W8 At oil Noumodo Hosiery Shops 82 N. Saginaw--St; SINGER* PORTABLE POP RENT I ■ $6.00 Lighting in the high school kitchen stove at-Our Lady of the, Lakes Church in Waterford are (from left) Mrs. Jerome Morris of Seebaldt Street, Mrs. James V. Sayers of Indianview Drive and Mrs. Fred Garneau of Sashubaw JRoad. These members of the Rosary Altar Society are making preparations for the Easter Monday luncheon and card party at the church. -V •■'/';■ ' By MARY l^EELEY Consultant in Money Management The single Woman, as this letter illustrates, has some special prob-lems in handling money that her married sisters can’t match. 'I get so tired of being patronized by my mar* ried sisters,” writes M.B; In Cincinnati. If I say i word about howl much it takes to live, or how I: wish I could save something ouftof pEELEY my salary, they just laugh it off. What have I got to complain of, they ask, with a steady income and only myself WROUGHT IRON. TRIVETS ' These charming Early American cad Iron trivets, can be used In so many decorative and useful ways) Special 2 ^ ^1 WIGQ has sq many wonderful GIFTS for EASTER! MILK GLASS See our large selection of authentic. milk glass by Westmoreland and Fenton ... we also feature a choice of cranberry and other colored glassl Shown: Big 28*ln. Size 'FEDERAL EAGLE fn Black or Gold Distinctive federal eagle In heavy cast metal — finished In antique black or gold! Magnificent oyer a fireplace or bs' part of a decorative wall group- Special $]Q ENGLISH BONE CHINA CUPS and SAUCERS Choose from a delightful variety' ' of floral designs and colors. USE INDOORS OR OUTI $1.95 to $12 , LENOX GIFTWARE ThT truly elegant gift, to' .-be cherished through the yearsl 3-PIECE PURSE SET by CELEBRITY Useful as well as gay, this attractive 3-plqce purse set. Choice of bright colorful satins or handsome tapestries. . $2.20 and $3.30 the Set F-T.l. 24 W. HURON ST. ' 4080 TELEGRAPH In Downtown Fonttac ot Long Lake Rd. FE 4-1234 644-7370 # Convenient Free Parking at JJoih Stores PTAs in Action Pontiac PTA groups will meet this week. EMERSON will assemble this evening at 7:30 p.m. The program will feature ‘‘Your Scouts Action” by Sam Dow and the Emerson boy scouts. WILLIS will meet Wednesday at 2 p,m. instructor Palmer Swanson wjll give a background on the science1 program And science displays will be set up. The annual spring fun night will be April 26 from 6 to 9 p.m. it COSTS YOU LESS ft, NT CUSTOM-BUILT MMTRBSES Quality Built with PSIM-A-LATOR “Strength of Stour Wire Insulators 3 layer* of put* cotton folt Since our mattreuo* DO NOT. contain tho usual sisal pads., (wood product) used In most, mattrossos causing thorn to break down rapidly, our mat*., toy firm f j, healthful correct rest! w NO 00IL FEEL EVER! but... don't toko bur word lor Mr... coma in today for d NO-OBLIGATION demonstration. WR EVERYDAY LOW PRICES JO Year Written Guarantee f We S|m»l>W«o b» Manufacturing Odd Site Mattussas "‘‘‘"j OXFORD MATTRESS CO. 411 Nftth Forty PARK FREE REAR of SHOWROOM T)p*n Dolly St60 to 6:00-Saturday 8:00 to 4:30 FMI ESTIMATES AT YOUR HOME FE 2-1 Ti l Single Gal Has Special Money future. But use something of whft you earn to build on. Even though you may not know exactly what you’re building toward, financial stability is a fine thing to have, married or single. MARY “You’d,think a' woman has to have five children, a mortgage, and a broken down washing machine before she can find anything to worry about!” Well, M.B., T wouldn’t. A single woman usually has to think in two different directions when it comes to apportioning her Income. Whether she’s 25 or 45, there’s the chance that she may get married next month or next year. There’s also the chance that she won’t So, should she invest in good furniture that may take her a long time to pay for, and set up real home? it. Or should she consider housekeeping a temporary, catch-as? catch-can proposition and spend the money on clothes, being seen in .the right places to meet new people, and or deluxe vacations? How should she manage her Income so ehe can get the most out of It right now and still prepare for the future? And what kind of future? f■ ' ★ ' ★ ■■ These aren’t easy decisions for the single woman to make. « In the first place, she’s apt to have a harder time keeping tabs on her money than her married sisters. When you’re not responsible for somebody else’a food, medical emergencies and education expense^ money has a way of slipping out of sight without any sign of where it has gone, i^ lot of flnRto Women tell «t# they want to save, but they just don’t know how! Well, there’s a simple, often overlooked remedy for this. Every pay day, put a specific amount in the bank before you spend a cent. Establish a reasonable amount so you can keep It steady one. The amount you allot might seem hopelessly meager at first, but the steadiness of putting in — never taking out will pro* duce results. A -. * Vlhe Idea is not to stop living InNfhe present, in. favor of tb# A young woman starting out on her own should make modest plans, to begin with — a small straight life insurance policy, phis amount Inaauings. LEARN ABOllT INVESTING If you’re a mature single wom-„„1, jvith more income and more savings, you’ll do well to investigate ways of letting your money earn money. 1 think business women today should know something about investment possibilities. Read up on the subject — tbeye are hooks at the lilyary. Ask advice from responsible business people. Find out what ds can do for you. H possible, take ah evening .ourse in investments. Such courses are available at colleges, the YWCA, and adult education classes conducted by Boards of Education. Look into what’s available In your own area. , V Findout how certain insurance programs can help you prepare for the future. You have to have some knowledge of money matters before you can ever hope to make decisions for yourself. You can’t expect anybody to guarantee yonr Investments, but the combination of thoughtful study and expert advice can steer yon in the right direction. The problem that plagues so many single women la the philosophy of “mamma” — waiting to see what tomorrow brings. It’s far wiser to get a course In definite direction and plan for it. ,v ‘ r ; A, 1 You lean obtain Mary Feeley’s budget saver leaflet by writing to her in care of TbePontiacPrtsss ' m self- Candid Wedding in Brilliant Natural Color Spwtal *45°° It 8x10 Color C From Up to M Proem within 10 dayt to got this special price. ERNESTINE L. LdFORGE *Ihe George R. LaForges of Auburn Heights, nounce the engagernent of th ei r daughter Ernestine LaVaughn to Ernest E, Alvrez, son of mrs, Henry Virrueta and the late Orlando Ayres. An August lO wedding is set. CAROL M. STOVER A June wedding is plan, wed by Carol Marlene Stover, daughter of the Le> land Stovers of InUay City, to Robert G. Boeneman, son of the William H. Boenemans of Third Ave-me. Changing Female Role Topic of OU Conference The changing role of women in this century will be the subject of a one-day conference April 22 at Oakland Uni- versity. Prellr' ..eiimlnary organisation steps were taken Monday by the planning committee. ★ * ★ Under direction of Mrs. Priscilla Jackson, assistant director of continuing education, the group explored program possibilities. Those participating were:. Mrs. Irene Murphy, Birmingham, regent of the University of Michigan; Dr. Ruth Phillips, representing St. Clair Shores American, Association of University Women (AAUW); Mrs. Philip Marri-ner, Birmingham, who la assisting Troy’s mayor Robert J. Huber in directing of Michigan Week in the county. Others were Mrs. Donald O’Dowd; Mrs. Jack E. Chari-par; and Mrs. Rebecca Maum, and Mrs- Barbara Bryant of the Oakland University staff. Concluding the list were Mrs- Donald McMUlen, president of Pontiac AAUW, and Mrs. Janet Odell, Pontiac Press Women’s Editor and president of Union Lake AAUW/ ■' TH 'Ot fk’ ' It is believed that this is only tiia third conference of Its kind in the United States. Manhattan Island, U,4 miles long, has 19 (bridges connecting It to other parts of New York City and New Jersey. KENDALE’S PHOTOGRAPHERS IS w. Huron St. FE 5-0322 iof Send coupon today for free booklet. Friends say Look 10 Years Yotmgor with Celebrity Hearing Glasses Good hearing nuke* a BIO' difference in my appearance. Straining to> hear causes wrinkles, headaches and nervous tension. Get Free booklet SPECIALS! ALL IN THE EAH MODEL Reg. 1279 USED HEARIND AID MOLASSES Reg. $325, NOW $119 Con bo r*-od|u*tad t# fit any loss of hearing. Now lose Hum 1 year old. Uied Sady-iypt Infra Sold New IEEE, NOW DIEM’S Hdro are flower-fresh stylos from our * exciting selection of over 20 pretty new shoos to underscore your Spring Ohd Easter fashionsl Sizes 4 to 10 — AAAA to B --------- Handbags to match, from $10.95* For over 24 yesrs Diem’s has specialised in quality footwear, properly fit-, ted, and value priced. 8 PONTIAC'S POPULAR SHOE STORt • 87 N. SAGINAW ST. Open Monday and Friday ’til 9 ’mar**" YOU'LL FIND k COMPLETE SELECTION of Candy for all occasions-Kitchen Fresh for you—Visit us today! . Everything for Easter Rackets! Easter NOvoltlos of lolld Ohooolato, molded by ill* : You choose.from an assortment of fine chocolates —Boxes made up to your personal selection. _____. a': up u , Diabetic Candy, we render “fund rasisng ser-vices.” It’s a pleasant drive to onr Modem Now Store—you’l! find your desire in Quality Candy. 9 Featuring Our RIT0HER FRESH Quality Candy if 4142 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD-FE 2-2509 < Open 8 to 9 P.M. Deify—Sundays 10 tot P.M. IfrnrrmrrmTmrrrmTnnrtrrrm 4 SEVENTEJEy THE POffTXAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 106aT Cloth Covers for Contrast ' For a unusual background I colored velvet, satin or nylon for a photograph, coyer card- material, glue it down; mount board or poster board with' I the picture aad frame. " (UtiiUmbmI) ‘ ‘ 4 , Psychologists Say Shelves Hold Washday Aids Most Love Is ‘ Those ceiling-braced exten*, sion pole* units — fitted with shelves, ji towel rings, and sliding-door cabinets — which fit above bathroom tanks have caught on like wildfire with practical homemakers. Now, similar : space-makers ari available/for the -foundry] area. Those poles stretch from {he top of a washer or dryer cabinet to the ceiling,'holding “trough” type shelves, detergent, and ojther Jaundry essentials. Incidentally, such elevated storage keeps household products out of the reach of small children, but conveniently at hand for the “Iaun- A black lacquer effect oh .unfinished furniture can be simulated with flat wall paint, and varnish. „ After sanding the surface as smooth as possible, brush on several coats of flat black wall paint 6r spray on several -coats of flat enamel. . In each .case, let the first coat'dry as specified oh the label. After the final coat has dried, apply a coat of flat varnish. By DR, GEORGE W. CRANE CASE P-408: Jean J., aged 17, is another high schooler from North Carolina. “Dr. Crane,” she asked, “do you be- lieve in love fBppijk . at; Tirst BBM. sight?----- ^BEf “And, if ^ so, how do : p s y c h ol-ogists ex-plain it? Eor B how can a B| person fall in dr^-rane love in Just. . a moment of time?” There are two methods by which we fall- in love. The most usual type is what we psychologists call “earned” love. In this variety, you start out dating without feeling particularly attracted to the other person.. Maybe, for Instance, your first meeting is on a blind date. But after you share many .happy experiences together, then you become romantically attracted. felt as if it actually turned over. It; gave a big flipflop and I never (lid recover. ences which they have shared together. Finally, they feel devastate ed at the very thought of being separated, so the boy gives the gjrl an engagement ' ring and urgently persuades her to marry him. Don’t you remember the fairy tale about “Beauty and the Beast,” where the lovely ■Princess thus actually fell in love with the Beast? FEEUNGS CHANGE < A young coupfo may even dislike each other at the start, but still find themselves ardently in love in a matter of months if they will simply develop this mutual emotional “bank account” by the “earned” love method. “Yes, Dr. Crane,” you may protest, “but how on earth can two total strangers fall in love at first sight?" Oh, I dated many, other girls and waited 12 years later before Itnarriedfaer, but T never got free from that original “spell.” For love at first sight can be a hypnotic spell; as 111 explain more fully tomorrow. Year-end mile- MrepH| stone*. Two “gi- ByVnB ant, steps” that ft ', may come around PjW (\LI baby’s first birth-day and ways you IV r"'"VjP can help perfect gjammmeQp-i these new skills: . When baby’s babble turns to speech you can teach word meanings by pointing to object* as you talk. Gerber Cereal Boxes are good for teaching'Colors, . When a rosy hand tries to make a spoon behave you can help baby’s hand-to-mouth coordination' with Gerber Meat " Sticks or Chicken Sticks. The British admiralty as late as 1840 contended that oak was superior to iron and refused to accept the metal as a shipbuilding material. KATHLEEN ANNE WHITE 'Child'Core Problem Mr. and Mr*. Steve /. IPhiteof Bote*.Lane announce the engagement of their daughter.Kathleen Anne to Edward La-Douceur, son of the Henry LaDouxeurs of Oxford. Ay September' wedding is; planned. ' When babies begin 10 fend for themselves, there's mspy a fumble twixt the attempt and the accomplishment. But over-helping a baby on the grow often delays self- FOR MOTHER'S DAY \ \ MAY 12th ■ GIVE MOTHER A CUSTOM BUILT COMFORTABLE CHAIR MANY' STYLES AND FABRICS TO CHOOSE FROM BERKELEY, Calif. Wh-Many problems faced by schools and the Western world* in general would be solved if babies were born at home and breast-fed by their mothers, claim anthropologist Ashley Montagu. ! Speaking at a meeting of school principals here yesterday,! Montagu said impersonal cold-! negs in handling babies causes a lot of grief in later years. “Cows milk is good for cows, but not for. people,” he declared, in advocating a return to breast feeding by mothers. reliance. Best way to help a do-it-yourselfer: guide only when he can’t quite make it on bis own. Just detsert*. What’s Just about the nicest thing that could happen at the end of your baby’s meal? Why,.a heaping helping of one of the four Gerber gsgax Strained or Junior Desserts. Made GS] front, milk solids, egg yolks and BvB fruits, Gerber Desserts are s-----------/ pleasure personified. Gerber Baby Poods, Box 72, Fremont, Mich. Well, it happens, many times. That’s exactly how I fell in love with Mrs. Crane when I was only 16 years old. She stood up in a church young people’s meeting to be introduced to the crowd prior to an election of officers. I had never seen her before that moment. And my heart Pontiac Pair . Tells "Vows in Parsonage Marcia Ann Rose ex? changed vows with Edward Nathan Baize of Rosylyn Street before Rev. William Parent Friday evening in the parsonage of the .Apostolic Church of Christ. Parents of the couple a& Mr and Mrs. George E. Rose of Mt. Clemens Street and. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Baize of Lansing Street. ♦ ■ • -St-"-: \ For the double-iing ceremony the bride chose ballerina-length white Chantilly lace over satin and a short veil of silk illusion. She carried white roses and carnations. , v. that’s the word on Gerber Junior Dinners. And for good reason ... more ingredients, more flavor. For these toothsome combination dishes are made from vegetables, cereal and meat and seasoned with in Monday and Friday till 9 P.M. FURNITURE 5390-5400 Dixie Highway OR 3-1225 Birmingham Cu*fem*ri Call 334-Q991—No Toll Charge For all of those pleasant memories serve much as a joint bank account wherein you have, both deposited dozens of exciting emotional m We have a rule in psychology that everything connected with an emotion soon becomes a part of that etnptioh. ' This even works in reverse, for when a child is pained because a doctor gives' it a shot, the child may later cry Just at tile sight of the doctor. fo that case, the pain of, the needle prick has spread to the doctor who was on the other mid of that same nee- Barbara StUnker attended the bride. George Baize was best man for his brother. The npwlyweds Will live in Waterford. Decorate With New Carpeting If you ire faced with the choice of refinishing or replacing worn, uneven floors in your Home, consider putting down new carpeting. Instead. New, durable, decorative carpets are available today that cost less t h a n « new floor, an4 they’re easier to keep looking like new than hard floors. The Knitting Needle . 4S2 W. Huron — FE S-1SS0 A Woman’s Mustache.. You see them everywhere-but who tslki about it out loud? Much tooembarrassing! Yet few women are blessed with i lily-white, silky-smooth upper lip. What about all the others? Who mentions it to them? Not a parson. Not their near-est-and-dearest (too htlltfui...too delicate). Jut we’re calling a mustache a mustache, in order to tell every woman howrn get rid of it Not with distasteful shaving. Not with bleaching (the color's all gone-still the mustache is there). But swiftly, sweetly. Helena Rubinstein* has the marvelous answer—NiM//i* for the Fact and Shper, Finish* Cream, together in one kit, especially formulated to cream away facial hair. Nudit does it In minutes (and' has a delicate fragrance, too); then you follow up with an application of Helena RubinsteWs exclusive Super Finish Cream to smooth your skin to new beauty. . t of chopping it off at the surface, it leaves your skin soft and smooth as a woman's skin should bo. \ Just as good for sidebums-or any other bits of embarrassing face-fuzz. Helena Rubinstein'* Nudit for the Fact, in a complete kit with exclusive Super Finish Cream and a spatula applicator. Only 1.50 and 2.50, plus tax. Ktep your legs smoothly free ojf hair with Nudit for the Legs. 1.50 phis tax. EASTER IS APRIL 14TH Visit the Sanders Department in your nearest National Food Store 2375 Orchard Lake Road (Sylvan Lake) 685 East Boulevard • 2375 Orchard Lake Road (Sylvan Lake) 3415 Elizabeth Lake Road (Waterford Township) 8040 Cooley Lake Road (Onion Lake) And a Sanders Store in the Tel-Huron Shopping Contor, Pontiqc 333-71Si - 333-7057 PERRY PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRtL 9, 1088 More Help for Harried Taxpayers Which Return Form to Use? Be Sure It's the Right One, rx&itdivs NOTE ~r There are several forms which citizens use to file federal income tax returns, and it is-important that the proper one fa used. This article, second Of a series, explains the 'different types and how income is reported.) of 10 per cent for personal expenses. You don’t have to claim it, or itemize to prove you had that much deduction. When you figure your own tax you can claim without itemizing a deduction of 10 per cent of income up to a $1,000 limit. You cannot use 1040A if you wish to fiie a return as head of household or surviving spousfe, were self-employed, claim credit for retirement income, are delinquent in filing your return, claim you get on your savings hi a savings and loan association are in fact interest Ju^jjjjisLlJte--re* ported asInterest, not as divt- Legion May Switch Convention in South Southern Prof Facet Charge for Art Work • . they can exclude the first llOOln nsmnmssm Ass.ure yourself • ouR'FUELoiu A the dependable Seeks eve®°room3 heat you need for your health and comfort. Call u$ today to order the Fuel Oil that gives you the best heat... for less. *NEW~YORK f API ~ Two 'directors of the Holland Furnace Co. filed a $6-million suit in Supreme Court yesterday accusing the former management of the heating equipment firm of “w a s t e, mismanagement and misconduct.” The suit was brought by Jer- The latter, a punch - card is simpler. Anyone can use 1040. People with $10,000 or more Income must use it. Only under-$10,000 peoples can u'se 1040AI and only if they| meet certain if you’re one of the under-$5,000 people using 1040A and don’t want to look up your tax in the table, fill out your return and send it to tiie IRS district collector. He’ll find your tad for you and (l) bill you for any tax still owed , .When they hold stock separately and file a joint rejyyrn, each cap exclude no more fKan the first $90. of dividends each receives .This can be done on 1040 or 1040A.1 Example: 4r , A y The husband receives $8$ in div-j iderids, the wife $3$, He can ex- ‘ faces charges of defacing the Con* | federate flag and obscenity stem-»ming from five controversial 1 paintings removed from a campus exhibition, { * * w G. Ray’ Kerciu, 29, an assistant art professor, said he had conferred with his attorney about the complaint. Charles G. Blackwell, 24, a senior law student from Ellis-ville, Miss., obtained a warrant for Kerciu’s arrest from a justice of the peace yesterday. - A small group of art students picketed the University of Mississippi Fine Arts Center yester-1 day.. • • - ' 1 National Commander James E. Powers of Macon* Qa., said he had. asked for ?n investigation by the committee arranging the Sept. 6-12 convention. Powers said in a statement the Pennsylvania American Legion had indicated concern over possible, difficulties for Negro delegates in New Orleans hotels or (2) send you a refund if too much tax was withheld from your pay in 1962. ★ ★ * When a husband and wife file separate returns and one itemizes deduction?, both must itemize and claim ohly what each can prove. Neither, lh this case, can use 1040A. Both must use 1040. NEW RULER (New rules on deductions for chairman, and Edward Grop-per, chairman of the executive committee, and the Holland Furnace Co., Holland, Mich. Among the defendants named were Milton J. Stevens, former Holland board chairman, and Re-public-Transcon Industries, Inc., of Beverley Hills, Calif. The suing directors charged Stevens with conspiracy to force a merger between Holland and Republic-Transcon, of which he is now chairman* h '• ■ This, the suing directors charge, was sought to be accom- On both forms you must figure your own tax if your income was t5,000 or more. TAX SCHEDULE You do this from the tax rate ichedule on page 9 Of the 14-page Instruction sheet sent all taxpayers by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The Pennsylvania executive committee urged immediate action either to overcome discrim-mination of remove the convention from the city. Powers said he had asked the convention committee to report to the n a t i o n a 1 executive body, meeting here May 1-2. They objected to the removal of . Kerciu’s paintings which symbolized the university’s desegregation crisis. * ’ stock transactions and other acts all adverse to the Holland company’s interest. The alleged transactions, the directors said, took place between May 31 and July 26, 1962 while Stevens and his shite were in con- Take 104QA. You can use it If: 1. Your under-$10,000 incolne vas entirely in wages from which ;ax was withheld except fob no more than $200 in dividepds or in- More than 400 viruses infect plants and more than 150 effect animals. NOWI YOU CAN START TO PICK HUNDREDS OF. STRAWBERRIES WMItln SO Days! UNIQUE CLIMBER... TRAIN TO GROW UP-UP-UP JfMLLIS, WALLS’, Etc. THIS YEAR’S % PRICE SALE vmici COLGATE TOOTHPASTE ADDRESS CITY. Redeem this I.D.L Dr VIA DELTAtm LINES I.D.L SPECIAL LOW PRICEI LANOLIN PLUS . LIPSTICKS ASSORTED FASHION SHADES PHOTOGRAPH EASTER FONj k and for sura shots, use a I Blus Dots,., the world's; J I most popular flashbulbs 1 I N0.5,N0.25,M-2,AG-1,4 f SYLVANIA FLASHBULBS A LADIESSPRING! h HANDBAGS MANY AS SlQ AS 8ILVKR DOLLARS! THIS MAY SI OUR LAST Or FIR AT Svm.To;LYoN^vLSow55if.f DELAY — OUR UMITSO SURRLY WILL tfa ^sstssSMk EASTER CORSAGES ANGELIQUE COLOGNES LOOK FOR. THESE I.D.L DRUG STORES IN YOUR AREA: ARIS Pharmacy 3526 taahabaw, . Drayton Plains, 59QS.PAPPOCK 1 NINETEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1968 Outbound Patronage Drpps, Inbound Soars gers gnd 47 inbound, passengers reported during March, according to 1962, when only 27 boarded NCA flights here. Outbound air mail, express and freight increased over February. Lastmonth, outbound flights carried 1,777 pounds of air mail, Sit pounds air depress and Ml pounds of freight. The month before outbound flights carried 1,507 pounds of air mail, 881 pounds air express and 313 pounds of freight. Inbound flights in March carried 756 pounds of air mail compared to 874 the month before. Inbound freight totaled 2,906 pounds in March and 4,830 in February. carry a fashion bag ] our hew collection of leather-look plastics We’re showing just five from • wonderful collection of Easter bags. Each one is budget-priced at only $3! Black, white, bone, ted or navy 'marshmallow’ plastics, black patent plastics in the group. A. Clutch witn bow. B. Chain accents at handle. 6. Molded handle. 0. Shirred clutch. I. Shirred pouch. Constellation, a Full Crew, Cotton denim front tin. Steel rivet .pockets,. belt loops; white stitching. A. 'Long-jean*. Beige, 14 g h t blue. I. 'Cut-Off’. Beige, light, dark blue; 10-18. I Passenger NEWARK, N. j. ffl - Eastern Air Lines flew a four-engine super constellation plane from Newark to Washington, D;C., yesterday WAY Miller showed up at the airport just before 9:30 a.m. to catch the line's no• reservation, pay-on-board air shuttle to Washington. But the plane, seating 90 persons, had already filled up and pulled out. The airline said it has promised that anyone who showed up in time for the air shuttle flight will not be turned away. So, for the first time from this air field, it rolled out Its standby WEST Fashion rides high with these Uasy-ivear, easy care casuals Visiton Crowd Romo for Holy Wook Rites ROME (AP)~Rome played host Monday to thousands of foreign visitors here for Holy Week and the start of the big tourist season. Hundreds of foreigners attended Palm Sunday ceremonies at St. Peter's, where Pope John XXIII marked the start of the week that ends with Easter. Cotton iMecn print ovcrblouw. Pink on pink, blut on blue, lemon on boot; 30 to 36. Proportioned cotton gabardine Capri, Pink, blue; loden; ir." 7 to IS. fr. petite, 3 to 13.' SALE,well-known FASHION PUMPS SALE, dainty FABRIC GLOVES thefttakes a minimum of IS min* utns of vigorous activity each school day. , 11 But parents must urge and sup* port such programs. Parents must make known their concern for youth fitness where it counts •-with local school officials. Tike It. up with youre—right eweyt If you would like more Informs* fton, write to The Preeldent'e Council on Phyalcel Fltneei,. Weehlngton 28, D-C. , Pubiiihtd si ■ sublM WUKSSSSm •ervktn In coo'psretlon high- and mid-heels parade fbr Batter IRREGULARS from a welUknoum maker A greet collection of our own Cerlotas and nationally »d-vert bed Citation* have been priced for special savings. You’ll find shoes in black patent leather or bipek, blue, bone calf in the group. Shown, juste sampling of the lip lea. Many have trim* for faahion interest. t » wtsMs’s anas Dsfarunmt—guaHs's evDosx imr&flm, n»n h Dressy and tailored styles In double-wbven . nylon or cotton. White, some colors. Sires 61/2*71/2, one Wretch fits 6 to 7l/t, others stretch 8 to 8Vi in grout), A. Longer Ktherca glove. I. Above-the-sgrist style with embroidered Wi. Slight Irregularities won’t affect looks, wear. THI PONTIAC PRESS rWKNTV THE P6NTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIE 9, 1968 From the Press Box BY BRUNO L. KEARNS ence ranging from 15 million to possibly 25, million will hear tl sportscaster say, “This is Professional Bowling coming to you froi the Pontiac PBA Open at the 300 Bowl in Pontiac, Michigan.'* For the next minute and a half, the announcer will talk aboi the pnrciroiit the tournament being held at the lanes on Cat Lake road. ‘ This will be a Ilftte different from the 96 seconds which preceded the PBA tournaments from Indianapolis, New Orleans, Birmingham, Kansas City or St. Louis. Prior to these tournaments.the cameras projected the civic beauties, sites, assets and industries of the cities mentioned. WHO REALLY CARES? * Satfirday however, our civic area, our urban renewal project, out; business areas, our 100 lakes, our 36 golf courses, our jo bowl* ing alleys, our I ski'areas, our fishibg, hunting and recreation acres won’t get a nickel’s worth of mention. We all tell ourselves about the wonderful natural beauties of this county and our offers for relaxation and recreations. But who really cares? . Maple Lea : but Red M it ■ ‘ * IS TORONTO '(AP)-Detroit’s upstart Red Wings go after hockey’s biggest prize, toe Stanley Cup; tonight against toe toughest team its Favored Sings 'Hot' | around, defending cup champion Toronto. The muscular Maple.Leafs, who swept* to toe Natlondl Hockey League regular season title and Our business leaders, our civic leaders, our city leaders, our Industrial leaders, our service clubs, our chamber of commerce heads, our bowlers and even our bowling, fans have all been made aware of the prestige and impetus such a nationwide presentation can carry. „ . \' it . ★ ,** The offer was thrown open for anyone of these groups to sell the merits of the Pontiac area for 90 seconds at no cost except that involved in making up the adequate presentation for camera ./use.' <;[ , Members of various organizations were even invited at gathering to fully realize how the Pontiac area could benefit with the attention received through wire services, press, radio, * TV, magazines and other media of communication. . No one can point to any event out of this Immediate area, especially one that carries the name of the c|ty, that has been presented for cm and * half hours to the size of such an aadk ince. Recent TV ratings have Indicated that the 3:30 to 5:00 period of the PBA bas moyed taUMhe top spot of Saturday afternoon viewing in the past two months, ahead of the rest of the sports telecasts. lOt R" A" One reason Is the fact these PBA tournaments have been pre* sented ‘live’ instead of On film as most of the Others, and bowlers are like other sports fans and participants, they want to see the greatest names of their sport in Uve action, showing their mis* takes as well as their perfections. Filmed sporting events have eliminated human error. it it it Despite the opportunity offered to help change the impression of the Pontiac area from recent murders, snipers and kidnapers, no one has come forward to carry the ball for the city. Lines are being installed for die camera today. It’s unfortunate the only thing an audience of millions will see will be alleys 17 and 18. Ming Has Yet to Win Opener as Tiger Manager Rollins, Maris on Sidelines Injuries Bench Stars for Twins, Yanks ST. PAUL-MINNE APQLIS — American League AU*Star third baseman Rich Rollins missed to” /s scheduled season opener for the Minnesota Twins when it discovered he suffered fractured jaw in the final exhibition game with the Detroit Tigers Sunday. Rollins was struck oh the left side of the face by a pitch from Detroit’s Paul Foytack at Knoxville. First X-rays Sunday .night showed no break, but a second set showed the fracture yesterday-' ■ Rollins jaw will be wired, probably toddy, end he wBI be out of action for three or four days. His jaw will be wired up for four weeks. KANSAS CITY (ffl-Roger Maris, who hit 61 home runs in 1961, will not play for the New York Yankee’s in today’s opener against Kansas City. He told manager Ralph Houk that his , injured left leg still bothered him after Monday's workout. Houk said Hector Lopez will replace Maris in right field. Houk said Maris probably won’t play until the Yankees open at home against Baltimore Ihunday. Orioles Dump Senators in Opener By The Associated Press President Kennedy, who says he has his good months and his bad ones, aikMhe Washington Senators, who have mostly bad ones, are off and losing in the American League race. The active baseball season's all over for the President, but the Senators, last a year ago, have 161games to go. The Baltimore Orioles, on the strength of two quick home runs jn the second Inning and the ract that most of the Washingtons hit the ball squarely at somebody, tripped the Senators 3-1 in the traditional opener in the national capital Monday. ★ * ★ There were 43,022 on hand including the President, whose first and only pitch was low and wide. . The other American League . teams open the long campaign to-' day. The New York Yankees begin their drive for a fourth straight flag at Kansas City. Although for a while this spring they had an injury list almost as long as the roster, only Roger Marls, hampered by a pulled left leg muscle, and pitching ace Whltey Ford, who has a sore left shoulder, will miss the opener. Ralph Terry, 23-12, will pitch vtor the Yanks against Diego SeguIpN. Ray Herbert, 20*9, will pitch tor the Chicago White Sox against Jim Running, 1940, at Detroit) Bill Monboquetto, 15-13, will be oh the mound tor the Boston Red Sox against Ken McBride, 11-6, in Los Angelen, and Jim Grant, 7-10, will hurl for the Cleveland Indians against Camilo Pascual, 20-11, for the home Minnesota Twins, in the the mound; Jim.’Gentile led off with a homer over the tone in right field. A1 Smith drew. a walk, and Boog Powell homered to the same place. The Orioles collected only four more hits. * ■ * ' it’ f 1 Washington, presenting an almost completely new cast, got its run In the iffth inning, when Larry Osborne singled and Don Leppert doubled hint to third. He scored on ah infield out. Rookie Tom Brown, a high school teammate of Barber, made a frustrating debut for Washington. HfTined into a double play with two men on in the second inning, and struck out with Osborne aiid Leppert on base in the fifth. Mlnoso, the hustling old pro who , was acquired from the St. Louis Cards last week, got two hits, as did Osborne and Leppert. The .Prestdent stayed to the end, and cheered for the home team. The defeat made his inaugural record 1*2. WASHING! abrhbl abrbbl 4 0 0 0 Brttdlng 3b 10 0 -■ 4 0 0 0 Hinton it 1 S i Robinson 3b I 0 1 0 Mtnoao It 4 • § " ••• 4 111 Lock of I if 3 1 1 0 Osborne lb 4 j I 4111 Leppert o a 0 1 0 0 0 0 OHM wft-.f 4 0 2 OT. Brown lb I f 0 - " * 1 dPhillips 1 0 O - HI II disposed of once-powerful Montreal in five games, fre favored in the best-of-seven' Series, but anticipate a tough time. , " *• * ' W- . “They’re hot,” Lest captain George Armstrong said. “Their team is in good shape and some of them are really lying.” , Strangely, the Leafs had as tough a time against Detroit as anyone during the regular season. Detroit won seven and tied one in 14 games with Toronto, but Leaf Coach ’ Punch Imlacb said that isn’t concern him. ;; ■ • “A ■ W .. 