U' . Th«i Wtathei i I ■’ ■■ T'- \ THET PQNTIAC^RESS^ ir 'k ir > PONTIAC. MtCHIGAN. MONDAY, MARCH ACT T °"‘’“A«SSSVreE«"‘”*^ Hom« £dttton noth YEAR Men Skirt Police Roadblocks 'Judge, We Ask Dismissar HOFt'A WORKS WITH COVNSEL-rTeamster President James Hoffa (right), and hi* chief counsel James E. Haggerty of Detroit, go through papers in Orlando. Fla. Today, Hoffa’* attorneys arc before U. S. Judge Dozier Devane in Orlando presenting a series of motions, including \ Ar riMuiM one* asking dismissal ^f the federal charges against Hoffp of mail fraud, motions for bdls of particulars and other legal moves relative to the charges. There are 12 counts, including the misuse of $500,000 of union funds. JFK to Discuss Latin America WtH Unveil Alttonce for Progress Program at “White House Tonight WASllING’TON (AP) - President Kennedy today unveils plans for the “alliance for progress" with Latin America. He has described his announcement in advance as a major statement. Snow, Tornadoes Buffet Wide Area BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Snow and sleet hit parts of the midwest today kndf portions of Missouri and Arkansas cleaned up fromj witTre^t* ^ tornadoes that killed on and injurwi at least 11 persons, stanieyviiifi that An«ine otcenga Snow blanketed Southern Wisconsin and sleet, mixed with rain, made driving hazardous jn the southeast Michigan. ‘ 1-he U.S. Weather Bureau predicted mow would fall on other sections of the Midwest before night. Wind* of gale strength whipped over the Lakes Huron, Erie and Michigan and also Lake St. Oair. The Weather Bureau said high 'ongrr** Tnenday Implnnenttiig ' >^nd* and tornado conditions which Kennedy will make the statement midway through a reception at the White’ House for LaUn-American diplomats and dlgni tariea starting at 5 p.dL The PreaideBt plan* to to^ow Hie program. _ All but two Of Wa.st)i|igtQn'A Tidih-American envoys are invited to the reception. . » ★ The two not invited: The Cuban and . Dominican Republican basaadors to the Organization of American States. The United State* has broken off diplomatic relations with both those ebun-iries. Kenendy I* expected to refer to f:aba in the speech, but olfl-rials said the emphmshi will be on a U. 8. pledge help for nation* threatened Southern lUlmds and IndU^ night ended Jifc -Three Nebraska teen-agers day. It been feared earlier In a campaign spewh last October he used this description: alliance of nations with a common interest in freedom and economic advance in a great common eff(»t to develop the resources of the entire hemisphere, strengthen the forces of democracy, and widen the vocational and educational opportunities-of every person in all the Americas.’*. Police Kill Man in Act of Stabbing ROSEVILLE (UPII-A young Detroit man was shot and killed early today when police discovered him stabbing his estranged wife in her parked automobile. Gerald T. O’Hem wa* diot by Policeman Robert McPherson. McPherson and his partner, Howard Day, were patroling when they beard the horn of an automobile blare. Hiey investigated and saw a man sitting in the car, stabbing a woman who wail coi^ witti Tiiodd; - i The offloers ordorad the man. O'Heni, from the car. He leached.into Ms pocket, told the elllcers, •'You’D have to sheot me.” then tanged at Mo» ' The woman was identified as Grace O’Hern, the raaif* estrasged wife. She suflered apv- Polioc said O’Hetn. in hla ekriy 20s, had gone Simdib' night to an Eari Detroit restaurant and •»-tempted to git his wife to leave with him. She refused. Later rfie left the restaurant and found O’Hem waiting in her car. He forced her to drive UiR arounds aii4 fiddly ordered to step the car In ftxmt party i^an At Gratiot and I*™*- Anti-Cominies Want Kasavubu to Head Group In Meantime, AAobutu Forces $.tart- Priye and Oriental Boss Is Out , From Our New* Wire* TANANARIVE, Malagasy Republic —Anti-Communist political leaders of the Congo have agreed to replace their centrally controlled parliamentary jgov-i ernment by a confederation of semi-independent states headed, by Joseph Kasavubu. The action of the political conference which en.d-ed Sunday, raised hopes in Leopoldville that the way had been opened to eventual end to the recent chaos. has plagued the Central African territory since it won independence from Belgium last summer. ! Maj. Gen. Joseph Mobutu’ force* have' captured three con: tpames of proJjlmumba troo^ in 1ari'offen*ive near the Oriental Pro-j vince border, the Congolese foreign ministry announced today. The Calm Before the Storm WEIGHING IN—World’s heavyweight champ Floyd Patterson takes a close look at the scales as he Weighs in for tonight's title fight at Miami Beach Convention Hall. He tipped the scales at ■ Take $20,000 From Markets; Escape Dragnet Hit Kroger Store at Miracle Mile; Daylight Robbery at Tom's ' Masked bandits who netted over $20,000 in two holdups of Pontiac area supermarkets in less than 36 hours eluded police roadblocks a second time today. City and state police were forced to rely solely on routine investigations shortly before noon today when a dragnet failed to' snare the armed robbers. Lt; Ray Meggitt, head of the city's detective bureau, said the same two-man team apparently staged thi? morning’s broad-day- ■ light.robbery of Tom’s Market at 888 Orchard Uke Ave. that pulled the Saturday night stickup of the 194\, more than he has ever weighed. A pensive Kroger market at Miracle Mile Ingemar Johan.ssbn wails his turn. He checked Shopping Center on Telegraph in at 206**. In the center is Nils Blomberg, Jo- Road, just outside the city, , hansson’s Swedisih trainer. Deny Lassiter Missing Boy Found; Death Puzzles Police Snow-Rain Mixture to End by Tonight The weatherman tells us today’ mixture of rain and snow will change to snow before ending tonight. Tuesday will, be mostly cloudy with a high of 38 predicted. Temperatures for the next , five days will average 2 to 5 degrees abovejth^ iwimiAl high nf 43 and normal low of 27. Wednesday will -...............- ...... be warmer. Thursday 1$ expected to be colder, with warmer temperatures returning Friday. Precipitotlon will total one-half to three-quarter* of an Inch in rain or showers, mostly Ttrars-day and Sntordny. Morning southeasterly winds at 14 miles per hour will become northerly tonight- ...... The lowest temperature recbrdrfi in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 34 degrees. At 2 p.m. the temperature reading was 36. News Flashes St. Frederick drew Ann Arbor Class C regional opening round opponent at Ypsilanti. The Bam* wUI play WodiBNMlay at < p.m. A viclory would seud 8L Fred against Whiteford Friday. The title game wUI he Saturday. WASiONOTON (UPl) — Preal-dent Kennedy’* key c ah I n M onH, aecretory nf health, ednea-Bw aud-SMdfatw-toattftoC today (hat he is opposed to attaching Ban’s school aM program. Rut he said he is wHHng to study a In Today's Press Unhn Gukl^posts 32 the tornado-like weather would drift into the Ohio Valley. inday scraped ered over Southern lUinoU. The Ooark totter* ktlied n woman and Injured her husband and lA other person* at a West Plains, Mo., prayer meeting. At least S3 other person* were reported In-jnred in Missouri and Arkansas. klDed last night when their automobile slid into the path of a trusk on a slushy Nebraska 92 west of Wahoo. The truck driver was not injured. A 1 Rain shifted inland from Vancouver Bay and Western Washington State, lacing the Rocky Mountains with mixed showers and snow at higher elevations. Showers also pelted most of the Northern Great Plains. blanketed a wide area SDUth aadj^j|LJhe Sunday’s tornadoes scraped a 150-mile border belt in Missouri and pummeled at least six widely separated northwest' Arkansas communities: wa* being eased out a^ bom jat Oriental Province, which I* in fhe hand* of follovrer* of,^slain ex Premier Patrice Lumumba. The announcement said one Lu-mumbist company was trapped in the town of Mondombe, about 300 miles southeast of Coquilhatville. Mobutu's force of 1,200 troops Bwh pushed m to the town of Ikela, 40 miles to the south, and captured add disarmed two more (companies. Dispatches from bush country said his troops had captured the LumumbLst stronghold. Gen. Victor Lundula, head of Lumumbist forces, had, sent reinforcements to the garrison at Ikela to protect Stanleyville from an attadc from the south. In addition to the threat from Mobutu, Lundula faced a stiff task in trying to stop his army and gendarmerie from going on rampage. The Stanleyville treasury is reported nearly empty and officials are worried how to pay their soldiers and security forces. Home ShowJ GRAND- RAPIDS (^About 150 exhibitors from Grand Rapids and West Michigan had more than 360 companions, Roy C. (Buck) Hicks, displays ready Monday for opening the week-long Greater Michigan Home Show at Civic Auditorium. The 23rd annual show expects about 50,000 visitors over the week. Lawyers Begin Battle to Kill Charges Against Widow, Gordon Watsori Attorneys for Mrs. Nelle Lassiter and Gordon Watson today began a fight to kill charges of murder and conspiracy against the pair. 1 They aigued tpere was no c.m-nectiori between the glamorous exmodel and her admitted lover di-rpct enough to implicate them in the shooting of Mrs. Lassiter’s husband, Parvin (Bill) Royal Oak u.st>d car dealer, cn April 6. 1959. The legal argument this: TECUMSEH IJI—The gtmshot death of farm boy John Paul Marsh puzzled polic4joday despite apparently extensive, evidence. John, 13, who had’ been missing from' his fioffigliT j this small Southern Michigan-town since March 5, was found shot to death in a wooded ravine Sunday. Near the body lay a revolver that state police said two neighbor boys adrrtitted having taken front John’s home and hiding'under tree. Police said they could not determine immediately whether Joha had shot .[himself or been shot by someone else. The boy, stepson of Alex Glenn, . , ... unemployed laborer, and one of partner, did p an to have Lassiter-^ children in the family, had Wiled (and it s denied that theyibeen shot once.fn the chest. did); And even if Charle* NiiNh, 43. the "dlrt.v Httle mnn” in the killing, was summoned from Tennessee purposely to kill Lassiter (and it’s denied that .Mrs. Las-sitfir and Watson bnd nn.vthing to do with this); eveil if the hii to dyWrin a drun) LANSING m - OOcial* nt UnMad Auto Worten locals in Detroit today started cotart aetkm '^,Hkned at holdinK up a decision Job iwcpcart incraasea in Sue ; tc^ and Blue Shield ratn. ^-They asked the State Supre^ 3lrf Miller Wins Honor ;ior Pictures qm*tm a( Bi«e Ooaa i . . {Local 351 and one of the plaintiffs ... Art Miller.Pontiac Press photoc-in the suit, charted that eartler a-rapher. won two honorable men- hearings hdd on the proposed rate tions in the feature cateeoiy atihikes for the and the laih annual Press Photography health cate plana Conference at Michigan State Uni- fn/mut to propagi vendty Saturday. _ - Hlk awards came for two pic-^'tures taken for The Press last f 4sil. One riiowed g little girl greet-‘ * yii« Gov. Netooa iRock^Mler of ,-New York as he { arrived h«e during the campaign. F It was eiditied. ‘Hi, Mr. Gover- Joining him in the suit was Mike Marasco, vice president of UAW Local T. * * * Blackford said he was uncertain what actian he would take until he had consulted with state attorneys. He indicated last week that a decision on the rate changes would be issued this week. I cooling (df in the hot weather. entitled. "Cool Beauty.” Four photographers were double first prize winners in the big dtieg class, and one small cities photog-aaiBpher copped three first plac fpid won anotl^ 1-2-3 in sports. MiFirst {dace winners in the Mg cities category included: ^ A1 Deneau. Detroit News, pic-• Asrial and portfolio; Doug F^ton, *3ihn ArtxH* News, spot news and ^errett Battle CPeek Enquirer ' ;li News, pmtraitsiiersonalities and fnnily interest; and James Kilpatrick; Detroit Newt, sports and feature; Corwin tnut- the plaintiffa with a did'* in. .l}Taahingtfln where they fad Ral /George VtalHIlee, Battle Orerft > faqatoer A News. 4^' Les Line, Midland Daily News, won first in poctraitfalio, pieture-story feature and sequence cate-gcKies in the small cities compe-.tition and Norris Engle of the Mount Pleasant Times News cap-«Mfdled first, second and third in • «^ve Qoh, Monroe Ijrws, won first in spot •*|cnera] news; and Bill Michaels, •• Aand Haven THbune, first in fom- .. Iqmate ^tabbepl to Ototb jlf Marquette Priion MARQUETTE (IKA aS-yAaixiid 'limate of the Michigan State tlhmal > propagandize the puM lefased a Mareh • leqaeet t aiver said he and Marasco u« filing the suit as subacribers to the hospitalization and health cam plans, but that they had the rapport of union locals. The Dtiy in BirmIngiMim Presby terians Will Hear .talk on Latin America BIRMINGHAM — The Rsv. Rob< eil C. Ihotp. acting secrstary ll Urtin America tor the co~ OB Ecumenical Mission i dons of the United Pretoyteclaa OiaKh. will b* the guest speaker at the fifth family night Thursday St the First Prerttyteiian Church. The speaker tar the sislh piw- gram the taOewtog Iharsdey wOI be Dr. A aarvey Baih nWeal UNCBDBON wm BART - This group ot Ooldand Ownty -^-officials returned honto’thU weekend alter two days In Wash-„ in an attempt to ^>eed up funds tor puhlic works projects in the county in order to provide mote Jobs tor the iBsmidoyed. Here they pose with hfichigan Sen. Philip A Hart (right, seated). Staled (left to right) are: Robert McGinnis, chief cngimer for the drain commission; Drain Oommissianer Daniel W. Barry; Robert P. ADen, assistant coiporation counsel; John G. Sen^, the county's legislative qgoit: Harry W. Horton, DPW Board sscre- Seeks Emergency Funds tary; Sidney H. Woolner, Housing and Home Finance Agency official; R. J. Alexander. DPW director; and Hart Maadiag: Hitond M. Thatcher, road commiaskm chainxum; Thomti H. 0*Dan-oghue, chairman of the board ot auperviaors' drain committee; Paul Van Roekel, commission highway engineer; fanner ataUe highway commissioner snd goUWuut Murray D. VanWaconer; Deloa Hamlin, chairman of the board of supendaorir vvd WlBts M. Brewer, coordinator of road projects tor Uie road commiaakMi. 6:30 p.m. ■■ Rev. Thorp wUl tell of the work being done In Guatemala aty through peraonal mlnMry to university students, tsscfalng. preacto ing, radio and theater activUlaa. The Ruth tlanal Affairs will be held tow at 10 B-m.. at the OoipmuBtty County Bids for Grants Should the federal goyenunent approve an emerge«cy grants pro-1 liiim tor-public works to spur the economy, Oakland County's bid is in to get a slice of it. - - A delcgstion of county offidsls. The suit demands that publie heaoled by Delos Hamlin, chalr- conqilete copy of the Blue Crora-Blue Shield applications "s ' proper answer can be made.” Arrest 3 for Plot Against Russian Cuban Youths Held in Connection With Attack on Envoy's Residence HAVANA tUH) sources today three Cuban youths have been arrested charges ot jotting, against the life of Soviet Ambassador Sergei Kudriavtsev. ^ fdeath Sunday night by.another ^'.^riBoner with a homsiaada knife. ■O'Jamea Davis, who was serving a to 25-year sentence for armed ■ ' robbery, was subbed three times while waiting for the prison movie lo start at a prison assembly hsD, gdMknals said. Warden Raymond J. Buchkoe said another inmate, Ernest Rodriquez. 26, had admitted wahhim ^^vis in an argument over clga-^ksttes. Buchkoe said Rodriquez tQd him Davis had intercepted some cigarettes by mistake and -• refused to return Me fhe Mock-long reMdeaee. Kudriavtsev was not home at the time the attackers battled police with gunfire. He was attending a reception at the officisl residence of his Red Chinese counterpart. The assault on the Russian envoy's home took place shortly before Msj. WiUism A. Morgan, of Toledo, Ohio, died before a firing squad on chargik of counter-ryvMutlqnary acUvfiles. The Weather Full UA. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICTNITT — Quite windy today with . mixed snow and rain this morning changliif to rain today and then briefly to anew again before ending during the night High today M, law tonight Zt. Tuesday moaUy cloudy, high 31. Winds easteriy to - SS mUes becoming northerly tonight spoke of the need for a speed-up of federal funds to get sewer and water projects under way. SlHMld such graalB be"forth-ramiag, they said, many ef tto cowrty’s sM statA’sraMmpioyed laborers woaid be put bark sa the payrolls. Talks were had with Congressman William S. Broomfield. R-OaMand Cbunty, Michigan Sen. Philip A. Hart, a repreeentetlve of Michigan Sen. Patrick, V. McNamara, who was tied up In a committee meeting, and Sebiey H. Woolner. former aide to former Gov. Williams and now commis-skmeilof the community facilities administration of the Housing and H«ne Finance Agency . It J. Alexaaitor, director ef the OoUaad Coanty Deparimeiit of PabHe Works, said U the federal fuarbi were available today OXFORD, England (AP)—The American youth who got months of Oxford education free by gate^Tashing the university's mad sewer projeeto wl to tbreo nioatbs. From Woolner, Alexander said he received one definite assurance that his office would piuh ahead on the county’s request tor $85,-for a preliminary study of sewer needs tor the southwest section of the county. While other commitments were lacking. Alexander termed the Thuraday and Friday sessions in the capitol "very advantageous” ”we got the county on reCOTd should Congress enact any pitolic wotica legislation.’ "They had an awful lot of sym- ' T*e«r Is fssum ^Lowest tempsmurt preeMUng 1 s ' Sub wu MoBSsr st 13* p a. son MtM ToMdsy »l (t4f o.a. .Moon *eti Uondoy ot 1:M p m. UooB run TuMdsy tt I J7 a m. Os# T»sr Ags la Psatts# (As reeordad dovoMvs) “ ' kigbat t#mpcrstnr« Saadsy'# Ttaipcnlar# Chart ■na 41 lg MemphU Tg S» imora gg 4g Miami B. W TZ larck St tl MIhraukaa U " tale 3t 3t UlaaaapoUf U mao M 3t Ntw Orlaaat U „ ti M Maw Tork U It 41 S7 Omaha ft M , ------------ 4t n PtUitoB » g Datrolt 4t It Phoanli M 4t Dviutb tt It PtUabargb M M Port Wi^ U 4t at. UH& - M - t XaDaaa CItp to ____________ Uattni 4t 31 Baattla L. Angaitt 71 tt Tamps Mtrguglu 33 It Try to Kill Charges inlaailerCase (Continued From Page One) Jones testified that Nash didn't know who Lassiter was at the time of the shooting: dkln’ know Lasfiter was the man he'd been hired to kill. Therefore, how can Mrs. Las-sltef- and Watson be connected with a spur-ol-the-moment, drunken slayi^? Attorneys Joseph W. Louiiell. representing Mrs. Lassiter, snd Harry K. Rosen and RalMi R. Goldsmith, representing Watson, pointed out that Nash, Hicks and Jones were convicted last February of eecond-degree murder, stead ot first, Indicating that premeditation was proyed in toe slaying. Tha argumetos came as the attorneys soaght a rvlhig tram Oreatt Oaart Judge Joseph 0. RaahU In Detroit, to quash toe murder eharge. Mavee to quash tha Biuspliucy eharges wate ex-toe day AT rhatafat NATIONAL WiATHES - There will be light snouf in'the Rockies tonight with occaAonsl rain on the north Pacfiic coast and in the Dakotas. In the east showers are expected in the ed rain snd snow in the Ohio vsUey snd the M and snow to the lower Lakes area and In NewQ«land. ' It was further argued that Watson, who now UvM In Los Angelas, is outside the juriedlctiaa ot Wsyne County. Loultell mslntsined that Asist-ant Prosecutor George D, Kent "intentianally supreesed and withheld’’ testimony at a ixMlmtnary hearing a year ago, twW ‘ have favored Mrs. Lae ctolmad the evidence pmrated then was Insufficient to toow prab-abla cause toe is gulhy of etther charge. In a hearing last yev. Jodga .Raahid denitd a moUan by Loui-sell to disqualify hlmsrif in the case on' grounds fitot hs had formed prejudices against Mrs. LaiMltor and Watson through hearing the trial of the three men now serving life-terms for the slaying. After that, a long delay In the proceedings occurred while th State Supreme Court ttas aske to disqualify RaahkL The high court refused last week. psthy for our program snd were Trilling to listen,” Alexander said. "They said they were happy to Other solutions might be partial loans or partial grants matched by focal funds. ★ A Now that O^aind County had submitted it’s Mueprim for public erorks projects, a similar |ttan fbr the six-county Southeastern Michigan metn^olitan area should be presented, Alexander suggested to Hamlin, chairman of Supervisors for the Inte^Gounty Committee which consiste of supervla(OT from the six counties. Gets 6 Months Free Classes American Buys Gown, Gate-Crashes Oxford classes ran few risks of detection, university affidalt said today. Official Ms ingenuity aras disapproved. But some of the dona secretly admired the exploit as just the sort M thing a high-spirited Oxford undergraduate might do at Cambridge. AAA The undercover student was bearded Alfred Raedel, 24, a Col-am hi a University mathematics graduate. He bought a cap and gown, and in Oxford that made him look like any other student. No classroom door was barred tq Mm, and DO one ever 'asked in which college he was enrMled or whether he had paid tuitfon fees. A A A His irregular course at Oxford nnpleted ti^ his satisfaction, Raedel Is goliv on to the University per un- 8bt BMgtoBB ^ ^ - otonr dergraduater an*^* toe eoMuston Triiites, believed to be Portugueae, ^ room guests ___ VImi CStvh. .. .. ^ . T were flown h«« from Kivu Skin-dsy. All Tvere badly beaten, the U.N. spokesman said. They told of dai^ beatings in the streeto, pillaging and threats of execution. AAA A nun reaching Kindu from a misaion sUtion at Kasongo told ot 48 hours of terror, rape and bestiality aoon after the death M ex-Premier Patrice aren’t identified too imedsely. A _ A A "Then as to lectures, people Trim _) in irearlng gonme aren’t checked. It wo«ild be tireeome to up every gown every day. But of couree pec^le urlthout gowns Tvould be spotted. This American, It seons, aru properly attired, and that's what counts. last month. Tha nun, Tvhoae name waa not dlsdoaed, said nine ais- tnutos and carted oft to the local jail. A 75-year-old nun said she waa thrown out of the track and her ed. That nun reached Leopoldville. In a prison courtySld, the n gtonea and gravel, singing hymne to Lumumba. Then they were locked up In a room for the niglit They ssere made to Ua on the ground and tortp Mt toclr dotoaa. ’’They did not rapt us but they I thtogs so disgusting to our or bodies that we dare r * lak of them, much less wr oi them,'” one nun said. Roberts Drives'61 Pontiac to Victory HANFCHtD, Calif. (AP)-Q|nm (FlnbaU) Rtoarto ot Daytona Beach, fta., won toe seeond an-mwl Chllfornia grand natiaiial Roberts led from lap snd finished two foil laps ahead of second place Eddie Gray of (tordena, ChUf. Roberts was _ a len Pod^. ThM plaoe went to Danny Letner of OoOTwy, calif. Press Chiefs Blast Castro lAPA Board Dedaras Cuban Leader 'Main Enemy of Press' ACAPULCO, Mexico (UPl) -The board of directors of the Inter-American Preai Asaocintion (IAPA) ended to lemtanmial Geprfo S. Cooper hu been . poinlsd to toe Cranbrook Institute staff Tritir toe title of Instractor in physics. I dattoo win be eraomwd ezhiUto in Mmi ftoU ef ihiloa. Cooper recMvnd hie tnlning at toe University ot Detroit. Wayne State University and the Rochester Inititute of Technology. He was formerly science editor for the Fine Arts Broadcaster. The Rev. Charles Brisaette. meeting Sunday with a crnidem-nation of Fidel Castro as the main enemy of the freedom of the press in the Western The threeday meetisiK domiiutted by discataioiui a precarious stale of hc eilan of the press................... toe Donfadcaa Ispeblle. A resMutlon adopted by the board went beyond tlie situsrikHi council of administration tor the state VFW adopted a weo-IMS weekend meettag here, urging VFW members and auxiliary members to vote " “ the (XHKxm weeU be n bettor method ef woifcleg over the date's eon- The council also said ths eosi-cott irould be “too expensive” for Michigan tajvnyen, patUng a doL 1st figure estimate of $3.4 million as the cost of « con-oon. The oooicil adopted anetoer resolution calling for cangrcasional appropriation of $1.2 million for remodeling and renovatlhg Camp Grayling, the Nhtioiul Guard traiitoig camp. The council said remodeling and renovating would enable saotoer diviaksi to train at Camp (Stay-ling, giving the area’s economy a needed shot in toe snn. nsdircd me to toy deem and pM any kmds biUni Hiy baek. Al 1 ceald ie wm toy there and Cfy.“ the front by tl» taller bandit end "Open the Mto or in kiU GETS LOOSE In the reer, Kovanee umked one ot hli hands looae when he me 1 by the shorter men, who preoMd Mi Mstol to the em- ' vm heal 'You’re gonna get it right now. Fm gonna' shoot you right In the Kovi^ mnembered the bandit saying. But the threat I’t canried out, and Kovsnes was re-tied. The pair ^scaped in CaudiU’a car. IA»«fOLEN CaudUl’s 1959 Pontiac automobile was found abondoned at 9:10 on Golf Drive next to Pontiac MuMcipM Golf Courae, a half mile from the store. Apparently the pair had trana-f erred to a second get-«wsy tar at the gplf ooune. This probability complicated the seardi, since then was no description of s sec- nd car. Two employes of the Kroger’s market at Miracle Mile had just lodced up the atare at 19 pm. Saturday iriien they were surprised by a Im masked bandit armed v^ a chrome-Msted revolver. AAA One of toe victims. Roland Barrett, 27, assistant store manager, told state pMice be and a stock-boy, Leroy Brooks, 19, wne getting into Barrett's oar in the parking lot in front of the store when the aboot to years aH. Sfoal right, and wrightog IN pa«ia, thea ordered the pair to Me dewa an “He said he had a ‘buddy waiting outside in a car’ and not to try anything,” said Barrett. The safe yielded over $10,000 Including sevnal cheda. State Police said the bandit was in the store almost a full hour. He placed money and checks in a piUowcaae, told Ms two victims to stay on the floor for five minutes and. left by the front door. Barrett said they did not hear , n car drive oft. He telNhooed state poUcc at 11:10 p.m. A roadidock failed to net the tbber. State priice said he wtt wea^ ing kid gloves and left no clues at the seme. He also wore a whifo kentoief on his face during the holdup. The bandits la the Tam’s hrid- te the ml, Mm toy ti watt to Arriving with Caudill wen Mrs. Alice White, 21. of 4975 Omstock Rd., Commerce Township, a cashier, and Loitts Kovanea, 35, ot 507 Cttrry St., Royal Oak, a meat nrtter. Mrs. White and Kovanee were ireed to lie face downward on le floor behind a iriav food counter while Caudill, hte Ufe tfo^-ened. opened toe aafo M tito front of the lugs foaiket aiDd handed ovar the u - / , 'V THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. Ma6cH 13, 1961 *Soldief Morgan Dies Calmly; Buried in Crypt HAVANA (AP) - WilUun A. American aoldier o( fai>> tome ^ W1 from natioiial hm to ^tor to toe fyw of the Ildd Oantoo regime,^ waa burled Sun-to a crypt bedde the Cuban Jtoomto Of Morgan’a Cttbui wife ottaDded the ritea to Ootoi ^ • oattoue vrieat offid-•tod. lira. Monga, |n Udb^ «» the fimerd. 8h; and 10 othen w«e convicted of treaaon alow MM. CXJJUl H. OBAUM Ira. Clare H. (lidtth B.) Graham, €3, of at04 Woodbine, died Saturday at her reaMeoee fol-kwtng f heart attack. She waa a member of the flrat Methodlat Church oi Pootlac and Manarot Johnatoo Circla of Flrat Methodlat Church. She la aurvtved by her hoaband. Service wU be held Wedneaday at 1:30 p.m. from the Doneiaon- ...Huwia ws{ wenc. ana abe waa declared a fugittve. The five-man court at La Cabana Fortreoa aentenced Morgan and Maj. Jeaua Carreraa.to •toter; two brothem. William Cbvey of Mio and Fred Covey of Washington; and 18 grahdehfl-• m. LAWRENCE Cl WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Service for Chrtetenson, 14, of 83S1 Fazntog-~ d, wUI be M 11 a.m. to-at toe MeOsmUesa. Zobel A Bradley Funeral Home, Antige, WIs. Burial will be in Elmwood Cemetery. | n, an employee of the Bower Rolling Co. of Detroit, died Friday of a heart attack at Pontiac (fenrral “ . ' T announced by the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Surviving betides his wife Dor-ore three aona. Rusatol of Texaa and Wallace and Donald, both of Wlaconato; fivn gmndchil-drm; three broUiers; and a ato->r. NBAON DBNBlaum HADLEY — Service for Nelaon lemberfer. 81, of SIM Hadley aad, win be at 3:30 p.m. tomor-xm at toe Hadley Bai^ CliiirdL be to Diyden Center Cemetery. 1 farmer, Mr. Deni-1, yesterday at Lapeer Coimty Gmeral Hospital after a lotet illness. His body wiU be at Brothers Funeral, until noon tomorrow. He is survlved,|^by his wife Dorotosa. MRS. DA.MEL R. RAWRRS WALLED LAKE - Service for in. Daniel R. (Anitid Hawkes, 89, of 116 Arvida St., will be held Wednesday at Auchmoody Funeral Home. Fishkill. New Yoik, Burial will follow in DuchM County Crinetery there. Mrs. Hawkes died yesterday at her borne after a fet^gtoy UliiMir Funeral arrangements are being handled by Richardaon-Bird Funeral Home. Survivittg ia a daughter Mrs. Myrtle A. Eari of WaUed Lake. WILLIAM MA1R8 NOVI - Service for WiUiam Mairs, 88. of 43034 Grand River AVe., will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Casteriine Funeral Home, Northvllle. Buirial will be in the Novi Cemetery. Mr. Mairs died Saturday in the Northville Community lowing a short illness. Active in community affaira, he was a former member of the Novi Community School Board of Education and had at one time beat Novi highway commissioner. He was a member of the Oddfellows, Novi chapter 487. for 58 years. He is sur\'ived by a son, George of Nevl, five granddiiltoM aad ooe graat-graadchlld. WEST BUXJMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Servloe for Mrs. Charlea (Una S.) MObreato, ID, of 3SM Pine Ridge Hoad, wiU be at U be to Gethsemane Oemeteiy, Detroit! in Pontiac General Hospital after a Hx-month illness. _ are a m Harold E. Schneider of Pontiac-'; a sister and 13 grandchildren. THREE riEE! a HUB —- No Purchase Necessary ^ No Slogans or Jingles . just ask for a tlckat at any counter In any dspartmsnt every time you visit SIMMS. Drawings will taka place on March }7, 28, 29 and 30 ... and you don't have to ba preiarit to win. TEN HAMS to 10 lucky paopla ovary day, all 4 days. 2nci FLOOR SPECIALS Fumu BufORKOn White Honse Paint lai«ilt»-NICH lal Bia Gray non Enamel 'lufAltw' Whitt iid Ctltfi Mellow Gloss Enamel MONUMENTS From '00 W MARKERS From 00 •3S 82 Taen of Oatatoadiag Sarvice INCH Momorials, Inc. 864 N. Perry St. FE 5-6931 Jorauu* Pontiac*i Only . Funeral Home . . . ... designed and built for the high purpose it serves. Pionned especially to pravide on atmosphere of quiet beauty and dignity and yet be spo^ious enough for the largest funeral. The OoneJson-Johns F u n e r o I Home was designed and built with YOU in mind. TUm federal 4-4S11 On Onr (Pr MRS. GEORGE E. CARROLL OXFORD TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. George E. (Mildred B.] Carrolh, 60, of 2350 Baldwin Road, be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Flumerfelt Funaral Home, Oxford. Burial srill be to FSdgeiawn Cemetery, Oxford. Mrs. Carroll died yesterday after a yeartoog illness in Union Pier. Surviving besides her husband are four boos, George E. Jr. of Ortonville, Albert N. of Pickens, Leo R. M Monroe and Henrji L. of Oxford; three daughters, Mrs. Ber- Fire at Empty House Does U500 Damage INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP-Combustion In a closet is seen as the likely cause of a $3,500 fire 111 an empty house owned by Kenneth Davis of 3135 S. Adams Road, according to township firemen. An identified motorist called the fire department at midniipit last night to report smoke and flames coming from the house located at 3093 Shedlowaky Road. W ★ ★ Davis told firemen the $7,500-house was being remodeled and paint cans were stored in a bed- Mm FQyR I ■ t THB^^FQXTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH IS, jm Vm of ■Iiliinifcim tv n* tMlen h iMMMllpMid Maiv^KaBL ^ *0M M po- flIM M kn» IM feprtiA Ait. Mt NlMIbP nSIntA oltIcUkb bMtOM IB «««. A per tatt Ibr riK>ppt« Mttvt and tM» tontati ■ ■ad II ter iteat M> WaceUaiieMt M ttAan M IK ipcd 1% ratal ta *» «l theTSA^ are performance-proved over billions of miles! Tuxelutlve reasons why 'Jeep* vehicles ore your besf buyl t. t«»iwt iMota ralM Am ta tmctaral dMlpa poytood eii^ildlly vti ^ 4. ip S. t>efrewitfc»pra*‘ Volunteer List for Space Hides Getting Crowded saa at MMtaat aMgy aaQt at LONDON (P — About 20,100 nii« and women of many lands have ’dunteiered to get aboard “ dtecavertai are being made at the level at tta msMcuKs M which living matter ll made. NOW YOU LAN GET OUT OF DEBT VMTHOUl A LOAN aiGAIN PEACt or MIND. SAY OFF ALL YOUS IILU AT ONE rUCE, WITH WEEKLY FAY-MENTS YOU CAN AFFOKD. Mnmm u tow is tio.M wsuly • FKOTECT your JOS «ttd YOUR CREDIT • AVOin GARNISHMENTS md REPOSSESSIONS • MIT PROTICnON INSURANCE COME in NOW nr CALL Tor VttOMI APPOINTMENT 732 Wasp Huran St. roNTIAC JmP OgpwiN Main Past Offk* Olficn IN wmtoiT and pontiac FE 5-9281 CITY ADJUSTMENT SERVICE any old rocket flying otl into spate, the Britiah Interplanetary Sodety ehtimates. W * ♦ „ “Many of the vahmteeta dta’t aeem ta ear* wbelhar taey get haek to aarth,’* nM L. J. OSrter. aeetetary at taa society. In u tatarvtow. "taieh vahmtreH Uv«k 'But lately more aerioualy minded perama have been vnlunteenng. medical men and some who are well qualified in SSlentific fields. ♦ , w w "The more valuable they »re m* more expendabie they seem to regard themsafvea. We advpai them all to wait, there being at moment a shortage of space ships.” SmJMCE BUYERS-OLUE FRETTER SEZ: I CHALLENGE ANYBODY!!! . . . ana Fuitharmoia I Promlia to Git# Yo« Ona of the Bist Applioncf, TV or Hi-Fi Deols in tli* Unittd SfotttI lO-Inch DELUXE GAS RANGE YUM^^M $11995 CiMRtMW W.t. Brand Noma 23-Inch TV .-V 13VS Cu. Ff. REFRIGERATOR rL* ^219 NORG^ ELEC. DRYER S99 w.t. 19 Cu. Ft. Freaxer Jtl Pnn* aSsHW. UU-Oal ■mrh. tota Is i>Mr ms 30-M. Bkit Liiti 6ai lit WaIbi Tuk $49w MERt UAMB S04N. EUCTIIC RJUIOI $145 NEW! 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Rsgiilir fw Ovar $ioe.go I* PRIZiSI . roMly to varniih, |Mint or stain BIG 9.DRAWER CHEST 29.9S Volu* 9.96 19 99 Manay Here's a lot of snug storage space ... in a good looking chest that is sonded, reody to varrtlsh, point or Btafn. 41" long, 15" deep ond 34" high. And just look, at the low, lo# price! KING SIZE BRASS TV TRAY TABLES . . . fot of 4 PLUS Mryfng cortf 1295 Volut tEB^ 2.96 $099 Entertain the oosy way! 5 King size trays 16"x 22" ore just the right super tiz#' to hold a complete'setting] Attfoctlut gold fnitt re than one million persons in three-state area, will receive the President's trophy at a ceremony in Washinilon on ApH 77 / French ^ English. All spoke French, so each was given s copy of the song In that 1 The giraffe’s Immense heart Is one of nature’s most powerful pumps. Montezuma, Ksa,. Js named for the next to the last chief of the Aztecs of Mexico. (AOTtrUicmtot) COPY DOWN THIS NAME AND ADDRESS NOW ... ... and write today to find out how you can still apply for a $1,000 life Insurance policy to help take care of final expenses without burdening your famlly. Mall a postcard or letter, giving your name, address and year of birth to; Old American Ins. Co. 4900 Oak, Dept. L2721A Kansas City, Missouri There is no obll^tlon—and no one will call or you. You can handle the entire transaction by mall. for Easter, Spring and on into Summer sewing! FINE PERCALE PRINTS Here's a lot of fashion for only 39c! 1(50% cotton percale, 36-in. wide ;in mony lovely prints for dresses, chll- ^ V*- dren's clothes, etc. SPRINGKNIGHT LITTU IRON PRINTS Drip-dry broadcloth, 36" wide for blouses, dresses, curtains, etc. BEUIRE LimE-IRDN GAY PRINTS ROBEST FASHION PRINT COHONS Wrinkle-resistant, drip-dry cot- prints styled by Rsbarre. 36" OR^ SHIP AHOY 4r WIDE COORDINAnO COnONS 98< Color coordinated prints and solid colors. Little-iron, machine washable. 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DELUXE VENETIAN BUNDS «-wu.. *3» 54" Long 23 thru 28“ wida, 54" Imi| 3.99 29 riira 36" wMa, 54" long 4.49 37 riira 43" wida, 54" long 6.29 e Nylen cords, unbreokoble tassels # Silicone treated slats shad dust, era flexible ond flutter-proof e Deluxe steel heed conceals smooth operet-ing, whisper-quiet mechanism # Unbeeteble cleaning ease Mirocia fabric droperiei combine decorator elegance with budgat-plaasing prices FROSTED SJLTXMr Draperies by STS 'SJ.V. »10W OanUa width by 90" 22.99 Trigla width by 90" 34.99 For tha first time, all the soft glowing highlights and warm, I rich bulkiness of custom-made draperies are available at budget I prices .Fashioned by ^Carole, these stunning wii^ glamour- I izers display the same fine detail you'd expect to find in drap- I eries cwting much more. G>me In and sea for yourself. Eveigloxa cotton, solid color QUILTED BEDSPREADS win and full atze lovtiy quilted throw PtoM reads In white,, pink, lilK or brown. argtase treated for wrinkle and soil | tistance. Smooth 100% cotton. CHARGE THEM AT THE FASHION FESTIVAL Booutiful, filmy Docron-n TIER CURTAINS ... in bungolow ono rufflo poir or fripio rufflo ponel sfylot •3“ Malehing voloncot .... .1.9R 0 Send 0 Yellow • Aqua • Pink • Snow-White Sheer, filmy beouty at yo6r windows! Choose from snow-white Or glowing pastel shades in triple ruffle panels or one ruffle pairs. FOURTH FLOOR M'-rS,!". THE PONTIAC PRESS M0NDA7. aOHCHIS. INI uuiaMjL.jmgm^ l^jiDo’g Snrar Quota Should Be Effiminated Last year when Cuba’s sugar quota of 2.5 million tons Was eliminated. President Exsenbowes asked for discretionary powers to allocate the Cuban share to other coilntries. Congress refused and enacted its own fomiala for dividing up a rich market. This gave the Donin-icaa Republic S21A57 tons in 1960, three tiaes its normal qliota. Prior to this the United States with other OAS members had denounced the TBumLO dictatorship for involvement in an atteihpted assassination of President Betan-couBT of Venezuela. Sanctions were voted. ★ ★ ★ Unfortunately, Tbujillo has powerful friends in Congress and a wdl-paid tobby. He an^ his family own most oif the Dcanln-ican Republic’s plantations and piiUs. However, President Eisen-HowEB saw that the TaujiLum did not jreceive the two cents premium normally paid to protect American sugar growers. ★ ★ ★ a preponderance ot non-whfte members. There are many and even conflicting fcnma of govemmrat within this Commonwealth of 550 milllan per^le. Each member is completely inde-pendmt while remaining a part of this strong and influential unity. ★ ★ ★ So the questirm of South Africa is hot so much its government but the pidicy of apartheid - they are not entitled to aeere^ to structtve, it doesn't altogether the degree that the apparatus resolve the pcob- mains hidden and undetected in its Pontiac Centennial Week lemofhowtoex- iteration. The people wH© are pose the et/orts # drawn unwittingly into this web Moroh- A nanth tiwlne ta live Soviet should not be bcanded as traitors, a government to nor should they be considered dis- Uawn to ns repuuuon. infiltrate cer- loyal. But they should assume tain colleges, responsibility for their acts. The annual Michigan Week has been churches, news- a- ★ a officially designated as May 21-27. That’s papers, radio ‘it is reaUy the Isdc of under- when we’re expected to do some extra and television stan^ of the true nature of plugging for our state. stations, labor communism that has caused the In former years it also has been made busi- Oakland County Week, when local real- lawbcnce , . w . v.- riantii did aoma additional exnloltlnE Stales. "r” understand that one can really be 0^1? of SI nrinclnal ra^SS whv problem iahowtodis- apartofthe Cwnmunist apparatus ----- alwut one^ of the prl^pal reasons why between those IndlvWuals without intending to be: that one Michigan is a great state. who sincerely and honestly advo- can serve the Communist purpose OIllllCo This year it is suggested t|jat every- cate policies they truly believe in without being sympathetic to Ito irtv in tha Pontlae area do their utmost and fhoae who are influenced hv .im. * actioatry fora* la the htahwy ot “If the sa-ealled Ifterals of If future circumstances warrant, the President should be free to restore Cuba’s quota. The danger is that reallocation of that quota might become permanent and that even a frioidly government In Cuba would find itself shut out of our sugar mgrket. btxiy in the Ponttae area do their utmost and fhoae who are Influenced by plugging for our centennial celebration, intermediaries to write or demon- Ito biggest doings are the week of June atrate in behalf of various causes. -------------------------------------- u», rorjou to Dr. William Brady Says: friends and relaUves, eq?eclaUy those who Committee on are former residento ot our dty, to come un-AroerIcsn Activities has be-and witness the fesUvlties. It will be the. conie'iuqiect biggest week in Pontiac's history. while there ara many persons ------ who on principle o> not like any RecenUy returning from a Florida congressional investigations, there vacaUon ‘"®«h Joining in ’ , the attack on the House conunittee Mr. had Mrs. Ed^ G. Farfcley procedures, are strangely silent of Birmingham brought home a smudge when other ocngreasional cmnmit- Lota of untruths travd mighty fast altiioagh they haven’t a leg to stand on. Cause of Hypertension? Answer Still Not Positive pot, and ar» usinc it on frosty nights un- tees der a peach tree in their yard. Congress Pushing Bill for 69 New Judgeships Patronage and politics ^ hguid In hand and it is now apparent that former President Exseithoweb was a little lax in this timeworn maneuver. A great deal of the time he tried to hold himself above this sort of thing. ★ -A ★ A recent news story points this up when it tells that during the years of Ike’s Presidency, Congress held off on creating many badly needed Federal judgeships. Now with Kenhedv in office they are stampeding to push a bill authorizing scHne 69 new judgeships. Naturally deserving Democrats will be appointed to fill most of them. ★ ★ ★ We can’t help but hope that the next Republican President is a little more realistic and a down to earth politician. Some political dealings at the right time might have set up half these Federal judgeships for appointment during Eisenhoweb’s term of office. ’Ihanka are extended to County Clerk-Regigter Daniel T. Morphy Jr,„ for a packet of sand firom the beach of San Salvador where Columbus first landed In 1492. pressure (or hypertension). Many people have asked «*at causes hypertenston. 'Ihey have to ferret out the facts. HMre waa a time tai Ameirieaa if it the eoorte tatety have aanrowed the freedom of the preae In Uric Teopect by caused by many unrelated things such as abscessed^ teeth, alcoht^ sexual excess, and al- Testimony and statements g^ven Rochester before Congress and Its commit- *”• tees, on the other hand, ere lin- ^ mune from damages for libel when ■*“ • “ttle fur- Formeiiy x>aator of Uie Church of the Nazarene, the to ^ died at Flint last week, aged 80. Burial investigations were abolished, was at Rochester, Baturday. ................. I wish I could liked Article About Robins That piece on the robin wu a real service to the people. , E. J. Writer Speaks for StRte Employes It aeems to employes at Pontiac State Hospital that the most complaints about them are made by pe(^ who know the leart about state Jobs. When work is plentiful tew complaints are made, but Personnel Cntbadi . Lays-Off Mlin What type of aodal ethics is it when at a moment’s notice a man of 63 years is told he must be •'lnld-o«” from his county Job because of a “cutback" in personnel? The MIehIgsn unemploynient office t^ Mm he Is net eligt- beeaase the oeaty doee net eetarlbato to thie eamw (ot eearee, net phrased la eank simple tenntaeligy). What must tijls man do now; He down and die? Aftw aU, he ^ rito. nnlv “• place ydii can cut ooeta are fh the state Jobs. When ftlngs are going well, you couldn’t bribe nnost people to take these jobs that an too far beneath their dignity. children, one of whom gave 1 life for his country. Thta “oki" man’s Job is now done: What need is his for financial itabUity or self-respect? Too had hO Ik not yet 65 and 4hus be eligible for social, secvrity retirement. D. 1.8 David Lawrence Says: Don’t Bury Facts on Communism The Almanac X By UnUed Piese IMmattsMl . Today is Monday, March IS, the TSnd day of the year, with 393 more in 1961. The moon ia appronddng its I Itae to Ameriea and America want to he worthy si the There are tew other Joba that are so thankless or that are open to so much criticism. Stands Behind JFK on School Aid The morning stars are Jupiter and Saturn. The evoiing stars ere Venus end Mars. On this day in histoty: In 1733, Joseph Priestly, file Eng-Ilsh chemist who discovered oxy- What Brewer says will be edNcd by almost all the members oif Congress irrespective of party. They don’t want to injure the reputation of anyone who is truly innocent, but they do want American public opinion to be Infnmcd that suppress ot tiie facts bearing on the o p e r s t i o n s of taa Ccanmimist conspiracy inside the __________..._______________________ United States is not only un- greatest critictopi of the House American but dangerous to the committee. The public doesn’t fully safety of this couitiy. In 1791, ’The Eights of Man’’ by Thomas Paine was pobUshed ‘ I admire President Kennedy for Ms rtaad against Fadaral aid for parodiial and private schools. Our forefathen under the leader- ‘in jgsy, o cartoon depicting sMp of James Madison and Uncle Sam as the symbol of the Tliomas Jefferson wrote two great United States appeared tor the principles into our bill of rights, first time, in the New Yoric Lan-Nameiy, religious freedom f- Always watchful for anniversaries, from the pen of Roy M. Brewer of piy to the kidneys. Herbert J Ficbt New York aty, vice chairman of '•'“J ^ 'against Communist of Waterford eends word that it was 40 Aggression. He writes: years ago today that a law was enacted ..The extreme eflort which the requiring lights at night on horse drawn Communist party, is making Case Records of a Psychologist: Pay Compliments to Regain Poise . Then the kidneys in tarn secrete a substance Into the blood wbicb directly reanlts In bigb bbwd pressure. This work may Union of South Africa May Be on Probation The annual meeting of Commonwealth prime miniaters and pre^-dents In London la of particular interest to those outside because of the. situation In the Union of South Africa where Prime Minister VEb-woiBo Is sure his apartheid policy has been divinely, ordained. ★ ★ ★ ’ The Union becomes a republic on May 31 and if it wishes to remain a member, it will have to ask for the cotisent of the other Cmnnranwealth nattons. T%ese are not only multiracial but have vehicles. An Insurance booklet entitled “Facta of Lift” tells me that fatal home accidents take as many lives in our nation each year as would make a city with a population exceeding that of PonUac. In the recent big winter thaw, the dog of Mr.'and Mrt. Lynn B. MeWatU of Drayton Plains buried some bones in the garden. He now Just whines as he endeavors to dig them up. destroy and discredit the (fommit-tee on Un-Americsn Activities is evidence of the tear which the party has for the disclowres of the committee. “The usual cry against the eenunittee to that It to maligatag to what t of membership The Country Parson Verbal Orchids to- Mrs. Orrea Hoxtoo of 50 Edison St.; 87th birthday. Mrs. Mary Oilep of 447 Orchard Lake Ave.; 85th birthday. Mra Ella Murray of 122 South Avery Road; 82nd birthday. Mr. and Mra Barry W. Bialcher of 506 Eaat Montcalm S^.; 51st wedding anniversary. Peter A.„ Paul B. and Philip C.; the triplet sons of Mr. and Mra WUUaa 0. Aiastroag iK of 210 cauppowm Road; •ighth birthday. The trouble with the Mdney theory at die present time to that many of the patients with hyper-. tension do not have any known disease of the Iddneys. To further contoan the issue, some hypertensive patients develop Mdney damage apparently as a rtoult of the high hknd pressure Itoetf. SOME EVIDENCE The. psychiatrists have turned up with some evidence that hypertension in many cases is due to psychosomatic pnbleros, but there is evidence that some are. Psychiatry to a adence ot diseases of the motlans and the per-aonality. To illustrate how theemo-tiont can affect the blood pr^ sure, ru lae the case of MTs. K. By DB. Gi»BOE W. CRANE Case H - 431: Homer G., aged 29, is a successful hisurance man. "Ifr. Crane, we have 49 agents," he began. “They are divided into units of 7 men each. I have diarge of one of these. “For 5 years I have been quite successful. But lately I . have grown very self-consdous and analytical. So I am losing my confidence. “I ined to hold am actually afraid to stand up “I can go put IML OBANB with one of toy men and do all ri^, hut I to afraid to make a tort*- / “I think it ail started when I hired pn older man of 45 in my ■ales Udt. He had been a fanner lawyer. “He is iiidiaed to erttidse me. Recently he teU me that 1 was So he has made Homer self-conscious to the point where Homer is ready to quit his Job. u Now I’m afraid he has ao-' caused no to dtvdop a naay yeaip. api after her pkyri- ___________....t'to Isuktog ter taulto to r9"fioU tostead at to-en to that when yvu fto* mw, to Bsmal toveto. Several days ,later she received a lettre which contained very distressing netos. Iminedtotely her blood pressure Jumped up to the there for aeverul days. Ous M 4hs pdms ptohiatiis whkh. I hato to fe to the efSoo in lbs lairutog I am (M a tataaaltoa------- set Hw aa "I can’t go on Uke this, for my men will kwe all their respect for me. So what do you recommend?" You readers may recall the old rhyme about the centipede: “The centipede was ha^jy. quite, Until tip toad, ta fra, Asked iriiich leg foUowed alter Ihis wrought him up to such a pitch He lay quite prostrate in the ditch Inquiring how to run!" w w w it it it I urged Htnner to re-extrovert The moral of that little poem is hlmaelL To do this quickly. Join obvioas. As soon as we become too the "compliment dub." . analytical, then we interfere with That oompels you tweiflByze the previous smooth operation of our habiU. Hamer waa a succcwflal sales-maa. extievertive and happy-uetfi this es-towyer eritictaod him. Thea Hemer grew totro-Bpeetive aid aaalytleaL But the longer he analyzed him-aelf, the leih aanvnnce he po-eeasemed. And a star salesman must fed sure of himself. AW* Excessive sdt«nalysfai is'^one reason why a person stutters. Some embarrassing dip ®f bie . .. • tongue calls Us attention to tile ?•*“ «> wWch to pay previous automatic act of , speak- ___^ ing. So he figuratively tlfrows a . MemiwhUe, your attention is monkey wrench into its smooth *1 y?. “ machtoeiy. *‘®***' fearful, or The person iriu profuse- efPkttod with imaginary aches and ly to also a victim of fids undue P^kss. --------- --------------------------------- ssb! I af an Meal atva prtattd la XSSSSa- ^ ^ ‘a OaklaaS. Unai- aeaaib. taawr aaS WatE- Homer it hawBcapped by ex-lawyer, who to older and of course deslrout at being thought a "big tor because he once had a ^ccemful legal practice. yrarto towyirta prtde to fhtok A M-ysaMU Is MW Ml ksas. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOiyPAV. MARCIF 13, 1901 SEVE^ Federal dept, store 'Ouw n£t V. s. Ut High faihion jtwelry . . . necklocat, tor* rings, b r a c 11111, mgtehing t • 11. N«w spring colors. Ail at Mnsotionol tavingsl Waldorf Jr. t«e-thirfs and briefs Regular 2 pcs. 1.15. Taped shoulders and neck for perfect fit. Briefs hove long life elastic. White combed cotton. Sizes 6-16. Tots' 2.98 famous easy-core slacks 197- Self belt, cuffed, zip fly, boxer bock. Son* forized*, washable. Pin,' Bedford cord. L 0 d e n, antelope, gray, navy, brn. 3-d. Fiberglos® flocked draperies ^99 Pinch pleated, ready to hong. Floral patterns on white. I IMI fr. M IIJI pr. Tr^ I M nJI pr. • Owens-Ceming T.M. SALE! New roin or shine coatf Peter Pan type collars, bidden hoods, beautifully lined. lins, beige, green or or blue. Sizes S-IS. Us« your crodif at Fodoral't . . . JM«t toy 'CHARGE ir Get the home and family set for spring and Eastdr at big savings! Nelson Poige's xShort sleeve sport shirts 44 t 'CHARGE m First quality fine group of plaids pkints. Embroideries, novelties, some with 2 pockets. All with permanent callor stays'. Woshable basket weaves, ivy button down cotton, rayon viscose. Solids, prints and plaids. Sizes S-M-l-XL. Save. Boys' regular 2.99 Wash 'n wear cotton slacks 257 'CHARGE IT' Spring's Snazzy polished cottons and Rondom cords. All are San-, forized^', wash 'n wear. Hook flex woist fastener, zip fly. Polished cottons in block, navy, taupe, olive. Random cords in black,^ taupe, olive, sea mist. Reg., slims, 6-18. Terrific assortment! Women's new spring lingerie 2 44 'CHARGE IT' Outstanding values in slips, petti, bouffants, baby dolls, waltz gowns, Muu-Muu gowns, many more. Nylons, Dacron'polyester, nylon and cotton blends. Choose from spring-fresh prints, pretty pastels. *Rrg. T.M. DuPont Corp. 1.15. pr.. if perfect! > Seamfree nylons, now in 'CHARGE IT' 400 needle, 15 denier crystal-clear, streokfree, seamfree nylons. Plain or mesh knit. Slight irregularities will not affect wear and are not visible. New spring shades. Coordinated lengths, sizes 8V^-11. Hurry stock up at Federol'sl Maker's cleorance! Regular12.98 better lamps 388 'CHARGE IT' Show room somples, odd lots, many are one of a kind. Table, pole and floor models. China, walnut and brass trims. Re-decarate now at savings. Hurry . . . remember quantities are limited. 3-way lighting. Washable shades. Save. ^ / 1 Girls' 12.99 Boltaflex® car coots ilw 1 10®® Smartly - styled, de-toiled, terrific on /Wear, easy to care. Gold buttons. Blue, green or beige. Sizes 7-14. Hurry in, save. Men's short sleeve Bon-Lon* shirts 499 Won't stretch, shrink, plaquet front, 6 colors. Sizes S-M-L. *Reg. T.M. Jos. BanrroD & ,5«» Boys' 'Waldorf' white dress shirts 1” Wash 'n wear, permanent color stays, convertible cuff. 6-18i Handsomely styled Communion suits 1499 Distinguished . . . fot that very special occasion. Sizes 6-12. Women's nylon gloves, just 200 Exciting styles and treatments. White ond colors. Sizes.6-8'4. Women's reg. 5.99 cotton slack sets 388 Asst, collar styles, tuck-ins, pullovers. One of a group. 10-16. 4 pc. king-size tray table sets 688 Reg. 8.99. Brass finish, tubular legs. Stores, has lucite casters. Men’s Waldorf ties Eye catching patterns and 1 50 shapes. New- ' | est colors. Men’s sport coats 3 - button. short 36-42, ^ 050 Reg. 36-46, | W long 37-46. 45-pc. dinnerware set, two patterns 16“ . 8 plates, cups, saucers, soups. Heavy duty 22x44" Conpon towels 67‘ Reg. 14.99'sturdy hard wood ploy pen 999 Durabe masonite floor. Easy folding for trips. Save 5.001 Boys' and girls' trainer bike 1999 Adjustable nylon t r o i n I n g wheels, chain guard, seat. Men’s tep coats Rayon gabs. shart 36-42, 1^99 reg. 36-46, | Ijyf long 38*46. Boys’ Waldorf sox Many patterns, fabrics and colors. 7’^ to lO't. 39? Boys’ jackets Reg. smart 6.99, new <|08 rev e r liblf J styles. Savel Boys’ sport suits Plaid jackets contrasting 1 ^999 slacks. 3 col- I # ors. 13-18. Jr. boys’ sport suiN .PIpid jack- — ets contrast- W I n g slacks. | Colon. 6-12 Boys’ spring suits 22*9 Wool - oert-Ion, 3 button. Sizes 13-20. Powerful hair dryer ond hood 4“ is Hold it in hand or use the convenient stand. Hoed attaches. Ansco oll-weather film, stock up 3 -«• 1“ Film sizes 127, 120 and 620. KedMoler film ....99c Brownie Stormite 11.95 camera kit 900 Built-in flosh, 12 pictures, color slides, black/whHe photos. ^Boat trailer, regular 99.88 B8“ For outboards to 14 ft. 4-ply tirOs, padded cradle supports. Boys* hat, tie set Bow tie matches band.. 99 Ton, gold, | willow. S-M-l. Boys’ wool hits Braid bands, f e a t h ers, 199 many styles. | 6'4-7’i. Colors. FEDERAL DEPARTMENT STORES downtown and DRAYTON PUINf EIGHT ■ MONDAY. MiUtCH IB. 1P6I \ Nixon...... -' Swqinson- T4ns SS»’S^Kenw4v^ g^r^P urf. |Bse(ta«^5 S^’S'goW-jS"!!!'”''''’ THE PONTIAC PRESS BRINGS YOU ALL THE NEWS OF YOUR WORLD . . . 1 ‘tSSiH^ = l^x_THE_PONTIAC DAILY PRESS fc ^ * * ♦ * yo3mA Rule NMba ht Nciil 4 Yra ffmm'ri [miYCANIIMTf •r 4A».WN«it INAKCmVITE e"" :rsis»A P?S i—liPh ^ *• •au.t^ *i:iL'i£ wMm www *t- 1 / TUB K>yriAC>EESS, MONDAY, MARCH 18. 1961 Tht Pratidtntt of tht TwtnHtHi Contury. Wo moy oil hovt ilron« fMlitift Hifir ttoWordihip of fkit offleo but jhitMry olono will post Hio final Judgmonf. / Thty hovo M our country through on# of tho mott topidly thonging conluriot in history. Mony things whi» oro now commonplocs Wort unknown whon tho firrt Prosidont took offico. Through thoir yoors we hoVo loomod much obout our world* Vost knowlodgo which will sovo. lives ond bring o bottor way of life to mon ovorywhoro. Knowlodgo which could dostr^ more lifo in ono doy thon would hovo died in sovorol conturios in timss post. Knowlodgo which will lood mon out from our plonot Eorth to ofhsr plonots in our system ond to unknown goloxies boyond... if we con only leorn to livo in pooce with one onother. When you rood The Pontioc Press you will knew from doy to doy the rood our President is following. Your news-popor. The Pontioc Press* is your personol link with the White House. It informs you... it protects you. It brings you the news of the Presidents... ond All tho nows of Your World. THE POCTAC DAILY PRESS i)UDGFS VICTORY Wmm lAIIPaiPEj Anundments Beaten; G. 0. P. Sweeps^tate MtIMIT UUI witMsnm ELECTION HIGH LIGHTS (Bilim ..rfTiB---—-------------. OEfSIfCIWiltl: • ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................... rsdru'iSwru*. r’.Si'K: THE PONTIAC. DAILY PRESS jwr.ytYxp Yt-u •7IA-maaon NAMED y— mn WOMAN cokoimm| ^ ^ ^ y,uS^^K!!i rv A TT-xr T»T> t:^oci ‘ .' *^l*ayT«l uciKBari VOTERS SWEEP DEMOCRATS OUT OF OFFICE (.o.r.VKT«y«i«e nuTfSTiNKTenfl OHSSM mm mmm^.. fURFIIEIK COUNlYnV niuvrin- ■CMViCNMI “«“•»( iVREPIllUCANS _____IL MEASURE rejected, county •BALIX)T1NG SHOWSi;fiZ>^l^--;rHr'"^ ^ TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 18. mi ‘ Robert Crawford Dim; iTh^Ck Wrof Air Coroi' Sona Xi«/0/5 RAEL'S DKIVE-IN <22$ NiffliM M. tM.S*i OPENING MARCH ISth G«orf Fo^ OoW fwrfc* Wrofo 'Air Corps'. Song 1 ty NEW’ YORK Ontiac Central High Scb^ audi-tcMium. The pleasure will come in the form ef a talk from thrir party’s spring elecUon standard bearer, State Highway Commissioner John C Madde, who’ll repmt on past and future highway construction plans to the state. It win ha MaeUe’s last ap- rean tmlficatkm, U.N. member ship to Mauritania and Outer Mongolia, and racial troubles in South Africa. Sr The Americans want to put off until next fall all items except disarmament, the Congo, Palestine refugee relief and trusteeship and knodkafi ^ srindews and Idled budgetary matters — with the avowed aim of ' _ ' war, and smoothing the way for East-West negotiations. Oooaty Demaeratle Oommltlee beta* Ma aama goea aa toe state ballot April g la aa attempt ta wta a aeooad loar-year term. The business part of the agend will fdtow Madde’s presentation, which County Chairman James M. Ginn said will ba open to the pub- , Me. . ■ , -........- - ★ ★ W Reports of registration and get out-the-vote drives tor the spring eiectioin and how many federal patronage Jobs are being funneled out o( Washinttoi sre expected to make up the business si^ of the 8 p.m. meeting. World production of crude oil in 1959 was estimated to be 7,042,-000,000 barrels. Of this, the U.S. . produced 36.5 per cent. Fdiemiah's Murd«r«r EioapM Aftor Tornado desperado, Douglaa Wayns ThMtip- INB of Bahnrsfield, Calif., who was bdieved armed with a rifle and ^’n^^’s two .companions, Calvin WlUs Johnson, 22. and Sammy A. ’Tucker, 26. of Fresno, Calif., were captured separately Saturday and chargwi with first degree' murder and fekmiow a^ ■anlt in the fatal slroOting Friday of Herbert Goss, «r. an auxUlary policeman. More than |7.0(j0 in loot was iken over the wednnd by glan adio ransacked two neighboring Bloomfield Township homes. * * ★ Miaalag f rsm the heme of Ray J. Hem of TMS Oieeawlch Road, Is $s,sas la cash, gold eolaa Car Bargot Right In Whan Evaryona's Ailaap KNOXVnJUBi Term. fUPD-Mril Thelma Seay was Awakened Sunday by a noisft sb/ thought was caused by one of her children falling out of bed, W A * GoKr laspectlon showed a driverless* automobile had rolled down an embankment pmd crashed into her Bvlng room. Damage was esti-mated at |7D0. U.S. Farmar a Prodocar NEW YORK (UW) - The American farmer produces enough for himself and 22 others, a mqre than 100 per cent increase over 1940 when he produced only Hough for 10 others, accor" I Olin Mathlescm Oieniical t t t Warryaf FALSE TEETH ^ Mcurtts ^ o«t rAsranv M Mkf dnis oouBUf. m mrm m three rameras, St bottles of liquor, dothes and power tools, Herro’s next door neighbor, Norman C. McCarty told Bloomfield Township police that he was robbed of J240. McCarty lives at 7406 Gremiwich Road. Herro discovered -tha theft lato Saturday and McOsrty, eariy Sunday. CaH Straat Clean-Up Off tree limbs in the Chariestoo area, the Hnstoss and Proleutonal Wqmen’i Club called off a clean-Up-tbe-streets cunpaign. N«xt time you see a truck or truck-trailer on the roads remember-eve^thing you eats wears or use comes all or port of the way to you by truck transport. ...ON PURCHASE PRICE ...ON COST OF INSTALUTION ...ON OPERATING COST ...ON COST OF MAINTENANCE MicUftt TiicUif AiifcUtioa THINK OF IT! A GLASS-LINED e HANDLEY-BROWN ^ GAS WATER HEATER FOR ONLY - 89 75 MFS-30G 30-Gslleii Cspscltr • Pott Racbvtry RnU , a 10-Yeor ProHcHoii Plan a Glou-Linad Tonk • Straomlintd Tonk • Fibargiot InauloHon a Hoot Holder Bofflo a Autonpatk Temporoturo Control . a Snop Action Sofety Controls CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY PENNEY'S-DOWNTOWK OpM awfy Mo.., Thun. .nS Frf. V:30 A. to 9t00 F. M. AU OHmt WooMii^ »:»> M. PENNEY'S-MIRACLE MILE Open Evary Waakday Monday Hiraiigh Saturday 10:00 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. t •nVELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 18, im S TIm «f QMmd CMMy ^ WlwMmrffteMMi 2 HIGH SCHOOL I AT HOMt IN SPAM TIMi ..........I (Congress Goes Into High Gear r.O. Bn IM ^ s;£%r«Er.i^w. A SMAAT STUNT roOTECTINfi TOUR ROOD CREDIT RECORD Eichmann Trial to Be Packed HopM to Finish Action on 3 of 4 Major BiRs During Wook WASHINGTCm (UPD-OMVnM ■teppcd to tectoaUrt pact today and leaden hoped to onapMe cttOB thla woek oa at leaat tiaee r tour inajor bOla. The Home Rult JERUSALEM (AP)-Tlie Ur, Of the SCO goat anoy^of by next weekend. They « e bills Record Namba* of NeirsniMi cover a criminal trial has registered lor the prooeedliiKs against Adolf Eichmann, due to start next credentials, SCO repreaeet me-__ ontside Israel. Aboot ICC American publications or radio Hie total seekhv credentials is representing 3S nattons. If ail Iww up. they wffl doiAle the her of correspondents who cov- and photographers to the trial. Press 01^ have been tasuod to trials in 1M6. Eichmann was a high Ulicer hi the German Gestapo during World When I visited my favorite store for my spring needs, all I had to do was say “Charge Iff . . . and the merchant was liad to do so because he knew the bill would be paid promptly the following month on the date it was due. I’ll tell you it Was a real convenience tq be able to buy the things I needed now and pay for them later from my weekly pay checks. If YOU maintain a good credit record, you too can buy almost anything you want at any time and anywhere without waiting for accumulated cash. Be smart, use your credit, don’t abuse it. “To Maintain a Good Credit Record, Buy Wisely — Pay Promptly!" PONTIAC CREDIT BUREAU, Inc. w Hi* CkSU Bar«t« W FcatUc, JUj It. IKS 333 North Perry Street Pontiac 16, Mich. Ptolvcl Tosf Credit md II Will Prelect Tee to restore avMtar generaJ t rank W«r II. Ho is accused of plicity in the death of millions ; of Jews, in a program the Nazis to former President D^ht D. Eisenhow^, to authorise' militaiy constfuctian proiects and to deal with regulation of food additives. Ike called “the final eolutioa of the Jewish question.’’ Israeli agents captured Eichmann in Argentina Ratification appeared assured by _ unanimous endorsement from the Senate Foreign Rriations Commit->e. Mansfield said he hoped the Senate also could act this week on the Columbia River Basin, and possibly begin debate, on President Kminedy’s proposal to extend unemployment compensation pay-lenta. The House completed action week on the JoUm benefits legis- at Ad Man's Dinner NEW YORK (UPI)-President Kennedy will speak at the annual dinner here on the Bureau of Advertising. American Newspaper PubUshers Association, OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOO($ HORMEL Pure Pork SAUSAGE SALE a MONDAY, MARCH 13 thru ! : DAYS* WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15,'61: SEA TREASURE... Fresh Frozen ^Breaded SHRIMP »(x»00f»ocxx50ooooooooooooooooooooooooooc»ooeoeoeoo< VIosic ■ jj Pillsbury or Bollard ^Biscuits Q FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS iwiSMMT|n«nMMsss.gimMMni; Twwatgy I 111 The •k.' Interesit... Aji iwl rM Ji0 eiHc^ 2^ «w5. YvVtfCV t»W» ' »T*' ,ttoo* •"fdeW ““S? W?*-., «“‘„"^ ”*««»»' » '*‘**% U0*» \®t*^ V» 0^ o-»L‘ «».»«*'*'•■ ■■* ItOtft leoV AustfJ* Itve ici«»\ letetic* o«t vtv V>? :f-*!^L»»X;^«.. °«»'s:fcrs>^LS‘S>St »’*'• 'v^X' ^a S?^-5gS‘S ?gsSSft pa7«“ «l ti®' 1 Deposit ““>‘. mod » “ ™ «''!S,i'”^^^S5S«r, clo»- , vneo*®" ‘*W' *'Z^ tea'll* V Mcit •P*^' •Vtted $^po» ;>tvere ^‘rcoiP®*’ rSs_S- «>r» c«-''sr«‘x >0»* . MO*'” «ll «'^'’ V, ft»® „ ttlftt ®* a- *”X^®»^““'^ ■»*^^ »’*'7r 'u »<» ,^'rtiM “•“* • ,dia»« »»«•*: t'td-»’^‘.w«x'S.r^‘!!' ^rr-3?.- 'S«'^SSS.-., •«'T){,d»- ib* ^e !* weft^ AW *** »“»*!r^»*s.‘. 11 c*s^ g\)tb aiv •“. -drftoes'*' w H0«'* . **'*..< ai« •ft r * -*r. « ‘^SS* W»*_*S«^ * d»a^**^ otd®7-oiiee-* M *ti** ' V laJi* '^•la o®^ „ed»f » «•», X “t". w-' ■^"■^Sirri »* a M1«» **^Jm»W“’„« *“'S*S»‘‘ S* *J“»’“*i ^ •»* ■ * tiv«*^ ^tatf • part o* ^VW>^ - — ■«i» ** • ««W • atxd ?js^'^rrs-‘xx atxd tw i‘x^‘“”*: “’*“ SiW “J".!! 0> ***J’Sx <*“*?,««. **'’«•>»* "ti- ^dotio— ib* **^^w i® *■* '■?»>*•« s. »•*■ »* ddd*'* atvdi wow- Yout Savings Deserves All The Protection of a BAM! 5;\- r' r-\." Natibnal [ Bank O F P O N T I A C '■j . FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 18. IMl f -4^ Spy Trial Opens in London Today Two'Xmerlcans Among 5 Chorg^ With Sotling Secrets to AAoscow LONDON (OPIt - Britain charged tdday that a spy ring of five persons, headed by a Russian posing as a Canadian citizen. s|o)e vital naval secrets and transmitted them to Moscow from the cellar of a idiabby suburban bv^alow. The trial opens today. (The FBI in Washinclon has identified two of the dofen iint' as Americans I. AT the Bar et jBirfice tai the N*. I OMrt af the OM Bailey, three men and tan women went nn trial la Britain’s most am- Fnehs was ennsirird at gbiag atanrie arerelB te the Camnin-aMa la IMS. All the dden^ts pleaded inno- ----at» S(^jnry^l2 men was ' with the traditional speed of Rrit-iah jtttice and the attomy .general of the realm. Sir Reginald Mannii«hsm • Buller, personally opened the case for the crowi He unfolded to the court cloak-and-dagger story of 1 British counterespionage agents followed a winding trail through London's streeU. It brought them at last, he said, to a cottage in the suburb ol Ruidip occupied by a bookseller named Peter John Kroger and wife Helen. This place. Sir Reginald t(dd the Jury and Britain’s Lord Chief Justice Lord Parker, who chose to preside personally over the contained a powerful radio thans-mitter hidden under the kitchen floor. Mrs. Joseph Ward, 52 of S4 E. Madison St.. Pdntlac. sustained a fractured arm when two cart col-Hded at a Pontiac Township intersection Sunday evening. A # * The only one injured in the .rash, she was in sattaiactory condition today at Pontiac General dvfri4in Head«On Colliaion in Orion 5 Hospitalized by Crashes Five _ in Pontiac as the result of three separate-trafnc accidents over the weekend. it It * Reported in 601* condition at St. Joseph Mercy Ifospital today was Bujclnl Johnson. <#, of 400 Oarks-ton Road. Orion Township. He suffered a ruptured spleen in i twcMur head-on collision near hta home Saturday. lajared la the 'same crash was James »:abaiik8. 44. ol tW 8. Boulevard. He has fac4al ruts and Is la satislartory roa- Mn. Henrlmaa’s two crandaona, Edgar. IS, and Gerald. 12. both of - ■ aty alM. ' * " Mtt. Ward was a pasaeager hi a car driven by her husband when it collided with another at EaW-Win Road and Galogyie Street la Driver of the other car. 1^ Guadaloupe Ramirez. 27, of 4S1 N. Saginaw St.. Pontiac, said the Ward car executed a left turn into her path and she wag unable to CAR SWERVES The driver and a paasenger were injured when a car awwved Saturday afternoon and,smashed into two mailboxes and four trees. Both Mrs. Harold K. Hrrri-mae. 44. and Miss Thelma I. Tnbrrt, «, ul Garden Oty were lu sattelaetory rendition af Pun-tUr GeneraL Mrs. Hrrtniaa suf-frre4 a fractured knee cap and Miss Tnbrrt received facial euts uug u fractured arm lu the rrarii. Mrs. Herriman toW sheriffs dc^ puties ^ lost control of the car when It skidded on mud on Car-rail Lake Road, a quarter mile south of Cooley Lake Road. The car careened 1S3 feet, after kn^k-ing down the mailboxes, ■rashing into the trees, dcputlra AMAZING PSORIASIS STORY Jao. 10. 1980 - Pittsburgh, Pa. "Doctored for psoriasis » years. Spent much money to no avail. Then used GHP Ointment and TaUeU for 2 weeks. Scales disappeared as if by magic. In A _ weeks skin com^etely cleared I program, or ’’something flose. to Swainson Fin^ Public Apathy on Tax Reform DETROIT (AP) — Gov. Swainson warned business leaders today that if they fail to support his tax n 30 years. Thanks for your msrv-elous prod-.nets." This much abbreviated report tells of a naer’s success with a dual treatment for psoriasis now made avatlabie to all sufferers. FuD mformstioD and (tetails of a 14 day trial plan from Caoani Oo., Dept- 24*0 Roekport. Mass. Codkioadies Written Guarantee Pfuni Houaus, Apaztmsnta. Gtoewiss. Facloriss and Bsslaarants. fUatoin eul only oas hoot. No signs uaad. Box Ex Company tax relief may not be forthcoming for Michigan's business and industry. In a speech prepared for the Economic Club of Detroit, Swainson said, so- far "tho bnrineaa-beea pnbHcly “For some time now,” he said, "the business and industrial community has said that it was forced i to assume unfair tax burdens, that! some taxes were detrimental to growth. * ★ * "I have attempted to develop solutions to the problems presented to me. I’ve done my phrt. Now It’s up to you." Johnnn and Eu when the Jatlcr kat cuntrol of the whsti Saturday iponiliig whi Roid la Orioo Township. The oar careened over the on a curve, a quarter mile «outh of Chutaton Road, and lato an onooming vehicle. Red China Bargoins Over U. S. Newsmen TOKYO (AP>-Oommunist Oilha todar demanded the withdrAwal of U.& torcea horn Foninoaa at dia price of admission of U.S. newspapermen. A dr ♦ TIm Information department of ihe ministry of foreign affairs made tha announcement in commenting on the recent U.S.-Red “ ■ tfilks in Wareew. Peiping said the demand first was made last SepL 6 and stUl stands. Truck,Nflriowlj Misses Williqms pn African Road Driver of the other car, Charles Scribner. 42. of 3461 Baldwin Quebec’a pulp and paper, smelt-Road, Orion Township, was treat-ing refining Industrlat have a: com- trel. bruMag baf hot ed at the hoapital (or minor in-jbined outptit of more than 12 bit- ....................... juries and released. lion annually. wta (VPI) — AiHitaaf Boerataqr al State 0. Msaam WUBaaas aarrawly IhrM of the Mx can at | 1 seiteosly the It paaseagera aad - SHOE REPAIR SPECIAL! - HALF SOLES $175 Voliw WMi Coupon Only AU WORK OUARANTUO Teak aad Wad Oaly , S. S. KRESGE'S iFESTlVflUt- A SUfIty Iraah-nn Tsw , Neidi — CsUisMlti Oeit- I mol — friti k n|lit ^ It •__ _ .,. _ Mf b Tw - Jm Mwiey ■ T ^ Stee-GMrH«wrU-lW brfSbv-lKkPMr-ate nwy, neev mrs ... 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CANS 99* 89* 99* ARMOUR'S-5c OFF LABEL Beef Stew NUTLEY BRAND Margarine 2 24.0Z. 5*89* 7C—0FFUBEL AArs Fino Qiiolity Solod end Cooking Oil dexola 49' 10c—OFF UBEL AOP't Own Port Vngotabl# Shortening dexo 3*65* SAVE 11c JANE PARKER PLAIN OR SEEDEO Rye Bread 2.^“35* SAVE 16c—JANE PARKER Pineapple Pie ONLY A&P BRAND Sweet, Frozen PEAS 4-69* DAXY UANO Dog Meal 5 ^ 39c !x'Hjf l-ONViAC i^RESS. MONDAY. MARCH 18. 1961 Farm^RPin; Hopes on JFK FIFTEEN } Rurd Union Long-Time S Advocate of Policies I Urged by Kennedy WAIHINGTON (UPI) - With »the riathxi of pUsrtnu rm Sthe pronilMd. land after Syean of txlbulatlani, membere of Stbe Nattatal Ffermen Union today S^opened their annual convenUon. • The 750,000-member union la a ikmt-tlme advocate of the Und of Sfarm mariteting controla and farm 2Jicome- domed 1 by Preetdent Kennedy. It waa almoet contlnuoualy on the iatratlon. Jamea G. Patton, prealdent of tbe 'amalteat of the nation'a three major general farm groups, said In advance of the three-day oon- la rebalMIng, and IM9 are ebewtag great ea tbariawn ever the oha^ la He predicted Sunday that Kennedy “will probably be tending to Oorgreaa hia first special meiaage bn agriculture whte>Va ai ■eation.” The mesiage is eiqwcted to include Itomedy’s proposals for new long-range farm legislation backed^by th efarmers union. This la the first national convention ever held in the nation' capital by the 69-year-old group which has, chartered units in 20 states and organizatioos : others. Chorale Will Sing Sunday Action Clarified the Fansers Union OrSla Terminal Asaectattea of St. Paal, Ion’s largest grain In addition to routine business, the convention schedule today includes annual reports by several other farmers union offidala. Patton will deliver the keynote address tonight to the 2,000 delegates. Later in the week, delegates will be addressed by Agriculture Secretary Orville L. Freeman, Labor Secretary - Arthur Goldberg, and several other government officials including John A- Baker, directs of agricultural credit services. Until recently Baker was a Washington legislative representative for the farmers unkn. Will Be Secretary for Safety Meeting ORCHARD LAKE-Kenneth He^ 2895 Warner Dr„ the Michigan Safety Conference when it holds its 31st annual meeting April 11-13 in Lansing. Hedges is safety director for the General Motors Corp. and is an officer of the Atneiican Society of Safety Engineers and the Greater Detroit Safety Council. More than 5,000 persons are expected to attend the Safety Conference, which will offer speeches, as‘'a huge ^bit of the latest types of safety equipment. Juvenile Delinquency Topic at Stone School AVWr TOWNOTIP - The Rev. Edwin OuBois will^spei^ on .. • ^ Ihuraday at the ( I p.m. meeting of the Stone-Au-buni Heights Parent-Teacher Association meeting at Stone Elemen-tuy SdxMl, 3741 R Adama Road. The Rev. and Mrs. DuBois, foi^ mar house parents at the Starr Oamroonwealth Home for Boys, also will describe the type of w«rk being done at the home. The parent-teacher stssociation wBl hold its annual card party March 24 from a to 10:30 p.m. at Stone School. Rotaiiam to Heal Bentley WALLED LAKE - Alvin M. Bentley, former UJ. rejreeenta-tive tram Mldilgan’s Ei^ Dis-triet, will be the speaker March 20 at a dinner meeting of the Walled Lake Rotary Qub. The program at the Walled Lake MeUiodlst Church is betog hsid In nctian with the Rotary b-teraatlaiial World UaderatanOiM Weak. March 1»«. Bentley, who will discusi the subject “Our Shrinking World" and nearby Rotary clubs invited to meeti^, also was a member the House Foreign Affairs Committee. As a member of the eommittaa, he went to Berlin in 1969 to obtain first-hand information on coodi- GET RELIGIOUS AWARDS — These six aarkston girt scouts are the first in the area known to have earned religious recognition In girl scouting given for one year of intensive religious activity. The work is similar to that undertaken by boy scouts for their God and Country award. The Rev. William Richards, pastor of the First Methodist Church, was assisted in making the presentations at yesterday’s U:30 a. m. church service by Mrs. Homer E. Ri(Wond, north district Girl Scout director. The recipients of symbolic pins are (from left) Kris Smith, Sue Hampshire, Elaine Keeley, Jennifer Pike, Jacquie Leonard and Then Robinson. Watching the proceedings are Mrs. Evan J. Leonard, scout leader, and Mrs. Richmond. At Oxford iligh School Zoning Notice OXFORD-The 69 teeiHgers in the Michigan Chorale who will take part in the “Youth for Understanding” program this summer in South America are slated to make their only local appearance here Sunday. Included in the group of young songsters are 29 Oakland County high schod students, three of them from Oxford High SdM»l where the cborale will perform Sunday at 4 p.m. Among the voeaUats David Gark, “ on the tour which is sponsored by the Michigan (Council of Churrttes. The chorale will leave the United States June 26 to fly to four Capitols south of the border. The group will present one concert a day before returning here Aug. 28. 1 LeaUe MeWIDIams. aU s tors at Oxferd ngh School. Proce^ from the concert here win be given to the three local youths to help pay their expenses on the South American tour, day’s program is sponsored by the QiCtord Music Club, Junior Wont-«'s Chib, Lions and Rotary dubs. Except for the funds received in mefit concerts, all members of the diorale pay their own petitive auditions befene Lester McOty, director of the Choral Union at the University of Michigan. McCoy will travel with the group in South America. Mentoen of the ehetala will stay with South American families while on their toar. They will spend two weeks In Bogota, sil; and Montevideo, Uragur, with stops In Mesloo CUy, Mex-leo; Dallas, Tex.; and Chleago, The group has a repetoire which includes music from Stephen Foster to Bach. They also sing spir ituals, ^ymns and Spanish num- Gark, a first tenor, is a member of the mixed oiaemble and ehedr at Oxford High. Ho has studied on a scholarship at Interlochen. Williams, also a member (rf the choir and mixed ensemble at the high school, is a baritone and an accomidlshed pianist. ' le, amemberoftbe mixed ensemble and high sdxxd dxdr, is prerident of the Ix^ music club. A second tenor, he took the lead in local prodtKtkms of ‘Good Flews” and "Oklaffima!” BY AUDinONg Like all other members of the chorale, the three Oxford youths were chosen for the tour Talent to Go on Parade at Romeo High Show ROMEO—A wide range of talent will be delayed at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow when the Romeo High School Concert Band presenu ite annual Pop Concert and Talent Show in the senior high school gymnasium.' Students from Romeo and neighboring school districts will present tfaair ads in oonweUUen ^ prises dining the Oie second portion of the program. ’IlM^ Win be divided into two A pand of judges wiU pick the wtonera from guitar players, pan-to mi mists, instrumentalists, piano soloists and vocal trios and en-semUes. The pop concert will feature the conceit band of 77 members directed by E. C. Qjala. The band-selected music will include several mardies, some Duke EHlington favorites, a number for the clarinet section and some popular times. A.osfnet trio, Tom Vos, Mare Rost and Idwn Warren, will ptoy “Bright K^,” and the newly Dinner to St»rt Drive Plan Jewish Seminary gOUTOFIELD A ft _ to raise $t00/m to flnaaoe con-atiuction of a Jewish seminary htn will begin Staday w‘‘ Uekoff dinner at Oobe Hall. the campus will contain a library, science laboratory an] a dismil- Missionory to Oikum Experiences in Japan The 33-ycar4M semiaety been mee^ in a hone ea eamput tbtet seBtog Ms quarters at 12015------------ ~ s,at 12015 Ltawood ia Dstrott > WWW Rabbi RethsBberg saM Ihc rDilment ed-40 te espeeted to i Me with tha cpeaiiig M the ★ * ♦ OGODMON-the Rev. Paul T. But, pastor of the First Method-tot (fturch ot Pontiac, Ma experienoea as a missiaoaty in Japan Mlowing a 6:30 p.m. Thursday at PMnt Oeek Community Methodist The Rev. Mr. Hart did miarioih ary work in Shingu, Japan, under the direction of the General Board Evangelistie Miasions of the He atoq has served as a n ter at churchee in Daviaon, Port Chorus, s tsculty group, will make s guest sppesraaoe. The deadline for entering the talent show competition is today. Tickets to the double musical event are being add by band members or at the door tomorrow night. . Prooaeda go into the sdsxiflaaki An official id the Oaldand County Planning Commission said township zoning boards in the county must give notice of public hearings to all owners of property located within SOO feet from the pe^ imeter of the property to be re- Other area students in tbe^bhor-ale include Chalmers Brumbaugh of Bloomfield Hills: John W. Bird and Judith EJdred, both of Rochester; and Ralph Adams, Marlene Beale, Susan Greenlee and Barbara Griffin, all of Pontiac. FROM COUNTY Other county students in group are Sue Mlllspaugh, David Parrish snd Bonnie Shep^, all of Walled Lake; Patricia Oeks of Holly;; William F. Greene of Milford; Richard Benninger and Katft erine Harger of Orchard Lake; Gordon Bush of Clawaan. Arnold P. (}karneck, Mary Louise Mehaig, Irene Suess and George VITlke. all of Southfield; Thomas Thrclkeld of Pleasant Ridge; Carol Jones of Northville; Jerry G. Alkira and Nonnan York of Fetn-G.