'Past history is all balderdash,*' he said: 'lit starts again tonight ai 8 o’clock. It’s not what they did yesterday that counts. It’s What they’re doing right now-period.” Detroit, which finished fourth in the regular season, lost its first two playoff games in Chicago. They recovered, however, «uid keyed by veterans Gordie Howe and Norm Ullman swept the next four. Imlach said Detroit has “good checking and is a good defensive hockey club. We have more depth. They’re up and going and we’ve got to have the spirit, too. If both clubs hustle, then ability will make the difference.” He left no question about that matter of, ability. “The Leafs can win anywhere and any time if they want to play.” he said. Imlach said Detroit goalie Terry Sawchuk “didn’t play as well as he should have,” in Detroit's closing 7-4/victory over Chicago. Then he added DETROIT — Opening day in April Is the time that brings day preams in October. Tiger manager Bob Schefflng is not different from any of the other Major League managers. He is also having some day-dreams, most of them about the New York Yankees. WWW 'No doubt about it, the Yan-kees are the team to beat,” said Schefflng on the eve of‘Detroit’s opener against the Chicago White AMERICAN LEAGUE New York . At Angeles Minnesota * x Powell If *w-Mgtr and OonUMi R oodlng and T, Brown: Aparloto. Adair H dentil#. LOB—Baltimore 8. Washing- lb—Smith. Leppert. Mlnoso. HR— (McBride 114). J1 pm. _ relond (Oront 7-10) ot IUmmmoIa (Poo- IS# Kiw^ork* ’atr iVsojp.m. Cwvtlond ot tBSmUhijji P»; TODAY^GAMEA « AngOlOt (Dryodole 31-9) tt ChlOogo (Jackson 16-11). 1:19 D.m. 9 Pronoleoo (Sanford 24-71 ot (fimn 10-29). I* nm lwiukoe (Burdette MM MhMj, ____________ Loula (Brogllo 12-9) ot Now York #*«■ *?•»»•. — ...T.. >C(Moboffey ?9-14 or McLIah 11-9). lf?09 P m WEDNESDAY’S GAMES ... Loula ot Now Yon. 2 p.m. Milwaukee ot Pittsburgh. 1:39 p.nr — 1:20 p.m. i. 1:09 p.i Sports Calendar - Bunning Hurls 1963Starter lingaii Good, Bad Starts in ByBRUNOL. KEARNS BARON OF THE BULL PEN-Terry Fox has been dubbed ’Baron of the Bullpen’ hi (fie new protected atoa for relief pitchers in Tiger Stadium. Fox peers through toe grill of the bull pen under the stands along the left field AP Pkotofax line. The visiting teams have similar facilities along right Arid. Fox will be ready for. mound duties if the Chlsox should get to starter Jim Running In toe opener today. ‘ DETROIT, *7 Opening Dw in ..Chicago, has given Priroit TteW manager Bob Sehefflng many pleasant memories. But tor toe 'remaining parts of those National League days, the season! often ended up to nightmares. . / “I haven’t , won an opener in the two seasons i’ve been Inp®-trolt,” said Schefflng, "and when I managed the Cubs I don t think I lost an opener.” t - “The difference has bent, Schefflng added, “I didn’t win too many more in Chicago.” Today’s opener wtto Jim Burning on the mound to Tiger Sta-dium before an expected- ttJM fans, pits two teams which feel that off-season trades wBI make Schefflng Points at Yankees Opener Brings October Day Dreams’ Sox before 40,000 at Tiger Stadium today. “But they have a few problems and remenber, they haven’t had a runaway toe last few years.” Schefflng had Jim Sunning geared to pitch his lift tor toe rebuilt Tigers. He feels the acquisition of two new regulars — third baseman Bubba Phillips and catcher Gus Trian-dos — will help make toe Tigers Redlegs Start Season Intent on NL Pe into a strong challenger to Yankee supremacy. , Ray Halbert was to be Bun-ning’s pitching opponent after Gov. Romney and Mayor Cavanaugh complete the traditional openin^pitch ceremony. Scheffing’s feelings about the Yankees are built around the world champion’s only trade. They dealt tong-time star Bill Skowron to toe Los Angeles Dodgers for Stan Williams, a 14-game winner. The departure of Skowron puts pressure on young Joe Pepi* tone to come through at first base — and Schefflng wonders of he wiU. By toe Associated Press Cincinnati Manager Fred Hutchinson played a punctuation game in his player rating book today, straightening the question marks following the names of Frank Roibnson, Gene Freese and Pete Rose into big, fat exclamation points. t Robinson.:__________ and Freese and Rose handled toe finesse as the Reds began thefr for the National League pen- ____t wito a 5-2 victory Monday over, toe revamped Pittsburgh Pirates in the traditional baseball opener before 29,696 at Crostey Field. The Reds will help Philadelphia open its schedule in a nlghter after toe rest of the league gets underway with an afternoon program that has Los Angeles at Chicago, San Francisco at Houston, Milwaukee at Pittsburgh and St. Louis at New Y6rk. The Reds made good use of thefr head start as Robinson slammed a first inning two-fun homer that sent Cincinnati ahead to stay while Bose and Freese pifod up the doubleplays iq support of Jim O’Toole’s six-hit pitch- ing. SORE SHOULDER Robinson hit under .290 last April and seemed headed, for another slow start when he came up with a sore shoujder in spring training that limited his movements, held , his batting average Oxford At Uko Orion NO Dondoro At ForndAn Kettering At Ortnbrook free Tr*ek WAtorford At rant S9VK --------- F»rm!ngton OL8. South tfOB At OlKr-toovlilo Roieviiie At Warm -JM IfAtt Detroit At LAkevlow VorndAlo At iouthfiold EVTT»"ih Dearborn Divine OhUd At OL St. M»rf HlSSI S SAglnAw At Flint Central lEML” Bay City CantrAl At Arthi Waterford At Stofr ' Prey Baioball Claroneovlllo At BrlfhtM1 Olarkaton At Bloomflold Holly At W. Bloomfield Northvllle At Milford Walled Lake at Ketttrlni 1 1 -jfm. Track t Fon“-- i At Ml lltOL SPPSW . Utica, MArytvfllo it Nomoo Ketterlni. Olarkaton At Lak* Orion itrvlti it HO.nnne Ortonvllle tt tmlay City i nsifrm. glance ^motoaT’i beiultS'*" >H "lUBAV H GAME AlifelOl 'll St. LOtlll, Lot Angela, —• Mit-of-T Weatern Dlvblon lino to .242 and kept him from hitting even one homer. y, But the slugging outfielder who wound up batting -342 with 89 homers and 130 runs batted in as toe Reds finished totod last year, Hashed a line drive in his first at-bat, off Pittsburgh starter Earl Francis that changed his punctuation rating. Freese, virtually a complete toes to toe Reds last year after he suffered a broken leg in spring trebling, legged out an infield hit in a two-run second inning upris-ing and moved well on toe double-pmy by starting one. Rose, a rookie not even on the Reds’ roster, started at second base in place of veteran Don Blas-ingame, was involved in three smooth doubleplays and draw a walk before Robinson’s homer to earn his exclamation point. Leo Cardenas’ two-run second inning Single and Gordie Coleman’s homer to. the sixth accounted for the Reds’ other runs. Donn Clendenon’s homer in the fourth got the Pirates started. Bob Bailey scored the other run fo the seventh when he singled and moved around on a balk, a walk and an error by O’Toole. “I foe! the Yankees might not be as Strong ■ hitting club because they traded Skowron,” ‘ “ * **“ “He was a years and he got Ms big hits when they counted most. “Pepitone may not help at much as toey think he can. I didn’t think too much of him to Florida when he was batting against toft handers. I'll bet now he’s not even In there all toe time against them. ★ # ★ 'Thefr pitching wasn’t toe best lost year and maybe WHliami will help It. But how much? Perhaps not enough to compensate for thetoes of Skowron. “And I have an idea Tam Troth isn’t really at feed • Utter m he was last year, toe. He hit JM and drove hi M runs, but can he do it again?” “I think the league as a whole probably will be a little closer, but tot’s face it the Yankees still are the foam to beat despite thefr You hope and you think about it’all the time and somehow the Yankees always manage to come out of Jt okay. ."Iyffiqn Minnesota to: next. They’ve got a strong, set team with good power. "Baltimore or we are the most Improved. I feel we both helped ourselves with trades ” thanks to the B The White Sax will have three ex-Oriotos to the lineup, Dave Nicholson in the outfield, Ron Hanson at short and Pete Ward at third base. HOPEFUL The Tigers are hopeful that Gus Triandos, the ex-Ortoto, will offer the bat and arm that has been woefully weak in the catddng department for many years. Triandos may get a chance to face an old teammate, Hoyt WiiheljR, whose kanektor earned him many bad days to Battonore when they were battery mates. Now Wilhelm leads the White Sox bullpen, and should the Tigers be able to Offer starter Ray Herbert ah early shower, rookie catcher J. C. Martin nUty Inherit Triandos’ old dilemma of catching the tricky knurider Only member of the Tigers who hasn’t started to an opener has been second baseman Dick Me* Aullffe, who last year won a regular assignment later to the season. Bubba Phillips is another new face in the Tigers’ opening day lineup although he has aeon many flag-raising ceremonies with Cleveland and Chicago. Two years ago ho helped ruin Schofftog’s debut as Tiger manager by picking up a couple hits to a Cleveland victory. Phillips had one of the best spring training camps of his career and gdteffUg feels Ms addition at third bate to the biggest asset for the 1903 Tigers. Otosr Tigers also recall their best opening days. KAUNE IN 1951 Al Kaltoe figures his brat season opener was to 1955 when he hit tWo triples and defeated Mike Garcia. He continued this fine start and won the batting title hat season. Rocky Cokrvito has an opening day he’s likely to forget Oh Safe of Stock Munn to Make Decision CHICAGO (UPI) (Biggie) Munn, Michigan State athletic director, waa expected to 9 i j decide today whether to retain .. s wi. |n a country dub man-firm, Which also lists a Chicago crime syndicate stockholder. ' w } a Munn confirmed yesterday he is a stockholder and member of the hoard of directors of Golf Club Management Co. of Chicago. But ha snM he was surprised to learn that Frank (Big Frank) Boeder! .was listed by Chicago T only met Frank twice and he was introduced to me as a furniture man,’’ Munn Said from his East Lansing home. He said he expdeted a call today from Loren A. Cameron, 38, president of Golf Club Manage-and would decide then whether to sell his stock. Munn said he has attended only one board meeting. SEVERAL MONTHS The fad that Munn and Sued-erl .Were both members of the board for several months waa revealed yesterday. Cameron said Munn’s 800 share (worth 10' cents a share when Munn received them) today were worth 19,000.' Munn add he had no idea of their present value. Cameron said he would ask Bucderl “point blank If he is a membtr w toe crime syndicate.” He said If fticcleri Is "I’ll ask him to sell his shares and I’ll probaldy Mir them back myself . ’ According to Cameron, Bucci-eri was a board director from December 1961 to January 1920. He said! Munn is still J|i board director. m was to 1|M after being traded to Detroit from Cleveland. His ftrat game was a retura to Cleveland fra Tiger mdfojit and Ms made the biilaas Mik good In toe trade for Harvey Kuenn by .Striking out fspr times. The White Sox and Tuer Sta-lium offer a piquant (memory for Norm Cash/In 1959, as a White Sox rookie, he started! at first base and got; two Mtajrtn folit1 trips fl nine innings. The game went 14 innings, and de-Mite a frand slam homer by Charlie Maxwell ad pinch-hitter, the Ttoers iMt on a homer by Nellie Fox. t ' / 1 , * What most fins remeiAber that opening day even more than Ifoe homer was the frigid weather-starting Unto there were 38|00 to the stonds. When Fox hit Jhe homer there were about 7,000 toft to see It. ■ V; i Todays opener won’t be as told bnt topcoats are stlU to order as the temperatures are expected to fall short of 50(degrees. pf Signal Callers Ready CLEVELAND W - Jim Nl-nowilH, Cleveland Browns ,|£m|v terback gjbtatosd to toe hpe last year that sent Milt Pluto to toe Detroit Lions, signed his 1903 contract Monday. Ntoow-ikl was the second Browns' player to sign. Tho other wao quarterback FrankRyafl. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 9,1963 TWENTY-ONE Top Net Pro Players M, , , / dent Lose in Tour Matches “k Lot NASHVILLE (AP)-Rbd Laver, Jgj Earl Buchhou and Ken Rosewalllaydt lost singles matches here Monday night in their pro tennis tour. it '■ * " ★ Barry MacKay, former Davis Cup star from Dayton, Ohio, defeated Laver 8-4. MacKay’s 1)laZs Ihm> 1» .nl lUn AimtMnlinM in Rookie Trades Seat for Outfielder LLOYD MOTORS CohlMct Oyer Dotes With Btitlsh^Open NEW YORK ,(JJPI) W* A year ago when the Jfen York Mets opened their home season at the Polo Grounds, 17-year-old Ed Kranepool was a spectator in “I’ll take care of her from now on,” he Said. of major league seouts by breaking Oil of Hank Greenberg’s home run records at James Monroe High School in the Bronx, N.Y. ing serves kept the Australian in the hole mpst of the match. The lowly Mets are hoping that - That kicked off a chain reaction; Kranepool also will take care of in which Andres Gimeno of.Spain opposing pitchers iike the way whipped Rosewall 8-6 and Luis he handled veteran Robin Rob- Ayala of Chili spilled Bucljholz 8-6. { erts of the brioles last Saturday. In the only doubles match, He belted .two of his homers off Laver and Gimeno trounced Rosfe-Roberts. ' wail and MacKay, 8-3. 1 if Lincoln W Mercury if Meteor 232 S. Saginaw] FE 2-9131 Because of AO? conflict with the British Open for the past MW- eral years, the Buick Open will not be/hekt’the 4th of July weeki but has been reset for June 6-9. Officials of the tournament, with one outlie biggest pursds on the circuit, were upset ,at the continued absence of some of ttie top names who decided to make the trip to Britain instead-Hoping that Demoit stqtidfha real good chance; of getting the 1968 Olympics,^ a* couple area dubs are reported iftterested ift bringing some major golf tournaments here to ryn cdnjunctively with the World Games. - He hit 19 homers in three years as a schoolboy and the Mets had to outbid 19 other major league clubs and several colleges for his services. “I signed with> the Mets because I thought f had the best chance to stick,” he said. - After graduation from high school last summer,'' Kranepool was shipped to the Mets’ triple A farm club at Syracuse, N.Y. There he hit .239 in 14 games. He then was. shipped to Knoxville of the Class A- Sally League, where he batted .278 in seven games. Kranepool' later dropped down to the Class D New York-Pennsylvania League, where he hit .351 in 20 games. He wound up with the Mats iter three games, getting one hit in six at-bats for a.167mark. 'V ' ★ Mt ; “Being up in the big leagues for . those few games helped me gain some confidence,” Kranepool said, “I faced some pretty good pitching.” Kranepool, whose father died before he was born, lives with his ^mother in Yonkersj N.Y. .The elder Kranepool was killed in action at St. Lo, France in June,. 1944. After signing with the Mats, the husky rookie said management. Today the 690,000 bonus baby was .expected to open in right field for the Mets. Manager Casey Stengel apparently wanted to relieve some Of the pressure from the rookie' on the night before,the game so he announced yesterday -that either Marv Throneberry or Kranepool Would play right field against the St. Louis Cardinals. But it figured to be Kranepool. r f Kranepool, a left • handed hitter who played first base most of his young life, said, “I’m ready. My idea is to stay with the big dub and I don’t care atwhat position.” Because of injuries to outfielders Frank Thomas and Jfin Hlck-man during spring training, Kranepool was given a shot at ah outfjleld job by Stengel. In 14 games this spring, die 6-foot, 3-inch, 205-pQund Kranepool batted ,344. He hit-three home runs, all against the Baltimore Orioles last Saturday. Here are some interesting PGA notes from, the 1962 golf circuit: LOWEST NINE-a 28 b$ tony Lema M 'final round of Seattle Open. LOWEST 18-a 61 by Bud Sullivan in the first round of Tucson Open. LOWEST 36-a 180 by Bud Sullivan M Tucson Open (61-69) and Billy Casper in Seattle Open (67- EARLY ARRIVAL AT HAZEL PARK - The Roger Williams Stable of Pontiac again was the first to arrive at Hazel Park Harness "Raceway for the opening of the 50-night season Thursday, April li. Becky-.Williams, daughter of Roger F. Williams Jr., was on hand tq see that her horses were being taken care of. Here she is with Cottonwood. Cindy putting the horse’s “shingle” on its stall door. . , TAKE-OFF TIRES tUIvU Jll Vl iy LOWEST 78-a 263 by Phil . Rodgers In Tucson 4)pen. . . - g V jr, MOST UNDl&R PAR—20 strokes Kndd Nines Cupit in final round- of Waco coaches” Jack McLean has nine Open, one shy of PGA record held letter winners returning. by Bob Rosburg and Bill, Nary. McLean anticipates a strong! LONGEST STRETCH WITH-lineup In the middle out BOGfef w tt holes by with Dick Lambert and Bov Wa- Bruce Crampton in Motor City kerley manning the shortstop - 0l)en second baqp slots. MOST IMPROVED PLAYER- Birming^m Groves Ns seven L ^ ^ jr^ #,,299 & experienced performers returning |ig6^ to w123i m tm 22 * jjfe; Rest freshman playeRt- Who *1* tat Jack Nicktai,? . “Pm not afraid of starting him any place,” said Stengel. “H6’s tfeally something. He stands at the plate like he’s been in the league for five or six years. It’s unusual for a boy his age, looking at big league pitching for the first time, not. to press and go for bad pitches.” GREENBERG’S RECORDS Kranepool drew the attention jQgfytjMR 6M DEALER SERVICE COSTS LESS IN THE LONS RUN '//• ’ v Rod Killy Ro-Elected ' WCanadian Parliament TORONTO Iff) - Len (Red) Kelly, center of the Toronto Maple Leafs who will open the Stanley Cup finals With the Detroit Red Winds here tonight, was reelected to the Canadian Parliament in Monday’s elec- Cranbrook has bfte* very Left-hander Paul Pangus and P*ease with the progress and catcher Harold Webb provide detalent displayed by his nine in tensive strength .but it may not spring workonts. He has a let- be enough to overcome the enter winner to put at every po- pected lack of hitting. The Black-sition and strong pitching. hawks are slated open today at John BlUesdon and Dick Moh- Imlay City, a winner last week, ser, both fight - handers, top the A fifth - inning rally made mound corps. They double as Emmanuel Christian a w 1 n n a r hard - hitting outfielders, also la«t week at Country Day and with BlUesdon filling the cleanup ftp Lancers wOl now rest on their role- lauerls until an April 19th clash The Cranes do not compete in ^th Whittemore Lake at home, an area league. The school is a Catcher Tom Anthony provM-member of the Inter-State Prep ed a big triple in the whining League. rally and he is expected to be Team captain BIO Estes at ai offensive threat nil season, third base and Bill Powell at sec- There are 12 mowngram bear-ond provide left-handed hitting ers beck this season, punch and catcher Dale Bosley Is - .. . .. ^ . n talented craftsman behind the nlnto but newcomer Ron Morgan, a p i IkHm Dm m Hu rv.no.> frMhman, threwtwo - hit ball In week, if they are able to ptaySJ^ *y ^ * their scheduled contests against a . Kettering today and Pontiac Cen- trttt RVUaif frOHl 8 10-1 168111 1881' 868800* ™ rrway. Pitching and defense will prob- COACHING ‘DEAN* ably be the team's strong points. Another talented team may North Farmington has a young shape up at Royal Oak Dondero club. It opened the season *yes* where the “dean of Royal Oakltefdhy at NWthVille. ‘ - * The suit molt preferred by1 mbit' young rfien: our sliver-iNM,. high ' 2-button > by \yynhtm.«The coet is side-vented, with hacking .poekots. TKo troutors ate low In llie rise, tapered ‘and beltless. -And the fabric'is «n excellent one for Spring; e lightweight, lustrous sherkskln blended of Arnel and cotton. See It In rich shades of silver grey, French ’ blue, British brown ... IM1'V Pll OPEN DAILY 8:30 A M. 435 South SaflMflw PC 2-1OTO wynham NQ.;MONEV DOWN NO INTEREST OR Carrying charoei 6 MONTHS TO PAY! ED. WILLIAMS WHEEL ALIGNMENT, BALANCING, BRAKES, MUFFLERS 451 S. SAGINAW at RAEBURN, Pontiac FINE SERVICE... 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TUESDAY, APRIL fi, 1968 OTEOTY-TWO Pro-Am Drawings Include 3 Squads Huron Bowl Hits 632ABC Series PBA Starts Thursday Witit $23,400 Goal of Keglers Don Oerter ToKfiTaVSTr" Bob Deltrlck Ed Bblkany Augle D'Annun Frcnkle M»y Carmen Salvlm Therm Gibson Olenn Allison Bob Btratnp* Pet* Carter Prank Rlcevutc Robert Wilcox Jack Armstroni Oliver WUson Wolverines Rod Over Arizona, 9-3 TUCSON, ^riz.’ m- Michigan walloped theUnfrersity of Arizona 9-3 Monday night -in -the opener of a six-game baseball se-ries. Although the Wildcats' picked up'the early lead -with two runs in the bottom of the first inning, the Wolverines had little trouble , making up the deficit and, pulling i ahead in the next frame. • j A catcher’s error with two out i in the second gave Michigan one ] run and extended the inidng for 1 two more seines. Dick Patera j missed a third strike to let in the j first run. the other two came in j on a single by rightfielder Ronald ! Tate. j Michigan collected 11 hits, in-J eluding a home run by Dave j Campbell, off three Arizona pitch- < ecs- Fritz Fisher (2-0) went allj the way for Michigan, giving up seven hits. Pat McLaugilin of Erie, Pa., appearing in his 30th ABC tournament, highlighted the dull Monday night by rolling, a Ml series in the regular team event. Van Lines of St. Lopis. Steve Nagy, another Huron team member recently enrolled in the Hall of Fame, fired a modest 560 last night. Other members of the recruit- Dick Kirby >£»yo^ Landry JIM Clarkson Bruno Koarns Loy Ledford JoaSpadaloro night’s Pro-Am event which precedes the start Of the 923,400 PBA Tournament the following day. ■■■ *' ■ ■ * # With several pro partners still available, tournament officials haVe decided to permit late entries in the Pro-Am up until the 9:90 p.m. deadline for the third Pro-Am squad Wednesday. 1 Amateurs may eater Me tourney for a 999 foe. They wOl GOOD ENOUGH — Birmingham bowler Dave Bonnell let his wife d^atv his professional partner lent night. She was the last one to pick and came up with Eddie Lubanski’s ticket. WifoMBrylynn is the sister of pro keg star Dale Seavoy and hid hoped to draw his name, but the Bonnell’s were willing “to settle** for Lubanski. Bonnell carries a 132 average in his flrit. serious try at the game. earlier in the day. McLaughlin had games of 178,-227 and 236. His team posted a three-game total of 2854. Please Bow, Don't Shake Those Hands Officials Blasted in PRAGUE (AP)-The low bow over the unhygienic handshake as far es some very thoughtful table tennis officials are concerned. According to recommendations the International Table Tennis Congress is expected to ratify today, table tennis players will be able to shake hands only with their opponents—not with the officials as they are doing after every match in the world championships here. Squads are slated to bowl at 7 p.m., 8:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. All entrants should report to tourney oftlaala one-half hour prior to their squad times. Ticket sales are to progress only at 800 Bowl. There is a limited amount of seating for all eight sessions and seats go on a first-come first-served basis. BOWLING TIMES Admission cost for tomorrow night’s Pro-Am event Is 92.50. Included on the first squad will be Al Savas and Bob Strampe, the second squad will see Don Carter, Billy GOliembiewski, Therm Gibson, Buzz Fazio and Carmen Sal-vino' on the laiws; and Dick Hoover, Ronnie Gaudera and Roger Hetle displaying their talents for the benefit of the amateur competitors. November-like Weather Greets MSU Gridders miracle for me to he okay,” he Said. Zelmo Beaty bad fresh hem-oraging in his injured eye, and wjll have four stitches removed from his eyeball before the game. “We’ve had too many charging fouls against us,” said Gallatin,, “and mat has stopped our momentum” He said ail he was after was consistent officiating. Celtics’ Coach Auerbach came backed with a loud voice and a set of statistics to criticise the work of referees Sid Borgia and Norm Hrucker in Sunday night’s 109-99 Cincinnati victory. “We just want a. 50-50 chance from the officials,” said Auerbach. “Cincinnati has played three good ; By The Associated Press | Simmering St. Louis brass were writing an official protest today over foe officiating in their National Basketbal Association Western Division final playoff against Los Angeles and were getting heavy vocal support from Red Auerbach, Boston’s only active volcano. The Hayks arid Lakers meet in the sixth game of their series at St. Louis tonight with Los Angeles holding a 3-2 edge. The Royals and Celtics, tied at three victories apiece, meet at Boston Wednesday night in the decisive game of the Eastern Division final. by the Lakers.” Blake also said the Hawks would protest remarks allegedly made to Coach Harry Gelatin by Referee Earl Strom. Stram has denied saying “I’ll get you” to Gallatin. Lakers coach Fred Schaus was not available for comment and no east Lansing ojpd - Late November-like weather greeted 74 football players yesterday when Michigan State University opened its spring-football practice. If the players wish to ao-knowledge the officials in some way, they can nod or bow—but MEMPHIS (AP)-The first com-, petitor to crack the 600 barrier, Ruth Longere of Indianapolis, shares a doubles lead in the Woman’s International Bowling Congress tournament. The 39-year-old nurse shot a ’614 series Monday, and her partner, Dorothea Jeffries, added 401 for a 1,015 total and first place in division two doubles. Mrs.. Longere’s 200 average series was the first of the tourney which began Thursday and was the best Of her 22 years of bowling. Joyce Fischer and Marty Roberts of Grand Rapids, Midi,, lead division one doubles with a 1,160 they scored Sunday. OUT OF HAND The change was. proposed ,by Hungary, which felt that handshaking was getting out of hand. Budapest officials complained that all the hand clasping was unhealthy for officials who — unlike playerscould not immediately eave for the showers. Two of their first six men will be crippled. Cliff Hagan had his injured thumb x-rayed and doctors found Two o( than were great. The Royals were not so great last (Sunday) night but got some help from the officials." He continued: There is no question to my mind that Borgia has no use for1 Bob Couay or myself and never wiU. This feeltog of his may carry over into our whole organisation. There’s got to be something wrong with an official if everyone in the Japanese team leader Hisao Kido seemed rather confused by the whole thing. He said the Japanese custom used to be to bow, but to order not to be different, Japanese playerk have adopted the handshake gecently. Now, he says, “maybe they’ll go back to bowing." Opening Day Remains Big Thrill for 'Stan' NEW YORK (AP)—What’s left, or 22nd opener and l never tail Itan Mustolt You’ve accomplished to get l thrill on opening day. iracttoally everything that can be It’-s something I look-forward to Grade 1 Premium Custom RETREADS 7.50x14 $095 8.70x18 O even born when he first donned a St. Louis Cardinal uniform, and strove to find the right words. ‘‘You probably won’t believe it,” “but I still get a big kick out of I said* Stall, the 42-year-old man, being in uniform. I still have that desire.” * Then, as if fearing this explanation might sound a bit sophomoric, Musial added sort of defensively: “You’ve got to have desire to play, particularly when you get older." , Stanley looked fit and trim in his 22nd annual issue of the Cardinal uniform as he worked but at the Polo Grounds to preparation for today’s opener against the1 Dayton, ed their track seasons yesterday with impressive victories. ... The Captains swept both hur< die races'on the wav to upending T^ayne-Oakland Conference favor- MONROE p SHOCKS “ 12.000 U ME sots SvarairtM Q.. I Ortonvllle stamped itself as a lino to the 100 in 10.8 and won the 120 lit 228. Kettering’s mile relay foam won to 2:42 and Gal-lero took the broad jump to 18-1%. Winning for fifo Banns wire Tom Hoopangardner, mila, 4:96; Bob Richard* 360, 2:04; Jack Armstrong, 440, 82.9; the 880 relay team, i:3l$ biu Calhoun, shot, 488; Roger Stewart, high jump, 84; and Brian Bish, pole vault, 19-10. First pleds winners tot Orion-ville were Roger Cascadden, shot, 98814; Jerry Cleveland, 880,2:11; Laity Jackson, 440, 80,4; Dave Myers, 290, 28.9; Dale Rowe, mile, 8:21. , MjJ , ' The mile relay (Jiolto0l,Lnr* ry Richardson, Jan Mayhew, Cleveland), 9:99. the 890 relay (Myers, Jerry Vlnyard, George Navarre, Mark Brown, 1:48. All it this low, low price 20 YEARS AGO “Opening day Is always exciting,” he mused. “This is my 21W 30 DAY CHARGE 77 W. HURON Pontiac FE 8-0424 itcalm . _ FE 3-7845, 123 East Moni WHEEL ALIGIMIVIEIMT BRAKE LIIMIIXIGS Free Installation tv Forth# SMOOTHEST RIDE You've Jvor Had, LET US ■V TRUE BALANCE and TRACTION IZE ^ YOUR TIRES 1 WITH OUR KCMIWAY -LemmwrjSpkim TIRE CONDITIONER EXCITEMENT ON YOUR MENU | «|j | vjj,IL1 I4ii-.j , ,.. M, gf wm 1 HAUL PARS HARHtSS RACEWAY OPENS TNUBS0AY, APRIL 11 10 BIG RACES NIGHTLY Aik about our special Club Party Plan! POST 8:30 1 10 Mill Of DIOU1NORK Haul Park, Mich. JOntaa W»S THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. APRIL 9, 1663 TWENTY-THREE BEN CASEY Prohibition Enforcer Succumbs at 73 RIVERSIDE, Calif, (APj ~ Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, Who put teeth in the prohibition amendment and once .was described as “ttoit Prohibition Portia" by the late At Smith, is dead at 73. Ijlrs. Willebrandt argued cases involving the 18th Amendment before the U>S. Supreme Court in the 1920s and piled up legal precedents-that strengthened the Vblstead Act. and led a diamond and finessed myjack to make all the tricks^ If you do publish this hand -I hope mat it won’t lend to similar overbids dtywer the country." Actually, Mr. Cahill had overbid, but I have seen far worse overbids succeed.\Of course, he By OSWALD JACOBY . A. Warren Cahill of Waukesha, Wis., writes, "It was near , the close of an evening of duplicate. My partner and ' I were trying to fljfe get back into the running after be- W'Jj&8£& ing fixed on a <&t Ml couple of boards, w yik I Hence, inyfreest Pi and easy seriesfl^o^lB of overbids to^^]XvBp reach six spades. West- l covering sales of locally grown '.produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Market Irregular Leaders Falter i Heavy Trade NEW YORK (AP) -^ Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of]leaders faltered this afternoon to noon Monday. Product- Apple*. Melntoah, b Cabbage, standard variety, to Carrots, topped, bu. __________ Chives’. *ibox . !.!....... Horseradish, pfc. .... ' Onions.’ set, 32-ib. bag .. , Parsnips, cello pak ______ Potatoes, 50-lb. bag . *’ Potatoes. > 25-lb. bag Radishes, black .......... Radishes, burnouse ...... Rhubarb, hothouse, box „ Rhubarb, hothouse, bcb . . Turnips, topped .......... give the stock market an liregtr* tnr^STli^'foiir advanb*! in a row. Trading continued, heavy; Prices dipped at the opening but many losses were trimmed during the morning. By noon there a good number of gains losses .amounting to a point among the key issues. Some of lower by 2 or 3 points. The hesitation did not appear ers were officially reported at re-to surprise many Wall Streeters cord levels or 1992. although most consider the long * % range outlook favorable. Many] Motors and. steals, among the analysts expect lower prices be-[market leaders in the last month, of the big rise in'the last were no better than mixed. Auto Poultry and Eggs ' , DETROIT POULTRY, ' J DETROIT, April f I API—Prices paid per pound *t Detroit lor No. I quality live poultry: Heavy type hens 34-30; light typ* hens s-10; router* over t Ibe.TO-SI; broilers and Iryere.3-4 lbs. whites 30-31; Barred Rock 21-23. DETROIT BOOB DETROIT. April » iAPi—Egg prlcei paid per doaen at Detroit by nrst receivers (Including UR.): Whites trade A Jumbo St Mr 41; extn “ 1-38; large 31-36; medium 38-31. six months. OUTLOOK GOOD The general business outlook continued good as one survey found Easter sales varying considerably but still pretty good, and profits of manufactur- Bond Trading Is Quiet, Steady NEW YORK,. (fl—Bond trading was quiet and steady at the opening today,, Some long government bonds were up 1/32 but most were unchanged as the trade awaited offering of $300 million in; treasury bonds. Intermediate and Short govern-me n ts were also steady and quiet, said a leading over-the-counter dealer. Corporate bonds moved nar: rewly. were particularly active, though, as Cbrys%, GM and Ford traded around 1963 highB. Steels, too, were uneven despite tenth straight weekly production increase. Market analysts"'noted the increase in the latest week as the smallest bribe series and they believed signs that demand is leveling off. f% American Stock Exchange prices were mixed in. moderately active trading. American Stock Exfch. Figures titer decimal points ' art elgh new York Cohu Elec. Creole Pet., Ply Tiber - Americtn^speebs: 26 Imp Tb C* . 314 Kaiser Indus .. ... 36% Lakav Fd .... 3% 12V, Mead John 18(4 12 PaePMbta 6 Technlco The New York Stock Exchange Dems Introduce Civil Rights Bill Hart Gives Speech Supporting Measure York large 30-32: rnedMm 37(4-30; checks 36'-CHICAGO ROTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO, April 0 (API—Chicago Mercantile Exchange—Butter. steady; whole, sal* buying prlcei unchanged; 03 score AA 67(4; 83 A 87%: 00 B 56‘4; 10 Cl , 86'4; cars 90 B 87 V,; 80 C 87. . 4 Eggs barely., steady; wholesale buying[AhhoUL 3.30 prices unchanged to (4 lower; 70 per ASCVen ,80b cent or hotter grade A whites 30; mixed'APT ind 2.00 , 30'4; mediums 37; standards 30; dlrtles Admlral 31(4; checks 30. AJIndue JIB CHICAGO POULTRY [AlcoPiod' .40 NEW YORK (API—Following JsVa llsI ' selected stock transectlQns on TWr Noa ■ ----- Exchange with noon/pricee —A— , Flrestne tb 114 ids.) High Low Last i a *i% oivi m, ■ 8 13% 13V* 13(4 ... 