^Sttnett. aD of Royal Oak. Landowners Inside 500 Feet of Area Must Be Informed of Hearing Wertl UaisretoudlBt Waefc to as aunal affest au the part al Batary elabs thrsngbeut Bw lag among people asd govern- tiODS. He was a delegate In October to the first American-G«r-msn Cbnferatce held in Germany. ’The public is Invited to hear the idrees, following the dinner, without charge. The dinner is' scheduled 6:30 p.m. and the talk at 7:30 p.m. | Trlemlsof/W'Plan Pkturo Framing Tal Rochester Mfm ifj. Ifys Major Bole '"'ih EMU Play CLARKSTON—An authority on tbb art of picture framing present a lecture on the subject before members of tbs Village Friends of Art at 8 p.m. Wedpes-day at the Oonaervatory of Music. Karen Boeaen 'M 901 Flnt 8t.. ochsMar. wUl pl*y « major role in' the Eastern Michigan Unlver-sily Players productlan of “Othello” to-be presented on the Ypei-Isafi campus March 22 thtvugh Mareh gj. ' He to John McKinney, a_______ her of the Little Gallery in Blr^ Prior to his preeent position, McKinney was on the sfeff of the Kacklock Fine Arts Gallery at little Rock, Ark., for eight years. Another feature of the program will be the presentation of several vocal numbers by^the darkston High School A Cappella choir directed by Martha Jetter. Miss Boesen,<« santor i to dramatfe arts, will portmy Dee- demona. OthsUo’s wtte. haama rsibs in 6ba Edwin VUtonef to_______ Trail, Farmington TtomUp. BMant, a senior speech maJiH-. Futten, s is cast as Roderlgo, and lophomnre, will pli^r L« The title role of OthMlo i portrayed by Joaeph Dennia, tor from Detroit Dr. Ekiund Will Speak ORCHARD LAKE - Dr. Lt»weU R. Ekiund, director of continuing education at Michigan State Uni-vmlty Oakland, will be toe gueat spealfer. at the 8 p.m. meeting Thursday qf the West Bloomfield High School Parent-Teacher Aaso- •"Ilie Or. Ekiund will speak Pursuit Of Excellence” with emphasis on Individual adiievement > The public ia invited to the ih^-1 tog. ■ ' I FORD SPRING MOTOR TUNE UP Spark Plugi - Only Utofbs ftov towra ipmM) BRnKE RELIHE Jerome*Ferguson Ford 215 Mein Street OL 1.9711 Reeheiter Gyde E. Cooke said he wished to correct an earlier United Press International stwy that appeared to The Pontiac Press ediich stated that “no notice of the public hearings need be mailed to owners ot property within 500 feet of the projicrty affected by the znning hearing.’* lowlag aa opinion by Atty. Gen. Pnid L. Adams to wUoh he said that township officials are qnlied to msU notloes ot sonli« hesrtags only to pubUo utilities tosest In the pstton of develop-raent ef the dlstriet affeoted.” “Tills x^toilon refers only to amending an interim zoning ordinance,” CoMce said. "There are no longer any townships in Oakland county opmttog under an interim ordiance.’’ “A postcard notice is sufficient,” Soon townriiip officials will ceive from the {danning commission copies of a buUetto op amend-tog-townhltl sontog ordtoances RMim Jeeaup and Baibara Sain, ondintog the entire procedure. PUBLIC NOTICE SPECIAL SELLING We Are Selling Detroit Builders' Show Display Models of NORGE APPLIANCES qt Savings Up to 40% OFF Regular Price I LIMITED QUANTITIES - SOME PERFECT — Some Slightly Marred from Handling — REFRIGERATORS WASHERS-DRYERS FREEZERS-RARGES-Bpea Toaight Sale Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday ONLY! FULLY GUARAKTEED--OUR OWN FREE SERVICE! 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Our fleet of new, modem GMC Trucks (meter equipped for accuracy) deliver cleaner burning New AAobiih^ Furnace Oil in Pontloc, Drayton PIdins, Woterford, Ciorkston, Lake Orion, Oxford, Auburn Heights, Bloomfield Hills, Keego Harbor and the surrounding area, so no motter where you live, you, too, con enjoy complete heating satisfaction simply by dialing FE 5-8181. |or Over 36 Yeera Oee ef Pentiec's Leedinf Peel Oeelefs NOW IS THE TIME TO SWITCH TO GEE! . I THE 1’OXTJAC PRESi8. MONDAY. MARCH >8. 1961 Typical ■ritiih Bigomist !*■ ", ^ ]t «i T«rf*ct Husbond' on biguay in thg A typicnl English bignmist, tbo ._ , jiwwipnprr said, '.to likely to be * LONDON (UPD-Ttiere are ».• Ueery little feUw anj. in the eye* 000 men in BetUin witl^ 2 wivesjot Ms neighbors, the perfect hut- t \ With This Coupon i M SAVE GOOOYUlt SCRVId STOfti. Id 1. Csti. TmHm Soy Nikita ilntorottod in Subiummit Tolks WASHINGTON^ (AP) • Premier Khrushchev hr reported to be interested In continuli^ b«-Ut Novoslbirik with main cold war issue*. ★ * informants said Si|nd«y Khrushchev expressed this interest dur- W.8., antbaasador toj^jff Jhot Bolo Members of . the Indian Parliament at New Delhi usually debate In EnglUh, the language that moat have In common. CASPER. Wyo. (II - Mr*. H. R. Hand harvested cotton **om a plant on her front lawn late thfs "-lx.vrs-"’ lUHN anro «UR lit W. WmMm' AffMS riMn nroitoee 'BRAKE iAND FRONT END SPECIAL I REGULAR ♦KVAtUE • Chad braUt, adjust for propor contact • Add bralta fluid, tost aittiro tyitam • Ropaclt front whool boarin^t a Align front ond, corroct cambor, caster, toa-!a a Adjust staaring, balanca two front whooU PAY AS Y OU RID! bOOD/^EAR SERVICE STORE ‘ NEW A.WB.ASSADOR - John S. Rice, secretary of the Com-monwe^' of Pennsylvania, was named' by President Kennedy Sgnday as United States ambassador to the Netherlands. Rice, 62, to the director of several corporations. 30 S. CASS FE 5-6123 MillionaiTe Takes Lite by Jumping NEW YORK (API — MulUmfl-Ilonaire Hanns Ditishoim, 56, Swiss-born financier, plunged his death Sunday from the roof vS tT-story Bronx fanikKng. Police said It was an apparent suicide. A hole from Dittohcim to his wile. Cornelia, was found on the roof. Police declined to disclose Its contents but they said It «n-phasized worry over his health and not his finances. * A ♦ Mrs. Dilisheim said she awakened in the morning to find her husband missing from their IS-acre estate, Lcs Oiseaux. in Tar-rytown. N.Y. She identified the tady-twre. - ★ A ♦ Mrs. pitisheim told police her [husband had appeared in good Jgpirfts Saturday. She said he spent IP entire day at home. The building from which Diti-sheim plunged, one of seven apart-iient houses in the $16 million 'oiuham housing dwelopmeijt. to by the ISanal-Randolph COrp., of which „ Ditisheim was president and dgr^or. ^ Canal-Randolph also Is the major shareholder of United- .Stock-yards, the nation’s largest stoclc-~ isheim and his ’' the comfpny As president of Canal-RandoIph, be had reported* trying to gain control or the huge Montgomery Ward Co., following a 'ar effpit liy financier Louis son that faded. Laos Ex-Official Asks U.S. Keep Hands Off PHNOM PENH, (Cambodia'(AP) Ex-Premier ^vrona Phofflllia'tff Laos said today that peace in his war-tom homeland depena find solutien-dycd viscose, bknda, rayons, wool broodloom rugs that hold fh*ir colon ... ora toil-roslstonf for on* racord lew price. All in high fashion twaads and miaad patterns end in tiaa* and colon for ovary room In your ham*. Roll ends of first guaiity carpalt ... not sacondf! i2'*ir TwNd, SoadolWMd Rostk .$49 irxir 108% Weal $49 iriir Twe^ SaadalwMd Ratfk. .|49 irx9*s** WaaHevSbMW $49 irxis' TwNd, Rastk Mgi 1 $49 ■ irxir 75% Royea, 25% Nytaa. $49 ir*ir Rayon, Natrio — $49 ll*x9**" 100% W*al, Mock aod WhHe $49 mis'T mm" Royra, Brmra Rayra, RahiMw .. $49 $49 f**"xir mir Rayaa Olead, Targa*ba $49 100% WmL Mixsd Pomrn. $49 mis* Nyan, Natrio — $49 irx9*r Tweed, Fawa irafS" W**Nei(, Cihaial . $49 irx9* WaaHax, Maiek ond WhH*. $49 iriif ray My upiT Mift $49 ■ 9*xir 70% Waal 30% Ryloii, Ony $49 irxii* Mixed Pattera .... $49 i2*xir . 70% Meat, 30% Nyloii. Ton $49 inririr Nyien, Wiator Fawa $49 fxl** Cattaa, Baoy TsraaACaM $49 mirr Rayaa, lohoBN |Toa $49 irxir $49 irxrr Weal Ibad, IMdM . $49 inrxTir 100% W*eL B*ift $49 irxir TwMd, SMrfNBi KVhlte $49 irxis' $aafa«a0nM.......... $49 ■'X ■ • --’1 ^ioNDAY, MARCH 13. 1901 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. ' " ^ Iz. / SEVENTEEN : Can You Identify These Busy I ’ ' : .. . .___ Do you pride youreelf on knowing where you are going? How observant are you? The lltUe photo quiz oh this page should help you find.out. Presented here are live pictures of entranceways to well known Pontiac buildings. Hundreds of people walk ^ through these doorways almost every day. Do you know t» what buildings these portals belong? ^ Test yourself on these phptos by Tontiac Press photographer Eddie Vanderworp. Then turn to page 31 in today’s paper tor the correct answers. Student Play Sees Outsiders Getting Into Act Thriller to Be Offered at City School By DICK SAUNDERS | malic effort unparalleled in Approximately 75 Washington school’s history. Junior High school students will xhe Washington Pioneer Play-see several months of hard work the a I ‘ n. <1 bear Its fruit Friday night at 7:30. | on both a dramatic and technl-Thc product 'Miould be as sweet I level — usually reserved for as success can be. : senior l&gh and college acting When the auditorium lights dim. "This is the first time a play the audience will be thrust intolof this scope has been attempted "Flight Into Danger ” — a dra-'at the junior high level anywhere. Hartman, director and speech I Los Angeles. [uNIQUr STAGING attempt to achieve realism jand vividness of event, the produc-jtion will be unique in the fact "Flight Into Danger’ has beenj adapted for the stage by Christo-j| Ti.„ „ o„t.i interior of an airliner and The plot revives around events which When Ihc of a huge airliner is stricken with .\ control tower has b^n eon-■ I slrueted in Ihe first lew rows of h , auditorium seats. «vill be Bob Dudley and Carolyn Spanburg. Other key fbles will be played by Mark Walker, Joanne Lynch, Jon Hartman, John Hofmeister, Ann Fulton. Cindy Morrell, Betty Nyhof, Char Everett, Carol Dodd and Roger Putnam. Is feet off the stage, and the floor |of the 8 by 10 foot control tower I will also stand ^mc .3 feet above [floor level. Also in the student cast are Jum Bnncy, Mike Hamon, .Susan Ca-puzfi, Cheri W'yrick, Christine Bex-’ ell, Nathan Joncs^ Dave Brown, Diane Mitchell. Jack Blestein. Russell Undervxood and Bob Isgrigg. Awlstant director is Elaine PjTTOs, English and spee<-h Instructor. Staff heads include Pamela La-* * * iLonde. stage manager; Dave Dun- The tower will be giassed-in so..JaP-.Publicity: Diann MitcheU, ad- Ithe audience will be able to [the action clearly. The play’s ‘‘curtain’’ will be I lighting. "The lights will fade from one set as they rise on another. PLAY KEY ROLE This calls for plenty of planning and timing for art instructor Trav-er Miller, in charge of lifting. Miller and his crew of seven students play a key role in the production. vertising; and Jeanie Jenner and Jack Bletstein, ticket chairmen. The students are charging 75 cents for adults and 50 .cents for students to see the show, llclcets can be obtained from Washington students, at the door, or at Felice Quality Market, 238 S. Telegraph Road. It will be the first evening dramatic perfom»nce at the junior high school in eight years. CONTROL TOWER CREW — The most unusual setting in Washington Junior High’s production will .be this control tower off-stage at audience level. It-is now partially constructed. I^nishing touches will be added this .week, fetors and actresses who do scenes from the Fmi Pfetu tdlMer are (from left) bavid Brown, Michael Harmon, Nathan Jones, Cheri Wyrick, and Diann Mitchell. The production, originally a tel^slon play, is being attempted for the first time in this area. The technical side will have a real profeNslonal look due to the help ot outside organisations. Michigan Bell Telephone CO. is sending technicians this week tq install radio communications between the contiol tower and airliner. They will also provide head lionet for the actors. General Motors Truck it Coach Division is donating 10 seats for the interior ot the airliner. DONATE HEADSETS Robbins Flying Service, at Pontiac Municipal Airport, is donating headsets for pilot and copUot. Personnel from Robbins is also assisting in an advisory cafpacity sure mlism and authenticity in the production. Appearing la the lead roles ’ Board Will Consider Black Topping Streets Hie only items scheduled for tmdght’s W'aterford Township Board meeting are a hearing for black topping two streets, according to Gierk James E. S^erlin. Hie hearings, scheduled (nm 7 to 9, involve a stretch of road Cheeseman Street from Ftembes Street to Sashabaw Road, at a total cost to property owners of $10,200. A second hearing to be held at the Same time involves an area on Riveria Street from Elizabeth Lake Road to Beechgrove Street. PLANE SCEBTE ~ These Washington Junior High School stu-are triieaniiig a pcene which will greet an audience in the achool auditorium Friday The ptay, “Fli^t lofoi Danger,” takes pteoe on an airplane. Hiia hi ^4Utttldiy two aeta — a cockpit and a passenger area cf the giant airliner. Hie actors and actreasea are (from left) Bqb Dudley, (>rol S^ianburg, JoAnne Lynch, Jon Hartman, RoRer Putnatn, Jim Briney, Susan Ckpuad. John Hofmeister, Betty NybdL Cindy Morrell, Chrot Dodd, Char Everett and Marie Waite, — ' ■ ; T EIGtfTEKN JL THE PONtlAlc PRESS, MQNJ^Y, ittARCH 18, 1061 Says Heqessfoil Has Hit Bottom but Aid Needed WASHINGTON (XJPD — Om-N. UaOgm 'litt ti re> covMinK but tot Preskleirf Kaft-nedy’s antirKcaion program knk ia brl^Midi«-But ht aaki a tarn, tax cut probably would not bt aacdad to pump oiora purcbaiim r Into tha acoeomy. Kateady prolniMd to coatoder aueh a t burinwi M not linprova by Fbocb Haltifig FtrriM of a Mimbar of RapubUean^ that Kamady^ antiraeoaatoB propoaals aboHld ba acrappad baeauaa TeamsieistoHalt Port Strike on Coast SAN FRANCISCO (INPI)-Attor nay Sam Kagal atmooncad aarly toOBy that an-- * " ranemd to an ol Ibamaun asataBt ^ port at n Fraactooo. ■deal, who aetod aa madlator I to topato, aaU to agroa-a U- aUaMppI iUvar ’Soodtag. ^ aaaraat bridfaa ara at Cairo, WhaUag aatlona of to wwld atgaad aa agraamont In U8T not to taka eow whalaa rumdiig ealvua. Mt to wwk aaaf tkla A tomllar ante to U-whidi atartod toaf Tuaaday, waa aattled THday aiibt. tttojfjto^TatoSo Maitttoto >• tMw (ILWV). Ttoa San Franctaao attomay da> cUnad to glva any of tba datafla I of to agraamont, but aald "Ttam* Boys Stool Flrt Truck, Toko Fast Siron Rid* CfUNDALU Itoc. (AF)~1bnw 0|ya atola to cRy’a fire truck and raced over to oountiyaide lito wing otor bean to a to tmdt, thiid^ It them to a fire Boya la to fire truck, thinking » car aocuptod by poll iwannd toto.a daadand road* T«e boya on to tmdt ftod. The lird waHad tor poUea to anuat him. Offlean ara kMkb« tor ‘ otor two. HOSPITAL^SURGICAL BnOMMCB FOB ROM 85 Tears or under NBN 1M4 " $1.75 WORMIMI ramt ot^ 1 WOKBIttoW riH $4.00 • a of Ae» biduliw $2.30 WQMBIt 4M» Tanrt al Aaa. todualTa CHnJOREN UIfI»R It TEAB8 $ .85 wtob OLD EQUITY UFE INSURANCE COMPANY Write tel P.O. iOX Nil DBTBOIT SI MigBCI^ , Mofl Cteopaa let eaiplite tatemwllaa about lUs low Cool Won (Porli ABB) W0BL8 WDE CgVIBAOI 2Sl •m.. LizBrealtiing Without Tube Adron Tolks Frotly WHh Eddit ond Poronts; Rtcortry Assurwd LONDON (AP)-Actrto 1 aUy today, mtaua to « throat tube to uiad tor oigbt daya to IMT figto againat daubto Ramoval of to tube In a fiva-mtaute proetdiira Sunday nt to Loagoa Otole was a Rpi of star’s raoovaiy. Hw ciltloal I to, a-i Cor Crosh Triol Storta in to car wreck f car btongtag to tha dngar. Mtw Clan Sliilf Today (Oty oimI *Niflit Scfioal) •neUBW Bam* latoeewi fm PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE 7 W. UwitotoCB .ff a*70t9 GO KXOGERmG . .. EARLY WEEK COUNTtY eiui a VAMIllA • C^UTI • STHAWeim e NUeOUTAN a VANILlA-CHOCOUTi % Gal. ICE CREAM BUY HALF GALLON REGUUR PRICE 87o SECOND OAL Me BoHiforBSo * * * "kOaa Taytor to now going akaw I very nlooly,'> aatd a. ^oheoman at to exdoslva hototaL * Mtoa Taytor, N, oaoversed hao> ly during to day with her bus- ntor pnlsad to tmm of doe- j tort and nnraas and tha dinic ! ■tall who had fought to kaap hit wile attva. He added: "There to now every rqmm to btovo that to will recover fully from the dreadful ID-new whieb ao very nearly took her Ufa more ton oiioa tUa past He alto tore—d toppwclatkai "to the many theumnda of filendi thranghout to wortd. unknown to us pononlly, who ^ their i tageo of pnyar and oncoun m«t and faith helped us im tandy to keep alive our own so 25 Extra Top ValiM Slampi WITH THIS COUPON AND ANY TWO LOAVES OF 17 VARIETIES KROGER BREAD NORTH BAY BRAND _ SWEET Of BUTTERMILK ' GRATED TUNA................« 19’ BOHErSMSCIITS... DEMINGS FANCY KEYLESS RED SALMON_________________’£ 79’ «HE SMMIES.... SAVE6.SOIDEN POUND CAKE*.....;...... - W POM’EIEAIB................... SAVE 4c KROGER FRESH GLAZED DONUTS....... - 39* STtMHTI....................... BN-Os. SAVE 20c U.S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN POTATOES §tesilc Sate! WITH COUPON BELOW 10 LB. BAG “ B tasty, lean, thrifty November storta hare Tuaaday. Jaatos Eviuin Davto, if, was to- |R0UND. I RIB.. SWISS-SIRLOIN TASTY, LEAN, THRIFTY T-Bon«................Lb. 85c PorterhouM .......... Lb. 85c Cube .................Lb. 99c 7S SCOTT PAPER FacialUssBe..^ 4<^99* White Towels.. S'-SO* Toilet TissBe.8'^ 99* CatRite Wax Paper 4<"99* 99 SALE AVONDALE Creel Style Cori6'”99* Toiatoes.... 6*^99* Peas...... .7‘*99' vegetables No. 303 CANS I50 EXTRA ■ Top Value Stomps ■ WMi iMa co«po« ond $5 pgldtoo or I ■ ■Mfo of motciMHMiiao oxeope Bggr, m Wino or Cifloraitto | I Ceepea valid af Krefae la Raaliae aad Diavtaa I PWee, MieWgan Itora Taanlay, idarak 14. I mi. Umit 1. ” FAMOUS HOLLYWOOD ankeUlm ^ A CANDY MRS ~ - ir RIIISO AFRICAN VIOLETS'^rSfo J Ol' f in ’ \{rl iF'd reserve the right to Unit quantities. Ptices effedive at Kroger in Pontiac and Drayton Plaint, Midtigad through Tuqt., March 14,1961. c^erj r Recital I . at Temple - Brilliant Charles /I. Wilson ^ Ploys New OrMn t for Large Crowd By 4AY JAC0B80IV Charlea A. Wilaon. minister — ^ of miiirip and choirtnaster e( ' First Cbngregational Church and organist at Temirie Beth Jacob, presented a brilliant ' and diversified organ recital , Sunday afternoon at Temple Beth Jacob. Mr. Wilson played •» with great variety and understanding and gave the feeling of complete identity with both the Instrument and the musk. The program opened with the seven part Suite of Oeram-toault, a contemporary of Bach, in which the varying stops of the organ were used very adroitly. Especially noteworthy stops were tl^ Basse et Trompette and DiaUgtie-Bach’s ‘Ttkcata In the Dorian Mode” is a fine example of the master’s unique contrapuntal style and Mr. Wilson executed the difficult passages with musicianship and finesse. Haydns "Musical Clocks” was in whimsical contrast to the more seriomi opening selections and it was played with humor and lightness. The two selections representing modem Jewish composers were "Prayer at Midnight" by BerllnsW and “March” by Bloch. •> Hie first evol^ a mood of imense religioas feet Ing at the same time that its atonal expressiveness was tempered in the traditional mode. In the “March,” the great Ernest Bloch successfully combined the usual form with the hanniuUes 'fdr w^ he was so famous. TTie program closed with VPlainte and Dialogue BUT tes Mixtures” by Langlais. These contemporary wofks are beautifully contrasted with each other, and Mr. Wilson gave each of them a reading of great sensitivity and depth. The new organ at Temple Beth Jacob is an addition to the musical life of this community and the large audience that attended this recital gave proof that fine organ music iriayed as Mr.' Wilson interpreted^ it will always be highly appreciated in Pontiac. THE POltTIAC PSES8. MONBAY. MABCH 18. IMi NINETEfty Caroline Kennedy, 3-year-old daughter of the President carries a toy six-shooter and a purse as she leaves the Georgetown . home of her aunt Mrs. Stephen SmiUt to join her father in a waiting automobile. Caroline’s comings and goings have become as newsworthy and interest-loaded as those of her famous parents. ine Keeps GOP Reeling Button Earrings May Become Saucer Si2ed! NEW YORK (UPI)-Stoort. simile hairdos, big bulky hats and lengthening necklaces spell bigger, more dramatk earrings—button or drop—for ■pripg;. ' The Fashion GoMdination Institute reports that the size of button earrings has grown so dramatically that today, an earring consider^^ daring a year ago seems al^ most conservative to a woman's eye. By BONALO H. NES8EN WASHINGTON (UPD-This Joke is making the rounds here: First Republican: I think we can beat Kennedy in 1964. SeoHHl Republican: Yes, but can we beat Caroline? Some GOP politicians fear there’s mbre tnith than humor in that little gag. And it's not Just President Kennedy's daui^ter who is stealing headlines. Presidential nieces, nephews and assorted in-laws by the nursery-full are gamering columns and col-' umns of newspace with their high Jinks. ★ ★ ★ For instance, the President granted his nephew Bobby (son of Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy) a formal appointment last Saturday after the lad wnHe Mm, “Dear Jack: I would like to see you sood.” Seven-year-bid Bobby gave bin Unde Jack A salamander named Shadracfa in a foot-h^ glass vase. BATES FBONT PAGE Associate WMte flouse Press Secretary Andrew W. Hatcher suggested with tongue in cheek that perhaps Bobby Jealously wanted equal space with his mudi-puUicized cousin Caroline. Almost daily front pages cany pictures and stories cm the exploits of this goldenhaired bundle of energy and miscMef: . Caroline dancing at a diplomatic reception; Caroline kissing her baby brother's feet; G^line riding on daddy's shoulders; Caroline losing her pet hamsters; Caroline shuffling into a Kennedy news conference wearing her mother’s shoes; Caroline welcoming f o r m e r President Harry S. Truman to ’'our” house; Caroline stretching out in a church pew; Cardifie keying her father waiting while she chats with a reporter; Caroline brandishing a toy sbc shooter. The PresideBt's 3-year-old daughter is the. star performer *of a sort of our gang of admin-iiftratkm offspriiq^. Another WMte House member is her 4-month-dd brother John Jr., bom in the glare ct puMkity the day after Thanksgiving, ensconced in a wMte nursery in the executive mansion and the subject of more published photographs fiian any other baby in years. The largest single contingent in the new frontier youth bri- Galg’ Thumbs Down - Abby Blunt on Pointed Shoes By ABIGAIL VAN BUBEN DEAR ABBY: I am skk of hearing the beefs about pointed shoes for women. The reason we sell so many is because you women must WANT them. SHOE SALESMAN DEAR SHOE SALESMAN: Please don't teS me what we women those hideous, pointed-toed shoes were designed by men who hate women and want to make them look as ridiculous as possible. If tbeie is a national shoe manufacturer’s as-sodatian, i^ase give me the addren. I would like to send 'them all the mail I recdve from iwomen who protest the new st)de shoes. A letter (or postcard) to this column will help-and 1 toad all the rest. DEAR ABFY: I am with you all die way in your campaign to get rid of those homely Wizard of Oz witches’ dwes. I have a long and narrow foot, TiiIm) aiM you^^ c^ imagine What my feet look like in the new spring shoes. I refuse to wear gray shoes because diey look like gun boats. GUN BOAT ^4NIE DEAR ABBY: My hus- L^can tell you how much suffer from pointed . especially young girls feet are still devt^ir^f. toes are bad enough, but oh, those beds! I have to walk "tippee toe” so I won’t get-my heels caught in gratings, between cracks in the sidewalks, . or even on shag 'carpets. Pkase, please help us get some sensible shoes before 1 break my neck. TIPPEE TOE DEAR ABBY: This wUl kill you!' Now they have pointed-toed bowling shoes! Al^, are they going crazy? GOING BAREFOOT D^ ABBY: The woman who complained about pointed dioes is no doubt wearing cheap shoes. Also she is prob-aMy one ^f those peaco^s who needs a size 8 B and fights with the dioe clerk to make Mm give her a 7 double A. The new pointed shoes are beautiful and comfortable when you get the proper fit. SHOE MAN DEAR AIWY: In reply to “FOOTSORE AND WEARY” you said, “I have been tdd the women love the new pointed-toed shoes.” Please tell me exactly who tdd you that women love these asinine, ri-dicutous, pointed atrocities? i AUGUSTA DEAR AUGTJSTA: Every shoe salesman to whom I 'complained. DEAR ABBY: I beat the ■ODIATItUiTS WIFE » ABBT^W^goInlsd stylish to cram your foot into a pointed shoe. Now I wear leather moccasins Just like tte Indians did. OOMFtniTABLE DEAR ABBY: You are to be commended for the letters on mental iliness you nn in your column. In those letters I saw so ctoariy the attitude of society, udfich mdkes it so dlf-fi^t for-the epxitianally disturbed to recoiteT.^ t had HI yaars of emotional tremble and wak one of the hKl^ ooM wtaoM lUBily stood by me. _I wonder how many people know anything of the dark and horrible worid a mentally ill pawpij. ILvea in, - There "are no words to describe the fear and terror. then the hurt they receive when trying to recover and they become aware of the strange things they did during their Ulness. Society has done a good job in making the mental patient ashamed. Too much cannot be said about the attitude of |he public concerning mental- illness. If ever a human needs understanding and patience, it is the one who is in the dark and lonely world of mental illness. I lived there—and I know. “RECXJVERED” ♦ w ★ DEAR ABBY: When we were married, l bought my husband a wedding band to match the one be gave me. I wear mine all the time, but he refuses to wear Ms to work. He makes up the excuse that it is dangerous . for anyone working around machinery to wear a ring. I think tiiis is a lot M hooey. How can a wife hang on to a husband who tries to pass hitnself off as a single manf MARRIED AND PROUD OF IT DEAR MARRIED: Your husband’s ^’excuse” for not wanting to wear his wedding band is probaMy valid. Don’t insist tiiat be wear it to work Unless you want a nineftngered hus- Yes, Abby will answer your letter personally if ywi write to ABBY, Box 3365. Beveriy Hills, CaliL, and enclooe a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Getting married? For. Abby’s bwklet, "How To Have A Lovely tlWIiiilf.” hM S6c to ABBY, Box 33^ Beverly HUkToklit gade belongs to Attorney Gen-.eral Kennedy—seven chlWren. The nmrts-minded attiwney general often Winds up a busy day at the Justice Departmoit by tossing a football around Ms office with his older kids. KIDS ROMP One day last week, all seven of his children descended on the department at the same time. They raced up and down corridors, popped into the press room and even fired off queries to atarttod offidMs ov«- daddy’s interooni. ' Then there are lUatoons M Kennedy sisters, brothers and other assorted relatives, all with children whq are forever doing something cute or prankish or otherwise diverting. W W w ^ In the words of a Gridiron Club spoof (to the accompaniment of a Gilbert and Sullivan August vows are planned by iRonnieJean Robarge, daughter of Mrs. Marjorie Robarge of KenihnorUs Avenue and Ronald E. Robarge of Highland Park, to Richard Williams, son 6fMf7ahd Mrs. Bernard Williams of Lapeer. She attends Flint Junior College. tune), the President is surrounded by: also his brothers and Us in- ho reckon up by the dozens. And Us aunts.” The quantity and exuberance of the Kennedy kiddie korps is reminiscent of the days when Teddy Roosevelt’s brood used the Lincoln bed as a trampedine and smuggled a pet goat to the upper floors-«f the White House in the elevator. Like TR’s brood, the Kennedy youngsters frequently are seen with animals. In addition to her hamsters, Caroline’s WMte House pets at one time or another have included "RoMn” the canary, "Tom Kitten” the cat, "Charlie” the welsh terrier,. two ducks and a rabbit. TTie hamsters, Debby and Billy, twice have escaped from their cages. WMte House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger announced after the latest recapture that "security measures” had been tightened. A, ♦ W ■ . Charlie Was sent td the Virginia estate of Caroline’s grandparents where there is m S:Jt — frkiar tU I - FI I-7I29 Smtutdar 'SI S Child Needs io Learn Fine Art of Pushing Kr* Dew Mn, LaMnrwce: Ow 9«tni«r is M «rtiata« ttle boy of ttuw «M«pl tor the ray he tn iMiM Idm. Ih the cw he aetwnblee ever ia hrottwr and wiU bhiwe at him nlll ha a«iMaaea Me the a next te me. Raoantly Oa«tt shoMint me a achooi drawtnt he'd made whan Jody climbed up on ly knae and piahtd Gaoifa away. I can’t lort*t the aad took that came over my older ha ‘ BiS he ehNOtet talk to i Is overweight far Wadnnaday. March 22nd BETTY LeCORNlI HAIR FASHIONS 5799 Dixie Highway Cemmaalty Bank Bldg.. Waterfeed “Note Open For S&sinesi \0mwA And a ti hwvltaUy an aagac^ rsatliM sapartooee for an only hiM to be dhplaead by a second ne. We aanWvns start rtw^ Im away. Wa «nn*t help It. We may have to rtnva way when w« lead the h .. alhe him. ra* to the bannd ol Ua wail. The rsault |s, oar « a* a parttfan baoMe yea la lilht far M. we can ancdnrafd hhn We can dadiM Ua rttfR to hia ahare W favcied pcahtona In ths aw, betara iha TV ast - and ‘ So, when the new baby la nonghito pwah Mm ha may. Uhi Pm gtod yaw oanghl too took W miasaa on yew oMar bay's tom. New yon haew tenaon to know cnoiigh ot oar sitoport of hia rtght to aaaort It by Nwalng his Ettla ThW hepadlor ahavw tot tor hh unto bnthar, too It Is dEBoilt tor chUdien to imw toad of bnthera and who alwaiv aOow themaelvaa to he Yon enh't i » Mandi wMi a sabmlaatvw e m I d r a a andaartat. rethem and atoton dto% T ‘ ‘ Mopoct tint many of yodr er boy's baOykit It la ofUn an older child’s d •JT£ iniaaive victim of a k the oonfuatooi we tiy to dartfy by daclarti« Ms right to thepartwr. Oiiiceis Elected by the Child Culture Club OtOcen for the Child Cultu aub of Pcntlae were elected Thureday evening at the honw of Streot. Waterford Township. TaUtol office with Mn. Raymond be Mrs. WllUam A. TMede, lint Viet iwesident; Mn. Mumy Oa- Rkhard Dykman, recording ai taiy; Mn. Calvin F. King of Rochester, treasurer; Mn. Frank and Mn. Kasurow, social chair-lan. Mn. Hilman Fortney spoke concerning “Moral Integrity.’’ Mn. William Forsythe of Kettering Avenue will be bosteu far the March 23 meeting. IESTIVAl-S[ SQMRTM Leaders Selected Olficen for Zonta-Intema-tkmal ol Pontiac wan elcctod at a dinner meeting Thunday at Hotal WaUran. Swving with Mn. H. H. Smith, incoming presklent, will be Mn. S. B. Wattlea, first vice president; Margaret Stark, second vice president; Mn. Grace Olsen, recording secretary; Mn. Beecher Fawcett, treasurer; Mn. Homer TInney, treasurer. ★ ★ * Direcion who will serve with the otfioen are Mn. Grover Scott, Mrs. Ladeoi Floyd. Mrs. Adrian Ish, Mn. Earl L. Oaik, MaiT' Kelly and Mn. Irene Aitoight. The annual April breakfast will be at Devon GaUes. finrCsM-IbNbtovt- SUtley Twaplsonsr Tssr TiBkifflTd - tisif to Tss _______, »is-6Mf|eFlsfrit-fte Fsrf Stow-Jack Pssr-ssf rn. it. Hum pmu mm mmr KA nMtt IMWW ^ iiimu NO DOWN PAYMINT—2 YEARS TO FAY 90 PAYS SAME AS CASH OpgB Moi. ui Fii. Nifhls f'Your Appliance SpecuUiUs'’ mN.$*|iMwSL nS-MN “Bai” NIONOUE Have You TrkJThht Substitute for Potatoes Mixes Rice and Pasta By PANCt ODIXL A pUal ia the East Indian method of cooking itot, our By Mn. IMMtoy Meoully % JWItoT w^wayry ^ tothe ricf and cornea up with an Inteitorting diah to^ aatva with hot Iamb or cold meats. Mn. Dudley McCuUy is the cook ol the day. She belongs to the Neighborhood Association, sews and knits. saucepan. Add vermicdli mid brawiT. Add rice and Moth. Simmer about 30 minutes, or until rice is tender. Saves 10-12 as a aubstitute lor po-taloet. Birmingham Deb Is Wed in Virginia Ceremony Is Tmt PiBpprty COMniTUT IMSUIID If N«F, Jlglid Tliia Maaawfgl on POUCT noRcnoiniR carofrst pratocNen with today's ropk value of your propartyt Ymi ba plaasantly surprisad toV how our plan con o^-of-tht-ordlnary i “Bsd” NICHOUE r*r ClUiliaU CurWrM VieleeUae 49 hk. Cfaw^ to. Nl'TSSI White tulips banked the altar in t. Paul’s Church, Lynchburg, Va., for Saturday vowa ol Ann AnMtage Hamncr of Birmingham and Joa^ K. Houck of Lynchburg. The Rev. Alexander Robertson ofiiciated at the late aflemoon ceremony in the presence ol some 400 gdests. Pareato al the aewlyweda, the ham, aad Dr. aiM Mrs. Jeanph W. Heaek af Lynchburg received gaeete at the Oakwoad Cewatry CJab. An heirloom veU of rose pointe^ lace Gompiemanted the prtooees-line bridal gown ot ivory peau de aoie styled wtth bell skirt and chapel train. The scoopneck bodice extended into three-quarter sieevea. The bride carried a cascade ot white tulips and Wy. Mrs. John M. Otter III of New York was honor matron. Attending Jacquelin Perry of New Canaaif, Conn., and Elizabeth Hamncr L ^ Lynchburg, with JoAime Beechler ■‘“***’ of Btrmtogham and Sally fVost ot MBS. JOSEPH K. HOUCK LynchtHBi. Martha Ifanhall of Lynchbuif waa bar omtsto’s flow*, er giri. ’They Shaath dress, featured blue satin ivy. Thrir bsadhanda were of hry. SON’i Bin MAN Dr. Joseph Houde stood M best man far his aco. Peter, and Leighton Houck and Randolph M. Hamnar, of Btrmingliam, Moth-«w of too faridM ooivle uabarsd Gill Holland and Joaqih Lyte of Lynchburg, Thomas Eaton of WaDimfoid, Oomi., and Rfahard PacUrrar of Now Haven, Qxm. jhrMIdc’a uncle, J. Merridc Ma^ - Birmingham dents who attended the wedding toa Jonathan M. Balls, the He^ J. Beams, the Robert Wind-lera, the Barney Banpons, the Imies E> Dunctuu and toe L. alph Mmoh. Ltaxfisan at the James River Club on the day of the wedding was heatad by the Jonathan Balls, toa MaxwMl Bankers of Lyncb-biaE. oourias of Mra. Hamner, and ~ Scott Perrys of Sorority Is Eying May Oniega Alpha Sorority met Wednewday ovening at the Pio-neer Drlvw home of Mn. Fbr-cot R. Whita. Mn. Joaoph Fok Tht amnaal May bnakfaat at EDcs Tempia May 7 and a demonstratioii on “Easy Oook- r $15 fragniit oil pormuent Tb* Pro-Ekdtnr wsv* that ISBVts yoor hair soft, ■tiWsm and annntod. aaay to manafe. Got yours during this Pro-fipriiw hslf-priee sslo I Fashion set included, 1 / Af# 72 i/II Durinf Sale, W to $12,60 *Slrtoif Departtnat Mens donnell ha/r :>iyusts MIRACLE M[LE FE 8-9639 The nomination oommittco lor April election of offioen was appointed by the president. ★ w w A donation from sorority hinds will be given to tiie Carolyn Carr chapter ol the ChUAren’a Leukemia Foundation. Mrs. Michael Kervensky related her experiences during air travels in Bulgaria and contrasted life in the villages with urban living. WWW Mrs. George Morrow presided *at the refreshment ta-Me. Mn. Warren Newton was a gn^^____________ Entertains Newcomers Mrs. Mert Jennings entertained members of the Pontiac Newcomers dub at a dcasert-taidge luncheon at her home on Weuonah Drive. ♦ ★ * Prizes for high scores were awarded to Mrs. William Emerson. Mrs. Rex Madwreher and Bln. J. Edward GrabieL Robert BlUings wiU present an organ recital at the March 22 evening meeting with Mra. Macicercher of Wards Pofiite Drive, Orchard Lake. QUAUTY DRY CLEANING LOW PRICES EVERY DAY I • MEN'S SUITS • 2 SWEATERS • 2 PLAIN SKIRTS • 2 PAIR PANTS Cosh ond Carry CITY CLEANERS 3S8 OAKLAND AVI.^ S> SANFORD ST, ^ 7633 HIGHLAND RD.—358 W. HURON ST. J 97‘ Ex-Students Assist . Secretarial Teacher tion iwcently at the John D. Ftoree wrera Mrs. R Wdls 1 Germany, Mrs. Stanley Alien from Irelinid, MiW. Lawrsnos Vaillan-court Irom France and Mix. Anthony Grimaldi from Italy. All were former students^] Antona. For Protection (UPD —Uaa. a cntto4 hoard Spring “spruce up“ time comes early this year! PRE-EASTER SPEQAL Have your liv^ room furniture Completely RE-UPHOLSTERED SOFA uT- *89“ CHAIR *39^ Phonadoday — wfll ba glad to bring fabric saimitos to year tonne. WnUAM WRIGHT Fmtotnre Makeix am 270 Orchard Lake • Furniture CompWtely ' re-built iMing all new materials • Staal-rainforcald full web bottom artd • Choice of styling • All workmanship guarantaad 5 years This hripa keep a keen cutting edge on the knife blade—and it’s Upaa leaving far FTarida, the and white, green aiw aad a tahlte hat. The oanpie liva hi LymBhnrg wrhero and Wamof INSURANCE We Have MOVEP and You're Invited to Visit the Newelt and Most Beautifut Salon in PONTIAC Sensational Budget Fermat^ • STYLE CUT • CONDITIONING SHAMPOO • DELUXE COLD WAVE • GLAMOUR RINSE • FASHION SET SPECIAL OFFER FASHION CUT CONDITIONING SHAMPOO SUPERB SALON PERMANENT CREAM RINSE COLOR RINSE Ne AppetoUBent Needed-Open Friday ia I PJM. PHOIYE WE 5-9S57 ** Belwe«ii Uwranta and Mmemny SNUVIl Pika 81, (Acts— trtm Straad HuBtor) Tha bride, a gnduata ot HoOtoa in Lytidtourg in IMS. Mr. Houdt ia an alunvms ot Vlrginfa ijpisco-pal School and the University of Virginia. His fraternity is Zeta PM. Mrs. Hamner. cheat a pure linen dress shading from pink to deep rose far her daughter's wed-ding. Mrs. Houck's blue ' Extra Specials Custom Permanent Pontiae’f favorite cloanan for over iZp yoan YYill make you ' look and feel freah aa Sprint it-•df and have all your clothing ready for the^ ^ buiy daya ahoad. COHPUTf SHOT snm 36 MONTHS TO PAY ' FOR THE NEW Nof only iwBarkaMy nay In own . . . M bb nnmidinf dolithl In hovn in ynnr honml Thn Rolty Rmi Spinni to baomlfnlly alyM In n snrlM of nacaioirt modala for todoy** honioi, Tkoir ployiot piooanro eon't bo turpotb^dl A inodoaf down poynmnl OMoros dalivory whoo yoo wtoh if, . . . sr mar isr as NMto as $9.00 $m mmUh Msaay paM la • ixM, w« hs sesdOad If yao patahssK Islii. lifhtr NaaalaatefW by <6* Soao rnarilr fat Orm n raais NLO IN THIS ARIA IXCUfSIViLY lY THE > GuuuaEi Moac CO. 18 iMf Hvroii Sfroot F| 4-J066 OpM Maadsy and PrIdsy'M 9 PM. niuniow in EUBOPEAN TOUBS Enjoy the magnificence of historic Europe— See the splendors of great cities, grand palaces, the famous, landmarks you have read about f years. ’ Ut Uf Fill A Trip Tm Will litvw r»ift ^^PONTIAC Circles End Meetings for March Central Methodist Church women have completed March Circle meetings. ★ ♦ * Mrs. Fred MueUer _ ______ Avenue was hostess to the Janette Geiger Circle'at a Smorgasbord dinner. Mrs. Robert Bentley led devoticms and the program “Poetry tor Lent’’ was given by Mrs, Donald Porritt Jr. nte Martha Orsf arcle mH with Mrs. Richard Kuha ol Gateway Drive, Wsterferd Township. Slides of' Bible scenes were riwwn by Mrs. Charles Steeber before the Barbara Norris Circle Thursday morning at the home of Mrs. ’ R. W. Curtis on Chippewa Road. Mrs. Russell W. Vessells gave devotions. meet at church The Etha Nagler Circle met at the church Thursday morning with Mrs. Wesley D. Johnson givbig devotions. Mrs. John Hall spoke on the life of Etha Nagler. The Ortho Lone and Marten Shaw elreles met at the ehnreh THE PONTIAC PRESS, MARCH 13, 1961 < T^VEXTY-ONE By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN It is impossible for older and younger generations to bridge the . ^ always have felt that we could come much closer to getting together, and that both generations would profit by it, if we did FOR YOUR HAIR by Aleda Whether you wish a new "Ir Fashion" hair style or a lovely classic Individually styled to flat-ter your personal charm, you will be more s e a s o n In a fashion style that Is as easy to Care for es it it smart in appearance. ^ Call FE 4-8611 for an appointment now! Aleda^s BEAUTY SALON 251 WEST MONTCALM AAA Tsi ue BeakkMplM BtSf. Cemer Elaine Jaat North ' ef Oakland Are. Telephone FE 4-8611 Veaaeila gave devetlana aad Mrs. George Alexsader showed sUdee ef her Enrepesn trip; Mrs. Arthur F. Hohan of Eddy Court teas hostess to the Jean Bagnall group Thursday afternoon and the Ada Duhtgg C!ircle was served dessert - luncheon at the home of Mrs. William Hodge of Ogemaw Road. ★ * Dessert - luncheon at the James Street bnne of Mrs. Cbcil Choate preceded a meeting of the Sarah El^lish Cirrie Thtnday srith Mrs. Harold Sibley leading devotions. The Rev. Daniel Wallace gave the program at the Marta Sim-easaon Circle meettag Thursday at the home ef Mrs- Roby Anstin ef Porter Street. Mrs. Zeipha Mustard led devottaaa. Lemw Shanks Circle Jnet Thursday evening with Mrs. H. L. Brest-ed of South Francis Street and Mrs. George Dieterich gave the program for the Otto Sisters Circle at the Glen Werner home on Voorheis Road. Folk-SongB Good Example' Music Joins Young and Old of theae who are ef age. Mn^ Is oae ef them. It Is interesting to note bow many of the songs their fathers and mothers loved have been revived and are now popular with the younger genenUion. A gredt many of these young people also are addicted to classical music as well as to farout jazz and rock and roll. However, perhaps the greatest meeting ground of all in music is the world of Mk songs. recent interview with The Brothers Four highlighted ih^s, You probably have beard their records and or seen them on tele-where they have been guests on many of the best shows. The Brothers Four are not blood brothers, but fraternity brothers. They are making a career of what they started doing for fun when they first got to know each other at the University of Washington, singing their own arrangements (d f(dk songs. The Brothers Four — Mike Kirkland, Dick Foley, John Paine and Bob Flick — are folk song specialists who are popular with young and old alike. Swim Fare Flairs (UPD—Enjoying a revival is the one-piece dressmaker bathing suit. Tom Brigance, of New York, gisfes it a special flair in a print of gold and black and ^ite. A matching printed skirt is added to turn the suit into a gaj; sundress. ouiyt Far from it! Yonag people at eellege age aad younger can’t get enough of theoe oougo. The BrothOT Four do a tightly-booked year-round concert tour, appearing almost exclusively at colleges and universities ttmughouf the countiy. When asked how they account for the vast audience they have found for their versions of f(dk song heritage, these attractive young musicians turned into philosophers. Tomorrow I will tell you some of the things they said. Any of you who measure life in years will proiSt by the rema^ of these young men. And if you fwl out of touch with your children, why not invest to some ol the areas where the ^hnger and older generations meet? Swne of these are enthusiasm, humor, love of life and music. The "'Different'* Look for You I Permanents Complete $5 $6 $750 I Styled Hair Cutting from $1.50 | ANNALIESE BEAUTY SALON N. Bagtaaw 8t FE 2-SaM (0*er Tsttf UAkerr) OGG CLEANERS Speckdiftt^* Phone FE 4-9593 And where do they get their Mrs. Howard