13 *»%. 68(6 88(4 - 0 15(4 1844 15(4 . 8 80 50(4 0H4 - rt lilt fw’Toj bg.|Fla PL 1,30 % Fd Fair ,00 (4 FMC Cp ,■ % Ford Mr j.i iForemD .* (4 Foster Wli . iFreeptSl h1*T 20(5 30(5 SOW + 43(4 43V, 43V, - ■TOR S»% Mm 33(5 33(5 Rdg lb toy. W .3.’ 46 iir#,ig *0(4 - % PToetfcG 1.00 10 76(4 i?1|| 8% — V, PSvEO 3.40 , 13 73(4 1 3W4 + (4 » ’ ” • Ul' 4 Pullman 1.40 13 101 > 30(4 29(4 - (4 Pur* 0)1 1.00 CHICAGO. April * (API—Llv* 4-36; special ft Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK - DETROIT, April * (API — (U8DA> —Cattle 700. Limited .supply slaughter classes fully steady; U head avers*- Hogs 400, Barrows, gilts and si higher; few I and 2 and number 320 lb. 14.00-14.18; 2 and 3 180 i*|Lud legPw 1 UedCh 1 ABosch .B0e Brk 3.40 idPar lb ■■ Can 2 AmCvan 1.80 A E1PW 1.08 AmFP 64 and 3 400-800 II ■fully « lOptlc 3b ..(Photo .33 AltBOlt 3.40 MMU. Am Tob U0 Am vise i AmXino .Mb' AMP Inc .40 I . Am pox Op CHICAGO, April 6,000: AmJBr* 80 active, butohera 35 to TO higher; aow. Anacond .80Jk steady to 38 higher; slrlppere took 68 — *n,r cent of oalablo supply; 1-3 1*0-330 „ butchers 14,80-14.08: 70 Mad at 14.18; 1-3 100-350 Ibe 13.18-14,80; 3-8 360-310 lbs ia.3H3.1B; 1*8 *30-400 lb eow*_ 11."*-13.80; 400-600 lb* 11.88-13.00; 3-1 1 *00 lbs ll.00-U.00. >, ’ Cattle 3,800; calves none; elaugl; steers uneven, - steady to weak; hell moderately aotlve,' steady; cow* steady to strong; bull* steady; feeders about steady; several loads BM0 choice and prime 1,160-1.188 lb liter* 38.00*16.80; ■ ■ —.1,300 lb* 31.80-34.18; good ooo- .1. —- ,t»ndard 18.00-H.00; slaughter helleri 3 48(6 48% Off ~ % °»m8k U0» iS L'%* 24(4 BE i (4 i.nDtni^ 2 1 L i Rtfs# a ,1 44(4 24(4 34(4 I (6 OPubU 1.20b 14 48$ m , IgffiiM 83 »?! 32(4 + , oJttyOU Vo* 7(? 26IV4 35W 35(6 - (4 0$4$e\'lO* ana oi M 21 + % OlenAld .80 ,114 !?u? 4iV. Goodrch 3.30 *! 253? fiv* 1JV* Goodyear l ifiL ifu j, xu Omms© Sb lb il7? llzF 1 It QrandU Mb 1 10 38(6 ' ii s m t •4(4 i m i s m \ 1,300 Ihl 33.80-34. a and ’ heifers 900 lbs 34.60; couple ■P cutters 13.80-14.18; utility and commercial bulla 11.00*30.00; few toads choice *38*010, lb feeder steer* 33,78* 37 31% 313 16(4 18(4 I 5 33(4 33(4 1 11 4* 46% ( 10 30% 30(4 i 87 81(5 67% 3$ ml .... n 70% 76%. '«% Wt ■ 36 37(4 ""L Hi#® Doyaf McB' 38>/i -; S| f / gt: 8S + ,/,litLO*0anF *1 43(4 - (4 BtReg P 1.40b .. 10% + % 8anD im Mt 111 7 3uyr »n -• vk iohtnlby l 140 33 , 31% 31% - % KlT *« 7 38% 38V. 3*Vi — V. ■"»« 14 46% 46(5 45(4 ..... II 38% 36(6 ..... 60 4f%> 43 43Vi . WASfflNGTOiN (AP)—President Kennedy .sent tiis^civil fights for voters program to Congress today. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich. and 16 other Democratic senators joined in introducing the bill in the Senate. Senate aides' said it would go to the Senate Judiciary Committee headed by Sen. James 0., Eastland, D-Miss., long a graveyard for 1.40 u 31% 31(5 HgE'... 1 1.18 34 17% 17% *7% + % it oil 1* S3- 22% TO ' RB 3440 f 86% 56% U% - % W Air 7 14% 14% 14% ____m 60b 10 40(5 48% 48% + .% ■RPSTto, i'o 4? ifu ■M m 7 • ii*% no% |io% ,ri > % t ■ % i ■ %T The remainder of the exterior will be faced with gray bride. Lw^j & f •;. ‘‘ The clinic, to be completed in two months, will be adjacent to two other Daines Street buildings which have housed the clinic offices of Dr. James C. Moloney. * h h Moloney founded the clinic in 1955. Also on the medical staff are Dr. Eugene T. Donovan and Dr Theodore Satersmoen, psychiatrists, and Dr. WUUam C. Schaef- CHICAOO. April * (AFI - Opsn today WTitat '■ , — "*•*--.-...—■■- May Jul . .....LM% IP ......1*1(4 •0 ......(1.06% |r,,,..JTO%' Dorn f.. Saginaw St. Store Gwen New Look /J.undM’wi ,§ Csrb 3.60 1.83 Dstrolt*r Mobil* Homss — Diamond Crystal ............ Electronics Capital . ...... Electronics International — McLouth Steel Co. : Mich. Beamless Tub* Co. ... Mohawk Rubber Co............ Pioneer Finance ............ Santa F* Drilling ...... — Transoont. Oas. Pipe Lins Wlnkslman's ................ Wolverine Shoe ............: (Wyandutte Chemical .........I MUTUAL FUND" Afiuiktid Fund .............1 Chemical Fund ............,11 Pptnam Growth .. . Television Electronics wpjuhftpn Equity . ,. impRn i icok Me _ „jf MStP F ChIPne 1.30a it ChrlsCftCl.f|nl 1 IPiWW roo J sc 4 CltlesBv 3,00 ” lOisv Bl 3> CocnCol 3.70 n sawKO Ool* F 1.20* f&JA. 2 . .SiCoiPiot .oof ? 5 JJ ComlCre 1.60. 15 8.«»|Ccm!Sol job ? 'HS QomEd l.Sob 16 8.88ioon Edls 3 Treasury Position 10 3* 37% 37% - % . i ttfi fa " io| 10% 10% * 30% 30% 30>/* imm TV4 164 tWM t«% 102% 21 43% 43% 43% ‘I 88% 15% *t(4 l (4 if Ml Sa - i 22 30%. 39% ■ 39% - (4 31 63% jit 83% '-'(4 46 28 37(5 17% - % 1 H , 87% 86% 38(5 - % 14 23% 22% 32% — % 16 i|% 48% M% 40 86% 86 66 I 38% 38% 89% ^lif % LQFvis 2.81 %! MbMcN .111 % | LlggAM 6 ]fp 1.87 21 18% 18*4 ’' 7 38Va Im a 84 .ij% M 13 lif* 0% 1 T ,XJ (Di fin L,,» u% ., moneir l i in •18", + % oil pip 1.39a 81 .(*% Ir.vWlLr K 49% 12% - V, Unit Cp ,35> xll 9(4 6% 72% - % On Fruit .00* 34 35% 24(4 uM*|0as 1 LongILt 1.73 Loril plrotr LorUird 2.40 IM 87(4 86% 66% - (• 46'63%, 68% 63% + % U 16 17% 17% - % 46 31 % 21 Vs 31% - i r m si - 13 13% 13% 13% <1 13 40% 43% 41% + MaokTr 1.00 IHBif Kl mmf Mend Cp 1.7* ”—" fiWi ua fb^,C : %% 3$ 80 A S? 1; US Smelta'lg til *2% itfy ..... 1' % E‘f J% 31(4 JK kjftfeg' fl 31% ||% - % 48 30% ?*% 38% Upjoaa •** •■ ■ ■ » TO%- 36% 33%'**. Vs m 49(4 41%; 4i% + % _. . 1 m P P * *W VM.AU 140b T 34% 34 34'*-% 82 fJjJ fl% - V, Vsnsd Cp J ljji fi% 13% - % if.? % Maoiiav Msralli^J.1 Sn tO 301 . . Jd Merck ’* TrCh ji pid aA,80T.1 Mintr Ob Mpl Hon 3 |DHR. Monsan 1.30b M ■- Series E and H bash sales of $117 million were $23 million higher than March • year ago. Gross redemptions dropped 1.1 per cent. (Total bond sales In the two categories for the first quarter $ were $1.35 billion, 11.1 per cent M + % above the corresponding 1962 ?!$ £ $'P«rtod. • Gross redemptions were 4.6 per cant below last year’s figures. The former' j. C. Penney building at 17 S. Saginaw St. has a pew face, a new interior arid a new owner. The foor-stofy building, now occupied by Ward’s Home Outfitting, has been remodeled and now presents a gray terrasso front featuring a new canopy arid large windows. A colonial furrilttft'e center has been installed on the second floor. Sr * * The building was purchased by Harold Goldberg, owner of Ward’s Home Outfitting from Albert Koegel of Flint, Price was undisclosed. sigh and right-of-way width fof future development of East Boulevard be* officially established by by, resolution. FOR FUTURE The planning commission re* commends that the city continue to 'purchase right-of-way rif 120 feet for the, future , development of East Boulevard as a six-lane divided highway. ..An official .statement from- the city on fatdre planning for East Boulevard would enable the State Highway Department to proceed with designs for a proposed interchange at the boulevard aad die - relocated M59. The Barton Traffic Study of 1958 had recoftuttfcttded only a 90-foot right-of-way. Further studies by dty engi- neers arid planners showed the need for a 120-foot right-of-way, which the city has been purchasing gradually ever the past few years. ■:;.'^ ■ ■- it it % ; . Commissioners also are slated . to get a re^rirt tonight from City Manager Robert A. Stierer on Pontiac’s 1963 workable program nowreadyfrir submission to .the Urban Renewal Agency in Chicago.--....,J. The program must be okayed by federal,, officials each year to assure continued federal participation in the dty’a renewal pro-rams. ......... * A tabulation Of bids' for construction of a comfort station and storage building at Aaron Perry Park will also be presented for -to- night. Broomfield's Committee Focuses on Rough Spots' WASHINGTON UR - Rep. William S. .'Broomfield, R-Oakland County, and other members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee are fogusing critical attention on two rough spots in the of foreign relations. global fabi The two rough spots getting special scrutiny in hearings on the administration’s $44-blUion foreign aid budget request ace left-leaning Indonesia and the vendetta, between. India, and Pakistan everJKnshmir. Broomfield yesterday, said he would offer an amendment to the foreign aid bill specifically banning aid rif any kind to IndoneBta. "Jk * Sr, Both Republican and Deiaacrat* ic members of the committee have suggested that U. S. foreign aid be used as a weapon or lever in the twQ situations. QUESTIONS EXPECTED They wereexpectedtoraisethe questions again today as David E. Bell made his first appear- ance as director of the U.S. foreign aid program. Bell. told the committee that U.S. military' and economic aid to underdeveloped countries “is , helping to wage the epic battle , of our time, the battle between By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. rtWe are young people planning to bny a home within the next year, and would like your advice on onr present Investments. We have very little cash and depend, almost entirely on onr securities to make a down payment. We own Breeze Corp;' Clopay Corp.; Howe 8onnd; McLean Industries; American Motors/’ DJL. A) You sound like a nice young couple and I wish you happiness with your future home. Now I’m going to make a suggestion which may surprise you. ui your position I would sell all my stocks immediately WhUe emphasising the eontinu- ' ing peed for foreign aid, Bell said, “ take it we are all 1n agreement that our programs of economic : and military assistance should be designed to be self-terminating.” ★ ★/ ★- ‘’The purpose of our efforts,” he said? “is to help'other countries get on their own feet and achieve a position in which they can su* tain economic growth and, where, necessary, military strength without extraordinary outside help.” Bell said that has happened in Europe since 1956, and “today the te/mlnatton of the need for development loans on “soft” termor is clearly to sight for additional countries, among t h e m Greece, Israel, free China; Venezuela and Mexico.” He said the need for military aid to Greece rind China will undoubtedly continue longer. In other cases, Bell said, "The ^ end. fs not yet iri sight—but It is clearly In mind. It will take some yeairs for countries like Korea, In-( dia, Pakistan and Turkey to-achieve economic self-support— but clearly that should be their target, and ours.” Tories Reveal Polaris Pact hr First Time ..'a., i—Also i. b-Annual rat* .Raj* rto STOCK reoiPlae .... BastOF l.no ' BIBpndS 1.20 1W1 BlAMus .06* . Emrr El .60 ?'riSPU*r A ,0* 55% aoat pS -- ,17% 110% 116% - pirn Math 1 qtlsRISV 1 60 out Mar .89 Ow«u til 3.1 *5,: "i% ll *% “ 18:33v, M >i% - (i ir w v •t wWjtt P - % , i r r - 'ffi' * m i B'-I -f- BBuj SiSBti if 1 1M p P ‘ 11 21% 31(4 31%.- (VFap Cola,. MO 17 49(5’ 49 , 49, ts 'fk P P: ‘j m 1 m t 37 30% 36% . —I ’— , * 34,34 stook dlvltlsnd. c LIouWating' .... jraJEWMOd 4»r paid Tn lpM jblui dividend, o P«iU Taut v«*ar, f -Ppy In itook during 1653. •lifmfttAd OMh I flits: MffS MwBS ■ L I if m % dividends ID atragrs. n—Psld Ihl % (ilvMsnd omitted, deferred ’ or/ no taksB ta last 'dividend meeting. DOW.JONIS 1 F,M. AVERAGES TO Indue, 706.27 off 0.71 TO Rail* 145.06 OB 0,14 ,, , 15 Utile. 136.83 off 0.03 , IS Stook* 347,71 off Oil Ii Volume t« 1 p.m. 3,300,000. News in Brief Noble Heitmever of 1409 Orchid t., Waterford To w ns hip, reported to police yesterday That two windows and a screen in his living room were damaged by an apparent stray 22-caliber bullet. should ever hold stocks khpwing that they must be sold within a specified time limit. Your, hold-are, speculative and It is anyone’s guess whether they will be higher or lower a year hence. There is only one thing certain about stocks: they fluctuate, sometimes widely. With your money in a savings account, you can be assured of your home, which probably means more to you than anything else, j ★ , w w . Q) “You frequently advise not holding moro stocks than, can be foltowod. What do you mean by ‘followed’? To the average person most parts of STOCK AVERAGE ifllad fcf TS* Aeeeeleled J tad. RaUs Ul nil Ohsuo* I.MH ..... w-'w■‘SB H i......m m If If 141.0 264.6 Sale, Wednesday, April lo, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Auspices Birmingham Eastern Star, 327 S. Woodward, Birmiiigham. -Adv. 1: a fit- Business Notes 10 Pubfio utliitto* . 10 industrials ^. >«. ii.Ur-O.OITedd C 'M.W^’fl rfltrol 7 IR i l - (('Fan “;■% pto! |jb 1 jo% 51 trlbutsd. wl -When delivery. ; , vj- ln bankruplev )|bh reorganised ui Former Pontiac resi'den Charles Dickerson has joined tbe w To 1* ■ Parke, Davis & Co. research Igb: '. dim. rg*. i js oratorios 'iri Ann Arbor as an as-H j H j distant research parasitologist, di'i fl mi its mo! Dic*(er8on> a graduate of Ferris Jo s 100 8 S'.* *7.1 oO Institute, was formerly employed H'f «l * ni m m.1 |by 'Project Hope In Washington, 7*^ TOT TO* TOO oi;f t>.C. , the money into a savings ac- braced for a wave of criticism, count. No one, .in my opinion) less. What are the things to look for, arid where to look for them? H. J. A) This is an extremely good If is very difficult for the or-dinary layman to follow his stock holdings intelligently. Ho cap atari out, as 1 do, by posting the daily quotations on hia holdings so that he can gain a quick visual impression of the market course of bis shares. If the market la moving up and any holding is standing still or declining, than he should seriously consider making a switch.; / From most Companies the Investor now, receives a quarterly well sis an annual statement, 1 he should pay particular attention to the trend in earniiigs. Most brokers will review your holdings periodically and I should LONDON (UPD Prime Minister Harold Macmillan’s government presented publicly for the first time today details of his * Nassau Polaris pact with President Kennedy arid immediately The full scope ot the agreement; was presented in an official state-’ ment in Parliament this after*: noon, on the eve rif U. S. Defense: Secretary Robert McNamara’s' visit to Britain. McNamara’s last visit here of Britain’s hopes to buy,U. S. air borne Skybolt missiles and planted the'seed of the seaborne British Polaris Beet. The government “white paper” -m the Nassau agreement was ex*' pected to draw moro press and: political fire, particularly from; Labor party circles that want; Britain to give up her nuclear de-; torrent altogether. Birmingham FirmTiai 90 Pet. Earning! Jump Berry Industries, Inc., of Birmingham has reported net earning of $164,194 for last year, art increase of nearly 80 per cent * over 1961 figures. Sales* reached slightly moro ‘ than $7 million for the same period, up 12.8 per cent over 1961. Di«» a$ Car Overturn! SOUTH HAVEN (fl - Eddie Don Hodge,/U, of South Haven, was killed last night when his car overturned after striking a . . culvert along a county road just certainly ask them to , do so. nortji of bore. State police said (Copyright 1913) Ihe was alone in the aUto. | * ‘v., I , .f/jCw! I TffE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIfc 1368 TWENTY-FIVE Pontiac Youth Hurt in Flint Auto Crash Two 20-year-old General Motors Institute students, one of them frtm Pontiac, were injured in Flint last night when the car in which tbfty were riding vhered off the road and struck a tree. WASHINGTON (APj—Sir Win* ston Churchill, the magnificent Briton, becomes officially today ftnnaM J. Qinim 0f 606 Fourth what he has been for two decades St.', received abrasions and con* tusions of the back, white Donald Kennedy of Wapakoneta, Ohio, received ft forehead cut and possible head injuries. Chase toM police the spring on his carburetor came off, and then his accelerator stuck, Both are in satisfactory condl-tion in Hurley Hospital in Flint. North Carolina raises and sells more peanuts than any other of the states. PUBLIC On Ante 10. INS at * Paddock and ^AuWirn. 1 April 8. and 9. 1963 form i 2 PUBLIC SALE ld» at 9:45 iTST In Orion. Michigan. 1960 i. 00569WI65940. will be April • and 9. 1963 Routing _ CommlMlon will . MMi------------1 tha following: Thermo* tag, Soorotarr mho Mumne »83 “ “ ' with stand. Lika new. Cyclone ] UaOT Spreader—6 it MOV Push »l Model <7—Extra Heavy I stands. Mat bo seen at 939 Branon, or caM# HE 6-3330. Bid opening Aprli ___ ’ April •• *> 10. 11 and l: SUMMERTIME IS MONEY-MAKING TIME . FOR MICHIGAN BUSINESS OWNERS WHY HOT Bt ONE YOURSELF See Partridge for DMVE4N RESTAURANTS BOAT A MOTOR SUPPLIES MARINAS HARDWARES MOTELS end eU kinds of mtmnmnu liSOW. HIMON FE 4-3511 ftwten Partridge I Assoc,, Inc. 14 Offices Thruout Michigan Winnie Today Will Become First Honorary the hearts of Americans—the first honorary citizen of the Unit* ed States. . v f The bestowing of this honor, unique in history, requires only a touch of President Kennedy’s pen on a bill enacted by Congress, and a second signature on a presidential proclamation. ..: J ★ * Weary now with the weight of. 88 years, Sir Winston was'unabte be presentjto receive s nation’s accolade. Neither were Herbert Hoover, Harry S Truman and Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, the three former ^.presidents, able to accept Kennedy’s invitation to attend. ; * ★ ★ The ceremony was carefully timed, at 3 p.m. EST, so that the British Broadcasting Corp. could " bounce it off the orbiting Relay satellite and Churchill could watch it on television in his London home. SPECIAL MESSAGE Sir Winston sent a special message of acceptance and apprecla- e± ^ Churchill climbed onto a tion to be read by his son, Ran-chair) chomped a cigar, wt1' 44> 4. «. „ poked his spilt fingers aloft in his The setting was the Rose Gar- ren0wned V for Victory salute, den, dt^ide^ toe White House Por congress he rolled out a where Churchill helped chart toe of ^ wen more strategy of global war and peered nowned oratory, at the problems of an uneasy peace in the climactic years of Winston Churchill stirringly erratic career. ......k it it It was to this house that the man Britain chose as her prime minister in toe moment of her greatest peril showed up suddenly and secretly a few days after Japan smashed at Pearl Harbor and toe United States went limping off to war. ★ Side by side in the oval presl-ential office, Churchill and Frahklin D. Roosevelt thundered at the common enemy at a joint news Conference. They assured the world that Allied might ultimately would grin out over. .Germany first and then Japan. Spry- is * n [investing QReek» to you?. It needn’t be... you can learn about the modem way to invest by reading our free booklet, “The Modem Way to Invest.” You’ll find out how to obtain the three essentials of sound investment: 1) esreful selection, 2) wide diversification, 8) constant supervision, Write for “The Modern Way to Invest”—today I JifefifUeh * SKingb&uiy %c. INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS FE 2-9117 $18 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG. IMMEDIATE QUOTATION SERVICE Ourf oellltloo Extend From Coot! to Coaot “I cannot help reflecting that if my father had been an American and my mother British, | stead of the other way ’round, might have got here on my own he said, looking arourid the House chamber. to Study Code A section of Waterford Town* ship's bqUding Code, called overly restrictive by a group proposing a 32-unit apartment bouse development, will-be reviewed today by the township's appe«l board. Ray O’Neil, and a proponent of toe development, appeared at last night’s organizational meeting of toe new Township Board seeking a change in toe code, i^A recommendation from too appeal board is expected to ' acted ,.upon at next .Monday’ Township Board meeting. O'Neil, who first voiced ‘ his objection at a board meeting two weeks ago, contends that the township’s existing code is unique in that it specifies both a front and rear-doorway in apartment boufce units. . 'ANYWHERE ELSE’ "We could put up a building anywhere in the state but Waterford Township,’’ he said. The building Is proposed VOorheis Road and Josephine Street. The developers have, option on this site which expires May 1. Trustee John Coleman, also a member of too appeal board, called the existing township buildUg code antiquated. "Hie entire code should bo graded,” he said. Pontiac Area Deaths HUBERT J. ENDRIES Service for former Pontiac resident Hubert J. Endries, 81, of St. Petersburg, Fla;, will be there from toe John S. Rhodes Funeral Home, 35 N. Fourth St. tomor- )W. Mr. Endries died in St. Petersburg yesterday. He was a member of Elks Lodge No. Knights.of Pythias and Pontiac Lodge No. 19. Surviving besides his wife, Viola, are a sister and a brother. -----HARRY STUMP ~ Service for Harry Stump, 78, of 9S1 Boston Ave., will be 2 p.m. tomorrow in the D: E. Parsley Funeral Home, with burial to Roseland Park Cemetery. Mr. Stump, a retired employe of GMC Truck and Coach Division, died Sunday following a long “Iness. A surviving daughter was list-;ed incorrectly yesterday. Her name is Mrs. Betty Kleiner of Las Vegas, N. Mex. Burial wlll follow to Mount Hope Cemetery. <\jfc . A : ★...... Mrs- Nusbaumer d ie dyesterday after a brief illness. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. today at the Sparks-Griffiii Funeral Home. Two niece* survive. JOHN M. PARRISH OXFORD TOWNSHIP - Service for John M. Parrish, 79, 610 Baldwin Road. will he 2 p.nu Thursday at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford; Rariar wiII be to Oxford Cemetery. * . * ★ \ retired farmer, Parrish died yesterday alter an illness of six months. He was a njeml of toe Oxford Baotiat Church. Surviving are three sons, Leo of Armada and Nelson and David, both of Oxford; a daughter, Mrs. Jack Clark of Burlington, N.C.; seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. MRS. ELSTIN HORTON GROVELAND TOWNSHIP -Service for former resident Mrs. Elstin (Florence H.) Horton, 76, of Flint, Will be 2 p. m. Thursday at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonville. Burial will follow in Hadley Cemetery. Mrs. Horton died early today after a two-year illness. She was member of the Woodside Baptist Church, Flint. Surviving are three sons, Howard of Holly, Harold of Davison, Snd Vern Halstead of Ortonville; four daughters, Mrs. Maxine Brandt and Mrs. Aleaii Mann, both of Ortonville, Mrs. Joseph-jtae Orr and Mrs. Nina Galloway, both of Clarkston; and If grand-! children. ; . ' „ , MRS. HENRY NUSBAUMER ORION TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Henry (Margaret) Nus-baumer, 87, of 2124 Silver Bell Road, will be 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at St, Michael’s Catholic Church. MRS. RENA M. STUDEBAKER HIGHLAND - Service for Mrs. Rena May Studebaker, 43, of 280 Center St., will be 1 p.m, Thursday at Richardson • Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will be to Highland Cemetery. it k ‘k Mrs. Studebaker died yesterday after an extended Illness. Surviving are a son, Kenneth, of Livonia; three daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth King of , Highland, Doris of Muir and Phyllis of Livonia; her mother, Mrs. Mila DeGarmo of Highland with whom she made her home; and two grandsons. • a * * .Four brothers, Burhl s Duane, both of Highland; Leon of Milford and Jay of Owosso; and three sisters, Mrs. Ernie House of Highland, Mrs. Russell Mun-ger of Muir ami Mrs. Alvle Patterson of Livonia, also survive. AMERICAN HEATING OIL TIMKEN aus& AUBURN BLUE FLAME 1 • NEW INSTALLATIONS—FURNACE REPAIRS • TOM KlOtt STANDARD MMNIR SUIVICt COMPANY j . *5 WUt PIKI (TAUT-.PI 4-iSM Pioneer Sc/on Dies Following Brief Illness COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Mrs. William A. (Rosa N ) Win-dtote, a member of one of toe original families settling to toe Silver Lake area of Oakland County, died early today after brief illness. " k k ' k She was a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Pontiac, April-May Group of her church and Commerce Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star. be 2 p.m. Thursday at toe Sperks-Grlfito Funeral Home, Pontiac. , ■ kA * * a Surviving besides her husband are two sons,-John E. of Union Lake and George A. Windlate of Flint; a daughter, Mrs. Leslie T. Shanks of Ferndale; three gramtehildren; and a greatgrandchild. a k ■ , Memorial contributions can ha made to the First Presbyterian Chunph Building fund. In other business, hoard members approved a request from toe David Belisle Post, No. 4102, Veterans of Foreign Wars, asking that a portion of Dixie Highway be blocked for the.-organization' Memorial Day parade. Township Supervisor James Seeteriin distributed copies of the recently completed draft of the township zoning ordinance for ' board members to study, public hearings on toe proposed ordinance were held to January. Action by toe township Beard on toe ordinance, designed to provide greatei township control dver land use, will be taken at, a subsequent meeting. Preceding the meeting Probate Judge Donald E. Adams swore in all candidates elected to office April !, including the seven members of toe Township Board. Death Notices firry Mt. ! All! will lie hooo-BIpIo t HORTON, APRIL 0, 1003, FLQR-onoo H TOO I. Eighth St., mint; *6® 79; d»»r mother of Mr*. Maxlno Brandt, Mr*. Alton Hnnn, Mr;. Josephine Orr, Mrs. him Qmmisr^E.1, Vita : luntADd. ■ Howard »nd Harold Horton, alio aurvlvod tar u irandohlltfron. Pu-vioo will ba hold Thuro-11 n, at 1 p.m, at tha day, April 0, F. Bht________ P Ortonville, with Dr. ....... olflou Interment In Hadley “—f Twp. Mrt. ________J1 Rd., ege ___t of Hre. lva Car- penter and Mri. Maxwell Huteh-Inion. Recitation of thO1 Hoeary will be held at I thin evening at the Bparks-Orlffln Fanerei Home. Funeral eervloe will be held Wedneiday. April 10. at 1:80 a.m. at the at.' Mlehael’e Catholic Churoh. interment In ,Mt. Hoae Cemetery. Mre. Nuebaumer will “ tha aparke-orlttin , lie PARRUH. APRIL 1,1063, JOHN M.. eto^Baldwln Rd., Oxford Twp.: ag^It! beloved hueband of Katie Parriah; dear father of Mri. Jerk Clerk, Lip, Neleon' an-* r*--M Parrleh; dear brother^ John iean; r Oof Mri. iHUved by aM four pf1'Aprl*rM ptfloiatlng. Interment in OxffM’. HneMry, Mr. -Farriih will IM in etate at the Flumerfelt Funeral— STODDARD. . APRIL 7, 1063 SAM-uel. jMl Frynne. Keego Harbor: age 70: beloved huaband of Ploj-*noe M. Stoddard, dear father of Mre, Ollmri (Virginia) BarnOe. Mr*. Kathleen Oranam, Mre, June Rae, Mre.' Charier (Betty) Find-i*v, Mri. 0«ne mutM North, rup. Jamie V. end Ooorie B. eervloe. ..... .. ______ April M at 9 p.m. at the O. J. Oodhardt Funeral Home. Keen Harbor with R»v, Rnhart L. P*»la officiating, interment In - Com-maroe Cemetery. Mr, Stoddard will lie In etate it the & J. Oodhardt Funeral Home, Keego 0611 WL 7, * 1001, HARRY, i, Weterford Twp,; age hi mioved hueband of Bertha I. Stump, dear father of Mre, William (PiniAev Btookford. Mre. Seeele Kleiner, Mre. Fred (Dorothy) Morgan, Robert and' Daryl •tump, dear brother .of Mr*. Ralph (Mable) Reltenodr, -aieo aurvtved by 13 grandchildren and II great-nandohUnren, Funeral limKjvIn be held WedneNai, April to, et I p.m. ot tho D, 1, Fureley Funeral Home with Rev, Walter, Teeuwluen officiating, interment In Roeeland park ........Stump will, lie In 3. I. Puraley Pu- Ki WTCnlnUke___________ beloved wife of wmiam a, Win-diate, dear .mother of Mre. Leeile t. flhanka. -John I, and Qeorge a. Windlate, aleo eurvlvad by 'three' grenddaughtere and one gnat-grand-dairihter. Funeral earvloe will be bold Thureday, April 11 at a p.m. at me iparkitolmn Cnapei with Rev, Oelen Hereher official- J* Jmm would *•«,> & )’ fimlly?1 IN LOV1NO MEMORY OF OCR mother, Mrs. ;qil(a MUee who jawed away Aprti 0, io». There Ie an empty apot in our boarte. ; Because our mom baa gout away. For lour long year* we'.ve mined , Love’s remembrance outlaste all: , And though the years bo many or Tbay are filled with .remembrance -Sadly mil daughterC CALL CARTER’S BEAUTY SALON for your iaator Specials. Sets $1.60; m MM Tint and Set $5.00; j»rroanenteJ7760 com-plete. Chlwron,rii.$0. FE 3^$T7. LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY AND ip economically wim newly roleaied" Dex-A-Dlet tablets. 9$ cents at OROUPS. CHURCHES OtldiklZA-* tlone. MO for eelTlng? ? FS MOM. STUDIO OIRL COSMETIC REPRB- -• serttatlves available to you.- Call OL 1-9301 aftoriite. In debt “ Arrange to pay all your blllg with one amalll weekly payment. BUDGET SERVICE 19 W. Huron _________FB 4-0801 Pay Off Your Bills — without a loan — Payments low aa llo wk, - . Protect your Job and Crodlt Home or Office. Appointments City Adjustment 'Service 714 W. Huron . FES-0391 ; OBT OUT OF DEBT ON A PLAN . you carf afford MICHIGAN CREDIT > Counselors coats DRAYTON°PLj5ns HOM>lO» 3-7737 D. E. Pursley Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME “Dwlsned for FuneraU" HUNTOON . FUNERAL HOME Voorb^es-Sipl© SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME ev—.—..... PR mil Cemetery Lets 1 LOTS, While ( ..hits Chanel, Fj 4-64I6.__________ . SFAftigii at wftiro oRklWi. ■ Wliriacrifice. fe 6-3647, ANY OIRL OR WOMAN NEEPINO a friendly adviser, phono FB$.61M P.AHt f Y Mi^ Ifi'IHMIi; Menominee, FftTim________________ 30 Baldwin Rd.. Pontiac. Mich- BROWNISH CRAY BILLFOLD CON- talna no money bur vmr—----- pore to owner'Mario o caiy. Reward: FE 9-093». Dial FE 2 8181 FOR FAST ACTION.. iTICR TO ’RRTISRRI cancel the chargee for that portion of Ihi first Insertion of the advertisement whloh has been rendered valuelew through the error. ,Th$ deadline for etncelle-tlon .of tranelent Want Ads Is 0 a.m. the day of publlcatlun after the first Insertion. *»“ —noelletlone are mad# to get your "KILL ,jt." no adjustment* given wllhoul It." . Pontiac Press Want Ads Clnelni time for «dvortlse-‘ menu containing typo elsos iargor than . regular agaw typo la II o'clock noon the day previous to publication. CASK WANT AD RATIO 6 3.05 6.40 (.40 3.60 6 40 10.06 ’ { 4,37 7.11 ii.,n 4.66 ' 8,64 11.44 9 1,49 ■ 9 73 i|.il 19 4.10 10.90 10.10 An additional oharg# of 90 oonla win be made tor ueo of Fwillao Froee nos numbers. The Pontjac Press Springe, Cemlnge. JMeub* Sail J. Lee at Voorbete-SIple Funeral Home, PE 2-6378. ' CLARKST0N^(±A88 RINO. Igte. HE--FOUNDroRAY POODLE IN VICIN- Kitchen. Pleas* mall 0 LOST: BLACK. BiowT™A$fi> "> male beagle. In the vicinity }*kl*nd Ave. Licensed, PE iln. Family pleat* e*li Lott Sun. REWARD FOR- INFORMATION leading to reoovory of Chihuahua male dog. Chocolate and white spotted, answers to name Peony, i Dixie Highway. BU AMBITIOUS MAN TO TAKE AD-vantage of offer by successful tot-poratlon. To train as eervloe and , •Slot representatives. Salary staris when training et arts. Incentive, compensation Maximum eoeurlty for your family and opportunity for you. Apply 7 p.m. Monday or Tuesday. 103 N. .Saginaw. ' 4..AT?*i!!S0,?i".......... making -748. Ql POMATIC ISMlSSfON ME-«uww W.IUCU. neply to Box 1U. The Pontiac Press. UTOMOTIVE NIGHT MANAGER (or parts department. Keego Sale* 138rp*"' dAM YOU HANDLE A hIaVY Job? Are you 36 to SO yoara old? Old you attend , high eohool? M ,ft. you want to work, send u* a tons hand, letter EMWOnni the abova and telling us your ago,’ weight, physical eonilMi fMnUy, home. , last place of employment and Wage rat*, schools attended, name* of,three reference!, your addrees and phone available. Address: Post^ Office Box 013. Pontlao, A NEW COMPANY Rochester art*. Evening work, part time, guaranteed wag*, ear a necessity. OL 1-0803. between ■ 5 end 7 p.m. KlDERLY HANDVteAN. MORE for heme than wages, room aha board' ra 44331. ELECTRICIAN. UCENSKD. FULL or part Ilmt.FESOMi. EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR advancement with a national eon-aumer finance company. Prefer man around 3* yoara of ago. Must be a,high eenM.xrMuaM. flood itarung salary with oar allow- , once i furnished, A liberal plan of company benefits, Apply Aseooiatei Loan Co., 389 if, Telegraph. Tha RntlaoMalT ,. ■ ' eXHeKieNCED CLERICAL HELP wanted. Min, single, retirement EXPERIENCED. ROD MAN FOR survey orew. Call MoOlimle Bn-glneerlng Co. 674-1313 or OR 3-7947. EXpERiBNdiii jiiAT CtfincR — Must be reliable, with reference. EXPERIENCED MAN FOR CLEAN- ■ 1isjnd parf*Ume. APPLICATIONS BEING TAKEN We need several neat anergatlo men to^flffjouljur saw* organ lea-WUI' tr»ln*,your”pVrtntfme*or' mi* 1 time, auifaniood mown*. No gbon^eA^amdy In pafeon. com. , KAST-HEATING AND COOLING Flisf" CL AifA^WHUUHift. _ 4404 EUeebeth Uke Rd,_ FE NCR ERECTORS. eXpeKi- Blood Donors URGENTLY NEEDED El Rh Positive. 97 Rh Negative DETROIT BLOOD lERVlCE 19 SOOTH CASS FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITY Territory proteoted by oontraot. High oommleslone. No mvostUMM. no dgUvarMfi no ooUeetlone. no risk. COMPANY 79 years a leader bt their Enow bow—ReHaroh rap Sound flnanolany. National aa-vertletng. QUALIFICATIONS Experienced ealesmen, n(o 30. to 90 years 4 lo sail on our eetab-luned acCounte with ability w expand bualnsu. Training In Held by ' District Manager. For complete Information ana Interview writ* Mr. Oaorge Rex, District Manager. Troploal Paint Co., 493$ Harvest Lens, Toledo 13. Ohio. OROOM TO TAKE CAItft 'OF-horee*. Good wages, board and room. Year-around job. 33179 W. 14 MU* Rd. OutLande Riding Stable. GROOM FOR PRIVATE STABLE In sloemneld Hull area, rallabl* . and sober. Call evenings. 781-453$. . ILL MEN iced.. Steady, good pay, i pay and Hoimtaltsatlon. ihlft. Apply lllae Broa. mi ooy, 90 S. Telegraph. ha boRi o p K r a t o r! bay ihlft. shop engaged In. ■ making ' epeolal machinery. 1993 Rochester Rd.. near 18 Mite, LATHE HAND WANTKd. -1993 Rochester Bd.,Troy, Mich. UM.' #AKt TIME, FOR SURVEY-Ing work, experience desirable but irel neeeuary. Reply lo Fonllie Press Box 64, MAn to work in..auto FAKifs •tore, Must have at leael l year axperlenoe as aulo parts clerk. . _ Hollerbaski Auto Parte 173 Baldwin ____Phone 338-111.11 SERVICE SALESMEN furnaces need some attention i as cleentng aim repairing, have expert workmen to do work. Your Jot^jail be to take roiipqualify. Apply ii KAST HEATING AND COOLING 463 South Saginaw Montgomery WARD n With good knowledge of Ci for experienced shoe ialejkmtri. VACUUM .CLEANERS ' APPLIANCES Fulj time, mult be thoroughly ex-COMPANY BENEFITS Apply Personnel Office ....„ty^hSa/l».