McIntyre of Henry Clay Avenup was hostess on Friday when the SaytHtiOk group of the First Congregational Church met. ’ Assisting her with the luncheon were Mrs. Carl Leonard and Mrs. Janies Absher. Mrs. Mai-eolin Borion and Mrs. Harold McIntyre were guests. Mrs. James Cheat was welcomed as a Hats Steal Show at Meeting of Mothers Group Mrs. Cressy B. Larson displayed spring hats, furnished by a local millinery shop, at the Mothers Group of the Pontiac Boys’ Club meetlrtg recently. Each member brought an Easter bonnet fashioned from kitchen utensils. Winning originality awaids for their creations were Mrs. Dick Khty, Mrs. William Rogers and Mrs. Frank LesCo. - Mis. Klihy and Mrs. Harold eoBtribuHon to the club during January and February. ’The group has been invited to attend a j^t meeting with the Mothers Group of the Boys Gub of Detroit April 5. Mrs. Rioy Barbe, Mrs. Lloyd Hampton, Mrs. R. A. Allen and Mrs. Vartkes Haroutunian are new membera of the group. GiKsts wet^ Mrs. Leigh Gentges, Mrs. William Neighbors, Mrs. William Mauie, Mrs. Dugald Walker, I Mrs. David Stokes and Mrs. Eu-Igene Harry. Church Units Keep Busy Mrs. Arthur W. *Selden gave devotions. Mrs. William Miller and Mrs. Leonard participated in the St. Patrick’s Day program. * it It The Standish Group was served a salad luncheon Friday at the East Huron Street home of Mrs-Daniel Kinney, with Mrs. Gus Shier serving as cohostess. Mrs. John Morrison read a Leaten theme “Steadfastness’’ from the'^ook of 8t. Luke and Mrs. 8. E. Kltne, who led ^vo-ttons, read a alary,on spring. Mrs. Ray Meiser and Mrs. L. C. Banter eatertalaed with a vocal duet. Guests were Mrs. William Eus-tice, Mrs. George Campbell, Mrs. Ralph Howell and Ethlynn Peter-)n. ’Ihe group will attend the Good Friday breakfast. * ★ ★ The Pilgrim Group, meeting with Mrs. Esther Mclntc^ for luncheon Fridw at her home on Mark Ave-noe, ’TiPeittttea scrap hooks for bosidtali^ children. Cohostesses were Mrs. Don ’Thomas, Mrs. Harry Lillie and Mrs. WiUiam rireker. Mrs. Becker gave devotions. ★ ★ ♦ “Remarks on the Meaning of laster’’ were offered by Mrs. 22 Members Meet at Lutheran Church Hoh long has it been rince ^ yon last ,. had an I exdiniiiation? Time has a habit of slipping by unnoticed . .. and our vision can change so subtly that we seldom realise the loss ... we can suffer many discomforts a^ not be aware of the cause. If you think you may need optical attention consult Nu-Vision Optical Studios ... a complete optical service Is available. Twenty-two im dies Guild of St. Stephen Lutheran Church. Drayton Plains, met Thursday evening at the church. * * it Hostesses were Mrs. William Barlow, Mrs. Rodger Allen, Mrs. Eugene Becker and Mrs. James CO^. Mrs. Carl Muhlhauser was accepted as a new member. Arno Hulet, program chairman, at a luncheon meeting of First Congregational Church's Mayflower Unit Thursday. Mrs. Sidney Olson of Spence Street was the group’s hostess, assisted by Mrs. Thomas Sherwood. Devotions were read by Mrs. E. Hotchkiss. Mrs. Odes Case, Mrs. Fred Hib-ler and Mrs. Henry Winter were gU«ts. The April meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Dexter Craig. Art Classes Scheduled to Begin . Classes in sculpture composition, fe drawing and portrait, water-color and oils, will open today at Bloomfield Art Association on North Woodward Avenue, Blrming-■ im. Registration for the eight-week classes and a Saturday young peoples workshop may be made'at (he association or with Mrs. Robert B. Bender of COvington Road, Birmingham. Svea Kline’s (>lnsac« in sculp-tare romposition for begtiml^ and ndvanced are soJiednIed on Mondays from t:M a.m. to noon; I to S;S0 and 7 to »:M p.m., beginning today. “ Mildred E. Williams will teach two classes in portrait painting and drawing f«r beginning and advanced from 9:30 to noon Mondays and Tuesdays. Clifford B. West will teach sketching in any medium from the live model, to beginning and advanced from 7 to 9:30 Tuesday evenings, beginning tomorrow. Geared to a creative approach to still Ufe, flower studies and landscapes, Mary Jane Bigler’s wateroelor classes win epen on Wedaeaday, with beginning and advanced classes from 9:30 to noon. An afternoon class from 1 to 3:30 In for advanced only. Kathleen Birch’s still life and flower studies in oil will open to beginners and advanced stddents beginning ’Thursday from 9:30 to nocm and 1 to 3:30 p.m. Junior and senioh high students in the Saturday Young Peoples Workshop will be taught by John W. Martin March Ig through April 29 from 9 to 11 a.m. Grades three and four will meet om rxwn jo 1:30 p.m. The April class will be omitted due to Easter holidays. ’The materials fee of $12 will cover the series of six workshops. Split-tevel Range Is Latest Device The top of a new electric range is split-level, with t^ rear cooking units on a level higher than the front units. Handles of the pans being used on the rear elements are elevated above the handles and pans on the front elements, improving safety and convenience, the manufacturer says. Epsilons Elect Officers; Spring Surprise Shower Officers for Alpha Delta Kappa ol Michigan Jfosaoa ifo-rority were elected ’Thursday evening at the home of Bonnie and Lois Coan on Irwin Avenue. A ★ ♦ Mrs. John Landon Will serve as president with Mrs. Cornelius Crowley, vice president; Mrs. H. A. Mitchell, recoding secretary: Mrs. Norman Uixlerwood, corresponding secretary and Mrs. Charles Hampshire, treasurer. CtaptolM are Mrs. WUliam Vandenee and Mrs. Owen amis; Mrs. Lewis Ooraell and Mm. Leon Yale, keepers ef the archives. Mrs. Ginton George. Mrs. Lola F. Sandage and Bonnie Coan comprise the nominatiflg committee. A surprise stork shower following the business meeting honored Mrs. Thomas Walsh of Sanders Plage, Bloombeld Township. about m toillion I United t of diabetes ip thelnine p States at the present tlmk er 1,000 population. r 2 pairs *150 ! famous, NEUMODE stocking lat wears... wears ... wears! Fashion’s latest COLORS for Easter in sheer beauty with MIRACLE NO-BIND *rops $1.15 Neumode Hosiery Shop 82 N. Saginaw FE 2-773I Listen to Letter From FBI Head Pontiac City Panhellenic Association met with Mrs. W. H. Ragsdale of Loch Lomond Drive, Bloomfield Township. Sharing hostess honors were Mrs. E. L. Bronoel and Mrs. Williafoi Belaney. Mrs. Ann Hallook Hepler, ref-ermce librarian at Pontiac City Library, spoke roneerning ‘”nie History of Pontiac.” A letter w'as read from J. Edgar Hoover stressing the role of college fraternities in combating Communist conspiracies directed against the young people. Mrs. Richai^ Kuhn, nominating committee chairman, presented a slate of officers for the coming election. ALL PERMANENTS DlYIDROj PAYMENTS AYAILABLB m NORTH SAGINAW STREET B. BnONMAN. OJ». FHONB FB t-nH DaHr to i:m Priday SiSMa 8H» Hollywood’s One Price Plan Includes: Easy to manage hair cut, permanent by an experienced operator and styled set. No appointment necessary. Your permanent completed in two hours. Friendly Htdljrwood Operators will make your *pcnnane|it a pleasure. Over Badey’a Gossarid has the. 'Answer' PANTIE OR GIRDLE TO FLATTEN TUMMY THE NATURAL WAY Costard's Answer girdles shape you booutifully, comfortably. Plush-backed elastic bonds follow bod/t not-turol contour; flatten ti . . . mould you gently out bones or stoys ... hold you up and in for trimmest of bock views. Sizes 25-34. ,0.95 MATCHING PANUI.....11S0 EVERY FASHION NEEDS ITS OWN FOUNDATION Let Federal's trained corset-leret fit you cerrecty for comfort and figure flattery. Jw» My 'CHARGE IT OFEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Sohirdoy FEDERAL'S.., Downtown aild Drayton Fkiint ‘ TWENTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 18. tm Johansson 18-5 Underdog in Tiubber Matidi* at Miami Beach Patterson Favored to Retain 'Heavy' Crown ptUM BEACH, Fla. (UPI)‘ guanuMee far the scheduled 15-Hoyd ^ttesaa was aa lavcp-1 % today to dcieat chaOenicr Spots lac., sent telesram to Mac-iBcmar Johamson to their third doobm reieasiag him trani the %ht taniiht t guarantee, bto^ champfanship of the world, l^tteraon and Jotaanoon were alpcisny notified that the gate had paned fte aU-importanmOO,-(to mark far the cdebrated “rub-Igr match" at the Miami Beachj Convention Hall. Both boxers ex-j pvssed relief that qnrtaman Bill: MacDonald of.Miami Beach wouldj ••'lilse no money on his M00,0m! gloves Lett first n 1 of IS.aM Is exiMWIed I Patterson. M. sf RookvIUe , N.Y., iwedea eft sritii the alx eaaoe at IfaM p.m. E8T. hooker Patterson was the um to recapture the heavy when he bMt Ingo, an ex- (dosive right-handed puncher, fat their second fight June 30. Flsyd'a left books floored^big. brown-haired li«o twice in the filth round (or a knockout that night. Johahsson, who knodted out Pat-torabn in the third round of their first fiyht in 1969, told J1«ds to^ day he hoped his unprecedentedly stiff training this time had geared him to stiffen Floyd again and I to win back the title. tienal “robber asaSoh" Is aahsd- But now It appears unlikely (hat the total reeetpto frsm those When tonight's match was first made for ^ 15,922-seat ai officials of Feature Sports aimed at a sellout of 31.100,(100 — ' tickets priced at 3100, 350 and However, the bout still may be the richest fight in history because of the booming sales at theater-TV locations In the United States and (3anada. as well as the large lrvfa« B. Bahn. presideid af Johansson, who floored Floyd seven times In the third round tor a technical knockout In their find fight, wiU be fi?ee 1 against any challenges he diooaes if he takes the title from Patterson tonight. There's no return bout contract. Thanks to the possible 34,000. 000 in gross ancillary receipts, pl^ the "live" gate, the purses of rioytl and Ingo may approach the milUon^loUar nufrk this thne. Each gets 35 per cent of the net Uvh gate, and Feature ^orts receives 50 per cent. Howevov P«t-teraon's cut of the promdlon's gneUiary recelpU is 50 per cent; Johansson’s, 35. Feature Sports gets 15. In addition. Johansson has the entire Scandinavian righhi to radio and film. From their previoua meeting, Patterson got 30*1.741 and 3771,-— Johaflison received 33*1,483 3643.1OT. Fight Facts, Figures r l«M. Mm la ba MMh bnms CoiB- clmd^eticaa TT-ier 'ihaaUis. saS ara- k Fred Cagers Ypsilanti-Bound; Southfield Next for PCH RamWallop : ' * * ’'' , * Ofchardiake A/orve/f, Donwason “ifiSLi Star in Swim Meet Romp to Regionols Also Moko and Whiteford are in the Ortonvllle and Millington won odier “C“ crowns while Memphis was having an easy, time taking CUss D honors at Troy. > M. Fred got mOlag in Sad fsaiter after both la I appeared to have chi Meed was the only boy detog snytbbM la aa U-O 1st gaarler. Ved Dabtod got eight la a M-palat M raand to pass a Sl-M It eras up to 4bM starting the final period and kept gotag hildier DobaU foUowed Reed with 13. Larry Siaoen topped a balanced Eaglet offensive with 11. e regtoual at Bay CUy with FowtorvUe. For the first time in its swimming history. Pontiac Central has two state champions. Bruce Norvell won the breaststroke in AMi time Saturday in the state Oato A meet held in the Michigan State University pool. Two events earlier. Ben Donaldson became a double winner by capturing the 200-yard freestyle. He had won the 400 freestyle in Friday's only final event. . * * * Hie thrw firsts gave PCH a total of 21 Mints and a surprisingly high fifth place finish in the field of 55 teams. Plymouth won the championship with 44 points. Battle Creek Central was next with 36U and then c«me Birmingham Seaholm 2S and defending champ-Grasse Pointe 23. Royal Oak NorveiTa victory waa a mild Mirprtoe, but not totally unexpected. The PCI| co^aptalB bad tamed |p an enviable dnal meet record daring the last two sea-soM. He was clocked In 1:004 for the 100-yard ertbodox event. This lowered the standard from the 105.6 set by Bill Tniesdale of Redford Union In the preliminaries. Truesdate was second in the finaT. The meet ended with two PCH swimmers in the record books. Donaldson set a ngw mark in the 400 freestyle. Northern's Jim Riutta were the only double witmers. Riutta set a state record In the 50-yard free-style, beating. Seaholm's Jim Elliott easily in 234 seconds. The Viking swimmer also won the 100 freestyle. Ed BooUunaa of Reyal Oak Kimball won the diving comp*-ttllM. Seaholm’s Don Norrto woo the Question Is: Can Ohio Be Toppled? Birmingham's Don Spencer beat Larry Jacobs again in the 100-yard Jbuttcrfly. Although his time of 56 seconds flat wasn't a state record. It was the sophomore's best docking this season. Birmingham Groves showed ^r-prising strength in the Class B meet at Ann Arbor by finishing third. East Grand Rapids .again won the team crown with 61^ points. Riverview had 55 and ^ves 42. By The Asooclatod Prewi Cesnes now the time of the year when the college basketball fan takes a look ft the big NCAA, small NCAA, the NIT and ' NAIA and yells SOS. Seventy-six of the nation's best isins, big and little, start this week the 10-day scramble that will end with four champions of the 1961 season and the answer t6 the questfan just about, everymie has been asking all year—can anyone best Ohio State? After smashing Illinois 9566 last Saturday, the mighty Buckeyes of the Big Ten Conference start de-ot the Natkmal Collegiate ti-tie they won so emphatically last with the first perfect record any major team since Cferolina in U57. CHy at JaseplL OitonviUe belted Atherton 7WI| tmlUae swtv in the last Quarter. AIl-A«ienca Jerry Lucas & oo. aS» IS 2d^29-2nSi « Hutchings fired in 25 and Doug Moors 15 to pace the Hawks. Millington bombed Marlette 64-44 with Ned Lockwood and Mike. have their tw&aeason streak at 29, their regular season slate completed at 24-0, and a solid 1^. 1 ranking of all the college teams as they go into the NCAA Mid- air zTk bined for 47 points. ^ MemphU had a 20-2 bulge in the They’ll need four more victories 2nd period after trailing 14-12 streak of 33-if and went on to tfke New Baltimore St. Mary, 5565. Ken Stahl swished 15 and Hildreth Lewis 13 for MHS. Memphis wffl play in the daas D regional at Willow Run. Britton, Webberville and Detroit St. Beraard complete that field. ST rasa («> ol bt. mast («i .ro FT rr ro nr »r V(kuM 1 1-T » SUMS 4 ]-S It LufltlB 1 1-1 S UlUtr 4 !-• » Dolnkl t 1-1 n Ton sU 2 >•! f KMd }1 3-2 U HAM 4 t-t I Kni'Adj 1 2-4 4 Xrof'eU ‘ ‘ ‘ they expect to nail another championship and match the '37 North Carolina club that won ’em all dttritqt the season, then swept bh to the NCAA crown lor a 32<.rec-(Md. Naming of Xavier of Ohio, Seattle and Oregon to the last three at-large berths completed the 24-team field for the NCAA cham-ploi^ip tournament which has preliminary games Tuesday night and Wednesday before settling down to regional semifinal scuffling at Charlotte. N.C., Louisville. iLawrbnce, Kan., and Portland. !Ora, this> weekend. To keep 'em company, the 12-team National Invitation Tournament begins at Madison Square Ganton Thursday night with tjfe first of six doubleheaders between then and cham|danship day on Much 35. Hw eight BurvhAn* of the NCAA small college field gather in Evansville, Ind., tor a three-day 2 Thursday, lYWay and Saturday. And 32 select teams start we^-long competition today in the NAIA tourney in Kansas City. Ohio State, St. Joseph's, Pa., Kentucky, Texas Tech, Cincinnati. Kansas £^te, Utah and Loyola of Los Angeles drew first-round byes in the natkmal championship. The tournby begins Tuesday ni|^ with Gewgr Washington vs. Princetim, Rhode Islands vs. St. Bonaventure, and Wake forest vs. St. John’s ,lh an Eastern Regional tripleheadw at New York and Ohio U. playing Louisville and Morehead meeting Xavier in a M'd-East R»gional doublrhead-er at Louisville. MarauettP ai Houston in the Mid-West Regionfl and Arzona State U. VI. Seattle and Southern California vs. Oregon in the Far West at Poiifand on Wednesday night will decide the field for U» four regionals this weekend. The New York winners go to Charlotte to join St. Joseph’s. The Louisville winners stay there to join Ohio State and Kentucky. The Houston-Marquette survivor advances to join Texas Tech. Kansas State and Ondimati at Law-rence. and the Far West winners stay In Portland where Utah and Loyola also wtU be present. 'Boom Boom' Is Close to Record CHICAGO (AP)-^Bemie (Boom Boom) GeofiMon’s back-hander from 30 feet out moved the Montreal ace to wifiito one goal of the National Hockey League sewing rseord Sunday night and helped keep the Onadlens in front In the NHL noe wlfii s 6-3 vtctory over Chicago. Geoffrloo'i goal came midway through the second period as the Canadiens vtatusHy ruined goalie Glem HMl’t bid for the Vezlna tropliy. Andy BatiBste sod Qunliie Henry each-acend twice in Newi York's win over Detroit Andy He-i beoton, Ted Hsmpaon and Earl Ingwrflald also scored for the Rangers while (tordie Howe, Howie (Hover and Vie Stashik tallied lor Detroit AT rh«MA« HE’S BELAXINO - World heavyweight champion Floyd. Patterson started out the day relaxing while awaiting tonight s 3rd encounter with Ingemar Johansson at Miami Bcadi. He Is ISdfavortte. Lee Driver of Groves won the 100-yard breaststroke in. 1:06.4, new state record. He was a member of the medley relay team that swept to victory. Others on th^ team were Bill ()uick, Russ Martin and Bob Sutton. BRUCE NORVELL ctASS A simuav ,«rd (r«Mt7l»-l. :riB Wutu Xorihtrn. 3, Jim XlUot. atnil_________ SMbelm. t, KUtr, Wsma. 4, “n* be twMO Bwv. sad --------- Dcarboni Forddoa. d. OTMijr. _________ Cretk. T—:m. (Ntw rteord, oM tWId mord :21.T by BtatC------------------ lOO-yard btttUrfly—1. Danmld Bptni ‘—‘-tham Scabolm. 2. Larrr Jace h. I. Wataw, SatUa cnek. Oak Jutao^ *'lO ** *‘***‘^*' Tard frMityl*—^ ,>tB DoBaMaoe. Fonttac Cantral. 3. Tib betbaan Bab-eock. Battia Crack, and OraMacar. Flymoutb. 4. Brooka Searta. RoyalM KHnbatl. I, Daley. FlymoaAh. d. Jamaf -------Scaholm. T—1:M,4. • 1. Aady Cocka, iatUc Creek. 2. Mlchaela. FlyiaeaUi. 2, Schrelbaf. Midi-' ' — Trenten. I. Ildbcrt ______ ----^ 'TL I. anrke. Flint fit_____ . (Tlae Mata laeard by RoaaM - aaw Arthur sm. IMS), breaat^roke—1. Bruee Her-- Oanuul. 1 Treeadale. Red- veil. iWlae C tdacl Ferd. 4. KWeUaiL U - I. Bender, Flmmith. t, „ x>m Xdael Pard. T-3M.J....... recall, old reeard );H.t bv.Truei- al» In •ftemooo prallmlnarr). lOO-yard ^ traeatyle—1. Jbs mntta, lint Rerthrm. 2. Mmaon. Oroeee -Wnte. 1. Tie amons Marah. Oroe Fpinf, 3fM, Flymmsh. aad Kir< 5SS“ .^UJ (bcttari tormar ---------------l;U4 by------------------- afteraoaa yrcihaiaarlae; ' ------ 2rJI.T bv Barry 4, Kalamaaeo COatral. .. Fordaon. d. Aan Arbar. 1.M.I ---------- record by Jaektoa In efleniaen pro-Smlaartn. Frevloua Mate raooM l:«.l by Settle Creek MM year.) 2M-yard treeatyle ratair—I. Oraao# .MnM. 2. Battle Creek. 1, Aaa Arbar. 4. Flyamuth. I. Sadtaa* Arthnr RUI. d. lieBroe. I:».d (bettare farmer Make ree-ord af 1:UU by by Sayal Obk Buman i Chiefs Easily Hurdle Final District Test Skipped Routed, 59-38; Walled Lake Advances in Ypsi Tourney By BILL OORNWEI,L Tburnament-wise Pontlsc Central High School led five other Oakland (bounty Class A quintets into this werte’s regional actiOD after easily'. suRnomtlng'Saturday night's dis trict final at PisMlsc N«Uiem. Veteran PCTftoboach Art Tan Bysla used all 14 varsity players. sad IS of them seered as the ChielB knidled oulmaiuied Wa-leitord wUhout dWIeulty, tt-M, to qualify for the Southfleid re-gioiial to4U«ey. The Chiefs will have area company on the Southfield court.•Rochester earned a berth in the same regional by downing Utica .last Friday at PNH two of Oen-familiar touniey rivals, Detroit Catholic Cwitral and Livonia Bentley, will-complete the field. WaUed Lake stayed alive In Claas A competition at YpsUantl by surprising favored f^ymouth, 5M7, Saturday evening.'The Votings will be jedned by Inkster, Ann Arbor and Jackson in this week' Ypsi regional. Royal Oak Kimball gained a spot in the Femdale regional with 53-36 conquest of Berkley Saturday and Highland Park followed suit by dumping Warren, 57-45. The Femdale regional field fx»-sists of KimfaaB, RO Dondero, Highland Park and the host Eagles. PCH, a state finalist last yesf and a state semlflnalist two years was nevft pressed by outclassed Waterford. The Skippers of Gerry Wallace made ■ vaOaat effort to puB upset, but Central had too mnf* backboard otiengfli and too many guns. The (Chiefs enjoyed quarterly leads of 166, 38-13 and 45-30. Tlw closest the Skippers ever came to catchii« PCH was a 66 defkdt midsaidway throHSOhelst pertod. " Any thoua^ the Skfopm might have entertained of stai^ a Btnfr' ner were thoroughly squelched eairty when the ChMh emed 13 aueight pdnto for a cotmnandtng 356 bulge halfway through th/Snd anza. Central’s scoring punch was so will spread that Rudy Ransom's 11 points were high for the game, aarence Douglas tallied 10 points for PCH and Waterford’s UtUe Ed Stigers also collected 10. As usual, Central’s agile ON TO SOUTHFIELD — Pontiac Central's terfwd In the Qass A final at Pontiac Norfo- happy basketball players display their district era. The OiieH swing into r«k>nsl acthdty trophy after Saturday's 59-3* victory over Ws- this week at Southfidd^_________ . Quaitor to gain a Mpstot t day by edging Lake Oriosi. 40-M. Rkfiae Just barely sipped past 41-49, to ean the /Fenton wfll slight favorite to advance to the Quarter-flnals gto over Tray aad toen from the Seaholm r^onal. But Claricstan will be gtrong contender a2id so win high scoring Maryw viDe. Shrine, a surprise district winner, and St. Mary do not appear strong enough to win the honors. Walled Lake broke away from Plymouth early in the 4th quarter after leading all the way by margins of four to six prims. KU Carter meihed 16 prints for the nd teammates John Mar-agot and Frank TMerty added 15 and 12, respectively. ISImm. i Doofiak a a-1 Id Ab^ o-Mih a 1-1- 4 iSsim . . . wu'ams a a^a a a Lato Qrtoa (Se) FO FT TF FO FT TF Uadr. 3 a-1 t Bach • d-t 0 wtiMa 3 0-14 Ok'nteb a s-3 a BFwmB 4 3-4 11 Wll'amt t 1-S S Walton a S-S a Read 3 1-3 5 i SSS t tST, Ralto a 3-3 0 Pvrrj 0 S-S IS Funk a s-e a TMais uia^aa tomu is ^aa Sadrs br Qaatton River Rouge, a heavy favorite I win the state championship, should have little difficulty winning at Willow Run. Riverview and poasibly BUssfidd have outside chancto .lor the regional trophy. Milan, Michigan dnter and Northville round out the fidd. Garkiton succeesfully bottled up Lake Orion's offense but almost lost the game because of pow field gdal shooting. The Welves maasged to get good pssItiM for shots. Inside and pet, bRt Bt ttmes, faUed to hit the rim or baekboaid. They made three af 14 attempts la Iho tint period and two et 17 In the second. Although they weren’t allowed many doae-in shots by the Clarfc-Bton defense, the Dragons did get some tinidy outsMe firii« by Bucky (Graven and (Huy Hunter and managed to snare a 22-16 half-time lead. Neither team could do much in le opening five minutes ot the second half. Then the Wolves be-pm Mttliig and finally took the lead, 29-38, for the flrrt time In the game on a set shot by Hal WastaB with 46 seconds to play in Uia third petfod. earner shot put the back cn top by one at the buzaer, it was the beginning of the end for Orton. Two follow shots by dar Wilson and throe (me throws moved Clai fount, 3744, Wtth 4:11 to play. The W^vei went into s snni-staU and forced the Dragons out of their saiy sas «( toe ehaiHy (aaaw ■ SCBOOL BASEXTBAIX Flint SouthwaMara M. OvoHO 71. Oraad Raeida Saath dk OrsM Ba Mtsollc Cantral 31. Haipar Wanda ^ Oanw M, «. C bam LalMTlair flT XtobteBd rikW. warn-dd. rnkatar 37, takitor BaWSaad 4$. ^Xajimrata CdBkcai 31 XalaniaaM LMcaM ‘Park 7L RMBatan 43, UtobM BaeUw to Badlord Onlaa 4 UaoBt Clamn 47, OtataaFaMto 43. Pwtlaa Cantral 13, Watorford m. iaral Odk XMibail 31. Barfetor to RSBtarigi^v JSSSL^SimaiA It, Raeara at, Baattaca 31. Mtof to - • HtoMBMB. ua* ssjsrsrv&szitr*- M» Ml W. ?p-c.srtv*S!a;.-dk.M. Mairauaaa to IdarnMtto OravaraM 41. OMaaflM IdriMMBa^rMtuBt Uarrla I I 77. Baarw «. k OcaaN to S3. HrMt 47. tNF 43. ^JUbar.UjalMtalty 47, SalMa 41. ^Ram^crato toaWeflaM M. Battia Cm. ^ to^^SMinb 44. Bsr_^ a •I. SL ass to Houdbton Lake dl. Laka Cttr M. Jackwn a. Mary 7S, Napniean 44. JenaartUs SI. Caodta FraatMnr’4l. KalAmaaon ChrlatiaB 17. Blablaod «. Kant CSr to Waasarla 41. MflUnttaa dl Uarlatta 44. W JDeam s. mehiaaB Ta«h 1 (Danvar vlaa tva-casM^^M^ Iddh to t) iTlaa cmiramBad abdaipMi- M,. O— •• *SSS’o252.*(SS* gCLk'to. CattterBM*3d Canadian Puck Team Takei World Crown GENEVA. (AJ») _ Qinada’i Ice hockey atari packed for home today widi the world title safely under ttieir belts and convinced they had proved to Europeans that their style of hockey still is the best. Pistons in NBA Playoffs, Thanks to Jerry West THE PONTIAC PllKSS HQXDAV. MARC**!! 18, l»«l TWKNTY-THRKE By The Associated Press Jerry West, the Eos Angeles Lakers’ valuable rookie, proved even more valuable to the Detroit Pntons in the final seven seconds of the National Basketball Association season. West’s basket with only seven seconds left, Sunday helped the Los Angeles Lakers to a 123-122 victory over the Oncinnati Royals. The loss eliminated the Royals from the NBA playoffs and gave the berth to the Pistons. The playoffs start Tuesday. Detroit had clinched at least a tie tor the third and last playoff berth in the Western Division a couple of hours earlier when it defeatjed New York 120-106. Detnrit used 14-1 and IM spurts to down the Knicks, who wound up with 58 losses, a league record. . NEW you o r T o r T 7 IS 14 Or«en SIS Let's Celebrate-Tigers Are on Top Bengals0wn3 City's Class A Basketball Title on Line Tonight Signs Pro Grid Pact Straight Citrus Loop Triumphs Detroit's 8-4 Victory Over Twins Completes Weekend Sweep Walled Lake Team Bowie Tonight ABC Has 1 Change Newman AME and Van - Dikes clash for the aass A City League basketball championship tonight at 8 o'clock on the Pontiac Central court. % BOSTON lAPt-Thb Boston Patriots Sunday signed George Bhm-mel Northern Michigan to an American Football League contract. DETROIT - Uttle Bobby VIen 435 S. SAGINAW FE 2-1010 1^ Fim InslallaMon 1^ S«v« Mmmt 1^ IS Ninuto Swnrice S«v» Tim* EASY BUDSn TOMS IVI By BRimo L. KEARNS Spoilt Editor, PonUac Press LAKELANP. Fla-It’s been long time since, one could look at any league standings and see the Detroit Tigers sitting up on top. At least it’s not very often, in the Major League or Grapefruit circuit. those Grapefruit Tigers have been full of surprises in winning three straight games, including yesterday's 8-4 victory over the Minnesota Twins, in the Uuis took the all-events lead in the regular division with a 1911 total for nine games. Vien, 3L roHod a 664 series in the team evem Saturday night and then came back yesterday with 630 in the doubles and 617 in the singles. The claoalo division stars had OWN reos cas THE DISCODNTS Bty • mnm4 ... OUm. rally OwraalMd 6J0xl5 $ 8.99 7.50x14 $10.99 O ir reaUe*B»l !• • ull KrrlM tS>r|* wU| NO MONIY DOWN Span, laiparl >bS CBuraet New Ttm M( DimmU opener at Lakeland. This gave the 'ngers a sweep of the two-game series after beating the Twins in Orlando on Satarday. 4-1. The surprises have been the young pitchers. Bob Bruce, Jose Gi^pnda and Phil Regan, and the "rebuilt" arm of Ray Narleski, plus Don Mossi and Hank Aguirre. OPEN FRIDAY ‘TIL 7 F.M Nos., Tbm.. WmI.. ‘ UnltDd Tirt Service . ISS7 SsMwIb An. n S-S4I1 Oms DsHy t S-Clw»S SssSsy , What has been even more prising is the clutch hitting especially from first baseman Norm Cash and I^rry Os^rne, and the consistent bat of rookie second baseman Jake Wood. stole the spotlight from i bowling's best names at the American Bowling Congreu tournament yesterday. The chunky, 54 M fidh team on yesterday's Bohe^, City, the only other classic divl- shot 2849. Graz Castellano had the only 200 average series, a 626 total. Onyx and the Bowlers Journal Junior Wings Move Closer to Crown The Newman cagers are unde-I fcated and Vaii Dikes once-beaten in the double-elimination event. If a 2nd game is necessary, it will' be played Wednesday night. j .u ; j j . . L. 1 ' Doolin’s Service and the Pon- Police will collide at 6:30 on| ... „ j the PCH floor in w Class Cjeml-! BurmeiSters Lunfoer Company , pr^imi^ry to the! '8bt championship game. The winner! I of tonight’s Dooiln-Police contest! 1 meets Town A Cbuntry Wednes-i ^Jjday for ..the city "C" title. of Wailed Lake competes at 9:30 in regular learn play. Ths •tsndlnfi: Ecfslar Tnsit .. Stu's DrlTc-In. Urtens. Ohio *. Pepsi Cols. Mllwsuke*......... S Roncsro'i St. Loutt 4 Bowlera ]M Club, Chlcsfo i. Pultont. Ksnut Clijr. Mo. .. EoMter Tcsoii rthern Truit. Chicsio vlcrs Tabulsllns. crrclevlllr. WINDSOR, Ont. rUPD-The Detroit Junior Red Wings edged to _ „ , , . . , within one game fo clinching theji. o.i “'B«.ferChie. Hockey Uague play-OTca^. boasting such names defeating the Windsor 1« Andy Varlpapa and Whitey Harris, nad's, 2-1 here Saturday night * mustered a dismal^ ^nes.Var- The victory gave t£ JuLi-■papa, who won the All-Star tour-j^vings a 3-2 lead in the best-of-^' I seven series for the title. They can:’ cro»»no v/rap up the championship in the s.^^rtc OMrs.-Roben Heiby sixth game Wednesday night. - Bl Alphontus. Dearborn KosInakI Hardware. Detroit Moslew Shrine No 50. DAToit .. »ii Refalar Blnilet ... -----^ Kalaniakoo 007 II. Beanivtlie . .. .. M5 MoasoUI. Syracuie .. . (77 vr... Kelpe. SI Louie 103 iTIei Oene Chapman. Kalamaaoo 601 Champioas have already been I decided in the other two classes. 7707 Buckner Finance won Class B J71TI honors and the "D" crown went J»*|to Elks No. 723. NEW . 1961 RAMBLER 2-DOOR 1195 Dm-142.19 MONTH Wa WHI Nat Kyiavtafly Ba UsAaraaM BIRMIN6HAM RAMBLER * Hu S. Woodward. 1 Portman-Dann namenl In 1946 and 1947, rolled 513. Harris shot 568. Dennis ChapisI ■ ^ team with 592. j I a Baker-Wllson Ewliif EXPLOSION! Even Dick Brown, suppohedly a non-hit catcher, came through two ruBs batted bi. So far it has been the two ... eran pitcheris Paul Foytack and Jim Banning who have been victimized the hardest by opponent hi|ters. Foytack and Bunning have given up a total of 12 hits I in six innings, while seven other pitchers have allowed only 11 hits in 21 innings. When the Twins started out yesterday against Bunning the first comment was “well, Jim still ha.s his gobher ball." This was noted by the fact that the first two hits off Bun-were homers In the first ig by I.en Green and Don Mlncher. The Tigers came back in *he first inning however and took advantage of Ralph Lumenti's wild- Wood singled. Bill B r u walked, then came a wild pitch and a fielder's choice by A1 Kaline for the first run. Rocky Colavito walked and Cash drove the ball 385 feet to right center he scored i Brown's single and it was 4-2. Brown again drove la a na in the 3rd Inniag after Boros siagled aad advnaced. la the Miracle Gains 3rd in State - Jones Matches \jndoor Record at Milwaukee r. Jknnvlllt. Wl>. 105S I Pfler Mowottl, Syrkcu Pontiac Winfred Miracle Northern gained 3rd place to head the local entries in |he state class A wrestling championships at Ann Arbor over the weekend. The huskie 145-pound ace bowed to 1960 134-pound chtfmp Dave Post of Defeoit Thurston in the semifinals. Miracle dominated the match but could not overewne an early. 54 deficit. He later trounced Bob Jessup in a consolation. Al Wadley of PNH lost two close verdicts Saturday. Northern finished with II points. Lansing Eoutern won with 48 points, Lansing Sexton followed with 47. Thurston 85. Ann Arbor 33, Flint Northern 25. j BaHle Creek Central, Hazel Park and Niles S4, Ftrmlngton 431, Dearborn 30. Bay Oty Handy : 10. Kalamazoo Cenirar If, Flint ' Central and Owosso 14. Ro.val Oak Kimball and Trenton 13, i Dondero 11, Alien Park 8. Jack- ; son and Detroit fYithollc Oninil 7, Lansing Everett 6, Southfield and Adrian 3. Bay City Central and Flint Southwestern 3. Walled Lake, Berkley and MeMndale 1. Pontiac Central, Waterford, Port Huron, Fitzgerald and East Detroit were among the scoreless MILWAUKEl! (Fi-Hayrs Jones of Pontiac, Mich, kept roiling along as a high hurdler Saturday night by matching the'^ indoor Kwrd of 5.9 seconds in winning the 50-yard high hurdles at the Milwaukee Journal Games. Don Bragg, Parry O'Brien and some of the other big stars were aihong the other victors. Former Oregon runner Jim Grell^, Bruce Kidd, a 'Toronto teen-ager, and Big "Ten champion Dave Mills of Purduo turned in big showings to share the limelight with the bigger name boys. 7. Amairr-niru. Akron 27»5-707(—ii/4 Prefiniiked V-6reoved~ LUAN PaiMling $491 ■ ShJ SPECIAL Plastic WALL TILE Many Bnantifiil CalBrs i PAINT! - SPECIAL! - PAINT! Reg. $6.95 Gollon Point’ Reduced SO% ^3.49 FREE! FREE! mUUD LINOLEUM REDUCED Deceretor Ceiert J Now Only W ONs AVERE 14e 5! UNGUZIO CERAMIC FLOOR TILE, 12.24 sh^t 1ST QUALITY. MIAVY DUTY VINYL WALL COVERING MICA VINYL, LINOliUM $149 Ft 29* MICA VINYL, LINOliUM m / COUNTER TOPPING VZ OFF VIHVL plastics, 1ST QUALITY FLOOR COVERING . Yd. 59* SPATTER ASPHALT tlLE Ac 9x9x!/e 4ea. SPECIAL SALE CEILING TILE WHITE Slight Imperfecta 8‘ Sq. Ft. FREE Free E^metea on All Tiling Jobs Guoranteed Engineered Inatellotien FREE ALL TILES AT \FEB-3V1 wc PONTUC'S UR6EST ARMSTR0N6 DEALER ME OUTLET mss WEST HURON ST. PONTIRC Smart Romans Used Brand Name Parts for Their ^hariot Smart Pontiaic People Use Brand Name Parts Ft» Thdr Modem Oiariote Belts for Autos ond Mowers: GOODYEAR " Rodiator Hose: GOODYEAR Exhaust Systems: WALKER and RIKER Hydraulic Brake Parts; DELCO and WAGNER Lubriconts: PENNZOIL Shock Absorbers: DELCO Ignition Systems: AUTO LITE MOTORCRAFT HOLLEY DELCO REMY Distributed To Auto Servicemen By AUTO ELECTRIC 367 South Sogiiidw Stiwet FE 2-9129 Ponfioc TWEXTY-FOUR Modern Action, Cometiy to Make Inroad* TV Westerns Mey BE Going Thataway ADAM AMES .THE PONTIAC pSeSS. MONDAY, MARCH It, 1901 State Solon FightsMedal forPoetFiost By,Lwi Fin« $ lar cwNTCu unmy ** AP TV-For atwni Snow, ']>rQpl}Mti beea ing a dfoline In po(>ui^{r ^ the tdtvisiM western. |tnd nutyhe, hut maybe, 1961 is the yesu- wlwn tM fsd really win begin to pnav. j . There la one Important sign: So hr the three telexision netwxwtell a total o^ 21 new Tfcw'ever. the Werwt In action stories, mostly polk* and adventure tales, apparently is stronger than ever:. U have been ao-nouneed. And eight new situation coinhdy series have been pirlied two of the pnimated car-stimulated by the WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep. Oaie E. Hoffmani RMich.. Here are some of the derring-do doesn’t have anythlnf agahist pc Robert Frost. But he wants I fellow legisUtors to know tl medals coat money. the summer slump (d reruns: "The Impatient Ones." a story 9t the World War I Ufayette iSs-cadrflle, produced by Qti^ Ma^ tin. late of "The Untouchables," another period piece; "Las Vega st‘1 and “Las Vegas,” crime> l-fl^nM In Nevada—the first NBC series, the second an ABC igram; "The New Breed," about the Los Angeles police M-squad; "STth Precinct," police ao tion in New York City; "Small Town D. A." and "The Defenders," the first an ABC l^al-ac-tion tale, the second a father-aon lawyer series on CBS; “The House on Rue Riviera," skullduggery in the south of France. Anxong the incoming situation comedy aeries are a new’ Bob Ciimmings series, a new Robert Young series, the Gertrude Berg-Sir Cedric Hardwicke series. "Mother Is a Freshman." the Dk-k Van Dyke series, a series Itentatively called “Snow Whites' for NBC, about a pair of police car cops, and three animal series. “Top Cat" and "Calvin and the 'Ookmel." both cartoon programs, land "nje Hathaways." starring; some chimpanzees. THE GIRI.S Htdfman, who is 85 and known •> one of the omeriest men In House, said Sunday he wanted to set the record straight about why he came out recently against a medal lor the New England poet. "Why 1 don’t even know Frost," he said. "Hc’a undoubtedly a fliw fellow. But if Congreee ie going to give a medal to every American who hat done a good Job I would cover at least two-thirda of the women and maybe even a third of the mbn." Father and Son Both Learn Their Lessons ST. PETERSBIRIG, Fla. (II — Cart Schmidt waa proud when hit ■on Tom took a lively inti I his hobby, model airplane icii«. But Dad was aomewhat chagrined when he Hniahed aa runner-up to 16-yearold Tom in the aixth annual Ibompson Trophy Junior Air Races., spwisored 1^ the Gulf Hawks Model Airplane Chib. By Franklin Folger THE BERRVS Rr Ctrl Gm&ert OCR/.. lU. CALL AND VeU C/MPOCUPFMEOSERS hSafbwmwutes.^ FISHERMEN ON WHEELS - John^,(Laramie) Smith (right), llelps happy youngsters set their tackle pn Fisherman’s -Wharf in Santa Monica. Calif. The Muscular liystrophy Associations of America boated the crippled children. Laos Forces Fall Back, Await Reds I Williams Is Rnding Desire for Freedom MONROVIA, Liberia (AP)-As-~ Sisiam secretary of State far Afrt-vrFNTiANF Ijin. HIPI t-Mnst Affairs G. MfMnen Willlama or hejxas found a desire at the ^a Phou Khoun Road lunc- L hfS’ STn''J3 T i;;-'■" Z'r.rZ.T““ the royal capital of Luang Prabang h. Af from an expected Communist at-' ♦ ♦ ^ u tack, U.S. military obaervers rc- The roriner governor of Michi-ported today. . igan siad ho beliex-es Africans will resist attempts at ConvmunisI dom- Otfeer Bowrees said M trooper Cbpt. Kong Lb’s foroeo kavo beea ferried at night by planes to an unknown destlnalioa and ttat U waa feared they were Prabang. rebels alM have beea reported active north of Luang Prabang. Sala Phou Khoun is 35 miles southeast of Luang Prabang and about 100 miles north of the ad-. ministrative capital of Vientiane. In recent days 60 to TO wounded Boldiers have been brought to a .hospital near here for treatment. The Commimlats have dalined the capture of Mdung Kany, 45 miles south Luang Prabang, but there still was no confirmation here. Capture of the town on the Luang Prabang-Vientiane Road Would indicate another major victory for the Red forces. ination because of their desire to be free. Williams visited the Monrovia port Sunday and addressed dent gathering at th^ University of Liberia. YJNOtMOOf itmuf wni. wH By y. T. Hunliii anm OF M3UIW DIXIE DIIgAN By McEvoy and Stricbal CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner "I can remember when marriage used to hurt an actor's career. ,but nowadays success seems to depend on three or four of them." BOARDING HOUSE 'Martha, MV iove.xwe invited Pierre LAFiTT.tHE iooted PRODOCeif AND DlRECTOR.tODROP BVAND X V 1W0U6RT—HAK-KAFFA-lF'jbU COULD, AsK*fME Members of-TMeowls CLUB CNIC theater COMMITTCEy . OiBR. FOR tea it might LEND A ( CERTAlM DIGNITY TO Vthe proceedings/ ifhesannIthatgang trek IN HERE,ME'D ^ TMiMKHEMAO S1U/HBLED ONTO AiCAH'5 ark/-**. besides, YCX) TOOK MVT6ASERVICETD ^ BE REFLATED THE DAY Before one 3ust like \T SHOWED UP IN THE / VJlNDOSNOF SAM'S j loan COAPANy .'jj NANCY in U.S. Contracts Detroit Ordnance Unit| to Release Work Early to Aid State Economy nance Distnc-l announced over Ulf L weekend it would aw ard .several; millions of dollars in defense con-‘| trarts early in an effort to helpj revive the state’s economy. , Col. J. E. Johnson, commaiwig Officer of the district, said his of- j fice would attempt to award some; T5 per cent of the rrmainder of' tts entire curivnt fiscal year procurement pmgr.’im hy the end of ' Mait-h. lie tleclined to estimate tol.-il figure of conlmets. or their worth. He said the fHtntiaets wiMild he primarily in the automotive field,. Including autos, trucks, engines, tanks and parts. * ♦ ' Johnson also said contracts in Jhe current fiscal year awarded by ^e Detroit Distrigt mavL jexceed „ the normal yearly total of .some $300 million. By Enrie Bushmilltl MORTY MEEKLE I SICKLY ICNPIN6ED ■THE 6UB3ECT-E OUT (H R WAY Modern English New Testament on Sale Today Bt RAYMOND E. PALMER LONDON (APt-A Nw Testo-ment in modern English, 13 years ft) the writing, wrent on sale today. Known as "The New 'English BiUe; New Testament," it stripe •way the laagtHtse of the Ki% James and eartier English vet-Hons. It it the first revisioa in Britain since 1881. ' And for the first time, in British f history, all'the major churches in Britain, e.xcept for the Roman Cathrt, followed by wheat. THEJ^yTlAC PRESS.MQKDAY. AlARCH 18. 1961 TWENTY-FIVK LmI TimM Tpiiita , "ai. tLUIS'' dbe »MiKOiS DU VOUNC" EAGLES S<*iH tuis. ~ tew mmm /mmimiNs mumm New Pulpite for Billy Cn^m^t Evangelisf Looks to Films, TV I Showman Of aur time, began hls HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Billy dlmb to lame a tloaen yban ago Graham, the neatest religious | In « Los Angeles tent, but now ' - ' ■' is oh the tbrnboM of becoming a STARTS THURSDAY "WHERE THE •OYS ARE" ILUE RIBION ENTERTAINMENT With these words. Director R. Sargfsnt Shriver promised Sunday night that Preaidant Keiwedy' Peace Corps program won't be ; haven for draft dodgers as one Republican BUS SERVICE DIRECT TO OUR DOORS! NOW! at Iffikr hicM HURON INTNCT! COMPLETE The Greatest Event in Motion Picture History! I ID. Cecil BDeMilles COM^DMENIS H5ia«l(NtR-6«(e-ii0BIN50lt-Df(m0-WGn SNORTS it 7:20 PEATUIE it f:43 Through his world wide pie-turea subsidiary the evangdist plans to produce feature-length 'Peace Corps No Joy Ride' Shriver Also AAaintains New Service Won't Be Draft-Dodger Haven WASHlNGTCRy tUPD-'TWi U going to be very difHodt, very hard, very real work. I would aug-anylMdy w'ho anticipates Joy-ride get off the train right agreed to permit deferment of draft-eligtble corpsmen aiilil their term of Peace CXrrpa ter\--ioe was up. But he said that the corpsmen would be subject to the draft after their tour of duty unless they go into another socially useful aiid normally deferable occupation. Rep. H. R. Gross, R.