*n ,: ___ business. Cap-' gar-.; All expenses paid. Mo traveflng. 9100 a week salary. Apply to Mr. Belt, Waldrop Hotel. Thureday 11 a.m, to 7 p.m. . MEN WANTED WITH LANbsdAF-tag exnerlence. Ala* landscape fore-mar. Apply to perutt, Jacobsen’a Garden^ Town, 649 g. Broadway. SECURE POSITION ____nigh nrnpol gnu eervloe established et togs end benefits are uiwuaan Interview. Cal’ OR 3-866$. .. 3 part-tuners j eeded,.. , ly toe'toed, high $£_,„ able to drive. Income opportunity . from $90 An- $160~por"W09ET CUM.. clean 'outside work. For pereonel Interview: CM1 FE 8-6119. MAN WANTED, MUST BE HIOH school greduett — or better,, to dost lng. OR 3-1384. RETIRED MAN FOR JANITOK AND general ^ maintenance^' Wort^^for Frees, Box 33, J TIRE SALESMEN benefit*. Apply Personnel I MONTGOMERY WARD BtNOLE MAN 40 TO 81. LIVE iN. r^u^WA®, MMdriSe WANTED: BUMP AND PAINT MAN ' Colllelon gliop. FE 3-94977 WANTED: SINGLE MIDDLE-AOED OA*8 montl1 farm work. WAITED: TOP NOTCH ROOFERS with recent experience, good opportunity. Apply to person 956 Scott : Lake Road. 1. .1 , WAW^V. MftN TO. WURK IN Ff- enced ■ or inexperienced. Be* Ray Car^aUsn,M6N.lJto**rRd.,Ox, fordrMlohlgan. - YOUNG MAN $90 The Scott I Fetter C9.. a 60-year- facility, due W tremendous aeeept-anoe of Ite now product -".The Sanl-tronlo Seven.” BgnMtt* Inolude . guarantee, , bopue. retirement. In--wBSPkIWplw*d'P*f rate* within go days, progress sharing pro- -»*P.ta, _ ....V Garage Mechanics Our busy service garage ha* openings for men expenenoed in gonorat AP1l“o®Y WARD PONTIAC MALL4 Management Training management •ponsIbUltles . growth of b I the pnanlutlong Ad-i,i,,,.,Security, liberal salary With bureaus based on performance, ear, allowance, modem *m- » benefits; national organ-n. For a Ibnlted oumbar of men 31 Ie 31, some college pre- *rrHOUSEHOLD FINANCE CO- 364 S. Bggtoaw, Pontlec. Michigan. Htlp Wiftted ? 1 WOMAN OR OIRL, PREFERABLY with toeuranoe experience Ip do general office work, Write Fentlae < Press Bex 39. A FULL TIME JOB WITH FAHT advancement Is ni local finance offlt tanee office, If you i raging guallneotlongt home, Friendly, .pIMMnt and prof-liable, reWOSOQliC Avon DMIMfUl ' quickly puls I to, your Rocket. Write P.o, Box 91, Drayton Plain* or , phone FE 4-4606 ________ BABYSITTER, LIVE IN. 618 WEEK. FE 6-6309 alter 6 p.m, fiBAtiTr' oraftA’roKnPQiiir' and part lime, Cali FE MOM, BEAUTY OPERATOR. PULL OR pari time. MA 9-9460,___ SeaJtV OPERATOR WANffcD, NO COCKTAIL WAITRESS AT NOR. tween 9 and 8. After I TO CARE FOR rmSm C|«ftUflORUOMI. _ COSMBTICIAN-DRUO CLERK."'1K-perioneed, Full or jjirc time. ' Jack’s Drugs, FB 9-7996, , " CtlRB OIRLB WANTED. AftttV A* ■'.! A 9t W, 991 Baldwin. CURB OIRL AN rsss wanted. Keego Harbor. I i*jmF. Drayton Plato* area .dr, Pontlao Press log 79, « WAiJrKE^^. a * w bftivi EXECUTIVE M E D I CAL SXCKK- . BpTw r Iw»|il»yif i>» Information 9-A CARNIVAL Blehltnd Rd; (53-59) MIDDLE AGED OR B tDSfR EXPERIENCED COUNTER AND WK shour»r^«aty*c< PULL TIME AND., 1 PART TIMS- ' Abort order took, evenings, ex- , parlance necessary, pood salary, apply In person between 10 a.m, j and 2:30 p,m. at Josle a Coffee I , shop, 423 Pontiac Trail, waned - fotTOCttaas^uul* la . LEARN HEAVY EQUIPMENT. ! s bra., on Doaers, Drag Lines, e Pree placement, ’’Key.’’ 0330 w. ‘ Mile Rd.. Detroit 21 PI 1-7323 ’ Work Wanted Male 11 ELDERLY WH LADY FOR ESTABLISHED WATKIN* ROUTS, t 8* i EXPERIENCED COOK, neat and clean. Top wages. Burger Drive In. OR 341040, ’_ EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OPERA* ' tor wanted, PE 0-3701. ' EXPERIENCED WAITRESS.' aVpLY earning above average. PS 2-3003. LAWNS. RAKED, SEEDED. PER-tllized Bush cutting *r- ’— hand digging. PE 2-EM2. Stardust Restaurant. 300 S. Blvd. i. Write in detail SCHOOLTEACHER, . wants summer Job. preferred, 731-9182 ai : bar. 3:30 . MAN OR WOMAN WITH ' in nerabn. Lou’s Cone] Piste Hwy. Drayton. established Watkins Routs, Auburn Heights area. Make 02-13 per hour for. actual . time worked. Apply _ IOO N, Perry, " ** *c -- Waitresses , Kitchen- Help Curb Girls 1 ERA AND CASHIERS FOR urive-In Theaters. Apply, In person to Pontiac Drive-In Tneat*- — acle Mile Drive-In Theate to <0 ‘ ~ ■ some welding and patience. 683*8641. s Bros. Big Boy, •'/ sf Telegraph. GIRL TO' HANbUC PURCHASES. WANTED: REAL ESTATE SALES-people. WE need 3 full time. Mus* bare good oar. Experienced pre (erred but will train right parties PE 0-2300, Mr. Crawford. BUSINESS IS EXCEPTIONAL WANT WALL WASHING anlng. PE 3-7581. DOMESTIC WMtK, SvDAYS A PLEASANT, PASCINA-riNO, PRO-fltable work In your spars time hours means 000 for your pocket, used house listings: TJCRRIF1C* MONEY DEAL for you. Tel, for appointment . C. SCHUETT FE 8-0458 EXPEttiiNcroTtflraT wants typing lo do at home, UL 3-‘2Q04. ELDERLY WOMAN WOULDLlXE Salat Help, Male-Female 8-A By Dick Turner Rent Houses, Unfurnished 4 y . RENT |l| - ' SELL , » . OPTION - —S»bodrooni «lngle homo-- featuring’ QAS HEAT [ WALL TO W ALLC ARPETING NEAR Pi "namia*3 I: and 4-bodrm. homes TRADE ANYTHING jfe of value on owner’s equity. 2-bed- SI»Ir m __ ___I_____ KAO- STROM REAL ESTATE., 4900 .W. Huron, OR 4-0358, Eves. CaU 682- .H INDIAN VILLAGE. 0 UTICA. 3-BED-room stone and -elum. siding, lib baths, 2 fireplaces, separate dining. modern kitchen, mtabod- recreation room. Seay garage. Alum. deal, For.nppt1; PE7:34390 Eyas. ■ JOHNSON BRING YOUR TRADING _ ~ PROBLEM^ TOU8 home. Oak floors, full b lib-oar garage, walking dll sohools. Nice west side a price *0,700. Rent Stores tfHIAhsTMfceUI You hinting I won’t get to* use the car tonight, Dad?” write Pontiac y IS A Wanted Real Estate' PE’ 4- ,T TIME-BEAUTICIAN CAREER OPPORTUNITY PRESSER ON SklRTS. SWEATERS. ' household Hems. Experience preferred or will train: Apply Pox Dry Cleaners, 719 W. Huron. h.N. Oft L.P.N. (MICHIGAN) PART time work. small convalesoobt bomb-Must have telephone, transportation and local refarenoss. Reply to Box 100, The Pontlao nanetal Institutions ol Its kind the world offers an outatandl position to three above avert caliber type men living in the P Port Huron and the thui Building Service-Supplies 13 CARPENTRY- GENERAL __________ repaint^ mo^wglxatlon and plaster- AL’S COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, spring clean-up of debris, tree end shrub trimming, 775 Scott Lake USED BUILDING MATOHttL#,’ . used 2x4S, 25c each; 2x8x)2-foot MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE JOIN THE ‘BEST SELLER LIST” Buyers walling lor all kinds of RfiAL Ear ATE and contracts. STORE, FOR* RENT AT 164 Auburn Aye,’ Will remodel for responsible tenant. Choice location for $ny business, call manager at The. Wiest Bldg., 160 Auburn Ave.,1 335-4053l Rent Office Space nil m i I'liiiwiiiHw ,, preferred- but net. necessary, t ply to Mr. Warren 1 between'*r*L_ 10 a m. Pontlao "Laundry, 040 S. ■ -aaRuSr..' Jf Garden Piewing _ GARDEN. PLOWING. . NEEDED All types of Re have property t ‘ » to dlsposln RbsidRntiAl and commercial building and remodeling. John W. PLOWINO AND YARD V WOMAN TO DO TELEPHONE BUR-vey, good salary plus, top *— mission. Over 30 add oxperk___ ■ pme^. cill an^s. FE 2^230, ' Copies, MY 3-1128, FE 5-6577. Income Tax Service "gEGROE R. IRWIN. REALTOR 299 W. WMton ■ FE 3-7583 ' WE HAVE CASH BUYERS. 2-BBDROOM HOME. ACRE LOT. Iwtn aBo of Pontiac v*%tM 2-BEDROOM. FULL BASEMENT. —ge, "furniture Included. 1000 WRIGHT 3*3 Oakland Ave.' GIRLS WAITRESS, NIGHT WORK ONLY. Pasquale's Restaurant, Lake Orion, MY 3-5013 aftir 4 P:m. *" ' .. , FOR FIRST ITRE8 -.ass^coum WAITRESSES CALL KAY CARLSQJf. AT‘646-3663 CEMENT ■ CONTRACTOR Quinn’s Construetlon Co. . FE 5-0122 Business Service L Data prooeselng Preston Walker Smith EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL . COUNSELING SERVICE ' 1585 Woodward Barbour Terraco No 0 , ALL MAKES OP FOUNTAIN PENS repaired by factory trained General Printing « Office S ■ Co,, 17 W. Lawrence St, 1 free estimates on all 55, NONE .HIGHER, IONO FORMS grtpared^and ^ed^jrour home. ACCURATE^ CONFIDENTIAL BOLIN TAX SERVICE We apeclellae in personal Income returns. Reasonable rotes.’ WANTED Lletlngo on houses, .corsage, fern We buy and aell land eoutrael C^ONTI ACR EALTY 3-BEDROOM RANCH $500 DOWN 3-BEDROOM Bl-LEVEL, 2-CAR OA-, bullt-lns, hot water heat, ce-j£—**■. Storms. 500. will iperlopce. Dwight at. FE 8-0846. YOUR HOME OR MINE 1454 Aim, pontlao Notary,--------------- Apartments—Furnished l-BEDF "In_______ n turn. -ins, hot wot nutty tab i and gufiars i >te. Nothing doe JOHN C. MYLES. BUILDER | Ht,t,»7rT KM 3-0733 5-BKPnOOM EQMB. 4 THAW QUb INCOME TAX , .Bloomfield, Hills 1 ROOM FOR EMPLOYED WOMAN. Stove, refrigerator, Unene turn. »io weakly, fiafi «»««. fb e-sixi 1 Douglas. „ r.r„l' 'IWi»,r jBS|e real bargain M WU0. . 560 monlb. 4 nilles north ot Walton out JOelyn. Cidl FE 3- I - BEDROOM BRICK. OARAGE. WAITRESS NIOHT8. NO EXPERJ-• eoce necessary. Call or apply In person after 6, FE 34901. Dell’s ’ Inn- 3481 Elizabeth Lake Rd. fWXiWlCD"' TYPI EVELYN. ED WARDS hauled away. Also ugh hauling. Tel. 333-7701, fioaiionxr Write It- ••WANTED’ '5 WOMEN i -tuuiu use w mrn 150 a wee----- ware time. Car necessary. Phona •VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE’’ Telephone FE 4-058‘ tb East Huron Sul INCOME TAX. BOOKKEEPING _ ken HETCHLER 53-55 A VO, I Dressmaking & TaDoring 17 591 SECOND FB 5-3876 “ OFFICE UNTIL 10 P.M, I to mortgage. Aluminum aim . recreation room, garage, ecreei poroh. 5834171. 1 5-ROOM, FULL BASEMENT, OIL DRESSMAKING, TAILORtNG, AL-. teratlons. FB 546*5. ’ ‘ DRESSMAKINO, TAILORING, AL- Friendly—Dependable—Experienced 3 , KEYS <| NACKERMAN 625 N. Perry FE 34171. FE * no- Large 1 ................ .ihoppxnc, 53.500 down, 570 1_____________________■ 55,253.55 balance, FE 5-3331. Ml ; Convalescent-Nursing HAVE ROOM FOR ELD 2, ROOMS UP, 1 ADULT. Uta-I-■ entrance, FE. i-MIf. 3 Vl UMA 555 MONTE : 1ST CAREFUL MOVING. LOW VAN SERVICE movino-aHd storage REENABLE RATES RGBB&T'foMPKINS B>P*OR14?18i2 CLEAN 3-^6NL.MCiDERN. PRI-LAWN WORK, HAULING, MOVING, ' “ jobs, oh 4-ir- r;5i’ HPURPl IS of Pontiac RBAL VALCT | 52053 BRENTON *8**B^-lSlr<>om',1*iM* ” brji . Trees, paved drive. 11.75 2-7421. Architscturol Drawing £3bHT TRUCKING, HAULING AND vlng. Clean garagee, basements j yards, UL Q-3015. i LIOHT MoVtNO, COLORED —FRANKLIN BOULE-yard. 3 rooms, private bath and entranoe. References required. B73- FURNISHED BACHELOR APARf- frank SHEPARD. Realtor 1015 N, Mein Open Bun, l .. . LARGEisa ANCHOR BAY LB SR., FLOOR ROOFS! NEW, REPAIR Oeneral Malnten OH m down. 102 BLOOMFIELD HILtB, 3-BEDROOM DO YOU LIKE RUSTIC LIVING? Here 'll ■ a 3-bedroom year - aroun log home. Canal Lake. oU f------ price ment. Ill'furpooe In bi 9,350 firllh imol LAKE PRTVILBOEB On Scott Lake with t A. JOHNSON * SONS. REAL MTAT15*?DWURANCE ' FE 4*2533 COLORED EASY TERMS C BUNGALOW— - imWLY __—Jana T-------- - CALLL FOR APPOINT- COLORED BARGAINS • * US FIRST FOR ShPER VAL-,-sz. - JhBWROOM HOMES — CONTEMPORARIES — i tSm % CUSTOM BUILT HOMES youriotqrours Ross Homes, Inc. FE 4-0591 Union Lake Area«-Owner (rooms, Breezewey and garage. 2 lots. An exceptional tnty at 0. 5100 down. 3654815: G.L Nothing Down offjhwlyn 50’xl30 toot lot. 17'Xl4 foot living room,' two largo bod-' COLORED l-BBDROOM, FULL BASEMENT - Payments Like Rent HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! FOR mg ooita. Don't delay, see It today. jfSdjfiB- Call d»llv_and ^undW M5-9375 fXoVhoK a: TWO-FAMILY INCOME Silvan Village ririplaoe an# carpeting own, room* and b»f*’ ’** *'*» 3-oar garag*, 913,599. Xrate dining •on. full MVMjiW'.lmM r garage with ARCADIA II , Wanted Chlldrin to Board 2$ Licensed BuTMtri ^CABINET MAKING. REMODELING. ‘ slumhjuin^ Jildlng. carpentry^ Free CUSTOM HOMES DBBIONBD AND '“t to your epemfloMloni. ’ ■— 8-3543 for anrnt.________ riKtDRICK BUILDiW^BRVICB -“ w, Garage, Cabinets. Adar— i TERMS. FB 5 ,CTC ' ni.u mmv„« — -5NT , Dump Trucks - Senrl-Truller* Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. ns. woodward^ CHILD CARE IN LICENSED HOME, days. Forty Park dlatfiartMWWl Licensed rtoUi, BV" DA?r i Wt*lt. UL 3-415X7 .. inlttoT1 F Attractive 3-bedroom brink, family kitchen, recreation room in bate-ment, aluminum storms * “ - mmmmnM1 ‘-i*--- Realtor, UL 54316, L 2"f376m FEATURU board* m ?rt.“8™.a s '«o* model, call Hlllei 3-8176 cr FB 44990, formica counter :ered ,wuU*. your let. to Realty. FB 2-bedroom home loc*ttd"off .Joejyn IVAN W. SCHrAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 tTH LAX l home, LAKE ESTATES Jack Frushour, Realty qouitnilunbaih t.alrs R(1, ' Ffi 2-6936 Carpet S*rvlc* Lumber _ EAKLBS CUSTOM UPHOLSTER-l'^41 * Xu'leluh, Union Lake. EM MWEa"fc OLSON uraoLSTEKTNa FmNl-2882 118 Virginia FB 9-1854 SCHWEITZER CARPET SERVICE, si. A TALBOTT LUMBER^ , ' CatsrlRi Strvlct 1023WOakl*ny Avel’UUdl“* “fe's-GOB ‘THOMAS Uf’HdLSTBlUNa 440* W. WALTON BLVD. Wanted Househkld Poods 29 AUCTION SALE . EVERY/ SATUR; day at Blue Bird Auction. We’ll buy furniture, tools and anpUMOOi OR 8-M47 or MElrose 7-51 Wl IUY IT OR SELL if fcOR , HHi JX F O R D (COMMUNITY ' AUC'noN. OA 64551. CASH FOR FURNITURE AND A j pifaneos. 1 Djeoe or houtefui. Foi ROOMS AND BATH. CLEAN. simple preferred. 6824477. Rent Housas-Unturnlshsd 40 Perohed on 94x197 i VEE-OEE's CATERING SERVICE. specializing In. comi planning. OR 3-H973. CoiMHt Wurk L KINDS CEMENT WORK, 5 AAA PIANO TUNING WtEQAND’S FB 8-43 A-l TUNING AND REPAIHiNU^ BLOOMFIELD WALL CEANBRS. Walls and windows. Rom. f faction guaranteed. FE 3-1831, 4-8318. 335 E._______ FOR ttURNt- 2-BEDROOM' DUVUEK,' ADULT'S. 580 plua UtillU**. Quiet, flowers, close in. Victory ct. near 36 Union St. fi 3-9419 or FE 2-7171. ^Bedroom bhicR rittRA^E. in- ---- 129 8. Edith. ,FB 4-5373, IM DUPLEX, ■ BASiHliSfi lOMPARAiLE Value tble by nw*t anyone J----------------. Llyins 1 hod- room*, oath, g«« heat, oarport. •torme and *c---- --u— W. suburban. I_ ___ down, low 974 mo. Inoludes ovary-thing. HAorrioM real estate, 4100 W. Huron, OR 4-035*. Eve*, call <53-0435 or OR 3 ““ NttWlAKE "FttoWT HOME. HAYDEN GAYLORD » TORES »W*y. bMomont, olumtoum and screens. Only 5750 I $9995—$1000 DOWN * 83’ Lot FUmlly Room lMi-cor Oorogo Go* Heal eou8, down bnymont •sfmvm iHry SwhTbmm, i ljbL^Eou*i nofti* Sow hit «««.» iTbM starter home. Ceil MY 24*11 or REAGAN. )lxl6 HwyV j I. T^autlM hr nd aim £.•’ 2SJ1 Plastering Servle* A-^PLABTERINO AND_ REPAIRS. ras-L.NJJF" ...and witt- .]*wn'*M"V^y"Sa8h'OR ffife ”"W MODELS open CHIPPEWA FENCE COMPANY '' nate* — FHA Term* . OR 3-9131 OR 3-5(55 ................. FB 3-7623, ffioisimo. FREE ESTIMATES, . DMeVers 1 wantY^bot^used^typ AlfplIailoO*. *OR 4-I10I. ffiinHd ta Rant 32 Wanted Old Concrata nor month FE 5-07U; i nooMs“7»D BA‘fft, ■«WLI with 1 or 8 children. OU vanoampen. Drayton ^ 1 ’AE Saturday and Sunday i:38 to $:30 ili'wP Uli.Ju1AV«i.V»e': jtplon^ilyd J Yunfveroliy°lElve)! lib mil** weet of downtown Siooh- 4-BEDROOM BItLEVEJL 10.995—1095 POWN W fe room “ C. HAYDEN, Reali 1 HI>MMiM%54 ° cheaper tHan SIX BEDROOMS ill thl*_lib4tory S. AU IsSforopms. Basemen!. value It only 616.W0 to »ppr* it. CaU FE8-9693 or MY 2-lHfl. ^wiltTlermlT Mr — SANDY BEACH. a ©ORRIS ffOMA In mil town. if Pontlao. Will give $M MOW- Free Wulloaper Steamer , ’lour sanders,1 pnllshei n, ji^a i nfl*OaV*\i|' ,Fuol_gJ^*jjjt, ' CLEAN, BROKEN TON-l InomdttV rcliifcroed. Orchard Lags Ave,, FB 3- o Crushed Cpnoroie, 27 Lin* couple. References, fk o-gwe, rott Sy May ll* Ref, *${: *&1I46‘. * * TENANTS WAITING. L... Ice, Adam* Realty; FE 5-wantIS-Jclean * — 1385 STANLEY. PONTIAC 8-hiidem. hrlek. fiill Mi*Wn»Ht RENT OPTION 156.50 MONTH mmodlat* ooMipanoy. 9*0 oolltel. Sun.J-9i ■ Michaels realty FE 5-4293 WE 3-4309 UN 3 R * C - ROBERTSON, INO. In, A-xwimi— 3-b*droom, attached garage on quarwr acre lot. 991 Jar month, inoludot all prlnolpai, interest, m miles north of Wolhin, off of Joslyn. FE t-tiil. Dlnrnu Building basement. Hof. FB DIAL ®: RESPONdIBLE COUP -hfid desire 3 or M Ml irniihed suburban . gppSQMR with .garage and large lot, within io miles of Pontlao. Reply to Bos M. Pontiac. Pree*. ......... Fmmer home or cottage - I months begin Maj J | — *75 Per MonUl Contact Roiidmt (Ian* *" “-etjflvq. at V* FB 4-75M l RENT north Pontiac $69 Down NEW 5-BBDROOM HOME $55 Month id Insarshe it .yiVmi, la with a o iui? in thia one-elory home. Penoed . ^ard. 58,200. CaU MV 34*21 or FI Lawrence Wf Gaylord with * 2-c*r attached garage, a giaryflc.Kibb-» . jium NOMM, Omar wy anxiou* to trad# for * oheaper homo, Excluding (a “IvoryoM w Homes-Farms A. . ACRES -Ujiflnlshcd 1 , ACRES—on M-15. I foot TV JOSLYN: Three-bedroom Itory and a half bungalow wiib high and dry bMomont, vary obarp Mini, with jargo aiumlqum JMB*, Wmr*M,m. front, Aluminum , elomi* and fotutd-ln roar yard. 3-bet RENT OR SELL $15 dow'n buys tt/SW home, idroom semi • flntlhoi 1 basement, rough pluiv...... “ thing down, Malerlale g Mid1 to ftlttah. 58,780. _ ___,jlu ... bedrooms, modern no litlei, mu* be oioott. On nko suitable for pow •r Sooting.Write giving doeor pllon looatTon and rental. 1571 Berkshlr< Modal obrner of Kinniy ______ Corwin i block east of Oikluad, 3 blocks north of Montcalm. FE 84755 1:50.19.5 jSi, . WBiTOWH MAlffir : . ’ modEIW, sMAlL vsSMBHBB Huron Oordan*. aood for retlroi couple. 595.0341. n be furnlehei i ali(, hove lots, a. C COMPTON a SONS OR 3-f(88s JiIm'’ 3 ¥Si5nooM hAivfcH. DRAi eecrltloe, OR I. MILL OR TRADE i„OTi.m^rtak I ACRE -154 ft on M-I5., Kcm# *1 Con ue« us business 00. 916.000. VAST SUBURBAN! A ro*l buy lit I bedroom* and full bulMSlMij new wall to wall oarpount and say other *Ol4t feature*. *11.590 XURY: Yet priced for thu working man ta ttle 3-bedroum r»nch hqm*i with ibmioui minify twit, P • ond unique nrogMM, sparkling modorn kitchen, coniotu livipi wU IeRC ip rail UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE otm; Whu : beach*'1*' bed room*."J AiF'baflii • and prioo lflauflli iwo rOmgei -I 1, THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 9> 1968 - TWENTY-SEVEN ' Sale Household-Good* 65 Sale Household Goed* 65 3 ROOMS FURNfTURE BRAND NEW WITH RANOB, REFRIGERATOR $319-415 MONTH ■ BARGAIN HODSE 109 N. CASS. BUY - SELL —TADE —FB 24842 kirby late model with all cleaning attachment* plus (tower polisher, . buffer, sprayer, eto. 10-ycar guarantee. Pay oil 985.11. WUf accept -tt-00 monthly., Less tor cash; Cadi PE 3-7922. Ktoctrs Hygiene.Co. - LOVES EAT AND G.E. REPRIOER-itdr. Prictd /dr 'qulok sale. 7 Taylor. FI 24007. % PRICE—REJECTS Beautiful living room and bedroom fultee, 179; 81.80 week. BaTgiin House. 102 N.-Caet. FB 24(42. LARGE FAMILY PORTABLE G.E. dishwasher. U**d 2 mos. Bought housis^wllh^hUHt-inSj ^30^ per cent MATCHING SET OF LIMED,,OAK end step tables and coffee- table. Matohlng table lamps, floor lamp, single poster bed spring and mat-tress_OR 3484r~ and 4 ohalr*. 1 jandalwood rug. 9x12. Never used, ft 4-4961. 7-FOOT FOAM bUSRION COUCH, with Chair .175. OR 3-8524. 7*PI0CJB LIVINO ROOM (BRAlfl) new): davenport and chair,^foam hies. 1 coffee table; 2 decorator lamp!, warehouse priced. $128.88. $1 25 weekly. PEARSON S FURNITURE 42 orheard Lake «Ave. » ■ 0UT;pHEY GO TO 21",RebyUtr - -- New ploture tuber .5 $5* 1 Maytag Wringers ' 889 Easy Spinners, Rebuilt 179 Frtgldalrc Automatic Washers. Rsbulll $99 Wefrlgergtori, Renewed $48 The OOOD HOU8BKEBP1NO SHOP 51 W Huron. ••■ FE4?1555 MODERN LAMPS, DRAPERIES, traverse rods, curtains, bath lets, d^, tsblescloths. etc. Reas. OA PLASTIC TILE lc EACH Llndeum Jtuis ... ...... 14.49 ri.«rTh„ 2255 EtooStf j58 RCA WHIRLPOOL AUTOMATOC washer, good condition. Ml 4-0778. SOLID MAPtE BUNKBEDS. COM-plste with Innersprlng mattress. Exc. condition. > 223 victory Dr. Pontiac. . 1 SYLVAN FAMILY MG VINO. 9490-100 Inc. ill foam Early American couch. 92)0. RCA StoycM .auto, washer and gas dryer • both tor *280. rca 14-cu, if. TRm. tmtih srator and frssaer comb 2200. All leas than l-yr.-old. m axe: condition. 6*2-3286. , 4 *9X12 Oriental ruo 873-8748 , TWO t$XI2 OREEN RUOS. FE 24787. V- ' 9X12 RUOS: J-.-!, • '-i.-X.93.98 Ea. vinyl linoleum *4ie vd. PLASTIC- WALL. TILE '.. le ea. BAO TILE OUTLET. 107$ W. Huron SINOER Z1G ZAO SEWING MA chute. In modern console. Does designs, button holes', etc. Just by using dial. Oitly 868,12 total of naw Contract. Can b# handled at 98,09 monthly. Capitol Sawing Center. FE 5-9M7. SINGER SWING NEEDLE^ AUTO^ hems, appllqes, designs, eto. Just set the fashion dial, pay M.lf per month or 958.90 balance. Michigan Necchl-Elnav' FE 8-4521. 9x12 RUGS.. FOAM BACK, 114.15. Tweeds. $23.85 Oval braided. *29 88 - Axmlnlsters, 949.95. 12x15 nylon. 169. Heevv fug pods. $9.95. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 42 Orchard Lake Ave. ’ 120 A MONTH BUYS X ROOMS OP 1-pcrn living room suite with 2 step tablns.-1 cocktail table, and 2 table lamps, t desk and chair. 1-pe. bedroom set -with Innersprlng mattress and box spring to match '1-n0L kitchen dinette act, all for 9305. 9x»2- rug Included. E-Z terms at ^the Wyman Furniture Co. 17 SEWING MACHINE AND VACUUM cleaner repairs. All makes and mddeli. Guaranteed home aervlee. Special blind hammer attoMmento 95.50. 7 ft. doth braided vacuum - cleaner hoae 94.75. Mlcplgaa Nee-ehl-Elna. 358-4821. 21-INCH TV. *8$. 21-INCH COM-blnatton, $48.96. Terms available. WALTON TV. FE 2-2257, Oben e-9, 815 E. Walton corner of Joilyn. SINOER SLANT NEEDLE DELUXE sewing maohlng, rig aagger'for design. eto. Blend cabinet. JFay off account In 0 months at ff.le per mo. or to cash balance. UnivereaJ Co. FB 4-0*06. _ SEWING MACHlRRS AND VACUUM cleaners, wholesale to all. Singer Zig-Zag consde model, to 80. B.ec-trolux vacuum. $14.18. Over 78 models to ehoos* from. Curt'* Appliances 6481 Hatchery Road, OR 4-uoi . : '' - SPECIArTHM 'WRMt- ' Bulk Candy Easter Egg* 2(k lb. with this ad! AUBURN t it 1ft 20 CUBIC FOOT DEEP FREEZE, i 6 year drib, both A-l. Reasonable. I OR 3-9589. 42 INCtf ELECTRIC RANGE. OOOD ! condition. $75. OR 3-8070. 50 YARDS OF USED CARVED wooi^ broacMoomed carpeting. Rea* APARTMENT OAS STOVE, STALL shower, venlty dresser. 825 each. Paul Jones. FE 4-8550. AUTOMATIC WASHER O.UARAN-teed. Reasonable. 1 Frlgldaire re-frl^erator with top troeaor. FE 640 Auburn Avo. FE 2-1411 TV. INNER8PR1NO MATTRESSES, bed. ohalr, tabloa to match, davenport, mlso. 44 Senlca. UPRIOHT PIANO, $30. OCCASION-al chair. $4. Call aftftr 3 p.m. MA 5-1534. APARTMENT SIZE gaa stove. Oood condition. 120 N. Tasmania. ALWAYB GOOD SELECTION UBEO TVs. Peer's Appliances, EM 3-4114. USED ELECTRIC DRYER 841.80 U8BD TVs 811.88 AMD UP toEVri RADIO AND APPLIANCE -422 W Huron FE .4-1118 A BEAUTIFUL ^SINOER^^ 8EWUJO eigjiJ stc.'*toL monthly''payments APPROXIMATE SIZE QE HBPRIO-erator, gae stove, crib with now mattress. FE 4-6*95. VAdUUKt CLEANER, ELftdfROLbS . All attoohmenta jnetodiC. A* uitl* as 81.08 per week or 828.92 total. Capitol Sewing Cantor.. FB 84107. aIout anythino you want FOR THE HOME CAN BE FOUND AT L * 8 SALES. A little out of the way but q lot less to pay. Furniture and appliances or ail kinds NEW AND USED. Visit our trade dept, tor WESTINOHOU8B RBFRIOBRATOR. Oood condition. 129. FB 84142. WE WILL CONVERT YOUR RANGE PHILLOAS 442-3000. Antlqm* ' ■ --(MNI - We buy^ sclii' Or trade. Come ^out parking fhoa* FE . open Mon. to wtr 9 to ), Fri. 9 tq f 24 MONTHS TO PAY 4 -mllOa E of pomiid. or 1 mile E. or Auburn Heights on Auburn. M59. UL 2-2800. CHESTS, COMMODES, 1 DROP-leaf Cherry tables, dry sink in rough, martuo.top., dre$i||Y china cupboStrda SM guns Y-Knot Antiques. tests OakhlU. ttofir. HI-FI, TVt¥aAo9 ii WYMAN'S BARGAIN STORE '. Apt. six* gas stove 129.98 Re-bullt washer . 848.88 Used^ r*fr|geraler. guaranteed $59.95 Used • living room suits . $39.95 Twin^ bed, coll spring, new ^ Used bedroom suite, oomplote With box spring and Innersprlng mattress . $79.95 12,iJW..,j|*JIII’> E-Z .Termi . F*t 44122 ^OgP^rieotrio ?ange.***anS ffiwr- ator freeaer, 922*. Hot point dlah waaher, requires no Installation. 298. EM 5-4525. 21 -INCH MUNTZ CONSOLE, EX-Oriient condition. 218. PE 2-2717. 21 INCH MUNTZ. GOOD CONDI* Moil MM. FK 44004. HEATH HI-FI SYSTEM. PRE-AM-pliflcr and ampllfler, birch comer cabinet eontMIngt-d IpSilieyij. like -new. Less than lb prfoe. CaU Ml 8-1813. 1 MAONAVOX CONSOLE. 17" TV. AM and FM radio and 1-epeed reoord changer, SXC. condition, . 80S. Ml 4-2877. ^ITgood condition. FK 2-6341. SALE; BRAND NEW TV. 18-INCH ^MffiMo, to; 10" pwjpiRraP 31' console, $138; 23" cqnaoto, 2l8l. No notify, dawn. Sylvan Stereo-TV, IS241N. fiXBY Si5b MATTRESS. CHIF-frobe. reasonable. FB I-18S3 after S:M. Portable TV’* - From $19.95 BUDGET TERMS Goodyear Service Store ■10 8. Cass FB 6-8123 phone! 30 to 78 watts for 88' mud1 be rin*gq^%orMns*Mpdi-tion, Write giving fdl particulars and prise to Pontwo Press Box 82. 849 BUYS: BOFA BEDS Choice of atyloa and ooloro ohoit and bookcase bed MAff?*OTHERI>BUY8 -BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO. 4788 Dixie ’ Drayton Plains OR 84784 BEDROOM SET.) 0 PIECES. MA-hojjan^^tinlHh, /priced reasonable. FLOOR-MODKL sale $ols Ml»tsltuiieba» 67 19 ft. Amana Fraeaer 9199 Am*na Chest Freeaer 9919 FrlauJars Portable dishwasher Speed Quean Washer 4 mo. oid. CRUMP' ELECTRIC CO. IMS Auburn Rd. FE 44878 1 PIN BALL MACHINE. *09. OR 1-9883. 1-A ALUMINUM SIDINO ORDBR NOW — Beat Spring Rush Enameled Alum. Btorm windows Awnings, Eevestroughs Oenulne Brick — stono Installed or'MateriaLQbJy ' JOE VALLELY COMPANY Quality and Service At lioweit Possible Priee "Slnoe 1846 The^Old Ralta^ Pioneer" ,. OL 1-962i 0Wn y**nt 8-^we ' CLEARANCE1' BUNK BEDS (WROUGHT IRON) complete with spring* and mattresses, 839.911. Also maple or bfond trundle and trlpl* bunk bada, Pearson's Furniture. 49 Oreliara Lake CLOSING OUT ALL FLOOR SAMPLES ,IpenO ill 5:30 Mon. 'til l;30 Bedroom sets, bnx springs dhd mel- roeifers **Y)Sm big savings on hot water heating supples 0. A. Thompson. 7oo» M4q , INSTALL YOUR NEW QAB FUR-nae* now. Also naw ami used oil, A. It H. SALES/ MA i-190t or MA ' • 8-2887. . . Wif Tllfiiw IN .MlCHIOX)NM wholkbAi.k All nationally advertised brands. sugar1" roBss *u^rbu{Sr Yalfe Sulla "juice,’ Kleenex, V&^V'tSfc Bxamplea- Dog food — 12 for 'onto" culu*^frv0*ri “ JJ|,0oonto m*tldnrshowini"tfow°%ul'o*nnbuy . al thea prices. 847-1577 . 8 to4. . oas S‘f6vk~Kil,Rf?>IRAT6R™66b tablgi, 9, junior chairs. 499-0199. jiNNY UND-siNoLTlp’ coW-Ptolc. reasonable. FE 2-3079. LARGE CHT'1 XRp MATTREM f urnitnrs, >42 Orchard1 Lake Avuv FEM8II1 ■ . ., • y. W dining Space, FuU .Mil ft. Auto, KM tor-and hot water boater. IfMIOO. town on terms or lower price hto^^K-O. Hemjg: NICHOLIE csssn HA beat. Ei ROCHESTER Three-bedroom bungalow. C1 v 1 n g ...a, kitchen. Hardwood ■ basement, vacant. Gae EASY TERMS. ____________illy oas HA beat, it. About *300 moves you In. CaU^IR. ALTON ,_FE 4-5236 nd carport. Jbout WO MR.”P" NICHOLIE A MVfc W. Huron st. cm sown - ■ costs. I**1— -■ w } MORTOAOE an as a pin- 6-room mod-! ,__In the Pontiac Plant area. Ilwsiwtv.'m «iuuu. Modernized kitchen, full basement. new CM furnace. Two-oar parage.- Oi3y tom. ELL OR trade—Cute and well, constructed two-bedroom mpaeni borne only 7 years, old. Full basement. Oil AC furnace. Oak floors. Recently decorated. Low Interest. Price only $9,800. wm aooept late lot as down payment,- Ask' for Mr. "•W1T& brick and frame rancher - only about one block from lake. About 6 yrs. old. Anderson wmBOWS. Your whole family will enjoy Uvlng bore. Prtced low ariUto.Wffl - accept cheaper home, bouse trailer or late model ct- WATER FRONT - A home, buUt tor ,TejOSffi|r f-ntom btgvsl wlib ?oom°UflreplaSce.miHr _ gum storms. yAe^stdo. rage. Nfce ;. Recreation 34,500 and wi ». Only H us build j_______ Open a.m. to4 Listing Service. ' ARRO YURY SHARP — 3-bedroom ranCh. UNION LAKE PRTVTLEOE8 WITH sttcsotlve home, lane carpeted nv inc room with stone flreplaot built-in otUna cabinet In dlnln ATTENTION OtS —Only mort-garage costs down on this cosy V 2 bedroom bungalow with full MW ment. new gas furnace. In CAR garage. 1 spacious lot. with fruit PHONE 682-2211 KENT 4 bedrooms - WestSide^home bedroom and bath OT* 1st floor. <*Marilq fv room, large family . Wned kitchen, good gas furnace. —....—j -"g, Mar garage. Un- ion. $0,950. Terms. o with many « ed living room garage- Paved street. mn»'' lot and more land avaunblo. Now at 117.000-Terms. CLARKSTOON AREA — Good X--— with tolf bath, kitchen, ail heat. . Nearly acre. UlSKSSl Built-In e Lake prl rjrwr CLARKSTOON AREA ~ Brick » bedroom borne. M-toot living room With fUreplece. knotty cedar feature!. FuU basement, garage. Lake - privileges. 115.050. Terms. - Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph 1 MILLER BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS. Owner . transferred, — must sell 'this at-: tracUve 3-bedroom brick raneh with hardwood nan, WaU-to-wall eahwung, natural flreplaoo, oer-amio tile bath, ass heat, attnohod ^tondsoaped.UA oholi W lani 02.200 BAIT SIDE. A thorp clean aitraellve 3-bedroomhome with.an,M» fin-, Inge tor somfortnbM living. Carpeting. dry baeemmt. new gat furaaOa, 2-oer garage, breeseway. Mum. awnings. A lots. PHA terms — MOO down pluo costs-912,001. HOME AMD ACRES. Orion Town. ship. I moms and bath, single a. story, with basement. Nerta muter Tepalre and decorating. Excellent garden Mrs*. Llvs strssm. $5,500 ""william .Miller FE 2-0263 Realtor <70 W. Hu_____ INCOME and ACRES R^ATfor RrtridSe joVNEjM by MtoUttmont. tA^rb«*ut§Ul SquaraLake, very spacious 5-bedroom home In ex- ■■IXStaSn. down end, to par month. 11 We j^Jeed ListinQS Fhono VrVtolfeTlvo. iJMfeto* TRADEX TWOFOLD CHOICE Both are three-bedroom brick an full basement, osrsmlc baths, bt beautiful kitchens, recreation rm i2’x36’. i has built-in even an at. In « wonderful neighbor of comparable homes -both below market. No mortgage costs — Around tie.ooo with an-_pro*. $1,500 down or EXCHANGE. LEW’ HILEMAN; S.E.C. Realtor-Exchaiigor 1011 W. HURON ST. FB 4-1579 ON LAKE OAKLAND Charming, onpanllvo 3-bedroom obungaUw with loo ft. of toke Trent-age. 27x18 ft. Uvlng .room with fire slz kitchen^' STRlts^iU6©1 meet. Just a’U.iwAerms^r trade. W. H. BASS REALTOR FE 3-7U0 . -rude ’ TRADE “Today's Top’Trades" 4-Bedroom Brick \ Only $350 down, plus dosing costs. 20' Uvlnf room, tils bath with shower. 7enoed ybrdi .65’* 14F lot. lake privileges on 8ylven Lake. West Bloomfield so-j BE AN EARLY BIRD LET US SHOW YOU f' This 3-bedroom brick ranch -with mootntfH. fuUt tile bath, also 2 conveniently situated tb baths, fireplace, garng0. Swimming, boating, and fishing pfmwgM on UPPER LONG LAKE- YOU SHOULD SEE BEACH AND PICNIC AREA ON NICE WOODED LOT. A-i condition. Carpeted living room with brick fireplace, , toree .dining room plus breakfast nook, SgJBCnarlsi kitchen, garbage dls-poBl. ceramic tile oath. Extra javntory In basement, gas hast, large landscaped yard. 2-car garage. . Smith Wideman KAMPSEN 1071 W. Huron St. 1 CLARK 4-BEDROQM BRICK $10,050. 81,10 DOWN) A rOM .buy. Separate dln-. -Mg room, extra r1*"'" *" IW’do^lltU^ wall-to-wall cu..„_„. . nace, payments 0027 monthly eluding taxes and Insurance. OI NOTHING DOWN. 1-ake privileges inx’^rowm ^ 1M^ ^IMithe, ?»ttE --pH 5-3000 or FE e Listing Service. inning CQLORED VACANT MOVE . IN AT ONCE rooms and hath. Meads a .hand man’s toud), Ussmsnt, new ga furnace. 037300 only *3® down - ST. MIKE’S AREA NEW HOMES FULL BASEMENTS 3-BEDROOM RANCH Gas Heat—-Oak Floors $100.00 DOWN VE 4-0005 gpottlto Bldg- odraom DoiMs, lull i street from perfect Case Lako. Both have Only 97,400 and M.to. •--its to quMlfted $06$ ANDRE - Cansl frontage. Large modern $-room bungalow. Only 97,-410. Lot’s taUT— 1017 SYLVAN OLEN — 2-acre park ■ a wonderful_ 8- n hams tor li 112,800 wi JACK LOVELAND 9100 Cass Lake Rd. jjlir______ H ....jilted. Nominal down payment and taka- over $02 per month'payments st 4rs par cent Mterlsi.1 Went n nice two '• bedroom home? Oood locetlon? This two • btdroom bungalow fills the bull it is situated on a corner lot in the Northern, Madloon High School .arda. About 0325 down, plus elostog coils will move you Ml mediate ooeupanoy. T hie ■ RITE PRICE REDUCED $2,000' Os this 3-bedroom brlek mi hoiho on Bylvnn Lake fro..*. Largo living room with flroplnce end dining L. 1 Mi ceramic baths, panelled family room with tiro-place, 2W>-oar garage, Thermo-pan* .window* throughout. Leris screened porch overlooking the like' Seen by appointment only. FI • 0803 after 8:80 week deys. day Saturday and J‘ 97,090, LOOK ,. . . u-.-o SIGNED “BBAUTY . HOME —Located on ■ ueau-’ tttul knoll, With 8 aoree. of rolling terrain where the view elonrie worth a million, thle sparkling all brick S-bedroom rancher offtre l^jorofeielonM flvlh**« lie very'beet. W-cited between Rooheeter and Orton, thle lovely, heme fen- jgviLaey xsumtt. ■ Mwito''''Si tomorrow, bathe, walnut p«i)otod_famllv SfJ trS m -iwrtttre •a'eo price of $17,000. Low to-loreai and Ion* term mort-. gage Is available with mth-bnum down paymont. ■ G.I. No Money aaiawMByut MmBrwfllmMt. oungsiow with toll baiomonl •"'T recreation room. new gae tor-nudi And txiPA ing pslti hnd shout $$$1 s month will mole you the owner pt this nest little nemo, parom’sa® iBKjMKi? »“»*«£■ ooutnl condition, WKh f I v,e room* on Ino wot . floor end , ton* rooms snd a large eun-ooroh on the senortd floor. , Extra HMOfMSIl *»rags. full price M 000, I RAY b^telL* Realfor V ,.7#“BW*Hi. $A. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE HIITER ‘PIKE STREET, 8 rooms snd.bsjh. plastered walls, flreplsos. “ wall qarpeij- bassmsnt. g|i COUNTRY LIVINO, on t lot. I bedroom home, ill* bath plastered wail- B■ rage, *13,700 terme C !>»« 8-75B9, Open I Pl"\rLiji£ JAYNO HEIGHTS One of the. best ’ocattons fr- j M Lb., Rd, Eve. FE ftllfy * developed ra.1 — ModeU open >mo of OAkiand Co. a ‘ Over a hundred d honraealtea to AOliOt M rOToj! SILVER LAKE CONST. 73-l$$l Daye $$1-0940 Bvos. pixie to illvor Lake Rd, i Silver Uk* Rd to Walton i left 1 mil* to lubdlvlslon. NEW fiOMFS ......*.. 3-BEDROOM RANCH Witli Attached Garage $69 Month ^ sop Model Dally II ' DIRECTIONS ,. ryitmui luktiiNo co....... NO MONEY DOWhl G. FLATTLEY. BLDR. tfl3.»o$r coMM,yv&.^Ap9.MM 3 BBOhooW hcImM - NO CREDIT CHECK bp Seen from 12 to 7 i 1 Snotllto Bldre. Lot-isimonth or%00094 TIZZY Sale Land Contract* PROBLEM WITH A BUSINESS OR REAL ESTATE? PERSONAL ATTENTION TO you-aniTyour problems 50-STATE COVERAGE CaU FE-4-1579 LEW HILEMAN, S.E.C. Realtor-Exchaiigor * 1011 W. Huron St.. Pontlec' Wintdd Conlrqcl» Mtfl>s 60*A 1$ AN IMMEDIATE SALE 9$ . FOR YOVR Land Cpntracts See ue before vou de Stout, Realtor. 77 N.1 FE 3-8165 , ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST | ‘When I told my father this one has sold a million, he.said the. bomb was overdue!" . NEW 9-BBDROOM, WEST gUBUR-■ , large to' ‘ Bid«. co- west suburban 4-BEDROOM 2-STORY NOME 7 large apaoloue room*, toll bait-ment, gat heat, 3 targe lot*, Anchor ---* Newly deoofaled through- SILVER LAKE CONST. GILES fORTHERN RICH home In A-l com carpeted. 12x23 hast, aluminum meem. only i PMRPU be converted to npnrt- .....we®. r.ik WATERFORD 3-BEDROOM — Oak floors, r .... - ii baaemont, r' ~ tcreene, lari Only 911.000 large jot and much no GILES REALTY CO. XB 54175 $21 Baldwin'Avi onttt > *.m. to $ tom. ANNETT tlon, Living room with marble (lropiioo, eepnrato dining rm.. $ bedrms. and hath on , lit • floor, 12x14 ft. bedroom on 2nd floor. Full baument. gas boat. Screened Jo renr' porch. 2-car garate. Price reduced to lllloOO, terme. Brendel Lake Front Brick and alum,' ranch, only 2 y re. old. 2-bed rooms, large Living room , with flreplaoo ■ nod Wil^bt ~ James K Blvd. . is»ri attached i plus cos Blvd. KM Ipw lreplece, 2>/« with flre-.Jem kltch-famlly rm. W^ft^toLJt-car attached g 2 Acres-—Cotnml iveauors, 60 n. nuron di. Open Evening! and Sunday 1-4 FE 8-3466 BRICK. I BBD- oms, iti BSlBl, Msonwni j garage. PE M974. owner. Model to Show * bedroom ranch — 2 oar garage. wMomont. thermo windows, marble sills, 114 ooramlo baths, buITt-Ine, quality workmanihlp. 914,910 8-Family Furnished ' ■ eld* location. 050$ mol 1*. Popular slsjs of *_ Top option Hospital, toto with 99,000 down Shown by appointment only; }. T. WARDEN REALTY "*~*TT5*E. HflrtltABD SikiBT............ . 7-f»mlly dwelling complex, consist, ing of 3 butldlnjfn which have a rOal investment |WI$lblllty. at 917,-000 oesh to morlsag*. Ideal for •toad, Mai tfe rt ike. Jto t) 87.4353. LAKE FRONT, $300 DOWN, house, glassed-in porch on nova, 3 miles opt of to price, $3,050. $3$ a mon Auto, PE 8-3278 or FE 5-23 WARD'S POINT—CABS LAKBFRONT Perfect beaoh. Beautiful crick homo, 2 years old. Country kitchen. - Hi-fi eystom, Carpoted. Lots of ' extra* throughout. $49,500. Blwopd Realty 082-2410 1 Lake. Front 50x2*0 ft. laX* front alt*-with 2 bedfoom home, ulaseed • In porrh. U ft. living room his natural Rone TlremaCe.^ Yes, full gerege? W,p00 PULL PRICEI Sylvan Lake... 00 ft. frontage, wonderful view, goed beaoh, A ranch home you’ll really enjoy. Cut etone fireplace. 14x20 llvlni room, carpeted. 114 betas, $ bedroom*. Oat heat too. , Paved drive to attached 2 car garage. SEE THIS GENUINE , LAKE FRONT HOME 1 We Have... , gome lego front lots avsilablo Humphries FE 2-9236 U no answer call PE M029 83 N. Telegraph Road Member Multiple Listing Si COTTAGE FOR SALS* WILDWOOD , Tlttabawessoe 1 00 X 200 IN MIO. $0$ DOWN. MOBILE SITES, DON’T RENT. ( V* aero. $20 down, to n mo OR 8-129$. Bloch Bros. Corp. LoU-Acreoge !1 ACRES AT CORNER O win ana Morgan Rds.. la rolling and niruy wooded vide readily^Into several Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor •ORBS 4$, ON WHITE LABE ROAD near Ormond Raul. (12 mfloi west of Pontiac), only too aero (In ont parcel), eaey terms. Owner, PI 1-toQ or 080-5847. ACRES, 11, ON PAVED M1LP6RD Road, near Highland Road (MSS); suitable to bund retirement home, small form, Investment. Only *8,000, too down. Owner, di 1-Moo or 849-5547. at^li* BUSINESS LOT 4BW LOW PRICE. TWO BBAU1 tol loll, Sir and M' tront by 27 Rooheeter Rd., north of Sylvi Olen Oolf Club. Call after 8 p.i 840-6288.________________________ BLOOMFIELD $ Lags area. Over i* from, .moo* have Hrom 8*80 RORABAUGH C. PA,NGUS, Realtor ORTONV1LLE 482 Mill it. ■ NA 7-8818 HI-H1LL VILLAGE Beautiful suburban homes lies In .. . proteoted oqmmunliy with wlndjng paved llroolB, Many, tiles aie. 110x160. LOW *1 81,830. 3 ml. north. of Wilton Blvd. on 3 ml. north of Weltnn Blvd. on MI4 (Perry or umi Rd ) LADD’S, INC. • 1035 Lapeer Rd, (Perry M94) PR 5-will or OR 3-IMl after 7:30 laWIIwnt" ” , Largo 9-room home With natural flHUaittoa’iwoom guoit JHM. 140 fi. lake frontage by to ft. daop. We’I looatodpn.Barnes Leke, Lapaor County. fM.to with N.M0 iMSS^Se- Ice!' shed° WOik*iSop* I?,080*terms. »K)B^>II»gc jiiflRN. Woodworth WEBSTEB LAKE ORION—OXFORD 8'4 acres adjaOont to par Club In flu* re«ld*ml*r ares, Very desirable oorner, Lake privileges on in-dt.H ri 4 0Bto *or vour53lF ILLS! •EE FOR VOuB lEROKLE 1 .juntty of bit* CHE You'll, vipnnHHRPnpp better homes and Id country t locntlnn. H „ llluMth teki Roi3 to Boctt Lake Rd — turn right * blocks to LaoOta. aeoTA« r 082-0435 or OR 3-6229. _____Jg COUNTRY LIVING. 10 rolling acret and an ogoilliot 4-bedroom ntlft|.*Mit, than 20 mlnutoo from Pohtiao. IllJOO, a PANGUS. Realtor ..Mm.t0RT0NVlU,N^..Mi.. Barn only. On eorne b-hh.d.i. ,n for home. River or spring. Near oaproMway- $13,950. b 12 acres—$32.7< Read our ads ui available. Homes- asj $dk^«Mmn Propt^y_________57 . Business Lot'» ‘ .. Approximately piv,di r-- ‘ Bidder Real Estate ~ ——; gAcgarMo:.. Byes’, FE 84823 TOP PRICES PAID tor land contracts, mortgages, an real estate' of alt types. For In action call any time. , J. T. TOLL, Realty. ' FB -54657;1 Or $$242ir, s CASH mortgage* -CMi-J Cullough Sr. 6S?*1820. ARRO REALTY 514; CA88-BLIZABBTH R , ..NO WAITING .. , .Immediate tale tor good - season land contracts. For o ' quick deal call 333-7157; WARDEN REALTY. »• CONTRACTS.W ANTE ~0- __r. Parrels, EM 3-881ti W3^0a8. CART. FOR .LAND, CONTRACTS <-• Hwy. Money to Lmn $25 to $500 on 'Your SIGNATURE FAST. CONVENIENT (Ucansad Money Lender) TELEGRAPH AND SQUARE LAKE, Home & AutO l.Oail Co. Road. Considerable business and linillMt ‘Opportunities’ 59 IS LAKE FRONT APARTMENTS, property as down. Pontlno Pr-es, TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN 214 E. ST. CUAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS X^TO toO LIVESTOCK - HOUSEHOLD GOODS QL $-70 1 OL 1-07*1 PL 2-3916 FL 94810 •FRIENDLY SERVICE" I. S OFT EE ICE C . truei. BlinW374, - s In retort nrea. - Busy punier ready to go. Gross 828,000 n 4 month*. Belling dud to death >f partner. Priced to sell ' Inventory and equipment Sail FE 8-3281 after 6 p. GOING BUSINESS Opportunity to buy service ‘ station on outstanding 140’ x 140' oorner lot. on heavily ' ‘' Tiway. Potential Praaently doing K'fVmwFMr ROCHESTER- PARTY STORE to.to on hooka last year. Bu-ness Inoreaslng. Sells Kowalakl suusage, beer, wine, very little groceries. Neat modern atore. Term*. -Call Ryan..-TO 8-4828. WATER WEED CONTROL, CHEMI-cally. Excellent seasenel business. All equipment, 'M Ford Pickup. 20' Pontoon and 14' Pram, 1 ---------■-------- spreaders, engine. WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $500 LOANS $80 TO *800 -498 — 8800 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. .10 B. LAWRENCE FE 84481 Get $2? to $500 ON YOUR Signature \UTO or FURNITURE Up to 24 month* to repay PHONE PE 2-0208 OAKLAND BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY14 WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 fOEPlCBS I1L... Drayton Pfklna , -Utica ' *1"1 -Birmingham >rs, pumjM, I.will bet 6M-188L Trailer Park-Grocery 32-unlt park Plus nloo neighborhood grooory. Top condition. Present owner naa mad* It har* and you oan too. Will'consider trad*. Bargain priced at $48,000. including 08,000 In grocery stock. Reasonable down payment. Bee I* pT. WARDEN 1 REALTY ' PICNIC , 'PARK plonto Vtobioi, playground mint, boat livery with It I---- and bait atora. Othar buildings and aqulpmanti. Owner retiring. Will takeirea! estate In trad*. Clarence C. Ridgeway fe wow aoa w, walton WALL WASHINO. RUQ CLBANINO. SELL RESTAU- ___1 business. Oood 'good lease on modern ....___ Easy terms. C*U today. Hlitar Realty, PE 24170 or T' BIDE. MU it equipment SACRIFICE . MEAT MARKET lUbjUocaUnn. Owner ^eUrjhyi^W "MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. JOHN LANDMBBBBR, BROKER 873 B. Telegraph FE 4-11 Rochester Area----------- Coin-operated dry cleaning plai and all related equipment only year old. Space for ID more mi ohlna. Doing good business. $7 800 down. ANNETT. INC .Realtors 88 E. Huron 81, FE 8-041 Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 CLASS “C Bar In Posen; Michigan oh h lee clean bar, easy jiuaband i wife Operation. Located In good toto farming area. Blbkneas tor.... sale. Living quarter*. See thla'and 'sta'tewide LAKE ORION OAKLAND-CO. Grocery doing ..... . 000 groea. Comer location, 0-room apt. included. Ideal man and wife operation. Business and rar' — ir land oentraet GASH Loans to $2500 Loins, aiillaalt to home purohaaes on autou, heme equities, and ^torni- *1ir*your4debi*nwllth oiSy’m'e small monthly payment. • Family Acceptance Corp. lORIOAC With U0t.wwv swumw fee B. D. Cherlee. 1 Loan Service. rontnge. No app.—... ^irT'Wer-^ YOU ^oRl $2,500 hornet any place li nty See or cun Voss & Buckner Cor. w. Huron and Skglngw FE 4-4729 '47 YEARS CONTINUOUS SERVICE 63 Mw«?klnMdliianceNor downtown'Xr se’lf FBr(|-M6l3hOU'<' t|,*ll*r 0f wl FE ?-78»f 1084 OMC H-TON PICKUP BWAP i—- ■— try ok, CAMP TRAtLBjrt #*6ll li FT ALUM. winf'y-ttJjJI m...........1 Katn|>sen Really A BIdg. Cq, FE MortRcYcLti) >6fe ao-kAnT, pe N6FfHiiN“PR6FSRTY T'bl lf--|»by Or*r ‘ 24771. >N .djog like Jiow.-Voimjto. iel^or^swap oocHHlonal chair. .YM 4-3559, WAP. BUY OR BELL - WANTED oement mixer, traotor, long wheel bate elahe truck, or stake p'atfnrm Al's Landtoaplng. -778 Scott Lake Rd, Fh 4.4228 j USED LAWN MOWEft8. Bell-ATrade J ------------- hwy, in For 150.000 only 81 trfiSren. ™'? ' WilL MXfiic1 Mf' Hxioo 'fb!t in REAi/roit partridge Member Purlrldge Ir Aatoe., Ino. Assoolete otfloei throueut Mich. oar wreokod or otherwls*. 1 motor. Will swap 21-In. TV able generator. MA 6-7430. WANT TO BUY A PARTY STORE? . _ CONTACT PARTmpcEjffiAfflrtrra: IMA w Wum nn J.ee*i and ■wiatora. Misses aflat i I 10. ChaaproR 1-1741 os.,poo per month loaio. Torino. ltlOT"WlliR^'Fiim LIQUOR * I UkTliew00^' OtOH,1' *°*tl *" and boor bar,doing over CXftoi wiWBfi&fli '61$ XW 6(5• roar. Fine aqulpmant. c«sion maternity , clothing, sloo mabi* lease. Biibsisti-; |5 334.7m, s pTFfiTTfRibisidAin drbm wiFh matohlng veil. sIm 7., 1 -pink and 1 black and dihlte oooktall dress. site 8, FE 8-4014. AkBMfarifAU.bREBsBii. sun glee 10 and I2~BM 3-4304. pn,m WLt I . UNIVERSAL REAL ESTATE BROKERS 1014 Pontjao Stale Bank Bldg. Pontiac, Mjch. 3344861 Suit land Contract* 00 84 AN ^MEDIATE 9ALE 8$ Land Contracts MSNOTH' FORM AIA onS^ip^Si ,ffl£ ohllfOl?r ill. WBTWrbiilviAL, *U!1 li. YelLow I iornial, list 14. FB 44047 after 8. ge> Ul hellre vou deel 1 formal, ene le, no e-oey arier s. Itoui Real or* 7? N.Ahaglnaw gt ,V(fNl¥t WiDDlNG bHi l $ OR FE 84118 ' I formal,” el«q Jl, FE 24850, T WENT Y*EIG^E^F" THE PONTI AC PRESS, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1963 mi “ "mt WATER HEATER. 30 0/ , "gas, consumers approved and $49.95 n bm -'Michigan Fluorescent, si Bp award Laho--16. ■ 1 ...KITCHEN cabinet sinks. scratched 42" model $89 value $44.50 while they last. Terrific ;.r; J.^USSnamental iron porch and PLA8TIC TILE ........• IHc BACH :.........tc root L'^nlsld Tile ........ . . Sc Each The floor Shop 2253 Elisabeth take ,, J’.UD M BI N O BARGAINS: FREE J?“SMandlng toilet, lll¥i so galloir ' 1 heater, $49.89; 3-piece bath sets. JJJjf *59.99. Flberglas laundry tray, trim POKER TABLE 129 RAILROAD TIES. SHUFFLE BOARD : , .. . machine. cheafr. St - ANCHOR FENCES NO KONEV DOWN PE 8-7471 SMOHR CABINET STYLE SEWING machine. Equipped to do ala-tag designs, button holes and blind hems, without any other attachments. Cash price only $37 09 of *3.44^monwwi Capitol Sewing Cen- ody during April tuny. MORRIS MUSIC 34 I. Telegraph Rd. PLAYER PIANO s Completely reconditioned electric actor, with stool, delivered. M9*., MORRIS MUSIC $4 S. Telegraph Rd. , FE 1-0567 Thomas Transistor Organ Beautiful hardwood dabinet 9-year warranty .......... *199 USED , CONN OROAN In mAhogany .... ......... *790 each instrument Umar iTCffin ^iiimibwib ----—THOMAS” DEALER NOR SAXOPHONE POODLE CUPPING AND DYING. mw^r ~~ PARAKEETS, GUARANTEED TO PARAKEETS, CANARIES. CAGES, tropical fish, aquarium supplies. Puowee. clippings. Crane’s Bird Ratohery. 84j»Auburn; ul 3-2200. P^DLESCLIPPE^AND BATHEp, POOpLE PUPS. BLACK OR BLUE mutiaturee. males. $«9. shots-»nd .. "^yatL i wdulut ~Wa Epater- *83- SIAMEBE KITTENS, 8 WK8. OLD. Jurtg In time for Holidays. LI ORDER EASTER f RUNN1ES .NOW 50c WILL HOLD TILL EASTER STAINLESS STEEL SINKS W1 rim, $29.93; Pella single lever 1 ce j« $19.95 with spray, O. Thompson, 7009 M99, West. •TALBOTT LUMBER 9 Glass installed In doors and W< dows. ■ • 1039 Oakland Avs____ FB 4-4999 Prellnished Amason frultwood 4xs, seconds ...............$3.95 Unfinished mahogany, 4x$ ..c. 13.49 Unfinished mahogany, 4x7 ... .$199 PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO. . 14$$ Baldwin ... 9P«H ers. adding machines, drafting tables, blue print files. New portable typewriters, $49.93. up. Special oi portable typewriters, cleaned o0e( and adjusted, 112.90. up. FORBES. 4800 Dixie Hwy. (Next to Pontlao 19 Frank St., MI ve aiso ouy. BEL FURNACE ‘ WTTH iRiES COMPLETE S $14.95, ; Also bathtubs shower stalls. Irrag tic values. Mlehlgan 1 it. 3*3 Orchard. liaxe-^L » LOVELY SINOER SEWING Machine, slg sagger, walnut cabinet. Pay off account in I months hi $9.40 par mo. of $33 cash balanoe’ Universal Co., WTOOWT 'METAL TWIN BEDS. MATT I-5*5 LAMP^FOO 11 ! mips*'$19.93 Val l Call factory si I J Fluorescent, 1 work benches, mi SALVATION ARMY I , REP SHIELIh STORE li ns WEST LAWRENCE l Everything , to meet your needs. I • clothing, Purnhura, Appliances - | VITRIFIED CLAY SEWER PIPE I SEWERS—CULVERTS—SUMPS . DRAIN TILE-GREASE TRAPS ,, c.I. manhole steps suia covers / Corrugated metal culvert pipe ! CORRUGATED STEEL AREAW ALLS I BLAYLOCK COAL A SUPPLY, CO. BjBfiStiL* USED COMBINATION ALUMINUM and wood storms doors. FE 4-0103. ^0 fUvms7*!^^ ot PI 4-3349! COM)*L|»Tll NltEW CAMERA. EX- i 1—130 BAH ACCORDIAN. LARGE ) else. S soprano. 5 Bass changes !<’ $114, '110 PAM medium sis# I cordton Ilk# now, $100. OR 3 r PLAYER PIANO I 'pianola St note, practically I $799. With some rolls, . •MORRIS MUSIC J 34 Mi Telegraph Rd.. , FE 3-0597 Acroatfrom Tel-Huron _ __ I BALbW'm UPRIOHT PIANO. GOOD 1 condition. PE 8-9148. " its1 n^w! IT’S BEAUTIFUL! £ Golden tone Oulbransen transistor ] organ maple cabinet, matching ! bench: NOW, only (895. , Gallagher Musi a Co., * ’* E. Huron ,1 Open Mon, and Frl. 8. till 8 II ACCORDIONS, low prices, loan-\ ora and leaeons, FE VMM. . 5 ENRICO RQ8ELL1 ACCORDION. 120 , base. >180., PR4-M99___________ * ELECTRIC oWaN AND AMPLY-I tier. Oood condition. MA 9-1397. E GOOD BUYS” I * In Nev And Used I , » organs and Pianos „. ._.tLY MUSIC CO. . free Parking In Rear MI M00I Open Frl. Evenings Across?rom Birmingham ratator , NEW SLbGT'RGNIC OROAN. voices, all pedals, plus .loud and Mft tone, mil keyboard. Anyone can play, MY 3-8137. Thomas oroan in mahogany. With bulU-in Hi-Fi ..,. . .. *349 HAVE ON HAND FOUR BRAND NEW THOMAS ORGANS IN WALNUT FHATURINO: 10 voles; if*- WURLITZER, OULBRANSEN THOMAS GROAN DEALER WIEGAND MUSIC CO. 4S9 Elisabeth Lake “■* <0TFfe 2-4924 , USED organs "71 jlawelfanM*^l,^erp0iJoSord idops’-Ilka new; 3100 less than used pftee. Now only 91.395. Thomss organ. _9Uhgle 1 - “i play. Fun for demonstrator Lo... pBPsftafs I ¥>•. , f *! • I Gallagher Music Co. 1 GKINNELL'S DOWNTOWN STORE GOOD ■ USED UPRIGHTS White Kimball U.R. With bench $75 , ’■ Beautiful Mahogany U.R, in fine condition $195 Nelson Provincial Mah^sploet Nice English Oak ’ U.R. good condition $179 , .Kimball U., R. Good $50 Others on Display GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN ADDING MACHINE SALE Wide selection of all makes and NEW MANUAL °MACHINES. Addi subtract and multiply, g99.S0. NEW ELECTRIC MACHINES. Add, sub-trrrt anc multiply, 8109.M. REBUILT AND RECONDrnONXD. Priced from $3' 5o Terms. Open tjli 7 p.m. for,'your oonvenlones. PONTIAC CASH REGISTER CO. 37, 8, Satinas* FB 8-31 TON USED AIR CONDITIONER imitf lelf Cohiamsd. 33oo. WKC Sev-e Dept,, 20 W. Alley. FE gQ711. 13-TON USED AIR . CONDITIONING —71 ‘NiOytG"*er»iee £ra‘ ;y, FB goTll. APACHE CAMP TRAILERB—A FEW new 1902 models left at big discounts Also a limited etock of 1M3 experimental models, AU 3 new T993 models on display. Complete ■took pf parte and. accessories for current and non current Apache trailers. Open dally 9 ja.m. to t p.m. Sill cellar, ■/» mile east of APACHE CAMP TRAILERS -amper, *338 and UP buy give Camper's_____ try. Michigan's largest lealers. Our Pontlao store, Apaehe d 369 Aubu DIVING EQUIPMENT. EXCELLENT comuiion. 2 regulators! 1 enamel tank, 2 tank nafneises, weights, pressure gauge, 1118, 998-9491, Burr-Shell. 179 8. Telegraph, r pickup. •33U after grain d Holly. 1 BLACK DIRT. TOP SOIL AND peat. Oravel, tana and nil/ grading. Reasonable. OR 4 CRUSHED STONE. 13 YARD. MAN-ufactured road (rave) SI. Pea gravel 81 yard, ,10-A stpne *2. Top soli 81. Fill dirt 30o. Delivery extra. American Stone Produts, 4338 Bash-sbsw Rd,. MA'8-2101. GOOD DRIVEWAY ORAVEL DE-llvarsd. PE 4-4888. MEL’S TRUCKING - l top soil, black dirt, (III dirt, and gravel, FB 3-7774. SAND. ORAVEL.' F’iLL,' CESiW, trucking. Pontlao Lk. Bldrs. Sup-piy. 7888 Highland Rd. OR S-1834, SAND, GRAVE-, . gravel, processed atone. TRUCKERS. CRUSHED ROAD gravel, being loaded dally. ~ Rd. and M-59.____;_____ Wodd-CosK>h*-fs*l 77 ALL KINDS OP WOOD. SLAB, fireplace, kindling and as ordered, also tree removal. AlTa Land-scaplng. PE 4-4991. - Pets-Hunting Dogs ALE THOROUGHBRED TOY Tier PUPS. *30. PE 8-0977, AKC COLLIE PUPPIES. * ARC BRITTANY SPANIEL. I DQOS B ■ a«»« I tPED/DOOS TRAINI >b‘s KenneTs. PE 3:3t DKHSHtifib PUPPlESr AKC REG- litsred. OL 1-8828.____________ ASTER BUNNIES. ALL SIZES and colors. 3978 Teggcrdjne. NASTIR BUNNiitlS, TINY M1NIA- if -Wilton. A . MTiUNfTfi" 18 Williams J _____M-0433, ilNiH K>ti oo^fa homN, * moiIth HIGHLAND WHITE PUP- • . B «.B AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY 3:09 P.M. Sporting Goods ~ All Typo* ' Door Prices1 Every Auction We' buy—eaU—trade, retail 7 days ^VOR 3-3717 AUCTIONS, Hm “fay lPI>H ______Rd. MI 7-t<49. HALLS MXJVrmi' SALES EVERY Plants—Trees—Shrubs 81-A Kin Mithter Thnyder come oat an’ play wif uth? 89 Boon and Accessories 97 LARGEST SELECTION OF T?S£D MOBILE HOMES EVER deal for lake cottagei or perr noblle homes. His loss is* lain., IS . different floor plan 1 ______ ___________i Hwy. (Old U.S. 10) MA MME TREES. ‘ SPRUCE. ' Jf* I NjL 'ffllk Yews, MUSho, Arborvltae, red maple, hard maple, ash," beech, Unde i end mil. You dig—bring tools and burlap; 2022 Sleeth Rd., 3 ml. west of CommOrce Village.. 2 mi. easi of Intersection of Duck ' Lake Rd. and Wixem. Rd- Open dally^jOt-OTO. elt prices Paddock, t AND PORK, HALF EVENING AND SATURDAY RIDINGLESSONS ALL APPALOOBA HORSES Children^ Adults , HORSES BOARDED GOLDEN H CORRAL HAY. |H)R I —Scotts & Greenfield— FertWlere. Lawn Seade Baby CblolUi Seed Potatoes open 8 to 7. Sunday it to ,3 Barber's Lawn and Pet Supply 4909 CUntbnvIlle Rd. 473-3 —1 Highland Rd. (M59) 473-9 OXFORD TRAILER SALES ............ 1943 — Marietta's “ > Stewart's, Champion’s. >W1-•ui o. Yellow Stone’s and Oem's. All slaes. terms, and priosd to your Satisfaction. . ' 60 Units on; Display Lots of good used units.1 aU sites. '*ET~ “ q M24. MY 2 AGED CHOICE BEEF SIDES 330 lb. Ye 42c rn.. hogs 34c lb., many smalt hinds, fronts, sides and & ijaV^ks'rtV M-89, 'Vt mile east of the Pontlao Airport. Friendly people eervlng you with respect. Open J days, 8 'til 4. 90 day* Is cash. For pay-ments caU . — Boats and Canoes, per cent down, 3003 Sd. Hots ii-PpoFi, repair experience, id1 fiia - Majd Orchard Lake ... „ to «, 6620000. WAR’T!BSS(?LAfl 1404 Rtvonia, Case 1 961 14-FOOT FIBEROLAS V and oluo. 40 h.j). Evlnrude, starting,' Trailer, boat cove life preservers. Call after-1 BOAT. MOTOR. SKIS, BOAT HOIST, - windshields, steering wheats, lights, Mr —1595. V Flberglas—$675. 1 PINTER'S EVINRUDE MOTOR MA, 9-2179 LAKE & SEA MARINA . New Authorized Dealer chris craft sport Boats ONDISPLAY 14’ ski Jet boat, 145 h.p. . 17 ’Custom Ski Boat 145 h.p. f H.P. motors. Hardin, sleeps Ship to shore radio, depth sounder and.many extras, very excellent condition. 45,050. Call Ward E. Partridge, - FI 4-5501, *" •*—- *r F9ntlSC. CASS LAKE DOCkAOE HOLIDAY PARK. P r 1 V a t e. Limited. Uncrowded. Swim, wiiwir ni. R4U, Oampf nenic. Reasonable- Free winter storage. Fabulous for tamlllee. Interviewing BaL, Sun. afternoon. Ted a. commodore >— 4300 Cats hath E 4-4377 OI TERRA MARINA HOUSE BOATS *3,005 to 05.505 CARSON'S BOATS WE TRA1 TelogyMR jm InM JOHNSOJ! Horsepower. soott ao hp. 3... i MERCURY. 6CYLP4DER 25%SAYlNGS hly A Few ' ttni | **•■'* Winner R. CRCntSE IEA-RAY 80S. 16Va-FOOT with flying bridge. 75 H.P. rude, Amor with aeleewr 1002 model; Tilt bed trailer. 41000 complete. OR BOATERS —■ SKIERS Buy Now for Spring Delivery, LAYAWAY AND TERMS BOATS 8 FT. TO 38 FT. CANOES—SAIL BOAM PONTOON BOATS—HOISTS 8COTT-MBRCURY, OutbOMu nd Inboard Outdrives CHRYSLER-MBRCRUISER WE SERVICE ALL MAKES ALLOIMTEI^NOlltAILERS Camp Trailers—Sporting Goods MARINE PAINT—ACCESSORIES CRUISE-OUT BOATSALE* 3 B. WsJtOO 9 to 9 ‘ TOUR DUNPHY ' li«m‘ ®! JOHNSON, MOTORS Aar Craft boats1 and QatOr trailers1 — Everything for u , OWBN'fi MARINE . MARINE INSURANCE $2.50 PER 100 Liability $10,000 for “ —------ Attcrtcy, FB 3-7063. KESSLER'S Johnson motors Carver camper boats Mirro Alum, fishermen , Complete part* and service iftoit OA 8-14 Osford ; PONTOON BOATS Thompson Lapstrakes — alumi-m and glass run-s-bouts — . . hnsqn Motors — OMO Boats. PAUL A. YOUNG. INC. 4030 Dixie Hw*. Drayton Plains (ON LOON LAKNI OR 4.0411 Open Mon.-Rat, l-l ______________ „ .1BBI NOW Going on at Loomla .Boats, 14018 Fenton Rd. MA 0-3338. Remember “Ride beforejWu.buy," . / 7ANTED: 32 MA 'WI''M FQpT. flying bridge TnMSNli planked orulser with head, galley, eanvass, APRIL AT PINTER'S MOTOR tyuNEUP TIME, Come in and obpose your rig, Sea-Ray Skl-Btrd M.F.G. Aero-Craft '• _ . pibn-Yan Hull-Oard and UtUe Dude Trailers Ohetsk Cfulser Hostel' Pontoons vNyroph Fishing Boats Canoes PINTER’S MARINE [Authofljed Johnson, Dealer” boitb{ i. 6pdyke~ l *ia$ 12 f ._i ifci a: . r boats, alumihurr . The the least. Yim ■HRMHUIMP fore you buy -any kind of boatl Some 1962 boats at'below cost— ooms out end moke oner, we Ore .dealing on new motbrs, and we RVn ^ourtrMSmCURY^MOTOR DEALER, > Cliff Dreyer’r,, • Gun and Sports Center 10210 Holly Jd. MB 4-0771 OPEN SUNDAYS BANK FINANCING STOP—LOOK—SAVE , Fabuloue Hydrodyne Comboards Larson-Duo-Chetek-Featbercraft EVINRUDE MOTORS and TRAILERS, Sylvan Pontoon Floats > AlUm. and wood dooks I Grumman. Old Tdwn Canoea •Tour Evlnruda Dealer'’ . Harrington Boat Works 10*0 S. Telegraph Rd. 232-003: Open Frl. 'ttt » p.m. Sun. 10 to : Wanted Cur»-~Truclt» ALWAYS A BUYER OF ■ n; 'Free towing. OR 3-3 morb for Good c__ ASK FOR BBRNIB AT — BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH INC. . 012 s. woodward wTltjn , " ' Always •HOfiNG’’ "'' '. 4SJUNK CARS—FREE TOWI$ TOP 90* — CALL FE 5-8142 ’SAM ALLEN 4> SON INC, M&M MOTOR SALES More Money FOR SHARP LATE MODELS OUT-STATEldARKETS 3837 DI3UE HWY. . . JT N. OF PONTIAC DRIVE-IN OR 4-0304 OR 4*30 FOR THAT “TOP DOLLAR" ON SHARP LATE MODEL CARS Averill's GLENN'S $$ TOP DOLLAR $$ FOR Clean Used Cars JEROME "Bright Spot" rd Lake at Caea WANTED: ‘54>*61 CARS Ellsworth AUTO SALES 0577 Dixie Hwy. TOP 04 CLEAN CARS—TRUCES $25 MORE itt high grade used car Hors you sell. H. J. 4540 plate Highway. 1 DOLLAR JUNK CARS AND Used Autotruck Parts 102 AU, THIS MONTH Mufflers and Pipes DJSCOUNTS to 50% N>wainmndTn4 warranty &PARTAN. DODGE,. INC. :*U S. MjUmMm ' ' “ ‘ ... CHEVROLET IMPAI.A >I)OOR h»rdtop. W $ nails i itindinl iriuti radio, neil-r, whltiWiU lii Wmijl (Inish With red trim. Onto M.N». Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEY-ROLBT CO.. J068 %. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM, Mt 4-1733. New ond Used Cor* 106 New and mwlH' CHEVY. t. PITION. $29 75 tm"1*0. WB Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks at MI 4-7548 rariBraKr - *.........■ § i 848 CHEVROLET J® shift. HAM, MI 4-3735. .... CHEVROLET BE Air Haiditm. Jtoautltul tu-tena « finish, atotow abura sari Only *6. per-week with .85 downl ^ XJNIVERSAL AUTO auto, transmission. Csll UL 3-3509 1896 CHEVY*BEL AIR V8, BEAUTI-ful red an" —*,u only *195. 19 CHEVROLET B . _______________ MMOR with automatlo transmission a--VI enmne. Full prtos **98 with — money : down? LUCKY AUTO sales. "Pontlacto Wtcou"' — 1. Saginaw. FE 4-2314. 1961 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 2-DOOR sedan, Vl englne. powergltde, radio, heater, whltowaU’tins. Fawn IjHHl finish. July $1,999. Easy t PATTERSON. CHEVROLET 1W8 g. ^WOODWARD AVE.. M1NOHAM, M4-4-3739. SPRING SPECfAL R & R Motors jDEBT C8RYSLEI IN THE ARI 724 OAKLAND AVB; EUxabetb Lake Rd. Trailer No. 7. 1962 Chevy Impala 4-door hardtop, full power. $2195 Famoua *-Yeur (OW) Warranty SPARTAN DODGKrINC. 211 8. SAGINAW FE 8-4941 1941 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR SEDAN. VS engine, standard shift, radio. Heater. wWU^l^lrei^WWtefto-PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO, 1400 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIR-MINGHAM. MI 4-3W8, 1941 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, HA-din. neater. Fnweriltde and powei miles. 41.400. Orl|-3-17*7, etoerins, 3 19601 Chevy Sedan , 2-door, can’t bo told from new! $1295 ‘Famoua 2-Year (GW) Warranty SPARTAN IMPALA 3-DOOR sdio. beater, iteertng._ good tsh. only $1,310. Easy terms. PAT. TER80N CHEVROLET CO.. M04 8. WOODWARD AVE.', BUtMINO- 4-3739. 30LET BEL AIR 4-DOOR £jn 1358 Ford. 1985 Rambler Ilf 1855 Buick, 195* Pontiac *17| 1951 Chrysler, imalsmMKi 1951 Ponltoe, ifH cbm fi* I— Plenty of other into models to ehoose from. Wo finance one half per cent * . ECONOMY DISCOUNT 3335 Dixie Highway FB 4-311 J959 Buick LeSabre 4-door sedan, with automatto tram $895 Famoua S-Yaar (OW) warranty SPARTAN jail coftVAlit LBflflg'laHBi. Powergllde, heater, wnltewair liras. Only 4L3M. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHBVROLMsCO., MOO ‘ WOODWARD AVE.. B1RMII 1962 Chevy Biscayne door, 8-eyl. stick shift. Like no Only $1895 > Biu HcSof Chevrolet TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS . _ •83 FORD. I to choose ....4 97 NO MONEY DOWN NEEDED Universal Auto Sales ill W. Mmitcalmjst Oakland i9«3 chIbvy suFmCwraT ook- £r;;e,r‘b^rM on 1988 CHEVROLET' BISCAYNE 4- & WOODWARD AVE., BIRMING-AM. MI 4-2738; — . — after 4i... CIlEVROLiT BEL Aik !-b( fan. VI mogk T555H ....JRflON CHMYROlIt CO., loftg AVE"Bm- 1857 CHEVROLET lEL AIR 4-DOOR u........ ,-j, automatic. raa|o, h(atir, powar imnu ana brakss, aiivor trim red ’ interior. |b8,;i;^&.ifegN Nl^ HADIO, whitewalls. FB 4-3040 altar 6:80. 1841 BEL AIR 3 DOOR HARDTOP) 1 owner, sharp. EM 3.4116._ ’mi) ckByloLEf IprXiR 1.' SooR sedan, vf Mshto, Powergllas, rsalp —Iwator, wPtowkUi, Veke wTtn copper interior. Only 11,895. Easy term*. PATTERSON CHEVROLET w7ot4vY v 3-DMR. tiltiil PE 3-7542. H. Rlgklns,.Dealer. ' 956 CHEVROLET B W^ltlOt, V*. Famous 3-Year (OW) WarrAnty SPARTAN 1993 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-DOOir; VS ooslni^owarMld*. Fowerapnr- ■and brake* radio, hoator. walls, blue finish, only 91.995. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1008 8. WOODWARD AVBc; BIRMINGHAM, MI 4-3735. ton wagon, VS. Fowerglhto, Low mileage, exc. condition. (Inal owner, reUsonable. ,ChU r 5 p.m. MY 2-1*81. • I960 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-DOOR ■urttftto.'vf. .48iM?HflHlE' (Uo. beater, whitewall, cobber Interior. Only , sharp, 341. eqglne, 1 Man. powar ■ EM 3-WM _______ 981 CORVADt MONZA COUPE. 4-speod, 103, original owner. 644-7313. 1957 Ford Fairlane "308” 2-door hardtop, one of the sharpest cars in town! $595 Famous 2-Year (OW) Warranty1 SPARTAN wtfb 8 cyl. engine. 1 from Tyxea, only^— RACE'S USED CARS 3548 DIXIE HWY. • liiwVFrirats 18*1 CbRVAIR kONEA Obbiril. green, 4-ipeed transmission, bt* engine, whitewalls, paddra dash. NO MONEY ;DOWN ergllde and power stosrlm and white finish that looas use This ear has boon excep- “ -----^golutoly x ■ year tionally well a no daut need WILSON PONTIAC-CApiLLAC 1350 N. Woodward automatic transmission, ...... heater, whitewall Gres, ■STATE STORAGE CO. AUTHO- I960 FORD. 4-DOOR COUNTRY SE-dan *-*HEtlNm transmission, whitewall* a FORD ?«,A 939 PORD CONVERTIBLE, straight stick and in, real good shape. No money down to this one. LUCKY AUTO sales. “Pontiac's Discount Lot," 1*3 a. Sagl-SSt ^tlit, ■ 1968 PORD FAHUdtNE WITH RA-dlo and heater, In axeallant condition and has tuck shift, no money down needed. Full prloe only 9187 and weekly payments only It .It. 0*11 or see credit manager Mr. White at mn AUTO SALES, It* S. Saginaw. *1 g-8403. I CHEVROLET; tandard transmii I DOOR WITH. . this one for. only *197. Low weekly payments! UNIVERSAL AUTO 1959 CHirrilOLET IMPALA 4-DOOR hardtop, vo online, automatic, pow- r steering, radio, boatoi rails. Onto 11,M9. Easr _________ 'ATTERRON CHEVROLET CO.. D^OB JIN, ihboont. CUSTOM royaT hardtop, power, 3*3^457. I whitewalls. Private 1 I960 Falcon 2-Door Sedan leator. radio, washers, and whitewalls. Real clean. Only— $995 BEATTIE 'Your FORD-DEALER Since 1838“ >N Dixie HWY. 5T WATERFORD AT THE 'OToPLIOH? a , OR 3-1291 tori- Chryslc j" Oakland, l TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS •90 Falcon . ........1845 qttao. Nice ....... riLUE^I ID WHITE FORD, 2 ____ after 3 *_ — iwu-MiiD coUnTry "bIdan, i passenger with, r a d 10. , healet ' autojilm “T' FORD "W •aJM. 3-DOOR, VI good condition, A longer neededI, Sacrifice, 111,, ........ Mil #6hLa-1 CONDITION. ..^......FB l-SIM , 1954 FORD CONVERTIBiSrvVl'h-line, automatic tran*mJ*lloh. nut, BTORAOB*11 FW.L LIQUIDATION SALE PMCE wf; c»ii sg%kfTenl #n!y I. Bagliii.iv.l ii®^D74^0^>AMOT^I 5»M$, > ftutonmtlo triuiNmlnsion, pi* (llo hpxtpr, power Nt«prl»«, power gnty *1 i Rochester Font Dealer. oL 1-0711. m i THE PONTIAC PRESS/TUESDAY, APRIL gy 1983 TWENTY IN g N.w awfU.ed ( 1*"» "OP" N-W . piitei »Mek,^t r Cart 106 New aid Uted Cart 106 New aad Used Can ‘ 106 New and Used Can 106 New and Used Care 106 New and Uted^Cart 958 FORD CONVERTIBLE, VERY PONTIAC |M1 4-DOC food condition:' 1003 Lakevlew. FE Vista. 12.000 mlloi. 144*4. — aoa brakee. FE 2-83 1962 Buick LeSabre 2-Door. Sedan i sHW i $2478 1962 Buick LeSabre Hardtop Moor, turbine drive, radio, ■HKAP $2787 I960 Buick LeSabre Wagon Mow with turbine drive, power steering and brakes, tinted - glass, whitewalls, white finish with red and wUtO Vinyl inter- $1985 I960 Pontiac Catalina Wagon Hydramatie, radio, hast or, matching vinyl trim. $1695 1959 Ford 2-Door Sedan ' V-0 engine, standard transmission. radio, heater. Qu owner apd has very low mileage — Sharp throughout. $877 1959 Chevy Impala Hardtop 5Lwr*» $1395 “1962 Skylark : ^ 2-Door jHardtop Turbine drive — radio — heater — whitewallspower stoeriog bower brakes — black vinyl bucket seats — all white finish I $2585 1962 Renault Gordini Save $$$ $1188 1961 Buick Invicta Hardtop 4-Door with turbine drive — radio — heater — power steering -r- brakes - windows — .f way power, eeate -» whitewalls — tinted aiaee *> fawn mieti $2394 1962 Jeep Station Wagon 4 wheel drive, heater, defrost-ft W^T$Ti brand new unit, don't miss this ape- “ $2495 1959 Buick 4 rose flnUb -• and on. ... an whltoftnlsh. $1484 1962 Buick Invicta. Cdwertible* Turbine d radio — b $2985 1962 Buick Special Sedan 4-Door wlih turbine drive Irani-mission — radio -—.Motor — deluxe interior — decor group — whitewalls — tinted glass — aU white finish - blue trim I .$2389 1960 Buick , LeSabre Hardtop p-Door with turbine drive.— radio — heater — power aieorlug — sower brakes — whitewalls — tinted glass — ..lawn mist beauty i $1889 1961 Buick LeSahrjB Hardtop nirhhte drive transmission — radio — hooter. — power steering — power brakee — white-walls — tinted glass — white flnien — aharpi $2365 1960 Buick LeSabre' Sedan 210 Orchard Lake Ave. Sine© 1929 in Pontiac FE 2-9101 — radio t heeler — safety trow l|iHnnlH — decor group Tow mileage) ■ $1696 I960 Pontiac Bonneville 2-Door fesr finish. laiufiijd ft * k e jj glass, whitewalls. whlti A reel dream, throughout. $1989' 887 Ford, rardtops. 2-door and 4-door sedans, vs eugtner end 6 cyl. engines. Prlood. to quick sale. Some as low M'JmL Ser week, no money down. These uys only at Universal Auto . ' , Saginaw _■ . fe e-ton 4c. pei... — „ ______„ . ms. a * Jr Motors, Ohryslor-Plymouth. 724 •Oakland. FE 4-8828. 1959 PONTIAC 3-DOOR HARDTOP, power steering and brakes. Real 1862 FORD GALAX IE 4-DOOR SB-dan, VS engine, automatic. pow** steering, power brakee. radio. hot or, whitewall Urts, 7000 actual n... fh-lecd right. JEROME-FEROUSON 1861 FORD FAIRLANE FOUR-DOOR With VS engine, automatic mission, wniMM^Iradioaad JT? “ JOSS McAULIFFE FORD. 1957 FORD V8 4-DOOR HAROTOP. Radio, heater, power steering ~ ” brakes. Automatic. Excellent ber. Only 1498. PEOPLES AUTO SALES S3 Oakland _______ FE 2 UM FORD. 2-DOOR,. 6-CYLINDER, mnJ-,..........M.........- Mr. Park! 'It' MI #600, Harol Turner, Ford. 9-CAR SPECIAL Plenty late4 StoM *60 Cadillac* •57 and '60 Fords — '61 Pontiac J NOW Rambler mid Flat. On discount — 2 year guarantee Economy Discount, 2335 Dixie Hwi 1967 >ORD CONVERTIBLE-- radio, heater, tu-tone' finish, and new toJ,^jj^5yoAtjLIyra FORD WEE. __... _______ ____,. heatei whitewall tires. White with Hu trim. Only $995. Easy tenhe. PA7 TERRON CHEVROLET CO.. 100. SfWOODWARP AVE.. BIRMINO-HAM, MI 4-2732. ML FAtcoN 4-door tot- t. A real b 1957 FORD HARDTOP $2?9 Full price No Cash Needed! ACTION AUTQ ..LORI-ilM,____________ ieei Ford 2-door. v-*. auto- 1 WO FORD COUNTRY BED Alt Wiki tlott Wagon. Black andred and shun, only tm. suburban olds, war a. wqodward. mlngham. Ml 4-4465. 1856 FORD 2-DOOR. ECONOMY 6 M| MO. CaU Oredit Mgr.. Mr. Parks -1 *** *-76W, Harold Turnsr Pew. _.t. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. WHITEWALL TIRES. $19.76 PER MO. CaU Credit M«& Mr. Parks irkrVmS,mmMKmlm. ”-J 1960 Ford Ranch Wagon Dew With 6 cylinder engtn BEATTIE Your FORD DEAUCR'Since 1936 4 DIXIE JJWY. IN WATERFORD < AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1791 ONE OF ^ THE LARGEST USED , CAR SALES IN PONTIAC'S HISTORY 150 OTHER USED CARS. TO CHOOSE FROM Pontiacs Reliable Used Car Dealer "HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES" '57 DeSoto Conv'rtible-Power FULL PRICE $295 '57 Buick 2 Door Hardtop FULL PRICE $495 '55 Chevy Stick Shift FULL PRICE $195 '55 Pontiac 2 Door; Hardtop FULL PRICE $95 '57 Chevy- Wagon-Clean FULL PRICE $395 '56 Chevy Clean-Nice FULL PRICE $95 '57 Olds Super "88" FULL PRICE $495 *56 Lincoln Premiere “TULL PRICE $295 '59 Chevy Stick 2 Door FULL PRICE $795 '58 Pontiac Like Npw , FULL PRICE $795 v- '57Ply mouth Wagon FULL PRICE $295 •'56 Chevy Bel-Air FULL PRICE $295 '56 Chevy Wagon .FULL PRICE $395 '55 Ford 2 Door Nice FULL PRICE $99 MARVEL MOTORS 251 OAKLAND AVE. FE 8-4079 i960 Ford “6” 2-Door $899 Full- Price ; No.Cash Needed ! , ACTION aUTO 6 East Blvd. M Pike ■ • ■ ' ; PR.2-4747 . ; 1960 Ford 2-Door 1 V8 engine, economy priced I $995 . Famous 2-Yokr'(QW) Warranty SPARTAN -*57 Pontiac Convertible $699 FULL PRICE No.Cash Needed! ACTION AUTO 1966 MERCURY 4-DOOR HARD-toy. Power steering and l Radio, hooter, power eeat windows, Safety belts. Ex 1287 MERGliRY 2-DOOR HARDTOP, money down. U NIV B H AUTO SALK), >12 W. Moi -at ealdand. PE 5-3590. 956 MERCURY HARDTOP. R..... HEATER AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. .WHITE SIDE....... TIRES POWER an— BRAKES. 629.75 PI Credit Jlgr.. , Mr. i 4-7500, Harold Turner. I THRU 1056s ' Any make, or model YOU Dick It — We'il flnanoe It. You call or have your dealer Call FE 4-oOM. It's easy .COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK 900 FORD. 8.CYLtNDER. 'STIC shift. Rkdlo. Healer. Whitewall Low mlloago. A reel bargain l M $1595 24 Months (OW) . Guaranteed Warranty LLOYD'S . Lincoln — Mercury — Comet •.mMWv&'iufiMS ‘wrt 232 8. Saginaw FE 2-9131 1060 MERCURY 4-DOOR HARDTOP. Power steering and brake and heater,, power seats dows, salety belts, excelle tion, #255. FE 5-0030 after 4 . '58 MORRIS M I N 0"R, BRIGHT red. ExceilTOt condition 5450. 1611 Alma at. East of Airport Rd. JTA|e OVER PAYMENTS 1057 OLDS PI 8-9811 ________________ lift DYNAMIC M 4-DOOR, BCOU-SUBURBAN b($U9sf> MS S, Birmingham, Ml • •"* BURDE. MOTOR SALES. INC. OAKLAND COUNTY'S NL... ■ IMPERIAL CHRYSUCR _ . PLYMOUTH VALIANT DEALER 1001 N. Mato OL 1-8580 Roehostor Wk |ivE 35 REAL dOOD TRANSPORTATION CARS. Trim 275 to *205 (Chevy’s — Ford’s) (Pratioe^Bulok’s eto.) . NO MONEY DOWN - - LUCKY AUTO SALES ' e'PWitUo's Discount Lor “OB”'14-Ddbft HARDTOP, r. We bollovo we have e sharpest — ' |— -DOOR SEDAN. __________________ilsslon, radio, hoaiot, Whitewall tires. Beautiful ... . ........... special ______ priced, only $1,095. SUBURBAN olds, 865 S. Woodward, Blrmlng-ham, Ml 4.4488. 19*9 Pontiac Convertible ' Factory power FUI1 Prloo $1495 )U6 2-Year (OW) Warranty SPARTAN DODGE, INC. 8AOINAW FE 2-4841 Holiday sedan. Sharp, solid yelloi with brand' now sol of Ooodyea. whitewall tiros, power steering and brakes, hydrematlo transmission — FACTORY AIR 4VmrcamM^vrotot!l..... MILFORD .______________MU 4-1025 1053 OLDS 2-DOOR HAtlOTOP, AU-tomaUo transmission, powtr stear- 1050 OLDSMObliiE DYNAMIC 55. Clean, power bratOO, and steering. 8505. OR 2-7725. _______ lk87 OLDBlifSiLB g#lft ' II 2-door hardtop, hat radio heater aM in excellent ai tion. Pull prloo only 5247 weekly payments a law U.73 Call or -tor 1958 PONTIAC 8TARCHIEF I hardtop, sxcoUont condition terms beautiful town and white fin: viu 150 fi. «•»!■«« - _ Fg g^407i $1895 Famous 2-Ysar (OW) warranty SPARTAN ‘ DODGE, INC. \ m. ... HASKINS Compact Car Sale mtloige, solid loot CORVAlR Monza Coupe. Power-glide with 102 engine, like new condition, fawn finish. 062 CORVAIR Deluxe 3-door with gas saving standard transmissloi radio, beautiful solid black finis) i transmission, HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds "Your Crossrdairto Savings” — US. 10 and MIC r MA 5-6071 MA 8-1000 1963 Ford Galaxie 2-door sedan, with 6-oyl|nder engine.* automatic tranamlaslon. radio, heater, 2600 guaranteed actual BILL SPENCE Rambler-Jeep 8673 Dixie Hwy. at MIS Ciarketon_____ MA 8-586 Famous,2-Y0ar (OW) Warranty $900 Year (OW) SPARTAN DODGE, INC. BAOINAW FE 8-4841 ims pontiac cATAlina S-bOOR ‘ '— ‘ uamarlns. Full power, . Sharp'. '363-249t--aft- 17 PONTIAC. 4-DQOR CHIEFTAIN A-l condition, ' lg. ta tonthlj. . _ M gat our deal I CONI' pletely reconditioned used -oars at low prices, ifikili HOMER HIGH-T 1961 Chevy Bel Air 4-door sedan, power steering, show room condltionl special '$1695 . Famous 3-Year (6w> warranty SPARTAN DODGE, INCr--- 211 B. SAOINAW ^ FE S-484 19^8 Pontiac Hardtop $699 Full Prfce No Cash Needed ! ACTION AUTO N#w and Used Cars 106 Now and Uiaf Cars -SPECIAL- ' 1962 PONTIAC Ina 4-door hardtop With rad: PONTIAC —RETAIL STORE Clemens :St.- ■ , - EE 3-7U54 BtJY TOUR NEW /RAMBLER HOUGHTEN & SON " matlc, radio,' heater, good Call FE 0-6474 alter 4 p m. dlo, heater, power steering and brakes, ..gray with red . Ulterior, whitewalls, a good will special—. 1950 PONTIAC Bonneville 4-(loor 1060 PONTIAC Catali dramatic tranamissto Or, power steering at Whitewnlls, solid tu-Uttle jewel I 1900 CHEVY Bdl Air jor. whites abwouPayn - Haupt Pontiac Open Mdnday. Tuesday and - Thursday, until o p.m. |----e North of u£l0 on M-l! .ioiuiup.au power, axoouent ci -dltlon, FB 4-8784. i960 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Cl vertlble. trl power, now tiros, power. 8939 Andersonvlllo Rd. PONTIAC 4-DOOR. HYDRA- .1262 PONTIAC 4-DOOR CATALINA. "oWer, extrat! FE 4-2470. 1ST REDUCE OUR INV eW Pontiac’s ana used liic prices. Hurry. Rurf til klnde, all modojg. Keego Pontiac Sales r. Burnt. 4-DOOR PONTIAC. STANDARD —-------------brMes. :--- New and Ut«d Cart 1 PONTIAC. , -* 1961 Tempest 4-door sadao. radio, heater, efand-ard transmission, whitewalls, 'solid Imperial IVory finish with wine in* $1288 ..:... Matthews-HargreaveS 1282 POtiTlAO CATALINA C&T-. vertlble,'radio, heater, whitewalls, automatic, exo,' condition. 31425. $1595 Famous 2-Year (OW) Warranty SPARTAN 2-7721 Csfter yp. ___________ 1861 PONTIAC CATALINA CONVER-tlble, clean, radio, heater. FI 1982TmtPEST ildldANS^ CONVERt-er steering, low mileage, 31,135. MA 5-1804._________ Immediate delivery. Low dowif pay- “rose rambler 106 1959 Buick Convertible , Sharpest ear you will ever see. ■ $1395 Famous 2*Year (OW) 7 SPARTAN tt 2-door-keautifui light i, lull ^prlce only 307. 1353 RAMBLER 2- graon..ftal * Only $2.00 UNIVERSAL AUTO Saginaw 'FE: 1*4071 1959 PONTIAC . Catalina sedan, 4-door — hydromat-Ic — radio — t. *--- covers, freer age. Extra s ;,u.-. to wa|e|slnfe2-im. 1959 RAMBLER, HAD RADlix heater and le bi excellent I ............... t j'SMsrar or see credit managor Mr. White at KINO AUTO BAUM, 115 8-gas tnawT FE 8- ~' B OWNER. muss, you must see It to 1 It. Radio, hqatoiv'wMtawan >1.3887Call OR 2-1713. IT’S SQ EASY, to Place a PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED At) ! Just Dial FE 2-8181 con'dHldn7OLIM^FB 5-_____ 1957 PONTIAC 4-DOOR STAR CHU —* --------684-7021 1 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF, H ■ wroain l im PONTIAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP. Really la shani. Only 22J25, SUBURBAN OLDS; 505 8. Woodward, Birmingham, MI 4-4485, * - NEW RAMBLER CUSTOM 4-DOOR SEDAN '. tesl’o model, equipped with AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, | i signals, self-adjusting FULL PRICE . ' $1995 Standard Transmission $162 Less Not An "American" This Is the Full-Sized Compact * ONLY AT ; Birmingham Ramblef 666 S. Woodward , - MI 6-3900 Where Service I#'’Kirtg*’ WHY PAY MORE? 4 1958 OLDS “88” 4-DOOR $799 FULL PRICE No Cash Needed! ACTION AUTO 5 EAST BLVD. AT PE 2-4747 7 PONTIAC 4-DOOA. CALL Ye ■5591 alter 8 l 1990 PONTIAC WPASSENOER WAG- 1992 BONNEVILLE SPORT COypE. 1958 Pontiac Harfitoi $695 SPARTAN DODGE, INC 211 S. SAOINAW PE 9-4541 1992 OLDS "88'' (f-'DOoR.'PAl ACTORV iiJitIopP oar, has factory ..... ......... ino (or your summer fun a comfort. Our low prloo of 52,1 «l excite you. SUBURB; , 546 S. yoodward, Birmii i R Motors. Onjfyslor- 1959 OPEL 2-DOOR SEDAN. 9400. 363-2119 after 8. 1399. as? ’, ^AhbTOP. tHE "DE.'ElfbAbLBS" KESSLERS ’ ‘ DODGE 840 N, Lapeer Rd. Oxft a"w 4oo*orjS a 8-Ssaa* p lOM ^^OUfHT'TRaT 8175 TAkifl iW'^plymoutA iTOolTilBM. ira te^yraS foam green finish. Only 52,099, PAtTNtlON CHEVROLET OOu— 11199 S. WOODWARD AVH„ B1R* MINOHAM, Ml 4-2738, -191 tllMifSil1!* i-DOOR IIIMW, tomaTfo VansmlHjaii; radio, lieatsr, iW* PW47TAC 4-DOdh, . ftAlHA healer, ■whitewalls,' new triuistnli-•Ion, Criiont Lake Inn 4jw)8 F*n- iSm'wHWac sWli tfAHto- RAMBLER—$1699 Ploaie got I prices bofort you buy Make (furs lastl Superior Rambler *660 Oakland Avo. \, 1995 Famous t-Yoar (OW) Warranty SPARTAN DODGE, INC. U 8. Sagalnaw FE 8-484 1242 roNTMC- 4-lDOOR. A FORMER BONNEVILLE CONvBRIHBLte. 1950 PONTIAC 4 -DOOR CATALINA hardtop. Rydramatlo, power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls. Newport blue, exc. condition, 1-»■««■ 31,098. MA 5-1397. flartltop 1960 Pontin 2-door, very low mOoago, exceptionally clean. Full price $1595 Famous 2-Year (OW) Warranty SPARTAN ItiC. MB 8»484. Chief. Low r Bjrminffham SUBURBAN DODGE) g, SAOINAW PONTIAcGrffi l.0l8& S PJ.AY BALL Bc'KDn a Winning Team With SHE-LTON 159 Chevy I’arkwowl wagon 199 c!icvyCImpala ('•tlwr' *!' jjjj) Pojitjao Catalina r Monaa. 4-«uor ......^6 Star chief \ 1993 Mr, 0<,"V‘' I wo Pontiao Vdoor hardtop is! a.rskhag{&pn. 19M Fj^Xlrloo^hajdtop PpnMao VSnni acSan SHELTON Pontiac-Bnick Rochester OL 1-8133 ilg1 ^ONTprC|Cr^¥At! ivTTBocilt. kt»W *Wqumsit (jniah WARD AVIS.. BIRMINCIHAM, MI LM6 JkmMd 4‘DOOR gTARClIiWV* PbmJr «U>ar!n« and .brakvn. low aSeSH THE SWING IS TO KING New Gars .Daily"’" NewCars Dally Auto Liquidators No Money Down Payments as Low as.$4<85 per Month 'Choose from Almost 200 Cars Such as These; ‘mf 1960 Rambler, 4-Door Sedan This car has radio and heater and is in excellent condition; Act real quick on this buy. *■ ___$397 . ' . : ■■..-y 1958 FORD , 2-door station wagon, 8-cylinder with Ford-O-Matic, excellent condition, and priced at $197 1961 ^IMCA Here is‘ a 4-door sedan and it is very clean, it has a radio and heater and is in the top of condition $5.97 1957 FORD Fairlane “500” 2-door hardtop with power brakes and power steering. 3 to choose from $197 1958 CHEVROLET 4-door sedan, with radio and heater and it is real clean and all ready, for ■the road $597 4956 FORD This is a 9-pas8criger station wagon, with radio and heater and it is a fine car for a larger-family- Act fast $197 1957 DESOTO 4-door sedan and it is really sharp, it lias a radio and heater and it is $297 1954 BUICK- ... This sharpie is a 4-door sedan, with a real hice radio and heater apd it is in the best of condition both in and out $147 1957 OLDSMOBILE “88” 4-door hardtop, this one- has power and a radio and heater. It’§. in excellent shape $197 1956 CHEVROLET 2«door with" stick shift transmission,' radio and heater and in real good condition $197 1955 PONTIAC This one is a real sharp and clean 2-door sedan with radio and heater, .the body is in good condition also,. $147 1957 FORD , Station wagbn with- whitewall tires, radio and heater, and body is nice •$197 19$ DODGE Hardtop and a 2-door with radio and heater, it's got whitewall tires $197 1955 OLDS', This one is a 4-door hardtop and It has a radio and heater and it is real sharp both inside and but. Hurryl $297 .1956 CHEVY . #, Tips is a Ration wagon with a radio and a heater’and it is real nice, both) body and engine, act witli speed here $197 AUTQ SALES Liquidation' Lot 3275 W. HURON & ELIZ. LK. RD. Open 9 9-p.m. Daily PHONE l-E 8-4088 9 a.m,,- 7 p.m, Saturday THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1963 THIRTY 2 More U.S. Pilots Killed in Viet Nam Managed News Is an Old Story of Human Nafure 4 N. Saginaw FI 5-559! 6:00. A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Dally k Cdrry-Ot/it Service'. _ i SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Rescuers evaded Communist I machine , gun fire May to reach 'a crashed two-engine' fighter plane. They found both American pilots and a Vietnamese observer dead. The B26 went'down in mountains 260 miles north of Saigon while making a strafing run Monday. publicist calling me to write up a sale of ancient pottery, f I said I didn’t know anything about andent pottery. “That’s just the point,” said the black — .“It’s new!” It is human nature to try to manage news — to publl-else the good and conceal the bad. It has always been so, and always will be. If news-management seems to be more flagrant today . .. well, doesn’t everything? . I remember, with considerable jwe, a letter I received.in 1955 from the late Dr. Albert The most annoying news-managed people of all are the press agents > who' hire other press ’ agents to promote the story of th&r personal accomplishments as press agents. Everything sleeks the printed page: Psychiatrists, dogs, pastors, business machines, restaurants, beggars,.' politicians, f a s h 1 o n designers,. newspaper writers, nonprofit institutions, royalty, the Em- - Now, possibly one shouldn't compare Sinatra with1 the Defense Department, even if both allegedly have contacts in the White House, but the Incident goes to show that ifs always tough to get news of trouble, and all too easy to get news of success. I don’t know exactly what . it is that makes virtually all persons, not to mention places, animals and things, demand publicity. , But it’s tiresomely true that they do. By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK —Hie sjmmer-ing controversy over “managed news” in Washington surprises me. The sense of surprise comes not from, the fact of the management of news, but from, the wild uproar | about it. - - j We live in an era of man-1 aged news — worse, of news-managed people. From Pierre Salinger down, there are hundreds of thousands of 'Americans whose churning gray cells work constantly in an effort to get opinions, personalities or simply their physical characteristics into (or out of) the headlines. , The doctor wrote that he was sorry he could not give me pn interview because he was “trying ‘to avoid all unnecessary publicity.” This was the first, and almost the last, time I!d heard of a man or woman (When not in trouble) refusing to contribute his name and ideas to the front page of a newspaper. Much as I’d \jiave liked, to meet the great Einstein and kick around Never forget an art gallery •PHYLLIS BATTELLE Any reporter realizes thqi jn this generation, modesty nas become a lost delicacy, and that the meek don’t stand a chance of inheriting the earth. You’ve got to have a press agent. This realization comes over you, for instance,, when a wealthy philanthropist hires a publicity firm to tell the story of his good deeds. This happens often. few equations, I found the refusal to be a shot in the arm — an arm that too often is slapped by press agents barking, “say, you want an exclusive story on—”? On the other side of the • WEDNESDAY* NO $IN OR SPECTACLE Tp EQUAL ITI variably attempt to suppress the news. I was ejected bodily from Frank Sinatra’s hotel suite once when he was trying to stay in hiding. | And when an octogenarian writes to the papers asking that they publicize his fourth wedding in their society pages. ’ Or when a movie starlet hires a press agent to reveal why she, the movie starlet, shies away from publicity. FISH SANDWICH FRENCH FRIES SOFT DRINK OR COFFEE THE TASTE TREAT OF THE SEASON BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY David C. Ltpolnt. es Trt J. Trailer. 67 Tregent. Claude A. Hagerman. 1 and Marjorie C. suzor, Uni. J. ,C. Jones. 391 Orcb Roztner Crisp, 446 Central. David L> Rosenqulst. •ally n. Lemke, Northvllle. Telegraph at EKzaboth Lake Rd. NOW PLAYING AT WATERFORD] TtOWPLAYiNG AT PONTIAC-H,N°W PtA)GN^TJR|RACLEM^ EXCLUSIVE FIRST NOW SHOWING Box Offic* Opwns Tonight 6:45 P-M. ‘SSrSSTETwr i O. Yerke, Farmington, and De-Landseldel, Lansing. e. Wright. Soutliflald. and Bhar- W. Morenz. Onion Lake. Gary L. Lloyd, Key Weal. Ruth A. Ooplglan. Ill 8. Telegra Carl W. Vinson. 4240 Park Evelyn L. Swann. 4240 Parkway. , .lunfiC II, Lookharl, Blrmina Carta M. Medium, Birmingham. George L. Walters, Farmln ELIIISmswr Herbert E. Steenbergh. Madison Helghta ana Nancy R. TervoUl, Detroit. Earl 0. Smith, 26 Oage, and Chrlatlne Pickens. ImlUfiialMth Lake Road.' Arnold B. Fox, 3600 Overton, and Bon-nte M. Brumley. UTN. TUden. James R. Smith. 666 E. Columbia., and mwjur • ft* LOWELL CHUCK DALE FENNELL JACK • - . ERNIE' MARSHALL * , CHAMBERLAIN JENKS SALES MANAGER SONSLIN RACINE Our Customers Know We Service Well-Each and Every Car We Sell Complete Facilities • Always Quality Work Genuine Ford Parts • We Grow With Oakland County We Won't Sacrifice Honesty—To Make a Dgal PersorTalized Service Ample Free Parking , Sincerity Honest Speedometer Readings KhOW HoW (Kn°W the Problem and Hpw to Solve If) NEW and USED CARS TRUCKS , Your.K5RD DEALER Since 1930 On Dixie in Waterford-At The Stoplight OR 3-1291. 1963 FORD -- 7 Salesmen 1930 FORD — 1 Salesman EAGLE DEBRA PAGET ELVIS PRESLEY Love Me Tender CIN«ma5coP£ r A THE PQHTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY", APRIL 9, 1963 THIRTY-ONE -Today's Television Programs- Program* famished by itattons lifted In flita o • TONWBT 1:11 (2) News , ,(4) Deputy (7) Movie: ‘'Charge of the ’' Lancers.” (In Progress). ' (9) Capt. Jolly and Popeye (56) American economy 6:26 (2) Editorial, Sports 6:21 (2) Weather (4) Weather 6:26 (2)' Highway Patrol (4) News (7) News, Weather, Sports. (6) Quick Draw McGraw (56) French Through T\^ 6:46 (4) Sports 6:41 (4) News (7) News 7:66 (2) Hennesey (4) (Color) Weekend (7) Mike Hammer (9) Whiplash (56) Age of Overkill 7:26 (2) Real McCoys (4) (Color) Laramie (7) Combat (9) Playhouse IS (56) Trio f 7:41 (9) Ted Lindsay , 6:66 (2) Lloyd Bridges (9) Stanley Ctop Play-Off (56) Drama Festival 6:26 (2) Red Skelton „/ (4) (Color) Empire (7) Hawaiian Eye 6:26 (2) Jack Benny (4) Dick PoweU Theater (7) Untouchables 10:09 (2) Garry Moore 16:16 (4) Chet Huntley Reporting (7) Close-Up (9) Dr. Christian 11:06 (2) News (4) News , (7) News .(9) News U:1‘) (7) News, Sports 11:16 (2) Editorial, Sports (4) weedier (9) Weather 11:26 (4) Sports (7) Weather (9) Telescope UAW 11:25 (2) Weather (7) Movie: “Tobacco Road.” (1941). Gene Tierney 11:26 (2) Steve A11 e n—Variety , (4) (Color) Tonight—Carson (9) Movie: “Call Of the -Flesh.l‘(1990).RamonNa- B:40 (56)Spimtimm80M varro WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:26 (2) On the Farm Front 6:26 (2) News 6:26 (2) College of the Air 7:06 (2) Nevis (4) Today (7) Funews 7:66 (2) B’wana Don 7:26 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:46 (2) King and Odie 6:06 (2) Captain Kangaroo (66) German for Teachers' 6:26 (7) Big Show . (86) Friendly Giant 6:46 (56) Spanish.Lesson 8:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:56 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-. Round 9:99 (2) December Bride (4) Living (7) Movie: “A Song to Remember.” (1942). Cornel Wilde, Paul Muni. (9) Chez Helene (16) Let’s Read 6:12 (6) Nursery School Time 9:30 (2) To Tell the Truth (9) National School Show (56) English VI 9:55 (2) Editorial 10:09 (2) Connie Page TV Features Detroit Plays Toronto WEEKEND, 7 p.m. (4) Rochester Paper Co., oldest paper milt In Michigan, is visited. ' - STANLEY .CUP PLAY-OFF, “8 p.m. (9) Detroit Red Wings Invade Toronto for opener of final round of playoffs. To be shown from start to finish. JACK BENNY, 9:30 pjn. (2) Jack discoloses trade secrets. Dennis Day and Don Wilson impersonate Stan Laurel ami Oliver Hardy. Chet huntley reporting, io:sa p.m. (4) w. Averell Harriman discusses rift between TtOssla and Red China. CLOSE-UP, 10:20 p.m. (7) Study of problems in coal regions of eastern Kentucky. (4) Say When (9) Romper Room (56) Our Scientific World 16:26 (4) News 16:11 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hpch (56) French Lesson 10:46 (7) News 16:66 (56) German Lesson 1U0I (!) McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jack La Lanne (9) Window on Canada 11:16 (56) Spanish Lesson U)|l (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (fj Seven Keys (6) Movie: “Port of E: cape.” (1666). Google Withers, (56) Food for Life WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:96 (2) LoVe of Life (4) (Color) First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (56) History 12:26 (2) News 11:26 (2) Search 6or Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best 12:46 (2) Guiding Light 12)66 (4) News 1:66 (2) Star Performance (4) Leave It to the Girls (7) General Hospital (9) Movie: “Libeled Lady.” (1926). Jean Harlow* William Powell 1:11 (56) French Lesson 1:66 (2) As the World Turns (4) Best of Groucbo , 0) Girl Talk (56) World History 1:66 (4) Faye Elizabeth 2:06 (2) Password (4) (Color) Ben Jerrod (7) Day in Court (56) Adventures in Science 2:25 (4) News. K (7) News RtSi (2) Divorce Court ■, (4) Doctors (7) Jane Wyman (S3) Young Artists at Work 2:66 (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a. Day (56) Discovery 2:16 (9) News 1:19 (27 MUUoMire (4) (Color) You Don’t 8ay! (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Scarlet Hill (56) Superintendent Reports r 3 > 1 I r r r r r 10 IT if: IT rr 15 16 nr * ■ 2i 24 Sr r 30 IT" 3$ M w r 38 44 41 44 «r Jm 1 r ir K1 tr 6S r W • 4:11 (I) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) American Bandstand (9) Razzle Dazzle (56) Memo to Teachers 4:26 (4) News 4:20 (2) Edge of Night (4) Make Boom for Daddy (7) Discovery ’18 (9) Mickey Mourn Club 4:45.(56) French Ledum 4:15 (7) American Newsstand 1:16 (2) Sea Hunt (4) (Color) George Pierrot ' (7) Movie: “Slave* of Babylon.” (1963). Unda Christian, Richard Conte (2) Larry and Jeny (56) What’s Newt 5:29 (2) Whirlybirds (56) Friendly Giant 5t4» (9) Becky and Hie Friends (36) Industry on Parade 5:52 (4) Carol Duvall Makes Big Splash Among the Splashers ' By. BOB THOMAS . Dick decided to follow his child- AP Movie-Television Writer hood interest in music. He played HOLLYWOOD.,?- Four years with a combo in a malt shop af ago Dick Dale was a 'metal-[Balboa, then moved to the Balboa - DREAM CAR INTRODUCED - The Monza GT, featuring a wrap-around canopy which folds forward to give full access to the passenger compartment, is one of two Corvair “dream •ears” being introduced by Chevrolet at the International Automobile Show in New York Saturday. Corvair 'Dream Show Hie first Corvair “dream cars” hinges, allowing full access to the passenger compartment. This unique canopy includes the portion of the roof covering the passengers, the U-shaped windshield and both car doors. The two^passenger cars .have will be Introduced by Chevrolet at the International Automobile Show opening Saturday in New York. They are the Monza GT, a slier, . fast-back coupe, and Monza SS, a red roadster with identical basic styling. Both have a rear-mounted standard Corvair engine, multipie carburetors and a four-speed, syncro-mesh transmission. While the length of both cars is approximately 165 inches, the is only SO inches high. The most unusual feature the Monza GT’s wrap-around can- Sibyl Tells All t He WohTBfeafhe a Word Oakland County Democrats have pledged a fight — into court if they deem necessary — if the State Legislature adopts a congressional redistricting that “does not guarantee fair representa-'* to Oakland County residents. ( By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Sibyl Burton had a secret tete-a-tete the other dinner hour with Roddy McDowall—who lived with the Burtons in Rome Back in thh early "Cleopatra” dayswhen Liz Taylor was just beginning to rear her pretty head. Sibyl also phoned actor-playwright Emlyn Williams, Welsh friend of Richard Burton who had tried to patch up differences a year ago. Neither gentleman, being that, would reveal whether Sibyl has some grand strategy to try to prevent Dickie and Liz from marrying . . . It can now be revealed that Louis Nizer, attorney for Uz and Eddie Fisher, wasn’t actually too shocked. When he nounced the Lia-Eddia split last year, a friend said, “Burton’ll never give up his wife.” Nizer WILSON quietly commented, “Don’t be too sure.” the Midnight earl ... Frank Sinatra’s “Come Blow Your Hem” will get the first s studded aerial premiere, on a N.Y.-to-Las Vegas jet....Rock Hudson's new Beverly Hills home cost lSOGs-^and with only two bedrooms yeti , %, -It.. 7k TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Teachers in the lower grades needn’t worry about automation till someone Invents a machine that can blew noses and remove snowsults and hoots. WISH I'D SAID THAT: Vi Veiatfco overheard a former film {Casanova described as “The Coliseum”: “That meant he was now a monumental ruin.” REMEMBERED QUOTES: “When the average man starts thinking seriously spout saving for a rainy day—it's probably a rainy day.’r" * ^ * . EARL’S PEARLS: The real henpecked husband is one who had laryngitis tot a week and didn’t know It. A fellow mentioned that his grandfather was known as the town drank: “And that’s not so bad—until you realize he lived in New York City!” . • • That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, 1962) an aerodynamic design .from a delta-shaped hood to a blunted, concave rear end. Sr. - ★ ★ Together with a custom Cor* vette, Chevrolet’s two “dream cars” will be special features in the company’s 13-car display. lurgist at Hughes Aircraft, T&-I day he is riding [the.crest of.the surfing craze that has swept J-the teenagers of Southern California. • : • Almost any parent in this area with Children between 10. and 20 has felt the surfing im-pact. It has been evidenced in music; magazines and other | merchandise aimed aj, the beach 'crowd. Bale of surf boards has boomed, ! The symbol of the surfer — bleached hair swept over the forehead—has been adopted by both boys and girls. A high priest of the surfing movement is Dale, a handsome, husky 22-year-old ' whose curly locks remain a dark brown. “I , want to show the kids ..they don’t have to bleach their hair to be a surfer,” he explains, “The really good surfers don’t go in for such fads.” Oakland Dems Pledge to Fight Unfair Districting County Democratic Chairman Bander M. Levin said he may seek his..party’s authorization to challenge the legality of such a redistricting. • Levin issued the battle call While leveling a new blast at plans drawn by Republican state legislators for a congressional reapportionment of the state that would .diylde Oakland County into two districts. Levin aimed his latest criticism at Rep. Henry M. Hogan Jr., R-Bloomfleld Township. 'N^T FAIR’ . Levin said a statement attributed to Hogan “Indicates that some people in Lansing are being guided not by the principle of fair, representation but by what is best for the Republican party.” 'WWW Hogan last week was quoted as laying, “The Thumb has not yet given us a plan we can accept. It Is yet to be proved whether a Republican could win in Genesee, and we must attach two solid Republican counties to it”. Hogan, chairman of the House Appropriation Commit-also was quoted V.. “We have. a choice. We come out with a Republican plan or wo Just forget about reapportionment this year.” Levin said, “Wo were shocked o read Hogan’s statements.” ’ W Hogan was quoted in connection with a disagreement among House Republicans over two redistricting. plans which differed over alignment of Thumb areas. ONE NAN One plan — approved by' the mate, favored by Hogan and most House GOP members and currently being considered by Hogan’s apportionment committee— would include Genesee County Jtepublreairareasamrput Lapeer and St. Clair counties with most of Oakland County in a new 19th district. The other — sponsored by a Republican and supported by Democrats — would make Ctat-esoo a separate Democratic district, put all Thumb areas in one district and put Livingston County with most of Oakland in the new 19th. Hogan’s committee may report out a bill today. ’ ★ . Noting previous objections to Republican plans, Levin said they "put together in a strange fashion counties that have little in common with each other ... and thus shortchange suburban areas like Oakland County.” -Today's Radio Programs- TONIOBT •:0*—WJR. HIM “i^ HU-WXTZ, LM AUn cam 6. sitirm WM«! ’■“Warwta. I:#»~WJR, World To«l*M WPON, N*WI, City CommlMlon 1:11—,WJH. Concert tiM—WJR. New*. . Leeilin* QUMlton lllMMR. rubllo School, WiN- WJR, New*, JIM Woo WPON, Norm O’Nell Show WilS-WWJ. Melodic* . lliM—WWJ, World Now* rbttr 1:M~WJR. Mualo WWJ, Mu,to wOAit, C*r*nd*r WICUNEAOAT MOHNINO tUST & ltd A»« nn dtSd—WJrt, Mu,I* M»H wars, wait, Mtwi, m, bnotu 1 WJBK, New,, Mara Avery CRLW. }I»W|, Toby Hi Vld WPON, New*, Dale Tllto WJtffi .Newe, Rue* '• RAHk* N*«i! Aver) vvcaR, New*. Siiennan Slits—WJR, Newa, oueit WWJ. Newa, Rubella Mu. won _ CKLw, New*, David lift aisn-wjR, Muaio nail S: d WJBK, Nawa, Avery Wxvz, Paul 1 Comics ........... 23 Editorials i/,.......< Markets ..........,. 26 Obituaries ........ U Sports ........... 20*22 Theaters............36 TV A Radio Programs 31 Wilson, Earl...... 31 Women’s Pages .....18*17 The first of a score of witnesses took the stand in Waterford Township Justice Court today to testify at the preliminary hearing of two men charged with murder in the death of a supermarki manager. It appeared the most pressure would be applied for release of the open occupancy bill, written as a proposed law to replace the so-called "Rule 9," of die Michigan Corporation and Securities Commission, which the Michigan Supreme Court ruled invalid four months ago. As drafted, the bill would, bar (Continued on Page I, Col. I) ’New* Tigers Pldy Bail at Home Today Sox. Scheffing, in his third season as Tiger manager, has yet to gain an opening day victory in Tiger Stadium. He pinned his hopes today on right-hander Jim Bunnlng (19-10), his winningest pitcher of 1992. The White Sox, as expected, countered with Ray Herbert, a 20-game winner with nine losses last tason. Hie weather wag expected to reach a high of 50 degrees for opening-day ceremonies with Gov. George Romney and Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh participating in the activities. The Tigers came away from Florida with a 16-12 record, and manager Scheffing has t| "my best in years." t * The probable starting line-ups: CHICAGO DETROIT Landis, cf Fox, 2b Cunningham, lb From Our News Wires LANSING - The official canvass of votes In the April 1 election is continuing to cut into the margin of apparent victory for the new state constitution. But State Election Director Robert Montgomery doesn’t believe the present narrow majority will be overturned by canvass figures still to be reported. e w a The constitution is ahead by 8,606 votes with 13 counties still to Hie Oakland Comity Board of Canvassers yesterday reported officially 89,154 “yes" votes for the new constitution and 53,777 “no" votes. This is a net gain of IS “no" votes over unofficial Robinson, rf Ward, 3b Nicholson, If Hanse, ss Martin, c Herbert, p Phillips, 3b Bruton, cf Kalina, rf Golnvlto, If Cash, lb McAullffe, 2b Fernandez, ss Bunning, p Newsflashes LANSING (UPI)--Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley announced today he believes the apportionment provision of the new constitution li unconstitutional. DETROIT (I) - Blue 8b acting feur days after being denied a rate Increase by In- wood Collmrn, today filed revised subscription rates catting for a rate boost of nearly the Canvass Cuts New-Con Edge But Election Director Sees No Upset turn in official returns. With canvass figures from 70 of Michigan’s 83 counties and unofficial returns from the remainder the vote was: Yes 810,677 No 802,067 The State Board of Canvassers held a round-robin telephone conference Monday afternoon and instructed Montgomery not to release any further comparisons between the official canvass figures and news service tabulations. Newsmen protested that the board had no authority to keep the figures secret. Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelly, when asked for a ruling on the, canvassers’ order, said the can-| vass figures “are public records ahd should be available to the press." The canvassers then withdrew their order. Hearing Starts Witnesses on Stand in Kroger Store Killing Adoise White, 79% Wall St., and Charles E. Hodges, 174 Prospect St., both 22 years old, are accused of killing Robert A. Greene, 22, on March 18. Greene, 122 Summit St., was comanager of the Kroger Store in the Pontiac Mall Shopping Center. Dr. Richard Olson, pathologist at St. Josph Mercy Hospital, the first to testify before Justice John B. McGrath, skid that Greene died Of a stab wound in the heart. Greene, the father of two children, had been stabbed 42 times and shot In the back of the head. The examination was scheduled to begin at 9:30 a.m. but did not get under way until a half hour Liter. Several persons were turned away from the courtroom because of the crowd. Greene was killed after turning over about $1,500 from the safe to assailants. They had forced to drive back to the store after they surprised him in his garage. Meanwhile, Hodges* wife was ordered held at St. Clair Hospital in Detroit for observation. Mrs. Hodges, 21, had been threatening “to cut people up,” according to Assistant Prosecutor Robert L- Shipper who issued a 48-hour mental health commitment order. DISABLED — No one was injured in this three-car crack-up yesterday afternoon at Ottawa Drive and Huron Street. Elmer A. Linton, 89, of 1932 Ward Road, was crossing Huron Street to enter Thorpe Street when his car was struck by another {left) driven by Jack Hender- FontUo Pmt Photo son, 19, of 80 Mark Street. Linton’s vehicle flipped on its side and skidded backwards into a car driven by Mary Sue Delisle, .20, of 1075 Canterbury Drive. Five Injured in Dive to Avoid Air Collision FROM OUR NEWS WIRES DETROIT -— Fiye persons were injured last night when an American Airlines jet-prop Electra With 52 passengers aboard dived to avoid colliding with Air Force F101 Voodoo jet* j fighter. The near-collision five miles in sky occurred near Syracuse, N.Y. The airliner, American Flight 465, was en route from Boston to Detroit. It landed at Detroit Metropolitan Airport five minutes behind schedule. The pilot, Mel Biederman, of Aim Arbor, took violent evasive action when the jet loomed on a collision course, the airline said. The sudden plunge came at dinner time. A passenger, Ralph Mc-Kehney, 17, of Grosse Pointe, said dishes and coffee flew ail over the plane. WWW 'In the back of the plane, by the tail section, people were thrown into the aisles," he said. None appeared to be injured seriously by the dive. LAUGHTER AFTER McKenney, a student on vacation from Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass.,skid the plane dived down and to the right. When it was all over, people laughed," he said- * * * An American Airlines spokesman said only foui1 of the five reported hurt required hospital treatment. Bledermann said the incident was “closer thaa you like to have It," but declined to estimate how close the planes were to each other. He said he could not go deeply Into detail without authorization from his superiors. Hamlin Elected to Eighth Term The Oakland County Board of Supervisors today re-elected Delos Hamlin to an unprecodent. eighth consecutive ternl as its chairman. Hamlin’s was the only name placed in nomination. He was declared elected unanimously. Addison Township supervisor Frank Webber was elected vice chairman. Ill Figure Higher Than Expected Tax Cut or Reyioion of 1963 Budget May Follow Now By DICK SAUNDERS Pontiac’s Board of Tax Review yesterday set the city’s 1963 assessed yalua-tion at $308,459,500. The 1963 tax base is some $27 million above last year’s and $20 million more than the estimated valuation on which this year’s ty budget was based. In 1962 the total assessed valuation was $281,075,360. Initial effects ef the new tax base could be a redaction ef the estimated IMS tax rate, a revision of the budget or both. When they prepared the 1963 budget, city administrators and commissioners • estimated they would have a tax base of about $288 million in 1963. REVIEW DUE With that tax base, the budget would have required a tax rata of $14.98 per $1,000 of assessed valuation, This was a hike of $1.12 over last year’s rate of $13.86. With the tax base establifM J $300 million, a $14.