-Iowa, barged Friday that the Peace Corps would provide refuge^for draft dodgers because of Herstaey’s agreement to exempt the corps-mien during tfamr service overseas. Twx> Area Men to Compete in Speech Tourney Birmingham and Avon Township men will represent Area 6 in the forthcomiqg district com^tition of Toastmasters ~4tUernattonal speech contest. James Stephenson, 2796 Stephenson, Birmingham, and the Re\'. Clyle Elliott, 425 W. Third St.. Avon Township, finished first and second, respectively, in the area; Toastmasters compkition held last “ Paul’s “ CSuircfa in Rodiester. The distrlet osntest held in May at Tolede. 4 AmonF'the participants in the area contest was Donald Rofe, 64 Matthews St., vice president of the Pontiac "Y*' Tbaitmasters. Toastmasters International se to give members the opportunity to develop public speaking skills community affairs. This Week May See End to Third Finch Trial LOS ANGiXES (UPD-The fate of -lUicit levera^^. 4t:-Beniard Finch and Carole Tregoff may be I placed in the hands of a pre^m-inantly male Jury this week. I • Qn^ly final ailments and the! Judge’s instructions remain to bei ooncHided in the third trial before and three women jurors bA>n their life and death deiiberatiora on the couple accused of killing Finch’s wife for kve and money. pictures and inspirational video nek B« World Wide Ftoturas, said the first pieture, “Dseade sf |Beci-•fos.” siresdy is hi the wsrks - starring BOy with TV chat- “Until now our filnu have been made principally for showings in churches throu^NWt the world,” Row said. "Now Mr. Graham is desirous of making an impact in commercial television and movies to reach those people who do not go to church. We are now dealing with 20th Cenhny-Fox and Pictures as part of our BASED ON TRAVELS “Decade of Decision" is a documentary of stock footage baaed on Graham’s travels and mass revival meetings. ‘•Billy started in a tent at the corner of Washington and Hill streets in Los Angeles back in 1949," Ross went on. “His movement snowballed until he has preadted before 32 million people by actual count, and that doesn’t include the millions who have seen him on 1V. “Our first major teleslslon project M a pair of bour-loiig Easter of IM. The format wiS Involve Broadway and Hollywood stars who will help tell the traditional stories of the holidays. “Our movies will translate the Billy Graham message into the entertainment vehicle, with the realization that this must be done subtly and dramatically." y DoadlockBcl on Algiors PARIS (UPI) - French and Ai: gerian Moslem, rebel emissaries today w at the end of the secret talks aimed at paving tli^ way (or formal negotiations to end the six-yearold Algerian rebeUfon. Tltere are about ypes and styles of.pencils. CORN DIOS ROCK 'JT BOLL - Jimmie Griffith (left) and John Martin, both Selma, Ala., high school students, say that the sound of musk has a nutritive effect upon their corn plants. The two daim they fed the ]dants a steady diet -of rock ‘n’ rdl during recent experiments and music-loving shoots far outgrew a similar stand of corn left in silence. RAZLEV E—/ CASH MARKC.T I. 78 N. SAGINAW STREET TUESDAY ONLY - SUPER SPECIAL GRADE "A" LARGE EGGS 39 DZ. WE LIMIT In his war against sin Graham' feels these are emergency days, and require emergency measures — among them motion pictures with a religious theme. *Wn>nLY RESPECTED' “He is a courageous churchman," Ross said..“His crusades transcMid any denomination. He is a member of the First Baptist Church of Dallas, Tex., but his wife. Ruth, ns a Presbyterian. Billy is one of the most w idely respected religious leadeii in the world." Current plans do not Call for Graham to star in future movies. However, he wilt act as host in lx)th of next year’s teleshov^. have the largest cast ever seen in any picture,” Ross concluded. "The footage contains literally hundreds of thousands of people who have come to hear him speak in this country, in EUirope and Asia. That’s a pretty big OSCAR FERRELL "Formerly With T. F. Cook’* -SALES- -SERVICE- Licensed Master Plumber FOUR EXPERIENCED, EXPERT PLUMBERS ON DUTY 24 HOURS A DAY Repairs Our Specialty FE 8-2800 All Work Guaranteed 1829 OPDYKE ROAD FE 5-7501 YOUR WIFE... HAMILTON DRYER 2 Hangs Up Over 7000 Articles of Clothing A Year to Dry ... Stretching Over 3 Miles WITH A NEW Either Gas or Electric FOR ONLY All That Back Break-^— — ingr Work Can Be A LOAD EUminated. • Every article that is washable ... can be dryed. Why buy just an ordinary dryer when you can own the best — Hamilton for the same money or less. EVERY ITEM WE SELL ... WE CARE FOR WITH OCR SPECIALLY TRAINED SERVICE PERSONNEL - 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH - FREE DELIVERY AND HOOK UP. MORE FOOD STORAGE SPACE AND FROST NEVER FORMS For the Family That Has a Freezer GM14 Cu. Ft MAKKET MASTER Every inch of the refrigerator is for food storage — just enough room in the Freezerette for ice cubes and a daily selection of essentials. H0U5EKHPIN(i ^ of PONTIAC 51 WEST HURON STREET FE 4-1555 Trade Your Present Refri^ratorNow OPEN TONIGHT AND FRIDAY’TIL 9 \ TWKXTY-SlX! J- TllK POXTLAC’^ PRKSSr MOXDAV.MAKCH 13, llMU 17” Business and Finance Grain Futures Mart Running light. Thin MARKETS i The fbUowinc are top prices; icwering sales of locally grown The grata by gitreers and sold by Detroit. Produce CHICAGO (.APt turr* market mistered - -----------^ . small gains today in early deal-i" '‘•holeaale package lots, mgs, but prices genremlly were QuoUtkms are furnished fey the. Rightly easier in a slow trade. De^it Bureau of Majdcets, ♦ * * iFrida>’. Brokers said there appeared to, be no new important de\ek>p-< ments over the weekend. Buying! racrrs was described as thin but offer- duiciom. ings also were very light. The absence of a significant push either way was viewed as an AaSt^cTsfr? indication that the market was; Groin Prices 1 Mart See-Saws as Steels Slip NEW' YORK (API -r Speculative interest boomed a number of stocks but the ovei'all stock mar^ ket canceled an early gain and showed r mixed pattern early this Gains and losses of key stocks! waj went from Tractions to ajwut a! In'point. Selected secondary stocks ?22|prodocpl some gains of I to 4 S M points and losses of 2 more. ,C»srM« top^. ha. . HorwraSIth. pk......... Lwk«. roBioni:®»ria »•....... •Ptrtl«7. roht. Wh*. iPtnaip*. dot Phcki OpkBias retaton. M-!b. hdf RadltbM. BUct. H hu . KadliliM. Hotboos*, d« . M>i Rhabwrh. Hetltoua*. dM < Rhubarh. RoUxmim. t-lh •* •: Squash. ButUrnut hu .Squash, Hubhard >« hu. Door Firm-Features RemoteControlin'61 Hm. list wan higher at the start ltd; sad the ticker tape ran late moat of the momiag, falling as ^^iiiuich aa three mtaiileu behind 150' Iraaiiarliona. ,\a early galau dwindled, trading ulowed. i 75 Predictions of a business uplurn } j|, by the secretary of commerce and •• othei-s fonneil a backdrop for the I.M market action but seemed to have ^ •• little influence on cyclical stocks.; ^Some big transactions were made | I in issues w hich snai-ed trading in-I terest for one reason or another, orntorr, Murch n .Ae.-eri«*s aeri Steels, nwtore, utilities and ^n-MUBtf deiiT«i«tf D»tr«a for No. 1 quBiuy , ferrous metals showed a slightly h.w“'Vpu hsas M-Mi Ufht tip* lower trend. Building materials, ®I*r oils and electronics were mostly Poultry and Eggs DtraoiT roii-Tav »5-lt: j7: higher. ,rr“-”Ti.‘m;:-B.s aric,.' I paid par doavD by fir»t rec«ivert da- opened on ^.000. shares and kept A new remote control operator. “*^("‘’fn about the head and fac^ra-44=yettf-old-Jn^f^ denee Township man lies in critics condition at Pontiac General Hospital today. Floyd Rowley of 7035 Anderson-ville Road remained unconscious since being admitted to the hospital early Sunday morning. Sherltr* deputies today were holding « year old Robert Voung of 4174 Lotus Drive, Waterford Toxvnshlp. for Investigation of lelonlus, assault. } Young has not been formally charged yet.. Should Rowley^ Young probably will be charged with mirrdnr tteeordlng Jp^tec-tives, The nmiout eontrcA door operator - hrdesigyied for 3fi-mkiute installation and is so simple in construction that 90 per cent of service will require no tools. Berry said. It features a portable haad transmitter whirb ma be used from inside aa auto or from within the house to open Ibe garage ( prt- I jfor movements among tl Csttte^^aaia'bto'j'm 'aiiil^Mrir'^S?*-”'seemed to account ttr tictri sad hrtten good grodi domlnatUu. co«i ia **rr llgtit •boat Ig^ per cent esrlr; cbstec- eerr >low vsrket not tulir eetoblUhed. (CO eorir Mktee itetdr. utility and etsnd-krd itceri and helleri kctlire, 50 cent* Mgher: Umited »upplr com needy to 50, - ernti hlgber. feo kikde choice eteere o(d and Ritter were lip I points l >M Ibe doon M.50-n 50: , .undmrd _____ II 50-23 50: Utmiv eteere 10 00- or more. mV'"' ........ Tranhlation Took 13 Years Modern-English Bible on Sale mode r irr I New Eng-j lent,” Is on] r nnniversnry of the- King Jniuea ring pressure, losing ' Hoge—asikbie TOO Buichere 35 cent* American Machine There is also a permanently in-|i'S7"s2riVso‘'”kDd^ t»-”» ibei'Isoo^jBiuiiswick s ninipng mate, re- staUed button control unit iltside!>««- » ^ mo'-*' »han a point at the thegantge. ------- "" The new operator can be ui^ on any one-piece or sectional ga- •B'ho'rn 'ejiShtei i rage door; lemKgtiedy to etront: elougfaier ovetinew scientific line of toys, spurted ---... .. ei -,te higher;--- ------- The new fiberglass canopied door is translucent and diffust^ a soft light to the garage interior. ' A" Testatmeht in English, known as "The lish Bible: New Testament,” Is on! eXerished by English speakli^ sale today. peoples everywhere. The new translation authorized I translation into current iaue-.n on. liisDusro, ’ j ii ' Prolestant ‘‘hureh: p- y^jrtaken by a Joint r,?rt‘!‘’'u.m‘ui Itit' bodies of the United Kingdom, the 70 distingukshed - nge-ig5« ,iug pressure, losing more than 2. ^rational Bible 5?ociety of Scotland, several denominations Foundry, and the British and Foreign Biblejjy major churches. Society is the first n?w church-j, j, ^ revision but an entirely authorized translation of the Scnp-i^^^^, translation from the original lures into English, since 1611. T*>«iHebrew and Greek, task took 13 years. ' , * * * The preheaUtion of the New | "Although a new translation had ; English Bible marks the .WWh ibeen discussed in England before I cut its net gain to a start fraction. Lionel, w hich-is - introducing a itic " Jat thd start and held a fair frae-•^i^-itional gain. Revlon trimmed an [early 3-point rise to about a point. > - . i International Business Machines Stocks of ArOO Intorost Iptcked up about 9. Gains of around r,-,.. |_„l Dmlrarc i« point were made by .lohns-Man-From Local Brokers u.s. . Gypsum and Texaco. ighiii* Merck. Ford and Phelps Dodge declined about a point each lIJS-llM. knd- eholcr cull to -cholct ■ttrr dcrimki point! k Srkknik! Loulili ■ 0>t Co. Student's Permit Lets Him Drive Bus to School ^ IBormkn Pood atom BRIDGEPORT. COnn. (UPIl —jcurtiu-wrighi c«n« Many college students drive t(i]^!^’^f^„J5^2i-Bo«»r B»tr 3ii 33.3 their classes in sports cars, I®'2”V.r‘fc" a''a!’kfui'g It^ies or conventional autos. Butii^.rd r .Gordon A. Wg«ner. n aenlof the University of Bridgeport, has R<^wtii stuadurd them all beat ' ^•***’ “‘»®“ Co • . inem au oeai. coexTiB sTOcas tt Sr W The (oIloirlBt quattllani do hot aoers- . H. mllo nntn »h« rammia ‘•rOr rtprcMBI kctuki trkmkctlooi tat AmMttCr He rolls onto me campus l*- «» Intoudod »! » guide to th» upproul-'Am Mow • hind the wheel of a 32-passenger mete iradlng renge of the eecm-utr- --- bus. !\Vagner lus a part-time job as a bus driver, carrying pupils to and from three public schools. His employers let him use the bus to attend his college classes and student council meetings. Scout Officers Meet Cify Vice Squad for Training Course Moonshine Said berserk, she saM and started to choke her. She told deputies she managed to break loose when the [ bed fell on their daughter and dashed from the house. Hysterical, she phoned police from a neighbor’s home. j When deputies arrived, theyj found the child crying but otherwise unhurt. Young and Rowley, were both unconscious on the floor nearby. '* * . * Detectives said Rowley apparent-1 ly had been severely beaten with| a bloo^ chair found at the scene, j He was rushed to the hospital,; while deputies revived Young and , brought him to the county jail for questioning. ^1 being held today. SEE US FIRST |*r Li»S C—tr»cCi-a««l ^ Trsrt Sqrrk# DAWSON t BUranElO FE t-5«w-rt 3-im Only oJitefth of Mexico's landj World War U. nothing specific had been planned when the- war post poned any work until 1946. • The Joint romnaitlco formed in July 1S47 arrived at an agree- ------------ ------- ment with the l^niversity presses | is suitable for farming, of Oxford and Cambridge where- ! - by the., latter would bear the entire cost of translation and pobli-cation and In return would be the Joint publishers of the Bible. The cOTimittee met twice a year I in the Jerusalem Chamber of West-; minstdr Abbey. They organized the work by appointing three panels of translators, one for the Old Testament, one tor the New Testament, and one for the Apocrypha. $12950 Boetric—Add—Sub.—Mull. PONTIAC CASH REGISTER ]JT S. SH-—’ ^ They also appointed a panel of; j literary advisers to scrutinize; drafts of the translation. A revising j j committee of three then went! New York Stocks iJCirly Morning QuoUtlonii • ifWr dnfiniki polsU nm »tgl AdiBIrjl n f Crk CokI ! 57 g J » a L __1 Kelwy Hny . 3S.1 EmnneoU . 34.4 KImb -Clk . 217 Rrcigt. U 313 Kroger men^oflaiiTS-wrL^gl^^Na^S; Ten persons were arrested in a through the whole Work. Order of the Arrow, met Sunday,j''®'** Saturday ''*“ APPROVED YEAR AGO lin the Community Services Build-:^«®d officers “ {ing on Franklin Boulevard for ai»'c8®l hquor place at 479 Nebraska training course. I • ' ♦ ♦ ♦ The 11 p.m. raid nette(J,^Bbout two gallons of .moonshine, irccord-ing to Lt. William F. Nesbitt, vice squad chief. Held on charges of operating illegal liquor place was WU- RM AbM Ami m Tel ii TrI Frit# C# McUuth Bleel C Shfttterp Taylor Tyat Orb npi Vemort Olager 43 Alchihoo 1 4&4 Avqo Corp .. 2g M Lodge Advisors Van R. Braid-^ wood of Pontiac and William J! m.4 DeGrace of Birmingham said the M f course included ways to coirfuct ^ J chapter and committee meetings. »• how to promote attendance at aSlevenU. and the general organiza-J*-*|tion of the order — a national 51 [society of Boy Scout honor camp-ijg’jera and leaders. "The biggest problem is park- J ing the thing.'’ says Wagner. "So 1 many students drive cars to the' campus, there isn’t much room! AimiktMi Fund . lor a bus." News in Bfief ■S5' *3 4 Motorola *• 3 Murray Cp ■ 1.} NM ai»c 73 ; NM CMh R !J * Nor Pne >3 Nor Bln PV |« Obto Oil Theft «r $•11(9 fntm his home .soi was reported to the sheriff s de-; ^ partment Sunday by I>X3 Capadagli of 1875 Lakeview Road, Orion Township. -Illngion Stephen Adams of Detroit sheriff's deputies Sunday that his J cottage at 9470 Private Drive, Commerce Township, had been broken into. ®nd $1(» worth of fishing equipment stolen. Explorer Scouts Study About Oil' at Houston Post HOUSTON. Tex. (UPH-One of the most unu^ hoy scout poets in the nation is Explorer Post 635 in Housfon. IS 5 Phzipi D , 55 g Phllco .. Ham Nash, 47, of the Nebrask* Street address. Nine others were arrested for loitering. They are; Leona Jon^. 40, of 478 Nevada St.: Pletto Causey. 21, of 535 Nevada St.; Lucille Stovall, 38, of 460 Nebraxka St.; John Coward, 31, of 160 W. South Blvd.; Johnnie Wright. 26. ot 565 Wyoming St.; Jessie Johnson, 22,.of 521 Branch Freddie Haynes. 21. of 497 S. Paddock St., and N. C. Williamson, 50. of 218 Earimore St. fledge for College I GREENVILLE (ifk-Managemcnt ' at Greenville Tool & Die Co., Moii-417 .SALT LAKE CITY,-(UPI) — The day, matched pledges of $1,400 by JJ Ipresideit of the American Phar-jils 50 employes to produce a gift « [maceulical Association says the 1 totaling $2,800 for the proposed Following the course, an additional meeting was held for members who will be conducting elections for order membership in all the troops and explorer posts of 'the Clinton Valley Concil. 'Si Drugs Shorten ^Hospital Stays Since Year^^ rdurr 0* U s>k n Dynkm n . 0«rb«r Prod OllletU .... Ododrlch . . OnodyMr . . Ot A*P ...... A (ape reearder wnrih lUf and..... i-j- n radio vahjed at $75 were re-j * * * !ki * ported stolen from a summer home The explorers have broken jlJ’.'JfH.o at 8494 Edgewood Road. Commercejaway from the usual eoncept of Township by the owner. Dr. Ray-ja seout wandering through wood-mond Forsylh of Detroit, accord-lend trails and Trying outdoor iig{ to weekend reports at the sher-|cookery, and have begun a study iff’s dQMmmcnt. jof the oil industry instead. ~ ’ The seoats, donning the ileel Business Notes ' workers, have toured ^nerien ! In Houston, have vlulted oil In-Gary Hendershot of Pontiac j dustry historical sites, and 4«ve Tractor and Equifmient. 1751 S. made syathetlc robber la eiqieri-Telegraph Road, spent last wifek ments. at Vienna Ga., at t^ ^utherol determine lhe ;gL^rSr Im^ment *DiXion, havelM-aixJ 0>. whero he is participating ini'""" ^ intensive product and sales train.j - , nrTrninmi , nm Sra"tiS1.?feat.^28 memlK-rs of thelfccSS operation and features. ^ periodic^-i!"!">“ *U Edwam N. CMe, of IS7t Kirk-'ly way Drive, Bloomfield Hills. gen-[Sc________________ eral manager of the Chevrolet i soak up the scientific knowledge Division of General Motors, has'they find in their scouting acthr-been named chairman leadership for the imtro^itan.------------------^--- Detroit 1961 Torch Driv’e. {gjg Ljff for Trollor IJnda Smith. 6. of 3M Horn McNeil St.' was trrated at Pontiac;,, General Hospital for minor injuries fv Toh . dtsT Dill Bstewsy St )S 3 Std Brand 2.1 std Oil Cal < Old Oil Ind 1 Std Oil NJ l atd Oil Oh cost of a stay in the hospital is less than it was in 1940. * ♦ ★ Ronald Robertson, Spokane, I Wash., says that’s because new ' drugs have shortened periods of iiokj hospitalization or even make it 2 2 unnecessary. : 1, * * I «s| An example, Robertson points “ gjout, is pneumonia cases. The ail-Iment used to mean an automatic 55 71 two-week confinement in a hos-• ^,|pitaV. Now many cases are cared . 431 for In the home. Grand Valley State College. The school hopes to be operating by 1963 to serve an eight-county west Michigan The Skilbladi]cr, a paddje-boat operating on Lake MJosa, largest lakelh Norway, has been running for 104 years. The translation of the New Testament was formally approved on March 23,1960,13 years after work was begun. Work continues on the Old Testament and the Apocrypha, which ^will be published several yeacs from now. As to the need for a new translation, a memorandum circulated when the project was first being-planned noted: "In the urgent task of evangelism, one main difficulty of the church is the difference between the language enstomarity lued by the church, and English as currently spoken. "There is' danger that archaic language may give the impression that the message itseH is out of datq and irrelevant. This is especially deplorable since the New Testament was written in the 'common' language of the time.” "The New English Bible"' is planned and direct^ by representatives of the CSiurch of England, the Church of Scotland, the Methodist Church, the Congregational Union, the Baptist Union, the Presbyterian Church of England, the Churches in Wales, the Churches in Ireland, and the Society Friends. * ★ ★ Representatives of the Brisish and Foreign Bible Society and the National Bible Society of Scotland also sit on the Joint ^mmittee. Need *50 till payday? You can borrow $50 for two weeks for just 70^ The Associates nrtkes loans from $25 I. 5500 on your signature, furniture, or car Our terms are tailor-made to fit YOUR,budget. You’re, filways welcome to our money. THE Associates LOAN COMPANY PonHoc: 125-127 N. Saginaw, FE 2-0214 Michigan Mirncia Mila, FI 8-9641 Drayton flains: 4494 Dixia Hwy., OR 1-1207 5TSU"-T-4ic COMPLEn INSURANCE SERVICE Tti Less Money No Membeiship Fees Terms Vara M. DoaiaU M. E. DoniaU Baniela Inaurante Agency 563 W. Huob Stmt FE 3-7111 Tran W. Air 15. , TrauMBier .. It. ' Tvent Ceu .. 4(. Undervoed . M. Un CarUde 124.4 Un Pac 31,• Unit Air Ua 41 , Unit AIre 3*. , Unit Fruit «2 ind have^c a petroleun mem tiers quizzed per ^ jy by th^ir advisor. Hetvy D.jjnt *a.i Y^”i‘"TBw 33.1 [Schmidt, to sea how well they £} Si ? Uoak UD the scientific knowledee . H i swxtb rm iim Pontiac Man 'Poof' After Fight Stabbing S' ^V’"un TM «.* 45 4 WmI* a “ 25 7 Wrntc BI WoolirorUi tabbing victim. Walter Andrew. 28. of 52 Vermont St. re-mahM>d In poor condition at Pon--qi J|tiac General Hospital today. Police stid Andrew was stabbed in the stomach with a three-inch pocketknlfe during a brawl last night at 594 Arthiff St. NEW YORK fUPD - A draw-^!ing of a helicopter that couW „ ^ J! straddle a hi«e highway truck ^turclay after she ran mto Howard ,rau„_ pick it up and fly away McNert Streri near^ ^me and ^ into the path of a ?ar dnven by ^ „ corp . | Jack Walker, 28. of 421 Hward ^ McNeil DOW-JORES I P.M. at 3* Indi ta M off «.30 !• Rail* 142 M off 0.14 U ytlli. IM4( up d.lt « »7 7s «n (.w Tolumt ta -1 p.m i.m.m aT4K-K AVERAOM MEW TORK aUrrh tS-lComplM b7 TIM guorlsittd Prrui: Show; a. Of 623 Ditmar St. Shaw was held pending an inveatigation by detec-tiveqi Commuters Must Pay NEW YORK (UPD-Americans are spending nearly aa much to „ .. .. transport themselves to and from induM >uii!tmi^st«kii||,^P homes as they are spending 3US ISIS ms 3W4 on housing itself, according to 342 $ liis !«!' 2415 i Architectural Forum, a profes-S?? 12? Mk budding Journal. The ptib- ............. Uk t IMS 1312 J4151 Heath*" Americans wfll s_ The state of Georgia .wai named!jet engines mounted in the tips of ^ -- IJ? ! iS t trillioo on tranH>ortation In the r King George U tt Englttid.|itB rotor blades. mv .V saa!t taaa ms Mi.iiaaRt 15 yoara. ,„r helicopter, weighing 30;^..........— tons, would be powered Iqi turbo-. TILE- TU" Carload PEKNY PAINT SALE 13,91 tud OallM ,01 AkMSTkONd ASPHALT TILE Caaaim Annatvent Asphalt TH«. Pet44Kt qiMHty. AN yaa VINYL EXCELON 1 Creesetreef—use it anywhere, fl kitchent, hasemeaH. etc. Never ■ $3.99 want. Carload Sale. CarPAn Meeds wsslRg. $C89 1 IB 80 Pcs. ■ fSS Wiinvii A 80 Pcs. Lin«l«wm 54" Nlgk Wall 10* Tile *?![ 6’-9’-12’meViiiyl’‘59‘| 4" High Ribbsr OsM 9 le Fi. BUY’LO 102-104 S. Saginaw (Next Door to May's) Free Porkinq m Reor CEIUNC TILE Whitt aniy. TangM an f/i ® R. PLASTIC TILE laaiitb THo far a IsHnaam 9r12 LiaaitaH Rags T OFIN T0NI6NT emi FRIDAY YN 9 F. M. Each Gear Boating Course to Small Craft Owners Hie Ooeet Guard safe boating ceurae, which ii acheduled to get under way at Pontiac Central Higfi School Wedheaday evoiing, hai been trimmed to eight weeka and ipeclally fitted to benefit amall boat opuntan on Oakland County 4akea, Tril{t|ng^ Officer Smith Cook laid today. ^— it ★ W Last year was the. first time the course was ottered in Pontiac by the Coast Guard. It ran 10 we^s, and covered many phases of sea-mandiip which had little bearing Given Job,. Aid for Son by Brinks LOS ANGELES. UPI) — Today Is decision day for Douglas WUliam Johnson, the man who found 1340,-OOO In unmarked bills in a bag that had tumbled from a Brinks armored car and returned it. ★ w ♦ > Grateful Brinks officials, after much thought on how to ade^tely reward such hwiesty, came up with an unusual solution—they offered the out-of-jwork Johnson a steady 'jo^ and a college education for his eldest son. The cashNG BEACH. Calif. (UPI) -■Three sailors were injured Sunday night when the front wheels of a poller coaster car jumped the track on the big sloop at the Pike Amusement Park. . About 20 persons were in thej too Gorgeous .car when it ground to a halt after skidding down the slope and going part way up the next one. Attendants at Long Beach Memorial Hospital said one of the sailors suffered a fractured leg. Injuries to the two others were descnbed as minor. 'Suzie Offers to TeacA but A N T LONDON pled in on them. Workmen had to cut them Miss Kwan is too beautiful,’’ said (}apt. Anthony Hare of the star of the movie version of ‘"The World of Suzie Wong” tott Coon Tor tiM cottotr JOTtnll* Ointlon. •- **-t mstUr of Um jMtil ----------------- Stcpt oU^ns that tha proMot whcresOouU of the fathor of lald minor----------— toewB and laid cbUdroL_____ opon tho pubUo for lupport mU omidran ihrald bo plaotd ■-t people of the SUU hereby i— yon are hereby notified _ .. ____________County, •OB the md day of March. A.D IMl. at l:M o'eloCK In the afumoon, and >yoo art hereby commanded to appeal penonally at lald hearing. It being Impractical to. make perional aerrloe hereof, tbli lummoni and notice abau be lenred by pubUcatlon of a copy -week peeeloM jo lald hearing In .The Pontiac Preag. a niwipapey pHoted *“il^gSS5!*l!S^*:'2rWj DonaId I. Adama. Jodse of iJd Oonrt. In tte gty ^ Skmliaeb laldCraty. thU Stb day ^ ii»ch AJD. Itfl. (Seal) DORi^ *. WAIU, '* *------' Judge of Probate ■A^BOOTM y Pr(d>eta Reglater JuTtnlle Dlvlelon March 11. INI To prepare the King’s Own Yorkshire regiment for duty in Malaya, Hare had the idea at after-hours instruction in the Chinese language, the use of chopsticks, and other local customs. He advertised for a teacher and. insure good attertdance af the classes, specified she must be thu Court Ibeautiful. Miss Kwan cabled Hare from Hedlywood: ‘‘Please consider me a candidate as (3iinese teacher for Yorkshire light infantry regiment. I am fluent in Qilnese, fabulous with chopsticks and fond Furthermore, I am half English. My other quaUfications? I can only suggest you see the World at 7 p.m. at tha Pureley Puneral Home with Rev. Robert Garner offIclaUng. Pollow-IDK the tarrleo idr. Priest *ui be taken to the Whltc-Ranson Pu-nertl Home, Union City, Tenn., for lervICe and , biiriel in . the Antioch Ometerv. UnUm City, , Tenn^ on Thursday_at 3 p.m. WEST, BENEDiCT, UAKW00D7 Mich.; age 7t. Punerel arrangements pending et the Plumerfelt Punerel^Ho^ Oxford._____ WiftTMAROH, MARCH 11. INL OIA B. Mil Piultne: age 67; beloved wife of John Whllmerch; deer mother of Joe Rickman, Mrs. JuUa WordeiL Mtt- D'kc* Bbaw. M<-« Mable bcmtor, Mrs. Ulllea Mrs. Maxine Ricks end Hooper: alto survived Ichlldren and ll great- . .. by ySgrandchll grandchildren, runerai service wUI be held Tuesday. March 14, at 1:30 from the Huntoon Punerel Home with Rev. Robert Oerner oKlcIntlng. Interment In Ottnwt Perk Cemetery. Mrs. Whltmerch will lie In state et tbe Huntoon Punerel Home.._________________ ,.'?e*a issi?. REAL ESTATE ROR SALE Suburban Property . ’ Tor Bile Acreage . Ppr Sale Parmt .. ^ Rent Term Pnipert Sale Buslnett Property ....... Rent-Leeee Buslneee Property 0 Por Bale or --------- FINANCIAL Bualneit OpportunlUet . Sale Land CTontrncta . .. MERCHANDISE aothiim ___^ebold Ooodt Hl-^*r*TV A Radloa Water Softeners Por Sale Miscellaneous Chrlslmas Trees...... CTirlsjmas OlfU ...... Do U Yourself......... Cameras. Equip.. Serv... Sala Musical Ooiids . Sale Office Equlpmmt Sale Store Equipment . Sala Sporting Goods gMtm------------------ Card of Thanks 1 WE WISH TO THANE ALL OUR neighbors, friends and relatives tor the many catda and floral offcrlnge. Wa are deeply grateful to all for their many acU of kindness and eympathy during our tad bereavement In ibt deeth of our loved one. Our npprecUi-Uon can not be adequately expressed Mrs. Howard Skarritt and daughter_______________ Funeral Directors Help Wanted 6 ACTUAL JOBS IN U. S.. KUROPK. £ipl^-e!?t“ifo“«?.-. SN. TN BoyMoa St. Boat A part time job JRD AT I ening worl k 3-Wn. I NEKDRD AT ONCE 3 MEN POR ------ Mr. Pruett. 1 p.m. ------(nlen......_______________ work with reltnbls and well as-Ubllebed wbolesele food company. No travcllag All normal fringe benefit' Including OrOup Ins. and Prom Sharing for Retlreea. Minimum of I3N per week. If you are hitereeted In a permaaeol position. with above-average Income, 3»-tS yeart c( age. ready to surt Immediately, nhone PK tdieia for T A C Pood Up to 113t hourly comm, plus ^ut. Saletmenthlp not required. Demonstrete new patented A 1 r Cushion Shoee Samplet lupplled. Cherlee Chester Shoes, Dept. Z, NN Brockton, Mete. POUR MEN OR WOMEN WITH ears te till veoanelet. Pull or part Ume. Opportunity to earn good Income. I,N N. Perry, 130 to OBS: HIGH PAY. ALL TRADES. 80. Amertqa. The Islands, U.8.A. Chance to treyel, etc. Por yifor- NEW'CAR SALESMAN. RAJnLEn experts * * “ ' * ---- Lake ( Halp Wanted 8 ----------and 10 to taka_____ of amail, largp volUma afUca. Complete baokkenpiog eiperlencC. Able to , qiMrato NCR raaebloe. Dtrset nasUtants. Co^Iete stoto and federal reports. HWle eue-toraer credits. PlcnesaC peranaml-Ity and appeamnee. .Local (town town company. Wrlto Pontiac Prase. Boa N. AND WIPE TO HELP CARE tor lawn, flowers and 4 gentla saddle horses. Wife to help with housework. No farm work. Pra-far retired ‘ wa NEED people. As ______ _____ builder that will work ... . Pleaie call Jdr. Pace. OR 4-0431. PART TIME WALLED LAKR AR Needed » men. Must be preeen employed. Over 31. Have a ( and willing to work. Call I Penrod. MA 4-3411 4 to 1 p.m Emptoj^ent Agencire 9 ' Evelyn Edwands meet THE PUBLIC ' I2C0 Attractive girl with good- persoo-altty Agee 21 to 31. No typing or ihor^thend: Public relatfons Job. Castaierlng experience helpful. HOSTESS CASHIER $311 Fashionable restaurant needs at-tracUve. self coofldtnt person , ggej 33 10,31. No typlns or thort- OFFICE MANAdSR ' . . |4» Must be part of work force In a 4-glrl office. Tborougbly experienced in bookkeeping. Outstanding opportunity. Age 33 to U. Good typing. MEN REAL ESTATE SALESMEN. NEED rgetic. well educated man for IS work. Prefer eipertence but train a capablt party. Call Donelson-Johns COATS A - PUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAtNS 6R 3-7717 Voorhees-Siple Cemetery Lots ROUTE MAN. I log opportuni earn up to 1131 plus expenta allowance by servicing a rauto of estabUehad. cuttomars. Sale ex-perienct helpful but Mt necet-sary as we provide trnlnlog. Light Meneant work. Car and phone eeeenttol. Por personal Intorvlaw api^tment, phooa PE 1-lTN, Real Estate Salesman Man or womnn expertsnecd. Full time. You wlU be helped with and prospacU. Ask tor RRHAGSTROM REALTOR 4100 mOHLANO ROAD (MSI) PONTIAC OR 4-03M ___ FE 1-0314 aftor_l_ _ SALES PBOMOTiON COMPLETE EVELYN' EDWARDS VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE 4>,k E. HURON SUITE PHONE PEderal 4-0M4 SECRETARY Woman aged 3S-4S with good typing and shorthand.' No pre-school children. Need own transportation. Excellent etartlM eelery. 3 day week. Midwest Employment, 401 PonUeo State Bldg. PE 8-1337 Wwlc WRBtoil FeniRle 12 Wmdjra(^B8»B8 DAT WORE. #ASHl)roS AND IRONINOS ^CE- Up and deUver. OR 3-7471,_ WASHINGS AND IRONINOS. Pici!-up and dallTtred Call PE b-m4. ^ Biliidhig S(M^lce______13 A-l BRICK. BLOCK AN^ CEMENT work. Also fireplaces. OR 3-1401. - A-l residential. COMMERaAL and Industrinl Maecm end gen.' contracting. Also store front remodeling. John W. Ceplca. MY 3-lin A-l REltC>DBLINO OP ALL RlNbs. Specialties In baeementa i under houses Ouar work end material. Free estimates and Uetnia butld- 1-1 CARPENTRY. SATTSFACTIOR guaranty. PE i-7240________ (-1 ALTlfKATTONS AND MODERN-izatlon. Realdenttal and commercial. Dale Cook Conitructlon Co. OB 3-M33. ______ fNY AND ALL 'TTRES OP BUELO- S5fld«l'. yE’'4-0MT'Evenriiu“pi 4-1113. _______________ BARGAIN Oerege. MSI. recreation room. 11 X 15. I3M. Additions, porches, attics, Mich, basement, modernl-latlon work. Terms. PE 1-1133 BRICK. BLOCK AND ' CEMENT work, alto repairs. Phone OR rooting 2-6^ Ught I toeing. UL FOR ADOrnONR oaraoeT aluminum elding, pettos. and ma-toory work M all kinds. Call R. E. JMmion. OB 33M14. FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL WIR-Ing. wUI finance, R. B Munro Electric Co.. 1011 W. Huron 3-7311 HOUSE MOVINO PUII>Y ROOFING - NEW OR REPAIRS Sheet metal work. Eayestrough-lag — new or repairs. Free eetl- Instructions—Schools 101 GUITAR L ESS 9 N 8 IN*YOUR 1 . Ing and loading. MA 4 SALESMAN so year old. nationally known manufacturer of high quality pro-Uctlva eoallngi has Immediate :?dti Orivel A Dirt . Coal A Fuel Trees. Shrubs . Por Sals Livestock Wanted Livestock ...... Por Sala Poultry ...... Sale Perm Produce Sale Perm Equipment AUTOMOnVE Por Sale Beueetrallere Rent Trailer Space ... Auto Acceeioriet ..... Por Sale Tlrei ........ Auto service Sale Motor scooters . . Por Balt Motorcyclea For Sale Bicycles Boats A Acetseortes . . Plberclae ............ Por Bale Alrplanee — Transportatten Offtrad Wanted Used Oars — Used Ante Parte ...... Commercial Trallcn .. Sale Used Troeke ...... Dead Track reign A 8 le Used a Death Notices CARROLL. MARCH II. 11*1. MIL-drrd B. 3330 Baldwin. Oxord: Mrroli: de°eV mother ol George Edvard Jr . Albert N.. Leo R. hod of Mrs. Lenore Lenym. Wllllnm end Fred Covey; also turvlTed by It grandchildren. Puneral tcrvlca wlll^be held Wedne^ay. Jdareh^l^ Puneri H Vudgeiawn CHRISTENSON, MARCH 10. IMl. Lawrtnee, 0331 Farmington Hoad, West Bloomfield Townthto; gat 04; beloved husband of Dorothy M. Chrlitenson; dear fath« of RusseD, WaUace and Donald Christenson; alto survived by three brothers, one sister and five grandchildren. Punerel service will be held Tuesday, March 14. at 11 a m. from tha McCandlaaa. Zobel A Bradley Funeral Home, Antln, Wit. Interment In Elm-wo^ Cemetery, Antlgo, Wit. Ar-rengements by C. J. Oodhardt Punerel Home. Eeego Harbor ORAHAM. MARCH 11. IMl, eSSB B.. MM Woodbine: age SI; beloved wife of Clare B. (Rad) On-hem. Puneral aervloa will bo Mid Wedntsdoy, March 11, at, 1^0 .. p.m. from the Deneuon-jMms Puntrol Home. Intermegit (n Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mrs. Oraham will Ua In ttato at tM Donelion-Johna Puneral Home. BAWidB, MARCR ii, 1001. AliNTi .. ... —... m,. nj, I. Myrtle A. vUl IM held ednesday. March IS. at tha ichmoo(ly Puneral Bema, Plth-U, H. T. InUrmant In Duchess county, PUhklU. " menti eompleterl no Arvtde, Wafied Lak SO; dear mother of Mre. Myt Bar). Funeral senrloe will bi Wedn—■— “-—V — Auchi y V. inL«nt,_. „ B.T. Arrangt-Rlchardaon- _ ___________WaUtd Lake. XA'TICB, MARCS II, lOdi, PITBL 3170 1^. Drahner Road. Oxford; a|c 04; dear father of Mrs. Mary Seean. Anna, MlehML Ooerfe, JjSui isd Ka^j^oKi RMdUttos ot*^ lomiT^wlU, be eudiUh^Md PunUI^BMna, Oxford. PuBoral eervtoo will ba brtd Cbiinti, Lake Orton. Mtortoont In EaitTawn ComOtery, Lake Orton. Mr. Katlcb wlU Ito In •tote et the Bossardet * Held Puneral Home, Oxford.________ CtciAiB, MARCH 11, 1901. AR-thur 107V5 orchard Lake Ave.; age 41; beloved huebend of Shirley Ana Moore Madgwiek; dear ' father of DanlaL lUw and Ro-mana LaClalr; dear brother of Mrs. Lewrenbe Bovey and Leo T. LaClalr. Funeral acrvlce will be held ‘IWeMtor, March 14. at ri a m. troat Veerheaa-«ple CMpel with Rov. Tbaodoto EL Allebooh otftdatias. lataratoat In ML Bopa The PobUm Pren FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 s.m. to 5 pm. ported *"^lmmeSaulfy. The sibmty ''lor^'erroV^^lher than to cancel the charges for that portion of the tfret Ineertton of tbe advertisement which has been rendered valueless through tbe error. When cencelUtlone are made be sure to get your ‘’kill number." No •dJustmenU will be given without It. Closing time for advortlet-mebte containing type slxel' larger than regular agato type le 11 o'clock noon tbe day previous to publication. CASH WANT AD RATES Lines 1-Day 3-Dayi 1-Dayt 3 gl.Tl 13J3 13.4$' S.M 1.(1 11 l.M .(.M U.M An additional ebarga of BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. Today there were repUes at The Preas office in tho foltofilnE boxea: S, $, 7. 11, SO. M, 10. IS, 74. 82, 07, 100, 101, 114, 110. Holp Wanted Male 6 i MEN NEEDED DdMEDIATELY for avonlng work. Call Mr. Tea-plei MA 4-3411 ADVICE To Men With , Ability If you aren’t earning at least $150 every week, let us tell you about an op- girttinity with Mutual of maha. This includes unlimited prospects, thorough training at qur expense, group insurance, opportunity for advancement and everything else you would wantJoiR career. If you are over 27, own a car and want to make money, call us for an interview. Phone: OL 1-9961 Aik Per JiDi Slmoo Mutuab of Omaha_ PLACE A "LOST” AD. ail FE 2-8181 for an ad to recover a loss. Dial FE 2-8181 for an ad writer. SALES OPPORTUNITY Company has branch office In Pontiac.. I need e few men to complete sales force. Prefer mar- ____ trained —------, ------- Insurance benents and profit ahar For Jntervlew phone FT! 1ST CLASS LICENSED BUILDER, tree estimates, PE 3-4Mt______ A-l WALL WASlifira. CARPET, YcEMENT. block. BRICK AND CABINET MAKER AND CARPEN- CARPENTBR •WORK OF AH’ kind. Reesenable. Call after p m PE 1-1431. __________ ing. P( l-OtM. TOP’ POSmON I need a top level ealee executive In the ItoDtUc xrea. It you can qualify, and want to enaka roallv big money write Box 334. Utica. Michigan. Replies coofl-dentlaL WANTED ttonally known electrlcel appliance Co. Must beve a high ecb«>l education and be between toe •gee of 35 end 4«. U you ouallly caU OR 4-04(3 between 4 and vXt?* sopfiicNEB^ salesman exc^ent program, mgh commla-aton. Can KLgln 7-0077 or MAyfaIr AAliO for appointment. Help Wanted Female 7 CURB WAlTBBaS, » W OVB». DEPENDABLE WOMAN POR BA-byslttlng. Good honri. CaU before 13 p.m. PE 3-4011. Do you need mon»y7 Avon «oe-metlci has the earning opportunity you need Use your extra hours profitably by being an Avon representative. Phone today FE 4-toili or wrlto Drayton Plalna P.O. Box 01________. CXPe'RIENCED SHOE SALES-lady. Good aalara. exceUent working coiumiont. rau or part time Apply In person to Dleme, Pon-ttac’a Popular Shoe Store, 17 N. Saginaw Btrtot ' ------------ PULL OR PART TIME Regular weekly pay check and keep your Important -- -‘*-emd mother. No tore g-43M. EXPERIENCED COOK. FEMALE, single, for summer resort Northern part of lower Michigan for season June 15 until after Labor Day__Itojgly Pontiac Press Box 1 UV^E 4N 6 DAYS ("CHILDREN. General housework_________MA _#il_301 PICKUP TRUCK AND CHAIN SAW, steady or part time PE t-5445 PAINTING AND LAWN , W0RK7 Building SuppHts M ^ Viiii." HOUSES POR SALK TO BE RE-moved, 4M up Ittar Wracking Co.. 70 N. Broadway, Mt. Clem- Business Service IS prsMtiwkliig, Ta^iy 1> Mrs. J. Manning. PR ♦•♦Wi DRBSSMAKINO, TAttOIW07 '*L-teretlons. Mre. Bodell, PK 5-lOM. YAlLORiHO. A L f R R A 'fYO B S, drtitoitklaf. cU8to« Ar»p««. MY ,________________■ ' TAnx)RiN<>--ALrinii'ri6i«rT Dress Making—Pur Repairs ERNA WARNER PE 1-lllS Qsrikn Pl0Rdn; \ W', I lncoin(B| Tax Sei^icR 19" 13-15 AVERAGE PEE DUHNW bookkeeping end tax eorvlooi OR 3-6311. " EXPmtEBCiD C SE^ICE ACCURATE BOLIN TAX -.. (Avtltable Year Round) CORNER PIKE * MILL STB. PE 4-lllH er PE 5-r~ FRIENDLY. PERSONAL SERVICE at your homa or ours. Average rate 13-56. KEYS A NACKERMAN PE 1-3397 3135 N. Perry FE WI71 lN~YOUR HOME OR MINe, OB INCOME TAX SERVICE NCITARy public, your home or mlae, 13-15 average fed. Carl OUbOlt. MY _3J103 MY 3-1M4._______ INCOME TAX BOOKKEEPING and Notary. 53 and 15 average 591 Second Fli 5-3876 INCOME TAX and Accownting Service 413 W* HURON PE 3-71 or Swr ra"PE MtlT' ' Moving and' Trucking 22 HAULINO AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any time. PE S-1015. HAULlNd AND RUBBim. 53 LOAD gravel and front end loading. PE 3-W03. __________ ■ MOVINO AND TRUCKlNp. CHlfcXl> O’DELL CARTAGE ' Local and long distance moTini _____Phone PE 5-MOd__ Pointing & Decorating 23 1ST-CLA88 PAINTINO, OBCOItAT' Re^ Don Seek. CT. 1-31U 1ST CLASS PAINTINO AND WT7 •^erhenglng, Thompson. PE 4-S314. 1ST CLASS PAINTINO AND DEC-oratlng. Cash or terme. UL 3J140. A-l PAINTTNO AND DBCORAT-ing FI 4-1(11. _ A-I PAINTINO, WINTER PRICES now in elfect. Free *« work Ouar. FE 4-1305. _11“L free estimate call OR 4-0062 PENCiES INSTALLED. .MARETj Pence CO. Free Eet. LI 7-0710. ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RK pairing and rewinding. 311 E. pike. Phone PE 4-3061 l PAINTINO AND DECOBAT-26 yeers experience. Reason-. Free eitlmetgs. Phone UL HEATING. FURNACES CLEANED end eervlced. C. L. Nelson. PE MEYERS PUMPS AND REPAIRS KELLY HARDWARE 3004 AUBURN RO OPEN SUN. 10-3 UL 3-3440 Saws, Hand Lawnmowers Machine eherpened Manley Leach . ■ 10 Bagtey St. WANTED: PAPER HANbiNO k Work Wanted Femaje 12, MIMEOORAPHINO TYPING SBC- I > roUfitl ifrvlce, IM 3>M42._ KUR^fiS AVAILABUI DAY AND 8ALVAOINO AND RETRREADINO PAINTING. PAPERHANOINO. PI LAWN MOWERS REPAIRED All Cooled Engines Repaired lncorpor.Tted Crafts _______am Union street_____ SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED ___________PE 4-4343 ______ HOTPOINT. WHIRLPOOL AND PAINTINO. -PAPERIHO. REMOV- al Washing. PE 3-3311. ’__ PAPER RANOINO. PAINTINOT ’ I plaster repairing, UL 3-1743._ I PAINTS AND DBCORATINO. NO,’. CREST TV, I HOUR SERVICE dev and night and Sundays. _ira_8-o'”* nav no Automobile Repairs Andy Csiki Garage Bpeciailst OB domestic and forergn VW Service handwriting Bog 03______________________ RELIABLE WOMAN TO .CARE P&le msfawg; , 031 W. Huron. ployed with afternoona tree after 1:00 p.m. Apply In person to A. A. McCully. (UrculatloD DepartmeBt, PonUsc Press. EXCELENT PUTURE in CHILD tralnlnit program. Appllcante toould ba married and must Uka It you hare eeer told to yojjr Wt,.jook Into 0 MW Ham which ereryoL. ____________ Rave wonderful opportunity tor part-ttoio people. Age M barrtor. Be tint to your area with thta tobuloua opportunity. For tutor' ----------- ----- ^ uuea. Medical Technologist Man or woman. Moat bo rOcla-torod (ASCP) and or hove baeho. loro dMToo to medtoM toehsiolocr. To porfom diamleaL bootortol^ cal and mlctoaeopte toata uodor -----at a etan phyelctoa Oo., Utohten Baalth (Pine 3 per cent tocreaea eftootive Jiily 3. IMli To flU tnmedtote end future va. canclet in local area. Egealleat promotional opportonlttoa. A11 Micbigan civil eervlce benetita. Must have two ygara at coUega prefCTtto^^lth Me courece to cent full time paid axparlasca to ■octal cage work. Cor nacoaaary. Obtota oppUcatka tor axABtiw-tton by ,wrltto« ^KtohltM Chdl Rarytoo, l.aiMlH UL INSTALLED FREE luto springs, mufflern, tail pip generators starters shook l_ sorbers when bought at regular Rollerba^T a*^ parts ----- ■ ■________3-14T Boats le 8ure-l ___ .-TH CONI______ 11 Larsoo A Wagemakcr Boata Powered With A ’61 Et___ YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER Harrington Boat Works IIH a.. Triegraph Bd. PE 3^033 WINTER PRICES On all boats, motors, traitors, and martoe su|>plles. . PAUL A. YOUNG. INC. 4030 Ditto Hwy. — On Looo Lakt __________OB 4-0411 Building ModerniMtion ATTIC — BASEMENTS - OA-rages — alum, siding — klicbsn— etc. PHA terms, no down payment, free eittmatee. Letter Oon-ctru(»toB CO. OL l-sm day r~ Eelth O. glegwart, PE 5-0783. if>0 IT BOW. RBMODEUNO, NEL: — Bld». Co. OB 3-im. Carpet Cleaners Dreremaklng, Taijoring ILTRRATIOHS, ALL OARIIEHTB, Knit Dtossto, AY. MARCH tS. IftOl Rcwt Aptfc Furajlili^ y I KOdUS. BHAItB MTli. OTIU- Notices aad PcTMOab 27| ARE, YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTS? t»: ;2 rooms, priv. bath, close to ^rs, clean. FE 4-2579 br/orc S p.m.____________ Ain^iMTH. »lp ORUfE- OONaOUDATt AIX TOD* ailXS, Iraac*. 8ci>o«l at FE un- OT oivR TOO , rooiu rd«~woiuuR6 LABf our PLACI TO PAT , ,, eM lU Nonb ■Alt. BUDGET SERVICE Si*' « mSsT ■ m*BdW ulTlwr. PE Aftar I pa. ar If M •oawpr caU Pt |.tTM. CaaiMni- ARE DEBTS WORRYING YOU? CAB Afford: — Rapiofrr net coBUctrd — StrctclMO your ROOM APARTMKirr. toji»^jj»f»YT*d. y«t R. aofiBAw. ritaoln AND BATH BAaKMKNT « RO^. NKWLT DKXNtAT-td. Atmuor turaUhod toBRif mUf, m MrfAinIC. PE S-MW J ROOMS. BATH. UTIUtin. FRI- Heat Aytfc Unfamhlwd 39 a ROOMS Allb BATH TKRRAC* PoalAO. MA MIRL_ AFARliiiNT NKAB DOHNTOHS; 1 m*. AIM kAlh. SnclMB MAOO. BM voter, oad hMi tom. MS atr ao. CaU PH l-fUl Mvooo S;W A.a. AMI S:is p.a. " ARCAbU~? 7 RMy iBCAMd 1 looat oBd ObUi »rS22. tjjhUfSL^BBd ^^^BVB. AapIo Maiadn ^uiuw. M HoSMwtoBd. BBoUar. Itl Rbiob. W •*“ * coll phVmr CKOICX BAST S Olfice S>>c» .47 I QPPICn POR RBMT, dSdS Hvy <3f MM* rROOMSTcLRAN. UastBD. gpn. Bbl* ter dUIrraat InsB «f >BBt-n«m». laqato P« w. Hbiob *' riultor H S-TMI _____ _M* *4«I OtORBD. 3 bOOM CLEAN 303 JR WjbOA Skevo ormlAff^__ CH11 .DR EN WF.LCOM E Modom I rooa apoitarnt—Store end reti^rator nraUlied. Newly decoTBle^ tSS aeaRdy -Apply b* l« Blooafield Terrace or ptaood PR: 0-3331 No diBrcc tor .bu^t BBBlnl* wnu or DbMte lor free boeklr‘ MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS W PonUBc State BabO B1 II ROOMS PRIVATE ENTRANCE ;_Bod OAOi_ni N Tetedroph. 3 rooms ON MECHANiclnHEE^ ...----- m j EHicienev Apartments. Llrlnr room' kUcheo, kBUuooBi. m N PoddBCk. PHMWtT" BOOLETARO TMtRA^^ ffi^TEO «~ROOMS and"" BAI^ UVINO ROOM. DtNm04„ ETI^ eo with refrlterator tod r‘— tile both. Wtfi tide. Dear < town- Phone PE l-SITI.__________ J ROOMS.' PRIV ATS RATH AND entrance.- Mealy tarn . 3S Nerteo. ~ NO BATH. GROUND le entrance PC t-UOl i SL ATER APTS. NRD AN APARTliENT? ;--------- ^ I - - ^ ROOMS ...... PHIINISMEO AND UNPORNiaKCO ---------------• M N PARKE ST. P«U»t i iJLu W4 tartru I : ss^tAnssj^ -¥ssr*cis:isr “ ■ £sm. — AaMncAD AtterlAllon i i.Tiini.. tueiu oolr IM! ••• oipotWy. 3 child of Credit Countrlon ROOM UPPER ADULTS. i NEAR OENERAL HOSPITAL. 3 ______{ rooat and bath, iteve and re- ir^ben l ROOMS. BATH CLEAN, CALL j fr^rrtor funtlthed. MS, PE O-nSt weletwr^Aytfy M E. Blvd. BottUi OEJ _______ o?ibfe‘oRch.Vrd ct. Apts; Umond Oaable ^g^E. ownlown ne.r bu. tta- 1 OH i bedroom apartment AIR CONDITIONED Modem In S>err Detail ADOLTS ONLT FE 8-W18 COLO WAVE SPECIAL U Oeaplete Do^ i. rej-iaM _ SaINTT maid SUPPUBS—T3S3 ROOMS Mtaomlocc, Mrt. Wallace ~ S-TSSS. ______________ near bui l_ uoo. 1 pmon — no drlnkeri ; CIraa. quiet Elderly perioo pre-, i Will Mke wrUam i KNAPP SHOES OONT UiT TOUR BOXS Horaex Serrlcri. 113 B. Broad-: way. Lake Orion, or SOS NaUonalj Bank BuUdlPf. Raeheeter. OL^ 3 ROOMS AND BATH. ENTIRELY ! prtrtle. wen tide, lulteblt lor couple PE qesil alter 4____^ n^MS WITH PRITATE BATH and mtraoce. adulu only lit per week Inquire IT3 Baldwin Art 3 ROOkU AND BATH 111 OR 3-4JU ___ 3 ROOMS AND BATH IN AUBURN lEST SIDE, S AND 3 RM APTS . heaL HW alo^ am' ------- ‘ ' MSir m. I Rent Houses Furnished 39 3 BEDROOM. MODERN. COTTAOE , unUl July SM mo.JdAJ-aS07__ I 3 be6rooW‘ tjoplex. partly fumlahcd. tSS a month. CAUdrea ________UTIUT1E8 PURNI8HEO W|f.hm(r rs ^ I J feoMs. PRiviTE Hath and i mtiwr upper AdBlU only 3331 OB3PMS_______ ROO^PURJNIBHED. WjdL'ffMBBboU Goods 29 a >6oi« and mth, rowER ---------- -------- _ utlUtlea and fa- only: i3s wk. ra ____ ____________ _______, j“b06li6niNDrBATS^ NEWLY UlOH boLLAR'lTORnroRNmJIUti ^’'*Mr*"maoS' 'Jfr d VERT MCE R ____ and bath. FE SdMd.___________ LAEE ORION — COST I BED-room. Its Helshto Bd. MT 3-13M MODERN LBEDROOM. UflLITliES' fumiahrd 1 mllct W. of Union _ Lakt until Junp JI, PE_»-ISt5. WALLED LAEE. 3 BEDBOOMsT CaU ermlatt. 1171 W. Ltka Drira «^iX33 ___________ LET US BUT rr OR BILL IT PORlr-. TOO OXP«U> COMMUNITYi* ADCnOH. OA t-lWl_________j VOULD LIKE TO BUT 5 ROOMS! _ uaod iBmlture MA 4-llSd | — Wanted Miscellaneous 30; _ ’ Id Pine- ; iwre.j____;__________. APARTMENT, 3 ADtJLW Rent Houses Unfurn. 40 BARGATN--CbLOR ED TOMATIC OA8 FURNACE ---- SMALL DOWN ■ - CAN TRADE. BY OWNER. 3 BEDROOM HOME. ietx3M ft. lol Cloac to elemen-tary acboola. OR 3-St30. APARTMENT IN cbUNTRT StrtcUy modem 3 roomo bath, completely mmlahed. Play wrouad. waaber. ftraie. Lake prirlleeea. ____Wanted to Rent 32 3 OR 3''BEDROOMS PURNliaDi^^RTl&NT TOR^NOLE MAN Pontiac o----—"------ *“ r~BT:'OR UNPDRNI6HTO _ - tear BUwiInfham. Pembroke Schoolj^erred. 17k to Sid per month. UL 3-3300 haspoNsniLB standard oil eiocottro and wife deilrt nice 3 bodromn ratdem unfurn. home ^ on weat aide. Refcrencet. Write Ppntlnc Preta B SImih Uvint QuartOH 33 WANTED MAN TO 8RARB LAKE w— Lake, ------------- ^ ye^i^^UUni prlratc.aM 3-43M. CIXAir 1 ROOM AllAllltRfSiT; ' bttti and enimnee. t3 Poplar __ Bald«'ln_Baby welcome, ____ PURNIWED APARTMENT 3 RM Pood area FE S-IP03 _____ ErrcHENsm cottaoeb, i or a odulta. fua ---- —— end maid « >»WS» USal Wtd. Cnntratts, Mtf». 35 ABSOLUTELY THE PABTEST AC- bnyera waltins. CaU Raaltor Par-trtdse. PE q-lldl. ISSd W. Huron CASH Land coaUacta. tquitlea and mot ---1. Don't loae that home. A phymenta toe much tor yo< sr Can TOd MeCelioufii, PE ARRO REALTY I ^Caaa-Illaabeth Road |L J IMMEDIATE ACTION >n any food Jaod cantrartt. Nen IMactory Inapectlon of property and title. Aak for Ren Templeton, i K. L. Templeton, R_eaUor | ... . --13 - gfoE Parkside Apts. BEDROOM RANCH WITH CAR-petliif, larte lot pored atrccta. ISO a monfli. MA k-U33. BEDROOM RANCH. NEARLY new. Judah Lake Batetet. Only »7t a month. Call OR\4-fl30l. BEDROOMS. A BEAUtT POR leaae. roaaonable. CaU UL 3-MSO. k-ROOM MODERN, OAS HEAT IIB week. OR 34SSS_______ ROOM UNPURNUHED PE S.4S3S. Near PonMae Motor. S ROOMS. AOTOMA'nc HEAT. AT-tached sarase. TacanL W 3-Mll. lin ' Nice bedroom _newlj decoratod._verj_clmn,__ BkCALL APAB-nntNTB. I OB 3 adulti, ullUUea turn.. Ill veek- Jj^and up. OB 3-7700_ _______ YOUNO COUPLE ONLY 333S Orrhard Lake LAND tXWTRACTS TO___________ 1. Earl OarrtU EM 3-3MI r EM 3-t< nlilird Lady i Wnnted Real Estate 36 ALL CASH ! ter acreata or farma. I t aerea Anyvhera la Oa COUB^. ^ tlSS W Maple"" Rent Apts. Unfurnished 38 1. AND IBEDROOM - PARTLY _furn-^ lakrfrent apta. OB 3-tHS. “llST CXMS APARTidENT. LARGE BUILDER ________________ - a floora, li . dinette, ilao ctieablo kltehca. gaa heated bulldinf. Juat 1-atory walk- - - *-----allc faa hot water Tiled hallwaya. I Jm FLOOR, CLEAN. EVERY- CALL, PE l-3d7«. 13 CASH Pom?v"S«^ANn%N'™Afir * BEDROOM UPPER aSd LOWER tiacrrrijirliiv CONTRACT. nat. aaa heot. Its Chandler._ . TIM WRIGHT, Realtor 3tt Oakland Arr. Open T' — PE k-7MI or PE I-M4I B «-4SI3 “NEEDED” I^ake Properties LOTB — COTTAOIS —YR. R'D Buyers Galore J. A. TAYLOR rf33 HMhland Rd IMM) OR t-SSSt .BtVlCS _____________________I k-3d43. Rent Apto, Furnished 37 I BBDRSt. DELUXE KITCBEN-otte model ante. Parklnt In front of door. PH eot . North StUe. Dny. week or month. PE t-33dl 1 AND 3-BBDROOH - PARTLY tern, inkofront —*- -*■“ 1 ATTRACnVif spaiteMaU. Pontiac. MA S-lSSt. i4tOOM RJTL'HEHITTX ADULTS. PE S-SISl. after 1:31 p.m. a ROOMS. NICELY PURNIBITO. peteata Batt, ....... PLACE A “LOST” AD. Cell FE 2-8181 for an ad to recover a loss. Dial FE‘ 2-8181 f«Jr. an ad writer. BEDROOM. CHILDREN Wtl^ tome.jM prta PB S-3W^_________ "bedroom ■ OTUbfitb iPLOOR. Private entrance, atove. refrff. Near Blue Sky Iheatcr. 1*3.71 me. pejatoi nUbOMS AND BATH, 33 BaLd-wln. teemd floor apartmen* moa furalahed. PiT 3-1331.___ ROOMS ANb"BAfit. REPRIOER-alor and atova lumlahtd. Oaa heat, PE S-Skte. rooms and bath. NEI decorated, heat, botvaier. n erator and itava famlahed I Ptehrr Body. ISi bwA. 3-7Pt* ■ 2-REDROOM BRICK Duplex. fuU baaement. taa beat, decorated, |7k per month. NICHOLIE - HARGER I F. .S-8,183 bedroom home on PRINCE- I uwnan — WSiST SIDE, 3 bedroomi. aS.IOS. 3300 down. Pm terma. EiceUent condKloa. PE 3-3377. ___________________ BY OWNER. COLORED ONLY. 3 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX Automatic beat — Pull BaaemenV. WILL decorate $75 PER MO.VTH FE 4-7833 _S44_Eaal_Bird. N al V^encla I BEDROOM RANCH 1'^ BATHS carport, huilt-lna, ntar acboola. PE 3-^d______ OBd of PoDtloe, atoi frit., 330. OA l-nSI. fine nelfb" breaktaat porch, :n»’\ tridir. . Pontia£ CLARXSTON. mediate poascaalsn. JE t-4404. 3 PARTUr PURHIBHXD. 3^ RO(^ and bath, automatic bMt. hot water, atorma, sarast, tarden. 3M 313 Waterbury Road, oft M-SI. at Btub'a Oaraia, near HALL 4 ROOM. MODERN. 3M Nawberry Off aintonvlUa Rd. 340 per mo. PE 3-3373 SMALL ^usE soirrH^ or pen- "I aerea available. MAInt a 'tjka. ma brick home In ^1 prlvllcfaa, 3113 Ici room qt 3l30 lea—. ----------- . --- For Rent Rooms 1 ROOM fOH COMtn^ rctrU.. ovarythlns tumlahad. PB 4-0713, 307 E Huron.___ yro?™b ^ ^2P?' '4JW31, 330 W. Huron PHOKT ROOM. 1ST. YTOOR. NICE Pvt, home cloae Is. PI 3-0314. nlEbiNa ROOM in PRibifi 0. kitalMB prlvutfoa or boaid umi PE PINO ROOMS. REASONA a. Oi Waat Konaott. PE S 3 ROOMS. NEWLY----------------,. unfumIMwd apt. PE 44037. CaU after I._____________________ 3 RoSmS MODERN. HEAT AND water fumlabtd. Near Pantlae Motor and Plahtr Sady. PC _3-3731 ____ ________________ iioOia AND BATH. t. PE 4^131. 3 ROMi WPPl_. _ beet and sanso. PE 3 Roomi with Board PE 34177. Id Matthewq. 34x3t REAR DR1VE4N DOOR MU^^wy _ OR^ la 3ESIRABLB^^*PICK ih|^4 »fl oa Sad floor wfhm Th re Bldi P^ paikl^apnc Oalt or aoo mgr. Uuran IHoaU For Ront MbcolleneonE 48 Wallpaper Steame Floor aoBAra. poUihera. aandera. temoec vacuum - s’chfiriSLe'^.^fS^u^ nSORB 1 or rent or Icaa*. . —------ oro'roema. 13a3» each Oaa "^WmJB kif ' BRESTER Joaeph P. Rolaa, Balta M4.. #443 E: Huroa Ot PB 44131 Afitr i‘M rm 4-«m For Sale Houses BEDROOM, BASEMENT AND •araxe N. aid*, near aeh— _ll,3i0 do^n^fK 34734. S-BED-ROOid, OARSOK.' fKM yard. N.^ near acboola. do. PE S4033._________________ nalL'*3 badrma., i’a?re. n""m Clarkalas. MA 3-MOT. No realtort 3 BEDROOM HOME. BY OWNER. Adalalde Erect. PUU baaement. oil heat, alorma and acreena. water aoRenar. Phone PE S4403 after d p.m___________________ 3-BRDROOM. SMaU. DOWN PA.T-ment. raaaonable monthly payment Pdr taformatloa write Box 433. Drayton Plnlna. BEDROOM. BRICi RANCK 31.330 down, balaaca 313.713. OR Plenty of diniot apace, too. Newly decorated Out N. Oakland. 3330 down. Odd monthly. PE 44303 3 ROOMS. BA'TH. 30’ AND 3 H.3i0 PO Box 33M. ^ PER MONTH Por nua *wS®kcpt*S»o _ war E MIchael'i Church. 3 bed- rage. apoUcaa. haa evtrrttUns. large lot, 3 ml. W. of Perry, 313,-300 Tarma. PE 34001. $9,500 MOVEABLE HOUSE $i.0Q0 More thla modem 4-room, frame home onto your lot. Oaa heat. Oaraxr. Call Ward E Partrldga, 1030 W. Huron. PE 4-33IL. : = MANDON LABE 3 bedroom homo with large Uvlng room. kUeben, bath and full baie-menl. Comer lot'00x100 fret. 331 Ennest. Needa claaalnf. -nalnttng and rejtatrl^ A wonderful Mr- ord"er*to^m?' -K. O Hempatead, Heaiior. lua m. Huron. PE 4-0104.____„ . MACEDAT LAKE. 3 BEDROOM by owner, 303 per monOi, 173. BRENDLE HEIGHJS Large 3 bedroom ranch homo fea-turlpg fireplace, carpeting and drepei, auto, oil heat, attached garage and large lot anchor F^U *p»lci 3u5«0^.oK*^£--lir i»r month CaU J. A. Taylor. Realtor. OR 44300.____ North Side Neat, clean convenlenUy located 4roem mode^m b r I e k Oarage, nice lot. priced 310,300. Lover price lor each. VV^est Side Spacloua 3-atory 4room modem home, fireplace In Uvlng room. baaemniL oU furnace. 13,330 - WILLIS M. BREWER JOSEPH P. REI8Z SALES MOR. 0440 E. Huron PE 43131 After 3:30 PB 34033 — Homea, PE E3371. Model OPEN DaUy 4 la I PNl. at tlM Midland SL. DnwMB Plaina.^ Finished famUy room with birch paaelbig,' I'k tUo baths, gaa boat, l^y klteban with bulIMn oven and range, fruKvood cupboards, 3 large bedroomi. Only 013.00# with terma. Model Pb. OR 41711. DlEe Hgwy. at Saahabaw Rd., Right one mile to OPEN signs. Wnrron Stout ReaUor, 77 N Saginaw E. PE 34100. ____771_______ Compare This “Trade” Suburban ranch. Entry leads to 3dx34 combination "L" Uvlng room. temUy and dining area with eatra large "front to back aec-thru picture windows." Ettcben w llBh Iioor sHUKIa/ SaW*t WtWiP extra large baaement with tiled celUng. Attached 3-car garage with urge work area extm. On neoroom gray, urica in E Blvd. NelghU. eat of schools and ter. Bardvood floOrs, restricted aubdivlalon. Only 017.-030. wm take amsU boms aa down payment. W. H. BASS. Realtor SPBCIALBINO IN TRADES milder _ ____ _ PE 3-7316 COroRSD'. 5 RMS. MODERN kitchen, basement, two-car ga-_rage. easy terms. MA 0-311(5,_ eeXORED leanttful 3 qoor the ih^plng^ screens and landsci lot. Payments only II which Includes all taxm ana insurance. Immediate potaesahm. PB Colored—By, Owner $650 Down—Vacant is.r irfl?7r,.”aan?.“'yi,3&' payments Ow per month Including taxes. Bte roomy t room house. Knottv pSte breakfast room. Pull baaemont. gas heat. Sparkling white alumloum aiding, also alum- ---- storms and acreona. garage. _ Bast ‘sMa loeatlon. OsU S-ld44 taum at Oood 1 PE41I EAST SIDE Larga 7-room, 3 bodrooma — room, 3 battii, gas furnaco, dou-hit garaga, nlca M. Hoar r~-roehlal adweU. Ttrma. PONTIAC REALTY 73T Baldwin PB 34m 665r-THI8Sir~lfJHrTTii: nnd bath. 1 aert land. Ntea to^kaep a horse. Only 313,- for action to close estate. Termi nEAR WALTER’S LAKE. 7 rmi bath (4 bedrms.l. OU heat. Oi rase. Extra lane corner lot. . ooaitnco at 33MS with 31.3M di H. P. HOLMES, INC. Ml B. Lapoer Rd. PE 3-3333 WHAT DO YOU NEED? Whatever it is, youll have more success in fading it in The Pontiac Press W'ant Ads. To Place an Ad DIAL FE 2-8181 DAY SHIFT For Solo Hoiiem #9 "My entire aptitude test shows I should be doing something with my hands." For Sole Houses 49 POR COLORED 3 AND 3 BED-room homes. Low down pumtals. Middleton Roa^. PE t-fift. POR COLORED - CALL AFTER HOTER >iBcn>, imdy for paihL lot. 33.333 and up. Cad today. PB 4-3333 or EM 3-S033 B C Hitter Real Estate, 3363 Elisabeth Lk. Rd.__________________ OWNER SAYS. "SBLLr IXBOW LAKE AREA OFF ^4 acre. 3 bedroom.. Larce U room. Plrratocf. Oarage jM arale workshop. 314.000. By i - EM 34337. PARTLY MODERN. 3 BEDROOkM, dtnlVg room. Uvlng room pad kitchen, 33.300 c3, ^te W. Bruce Pnllertop. Luther, Michigan. 3,oW^i^tM&.b.r: hood. Dandy Mg lot. dreulir drive, shade troee. I xma:. nice UtUtty. Lenox furnsex. eaijeUng. drapes, 3 ear garaga. IWt mlaa this ana. oi.filO ,,dn.. 373 • mo. HAROLD R 3333 Union Lk. Rd., EM 1-3333. Practically New baths with double lavatory end vanltv. 3 bedrmi., larga Uvlng room; nice klUben with plenty of natural wood eahinete. utUlty •------------‘V.......... Situated on o • apprcctal (. with g38S MA 3-43107 ja'Vm* 'Sria 3 bi^room brick rancher, modem shopping center in nice mldentlsl area. Thte extra nice home has carpeted Urtng room, largr kitchen, lull basement, fln-Bhed recreation room. I'l Imtha and double car garage with paved drive. You can buy down to 3Hi per cent mortgage. We’ll thow at your eoaventeoccl Clarence C. Ridgewjiy Tea W WALTON BtYD. T-room houeo In town? Two fi the.prloo of one. Duplex, Uve I one 7-room unit, rent the oUu Tenne. OL 14431. OL 14333. RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY ^ree-bedroom fnee brick raneh. P^ buem^^^ja^^l^, OdWera M*1&ABLB REALTY PE 440a LI 34133 "*• *■**“ WE 3-U33 Retire in Tins I bedroom teemo Cloae to acheola. Older Home 3 bedrooms. Nleo UMben. dinteg room, living rooM, fuU batomont, 1 ear attached garage an i aers.' 3 mUes from town. glLOOO. 2 Bedroom house an 3 neros Commercial frootage. Small bam, tool ebed; chicken eoop, gl3,0gS, reaeonable ffiwFORD AGENCY 331 W. WALTON n 34333 Ml E FLINT_______MY 3-1143 I. nulaaaUc gee hent, elding, paved itreeL H. C. NUEWINGHAM .i,VAN VILLAOB. 3 bamt,. gamn. qrlta Boaoh priv/FlB 3473b. STL YAlt LAKE Sam WnrvM baa brtek^ Ii4 Itvtl. MlT ItearwMd Road. }4«i-rodma m bsUM, twcrodtien radm, TO' bbv " 'or~i«grigar~ CLARKSTON REAL ESTATE, INC. TRI-LEVEL STARTER NO MONET DOWN On TOUT lot. Trl4avel or Raneh. *&’]5,£8fwi2" SS2J*®I __For Sale HouaeE 49 HAYDEN OWNER WILL SACRIFICE On This 3 bedrm. home with flaiahad breesewey, 1 car garaga. Moat bo OPP ELIZABETH LK. RD. Nec . bedroom home with alum, elding and IttU baeement. Family kitchen with built In range and ev" Oae furnace. I1S.3M. Tdrau. Low down payment. 1 poteeealon. 4 large n bath. Baetmcnt, new ol mem. Oil furbsce, 3 ear saraft. Lot 100 X IIP. 314.331. Torme. MMXDIATE POaaBa8ION,iiAB honwe. Ho eqortgage coet. Low dou^ paymenl. 3 and J ^rooma. I.U.O. Immediate poaeoa-UUs nan 3 bedroom homo tern lot. lib coramle tila ig. Bnlll la ranga and oven, -tent, gn tiixnace. glt,300. Terma. J. C. HAYDEN Realtor FE 1-0441 30 E. Walton Val-U-Way OOCH3 BUTS AND TRADES SYLVAN LAKE Canal Irontaic access to Otte Lake. Sylvan Lake and Casa Laki home, featuring: 3 hed-I. Tte ceramic baUu. tamUy _____kitmen with baUt-ln oven and range, plus a full basement and 3 ear attaC ' - itached garage. Only 3060 DOWN 3 famUy Uci Uegea. * - Lotus Lake prtv-aad bath up. 3 moms ana sow. natural fireplace, down. Immediate poeeeacton. Pull price only 37.430. COLORED - BARGAIN R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 •303 OAKLAND AinBNDB d S TO 3 -SUNDAY 11 TO ■ PHA hAteaoc. porcbee. On large teodacaped lo4 ioo ft. to excellent beach. gl.OS down and 333 per month. Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor 344 E TELBORAPH FE 3-TS4S__________MA S443 O'NSL MULTIPLE UBTINO SERVICE SUBURBAN BRICK RANCH In RIckorv Ororo School District. The finest of materials and workmanship'. All rooms are spacloua on# Include living room with fireplace. fan dining room, neautlful kitchen v^th buU4 In oven and range - 3 bedroomi, extra toilet and lavatory. I'b car attached garage ti plastered, covered patio, profcislonally land-lee^ M. Price reduced to bast sn>B - LovelT-kepI S-eterp. Aluminum aided, hath up tad bath down, could be used aa Inemna or as S-bedroom homo. Basa-ment reerttSen room, gas-«md furawe.,^nraio^TeA drWo. CSB be bon^ on B-Z. PBa terma. An txecl-lent buy tor larn tamilp now UvM In tha Urbui Renewal Area. Be cure to eaU LOVELY I4IEDROOM brick on paved street..tuU basement, paved drive, only gU.-03t. nnd I3M wUl move yea No other coate. HILLSIDB SITE — Clarks-ton drea. Brick raneh, 3 grand sisa badrooma. largo Inrinx room with flroptece, dining rPom, madam ktteb-env^ bulk Ins. 3 bnlbs, sisnsvi'•!?,%• iHi EbMyskistj aTtllitlt. gas lumace, 1 a levdip weoib WUliama lake. ....----- abla mgathly payments. Ray O’Nitil Realty rsSfi BARGAIN INCOME A cheap WAT or OWH-IITO YOUR OWN ROMK- ?^5&^uiS?2g NOW UNTED-PBIYATTB ENTRANCE AND BATH — -------------- WRIGHT, Realtor — Onktead Aea. Open '10 S:3S yg„M««t__________?i_fcga The Bonneville 180 W. BEVERLY $100 Moves You In U.S, Government Property Manager ATTENTION HOME BUYERS SALE aeveml cbolca pltets fuba'iSSffia MvCl*1o‘U - TORT NEED NO DOWN PAYMENT - and yen can 'Mirebaao a boms an n long term eosttraet with monthly r^BEraOO& - LAR« HAVE TO BE A TVTER-... -----_ kNY Is a r MANAO- ________ _'r,‘»a“3 fonr awn. CnU PB *- for fur*---— O'NEIL MULTIPLE USTTNO SERVICE CLARK REAL ESTATE larga landaeapad lot lltxllt feet. 3 ear garage, comont drive, Ugbl ^ pc. bath, baseteenL e furnace. gS.3N dn. NEW RANCH HOMES PRICED REASONABLE. Nortbenf High District. 3 bedrooms, polished oak noon, m bathe. • ft. ----- copper plumbSte. lot I only glLOSS. AU you D plue mortgage coate. TRIPP INDIAN VILLAGE 3 bedroom - Elect Fireplace to Uv. room Sepamte dtotog room. Ea4to kitchen. Pull baaemont, gae heaC 3-car garage. ANNETT Near Downtoi^’n • -Vacant. WeU eonetructed, alee ly decorated S-hedrm. home Pull baaement. gaaWteat. ga rage. $7,300. terms. Indian Village^ 3 Bdrnis. S rnu.. IVb baths, icreened porch. Uvlng rm., plenty of wall space. fuU site ------ both, carpeted, kitchen. 3 bedrms 01O.3M. I Drayton Plains PracUcally new 3-1 Med___Uv^ .I? ’. Bloomfield Brick Ranch Near Kirk In the HUla. tend scaped acre lot. Deep pile carpetlas covers spacloua picture wladow living rm.. drapes Included, step dn. paneled family rm. with comer, brick firepteco, kltehen and nook with many bnlK-las. It* baths. 3 bedrma. with closet walle. Pull bateiBonv m rodlaat pU Heat. 3 car att. garage. OSP.SOS, terms. WE TPILL TRADE ANNETT INC. Realtors FE 8-0466 “Bud” Nicholie, Realtor 41 Mt. ciemcht St. FE 5-1201 After 6 p.tpu FE 5-8004 BATEMAN REALTY MULTIPLE LI8TINO SERVICB LETS TRADE TRADE Tbo owner of thte 1 year eU 3-Onaemont. brick with ^cbed taraso located Mat wait condt^ as this S-bedroom brick l*n’aT^aj opportnatty far LET'S TRADE LAKEFRONT »3' of frm^o nn Pontiae Lakt. Charming 0 pear old ranch, ana perch, sandy beach agd tote of, land and apneo. OwnerwUl ascri- &*d*iw?ira1SJ25.%fte“i WALNUT LAKE.., PrivUogos wWi thte aaat usr MADISON JR. HIGH... and now Nortnom Hlsh nnd Lo-Bnran Blamaittnrp are aU aail door to thte Sbodmem economy home. TOeUecaly Moan, mea car- UCTB TKADM REALTOR FE 4-0528 FE 4-4526 PINE IJVKE PRIV., ural flrcpTace between kl^ on and dining room. PULL PRICE. 313.3(3. SSSSrUk ranch. Paved ' !men|'‘ics *hei ixecUent coodti SMITH WIDEMAN 413 W. HURON FE 4-45% JOHNSON S3 'YBARB OP SERVICE WATERFORD — S«M 4 largo aodreema, tern llvliii mm. family kitchen. Meal teca-tlon. Cloee to schoola and itorsi CLARKSTON — 3 bedroom raneh imme. pletely tadeeoreted. Oil heat I years'old. Only 37S per month tacludlag taxes and Ineurar'- PONTIAC - 3130 DOWN A. JOHNSON & SONS REALTORS FE 4-2533 ITM S. IHLBaRAPH YOUNG-BILT HOMES Really Means BETTER BUILT LIMITED SALE $100 Total Cost Down 3 Bedrooms MODEL 188 W. Chicago OPEN 1:30 to 6 P.M. •ALSO WASHINGTON PARK 3 Bedroom "■ OAKLAND LAKE lovely 3 bedre— featurtBg: 34-lt. S^!“om*PA “beat ™PlS JieiO-ment. Water adftener. Nicely landscaped fenced yard. NORTH 81DB 3400 down — li Butomatie gae heat. Tour tLetoa WILLIAMS SCHRAM Madison Junior High A vary attraeUvi# 3-bedrooL homo with hardwood floora, gaa beat, gaa hot water boater.’' iV car garage plus screened-in patio, 31.000 dawn with 3TS per month. Includtoi taxes 4a-* *-eumnee. Call today. Auburn Heights Lovely 3-bedrm. bungalow with unfinrtbed upetairt, dining dn la a Uteboa Is SxIO. PuU hnaemant wHh poaoiblo roc. room: Fully Inauteted, 1^ heat. IVk-ear gn-mso. OMO down pIna etoa-Ing costa on PBA terate. T-Tcatlgnto BOW. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 per JOSLTN COB. MANSFIELD OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY MUL-nPLE LISTING SERVICE MULTIPLE UBTINO SERVICE IRWIN DRAYTON KAIHS HML. slnadmmL-iltiML Ji jma-wS^Siu. V»fr ».ss.Zu*sff* “ WEST SUBUKBAK 3 bedroom brick rencher. C floorc. pteatered walto, birch e boarda. eeramte bath, fuU ha ment, gas heat, eldewtlke. bli Ipp itreot, community — — krlve. Bee__ PuU priea rheS^SSn^liil!:.. Neat am. Clem, and larga lamUy room, could bo extm bedroom. 1% cor gamgo. Peminatene and nUuntaum ildlnt. Ptnead roar yard, cloto to lake. \^*lcS^at'^^nM' GILES West Suburban 3 room clean borne to ex-ccltoat location on IH acres Ot ground. 3 ear garaga and racraatton raom. Tha sa-sss Kw paymanr’Wte ireni* In the City 3 room_ bomt wttS hard- ^ Stowad front porch. Owaor ersi take ear, track For Colored A very alec f room kcent. a^ aM ctedte IhM canid to need fwr^laeanit. AU GILES REALTY CO. Fy Sait Hi DORRIS ncTEknous wuck ranch roundtog homes all tha uWng appolnlmente demanded to to- | dayemost dteerlmtoattog bujarg f tear aMaetod garaga. a tonam j with sink and built-in reWgem-tor 3 very eomfoitable bed-mcmi. two complete eeramis SSi,“SS fi«U“tS.T trada. COMFORTABLE ROOMINESS OP MODERN SPLIT LEV3X ONLY 313.333. A veiY aUractlvt heme, coostrueud for eonvam teat and gmeloua Uvtof. ^ rooms have that warm comfort isrss hall. »ltech8^»r»i«T «ompar* 3J3P down. Kxoaptioau no eooeldertos ttio abundance •lorafc space, and a food buo-mcnl (Nnor appmntmcnte you wUl Bdmtta. near Northem ingh .aluminum HIDED 3 BEDROOM BUNGALOW BRAND NEW 313,330. A beautiful kitchen With Ilwrmo oven and grUI. ------------------ luron Itooi QET TOUR MONET’S W(»TH; Make an appointment teeeo this beaullful h««e to sylvaa Manor. Threo big bodrooM (eTC?# living room with ledge i fireplace, dining L. fatnfiy kl eo. utility room, two car n- Mc'cr/TaXelpr-FiSa at: 330,333. Immediate poeeoa-atoa. TfEST SUBURBAN; Pour badroom raneh boma. Uv. tog room with ledge rock llra-place. modem kitchen, ceramlo tile bath. famUy room, comer lot. Ub car lamga. ImaedUU poseeiaton Ttmt. EYE. PE 34333 Partridge IS THE "BIRD" TO SEE Highland Colonial Vacant Partridge 1333 W, Huron SELL BUY TRADE MILLER HURON one floor: New carpettoc la Uv. rm., dto. rm. and hall. Olaeeed-ta WEST SUBURBAN 3 good homes altuated on ever tb acr* shaded tot. Ont teal room b ---- --- brer------' "lat,-----—------- t floora. Iho other and hath with efl also a fireplace and rcb. An opportunity Mlo and an tocomo — _________te your payments. , P^ed reasonably and only 3LT70 William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 P OAKLAND ATE. _________ at. fuU k Payments only about 333 per month Including taxei and la- MORTH END 3-bedropm home, decorated la and out. Comer lot. near Madison Jr. High. Paymente. IfCt than 333 tor monUt. SUBURBAN 3-bedreom home., alum, elding, oil heat. Ule bath, large lot. comDlotelr decomted: Pay- 333 par month la- ss!ssf“sni£niiB- whM Id good, enU ut for d«3 of the bom dente In tovn. '’“*£?* tSmln" NICHOLIE. HARGER 33tb W. Huron FE 5-8183 MULTIPLE LIBTINO SERVICE ARRO vm^ klUto^fiSuy^^*;? ’gST5!5,i"a4?tSP,' foom, niumtoam atorme nnd iSiSJ^SE S“.c*r.':^srv‘:M ^i^: ^^J^H REALTOR ^ Is HOYT to ibd ■ OTTAWA BILLS THE POXTIAC PRESS, MO: TWENTY-NINR STOUTS Best Buys ■ Today SfeE;*-" ttl* « MN Httto (sm ?y*«s.r.ite-sr& as’S.'wrri^L itiM N«rth nn MetiM^tr ita MUr. froMi ud^ 1 siTO A ■jrlTM vin»i >H th* mM fro I* MPtellM I __ •ad «mp*a. »j.M «< M*mS?. Ml » ma*. oak n*an. taMlaUi, •torai aiid MrMM. lOilM M. M« d*»a laiBtBt. tl.*M ftrrr JHrk, tlow «• |r*d •MmwI. I feadroMBt, at«T« d*M ntad. M lUnM, m M Si*m£S& *^ •**• "^ Warren Stout, Realtor Tf N a««uiaw St. n. n mm Opw Em, ““** “ “ *' To Settle Estate' W* aiui mU nils sbofa ivmit Modtra t raoM buniaiow in iood B^aS-Seffe Handyman’s Special !^T;.unLViiK-ar.?'■ JAOC LOVELAND m caa Lrt» aoM n i^i BROWN Sli^Lt - sot you Into tkl, nlc. ^djrus.^Trvr.sa (Iwrl. Call tor d«iUt. LAEZ niONT - Only M.W 1 •My torai. « rooat and bi Good cMd. dOaidO lot. LAtn non aSad. lartd Stoto- Bacttt_ ______ vdi eaipaai. OMd baaah. Oa|y lyw down. CaU Mn. lldOiAy CAST nu TEMtt - Itocatod In to»«lr Anbnm Maaor. Mk« J-acdrooa bnnialon with toll bair- SBLL OR TRADE - Lari* sa*d-rooa Wait lid* bom*. kic*ll*nt •oadltloo. Win trad* for dtoapcr baa*, land eontraM, honiatraUei •r oar. Aik tor Idr. Brovn. Prtcid at only dd.tdd. Er*. eaU oa asdid. L, OR TRADE For Sale H—■— 49 Watkins Lake porch. S badraoM d*«a. Myrtle St. P**cb, italri to lloorad at mi and r*«r*attoa ro*a tall ba**a*nt All tb* fl ir^i3oiUtl*'TlSa*“'*AlJ!^»: -« LIST WITH Humphries. SuburlMin Livintr At Its Beat (C^N^'flBLi'^d) 1 a * bodroomi, m baths W. W. ROSS HOMES 9* MdSl Income Property 50 2-Family d'lddd DOWN payment buti M I Id butldloa to Pontiac with 1 lumacii, a bathi, a car an., rai*. Normal rmtal Incoa* SU* c1cHffETt,'?E‘Mjt58 dd PT., I. Hammond le. a beo- p. '^‘rU5 'fi‘4 ‘Sr'TKi w^.g2"*S’nra*‘sy ANora»~>iNirtvmrfaSTf Mroom niwly diioratod ranch, full baamcnt, Isric shady lot, larait; Acrom itract fr*a Brcn- iSwn. UUW&'Ll LAKEWOOD VILLAGE BELL 01______ _______ _ SillSrSre^eM Sr*^'^l_ «S??toifSf-ihSSrTSS? tacaaa. OMy dM.ddO. U0 WITH DS - Wc need____ . LUttof Sorrica. L. H. BROWNrRcaltor KENT INCOME - Noar StaU 14 rai., ato baths. d-i_.---- auartors, pins a tour-rm. spts. ow showtoi load return. Ideal for boa* nnd rentnl or toU r*qt*l. Totol price tlLddd. Say terms. B«t of abtortels. Tiled bnth, t ■eod fined bedra*., eek floors. fuU bsa*t. Oil beet. Aina. sUtot. Perod ditto Add UMar nrais. Ntw la ‘dd. PrtTllaios to WtUaisi Lako. Wm aaerUM tor |ll.iidr 3% ACRES near CLARESTON-Rl|h slthtly locattoB amid trsas. 6-nn. home. PuU bath. Yariety at benrj^ bdsttos. All for low price of Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor aadd Otolo Bsry. At Ttlctrcidi PE a-diaa - Onai Eytc. - PfM Parkini RfePOSSESSED M North Tacmaitia gtrset. d rooac. aew tad funwcd, waidr baattr and nod. Sdt||OOOT ettldt. 1 wwa modem. *bodWto?Ste*prtimld.' idi overlook. Oxbow I bedrooms, nsw fumeso • - . -laid' A^^iWOOl^^iUr. Coiriey Uks. 4 bodrooBS. Mast ba fold. Paul M. Jones, Real Est. GAYLORD orr aosLTHjMdo. on# gx'jiss.‘?5£5ryss‘: Mw totorart raU. furnaeo. Call today PE ddtts. All r------ --------- LAWRENCE W. OATLORD tats. W. Haroo St. ' FE 8-9693_________ GJs DON'T PABS DP bOOKWO AT tbla dbadroddt baaa to-ettad on a Ml miws of food aardsn land. tf§ prtesd at aiCstS wNb dBly sMtie jr^agt-a-CT* __________.1 ANEA. 1-bad- . rata alUBtonB sided boa* d^la^r^v. 'sfuisrY*? R»y O’Neil , Realty WEBSTER LAKE ORION—OXFORD iwbfr anxious to sell, a bsautl Iks lots to.rsftricMd ana. Y •d U d4,m each WtU sell b &Je B*«9rt Propwty M FLORIDA PEACE RITBR WATER-trout, and Hltblnnd home sites AJd.dd _aftor d id p.«L IDEAL DEER HONTINO. t Y.s* money. FE 4-tdtt. _____ LARK una, dtdS, lit DR., did Bo. at mm. to ^t. PE dUddt. Suburban PrO|ierty 53 Brick ranch, a bodrm., eotorod tHed bath, lac beat, ctormc and acreens, awatots, etoca to schools and sbo^^, tow down pyat ' For Sale Loti 5 SPRING WEATHER THE STARTINO OP THE , BDILOINO SEASOH IS HERE! A larxs scleetton of ostato siss hoaentoi on pared roads. Is catod to west sidd locations, aort •Ida and aaa tlda locations. Lo' “hLHILL VILLAGE A rainni eoamnnlty of Inric bomesitos In b good nolibborhood 'With wtadlni pared rostos. nt PERCT5NT AdORTOAOES AVAILABLE. OPEN SUNDAY LADD’S. INC.'' Mt LApoer Rd. T. VACANT BUSINBaS PRO —e. Next to Me W Waitoa. iprovsmenta b. tMd psr frtnt mxariM wri Drtre thru. ^ >k___ ---------------------Dasp, dry basetosa. UNDERWOOb REAL ESTATE ------ - d| sun. MA Mtt. noTATixTiili OR nidi Eras. BEAUTY salon. | COMMERCIAL LOT ON MONT-cslB. 2M Met frontais, nica ner, etty imprortmento, ' aotlr# locatlsn. Utoal for>iai tion, used car W and many o_ topsi of bustoess. Jld.teo. Clark RM Estate, not W. Murer —' i-itar____________________ W VEtTMKNT PROkERTV. PBBA en^^ rented, food tenant,. OR Dwallr^odtE bSilduio, d».tdd WILLIS M BREWER rHufonr* “^E-K letl ” PE 4^11d Templeton Zoned Commercial 3 acres near Milford plus Id room modern brick home end Businw Opportunity 59 A OOOD INVESTMENT. WAN1TO silent er worktof partner Ir •Dd new fumttore business -- antesd ons of the best potently to city. For nppolnUaeDt. Cell FE d-iids.__^____ '____ BARBER SHOP. SELL OR I _»»70 Ehrebeth Lake Bd. _ dOMPLETi OROCBRV nKlbRES tor sale, partially er whole. Store M ill Wbittomor* ~ ' HAGSTROM OROCCRY. MEAT. 8 D M --eellent location on busy hlxhweir. so toeludos 3 bedroom lekeiront bpme. mi price tld.ooe. HERE IS VOini PENSION -bedrm.. motel' eptt„, 1 tr« L U E LAKEFRONT taxes compistoly furnished, bedrm. livtox ouarterx. Nice sandy beech. Boats, swim raft and play-•round soulpmcnt. On one ol nation's busiest hwyi. Near Pontiac’s expandins airport. Bxcel- Road (M-Mi HOPFING-BUSY RESTAURANT On a busy axpreatway. IM fi •xs. S4z4r brtek front outti__ Om hsat, .Atoplo parktof. Real estate and all for only tll.dr with td.Odd down. Peterson Real Estate MY 3-1681 “LET’S TALK BUSINESS’’ HARDWARE BeauUfuI well stocked disc to top enburbaa e Oxer tlM.dOt eMos to am DRESS SHOP Orer dto.tdo rolnmo first . Ons. of tb* beet deala to yeersi MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION ---- - -tDMKSaXR,---- APE ROAD IN OR WOMAN To Servlee PART-TIME VERY SMALL STARTINO CAPITAL TOY ROUTE [ALL STARTINO C GOOD INCOME WJ win appoint _ . er woman to eerrUa a numecr < sensational salf-eonrlea 'TO' SHOP" Displays located to mti keto, dme, yariety etores. etc Each "TOY BROP*' earns montj Simply replaoe toys each wee. end eelleet maoey. Requires Only a Few Hours Each Week t late eemethins yea i Not a Get-Rich-Quick Scheme If you hare a desire to better yoursril — If eober, booeet, really fineere. hart a ear (sUn. tM MBpieto*!^M IsSeut tvS^. pbooe nuxtber. Airman or wire: TOY iqnjciuuroimo corp. Woedride rr Hew*Yeik MODERN SErWcE sfAtTONlWR For fnrlbor ufarmatloa e m ft-tddd dariag the day ar Fs 1-3411 aflar d p.m. Partridge n TNE "Bmori TO SEE CONEY ISLAND •I.dtd da. Pisa flaek. dtS RM. lemM. Il.tOd per mdott tram. B»« tM per wemi ob meehlaee to sum- HIGGINS LAKE {5?*ttme"ef ^Hurtiy "2d e^* meat here. Will TRAOC — W.-dtd |dus etoek. Partridge BOMHBsIS/lffiSoO™ ttt N. HURON / FE Midi Business Opportunity 59 ^ SUNOCO aies of ^ . iitoniied. FAinat;,^*" ' ' *"'t to mt Cheek on this nmieniu opporUmUy »,S|ti‘t.d“'M'iSS‘tb2^ or write Bun. Oil Oempeay, P. p Box Idlt Ottroll 11, WcblsiS All replie. contldontlal OFFICE. 3-BEDBQoS1 Rome on Oommerce Rd. 1 csi seret*. built to oven and isnie washer abd dryar, stormi ant acreens. eerpetini and drapes New belni ooeimM a* Roal Ee tote.office, dtim. oT aea btt] John"]” vMrmett RgAL **TAj^ AND^INSORAHOU, sf ATIONS ^ lease GOOD POTBimAL. Pleaee eaU ^ tween t n.m and t p.m. PU Bdioi or after s p.m. » S-Utr PURE OIL COMPANY_______ iAVERN. M MiLBp North o Pontiac, met U nod as Ilqu( bar. Orest oxer dw.dOd, ae foo< STATEWIDE iMl Btt “BUD" [■nro DRiYi-lH end Hamburter Businstt. Tiptop loeatton Jnat west ef Pan-Use. Includes malt mixer. s<1>l- —^_________________sotfoi dr.dee.dd* Dowa!' fiance payable •t tM.OS per month. Leeae mar to May 1M4. "Bud’’ Nicholie, Realtor 4d Mt. Clemant St. FE 5-1201 or FE 3-7859 Sale Land Contracts 60 SEASONED LAND CONTRACT. Money to Loan fUeenecd Money l GET $25 TO $500 Bovt-ow with Confidc|iCe BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY ’ ^ WHERE TOO CAN BORROW UP TO $500 pWiec Sran^PIntos — Utlcn Walled Lk., Blrmlnihem. Plymouth Signature Op to M moatbe to repay PH- FE 2-9206 OAKLAND Loan Coriipany M Peotlec etate Bank Bldg. LOANS d» TO ddoe BAXTER * UViXOSTONE W. Lexrrmiee St. — ‘ LOANS $25 TO $500 e to feet, frtondly end helpful, [sit our office Or jphene FE t-dUt HOME & AUTO LOAN CO, ■ ~ “ Cemer E. Pike Need $25 to $500? i See Seaboard Phone FE 3-7017 1185 N. Perry St. PARKIHO NO PROBLEM Seaboard Finance Co. LOANS WORKINO CAPITAL LOAR8 Reeelxable-Meehlnery-ReM JMato EQUIPMENT LEASINO PONTIAC FINANCE AND MORTOAOE CfMtPAHT Pontiac P. O. Box m _ Pontiac MicbUxa » MMS TEAGUE FINAMtE CO. 202 S. MAI>L . 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS two LIVESTOCK WHEN YOU NEED. $25 TO $500 We wUl be flad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. yen can nfford IS, Axold Oamtobmxnie waa repoteastlons (1) Debt proteetlen Inturaaoe Come la er cell Per itonM Appelntment City Adjustment Service FE 5-9281 OPPOSITK MAIN POST OPFlCl BUDt^ET YOUR DElfS OONSOymAfl^m^^ LOANS to (M Ottt Of Debt. See Financial Advisers, Inc. m S. BAOWAW PE s-ieti Mortgage Loune 62 Voss & Buckner, Inc. W National Bids FE 4-471 MONEY AVAILAiOriiDWl! Hem to the ttme to fls np ^en __ITOAGU — ______ . With iM-tom fnMase. No apprato- Swaipa t SPt Call MA i CASH Nor ualm RAinm pbom and tape m^irdert. PE BQUmr IN N OALAXV. 4 DOOR need clean car MA 4-41td have 4 BBoHboid. itb isAni “1 wlih you’d tell Arnold I'm not home oiice In awhile. He’s beginning to take me for granted! ” Sell or Trade h type home ________ -llebltan neai Tecta center will trad* lor __ home In or near Pontiac. Doa Tipton. FE 1-S04._____________ iwAF LAND CONTRACT EQUITt! g^meM M place, teres* ana mu 01 extra Lake prtxUetai and only fll.tl BATEMAN REALTY Realtor FE 4-0528 riT S. TILT TRADE OR________________ need or recapi.iUmk or paewb-ter. wm takoVloto, ontUard*. |UM.^ oto. Dayton Tiro Co. FE WE HAVE 1 GOOD CARS. (Siexy 4 door, lit* BuMk 4_______ and llll Falcon 4 door. WUl trade any on* ter eaulty la toed I Muet be prieMt risM. L. H. 1 Realtor. FE 1411*. Exe. For Clothing 64 BOYS BLACiU, SFOBT JACKET dM ablrto. alte 14. CaU attex 3 p.m. FE 14W4._________ FROM BLOOMPIBLD HOME AT- Sale Household Goods 65 jbjroiCT «.M''wf'ffitoiato ubmeTlW N. Caei. FE 1-4841 »-_________ PIECE OR HOUSEFUL WTD. Quick caih for fumlturt. appil-ancee. Bariate Houe*. rt iMtl ~HkO TABLEB, 1 MATCHINb 3 PIECE UVINO BOOM SUITE, brand now, tll.M. ti ll weakly. Peareaac Purattore, 43 Orchard Lake Ax* PIECE sectional SUITE. Seneca. ___________- ROOMS OP BRAND NEW PUR-nlture, daxenport and chair to-blee. lamp*, bedroom lulto, mat-treie and eprtote. xaalty lampi, I piece dinette. All tor MM. Pay- ----- only *1.“ - —*■ “— - Orch-. "White . . . n learnt Eltoabeth Lak# Rd. Of Teleiranh.______________ I ROObU OP modern PURNI-^ ..... ®f«‘______________________ FE Hitt.________ 4 TEAR CRiSa BRAND NEW I CUBIC FT. PRIOIDAOtE, USED diuon. 17*. 5e nidi. °* I I li PSaM BACEiD HfSi; n INCH BCA CONBOLU TV. VERT ABC GAS STOVE. FE 4A71I npiic^Fobrsiiiaaf freeier,-o.------ . eeU I3N. J piece Kltcben^idf. fse. 1 Ropoeeeued eofa Ml. Bedroom outfitttos Co.. 4T*l 01x1* Drayton Flatoe OK 34114 OpenJI^...... TV. 46 E. Walton Blvd. A5fflfRAL~1 DOOB BEPWlOERA-tor 111* automatic dolroet. re-poteofeed. Balance 13 per week, electric raax*. late model *48, -------- wedier. lUct new, btl- Id on, ft. ...________ 1* cu. ft. Ml pd. frteeer I’lSfFirXdH""’..;:::; ,v.- {S - —— *- nay. M tame ae aaita [YNE OABERT m N. SAGINAW___________FE Mil* APARTMENT GAS STOVE. BRAND new 4 burner exen conM. IM.II. Peareon'e 43 Orebard Lake Axe. <#**n* kiiiir 'NEW CH^Wi^our trad* dcp«. lor ! buy. eell or trade. Own* out d look ereand, 1 ecree ef free rklM. Phone FE l-tt41. OPiai MON. SAT. • TO t FRI. t TO I 34 MONTHS TO PAT milM E. Aii&UB name brand*, eerctebed.. Terrific xeluea, tldl.tS while Ibex laat No phone erdera pleau. Mlcbl|>r nuorcuent, lei Orchard Luka FbRNlTORi~FbR SAlirTtiw portable TV, weehlrm machine and eleetrlc etoxe. wl 6-3t*3. FOR BAIX EUBCTRiC STOVE —-xlrttemter. seed eer-"— to eeB. FE 4-3TM. DININC (1 heat roenu furniture, I chain thaln). white naugahyd oablnct, buffet. FB t-wk tCE CREAM CHAtRS. ---- lampe. t piece I Reaeonable. PE i-ailt._____ MAOIC CHKFUaA STOVE. LEO- ifOVINO. M^IF^. HERMAI. MUler ebony dlnln( table, mateb-int emnpletoly upbuetered cbaire. OUT THEY GO! TV’S - ALL BRANDS Rebuilt- Ouaranleed REFRIOERATORS ReneweaL guaranteed WASHERS. ALL BRANDS RcbuUt, deUxered The . ___ OdbD HOUSBKEEPINO BROP Of Pontle. dl W. HURON________FE 4-1666 OVER M -OBED TV SETS FR< ' II4 M up. TV antennea, 14 16. WALTON TV ftl5 E. Walton _____yg ; PRICES SLASHED IttO ox waahera and drytra. Baay •utomdtlc waahera — —• •— tpinnere at tilt, portable dishwaaha rent* till. U- dlabwaehera, OB_ topa at eoet. Copper_ ___ oxen, built In. Black daxenport nnd chnlr. *16. RCA AM and >M radloe, *31. IMd 21- and M-lnch BCA TVi at ooet. 'Frmr’i, 6t9 Orchard Lak# Axenue. ft 4-081*. 3 WASHER, L 1-3000 for HI-FI, TV and Radio 66 la I Inch Mcllloecopc. calibrator, wrlOa Dot •tor all for lift. Alto RCA TEST equipment BCA wotto I 1—" ------------- write TV ealtbi Bar lencrator i Tpu CAN ALWAYS PfifO A Urxe eelecUon of late model, yua-Taifteed uaed tetovUtoni, LAVAl________ ____________ ^_____ xahie. S14.6d Alto baUituba. tol-lata. ebower etolla. Irreiulart, tor- Water ^fteners^ 66A ts.t00 ' DRAIN BRUNER IPor SaleJIMscdUneous 67 Vb HORSEFOWEB JET PUMP. ferriho buya!*^cilxM'‘'iluonL ■cent, 3S1 Onhard lAxe, 30. MCWERS. nLiXRS AND TRACTOR#, hlDlHO AND WALKINO. EVi^S EQUIB IMT DIXIE HWY. MA d-irs, OR 3-7*34. AND USiBD I INCH OALi^ATBO WATER pipe. II eenta per ft. Alan uud plumbiny, PE 4-33*3. *10 up to 1100. 