$6 per $1,000 tax rate would produce about $300,000 more than required in the budget as adopted. Commissioners Indicated when they adopted this year’* $(.7 million budget that It would bo subject to review and possible revision after the tax Webber was one of three candidates for the second post. He elected on the first ballot, receiving 45 of the 75 votes cast. OPPOSITION Also nominated for the vice chairmanship were Milford Township supervisor Mayon Hoard and Independence Township supervisor Duane Hursfall. Hoard received 16 votes, Hursfall 14. * * * Hamlin, an appointed supervisor from the City of Farming-ton, had been expected to run unopposed. ______________ Bancroft, Peck Win Top Oscars SANTA MONICA Calif. (AP)--iignored, are winners of the mov-inamed the year’s best film Mon-Gregory Peck, a /our-time loser ies best actor and best actress day night at the 35th annual Acad-ln the Oscar finals, and Anne Ban- awards for 1962.. . fe^iijSE? wTZ' and a croft, an actress Hollywood oncel “Lawrence of Arabia" -was|grandfather, Ed Begley, ana a Ekberg Weds American LUGANO, Switzerland (*> Swedish film star Anita Ekberg was married in a civil ceremony today to American film Actor 'Rick Van Nutter. Should the budget not be revised, It would require a tax rate of about $13.09 per $1,000 on the $308 million total assessed valuation. This is a 13-cent increase over last year. ★ * ★ Some revision of the budget appears likely, however, since several department allocations were cut to a minimum to keep the adopted budget as low as possible. Board action was In sharp contrast with that taken by the 1962 tax review board. Last year’s board sliced 817-9 million off the total assessed valuation recommended by City Assessor Edward Bloe. SUGGESTION CUT This year’s tax board cut Bloe’s recommended tax base of $310,-584,300 by only $2,124,800. The tax board’s final figures were anuounced after a month of meetings at which the board heard appeals from taxpayers who felt the assessed value of their real and personal property was too high. Bloe's recommended total assessed valuation of real estate was $153,830,200 this year. The board deducted $2,123,400 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) t teen-ager, Patty Duke, won best supporting actor and actress honors. Miss Duke, who played the child Helen Keller in “The Miracle porker,” is the first Juvenile ever to win an Academy Award. Shirley Temple, among others, have received honorary awards in the past. In a glamor-packed setting at Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, the taciturn Peck confessed that he came to the show "prepared to be a graceful loser.” "I’m just a little stunned about the whole thing. It really staggered me,” Peck said. Miss Bancroft, who portrayed Annie Sullivan, the tenacious teacher of the blind and Helen Keller In “The Miracle < Worker," was busy Monday night Ian^ Wednesday. wuirci, j # Temperatures will drop to a B moWM. Jam Crwhrd .cc.pt- „ more of the same. Clouds Will Cast Cool Shadow Here Partly cloudy and continued cool is the forecast for tonight ALL SMILES — Winners of top Academy ed the Oscar for her. ‘LAWRENCE’ CONQUERS Early in the night, as technical awards were announced, it looked like a sweep for "Lawrence of Arabia.” It almost was. The $12-mllllon _ j. - . ‘ii, niuiuBi nw. »n» it together backstage last night. From ford, holding Oscar won by Anne Bancroft ror movle -j th0 mysterious World - * • ‘ - u—■* actress in “The Miracle Woriwr;^™^Ed war I hero won seven Oscars for Gregory Peck, best actor In “To Kill a ..„3kbMblra:’'.Patty Duke, best supporting actress In “The Miracle Worker;” Joan Craw- (Continued on Page'2, Col. 5) 'I Morning winds northerly at five miles per hour will shift to north to northeast late today at 8 to 16 m.p.h. i “. , Thirty-four was the low reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The 2 p.m. recording was 45. ^ | v f Wi mm Rusk Pledges Continued to SE Asians ‘ W - THE PONTiAC rn^SS, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1963 • * „ From Qur News Wires PARIS - Secretary of State Dean Rusk today pledged a continuation* of adequate U.S. economic aid to Southeast Asia in the drive to combat increasing Communist threats in the area. ~9T~the need for helping the Asian countries. He went out of his way to reassure the SEATO officials that the United States has no intention of making large cuts in its aid, as was indicated in a report to President Kennedy by a special investigating team headed by Rusk told the ministers council of the Southeast Asia Treaty { Organization (SEATO) that the |Gen. Lucius D. Clay. American people are convinced Up $27 Million Warming of relations between France and the United States and Britain tightened the SEATO alliance as it held its second day of consultations. The meeting ends tomorrow. REPEATS CONCERN In his speech to the closed session, Rusk reiterated U.S. con-c e r n he expressed yesterday (Continued From Page One) for a final total valuation on real property of $151,706,800. The assessor recommended a valuation of $156,754,100 for tax ajj0Uj purposes on personal property. The board reduced this by $1,400 for a final total valuation of $156,752,700 on personal U. S. Asks Soviets to Intervene, Page *7 A major-portion of this year’s board deductions was a $1,077,200 attributed to urban renewal demolition and clearance. A n other $73,000 drop came from properties being condemed by the State Highway Department for highway right of way in Pontiac. The big overall Increase was due largely to a jump In the personal property assessment to General Motors Corporation. Bloe recommended the GM personal property assessed valuation be set at $128,728,200 - about 40.84 per cent of GM’s estimate ■ of actual value. APPEAL DENIED GM appealed for a $31.9 million reduction of the recommend-•id valuation. The board denied the GM appeal and left Bloe’s figure unchanged. A GM spokesman the corporation may appeal the board’s action to the State Tax Commission, but no definite de-cision has yet been reached. “General Motors has always been known to pay their fair share of the cost of local government,” said W. Ray Ransom chairman Of the tax review board. ★ * * “Their figures have been broken down in the same way other industrial figures are handled." Last year’s tax board granted a $15 million deduction to General Motors after the corporation appealed its personal property assessment as recommended by the city assessor. L Viet Nam, Thailand and the Sino-Indian dispute. Though he pledged an aid program of “adequate size,” Rusk warned Southeast Asian nations they must recognize that eacht-foreign aid program has to be reviewed in the light of available funds. He stressed that there must be what he termed “a sensible, reasonable program” that would meet the needs of the greatest number of people. The council was to go into the Laotjon situation and its threat to neighboring Thailand in detail at another closed-door session this afternoon. The prospect that the pro-Com-munist Pathet Lao would take over all of northern Laos made the situation in the adjoining Southeast Asian kingdoms the major item before the council. Laos is not a member of SEATO, and the 1962 Geneva agreement which neutralized Laos in effect bars SEATO intervention there. But a Pathet Lao takeover probably would bring an increase in Red subversion in northeast Thailand and a Thai appeal for help from the alliance. Elaborating today’s speech by Rusk, conference sources said Rusk had described the Laos situation as very critical. They quoted him as saying the first objective is to stop the fighting and to learn more of what is going on there. LAOS REFUGEES — Arriving in Vientiane aboard a Russian plane, Laotian refugees flee fighting between the Communist Pathet Lao and neutralist forces on the Plaihe des Jarres, where the Reds are battling for undisputed control of the north. To Equip Underseas Force U.S., Britain Reveal Polaris Deal WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States and Britain made public today an agreement under which Britain will buy U.S. Polaris missiles in such quantities as it requires *to equip an underseas nuclear striking force. * The agreement was signed here Saturday by Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Ambassador Sir David Ormsby Gore. It was made public concurrently with its presentation to Parliament by the British government; which they would require 18 Po- maintained in. order to assure laris missiles each. The size of the nuclear underseas fleet could be larger than that eventually, however, authorities said. The text did not specify the number of the missiles to be sold to Britain but officials said that as far as can now be seen it will be up to 100, depending on Britain’s construction program. The fact that the agreement had been' signed had been disclosed Saturday but terms were withheld at that time. COULD BE LARGER U.S. authorities have under-,..v JUMP stood the British planned to build Rusk said it was hoped that four missile-edrrying subs for forces from Communist North! Viet Nam would be turned out of Laos and that the International Control Commission, a watchdog body, could enter the area of the fighting for a first hand study, the sources reported. The Weather vmsm Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Partly cloudy and continued cool today, tonight and Wednesday. High today and Wednesday near 50. Low tonight 35. North to northeast winds 8 to 15 miles. Lowtib tompertturt preceding At I i.m.; Wind Velocity S .Moon rlM> W«d. * 30 39 Miami Beach 90 49 30 Milwaukee 39 49 31 New orleapa 17 90 39 New York 03 93 90 Omaha NATIONAL WEATHER — A few scattered showers or snow flurries are expected tonight in the northern and central Appalachians and into the southern Ohio Valley while a few showers and thunderstorms are likely in the central Plains and parts of the middle Mississippi Valley, Showers and snow flurries also are expected In the northern Plateau. There will ,be showers on the north Pacific Coast. It will continue mild from the southern Atlantic Coast to the western Gulf Coast; cop! from tHfr|northern and central gentle Coast westward to the northern Plains., , Negro Singer to Lead March Willing to Go to Jail, Says Al Hibbler compatibility of equipment. Dems Criticize 'Risky' GQP Say Fund Rejection Spark Recession WASHINGTON (UPI)-Demo-Cratic congressional leade charged after a jmeeting with President Kennedy today that Republicans appeared to be “willing to risk a recession to Win an elec- Speaker John W. McCormack lashed out at the GOP bongres-sional leadership f in reporting thdt Kennedy was “very much concerned” at the House- Appropriations Committee’s rejection last week of the administration’s request for $500 million for Job-creating public works projects.; McCormack noted that all Republican members of the committee voted to deny the funds. They were joined by several conservative Democrats in the 22-19 vote. ‘BLIND OPPOSITION’ McCormack said the committee vote “clearly evidences the blind opposition of the great majority of the Republican party in both houses of Congress. The speaker said the committee action “raises the- question whether the. Republican leadership is willing to risk a recession to win an election.” • McCormack added: “They make speeches against unemployment — and they vote downrprograms to help employment. "They, forget about the deficit when they recommend cutting corporation taxes for the rich— but they forget about the unemployed when they cut out public works for our towns and cities.” . BIRMINGHAM - City Ccnfe missioners last night elected fellow commissioner William H. Burgum to the post of mayor. The ballot was unanimous. Burgum, 48, of 1875 Winthrop Lane, succeeds Mrs. Florence H. Willett, who did not run for re-election. \- ' He has served on (he commission for five years and was re-elected when his term expired this year. The new mayor said he “ap predated the confidence and Britain, according to the agreement, will pay the UJ5. “the normal cost of missiles and equipment based on common contract , prices" plus charges for U.S. gov- real estate brokers from encour-ernment services, plus 5 per cent of the contract price as a contribution to current research and development expenses. The agreement is a further step in a plan developed by President Kennedy and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan in a conference at Nassau last December. GOP Caucus Holds Bills' Fate (Continued From Page One) Macmillan agreed to take the more advanced Polaris in place of the now-discarded Sky bol t bomber-launched missile. He also agreed that the submarine striking force thus created would be committed to the NATO defense system along with matching U.S. forces. The United States agreed to provide technical information to help the British create their force. But the agreement made public today specifically “does not . (authorize the sale of, or transmittal of information concerning the nuclear propulsion plants of United States submarines.” “The government of the United Kingdom,” the agreement says, “Will provide the submarines in which will be installed the mis-Islles and equipment to be pro-BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — vided under this agreement, and New racial demonstrations were wm provide the warheads for planned today and blind singer Al these missiles.” aging, suggesting or recommending that home sellers select purchasers on the basis; of race, religion, color or national origin. Since passing the Senate, the bill has remained In the House State Affairs Committee. Rep. Lloyd Gibbs, R-Portland, said yesterday he couldn’t predict its fate as the deadline approached. A GOP caucus decision on (he minimum wage bill, a House substitute, for a Senate-approved^ measure calling for a $1.15 wage floor, was coupled with a demand by Democrats that the House Labor Committee be forced to report the bill out. *■ ★ * ■ House Speaker Allison Green, Hibbler said he would lead prayer march in this Deep South city. “I’m willing to go to Jail," said Hibbler. “I’m Itching to go to Jail,” the Rev. Ralph D. Abernathy told some 300 chanting Negroes who attended a rally Monday night. ★ * * Ninety-six Negroes have been arrested since demonstrations began last Wednesday. Of these, 55 have been convicted of trespassing after warning and sentenced to 180 days in jail and fined $100 ich. Cases against .41 others arrested in racial demonstrations were sent to Federal Court. They claimed their civil rights were violated in city court trial. ★ it it The Revv Fred L. Shuttles worth, Negro minister, told newsmen that the U.S. attorney general’s office had asked integration leaders for a moratorium on their direct action fight. We have been qnder a moratorium too long,” said Shuttles-worth. "We turned them down. We are here for the duration, Many of us are willing to die, If necessary, on1 the street of Birmingham.” Alabama Public Safety Director Al Lingo sent 100 highway patrolmen to Birmingham and stationed them on the city’s outskirts. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr,, of Atlanta, told Monday night’s gathering: “We have to go to jail en masse and fill up the jails of Birmingham. If we do that we will turn this city up-fsfde down and right side up.” “Close coordination between the executive agencies (U.S. Navy and British Admiralty) of the contracting governments will be in Bus Crash SANDUSKY, Ohio (AP) -A Greyhound bus slammed Into the rear of a steel - laden truck on the Ohio Turnpike near here today, killing a woman bus passenger and hospitalizing four other passengers. *' ★ ★ Forty - two other passengers on the double - deck bus, en route to New York City from Chicago, were hospitalized in Norwalk. They were released after treatment for minor Injuries. The dead woman was not identified immediately. * * *. The collision, which occurred six miles east of the Sandusky Interchange, sheared off the right front portion of the bus. The O h I o Highway Patrol said four seats in that section, Including one occupied by the dead woman, were hurled out of the bus. The truck: driver was identified as Nora'lf Bendiksen, 49, of Garden pity, Mich. He was not injured. R-Kingston, said he was not sure the minimum wage bill — declared dead last week by Rep, Rlemer Van Til, R-Holland, Labor Committee chairman — would be brought before the cau-:us. But Rep. Marie Hager, R-Lansing, a sponsor of the House substitute version, said she intended to ask that committee Republicans support the measure and bring it to the floor. “I admit there’s not great hope,” she said. I think it depends pretty much on how much influence the governor can exert on this bill.” ★ ★ Sr Less fireworks were expected on the school bus bill, which had all but six of the 34 senators as sponsors and cleared that chamber by a nearly-unanimous vote. The measure would require public school districts providing bus transportation for their students to make 'it available as well to private and parochial school students living within the district. Estimates of the total cost per ydar, with the state paying about two - thirds, have ranged from $800,000 to $1.4 million. THRILLED -Anhe Bancroft slaps her hand against her face in disbelief as she learns she has won an Oscar as best actress of 1962. She Is now appearing in a play on Broadway and wasn’t able to accept her award in person. Bancroft, Peck Win Osgars (Continued From Page One) sound, film editing, music score, color art direction, cinematography, best director (Britisher David Lean) and best movie. Blonde Miss Duke, sweet II and a high school Junior, was so stunned she could only sob, ‘‘Thank you,” before the nationwide television hudience. Backstage, she said that was all she intended to say—“and I didn’t think I’d get a chance to say that.” She-clutched her Oscar to b(\som of her green silk organza drjsss and said: “i will hol$t onto it forever.”, Little Change in- Weather By The Associated Press The nation’s weather pattern showed only minor Changes today, with a feto wet spots, cool across northern areas and fairly mild in the South. / There was considerable cloudiness throughout the country but no stormy weather was reported. The main precipitation belts were In the northern Rockies and northern Plains with light rain and snow in higher elevations. Light rain sprinkled areas in Ohio and West Virginia and snow powdered most sections of Maine. E. Berlin Border Guard Darts to Western Side BERLING (UP!) — An East German corporal carrying his submachinegun fled to West Berlin In daylight yesterday. Other patrolling border guards did not see the 20-year-old corporal crawling through barbed wire entanglements, and no shots were fired. ‘ Many Die in FlashtFlood AMMAN, Jordan W> - A flash flood In a deep gorge-was blamed today for the deaths of 23 French women tourists, a French priest and an unknown number of Jordanians near the ancient city" of Petra, in South Jordqn. , Birmingharln Area News Unanimous Ballot Seats Commissioner as Mayor Soviets Warn About N-Ihreat Note Hits at NATO Multination Force MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet Union has told the United States the creation of a multination nuclear force under the North Atlantic Tfreaty Organization will 'unleash a race in rocket-nuclear armaments,” Tass, the Soviet news agency said today. ★ ★ * The statement was made in a Soviet government vote to the United States handed by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko to the U.S. ambassador in Moscow Monday. It described the NATO nuclear force plan as an attempt to give the BUndeswehr - West German armyr-and the “armed forces of other countries access to nUclear-rocket weapons, to extend preparations for thermonuclear war and to unleash a race in nuclear-rocket armaments transcending all national and geographic boundaries.” STRENGTH POLICY The Soviet government declared that the plan is "a modern expression of the position of strength policy, a policy of pressure and ' dictate of which nuclear weapons are proclaimed as the main element and core.” * The Soviet government called on the U.S. government to help resolve the paramount international problems and, by joint effort, to halt the race in nuclear-rocket armaments, TaSs said. Tis Spring! Classes Get Vacations , Spring and Easter vacations beckon Pontiac area school children this week. ★ * ★ Pontiac public school pupils will get a rest from classroom chores beginning at the close of school Wednesday and continuing until Wednesday, Ap;il 17. This includes both elementary and senior high school students. ★ , Sr , ★ • Students at St. Michael School get off at the close of school Wednesday and return Monday, April 22. St. Frederick School pupils will be d IsmIssed at noon Thursday and return April 22. Emmanuel Christian School will close at the regular time Wednesday and reopen Wednesday, April 17; Waterford Township p u b 11 school students will begin t h e i spring vacation at the close of school Wednesday and return on Wednesday of next week. ★ ★ ★ All Our Lady' of the Lakes School students will start their vacation at noon Thursday and return April 22. EARLIEST DISMISSAL Students at St. Benedicts School get off the earliest of schools. The St. Benedict youngsters were to begin their vacation at the close of school today and not return until Monday, April 22. ★ * * The St. Benedict pupils gained an extra day vacation because of the pastor’s feast day, which is allowed any time during the year. Oakland University students receive a spring vacation break between semesters. -Class sessions end Thursday and the new semester doesn’t begin until Thursday, April 2§. HoWever. students must register Apk*il 24 for the new semester, \! i.nifkJ trust shown in asking me to do the job and follow in the footsteps of one who’s served so well the past three years. “There are some responsibilities I cannot accept to the extent that Mrs, wiijett did.” He referred to the kisses bestowed on' commissioners at Mrs. Willett’s last' 'commission meet-ing, , ;. •, i , OTHER OFFICERS Also taking the oath of office were new commissioners David F. Breck and William E, Roberts, who is serving his fourth term on the commission. Another unanimous choice was election of Robert W. Page as mayor pro tern, succeeding Burgum. In other action, the commission voted to eliminate the 19 cent twilight golf rate at Spring-dale Park. ★ * * According to Arthur F I t c h, manager of the course, congestion was caused by golfers arriving before 8 p. m. when the lower rate became effective, then waiting to purchase the 50-cent rather than the $f ticket. 1 As many as 40 persons were reported to wait, with some groups held up for an hour. City Manager L. R. Gare-' pointed out that this was not a move to pull in more revenue, but an attempt to erase conjes-tion at the No. 1 tee at 8 p. m. ★ ★ Also adopted was a resolution supporting the annexation of the Springdale Park property to the city of Birmingham. Presently located within Bloomfield Township, the-property was purchased by the city in 1947. The resolution will be passed on to the Township Board for consideration. Lyman J. Craig was elected last night' to replace John S. Bu-s as Bloomfield Hills mayor. Craig, mayor pro tem in 1962, has served on the commission since 1955 and was mayor In 1959. Bugas was defeated at the polls last week. New commissioner Louis J. Colombo Jr. was elected mayor pro tem. David W. Lee, also elected to the commission last week, was appointed ex-officio member of the Bloomfield Hills Planning Commission. * * *. Robert J. Stadler was reappointed clerk-treasurer, and City Manager Elmer Kephart was named assessor and representative to the county board of supervisors. In its first action, the commission passed an ordinance which requires persons planning to excavate within the city to purchase permits. The city will then notify public utility The ordinance was passed to avoid fires caused by broken gas lines, according to Stadler, public safety director. Area Man Named to Athletic Board LANSING —Governor George Romney today announced the appointment of Dean Rockwell of Pleasant Ridge to the State Athletic Board of Control. Rockwell, who will be the coach of the 1984 U.S, Olympic wrestling team, is tee first appointee to the board, which controls boxing in the state of Michigan. "Is it lawful to give | tribute unto Caesar?" | Matt. 22:17 That Tuesday of His j Passion Week . . . His J down-fall still the High j Priests seek . . Their efforts they wllj not relax.- 4 > “Shall we to Caesar pay the tax?” , . ., They ask of.Christ in Hopes that He . . . Will speak some word of heresy . V *. j Against Jehovah or de- j dare . . . Some treason, j but He bids them bear \ ... To God due tribute i and to pay . . i To \ Caesar his to their dls- I may. JULIBN C. HYER ! / FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1963 Troy Zone Poll Sinks Developer's Suit S TROY—-The City Commission last night knocked the bottom out of a Circuit Court suit filed against it by. de* ^elopers objecting to new zoning, regulations on minimum lot sizes. | In an informal poll, the commissioners yoted 6-1 in favor of adopting a smaller minimum lot size in the R-1B zoning classification. Trus- P mW'-wmmmmmm 17 Churches ito Unite on Good Friday Developers based their case on S state law requiring approval by a three-fourths majority of the commission-elect when more SWORN IN - Taking the oath of office for than 20 per cent of the property Troy Commission seats last night were new owners affected file a protest. Commissioner Glen H. Houghten and incum-City Attorney Stanley Burke bent Clifford Sutermeister Jr., who was^ resaid today that although toe Informal poll itself doesn’t ' -ROCHESTER — Seven local ^lurches will unite for a communitywide Good Friday service from noon to 3 p.m. at the first Congregational Church. 7 Sponsored by the Rochester Ministerial Association, the servile will be divided into seven segments. Persons may come and |o between each section. *“The Garden of Gethsemane,” "presented by Rev. Robert Her-jnanson of toe University Presbyterian Church, will begin the service. • It will be followed by “The ecclesiastical Trial,” given by Rev. J. Douglas Parker of St Eaul’a Methodist Church, with auren Frank as soldist. ~Rev. Leon Dayringer from Paul's will' continue with “The Courtyard,” followed by Jack Zahn of the Rochester YMCA and "The Temple.” -Soloist during this part will be Mrs. Harold Sherman. Z Focusing on “The Civil Trial” ivill be Rev. Lloyd Buss Of ^Abiding Presence Lutheran Church. Next, Rev. Robert Jacobson of First Congregation ^Church will present “The Road Xalvary.” with Mrs. Laurence 'Kirkton'as soloist. . The climax, “Calvary ,1’ will be toe meditation offered by Rev. Thomas Riddle of the Nazarene Church. An offering may be placed in toates at the entrance to the nave. It will be used by the min-Jfterial association in the community. The commission set April 29 the date for the hearing. It expected that a formal 6-1 vote will be received after the hearing, thus making the developers’ court stand unapplicable. AVERT TRIAL This will avert the long trial anticipated with only a 4-3 approval of the new minimum lot : Replace Usual Service «UNION LAKE - The Four Towns Methodist Church on Cooley Lake Road will replace its traditional Good Friday service With a Maundy Thursday communion service to be held at 7:45 g.m. tee Clifford Sutermeister Jr. was the sole dissenter. The contesting suit, filed in Oakland County Circuit Court by six land developers, claimed that the City Commission’s Feb. 25 adoption of the new zoning rule by a 4-3 vote was invalid. SOUTHFIELD - Philip B. Peterson was elected president of the Southfield City Council last night succeeding C. Hugh Dohany, who declined to seek a fifth term. Peterson, Michigan Beil Telephone Co. executive, was elected in 1961 to a four-year term on the council. He is currently serving on three city committees — wage and salary adjustments, school liaison and finance. elected to office. Pictured are (from left) Clerk J. Lawson Lockhart, Mayor Robert J. Huber, Sutermeister and Houghten. The new commissioner unseated Roy L. Duncan in the April 1 election to win the second vacant seat. any direct effect on toe knit, it toys toe foundation for passage of a new zoning rule after a When toe zoning amendment was approved by the city, Commissioners Robert J. Bar-gert, Roy L. Duncan and Gif-ford Sutermeister Jr. registered nay votes. Last night, Bargert did an about-face and new Commissioned Glen H. Houghten, who feated Duncan in the April 1 election, also voted in favor of the new lot-size minimum. WALLED LAKE — New councilman Milton A. Parrish gained two distinctions last night — he was elected mayor of this municipality and his election took only five ballots. The fast action of toe seven councilmen, five of whom were elected last week, gave apparent substance to the claim that “things are going to be different.” Although he had voted against the amendment before, Bargef said he changed his stand to ip-us out of court.” I The n e w zoning amendment stems from the State Supreme Court’s ruling last September that toe half-acre minimum lot size, in effect here then, was “unreasonable” and therefore illegal. The protesting developers claim that even the revised lot i are still too large for proper growth of the city. The commission also discussed the setting of h o u s e sizes t, but agreed to wait until toe lot size controversy was solved before tackling the problem. In Walled Lake Mayor Elected in Six Minutes the nod from JMs fellow council-men on the 82nd ballot, cast at a w i'c e-continued organizational session. The final mayoralty ballots ere cast just six minutes after the organizational meeting started. Last night’s figures compare favorably to the record 169 ballots it took to elect Marshall E. Taylor in 1961. Last year Louis E. James got LAST TIME Parrish is the last mayor to be elected by the Walled Lake City Council. Voters there last week approved a charter amendment which provides for the popular election of mayor. G. Kellogg ,Jr. was elected may-pro tern and Taylor, representative on the County Board of Supervisors. Taylor served in that post from 1955-61. After their 12-mlnute organizational meeting, the councilmen reconvened to name Clerk Shirley J. Ryden temporary budget officer. The amendment will go into effect next year. The new mayor said he will resign tonight as chairman of toe Walled Lake Planning Commission, a post he has held for a year. * On two first ballots, Wendell The new mayor appointed Kellogg, Donald M. Post and Robert J. Buffmyer as members of an advisory committee to work with her. Elect Philip Peterson Southfield President Last year’s four representa- Choir to Offer Easter Cantata tives from Southfield to the Oakland County Board of Supervisors wsre reappointed for the coming year. They are Mayor S. James Clarkson, Lloyd Gabler and councilmen Clarence A. Durbin and Dohany. - Last night’s organizational meeting, following a precedent set last year, was part of the inaugural program for elected city officials. Held in the South-field Seniqr High School auditorium,, it was attended by 300 local residents. OXFORD - Thursday, at 7:30 Oxford Methodist At the close of thq session, Clarkson proclaimed April 17 as Brotherhood Day in the city. That date will also commemorate the city’s fifth birthday. Gov. George Romney will be featured speaker at toe twofold event. the Church Senior Choir will present an Easter cantata, “Hallelujah, What A Savior,” by John Peterson. Mrs. Ralph Curtis will direct the singers.* The narration, consisting of Scripture readings which tell the Easter story, will be read by James McGraw. The solo parts Will be sung by Barbara Mapley, Mrs. Joyce Wood, Harold Ehle, Murle Davis and Lee Shaw. Mrs. Elva Willows will play the organ and Mrs. Harold Ehle will be at the piano. Immediately following the musical presentation, Holy Communion will be observed. On Easter morning services will be at 9:45 and 11:00 a.m. Sunday school will be held for the p r i m a r y department only during the early service. The mayor commented on 'tremendous growth” of S o u t h-ffeld, already third largest city in Oakland County with a population of 35,000. He predicted that another five years would see it overtake Royal Oak and Pontiac to become the county’s “most populous community.” Special Education Chief to Address Scotch PTA ORCHARD LAKE - Dr. Paul Thomas, special education director for Oakland County schools, will speak at tonight’s meeting of the Scotch Elementary School PTA. BARBARA J. HOSLEY The engagement of Barbara Jane Hosley to John Brana has been announced by her mother, Mrs. Marion R.. Sears, 2254 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake. The prospective bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Nicolae Cjarje of Dearborn. A June 22 wedding at the Walled Lake Methodist Church is being planned.- OK Contract in Troy for Pumping Station TROY—A $398,300 contract for construction of a water pumping station at the corner of 20-Mile and Dequindre roads was awarded yesterday to the F. H. Martin Construction Co. of Flint. The facility will be used to pump Detroit water to Pontiac and other northern Oakland County communities.-Martin was the lowest of five bidders competing for the project. The water facilities center here is scheduled to go Into operation by July 1, according to Gerald J. Remus, general manager of Deo trolt’s Water Department. State Traffic Kills 372 EAST LANSING (IH - Traffic accidents have killhd 372 persons The meeting is scheduled for 8jin Michigan so tar this year, pro-p.m. in the multipurpose room visional figures compiled By state of the school, 5810 Commerce police showed today. The toll at 'this date last year was 316. 3 Area Candidates Petition for Recount Two candidates for supervisor and one seeking to retain a clerk’s position — all Republicans — have filed recount petitions in three area townships. Leonard F. Terry, a candidate for supervisor in Pontiac Township, has requested a recount of the six precincts there. He was defeated by incumbent Leroy Davis (D) by only In Brandon Township, outgoing Clerk Galen H. Whipple has filed a recount of the township’s two precincts. Mrs. H. Lucille Saunders (D) was successful in her bid to unseat the incumbent by a vote of 438 to 424. Groveiand Township, Republican candidate William Sc rami in squeezed by incumbent Supervisor Earl B. Rhlnevault, also a Republican, by two votes. Rhlnevault has also filed a recount petition. In Brandon and Groveiand townships toe recount can be started at any time, because toe voting was done by paper ballots which were kept separate from the state polling. Pralltt Prim Phil! Z INSPIRATION - Prize winners In the pos- j , ------—...... ter contest for Rochester fjflgli School art third place; Sup Ozburq, 17, a senior, first; and •students to publicize the Jaycees’ annual Easter Sharen Dyer, 17, a junior, second. The egg »mag Huht Sunday, posh with the animal which hunt, for children of elementary school age and -init!* u-.ii, _ _» -* "'-(wnship ^provided them with their inspiration. They, younger, wifi be held 1 p.m. at Avon Towns lilt (from lefff Melinda Combes, i'6>% Junior;™ Park. 1 , , -,:b ■ ■ ■ - 16 votes, 892 to 876. Davis was the only Democrat elected in Tallying 213 sticker votes in However in Pontiac Township, where voters recorded their choices on machines, the recount will be postponed until the state glvesr permission to unlock the voting equipment. S This will be after a final decision on the state races & made. United Service Slated Friday in Clarkston CLARKSTON — Area churches will conduct a united Good Friday service from 1 to 2 p.m. at First Methodist Church. , Rev, Jack Giguere, associate minister of the host church, will preach. Choral music will be provided by the Wesleyan Choir of the First' Methodist Church. Members of the Clarkston Rotary Club will usher. Participating churches Jhclude Calvary Lutheran, Drayton Heights Free Methodist, First Baptist, First Methodist, Resurrection Episcopal and Sashabaw United Presbyterian. . »' FLASH! FROM MOBIL ECONOMY RUN RAMBLER AMERICAN”440 WINS CLASS C 28.61 MILES PER GALLON New Hardtop Beats Other Large-Engine Compacts In Los Angeles-To-Detroit Run Chalk up another trophy for Rambler! A stock Rambler American "440” Hardtop with Flash* O-Matic transmission and 125 horses under its bonnet (the famed Rambler OverheadWalve Six) took on the most fuel-sparing cars in its class—scored the best gas mileage of them all. Rambler did it over a tougher-than-ever Los Angeles-to-Detroit route, too. So once again Rambler claims its right to the much sought after title, America’s Economy King. Yet top fuel economy is only one of the big benefits that earned Rambler ’63 the coveted “Car of the Year" Award from Motor Trend Magazine. All the other clear-cut superiorities in performance and comfort and dollar-for-dollar value are spelled out in the free ’63 Car X-Ray Books—now yours for the asking at your Rambler dealer. Drop in and pick up your copies today. American Motors—Dedicated to Excellence RAMBLER SCORES BEST MILEAGE OF ALL CARS IN ALL, CLASSES! This advertisement approved and the data certified by the United States Auto Club \ RAMBLER 63 Winner of Motor Trend Magazine Award: “PAR OF THE YEAR" Now Ramble, Amerlcih "440" Hardtop If#111 wfl ■ NlS ■ ■fWO PONTIAC CLARKSTON LAKE ORION ROCHESTER UNION LAKE “ lighten 1 Son Rooo Rambler Superior Rambler, ISO Oakland fvt. Bill Sponco, Inc. (tun iohnien Motor Sales' I Select; Used Cars, Too. Buy Now During Your Rambler Dealer’s Used car VALUE PARADE I -1' , * \ /i ■' /f' PONTIAC PRESS Rich Chocolate Mousse Is y Decorated for Easter By JANET ODELL Chocolate Easter Egg Dessert ' Pontiac Press Food. Editor 2 envelopes unflavored gela-Easferi&a delightfully gay”35a^~-<-«^4iae > son, evenin''the food department. 1 cup sugar Just look at the picture on this V* teaspoon salt page. Isn’t that chocolate mousse Vk cups milk delicious looking? 1 12-ounce jumbo package (2 Molded in a melon mold, it cups) or 2 6-ounce packages looks like a giant-size Easter egg (1 cup each) semi-sweet when it is decorated with frosting or whipped cream. Making a mousse is not complicated and is well worth any work involved. Gelatine is the secret of a mousse that holds up. chocolate morsels 2 teaspoons vanilla 1 pint (2 cups) heavy cream, whipped Mix together gelatine, sugar and salt in 2V4 quart saucepan. If you don’t have the kind of Stir in milk and semi-sweet choc-mold called for, use a mixing olate morsels. Place over medi-bowl. The dessert will be round, urn heat, stirring constantly, until not oval in shape. gelatine is dissolved and choco- late is melted. Remove from heat, beat with rotary beater urn ill chocolate is blended. Stir in vanilla. Chill, stirring occasionally, until mixture mounds slightly when dropped from a spoon. Fold in whipped cream. Turn into a 10-cup melon mold or use a round mixing bowl of 10-cup capacity for your mold. To determine the bowl’s capacity, fill with water by the cupful. The liquid should fill .the bowl right to the top of the rim. Chill until firrii. Unmold on serving platter. Decorate with confectioner’s sugar frosting or with frosting in tubes or garnish With whipped cream. Yield: 12 servings. Sweet Pet a Delight EASTER DESSERT - Mold a rich chocolate mousse in a special pan or eveiFa bowl. ’ When tiirned out arid decorated, it will look like a gigantic Easter egg and pretty as a picture. Simplicity itself to make, the mousse will be good for summer meals later on. Tp.Encf Series at Duo-Piano Performance A program of duo-pianr works c6ncludes this season’ Oakland University Com miu^ty Arts Council serie Wednesday in the OU studen center Gold Room,,8:16 p.m jiff' • * ’ * * 2: Performing artists are Di ;®avid DiChiera, the univers Tty’s assistant professor o jiuslcology, and Robert Fac lecturer in music w w ★ ^"Opening with the Sonata ii UP Major by Johann Chris p|n Bach, the program fee Sfires die first performano ♦re. to weep about,. S*5i>:•• t: Thb cost of bridal and bridesmaid dreses are expected to rise from 110 to $20 as A result of increases in *the wholesale prices of silks *and • imported laces. Js5' (p* :^“MAny-igowna' require up tp ; 10 yards of ' silk and are heayily embellished with 1 laobs. !; r. • I ; Although some members of. the bridal.,industry say they "will to combat' the .price rise' by ' cuttlhg corners in workmanship, and yardage, most feel /that. they must * maintain, /the1 quality and Stjdd of /their designs and paifr on ['the increased costs < toW Wide - or rather her father. <...•’ Womens Section , C. Sheffield (center), whosk home on Motorway Vrive is filled with . interesting antiques,'was hostessi recently to women planning the 11th annual ». antique show and sale at All Saints Episcopal Church. Mrs. Robert Tricher, Dick Avenue, leans over all antique pine desk to look tit tlie captain's chair in front of Mrs.'Thomas Atkinson of Lan-ette Street. MrL'Atkihspn is president of the Episcopal Church Woman. Antique Hunters Invited Antique hunters will have a three-day opportunity to look for Wanted items at the llth annual ahtique show and sale ,ht . All Saints Episcopal ChurchAprfl)6-18. .'Eighteen' dealers from southeastern Michigan and Ohio Will show their wares from 11 a.m. to 10 pm- dally. Herb Martin, dean. o$ the chair caners In Pontiac, will demonstrate his craft and take orders. ’,v ^ A snack bar will be open throughout the show with Mrs. John Hubbard, Mrs. Thomas Atkinson, Mrs. Don Harrison and Mrjg,- John Riley In charge of food. * ‘it- w A wide variety of articles wlj) be displayed: dpUs, coins,\ jewelry, china, silver, glass; of all kinds, brass, lamps,/ket- tles, furniture, accessories, • primitives and oddities. ‘ v■ i it if, Mrs. Roberf Trlcker is general Chairman of the 1963 show. In addition to the women named above, she will be assisted by Mrs. James Nye, Mrs. Horace Hall, Mrs. Fred Cookie, Mrs. Whitney Prall, Mrs. Cyril , Perlman,, Mrs. Larmon Smith, Bruce Melx-sell and Kenneth Burr. > Don't Invite Date In if Clan Sleeps By The Emily Post Institute Q: Will,you please settle the following family argument? When a young woman returns home after midnight from a date, Is It proper for her to invite the young man to come into the house for a cup of coffee and a sandwich? I say It Is, not proper and that afteV seeing her safely to the door, she should bid him good-night. My daughter thinks I am being overly strict and sees no impropriety- in his coming./ Into the house. We would appreciate your opinion. * it it A: If the family has re-• tired, she must not invite or allow him to come into the house. If he asks to come in, she should answer casually-but firmly: "Sorry, another time,” and bid him good-. night. If you, or your husband are still up, It’s perfectly all right to invite her friend in for a dip of coffee and a sandwich. Q: Isn’t It ,up to a new bride to ask relatives of both families to her house as soon as she is settled? My nephew has been married for several months and his bride has not Invited any of us to go to see them. We / all feel slighted over this. ★ ' * it A: Close friends and relatives of the bride and groom do not wait to be asked to go to see them, and they are probably wondering, why you have not done so. Do you find It difficult to eat spaghetti? The new Emily. Post Institute booklet entitled, “Table Rules of Importance,” describes how to eat spaghetti as well as Other difficult foods, TO obtain a copy, send 10 cents In coin and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Hid-’ Uy Post InstltuteTTn care of The Pontiac Press. it ' * / The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this column. ,!" - * « ■ If you’re going visiting at Easter time and there are children in the house, gift thenf with a simple-for-you-to-make candy Bunny. The youngsters will be amused and delighted by your cleverness and be your friends forevermore. Here’s how simple and inexpensive it is to make the Sweet Bunny:’ use orte small and medium styrofoam 6ali;^>ltach smaller ball atop medium ball with toothpicks. Cover entire surface with marshmallows, attaching individually with toothpicks. *. a it Use licorice “neck” for tie i lied gumdrop rings down body for buttons. Eyes are non-pareilS'JMvith miniature march-mallows in center; the' nose is a chocolate kiss r-*1 form the mouth, toothpicks. For ears, peel medium-size bananas cut in half lengthwise and brush with lemon juice. Fasten to head with, wooden skewers or long toothpicks. Mrs. Bunny’s children are made by toothpicking two marshmallows together for head and body. Arms and legs are miniature marshmallows and ears are one large marshmallow cut in half and toothpicked to head. Features are made of chocolate morsels or cloves. CONFECTIONATE BUNNY A Little Truth About People Makes Crass Generalizations By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR MADEMOISELLE ABBY: I am a Frenchman visiting an American friend I met in World War II. Why db you A m e r icans think we F r e nchmen are such devils with the women? I have been married to a lovely ____F f ench- woman for 10 years and have never had the desire to cheat on her. I have' .been to parties in this country and everywhere I go women say to me, "Oh, you Frenchmen! Do you mean to say that you do not Chapter CL Assembles for Meeting Mrs. Clark- J. Morgan of Holly, was hostess and program chairman for the Mon-day afternoon meeting of Chapter CL, PEO Sisterhood. ★ it A Assisting Mrs. Morgan with her program, entitled “Women In the Arts,” were Mrd. George Putnam and Mrs, Vic-tor Lindquist, who sang Easter songs. Mrs. Martin J. Wager and Elda Sutter presented an organ recital, including an original composition played by Mrs. Wager. * * ★ Mrs. Thomas Gallaqt, Huron, Ohio, a former member of the chapter, was a guest.’ have a girl friend on . the side?" Such remarks to me are not funny. JEAN PAUL J. DEAR J. P : If "everywhere” you go women inquire about your infidelity, you’re going to the wrong places. Many Americans are poorly informed on French culture, just as many Frenchmen believe all Americans to be materialistic, loud and showy. The trouble is, there is just enough truth on both sides to make generalizations believable — and annoying. ‘DEAR ABBY: My girl friend has been going out three and four nights a week and doesn't get home until sometimes four in the morning. . She says she is "baby-sitting.” I am beginning to wonder if maybe she isn't stepping out on me. I have my suspicions, but how can I be sure? We are supposed to be married next summer. LEERY * ★ ★ DEAR LEERY: Do a little checking. If your girl friend isn't where she says she'll be, why don’t YOU do a little •’baby-sitting” — if you can find the right baby? DEAR ABBY: When we go to a party most of the men sit around and refuse to dance. My husband is the life, of the p: rty because he’s a wonderfu dancer and he loves to dance. So all the women line up to dance with him. I rarely get to < ance with my .own husband. They ail say, "Uh, you have him all the time!” They must think we dance together at home. The truth is, the only time we get to dance together is when we go out — and then everyone else grabs him. He feels flattered that he is so popular, but don’t you think he owes me a few dances? Or should I just sit and be a good sport when I am dying to dance? WALLFLOWER DEAR WALLFLOWER: Don’t be a wallflower—be a dandy lioness. Insist that the first dance is yours, and if you find yourself sitting alone and tapping your toes, get up and "tap” the woman who is waltzing your hubby around. There’s a big difference between being a good sport and a dope. What’s on your mind? For' a personal reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope^ to Abby, in care of The Pon-tiac Press. To Give Talk on Auto Trip The final tour for armchair travelers is 8 p.m., April 16 in the Village Woman's Club lounge. Mr. and Mrs. Day Krollk Jr., will give a talk, illustrating their motor trip from Italy through Spain last spring. 1 Highlights of the talk include pictures of the Alhambra palace, and El Greco's home and paintings in Toledo, Spain. Armchair travels are open to the public! Anyone interested in attending may in-cfiilre ft the Village Woman’s Club. / THREE COLORS VlHE. PONTIAC PRESS., frUESPAY,, ATO 9, 1968 P'QTTRTEEN )f Conceit Summer vows are planned by Madeline Grace McCormick, daughter of the Harold McCormicks of Milford, and Roger Dale Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Williams of Emerson Avenue. Both are seniors at Oakland University. By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN There Is nothing wrong with a good healthy ego! I do not mean that it is good to be conceited, but unless a person respects himself and believes in himself how can he be free to have faith in life and in others? If your go is healthy you can and Huron Street. A pvt, attractive widow, Mrs. Smith proves that a woman over SO can adjust to changes inher life and find a fob with which she is happy. MADELENE GRACE McCORMICK Name Group Chairmen Chairmen to head two newi auxiliary-sponsored service groups were named at the Monday evening meeting of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Auxiliary at the nurses’ home. Mts«jCLJ. Thomas will head the pediatrics committee, with Mrs. J. B. Van Cronkhite heading the junior auxilitary. Mrs. Phyllis Addison, librarian of medical records, spoke to the group on the number, problems and uses of the case histories. Volunteers from the local St. Joseph’s Hospital Auxiliary will be in charge of the Import Fair at the American Field Service Festival at Grosse Points War I Memorial April 27. Imported _ handmade sweaters, foreign dolls, and patio accessories Will be on sale. proceeds will be used in the foreign exchange program of the American Field Service. To Talk on School Vigdis Mertensen, a student from Norway, will speak on differences in the education programs of her country and the United States at Tuesday’s 7:30 p.m. meeting of the Carl Sandburg PTA. Entertainment by the school chorus is glso scheduled. *f golden (N^Nli mmm mm •und«B Dairy Queen topped with crunchy butter paoan. Only Dairy Quaan baa that wonder- Pontiac Area Dairy Queens EMPHASIS BANDEAU Ntw Maidenform bra puts the emphasis on peiftct shape for spring outfits 200 'CHARGE IT' Circli-stitched cups shape and accentuate, Vyrena®spandex front gives snug fit, baautiful separation. Have a prettier figure under dll your naw spring outfits. White 32A-38C. Shop Federal's Today! Ut'our expertly trained eenetleret fU you correctly for comfort and figure flattery./ Nurses Unit to Hear Talk by Doctor Elliott Luby, MD, will speak on 'Psychopharmacology’’ at the monthly meeting of the Oakland County District Nurses Association, 7:30 pm. Tuesday at Beaumont Hospital. Dr. Luby is a graduate of the University of Chicago and of the Washington School of Medicine. He served his psychiatric residency at Yale University. #, Sr ★ For the past six years, Dr. Luby has been associated with the Lafayette Clinic, where he is presently director of clinicaTserV-ices.. In addition, he is professor of psychiatry at Wayne State Uni-versity’s college of medicine. * ★ * All registered nurses are invited to attend the meeting. For further information contact Mrs. Alien or Miss Purdy at the Oakland County Health Department. Use Soda on Steam Iron If the Inside of your steam iron appears to have rusted and is discoloring the cloths you press, disconnect iron, fill dumbo* with hot water mixed with a couple of tablespoons of sal soda. ~ Let it stand, swish it around from time to time. Repeat process until emptied water looks clear. retires from life. Another may seem to be a braggart aod becomes extremely load In order to get the at- teeth* be needs h erder te rekhred’hb faltering ege. Some folks Just seem to be bom with nice, normal healthy self* respectand self-confiijence while others have to earn it with a larger outlook, with philosophic thought (thus getting their values straightened out), with a determined interest in others and, most important, by learning to do something well, to excel In some oriN iviar NIGHT TO * DOWNTOWN ANO DRAYTON TWAINS Scoyoc-Radke Nuptials Held in Area Church. Nancy Jane Radke ex* changed vows with Seaman James E. Van Scoyoc of Norfolk, Va. before Rev. Mires MRS. J. E. VAN SCOYOC at Easter time rtmombor your lovod one* with a box of Crockor's delicious quality candies. Have you tried one of $ M Whin Dlx .96 | Woolwih 2.50 Worthln 1.50 Xl 2B‘J 28'J 28V* 22 ml 72“ k mk 3 30:,o 30'a 30 V* to work out technical details of the proposed circuit. There also are important political decisions to be taken, such as the inclusion of third countries, routing of the cable, transmission procedure and an agreed system for using the circuit in emergen-' cies. There apparently is po argument about'what language to use. The two governments seem to agree that each *would transmit in its own language, leaving the other to do its own translating. Teletype machines with both Latin and Cyrillac characters would be placed at both terminal points. payment within 10 days, and 4 per cent if paid in 70 days. But in some industries, companies are demanding and getting as long as four to five months to pay. Ten years ago the standard terms were 30 days, of credit to business by hanks, and the total is DAWSON estimated at more than 3100 billion. Manufacturers’ investment ir accounts receivable is put at just under $30 billion. Commercial bank loans were estimated at $42 biliion last year by the Federal Reserve Board. Wholesalers’ books carry at least $10 billion more. The total has doubled in the last 10 years. Past due accounts on manufacturers’ books are put at 19.7 per cent of the total extensions by the WASHINGTON iff) - Foreign Aid Director David E. Bell said today U.S. military and economic aid to underdeveloped countries “is helping to wage the epic battle of our time, the battle between freedom and communism." WASHINGTON W - Rep. William S. Broomfield, R-Oakland ening their discount oCfprs for STEP UP EXTENSIONS prompter payment. . ^ Businessmen are stepping UP EXTEND TERMS T their credit extensions from other But as many or more corpora-traditional sources. Bank loans tions, are extending, willingly or have increased in the last decade, not, longer terms to customers, along with general business activ-In the keen competition of recent ity. And a boom in factoring In a months, businessmen have been number of industries is reported, able to shop around and demand Factors estimate total volume that suppliers assume the credit last year came to $5 billion, up burden that is involved in carry- $400 million from 1961, andl ai 60 ipg inventories. P®r cent jump from the $3 billion Gerrlt J. Popma, president of of 10 years ago. .... Textile Banking Co., a factoring The factor buys his clients ac-firm says, “today many indus- counts -receivable, paying the trial’firms don’t know whether manufacturer cash when t h e they’re in the manufacturing or goods are shipped and assuming sales finance business.” Tull credit responsibility for col- * * * lecting from the customer—at a ifCGe The foundation reports that half; consumert or buyer's, mar-of the business executives it has ket hag adde(j t0 the growth of ^st oned believe that collectinglbusine8S credit) according to Wal-bills from wholesalers and reta l-jter M( Kell pre8ident of Com-ers will be harder In 1963 than in mercia, Factors Corp. To meet t a the competition, Kelly says, the Some m«”ufacturew now ^ are I manufacturer must find a financ-■fMlMjiMk ing plan that lets him “offer the - right product to the right customers in the right quantity at the right price and at the right time.” ' ★ ★ ★ If the economy starts to move ahead faster, as hoped, both Popma and Kelly see need for a new approach to trade credit, taking some of the burden recently shouldered by manufacturers. Other factoring firms make the _ . ...___________.___ Jsame pitch: manufacturers are County, and other members of becominc t00 involved in credit offering to deduct 5 per cent for Broomfield's Committee Focuses on Rough Spots’ $85,000 Unit Announced hr Area Clinic the House Foreign Affairs Committee are focusing critical attention on two rough, spots in the global fabric of foreign relations. The two rough spots getting special scrutiny in hearings on the administration’s $4.S-billion foreign aid budget request are left-leaning Indonesia and the vendetta between India, and Pakistan over Kashmir. Broomfield yesterday, said he would offer an amendment to the foreign aid bill specifically banning aid of any kind to Indonesia. becoming too involved in credit and it's time ti>4urn more to the pros. But ‘Prentice-Hall publishing firm advises, businessmen should make fullest possible yse of trade payment terms.” . ' *,i, **-,i Successful* Investing * Saginaw St. Store Given New Look BIRMINGHAM—Plans for an $85,000 building to house the Birmingham Psychiatric Clinic have been announced by Dr. Jack B. McIntyre, new executive director of the clinic. ★ ★ ★ The modern structure, with 3,150 square feet of office space, will be located at 625 Purdy St. Plans call for no windows Both Republican and Democrat-! B* R00ER Et SPEAR ■u members of the committee | Q- “We arc young people have suggested that U. S. foreign planning to buy a home within aid be used as a weapon or lever j ‘he next year, and would like in the two situations. QUESTIONS EXPECTED They are expected to raise the questions again today as David E. Bell makes his first appearance as director of the U.S. foreign aid program. your advice on our present investments. We have very little cash and depend almost entirely on our securities to make a d o w n payment. We own Breeze Corp; Clopay Corp.; Howe Sound; McLean Industries; American Motors.” D.L. . A) You sound like a nice young Bell has been spending "end- coupie and j wish you happiness less hours,” in the words of an wjth vour future hom6i associate, getting familiar with Nov^ rm going make a 8Ug. ... . , the worldwide activities of hisgest|on which may surprise you. except a wide expanse of glass agency _ the Agency for Inter- jn your position 1 would sell all at the entrance to the lobby natjonal Development (AID). my stocks immediately and put and main reception area. I „ ... .. , : He moved in from his for-The remainder of the exterior mer position as director of the will be faced with gray brick, budget just after Christmas. In recent weeks he has been calling on members of the Foreign Affairs Committee so they’d be familiar to him and he’d be familiar to .them. The clinic, to be completed In two months, will be adjacent to two other Daines Street buildings which have housed the clinic offices of Dr. James C. Moloney. 3 56% 88% 5(1% - % MayD St 2 20 6 30*4 3074 30*4 + % MeDonAIr lb 0 '2174 21% 21% - 74 Mead Cp 1.70 ! ft ft ft ... Miner Ch .70 ■ ■ ■ Mpi Hon 3 - *4 MlnnMM .00 - % I Mo Pao 3.40 — ft Mohas .40a — %iMonnan 1.30b — ft Mont Ward 1 - % Motorola l I 5374 53% i 38 38 I 00% 00% -N«— The former J. C. Penney building at 17 S. Saginaw St. has a new face, a'new interior and a new owner. The four-story building, now occupied by Ward’s Home Outfitting, has been remodeled and now presents a gray terrazzo front featuring a new canopy and large windows. A colonial furniture center hasjDr. Eugene T. Donovan and Dr lindonesia edged his island n! been installed on the second floor. Theodore Satersmoen, psychia- tion t00 c|ose t0 the Sov|et orbj * * * trists, and Dr. William C. Schaef-' The building was purchased by er. , Harold Goldberg, owner of| the money into a savings count. No one, in my opinion, should ever hold stocks knowing that they must be sold within a specified time limit. Your holdings are speculative and it is* anyone's guess whether they will be higher or lower a year hence. There Is only one thing certain * * * j about stocks: they fluctuate, A number of committee mem-1sometimes w I d e l y. With your Moloney founded the clinic in bers 0f both parties have Indicat-1 money |n a savlngs'account.’you 155. Also on the medical staff areLd they fee) president Sukarno f Crompl^ CrnZell DttEdle 1.30 pet stl .18* Disney >-48|,()# DomeMln .80 _____it 1.80k Duq U 1.28 Dynam Am x4 5874 58% 9874 — ft N .Dairy 2.30 0 48% 48% 45% + % Nat Diet 1.30 0 27% 3774 37% + ft Nat Gen 1 203% 83% 83% + % Nat Gyps 2b 1 12% 12% 12% ... N Lead .78k 8 6074 00% 8074 + 74 N Stee 1.60 0 81% 5174 8174 + 74|NEiik El 1.12 3 48% «% 4874 - ft NYCenl 33e 111 iiitev Norik W oa 12ft 12ft - | 10% 40% + 1 1474 3474 + % PttC^04tE ^ 14 34 — % ParkeD 1 :•**- |ILa Penney 1.20a tilPaPwLt , Sales figures are unofficial. Unions otherwise noted, raise of dlvl (lends In the foregoing table are annua disbursements based on the last quarterl' or^ semi-annual declaration. Special o nated asVreguiar arc Ydentiur ln°thc fool note following footnotes. dividend, C—LlquIdstltiK dlvi I d—Declared or paid In 1003 pin — dividend, e—Paid last year, f—Pay tble In slock during 1003. estimated oasl 4 plui Ward’s Home Outfitting from Albert Koegel of Flint. Price was I undisclosed. Business Notes Sales Increase on U.S. Bonds <*f,ean be assured of your home, which probably means more to you than anything else. Secretary of Defense Robert i S, McNamara said yesterday I he felt the rather limited military assistance program for In- ' donesia should be continued but j phased down In coming years, acknowledged that Russia Q) "You frequently advise not holding more stocks than can he followed. What do you mean by ‘followed’? To the average person most parts of annual report are meaning-What arc the things to has poured $900 million worth of |4 0074 6014 - % ! ft i i 14% 14% 38% 37 >n ex-dividend .. _______I__ _________ ........ ..................imam, W1,11IIU5U (llc u n (--Declared or 'paid "eti/*'stock Charles Dickerson has joined the trend showp in the first two!,ravelil18 committe *" is 1t^uJ«S,rf™*r with I Parke, Davis & Co. research lab- months of the year, with a 6.2^8 t0 see Indonf u„ said, A' .Thls ls an icmbers hu,es 10n' s It Is ve .dinary extremely good 7 officials |. i--Salea In full. sistant research parasitologist. 11902, the Treasur Dickerson, a graduate of Ferris day, Institute, was formerly employed by Project Hope in Washington, D.C. Series E anil H cash sales of $397 million were $23 million difficult for the or- M”''uihad 'been forced to cool 1 t*°1,.!?1?.W S8 STS** until Russian admirals had «took hoidlngs Intelligently. He P,irte'‘ 10 Icompleted their visits. ‘ 8,arl ,,U|'{ S1 1 do‘ b-V P°«‘ n« 1 [the daily quotations on his hold- ings so that he carr gain a‘ quick 1 j visual impression of the market W JONES NOON AVERAGE Army Awards Chrysler $ 1.5-Million Contract SIBoih ElAMi Balance - .. D+Jionltd fiscal Withdrawals t rotAl debt ... Sold ad*ete ...... •included 8380,280, April 5, UKl i I 6,128,518,858.6 i 74,867,800,819.06 ■ «di711,507,407.86 j| —.871.71 . i. .*im8,305,108,1 ... I 10,600,601, < 1,488.05 debt not 15 Utile. llEoO up 0,00 , &KWrf®.oo El' i A Phelpg 6 3 i WH veil H Phllr^BT 1.20 iwlftl o lift lift 7 48% «ft 3 48% 4674. 3 8*% 86% 7 31V, 3074 * 3774 3774 9 84 0374 I ft +' 1 5 Wh 2« 5 I % *?(t TWS HBr j>?W Hh 4(5*4 4674 W% 4 ji 4 34 34 34 ... Fit Plat 2.30b 7 53% 6374 83% I ft ilitiiA ,ilf! a i« i l+.n‘£ 111 —F— i 2^4 i%zi\ wM ........ Fla PL 1.1 ™d sr a FdremD ..40 rofttor w|t iFreeni n 1 lFl'U* T 1.3 18 ft m M i •i ft I 0 40% ( M% - I 11 I ?ji a is %4«bi»>. Richfon l.o '‘»m,.3e %w» ... rr —R— it fly#’ r 12|4^j 11337-,4 37*4 - 10 4674 46% 48% - M 43V ft 43% ! 3 14% 1474 1474 33 4874 46*4 4874 ( 1 34% 24% 24% 30 48% ■ 40 48 - 6 814 8% 8*4 . 10% J . I 10 Industrlali ill the two :ategories for the first quarter DETROIT (AP) -*- The armv!were hllllon, ll'.l per cent 88.Di-o.ot Ubm;,. r above the corresponding 1902 gjoo announced Monday that Chrysler- K * had been flWflrded a Gross redemptions were 4.6 per Detroiter Gets r The Aeeeelated I Net Change i .l Noon Mon, 80.0 100.4 Prev. Day 80.0 100.3 Ufa0 ■(Corp. -003 $1,511,812 contract to produce 370 three-quarter ton truck chas-Isis. Col. W. E. Bessq, commander l«vJ of the army’s Detroit Procure-ji.ijment District, said • the work |j| would be done at the Dodge truck oilplant. Grain Prices lie told McNainara lie didn't]v li u ,l l i“v>® how he could justify contrib- nt his shares If the mar higher than March a y««r ag°- -utjng taxpayers’ dollars to a coun-!ket ,8 mov|ng up and any holdln TLT m dr0pped *' lry whlch h® aald was domilTflled l» Standing still or declining, thef p |hy Communists. he should seriously consider mak Total bond sales in the two —— - ||)g a switch. From most companies, the in vestor now receives a quarterly as well as an annual statement and he should pay particular at A i iefrin A\A/nrrllientlon t0 the trend ln earnin8s MUSrna Mwuru [Most brokers will review youi .holdings periodically and I should DETROIT (API - The Great c.......................... Gold Medal of Merit of tho Republic of Austria was presented to Joseph M. Dodge, honorary president of the Detroit Bank and Trust Co., yesterday. cent below last year's figures News in Brief Noon Mon, Ppov. buy P, Ago Your Mo low HI fill is to, toot Dow Inrt. 'Relit UHI. Slei'ka 374.4 HU 1444 26+7 1FJ,ljv 373.0 133.0 144.8 384.1 i'J ; 3(16.4 130.0 143.6 258.6 "“J' 359.1 120.11 140,9 255.(1 . 360.0 120.6 141.0 pil.a.M*1- , 378.6 183.0 144,0 $64.1, Corn .341.1 121.8 134.0 842.7 Mey . 5774 137.2 J42.0 202,8 Jul. .205.6 07.0 110,3 -200# Be# Noble Heltmever of 1409 Orchid St., Waterford Township, «-ported to police yesterday that itwo windows and a screen in his living room were damaged by an apparent stray 22-callber bullet. ertainly ask them to do so.’ (Copyright 1903) Birmingham Firm Has 80 Pet. Earnings Jump . i.i^% . . 1.1074 I ''/'I ■ ( The medal was awarded in I Bbrry Industries, Inc., of Bir ” recognition of Dodge's work as mingham has reported net earn jU. S. minister and delegate til ing of $184,194 for last year, at m, ! Rummage Sale, Wednesday.ilhe Austrian Treaty Commission increase of nearly 80 per •'S'! April 10, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Au-]meetings held* In Vienna In 1947. | spices Birmingham Eastern (Star,! Dodge’s work is credited; with : i:io*4 327 S Woodward. Birmingham, helping secure Austria’s present iH%r 1 — Adv.mound economic status. en| /er 1901 figures. Sales reached slightly lucre Hum $7 million for the same period, up 12.8 per cent over 1001.. i , (lemSk