0 piece dining rm., *30. Baby crib and mnt-treiaea. 111. llx. rm. eultef. 111. Bedrm, lUtteA tl*. Oat and oil ■pace heatort, low •• *11. Bcdi, eprlngtV lampe, tablei. TV'i and odd chair*. Exerythlng Id uaed furniture at Bargain price*. ALSO new llxlng rooma, bedroomt, roll-a-wayt. bunk bedi. dtncttca. ruga and mattretaca. Factory ecoondt. About >/% price. EZ terma The Bargain Houad, BUY, BELL, TRADE. 101 N. Cat* at Ufay-elte, FB 3-0S42. ^ SHWOLES. RED rwiICE FOT ALL 14 INCH TIRES, OOO&Y^ TWIN I TEAR CRIBS. SOI CAM- 4-INCH SOIL - _ - eh Soil Pipe ............. ‘save* pSumbwo iuppl^ ** III B. SAOINAW FE t-liot 3 LOUVEB*, tt ___________FE 64203 a BUSHELS Ol 4-INCH SOIL FI?1. ____ _________ pipe ei tpeclal prlpea. Flrat quality 33x21 double tlnka. tlt.N. O A. Tbompton, 7005 MM West MO MA 4-41*0 Ox* HUS ......... PLASTIC TILE, ra ASPHALT nLE. ea. "BUYLO" TILE, 102 B SAOINAW 3EILINO TILE . . Ic aq ft. ■BUYU>’^TILE,J(B_S^8AOiHAW 10 AMP. ELECTRIC- BOXES. __kljtoa. tl ea. and mtac. FE f 40 Fist i, INCH SOFT __per,_38_eenta per ft. PE,6-32*3. 12-OAL. ELEC. HEATER, 10* N. 30-tel. auto, gat heater, dM.H. Cab. tlnka and flulnga, gM.M UP-- dry trAya and ttand and fi tai.M. caah'and carry. SAVE FLUMBINO _______________I lASB. EAVE8- T ROUGH, SHUTTERS. AWN-1N08, RAILINOB. Low winter pricca-lat pymt. nprlng Call JOE VALLELT Now FE 6-«646 OL 1-0021 My aatlafled cuatomera and frieuda hare hr - - ------ — • "Iarl---------— pecta reaultlng I too PER CENT AUTOitATIC ELEC- BOOM OP BEDROOM FURNI-turo. Bed, dreaacr, xantty, mirror, drapet earpettnt, lamp*, Ml. Good condition. Coll OR 1-3M3 or lilt Lexington, Scott Lake, aft- RCA elHCtric stove, AUTO-matlc, like new. FE H80t REBUILT VACUUMS, $13 N tP 141 W. Huron Barnet A Hargraxet RANDOM TILE^ ••.......... 03c IxlO UNOLEUli ...........*2 H VINYL LINOLEUM, 3d....... 4ic "BUYLO" TILE, ltd g. SAOINAW BPBCTAL pricks; BIOHT HOW on PhUoo Waahera, dryert, TVa, •ad , twfrtfer-*— *- — Sl.ie down, the FREE' trip for 3".-----, •tone atore. 14l N. I iruDio cooe« didTTtDTtioER: •tora tll.M up. devenport and chair til waahera - Maytag*. Speed ^eent. ete. 114 up. *i Inch TV gll.lO. bedroom autte *36, portable singer aewing machine, gu and electric atovea 111 up. Weetlnghouae Electric dryer, maple earner cabinet odd ehatra, , Mt, eprlnga, muile tofa bed and chair, 1 ptKf dining room eet, dlS, M Inah electrie rango. Loada •f brand new fnmlture at little more 0^ uaed furnlturt prtoea. botT seu* trade Pewr^e Trade In Department, 41 Orchard Lake Axe, pj 4-71S1 BOFL LOUNOl CRA'ra, ARMLESS ebalr, good eend. MA g-ddl7. binoHr sEwrao Ma^unx, eeet, teallope, eU. BaUnee of aecoont I71.4S or take up pny- SPECUL eXll RUOS. 124.15. McLeod Carpet, Woedwerd at Square Lk. Juat belexr Ted'a. FE 2-7701. SXWIIU MACHINES, WHOLESALE to an. New, uaed and repoeaetted. Oxer 71 modelt to cboote from. Prieet atoit aloger portablea, tll.M, aid laf equipped. Curt'* A^^linncea, MIt Hatohery Rd. OR ifSED Wa, twit AliiS BIT Hnren'ra*Vl732^ Appl.’ 422 W. ' “ AUTOMAnd~wiiiixi^ PE 4-3*13 Used Trade-In Dept. Lonnte Chnlr .... I l.ll SWtor*^ U|:S A9e. Breaktaet aet . BdJO A-ft'. Sprint Hni. eWto ... jtl.N ’^OMA^E*&OMy“ 3*1 S. Baslnaw__PE MUI WYMAN’S USB thaob-in dipt. Onnr. elee. refrlg. ANCHOR FENCES REIORT SUPPLY 3616 Upeer Rd.__________FE_4-8431 BOY'S SUIT. SIZE 14, |10; MEN S ault, M, 410: RCA 10-In. tl3.i0; Typewriter, 416: Port radio. 110: '40* Plymouth, BEAUTY SHOP EQUIPMENT OA BEEP AND pOrK — HALF AND quartera. Opdyke Mkt. FE 5-WL CHaOREN'S piRt-TRUCK. UP TO 1 yeart, *10. 66* Madlto^ 16 Plyaci I 32-ft. I Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY 1M0 oooify Lake Hd. EM 3-4171 Open I a.m. to 0 p.m. dally ____Sunday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m._ CAULEIN^ li.M OALLOk _______. F* 0-3303 bo YOU 'have a . — deeorallng problem? Huhdreda of color.* to efioate troid’. Interior — exterior, see our well paper x matching fabric aeleCtlon. Berry Broa Jriled Magic no-drlp pr— OAKLAND FUEL-FAINT 43g Orchar^Lake_A«._FE^-*lM ELECTTllC LIGHT FIXTURES, all rooma. INI dealgnt. PuU down, balloon star. Bedroom, *1.15; mrcb. dl.H Dregulera, eamplea. Prleea enly toctory can gird. Mlcblgap Flnoreacent, 3fl Or-- chord Uke 1*. ■ ridem srliNDiNa TOiuiiTs dti N 8?Tb.2*‘eo2i‘r ..... " 30-lb. lengtha .. lie ft. ...... ’^il(Ml.**con“1l>to week only 40c ft. Bwr bath aeto with trim .. IN.N White or oelered FWctorx Inde — Irregulare SATE PLUMBING SUPPLY 171 S. Saginaw ------ formica, PLUMBING. P A....... flaaa. Wiring. Open 7 dayi, FE M7li. Montcalm Supply, IM W. I^ye'tatlmatei on sarage re- BERRY DOOR SALES Hocking Stoker Coal $17.45 per ton ■ Hockiiw Stove Size $16.95 per ton rUCET LUMP AND ---1 FURNACE A 8TO- POCAHONTAS BRIQUETS BLAYLOCK COAL CO. Orchard Uke J HOT WA'TER hMaTER. 30 OAL' Conaumera tpproxed. SM.60 xalue. g30N and MIN. marred. Alao .electric, oil and bottled gaa beet- Hearing Aid ------rer^Mo*ra ucretched. 4F' mcxlcl. ^ .... 044 M while 13 deUxered, PE 4- iiywood, Ml'l Waldoa Read. i piywoo 3-1022. Plants, Trees, Shruiis 78 3 YEAR OLD PAWN B03CER, RBO-Utered, ipayed, >36. OR d-lMI. 3 ALL BLACK KITTEKS, FREE to good brnne, FE 34*77,____ COLLIE TOFFIES, SABLE AND white beanUeiTAZC rex. prem cxeeUent »tock. MA MdT*. DAL M A TIO H, FXSULE TI monlhi. FE 4431*. 436 N. ^rry. mSo GIVE DOG TO GOGD BOMB guaranteed BUfOXR CAHAR-Ite and tupnlle*. Barnes and Harfraxa Fit shop ONE YEAR RBOIBTBRBO TOT Pooga. spayed. Beet offer. MY PUPPIES $8 UP INCL. ntOCULA'nONS. ALSO LTVESTOCE GUARANTEE I HUNT'S PET SHOP —....... PARAKEETS, OUARANTZXO TO Cansrlu, cages and suit-Crane’s Bird Hatchery. 2^ ’n. UL 2-2200___________/ . ftfUgraCe 'aKC. hi tOObLE POPPIEa. SOME READY ---r. Also deposlU taken for [ter PE 44M1, ■rbY POX TERRIER 7 Watkins Late PUFPV. I Rd., baton UKC REOISTERED Tbit POX ~ tot^ui^.^Ue 3 proxen OEC l£*. HiP [lel^. «M. After S PE 14333. Pdgs Trained, Biyrded 80 BRITTANT PUPS HeNART'S Tallwagier Ktimalx. beardtnx trainins, trtmmint. Brtitaax and . Poodle etnd aarxlea. OL 1-**M. Hy, Grain Mid 82 nRST CUTtlKO_ ALPALPA, iv: For Sale Livestock 83 MILK OOAT8 POR SALE, i Waldon Road. Clarkxtos. Vau after 4 p.m palaiHno riding ROM. Uw Predmera. Lak* Orton. MT i-lih. Wanted Uveetock 84 WANTED DtCUBATtHI — ALSO Srie Farm Preduco 86 ' s^ Ytad, a.Tw- SrIo Ferw EquIpmiBt 87 CO-OP TRACTOR. STAimU - ^hto^iljr-i« tobbw. ms. THIRTY «THE POyTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 1 _N andolT^ SEI?OTLt”S?D.71»A_________________ - USED FARMALL CUBS Airo EOUIFMEKT _ ^ ■ TEESE TRACTORS HAVE BEEN RECONDITIONED AND OUAR-. ANTEED. ALL ARE FRICED TO r ^febrr TBSUis available KING BROS “ .......ofivVJ" B(SB BUIUDUPCASH with "Quick-Action" * PONTIAC PRESS " WANT ADS SELL THO.SE Building Supplies in< "Classification 14 CALLFE 2-8181 "The Market Place of Thousands" — ^ AOCTlIfcl BALES KVERT FRIDAY .7PM EVERT SATURDAY 7PM ^ EVERT SUNDAY . I F M , ..... OPEN 7 DAirS WEEE-M SUV - SELL - RETAIL DAILY ! Omt PrlAM E»»nr AueHon “ Unrii R«oai 0»M Ertri AucUoa ■' tsw DIXIE HIOHWAT . , ADCnON EVERT FRIDAY NIORT, 7 0«i»r»l hou»»hoW »ood«' ________ DON’T KORGET _ FISCHER 8UICK used'buicks' It MOirnn mrrahtt A S. WsjjdVBtS ^ B'Mol -r'i t««l SalH MM I R*dl«. hMWr, Ant littMlar Thli to i - AlVAII KMkms (jW. PBOFLEB AOTO BALS8 St Ctokto nd__________Ft t tMI owMEk ciaafritD ISS7 BuirS CMtury t Stosr htrdtoA 1^^** tirrs. I'm <01 Mslt *nd wblW tharpl A*mm7 psjmrato M a PU asotS. leu cAab down Id tndt. Ltopd Uoton. Ua-»^Mma^«saM ^ S Bail- «~BUICE~C^AR. JTAND^ traaamiuloa. Radio, HtMtr. BssI oiler MI 4-ltSI^_____________ t FortT^iLAS- SS-'U . SH ap. 7 Foattoci •tS--»4--tS.'ll S7S ap. t Cidillart •57-'SS- S.-64-'«l S7S up-4 FltBMUttU -SS- SS-'tS-'U m up. I NhUm 'SS-’St-'U . . t« ap. t Butckt ''IS--M.-U » m up. 3 Fockurds M- kS-'M SIM ap. « Cheeyi VA aad aim Ford* and CIWTp Stattea Wofone ISO eUiert. lo ehooeo -We flnaaee ECONOMY CARS tt AUBURN 93 i Wanted Used Cars 1011 ttU BDICE XLECTRA hardiop, full power, rai heeler, (parklliid two-to rmt>h. liMS Uoyd Llnrola-MercuryCouMt, aaglBaw. Ft^I-SlSI _____ be»|_« ____ IS'CARS TOUR C^CE. S7» - lvS« M «r M Motor Sales I ; **radio a absolute^ LT NO MONEY DOWN. Auumo i RJd«sf ---------- ---- JotdT CRARESRAFT ORIKDINO, 1 FOR TOP DOLLAR ON LATER | ; ■Uader kortai apd voire ---■*' --- ( OI^IAIM^___________ 'CSRAFT aanrOIRO 1 Cylinder* rekond Z« eSbop. 23 Hood Flu ' Junk cars. _------FBA-HSt.________ » BUCE-JUNK CAR. TRUCE.! For Salt Cara 106 uaa. aa aoaoy daaa. lull Wlffrir CREDIT ilAMAOBR. gs^,8?.’'^D^^vr RIRMIWOHAM. Ml aATIS. _ lPt3 CHXVRtW. BECOMDJL OaSHa hi ■d KmIO afATIOM WAOOR. RiC dto and Boater. otMtIvo pawor g'^l^-a&aSo.’trtVSt lisT'ToiurFiaRLAiA aTRAKurr rtlck. met t*». m, l-totl._ Clare ear Stock Ro. SMS. Only S1.3M. mm torae. NORTB CHEVRmSr CO , lots S. WpOB>- WARD AVE.. BIRMIMOIUIL Ml^ rt07 CHEVROUirip 1 DOOR. BA- VO opstae. standard*^ dlttoD Stock Ho. 30U. Only 01. IM Edey terae. NORTH CHEVRO-LEf CO. 1000 B WOODWARD _AVE.^ BntMIMOHAM. Ml 4-3730. •M cHEighMarr. oo6d cowot-tlon. newpalB: i»w Uioe. SJTI.* ______maLSa 1007 Ford CODTertlUe. ai radio aad bentar, white wnu nree. iacp Gold and WbUe Ilntab. Bare up to otto for biotof now. auumo uayaento of (mM per month, Syd‘1&.A?:“ Coaot. 333 B Baslnnw. FE 3AI31, Rd TBe will buy H cell « Opeu doily U eeutlsnarau. Can fr ____________________j For Sale BkycleB aaB’pTaiht*Auc0^er INCH SCHWINN EXCELLENT Msi______________________: ”■ -’#ARM MACHINERY DISPERSAL^ _ _ ___ BUICE 1 DOOR 8TICE SHIFT. PONTIAC WASinB. ~PTt »«00, . i _________ FTO t5SO>OR aiBT CWVT-OR I ;g Vord mt S.MAl ^7 CHEYT 3 6t %. tUCk I5M ------------- CHEVY Bel Air t dr h top UM Used Auto Parts 102 .'■ BUICE SPECIAL. FRONT I ________ -----piB, «t»n Diiie Hwy., * -IS CHEW Ih ol MH aa MUford Rd W.—. _____ __________BIKlRTS ;oupc. .radio, boater, directional ------ whitewall Uru. OOod com _____— „"3Uo"Devuhuri Rd'; §Mts and Accessorlet 97 •* an Wedneeday. March U at 13 .. ^ o"troJiS?3'X..“ »^0?^L.>^-*^VJlPnS“ « caltlvctece. I drUle aad ptoatere. ___it tJl»-Bew ___ r^owrri:‘l'ciimbiiwr3'co'?r*V,M FT. CADILLAC ALUMINUH. — - —'“-‘-iti, 5 rkkei, I ditki; $13* FE Util. ____ ” CIU8CRAI 1500 MERCURY MOTORS A 00 R.F. TO H P AND M HF AT BIG DISCOUNTS DF TO 750 8Q'rr OF UVINO.WE CARRT: LIVINO ROOM. lOilO •••* “**■ - BEJROOM 13- WIDE , NOW ON DISPLAY ' Due to the large demend for; our 1001 DetroHer*. — *•— •ti la e large tetoi.----- _ obtle boraee which SEA RAY b LONE STAR MOhV§ ARKANSAS TRAVELER AND TMEE-NEE TRAILERS llil MERCURY MOIOJIi tak-; 10 PER CENT DOWN ON BOATS. I MOTORS. TRAILERS HASKINS .TRUCK Specials CHEVIES 195#-’56 FORDS. BUICKS. I»LVMODTHS BAD CREDIT? NOCREOIT? NEED CREDIT? No co-alinen. Immi try. WMkly paymta lOOS Cherrolet BUcayne. 0 cylinder attok ahin. -------------------- wall tiree. ne owner beauty lodi aymento M Erf.lS | fail.. puH! 0S05 lull _____ns.50 per monlb. ___ . O’Brtan. Credit lisr. BIRMINOHAM-RAICTLEB. SIS B. vroodward. MI S r. Muet m ISSO CHEVROLET lUPALA 4 DU. hardtop. TO aottoe. powergllde. power eteer^, radio, btsicr. tlot- Easy terms. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. lOOO S. WOODW^D AVE, BIRkHNOHAM. 3dl 4-3735. '50 CmrVROLET BEUAiR 3 DOOR VI, Powergllde^ 3 ‘ --------- radio FE H1I3. OWnOJ JEBCTTim radio whliewii t*M finish. •r«r*zssL‘ts; r. R 1-0131. dan. Vo engine, powergllde. poi cteering, power brakee. 1 lone lab. Oniy 20,000 actual mtlea. ran find Atdek No. 1007. Only I. NORTH CHEV- OWNER CER7TFIEO IIM Chryaler New Yorker 3-Door Hardtop. automaUe full powr-radio and heater. whU* wall Uri sparkling palamino tan and bran flnlah. Fofiu. ihe to to mint eo dttlon. Assume payment* o( 020.03 per month, low cash down or old trade. Lloyd Motoro. Uncoto-lier-cury-ComeL 233 8. Bagteaw. PE 3-0131._______________________ itei CHRYSLER. RAIHO ANb beater, no mooey down, eacel-leht condUion. full price tsk Assume payment* of 0100 per ——CALL MR. WHITE, TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS irehaaed as lew as 1101 d Bob Hufehinson Mobile Home Sales 4311 Dtxle Hwy Drayton Platni 4 Ml. N. of Pontiac OR 3-130: 7 day* a Wqyk . n CUFF DREVER OUN b ». _ SPORT CENTER LqFEN 7 DATS A WEEE ME 4-1 .. flUie HOLLY RO. HOLLY. MICH. .. Btudebaker ......... 505 .. an. uu.n -______________'« OW* hATdtop .......... 0M< Inter-Citv Motor .Sales i •$!! ?ort,*V door, vo . ^ 750 N. OAkLANO AVENUE 1 W J. SMITH MOTOR SALES FE 4S030 “• ""—............ ■ ~ " • ” '-wnmurr am full, ...... ___ RARDTCI^ A real abarp loaded With extra*, power iteor-tifg and brake* Onljr *7W. $10.'* _»E 4-fllM __________ „ F O L L LAKESIDE MOTORS. At Ellaabelb Lak* Rd. n ptekup C a. Dask sn IIU METAL ZIMMER, IT LONO.*TlP«>co LUe__________^ MAto_0-W70 NOW IS THE XtME », ^^^jlgVaioi ?g8R°?R!SLg^A”N'V n°70*5F i TOWWONOgfibAR-D MOTORS. WAmiiot' Bmu. 0»tor TraUtri WE HAVE Binf*^ WAITIIIO?; EvcrTthldfl for tho boot owBiTfl If ARtra suppuica mi cb«i owner. A finlih. Chevrolet W ton pickup. R«- .rSJiii, . us TODAY! IINE * COACH Si 15210 Holly Rd. HOLLY. ME A SHORT7I MOBILE HOMES BALES AND SERVICE 81>ECIAL 14-rt Oern. $005 17-fl. Oe -IOUTBOARD MOTOR, 7% H pow*r, 1 trailer, I 14 loot I MH> FE 44134 • e line ot a^ httrbe* u>-_3J71 W Huion U.SED TK.MLEKS ’M AMERICAN 10*43' 130 '00 TOOR-A-HOME 14 I T '50 PONTIAC 3 Bedrm 35 ft 510 PONTIAC CHIEF 30' . I » PONTIAC CHIEF 40' SEE SCOTTY ■y^Pllo'^'Jp Trad.* your old motor In un * new SCOTT by MrCuUocb. You'll ' ' Acrou From New Car Sala* HASKINS CHEVROLET 0715 Dtxto Highway at M U UA O-IOOS OpeadNI^i 'U1 0 Auto Insurance 104 "M9 CHEVROLET ImpalA' 4 door hardtop, black wito red tatertor. Pull power. 11,000 mllei Extra abarp. 01700. Rammler Dallas QL2-9III ~____ ”957 CHEVROLET ppaMenier aMtlon wafon. VS engine. powergUde tran*mto*ton. fine, powergllde tran*ml**ton. Itower eteertox and toake* for your driving oa*e. Immaculate condRIon throughout. BeabUful Iv-ory and red frnl»h. ONLY 01005. CRISaUAN CHEVBOLirr, ROCM- ESTER, OL 3-0721.___ 1067 CHEVBOl^ 1-DOOR, O^L-Inder. *Uck ifflt, fib money down, 0405 fuU price. l*t naymant duo May 1. Lucky Auto BalOl, 111 B. Baitoaw. PE 4-2214.__ tOM CORVAIB "TOP' » DOOR BE-dan. Powerrildmjattn rtlrer fto-iih. Stock hTmOI. Only ll.y Baty tern*. NORTH CHEVRD let Sr lOOO 8. WOODWARD AVE. BlilkhNOHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1957 CHEVROLET per week. Eddie Bleato. Yoor .. KCOfO I ■so DODOE 4-D06r of 00.70 per week. }.l SMITH eel Diaca, ansomasH;. rsuuj. nvs* er, new rubber. A real eparkler! 0505. «M down. Aeeuma payraeM 030A0 par month. Call Mr O'Brian OedH Mgri BIHMINU HAU-RA5fBLER, MO 8. Wood ward. Ml 0-3000. UAE&nM*^07SifB. _^nr^at Elteabeth Lake Rd. SMIl. They Must Go! ? ?Sdr^itv«&- :S si^“ FOR 6 ^NTflS OAKLAn'd*“ma^RIn"e'‘‘exCHANOE 025 00^ftabiuty“^‘' »1 8 Seglnew FE 0-4101 01 wo medtobl SEA-TOWER 5M’iM*uton?ttrid“mtoort*ts Inbmrd-Oulboard ***'*!? 7C7A .V DrlTf. set It now at PHONE FE 4-3536 VENTURO BEAUTIFUL 44 $m0 2.*'^!:*'*° MARINE EXCHANGE! We aleo Write canceled eulo NEW CREE im lUOi Ml S Seginaw_________V*LJti'*J I FRANK As ANDERSON AOENCV iTVYRi.";? !! .‘K| terrific discount WITH OVERHAND BUNK On 1000 boats and Evtortide mo- --------------------- tors and trallert Tune up now. WE ALBO HAVE THREE ' Tony'jMartoe, 2005 Orchard Lako lOM TOUR-A-HOME i *d FE 0-4011. AT OUR COOT I FORD*TO JPtr SuM Cy», 106 FORD efirasoo im IMt dowm. Soritfil B Mate! aSford Mb 0-ITU Bw'''tormR NOR T ft 5TA*Rir2S*^S&iS?<&A^M«iS 4J730. ______ « PALCOH i ixioii ^ RAOtOAMD HEATER. SHARPI RED FWISH. Stmisht BUek. jeromF-ft:rguson llOCHEnXR PORD DEALER OL 1-07U 7 TOBD t DOOR. ft. STAND-ard traasmtobtoa. Vory cloan $500 full pitot. No mofioy dowa. IIO.M per mo^. Call Mr. O'Brian, credit liar. MRinNOBAM-RAM-BLER. IHS B. Woodwerd. I« low FORD 4 DOOR. II.IM »____________FU 4-12M. 1007 FORD^ WnjUUO.HT ssater; lOM FORD WAOON. ger, v-l aatomatte, rsoio sue heater, whitewall tire*, epark-Itoi grttn ttotob. A family mao'i dream. Aeaumt payments ol I33.N per month, low. cash down or old trade. Lloyd MMrt, Ltoeoto-Mereurej^Cemet, 231 B. THIS IS IT! 1955* FORD Falrtane 1-door, i ryUnder, Ford-O-Matlc. radio ond heater, white waU Urea. Real nlM at BEATTIE FORD wgrb, ym o —M. UM FORD CLUB COUPE. . standard THAWBMMSIOM. RA-DIO AND HEATER, ABSOLUTELY HO MONET OdWN. Assume paymento of SS4.TI _nar r-Credit Mgr Mr. Pdrk* 47580. Harold Turner ~- Btorago charges ot I3H. Ltold Motors. Ltocoto-Sforcury-^tomet, 222 B. Baslnar “ - 51 FORD RANCH WAO AND HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Asr — paymonU of SlS.ft^r mo. Credit Mgr Mr. Paits at 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford. 1053 FORD. 0350. fiUST BE SEEN to be oppreelatod. OR 3-44M. FOR SALE 1034 FORD COUPE. Biilek powered, PL >4555. GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE AU BOW aad used oars must at saerlflc* price*. Clarkston Motor Saif s CHRTSLKR-PLTMOUTHDIAUR 32 B. Mato, Clark »ton NA gnfJ^ "Every other dog in town has to WALK to school!” For Sale Ctb 106 loss FORD. 4 DO«. FAlniANB; John McAuliffe, Ford 430 OAKLAND ” •-*>* 1 MOim A'S AND EXTRA FARTS- U6J FORD. RADIO AND heater. rxceUenl condition, no money down. fuU price. $04 Assume paymoato c{ Ol.M per weelL Call mr. white, credit MANAOBR, FE S44H. - l-T in f —--------- 1H4 FORD CUSTOMUNB PDOOR sedan. 4 cylinder castoa. standard nYsSjb I. NORTit __ 8. WOOD- .........BIRMlNaBAM Ml 42736. UTVS. very ci*p*i..w*‘ Only 44M. Easy ti CHEVROlfr OO 1 WARD AVE. BnH IS54 NASH SEDAN. RUNS VE^ food. Ha* BO rust. Hrst UI4 buys til Terms. Call Mr. O'Brian. BAN------ Blrmtoshau.. — 1053 OLD85IOTILB. REAL CLftAiT Call r*~ UU HUDSON HORNET. HARD-top. Radio and heater, automauc. ^an. Fun price 1304. No money ifr or „ Premiers 2 AND 4 DOOR HAROTOPjl 4 to choose from ISM OLDS HARDTOF, RADIO AMIi HEATER. HTORAMATIC YnOTSWALLS. AB8(».UTELr NO MONET DOWN. Assam* payments of SM.M per mo. Call Credit---- — '—" -* ■" 474M._________________________ IIM OLDS^ SUPER M BOOOR Holiday. Fun powor. 040 down, Rd., PE 44S82. Llneeto-Mereury-Comot Poalti ---------------- — «u.u.u 300 8. HUNTER BlfVP. NO MONET DOWN. Assume pay-meoU ot 00.05 per mo. Call Cre^ Mgr. Mr. Parks at Ml 475M. Harold Tamer Perd. PRIVATS 'U LINCOLN BARD-top, fun power, very cloan, 03M er trade tor smaller ear. plek-up truck or Harley motoreyelo rf ------1 value. 352 Romeo Read. IIM MERCURY CLUB COXTn. RADIO S'HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANS5U88ION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assuma pay- ■SS lOOtCURT HARDTOP^ , Like new tostdb and cnit. perfect engto*. new rubber, no riiM. onto 5405 full price, no cash needed, Rff4SST^."»jR.fflflA?« 1050 MERCURY Station Wagon, hue new *y down, 1st paymento ORIGINAL OWNER IIM IKERCURT 2 DOOR BTORT COUPE. With 0.0M Extra Easy Miles. A Beautiful Medium B^uc Finish I PbUy Equipped. Flu* Pow-er Btoertog and Bi^eA «^d Olass tor Ban Glare I tearkllng White WalU. Ecaoomlori to .Operate! Forced to BeUI $L0H. If you wftpt u CietUfot AttioosobUf. Sara LOOK! BUY! SAVE! ______________ 4704 tockup . . 41000 ________________^hlef hardtop 51405 lIM PooUae B'vUl* hardtop $2005 IIU Ford station wagon .... |«6 1050 Ford 4dr. Fbrdomattc . • OMJ IMS Pontiac S^totef 4dr. . 11006 1M7 Bukk Ctotury hardtop . .410M llMChtvy Impw hart " ,TfM Buick Bpeelal 4dr. -1007 Chevy % ton_pl«kttp lOM Chevy Mr. Fewer .......... 1M7 Chevy atattoa wasoa ... fllM INI Chevy Bel Air 4^ ... |15M UU Mor^ Madia "lor' ... MMO UM T-BIrd. PUU powor ........ 53405 UM Buick LoBabn Oonv'L ...tUH UM Penttoe B'riUo wasoa ... 52iN 1M7 Pcmiac 4dr. sodap ........ 0005 IMT PooUac Spaas, wagon ... OlW 1N5 Buick 4dr. Dynaflow ... 05M IBSk Dodga Wtoo pickup ........$345 1040 BttIcli. extra clean 1051 Pontiac Mr. sedan ----Buick 4dr. ------- COME CHECK I FOB I WE CAN SELL Your bost-motor4raller Spt^C«rB 105 and enflne OB > For Sal* Cars 106 Hollv Marine & Coach i Airplanes 99 1S210 bToLY HD ME 44T71 _ . ,, HOLLY MicHioAN BANK BATES Trsnsportst n Offered 1001 ;™»'Si'rtM'"Midib and h« ■\;AGAR0.\D. ZIMMER.;, ,,HO.NE'AniLINERr L08''AN.; ri‘Ar'kSil.^‘?^‘n"a«te7£’. GKE.\T LAKES. CiFXERAL. STU.ART ; im: Ferry service Inc. OR 3-1254 i ,5d llto?a''Motori. L*ncoln- ANI ) YELLOWSTONE A.**NOR'itl. part ; Mercury-Comet. 232 8. Itootoaw. clean and one owner Stock 2034 Only $1.105 NORTH CHEVROI WOODWARD AT HAM, Ml 42735._________ •50 CHEVROLET DEL RAY OWNER CERTIFIED 1050 Ambassador Wagon. I have VI automatic, power brakes and now. 0 story ^imd Expi Many ^ood load_^i ___ _________ ‘Srtee/iVfbULD UKk“CAR ORIVKN TO sed 'erfht"or ten rt ' Tarap^y^March list. FE 4-$52$. to sell Terms tolWAN'm) 2 RIDERS TO TAMPAN to bick from Buy I Flortda. share expense*. Leaving now-Speclal during Feb only J Wed. March Itth FE 4S03S Electric Chord Organ free w‘‘- ' " Oxford Trailer Sales mile* 8. of Lake Orton on 5 ________Bales. EM 3UU or^M 3-7M1 Used Cws 101 |A TOl> DOLLAR FOR OLD CARS ,-------- --------- ---- VACATION TRAILERS Flxte Trailer Sale* and Rent 1045 North Lapeer Rd. Oxfor OA 437T___________ WANT TRAILERS! iUICKS? WHY' NOT THY BUBOR- U41 BUICK. COLLECTOR'S ITEM. Original. Not rostered. Orlflosl finish. Interior tpoUess. DrIvee l.OM mileo on a quart of oil. Have “bl!f‘^f' X™ A.ltog"“u“S, % DRIVE A MILE SAVE A PILE! New Dodge Lancer $1781.65 ' .SMALL TOWN LOW OVERHEAD I5.IM, MILK OUARANTEB RAMMLER-DALLAS IMl N. MAW ROCHKBTKI )DOE--CCTTIHJ^TRDCKB 0-cyltoder.------------- er. whitewall tire*, sparkling ; blue and white finish. It's tho right kind of car. Assume pay-menu ot 520.00 per month, low rash down or old trade. Uoyd Motors. Ltoeoto-Merebry-Comet, 23t 8. iagtoaw. FK 2-1131.________ “STORE^HELTON For Sale Cart URna'«;.’ig hoater, white waU , taxury wagOD today..-- , . ST»SS5?'Jf'S3^ * c'onditton. Ml S-22W. MATIC TRARSMiaSIOlf. AB80-LUTKLT NO MONBT DOWN Assume poymonts o( Ml.1$ P*r mo call Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks at MI 475M. Harold Tumor Ford. MECB ANIC8 "B^HdAT OldsmebUo 4door. real i Body Doods aomo work - offer, no money down. Lucky_____ Sale*. 103 8. Baginhw, FE 42314. REPOS^SSI^" nm Pull price, no cadi needed ^y onlylU a mo., duo April 15 RUB AUTO 8ALBB. MR. BELL. For Sale Car* IM trade UP QR DOWN Wo have many many ACT NOWl John McAuliffe, Ford ava'^nanJINO FB 441U •H WHITB BONNinnUJB 'flBTA. 1 owntr ear. powtr btakat. powor after 0 p m._________ ’53 PONTIAC X DOOR SPECIAL $95. BRAID ~liS PONTIAC SUftEB^iP. Mmrv. Low mltoagt, toadod. See aaytSao. 4IM Sasfaabaw. DHtyloa TAYLOR'S OK USED CARS CHBTROLBT OUMMOBILB oSKT «*“^ail.d Lao •d. 010141 down. MI.U p» Includes radio, h^r, and __tewau*. lai-tl iamiiloy Comos at s>*M«Sy prtow. R&C RAMBLER/ Super Market cokoaacB R ' ~ ___PONTUC. BUNB^ O0» first $75 tekes It. M MUtor Off Hwiry Clay. Credit Mfv.. BLER. M* 43500._________ 1055 PLYMOUTH. S'^ntoSSTO Call Mr. O-Brtan. HRMimHAM-RAM- ___, ______ Lucky Auto Salot, D 8. Saginaw. FE 42314. • PLYMOUTH « PiSSENOBR custom Bub. Wagon, with power eteertog and brakes. Auto, traos. Good eontotloa. 2 ton* ttotob. W-WaUs. $14H JACK COLE. INC. ALLBD LAKE___________MA 4-4511 CLEAN Birmingham Tra^s WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward SHEP'S Week-End Sale 'M MBRClfttT 4-door aodan •iframAo' 4door 'bartV' too, absfp ..... OTN >M TORO Caatom 4-door, twal ale* ... .. $4N *14 Cborratet S-d*or. 1- CLEAN-UP SALE •53 Pontiac ......... •43 Mercury .......... •M Ford VI •53 S^fttsr, Odrlve '51 Ltocoir A-i Running . ■M cadlUac. H-top. nlc* . ■M Dodga. Stake •52 Ford, VI Pickup . -'1 Cadiftac Rcaree TO I. M Dclawsre. is !.S SAMBLER SUPER 2 pOOT, adto and baater. Catt n 5-S4S1 after 5:30. White flnlata with rod trim. Stock No.%21. Only tl.OM. Easy term*. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1000 8 WOODWARD AVE., BOtMlNO-HAM, mi 42735_______ , passontor wasoa. Power at 24-HOUR SALE! Prices Good Until 6 P.M. Tuesday Only 65 Mf. Clemens AND Corner Cass and Pike FE 3^7954 PONTIAC .BUICK . Rochester OL 1-8133 cross from new ear sale* ipoB 'til I p.m. or later led Wed, and Bat, at 0 p.m. VALUES: IIM Ponttae Oaltataa 4 door. By-dramatic. Radio and beater. Beautiful trey ttotob 1 owner. Low down payawnt. Bank rates. 1554 Pontiac 3 door hardtop Hy- 1960 CHEVY Brookwood \Vag( Deltthttul 4-Doer wtto V-t eu|toe, turbotlldc traosmtsston, whitewall tire*, radio and heater. Sparkling Impertak Ivory ftotob walls. Terms t. ,— .. 1H7 Ponttae t dr. sedan. H J. I bo You Need Monc>’'? WE HAVE IT! ' n FOR EXTRA CLEAN USED CARS , d fi^f ta5e* I "W DOLLAR PAID " 1961 Pontlar Ares ; . etc ‘No strings' Call ri Glenn’s Motor Sales "Rent Trailer Spsce 90:“?...y^ , California Market i OXFORD MOBILE ICANOR TOR,pr, >gg ponUac*. Old*. Buleks I with 25 1 •sfca.^'sri i AVERILLS r« FE IXIDGI-: DART 6-PASSENGER sedan- mile OUARANTEE ^.j'Yoii can altvay.s locate ^ the |>arties interested in what you no longer need KUHN AUTO .BERTIE_, i5srwhLAcrTO^ALLi'<>'=» 1 $1,899 HIGH DOLLAR FOR USED CARS JOHN J smItb Birmingham Trades INI PooUac Tempest, special Interior. radio, heeler, while 4.4N certified miles . . I31II lull llSl ^Rambler atatlon wagon, custom model. outomoUc. tuUy ll«S''ifmtasudor h&top. full pow-.r I.. •■leage . . . 42,IM. Bcl-Alr $ Or. Standard IWi Ford ■ oUtton' vaflB. f»U3 llSl''‘^d iTije«i**stalioB wagon. 4 door modol. apoctal totertor . . . 41.745 ’ UM Ford I door Vi tlandaid tranm UM*1^' ‘Tb^de^ri UM Mercbry Ird, d- Mantctolr iw'ir. 1I.4M ’;.\ds! BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER $885 Matthews- Hargreaves - '•CHEVY-LAND ” OAKLAND COOHTT'B Largest Vdama Chevy Oealir •n OAKLAND AVfeRUa I f. ■so ronnac oatanaa a or. loaon. ftedramatte. RAdlq and iMm^. Bnutewalto. A UttI* titol Vito make your torms. HAUPT PONTIAC ’60 RAMBLER WGN. Save $1000, ’61 METRO $99 Down $49.8i Mo. •61 PONTIAC $166.88 Down $76.35 Mo. •61 RAMBLER $184 Down $56.43 Mo. Russ Johnson Motor Sales LAKE ORION MY 2-2871 MY 2-2381 1960 Chevrolet „ PONTUO 4 DR. . •55 FORD 2 DR.... 'U MERCURY 4 DR. '47 PLYMOUTH 2 DR., t 'M CHEVROLET 2 DR.. '55 FORD, CONV... •57 PLTl^OUTH 2 DR., Ml Wafon. I I aatomatte d has power MANY MCHIB OREAT VALUES RITE AUTO SALES IN EAST ELVD.. AT AUBURN BRIGHT SPOT Orchard Lake at Cass FE84D488 HASKINS SHARP CARS iSZ heater. Uk* new sliver Ralsb. HASKINS CHEVROLET -wm~ YOU SHOULD SEE. j RITE AUTO SALES Buy Now — Pay Later NO CASH NEEDED HCMER MIGHT Small Town Trades: ■M Chevto 4-dr., r WAS HOW **S3N lJU ■17 Chayl* 2-dr., S-cyl., Hal AU. lUek I Ml $ « powor oti d brnltei. a M Fard 2-dr., S-cyL, ' radio aad haator SUM $1841 b haatar • 7M $ IM Ickup $ IM l-dr....... spatdal U Chovretot-Foatlae-Eukk HCMER MIGHT MOTORS BUICK SALES & SERVICE. 1960 BUICK 4-Door Hardtop „ Radio, baater, dyaiMlew, powtr ttetrlat and bnUtt $2595 1959 BUICK Electra 4-Dr. Hardtop - Power-atocrini and brakes, radio, beater, dynaflow, silver finish . $1995 ' 1958 RAMBLER 4-Door Sedan Super aarias. Rod and ftolsh. radio, hoater, a ^$995 FORD Sedan I Waton with standai boater, solid ^to*. $895 BUICK )r Hardtop , heilor, dyaaOtw, $695 BUICK >r Hardtop and White liatoh. r, automaUc trabsml . $495 1953 BUICK 2-Door Hardtfm fmfr aortas^ V4 aathM. radio: boater, dynaflow. $195 OLIVER BUICK ^ ^ORCBAaO f.k*:E AVE. radio, boater, ttaadard 1957 FORD Country Sedan ~ Wasoa with standard ablft. ■iswter. St... 1956 BUICK 2-Door Hardtop 1955 BUICK 4-Door Hardtop ■ ■ ■ . r THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 18, IMl. THmiT^oim - "Today's Television Proigrams- I. V MhlMM to dtoM» « I t-rnmtv chHMi t-atLW-TV (» Hovto (oont) (4) - - ff) (») » (7) Believe It or Not i (T) i (2) (4) 1 (2) (4) (D (•) I (2) (4) ( (t) (4) (96) College Math ) (2) Underwater (4) Sporuiaan’a Oonwr (7) lOater Ed (») You AAed tor It ) (2) Grand Jury (4) Amerteana (7) Cbiyma» (9) lloviaz "Letnetdom mV*’ (UM). Idealiitle yoimg Harvard mta flghti brow-bee ting railroad boron. Nelaoa Eddy, VfagbilB Brace, Victor McLaglen, Lionel U:U UtN (96) Way of Life (2) Pete and Gladyi (4) AmeticaiM (oont.) (7) Cheyema (oouL) (f) Movie (oont) (96) WHtton Word (2) Bringliig Up Buddy (4) Wdla Fine (7) 8ntto>de6 (9) Movie (oont) (56) Astranomy tor You (2) Denny Tbimiai (4) Acapulco (7) Surliide (cont) (9) Don Meeser’e JubUee (2) Andy (klflith (4) Dimte (7) Adventurea in PindiM (9) Jack Kane I (2) Hennesey ' (4) Barbara Stanwydt (7) Paradiae (coot.) (9) commonwealth ol Na-bone I (2) June ADyaon ^ (4) Beie Jackpot (7) Peter Guim (9) Newa i (9) GoU Tip • (9) Sparta I (2) Newa (4) Newa )[7) Racket Squad (9) (2) (4) (9) Teleacope UAW (2) Sparta (4) Sparta (2) Movie: "Ebb Tide” (1937). Diagraced captain becomea beachcomber on South Sea inland. Otcar Ho- molka, Itonoao Farmar, Ray I2t46 - (9) Weather mat (4) (Color) Jack Paar (7) Movie: ’The Suopeot' (1944). A middfeaged nan munlera hla nagging wib Ella Ralnea, Dean HaroM, Henry Daniell. (9) Movie: “In (M Oiicago’ (1936). Stonr of the fblihti^ O’Leary tamlly including the two brothen who love the name glri. tyroa» Power, Alice Faye, Don Amecbe, Andy Devine. TUESDAY MOSNINO tm (4) (Color) Continental B (2) Meditatlona.' • (2) On the Farm Front B (2) TV College. • (4) Today (7) Funewi B (7) Believe R or Not • (2) B’Wana Don (7) Jolmny Ginger. B (2) Captain Kangaroo. 6 (7) Believe R or Not 9 (7) Movie. 9 (2) Movie. (4) I Married Joan. a) Movie (cent) (56) Saludoa Amlgoa. 9 (4) Ed Allen (56) Exactly So 9 (7) Newa. B (2) I Love Lucy (4) Faye Eltzabeth 9B (4) Say When <7) Jack LaLanne (56) Our Scientific Wcrld. 9B (2) Video ViUage (9) BiUboard • W (4) (Color). Play Your Htmch. (7) Divorce Hearing. (9) Chez Helene. (56) Arne IB (9) Nuraeiy Sdxx>l Time. 9B (2) DouUe Expoeure (4) (Color). Price la Right (7) Morning Court. (9) Romper Room. (56) Guten Morgen. 9B ^2) My Little Margie (4) Concentration. (7) Love That Bob! (56) todatva Art TUlftDAY AFTEBNOON IStBB (2) Love M Life. (4) Truth or (7) Camouflage (9) Suaie. (56) Virus (2) Search for Tomorrow. (4) (Color). It Could Be You. (7) Number Please (9) Mary Morgan. U:40 (56) La Douce France (2) Guiding tight. , UII9 (9) Nowa, Utii.(4) Newt. 1>69 (2) Dick PoweU (4) News ,7) About Facta. (9) Movie. 1:91 (4) Bold Journey 1:19 (56) Parlea Francaia. 1:91 (7) Nafwa (2) Aa tha WoiM Tuma. (4) Tourney (oont) (7) Uto ot Riley. (56) Htotary 1:99 (2) Amoa and Andy (4) (Color). Jan Murray. (7) Day in Court (56) Arithmetic l>99 (2) House Party. (4) Loretta Youi«. (7) Road to Reality. (56) Adventures in Numbers. 9:09 (2) Millionaire (4) Young Or. Malcme. (7) ()ueen for a Day. (9) Movie. (56) ConmxMiwealth 6:99 (2) Verdict Is Yours. (4) From 'Hwse Roots. (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Movie (cont.) (56) Merno to Teachers. 4:09 (2) Brighter Day. (4) Make Room for Daddy. (7) American Bandstand. 4:U (2) Secret Storm. 4:19 (2) Edge of Night. (4) Here’s Hollywood. (7) Bandstand (coot) (9) Adventure time. 6:99 (2) Blovie. (4) (Color) George Piei^ (T) Johpny Ginger. (9) Looney Tunes and Jingles. 8:16 (56) Friendly Giant 6:M (2) Movie (cont.) (7) Rocky and His Friends (56) World of Bocia 6:46 (56) News Magazine. 6:69 (9) News 6:66 (4) Bending Highlights I Answers to Photo Quiz ■m BN t%B BB6WM to tlM Oil 9* pagt 17. The dom-bolehg toi Top left, FBBtlae aewal HeoeiteL Tip OoMlor, Pentloa CMf BalL Tep rlikt, Fentlae Motor D^wielea Administration Center right, Pentisc branch efflee, Mlehigan Ben Telephene Ce. Bottom right, St Joseph Merey HaqItaL r r r r B" 11" 14 lir H" IT w 1 IT tr w r m w IT W r r D i w H se SpMUah Tim a Uni SI iS^BMUas 40 Btiteliao fram* 4T Wratara italo tS Capar a Vtndad 36 Zrtah aehater M Baatlag Otflai - (1T41-UU) II Careal ^ on TV Debate TV Features By United Preaa lateraatloiial CHEYENNE, 7:30 p.m. (7). Young Theodore Roosevelt (Peter Bredc) teams with Bnmeo (Ty Hardin) and Sugaitoot (Will Hutchins) to investigate the slaughter of buffalo. HENNESEY 10 pm. (2). Voodoo doU rites by Harvey Spmicer Blair in (James Komadc) seem to work Adm. Shafer (Roocoe Karas), Jackie Cockier stars as Chide Henrmsey. JACKPOT BOWUNO, 10:90 p.m. (4). Final abow. The winner of tile Pat Patterson-Art Pappa preliminary game meets Ed Shuler In 9 S70.000 Jackpot game. Mil-ton Belie, emcee. PARE. 11:30 pm. (4). Ed Sullivan win appear to debate Parr on bis prectioes ot emiSoying talant Attorney Mtoris Erast, ' me Phyllis Oilier, Shelly Berman, Genevieve and singer Earl Wrlghtson are also sdieduled > appear. (Color) RADIO CHAMPIONSHIP nCBT, 10:05 p.m. Floyd Patteraon-Ingemar Jo-sson heavyweight championship fight from Miami Beach (Convention Hall on ABC radio. Howard Coaell and Lea Kdter Paar Guarantees the ExeJiange Will Not Be Friendly With Sullivan NEW YORK (UPD-The seconds for Jack Paar and Ed Sulli-qui meet today to lay down the rules of hwwr by which the two stars will stage their duel of words on television tonight. ★ ★ ★ 'If people. around the country nt to stay awake for this,” Paar said, ‘Til guarantee it wlU not be a friendly debate. I don't want Sullivan before the debate. I don't want to give him a chance to aoften me up. At the moment I’m not ao crazy about Ed SulU- Big 700-Pound Cannon Stolon ... but How? NJ. (UPI) — H y« I to ran Into a 999- -Today's Radio Programs- WjBBOb SBtoF^wFl WIBM WJBK, IMwrt a. Lm WV^ arort* itaa-WA, tsroawur wwj, BMlew Oat* m tiaa-wwj. Pto* waiiM •sch: ' HF" WJBK. R«VI. UiOMT tiss-wja, Nnr*. uaqnr ■SJKEi” sss’.xs.ks* vomnsT BSOttNTio Baws.w Hns-WJR, K«rt But wwj, mv*. ifiNi* ssftjrsr** SKRrJX,. mto-wpon. oboL zHr* •sssfiTsur visa. KUO WC4a.»jjro ^ litA-Jfnm, STOW*,, litob lies-wjn, tum i*r Mwt* wnoN. if*«i. oiMB votansT smanoan zMs-wja. Btvi. r*m m-mm, umum ate urn wm. t*B*-^ itous liW-WA Ompowt* WPOK, Jtnj Olam liaoWFON, Otom. H*vi Find Poor Housing for 1 of 6 Famiiies WASHINGTON (UP!) - ITie Census Bureau reports that one out of every six American famillea lived last year in dilapidated housing or tadeed full plumbing facilities. Nevertheless, housing in this country improved appreciably in the 1956's. There were^ the cMef con-cloBlons of a report released tonday on the 1990 hoosbig eea-■u, taken ahMg with the pop-Blathm count last spring. The bureau found that 83 per cent — or five oiit of six — ot all occupied nondllapidated housM and apartments contained M plumbing facilities. In 1960 the ration was 64 per cent or just under two-thirds. UFE HAS A LIFT — The American Toy Fair in New York is a boon for kids and manufariur-era alike. For the kiddies, it’s a chance to have fun with new toys. For the toy manufacturers, it offers first-hand information on which toys AT rbaUlM the youngsters will want Santa to bring them at Christmas. Sharon Schaefer, 8, of Astoria, Queens, is having a bouncing good time on a TV News and Reviews Sullivan Is Sure to Lose in Tonight's Big Match no "great TV dMaUe" be-fw^ the two high-powered payment of guest Paar’s "Tonight” show on NBC-TY nt 11:30 p-m. (Poatlac time ■ ona hour after a preHmfnary batda between Floyd Patterson and ^emar Johansson for the worlds henvyweight b e z ing ehaflapionship In Miami Beach. ★ ★ ★ SuUlvan’s representative Robert Preckt, meets with Paul Orr, named by Paar as hia aecond, at 11:30 a.m. to imq> out detailed ground rules for the debate sure wantage. i meeting of the seconds take place on neutral ground in the office of publiriier Bennett Cerf, of the TV show. “What’s My Line," who was tiffined moderator for the debate. By FRED DANZiO NEW yets to star in a one-hour musics' ’O'Halloran’s Luck.” A4 44 4 Carney’s lude was all bad in this NBC-TV special, based on Stephen Vincent Benet’s story, withj^c by Dav)d Saxon, lyrics by Diane Lanqwrt and Peter Farrow. The songwriters displayed a pat knowledge of cemtemporary musi cal asaentials that now lock in tbe flavor of/Nir Broadway stage suc-ceaaes.j^ their iqqdlodion lacked cHigtoanty, b o u n c e,. full-bodied lightness and style. Oomeriicut’s new state turnpike was used by 40,356,371 vehicles in 1969, Its second year. • A 99i2J)09«aiiBt stodipUe of diamonds is in the U.S. DepaitaeM of Agricalture’s storage bins, ato qtiired in bartering ^surplus tom cippt for strategic matertala. Woman Tortured by Agonizing ITCH T/ky**n.Tkmt/Mmda m*w w»mdtrtnmt.SMi>i rmkafpy,"wriUiMrt.* tMimret of Taginal rtecal ifche ckalnag* rath SE"— WhU* it •uoam nw, inuu«i w issst'ss^sx, Belch! ttaa hidlgasUMi I TIoms Fastor farUMI*k*ralinMi|(WiKU-«SIM. hU matralin 3 ttMi ■■ Mck itMMk aciSHs I* tm sl—W M row liiihi itoSlw Utnti. Stt BELL-ANS taSW • rtIM. 35* *t 4nMl . By EARL WILSON MIAMI BEACH—A particularly fascinating rumor heard around the fight crowd here is that gambling will eotne under attack In Nevada. I give It to you for what It’s worth, which may not be much. It’a been heard often, but Nevada performers are re- ■ portedly encouraged now because Atty. Oen. Bobby Kennedy’s gunning for the nation’a bad boys. It’s a aearey story to lagit buatnasa paopte with millioiui sunk in tha gambUng templea. Aetors wince at the rumor. Many top entertainers depend on the so-called "To ^k-wlth-you-money” from Laa Tegaa ‘ ~ GET OUT DEBT! WITHOUT A LOAN CONSOLIDATE and Arrange te Pay AH Your Bills Post Due or Not . . . 9 EED9SISS3I One Weekly Payment poys all your bills, you moy avoid garnishments and repossessions and keep yoiur good credit. Debt protection insurance included. No cosigners needed. Michigan's largest credit Management Company. BUDGET AID ASSOCIATION, ING. DOmr BE CONFUSED WITH IMITATOIS ... DEAL WITH MKHIOAN'S LAMEST COMPANY 1011W.H9roi FE 40961 Naabsr Pontiac Ckamhsr ci Commmeo It’S named that because four weeks at $10,000 to $20,000 a week enables them to use that crude expression frequently. Anyway, Las Vegas will probably bet you WILSON that It’ll never happen. ★ ★ ★ A remarkable Chinese hootobeat — medera daetfu, worth $140,099 which most be towed as It has no motors — Is docked hero, tbe property of iiUy B1bm» owner of the NT pnb, "JUly’a.” Yho boat (“JlUy’s Ten”), doekod aerooo from the Eden Roe, has a round bed and gold bathroom flztarea ~ and yon have to take year sheea off when yon enter. ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN NEW YORK . . . The Bits Bros., at ttie Broadway International, are getting $15,000 a week, highest In the club’s history - - • OarMlne r nedy*s getting a camel from producer Joe Levine; It’ll go to the Washington zoo... Carole Brnnett re-signed with Oarry Moore for next TV season at donUa the old salary. Arteae fronds busted Helen Bayes* attendanca record at at the Palm Bead! Playhouse ... ' BABL*B PBABLS: Proqfeiity Is that short period between the final Installment and the next jrarchaae. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A sdmtlst claimed that he’s crossing a kangaroo with a horse, so TV coyboysTl have a place to bide extra guns. WISH FD SAID THAT.' Adult education will continue Just as long as children need help with their homework. A visiting Latin said hi* government’s changed hands ao often recently that *1 don’t know from day to day vriiethcr rm a tourist or an exUe.” that’k a9>lf brother. ^ St ErF-OPENING fACrs ABOUT HOm BIAUTY THAT PAYS FOR ITSllf MURM STONE IMMM FrwCost Stoot AppM Ovw Aoy Sorfoie Mi op tb* d«lian yao ssv* by •nding everlasting beauty ENDS HOME REPAIRS FOR EVER ^NoMoMyDowH Call For Fm Estiiiti for hemaa and businatsas in OaUand County. FE 4-2575 ALSO CALL US FOR: • ATTIC lOOMS • ADDITIONS • MCtlATION ROOMS • lATHROOMS • ALUMINUM SIDING oFORCHiS • KITCHIN RIMOOILINO ^ oSARAOn AND RROZIWATI •GiNIRAL RIMOOaiNi miiwEST biulders 71B Wdsf Huron Shoot ^ iHiR^ V-nrD THE iONTIAC PRE6S. MONDAY. MAACH 13, 1901 iittittiiii A Lcntep Gttldcpogt . ' * Parents Taught Girl to Use HerWilll Wood Preservatives N in Swine Crates FARGO, N.D. (UPl) — Wood ' (•■ I tlK most crucial lie came not when end I were still poor )qt long after sacct wliea a dots ]pr told me ti>at| without pii ftiediate operation odds of Wsviving a ViciOttS fOTTOi W high blood, pm- ’ When I was tin my late teem, my father lost pis job. He and my mother had a little money saved, and they deddpd to open a small was a wonder-ook. Ste kA«d to feed people, always told us. •‘Nevereum anyone away hungfry." : jt was on the Vest Cdast — 3.- R miles frmMrt. Gi husband and child rm. There ens no time to send for them. decision was solely mine. trAnd I was afraid. rWth the tear came a terrihl yaandog for my mother. No mat-^ how old we arer in a oisia the need for 0>e mother's comforting touch returns. EUaUEMTAL FAITH .^looking bssjt. I see that whal-1 am now was for the moot part created and molded by this bee for Him was elemental. She l&ade no bargains. She merely en-hnisted herself and her brood to His loving care. ^ ’Since her philoaophy appUedT par-tkularly to nonpaying guests, the te^uran^failed. ^ Wheal it became clear that my father urgently needed a change of air. we salvaged wliat we could from- 4he restaurant for a down payment on a amall fann in the POOR LAND Our land was too poor lor farming. The alternative was to take 1]bat was the beginning o( Gros-singer’s. Now, lying in the bo^ital bed. _ remembmd how this past Labor Day — 43 years later — we had boused and fed ISOQ guests. “We’re By hunger i mean physical pangs alone. To Mama, butter extended to the heart and the q^t. tea at the tars a( the ceatary herkiag a bas-ea against oppres-«1m. Oar scaaty posiiessisas la-Haded two Irrasares — my la-JSier’s prayer shawl sad the fsm-ify BlMe. * We settled on '^lew York’s lower Cist Sde where home was a squalid tenement. My father, a gentle, Imdly man, bewildeiml by the iKW world, worked im a sweat shop for a very small salary. There wasmevpr enough to eat. ,Beii« the eldest chUd. the lire to hdp the family made me restless. At 13, as much as I loved Bchod, I took a job making button-Irom 7 in tbe morning at night. /?U TO NIGHT SCHOOL My mrther baud my job, al-Uiou^ we desperately nee^ my earnings. “You mustn’t lon^ about your education, Jennie,’ would remind me. In the Orthodox Jewish home, usually the father is the a nee gleaming. But Mama igrlCt respect-^lor knowledge- **Oiily through leandag raa horomo what God hu mcsuit as MIMEOeRAPHING SERVICE Bulletins, Letters, etc. FAST SERVICE! Quistuui LitmtHrc/Sales M OoUaad |t 4-RUl I worind by day atel I It was quiet in thg hospital room. ’There wa» a sudden wannth i '' in me, a resurgence of the that Mama bad coaxed to life In me when I was a child. In my heart. I could hear her voice; ••God kmws M geography, male. He is everywhere. Put childhood. And ft would act through this crisis. What eras It Mama used to say. **Of all God’i tures, we alone ate blessed with wiU power.’’ As the years went by, and my husband aad 1 worked hard ta hmid up Groeslagee's. there were ttaneo whea 1 Jmd wanted to relax. to be Iniy, te step worry- But some inner drive kept nag-0j«,a't me. And that liight, in tbe hospital room, I suddenly realized |!wha1 tt it s A SUDDEN WARMTH It was will power. My adlldiad not allowed me to give up. My will had nourished itself on the hardships and discipUnes my Marriage licensed J. Pronsin. U Ham WlUU«^r« Msr, r vircil Hftftkvpf. aahv ■hhrmih. vMymtav' bftm vod jMqociliM B. tuwrt. BtrUev wta-if^a.T'c.ssR’sa Divorce Decrees Rictasrtf O. fraa ----jm < cliMB a. frool nkUU J. ti Truths J. I Wilms L. fl La^t*ft« T D II ImotcM' Mtrr A. Jrrrv L. DsrHM I Msrr i. Bsrhsrs M. Jscktm . JorMbr I Ctssr ___JohD R Rrll* Douflsa Aiutln om OsU L. aoldrr rsm BsrI aoisuder Wn Th«odor« S. Jrnlith fraw .OrlsBd >*ms om LsvrcDce O. Sn>su >m Jsmei E. Hsrststu J from SsIlT A Brsdlrr B Jodi* Hsrmon im Tbonss M. EdvsM* Iron Bdv. J. BsrtbMU ron Dotorss C. Ssrolt MB OtBc Mtraclc om Robort M. Wstfs om BOTtrlr A. Dosb mutsP. AUorMB ismes P. SUTsai it NEW LOCATION CURT’S APPLIANCES SPECIAL- RECONDITIONED Cart's AspliBBM CUat Oar Owa Fatls’* Fret Home Dtmonstrotion—OR 4-1101 Within 25 Mils Rsdius ComrM# Psrta aaS nosair Ssrsiss sa An CImaen W* tn-L WBAT WB AOTCariSC rse YOUR INTEENATIONAL CHAaCB Wc Sstslct BBS StMk Paris tar All Makss NEW HOSES Braided cloth, all rubber. (No Plastic c YOU SAVE *2.55 Exekongt with Your Old Rtutabit Hom Ends •4.95 ewn imiiUKES rsetssr AalhsftosS WhIU Oaskr The opmtion is over, a year In the past, and although recovery chbrophenol or creosote may be toxic to swine coming li have acquired a s(dritual sedative. It is to try to fUget myaelf in thinking of others. This UM of one's will, but with practice, it gets easier. TUESDAY - W. E. Haywood tells how he learned the power of and prayer when he and hit son were lost and near death in Dismal Swamp in Virginia. (Ospyrifht IMt) Contributions Buy Headstone for a Stranger GOLDISOBO. Jf C. IR- The In acripUon on- the grave heqttohme reads, “A Stranger Who Wanted to Live in (toldsboro.” This was found out during ex-. erlments condqcted at North DakoU Agricultural College by Dr. I. A. Schipper. ScUpper said •ertous becauM more shippera are heae preservati^ wooden farrowing crates. The hreservatlves toxic if used on freshly cut wood and have a more harmful effect on grave. As his s(^ spread, mspeopla contributed smtll amounts of mooey which wera deposited in a bank, and later used •buy a headstone for his grave. bag back to Goldsboro. Because he had no job, the only place he could find lodigiiig was the Salvation Army. Even there shelter was limited to overnight stays. Last winter on one of visits, Calvert, died. The city provided, a coOin and A survey made by tho U.S. Da-purtment of ^Interior In UOR re-I that Rh^ cent of all llahep and 3 pw cent of an hunters are 65 years of Age or mors. TWO DOCTORS ON DUTY • ASSURE YOU IMMEDIATE SERVICE EYE EXAMINATIONS FILLING PRESCRIPTIONS EYE GLASS REPAIRS PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER , __________________ FE 2-0291 _ -5:30 Daily Mon. or Fri. Eve. by Apmt. A. A. Milter, 0 D. — P. C. Feinbarg, O.D. of additives... 1 Cuts down on engine wear 2. Saves you money on repairs 3 Keeps your engine at the * peak of its power PURER with Tri-tane At no extra cost Never before has there been a gasoline like this. PURE Firebii^ Super with Tri-tene gives you benefits you just couldn’t get in a gasoline before. It contains an exclusive new combination of additives that reduces piston ring wear, reduces preignition and compression loss, increases spark plug life, virtually eliminates the need for carburetor cleaning and adjustment. Try a tankful of PURE Firebird Super with -------Tri-tane. Don’t expect miracles. Do expect a better running car, better tuned to perform under all conditions. And greater economy, too. New PURE Firebird Regular If your car runs all right on “regular,” chances are it will run even better, farther, on PURE Firebird Regular. You get many new benefits including PURl^’sn^ anti-stall additive. No extra cost for either Supfer or Regular. Rre up with Pt/RE Finiird.., H BE SURE WITH PURE TJh» Weathei U.'i. WMtktr l^ka r»rt»il , THE PONTIXC 119th YEAR ★ ★ ★ > ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. MONDAY. MARCH 13, J9«l-^2 PAGES 'Judge, We Ask Dismissal' HOFFA WOBKS WITH OOUNSEL-TeamsJpr Pifsiek-nt James Hoffa (right». and his chief counsel James B. Haggerty of Detroit, go through papers in Orlando. Fla. Today, Hoffa s attorneys are l?efore U. S. Judge Dozier Devane in Orlando presenting a aeries of motions, including 2 Area Markets Robbed Get$12,000 in Holdups Anti-Commies Want Kasavubu to Head Group In Meantime, Mobutu Forces Start Drive and Oriental Boss Is Out Missing Boy Found; Death Puzzles Police ones asking dismissal of tlic federal charges against Hoffa of mail fraud, motions for bills of particulars and other legal moves relative to the charges. There are 12 counts, including the mi.suse of $300,000 of union funds. JFK to Discuss Latin America Will Unveil Alliance for Progress Program at White House Tonight Snow, Tornadoes Buffet Wide Area TECUMSEH (iflPl—The gunshot death of farm boy John Paul Marsh puzzled police today despite apparently extensive evidence. John, 13, who had been missing from'his home, in this small Southern Michigan town since March 5, was found shot to death in a wooded ravine Sunday. Near the body lay a revolver that state police said two neighbor boys admitted having taken from John’s ___ ♦home and hiding under a Spy Trial Opens in London Today WASHINGTON tAP» - President Kennedy today unveils plans for the "alliance for progress' with Latin America. He has de- _________________„„ scribed his announcement in ad- 40-mile-an-hOUr gales on vance as a major statement Lakes Huron, Erie, St. Clair Kennedy will make the state- Michigan, mrnt midway through a receptioni ... , . .f at the White for Utin- winds and tornado condi- American diplomat! and digni- lions that threatened Southern laries starting at 5 p.m. 'Illinois and Indiana during the The President plans to follow night shifted east into the Ohio up with a special message to Valley. A Weather Bureau spokw- From Our News Wires TANANARIVE, Malagasy Republic (;Pi—Anti-Communist piolitical leaders of the Congo have agreed to replace their centrally controlled parliamentary government by a confederation of semi-independent states; headed by Joseph Kasa-' vubu. The action of the political conference which end-A new snowstorm rocketed into the Upper Midwest; Sunday, raised hopes in todaypoweredby winds expected to reach gale strength;Le^,pQj^j^jjjg j^at the way chaigcd today that a spy ring of on the thawing Great Lakes. been opened to an five persons, headed by Michigan and Wisconsin braced for up to a half-foot ^ recent of snow and the U.S. Weather Bureau warned of sleet and snow acewnpanyingf-------------------------- Police said they could not determine immediately whether John had shot himself or been shot by someone else. The boy, stepson of Alex Glenn, Two AmOriCanS Among |Unemplo\’cd laborer, and one of 5 Charged With Selling children in the family; - . , 11 been shot once in the chest. Secrets to Moscow ! LONDON (UPli - ('ongress Tuesday implementing the program. All but two of Washington's Latin-American envoys are invited to the reception. The two not invited: The Cuban and Dominican Republican an»-bassadors to the Organijiation of American Statea, The United States has broken off diplomatic relatkms with both those countries. Kenendy' is c.\pecrted (o refer to Cuba in the ^speech, but officials said the rfnfdiasis wrill be on a 1'. S. pledge for continuing help for natiohn which help themstdves." In a campaign speech last October he used this description: alliance of nations whth a common interest in freedom and economic advance in a great common effort to develop the resources of the entire hemisphere, strengthen the forces of democracy, and widen the vocational and educational opportunities of every person in i the Americas." ★ ★ ★ Wants Aid ioi Teacher Salaries WASHINGTON (API—The ha of a teachers' union, testifying in favor of the administration's federal aid to education bill, day: "Bricks without brains constitute national folly." "I cannot emphasize enough the necessity of havii% a portion of federal aid appropriations mandated for teachers salaries," said! Cart J. Megel. president AFL-CIO American Federation of Teachers. "It is foolhardy.", Mcgal said in testimony prepared for a hearing of the Senate Mucation subcommittee. "to consider aid for education only In the area o< school construction, for the teacher and the pupil are the keys to education in the final analysts. Rep. Roman C. Pucinski. D-Dl, Sunday made a proposal to allow inewne tax deductions on tttMoa paid to parochial schools as a substitute for a loan program for nonpublic schools. Puefoski said he had written to Mortimer M. Caplin, director of ' the Internal Revenue . Service, asking him to reverse a 1954 ruling that such tuition cannot be claimed as a dedtaction on federal income tax. Pucinski. a Roman Catholic, sah) a reversal of the nilii« would eliininate further debate over the constitutionality of federal aid to church achools. man said the winds appeared to losing strength as the low pressure center broadened. Tornadoes Sunday s«raped Mlsaouri and Arkansas and hovered over Southern lUlaois. The other persons at a West Plains, Mo., prayer meeting. At least S3 Three Nebraska teen-agers were killed last night when their anto-moblle slid into the path of a truck on « slushy Nebraska 92 west of Wahoo. The truck driver was not injured. ♦ Rain shifted inland from Vancouver Bay and Western Washington State, lacing the Rocky Mountains with mixed showers and snow at higher elevations. Showers also pelted most of the Northern Great Plains. Thunderstorms blanketed a wide area south and east of the Ohio Valley and Lower Mississippi Valley east to the AtlanHc Coast. Sunday's tornadoes scraped a 150-mile border belt in Missouri and pummeled at least six widely separated northwest communities. Arkansas Home Show to Open GRAND RAPIDS ifi-About 1* exhibitors Irom Grand Rapid! m Weat Michigan had more than diqdaya ready Monday tor « ing the weekJong Greater lIlclF igan Home Show at CMc Andifor-itim. The 23rd annual ahoit tn^peetg WIiaoa, Kart ibout 50,000 vialtow over the U|fek. ’ Police Kill Man in Act of Stabbing This warfare has plagued the Central African ^territory since it won independence from Belgium last ‘summer. posing as a Canadian citizen, stole vital naval secrets and transmitted them to Moscow from the cellar of a shabby suburban bungalow. The trial opens today. Clhe FBI in Washington has identified two of the defendants as Americans I. At the Bar of .lustice in the No. 1 Court of the UidUtailey. three men and two woif^ went pn trial In Britain’s most sen-senational spy case since Klaus Maj. Gen. . Joseph Mobutu's forces have captured three com- "rt Wm’LbbS tewS.l.t. I. I«». wife in her parked automobile, mmistry announced today, ;,\ii (|,p defendants pleaded inno- Gerald T. O’Hem was shot byj Mobutu's long-expected drive cent, a jury of 12 men was chosen Policeman Robert McPherson. ; ,.oupled with reports from traditional speed of Brit- MePherson and his partner, I attorney gen- Howard Day. were patrollng VVn' A"®*"** Liaenga g.^ Reginald they heard the horn of an auto- ! out as boso of j Manningham - Buller. personally mobile blare. They invesligatedj Oriental Provtnee, which is in jopened the case for the crown, and saw a man sitting In thej Mm hands of followers of slain >sl e •Premier Patriee Lumumba. stabbing a woman who ewered w’ith blood. | i-jjp announcement said one Lu- The officers ordored the |mumbist company was trapped in roan, O'Hem, from the cari the town of Mondombe. about 300 He rearhed into his pocket, told ImUes southeast of C^uilhatvllle. the officers, “You’ll have . . Snow-Rain Mixture to End by Tonight The weatherman tells us today's mixture of rain and snow will change to snow before ending tonight. Tuesday will be mostly cloudy with a high of 38 predicted. Temperatures for the next five days will average 2 to 5 degrees above thf normal high oS 43 and normal iwf of 27. Wednesday will be warmer. Thursday is expected to be colder, with warmer temperatures rctvirnlng Friday. Preciidtatlan will total one-half to three-quarters of an Iwh in rain or showers, mostly Thursday and Saturday. Morning southeasterly winds at 14 miles per hour will become northerly tonight. I Me lim. The woman was identified as Grace O’Hem, the man's estranged wife. She suffered several superficial wounds. Police said O’Hem, in his early 20s. had gone Sunday night to an East Detroit restaurant and tempted to get his wife to leave with him. She refused. Later she left the restaurant and found O'Hem waiting in her car. He forced her to drive him around, and finally ordered her to stop the car in front of a party store at Gratiot and Wildwood in Roseville. When O'Hem began stabbing her, she managed to sound the horn with her foot. Mobutu's force of 1,200 troops then pushed on to the town of Ikela, 40 miles to the south, and captured and disarmed two more companies. Dispatches from the| bush country said his troops had! This place. Sir Reginald told the captured the Lumumbist strong- jury and Britain's Lord Chief He unfolded to the rfcuil a cloak-and-dagger story of how British counterespionage agents followed a winding trail through London’s streets. It brought them at last, he .said, I a cottage in. the suburb of Ruislip occupied by a bookseller named Peter John Kroger and his ife Helen. The pa\ ine. In the River KaUIn marshland area, is less than half a mile from the family home. Playmates found -lohn's body. One of them was -lohn's step-hrothcr, Alex Walter (ilenn, 18. They ran and told their parents. John’s body lay face up. The arms were folded across the chest. A sixth grader in school. John last was seen at a movie theater in Tecumseh the afternoon March 5, Police and National Guardsmen had searched vainly for him for days. State police said that at one time during the search for John the boy’s parents said he might have gone off on his own on a trip to Kentucky to visit relatives. THEY SOLD BOTTLFJl John's tragic story began with a movie matinee. He and his father sold bottles to get the 50 cents admission for John, police said. That was the last seen of the boy. John's teachers spoke well of Hm. One of them said be was of the best all-around^stu- 5et Roadblocks for Bandits on West Side Employes at Terrorized Grocery; Escape Car Found by Golf Course Police roadblocks were set on Pontiac’s west side today after the second of two grocery store robberies in less than 36 hours. More than $12,000 was [taken in the holdups, the 1 first at the Kroger St o r e iin Miracle Mile Shopping _ _ _ IT 7 i Saturday night, the vV^tSOn ASK second at Tom’s Northwood p, . . J I Market, 888 Orchard Lake DlSiniSSd.i Avenue, this morning. The two crimes may have been Ah attempt to have mui-dcr and connected, police said, conspiracy charges against Mrs. Nelle Lassiter and Gordon Watson JOHN PAUL MARSH Lassiter, dentH" in her rlaaa. The mother. Mrs. Agnes Glenn, described John as a normal boy. Dr. J. H. Ahronheim, a Jackson pathologist who performed an autopsy, said the bullet missed John's heart but penetrated a lung, causing him to bleed to death. He may have lived about an hour alter being shot, the doctor said. dismissed was to be made by defense attorneys today in Wayne County Circuit Court, Detroit. The hearings will be In the courtroom of Circuit Judge Joseph (J. Rashid, who has already sentenced three men to life Imprisonment In the April I9SA slaying of Panin (Bill) Lassiter, wealthy Royal Oak auto dealer. Laxter’s widow and Watson, his former business as.sociate, are accused of plotting the auto deal's death. A defense plea that Rashid be removed as trial judge on grounds of bias because of statements made in sentencing the trio of killers was turned down earlier in the month by th'e State Supreme Court. Mira. iJisaiter lives at IMM Beverly Rd„ Beverly Hills, and Watson In Ixs Angeles. They are free on bond. Both Mrs. Lassiter and Walson have denied the charges and sisted in their motion to quash them that the prosecution ‘in tionally suppressed and withheld’ testimoy at their examination which would have "conclusively demonstrated " their innocence. hold. Gen. Victor Lundula, head of Lumumbist forces, had sent reinforcements to the garrison at Ikela to protect Stanleyville from an attack from the south, In addition to the threat from Mobutu, Lundula faced a stiff task in trying to stop his army and gendarmerie from rampage. The Stanleyville treasury is reported nearly empty and of-'ficials are worried how to pay their soldiers and security forces. Justice Lord Parker, who chose to preside personally over the case, contained a powerful radio transmitter hidden under. the kitchen floor Will Study Langer DEARBORN (UPD-The University of Michigan has announced plans to reduce vacation times and registration periods at the Dearborn center to tighten up its tri-mestPr schedule and make the fullest possible use of facilities. disappeared. This Way, Folks, Into Stony Creek Park Mackie to Speak Dr. Ahronheim estimated thel. time of death as about 6 p.m. on tO ^OUHly L/eillS "" '"’’laf Meet Tonight County Democrats will mix bus!-jness with pleasure tonight at their quarterly delegate meeting at the I Pontiac Central High School auditorium. The pleasure will come in the form of a talk from their party’s spring election standard bearer. State Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie, w’ho’ll report and future highway construction plans tor the state. it will be MaeUe's last appearance before the full Oakland County Democratic Commlltee before his name goes on the stale ballot April s in an attempt to win a second four-year term. The business pai1 of the agenda will follow Mackie's presentation, which County Chairman James M. Ginn said will be open to the public. News Flash St. Frederick drew Ann Arbor University School today as Ita Class C regional opening round opponent at Vpatlantt. Hie Rams will play Wednesday at < p.m. A victory would send St, Fred against Whiteford Friday. The title game will be Saturday. The loweat temperature recorded in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a-m. was 34 degrees. At 1 p.n the temperature reading was 34. TV amd Badio ProgmoM. PAKK OONSTRUenoN UNDER WAY - Heavy equipment and a large crew of warkmen ar^ being used for the ftrat time at the Stony Greek dfetropolitan Park developroem three miles northeast of Rodfiester. A $273,000 bridge hnd dam is the first major constriction project at the 4.000-acre park site owned by the HuroiFClinton Metropolitan Authority. The structure, which is being built south of the 28-Mile Road entrance to tb4 park, will separate two artificial I^es and carry traffic into the park when it open8 to the public in two years. The Stony Credc development will be the second largest recreational facility run by the authority when it is completed. r Pontiac and state police combined In the road search at • a.m. today after two bandits, both carrying pistols and wearing Army surplus clothes, their faces conceal^ by scarfs, terrorized three employes at Tom’s market, threatening two of them with death and tying up two, inc luding one woman, Eddie Caudill, 30, of 28216 Del-ton St., Madison Heights, the store manager, said the Sunday receipts, amounting to "at least a. couple thousand dollars" were stolen at gunpoint shortly after the 8:30 a.m. opening time. CAR STOLEN Caudill'a 1939 Pontiac automobile was stolen in the escape, but found abandoned at 9:10 a.m. on Golf Drive next to Pontiac Municipal Golf Course, a half mile from le store. Apparently the pair had transferred rto a second get-away car the golf course. This probability complicated the search, since there was no description of a set:-ond car. Two employes of the Kroger’s market at Miracle Mile had just locked up the store at 10 p.m. Saturday when they were surprised by a lone masked bandit armed ith a chrome-plated revolver. * it * One of the victims, Roland Barrett, 27, assistant store manager, told state police he and a stock-boy, Leroy Brooks, 19, were getting into Barrett’s car in the parking lot in front of the store when the gunman ordered them back inside. The desperado, described as about JO .veara old, 6-foot eight, and weighing 100 pounds, then ordered the pair to lie down on the floor Inside the supermarket. He scooped approximately $1,300 out of a cash register, and, apparently not aatisfled, ordered Barrett to unlock the store’s safe, which the assistant maa-ager did. "He said he had a ‘buddy waiting outside in a car’ and not to try anything, ” said Barrett. The safe yielded over $10,000 including several checks. State Police said the bandit was in the store almost a full hour. He placed money and checks in a pillowcase, told his two victims to stay on the floor for five (Continued on Page 2. COl. 31 Village Voters Go to Pollls as Weather Plays Dirty The polls in 18 areajcommunities will be open until 8 p.m. today for voters casting their ballots in the annual village elections. Few village residents were expected to show up at the polls in many nearby communities because of poor weather conditions and a lack of races. A large percentage are running unopposed. However, good turnouts were forecast in Rochester, and^ Franklin, Metamora Imlayk City where lively infjifigns for council posts were waged right up to election time. Romeo residents may vote twice todiy. Besides the regular village election, voters iretlle Romeo Community School District are betng asked to approve a three-miU op-eratloaal tax on a special school of wood Creek Farms will be Mked to approve m sewer contract with FurmliigtoN Towushlp and the p(ropoaed purcluiae of the Village Greea wiU be decided by Fnwklfai voters. Although only one slate j villages, the entry < 8tic|gar candidates remaiM as a ne slate jt < tMOIotsiinM t ot wnte-in voter Interest. Q>i|np)ete election returns urO bs reported tomorrow in Ttia Poadac b THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 18, im UAW to Delay Blue Cross Rulingl LANSING (f* — Offi^s of tw.'ol Court to conduct a hearing March United Auto Workers locals in De-!?! on *ky Frank Blackfoid, stalei troit today started court action insurance commissioner, should aimed at holding up a decision not be prevented from making a; on proposed increases in Blue decision on the nnatter until new I Cross and Blue Shield rales. , hearings are held. j They ukti the State Siprerae BtecUaid already has aaa- i ---------------------------- darted brariags la Detroit. Laa . idag and Oiaad Rapids oa re-/Irf I tiaesis of Blue Cross and Mae /iXl iKIiiiCI SMeld lor rale laereaan, ol tl I _ _ _ , Yj, per eeni and IM per rent, re- lAf in^ HnUaT *pccilvley. u granted Hie.v aauld 1 WY mo llKJllyJl I c«n „Wr«»eni HfA mHIkHi aa- ! hr Pictures Paul aiwr. president of UAWj ■ Loral 3M and one of the plaintiffs! Art Miller. Pontiac Press photog-in the suit, charged that earlier rapher. won two honorable men-; hearings held on the propoMd rate lions in the feature category at | hikes for the hoapitalixation and the l.^h annual Press Photography;health care plans were -merely Conference at Michigan State Uni-|(onims to propagandize the pub-versity Saturday. jlic," ms awards came for tw-o pic- joining him In the suit was Mike tures taken tor The Press last Marasco, vice preaidenl of UAW fall. One showed a little girl greet- Local 7. ing Gov, Nclsan| Blackiford said he was uncertain ^Rockefeller ofjwhat action he would tidie until "4! New York as he < he had consulted with state attorneys. He Indicated last week that a decision on the rate changes would be issued He acknowledged that he had relUsed a Marrh i reqaest from a greap 11 arrived here dur-ing' the campaign. . . ^ It was entitled. > |-Hi. Mr. Gover-SeifTJp.d 1 TV other ^ vwBs 'a picture of ■y o u n g woman Jeodling off in the weather. It entitled. MILLEK "Cool Beauty.” Four idiotagraphers were double first prize winners in the big dties'the hospitalization and health care class, and one small cities photog-j plans, but that they had the sup-raphw copped three first places jpiMl of union locals. M'NCHBON WITH HART — This group of Oakland County officials returned home this weekend after two days in Washington in an attempt to speed up funds for puWic works projects in the county in order to provide more jobs for the unerai^yed. Here they pose with Michigan Sen. Philip A. Hart (right, seated), bratrd (left to right* are: Robert McGinnis, dilef engineer for the drain commission; Drain (tommlssioner Daniel W. Barry; Robert P. Allen, assistant corporation counsel: John' G. Semann, the county’s legislative agent; Harry W. Horton, DPW Board secre-. tary; Sidney H. Woolner, Housing and Hone Finance Agamy official; R. J. Alexander. DPW director; and Hart. Mai^llag: HUand M. Thatcher, road commission chairman: Thomas H. O'Don-ogiiue, chairman of the board of supervisors’ drain committee; Paul Van Roekel, commission highway engineer; former state highway conunissioner and govenKV Murray O. VanWagoner; Delos Hamlin, chairman of the board of luperviaort, and Willis M. Brevrer, coordinator of road projecU for the road commlaslon. Ni ,_____________________________ and won another 1-3-3 in sp^. First place wiiuiers in the big cities cstegory included: A1 Deneau, Detroit News, pictorial and pi^cdio; Doug Fulton. Ami Arbor News, spot news and picture-and-story feature; Corwin Wherrett, Battle Creek Enquirer A News, portraits-personalities and family interest: and James Kilpatrick, Detroit News, sports and sequences. Other Ug cities first pisee wks- Oeerge VlalHBee, Battle Craek Let Line. Midland Daily News, won first in portraitfolio, picture-story feature and sequence categories in the small cities competition and Norris Engle of the Meant Pleasant Times News capture first, second and third in sports. Dave Cron, Monroe Evening Npws, won first in spot news and gsaeral news: and Bill Michaels, Grand Haven Tribune, first in family interest. Inmate Stabbed ta Death at Marquette Prison MARQUETTE (M-A 3S-year-old inmate of the Michigan State Branch Prison was stabbed to death Sunday night by a n o t h e prisoner with a homemade knife. Junes Davis, who was serving _ 13- to 35-year sentence for armed robbery, was stabbed three tiroes while waiting tor the prison movie to start at a prison assembly hall, officials said. Warden Raymond J. Buchkoe said another ininate, Ernest Rodriquez, 26, had admitted stabbing Dsvls In an argument ever cigarettes. Buchkoe said Rodriquez told him Davis had intercepted some cigarettes by mistake and refused to return them. The suit demands that public hearings be held “in conformity with the Isw. ” and that Blackford furniW) the plaintiffs with a complete copy of the Blue CToss-Blue Shield applications ” proper answer can be made.' Open Confab, Seek Expulsion Ministers Pushed by People to Put S. Africa Out of Commonwealth LONDON (UPl) — The British Commonwealth prime ministers conference opens today with several members seeking to expell South Africa for iu racial policies. Scheduled for early discusskm by the prime ministers was a request by South Africa for continuing membership In the coiiunonwealtt| after it switches from a constitutional monarchy under ()ueen Elizabeth to a republic on May 31. Despite open eriUclsni of Soulli Africa, observers said there is little HkeHlMiod the gevenuneot ef Prime Minister Dr. Hendrik Verwoeid would be kicked out of Should the federal government approve an emergency grants piTV gram for public works to spur the economy, Oakland County’s bid is in to get a slice of it. A delegation of county officials, headed by Delos Hamlin, chairman of the board of supervisors, returned this weekrad after two days in Washington where they sp^e of the need for a speed-up of federal funds to get sewer and water projects under way. Shoald sock grants be torth-romlng, they said, many of the But some of the prime ministers are under heavy political pressure from their people to demand South Africa’s expulsion from the commonwealth, p o t a b 1 y President Kwame Nkrumak of Ghana. Tunku Abdul Rahman of Ma laya and Sir Abubakar Balewa of Nigeria, have stated publicly they would like to see South Africa out of the commonwealth unless changes its racial policies of apartheid (separation of races). The Weather Full U.8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINIT¥ - Quite windy today with mixed snow and rain this morning changing to rain to> day and then briefly ta snow again before ending during the night. High today M, low tonight S8. Tuoeday mostly cloudy, high St. Winds oastcriy M - 35 miles becoming northerly tonight wind ralocUz H • p m OlrKtton—I_________ Bun Mtt Meodnjr ni Bun riifi Tundnr i. . .. Mood trti Monday at ]:M p.m Mpoa riaoa Timrday at t:>7 a m Tr."nl*'' fU|he«t l»mp*ratur< Lovett Irmperatura Mean temperature Weather—Mostly . Om Tear An, la raatlae Hl|htit temperature......... LovmI Umperatnre ............... Mean temperature ............... Weather—Suonyi •Bsadey't Temperatnre CheH 41 19 Memphlt 70 09 z»aiviwprig §$ 40 Mt«mi B. 70 7} .BItmva is 93 Milwaukee 16 3| Ouffale 31 36 MinneapoUt 36 }i Chkafo 36 36 MtP OrVu 76 S3 ClBct*au 64 66 New York II 16 Cleveland 46 37 Omaha 31 30 Denver 46 37 Pelliton Detroit 41 36 Phoenix Duluth ^ 60 16 Pltteburth 64 36 Jort Wjmh 13 41 Ot.^ttla M 66 O Rapida 46 II 0 maelico N II RouxhtoB 66 16 60 Marie D ll Jacktonvilhi 76 61 Traverse C, II ft .. washinfton M 43 NATIONAL WEATHEB — There wUl be light snow in the Rockies tonight srith occastonal rain Oh the north Pacific coast and 1(1 the Dakotas. In the east showers are expected in the southern states, mixed rain and snow in the Ohio valley and the middle Atlantic stata and snow in tbs hwer Lakes area and ig NewEn^aad. Seeks Emergency Funds County Bids for Grants pathy for our program and were willing to listen,” Alexander said, "nicy said they were happy to have the information.” One means to speed up sack laborers mmld be put back oa the payrolls. Talks were had with (tongress-man William S. Broomfield, R-Oakland County, Michigan Sen. Philip A. Hart, a representative of Michigan Sen. Patrick Namara, who was tied up in a committee meeting, and Sidney H. Woolner, former aide to former Gov. Williams and now commissioner ol the community facilities administration of the Hous:i gand Home Finance Agency. H. J. Alexander, drector oi the Oakland County Department of Pnbllr Works, said if the fed-oral funds were avaUable today the county couM start on |70 million worth of vnrioua wator and aewer projerto within one to three months. From Woolner. Alexander said he received one definite assurance that his office would push ahead the county’s request lor J65,-for a preliminary study of seover needs for the southwest section ol the county. SE8MON ‘ADVANTAOEOL’g’ While other ctxnmltments were icking, Alexander termed Thursday and Friday scions in the capital "very advantageous” in that "we got the county on should Congress enact any public works legislation.” A ★ ★ "They had an awful lot of sym- American Buys Gown, Gate-Crashes Oxford OXFORD, England (AP)—The {classes ran few risks of detection, American youth who got six months of Oxford education free by gate-crashing the university’s Bandits Net $12,000 in 2 Market Hotdups „(Contli!ued From Page One) minutes and left by the front door. Barrett said they did not hear car drive off. He telephoned state police at 11; 10 p.m. A roaiiblock failed to net the )bber. State police said he was wearing kid gloves and left no clues at the scene. He also wore white kerchief on his face during the holdup. Ihe bandits 1k the Tom’s holdup, one tall and the other short, had broken Into the ntora eariy this morning Ibrongh a ventllalor to the roof, then lay in oralt ta a rear room until store nuuw-ger CkndtU arrived at the store. Arriving with Caudill were Mrs. ^Ice White, 21, of 4975 Qxnstock Commerce Township, a cash-and Louis Kovanes, 507 curry St., Royal Oak. a meat cutter. OPEN! SAFE Mrs. White and Kovanes were forced to lie face dovmward on the floor behind a rear food counter while Caudill, hie life tlireat-ened, opened the safe at the front of the large market and handad over the uncounted receipts. Ax one point, one of the rob* bera pressed his gun against Ko-vanes temple as he lay on the floor and threatened to shoot because the employe hod attempted to loosen hli bounds. CoH StTMt Cloan-Up Off CHARLESTON, S.C. ID-After a series at tornadoes tore off roots, (HI out windows and feOed tree limb* in the Charleston area. Business and Professional Wonen’s dub called ott a clean-up-tbe-streets campaign. be for the federal goveriunant to grant Interest free loniw which could be repaid over the ybars from newer or water oonneetton charges. Other solutions might be partial Now that Oakland Cbunty had submitted it’a blueprint for puUic works projects, a similar plan for the six-county Southeastern Michigan metropolitan area should be presented, Alexander suggested to Hamlin, chairman of Supervisors for the Inter-County Committee which consists of supervisors from ix counties. Gets 6 Months Free Gasses Cubans Foil Embassy Attack stop Anti-Castro Band at Soviet Quarters Before Morgan Shot HAVANA (UPD—Police guards foiled an armed attack by an anti-Castro band on the Soviet Embassy residence shortly before Maj. William A. Morgan of 'Toledo. Ohio, died before a firing squad for allegedly aiding the enemies of Premier Fidel Castro, diplomatic sources reported. ★ * A The Incident sras seen as another indication of mounting op-positioa to the Orntro regime In spite of harsh rqwlsals. Observers mid that rather than dlsoonr-agtag the The sources said the attempted ttack on the Soviet Embassy i dence in swank suburban Mirii was made at 1:30 p.m. Pontiac time Saturday pight—about minutes before Morgan was executed in La Cabana prison fortress, about 5 miles away. ★ k ★ At least a dozen shots were exchanged between the pdice guard and the attackers, according to the informants. The snti-Castit>> Ites were scattered by the polioe gunfire and at least one subsequently sought asylum In a foreign embaaay, they said. university officials said today. Officially his Ingenuity was disapproved. But some of the dons secretly admired the exploit as just the sort of thing a high-spirited Oxford undergraduate might do at Cambridge. # # w The undercover “^student was bearded Alfred Raedel, 24. a Col-b i a University mathematics graduate. He bought a cap gown, and in Oxford that madp him look like any other student. No classroom door was barred to him. and no one ever asked in which college he was enrolled or whether he had paid tuition fees. ♦ a ■ a His irregular course at Oxford completed to his Satisfaction, Raedel la going on to the University of Bonn. There he will study physiology out In the open, as a properly enrolled student. Oxford officials wouldn't talk about Raedel's achievement pu^ licly. But a fellow of Merton, one of the university’s colleges, gave this explanation: ★ "Anyone can be taken to college meals as a guest oi a proper undergraduate, and in the confusion a busy dining room guests •n’t Identified too precisely. # ★ ★ 'Then as to lectures, people who go in wearing gowns aren’t checked. It would be tiresome to up every gown every day. of couroe people without gowns would be spotted. This American, it seems, was properly attired, apd that’s what counta. Three Kids Start Big Business With Peanuts KINGSTREE S. C. Ill - A little realght — and the family freer r — help three Klngstrec yoting-stars to a head start in the annual paddling of peanuts. ■i it A Long before the boiled peanut ■eason officially begins, the eons of Mr. and Mrs. Frank McGill trims the previous harveet i have started selling them. The boys, whose daib* peanut and plants Each day thc McOOl boys pool their earnlags and divide them equally among the Hilton, 10; Ted, 9: and Yancey. 8. abUity end there. From the earnings, they ^ buying a four-room house in Kingstree as rental pro|ierty for an investing Press Chiefs Blast Castro lAPA Board Declares Cuban Leader 'Main Enemy of Press' ACAPULCO, Mexico (UPD The board of directors of the Inter-American Press Association tIAPA) ended its semiannual meeting Sunday with a comtora-nation of Fidel Castro as the main enemy of the freedom of the press in the Western Hemisphere. The tkree-day meetiiig ditmlnsted by discasshMs o pre;(wrioaa state 4>f freedom ef the press In parts of the Americas — partlcDlarly In Cabs. Suppirraatea of the free prem also iras attacked in Haiti, Nle-aragua, BoUvls, Paraguy and the Deminiean Republlo. A resolution adopted by the board, went beyond the situation of the press in Cuba. Itjsaid Castro had betrayed the ho^ of the entire continent by making his government the spearhead of Communism in Latin America and endangering continental security. * ♦ ♦ The resolution was a reiteration on one adopted by the lAPA general assembly at its Bogota, Colombia. meeting last October. Ray Dta ef the Wooster (Ohio) Daily Record said Oairtro ' handing Cuba E. S. Matheson to Be Buried Wednesday DETROIT HJPI) - Services will be held Wednesday for Edmond S. Matheson, 60, gen^ manager of the Automobile Qub of Michigan, who died Saturday at Henry Ford Hospital. AAA Matheson had been hospitalized since Feb. 20 when he suffered heart attack at his home. ★ ♦ ★ He joined the auto club in 1930 and wu credited with drawing the first road map ol Wayne county- * ★ ★ Matheson was named general manager of the auto club in 1963. Services Tvill be at 9 a.m. from the Howe-Peterson Funeral Home. Jack R. Howard, president ol the Scripps-Howard newspapers, said it was "discouraging to see how press freedom has been suppressed in some countries, especially th etotalitarlan assault by Fidel Castro in Cuba.” TTie directors also approved resolutions declaring that "the free press of the hemisphere again demonstrated its unalterable defense of basic human rights by giving broad understanding and coverage to the needs and aspiration of Cuban refugees." Look Doc, No Hatl DES MOINES, Iowa (»-A four-year-trid Des Moines boy, deejdy resoitful because a peitotrician made his sick baby brother cry with necessary probing, got a pair of scissors and cut the doctor’s hat all to smithereens. Area Delegates Fighting Swainson on Stiiool Aiti A quintet of county Republicans, recently returned from the 22nd annual Citizens Conference on Ed-in Lansing, have forewarned leglslatora in Washington that the concensus of the meeting wag not support of President Kennedy’s federal aid to education program. In a sharply worded letter to Rep. Adam C. Powell, diainnan ot the House Committee on Education and Labor, the five hoped to dispel any attempts tomorrow by Gov. - John B: Swainson and I^rni M. Bartlett, superintendent of public instruction, that this was the result of the Saturday contar- Wdode, Mr. and Mre, Robert M. Sinclair of Birmingham, and Mrs. Elizabeth Rosenberg of Royal OoK-They attended the conference as debates from Oakland Cbunty. "TradHtsoally thto eoafersooe hoe taken a partlenlar edaea- The flv ecompbdning RepublV cane charged the past oonferanoe "a huge brainwash" for Firing off the letter to Powell and 10 other legialatorB and oftl-dals in Lansing and Washington, indudhig Swainson and Bartlett, were AMn iR. Balden, Mrs. Ann M. Charles, both of Huntingtai 1 sspeete ef It," Bal-m said. "Bet this year all we )t was a eoBstaat sales ' I federal old." 'No effort was mada to study any alternate solutions to our state’s educatkmal problems,’ five contended. "Instead, Gov. Berabison end Bartlett need the forum tp advance to adueathm." la CM greap, the five toM PeweB la the iattar. It eat at n delegates ware appoaadfeiad- "Presldent Kamady*e ptagram ma lookad upon aa baing nahher • partleularty desir- Thay said that if Swainson and Bartlett support the adminisUa-tkm’i fsderal aid plan, thair views adll not bs an aocurata rsflsction of the attitudes of conferenee dale- Hie Day in Birmingham Presbyterians Will Hear Talk on Latin America BIRMINGHAM - The Rev. Rob-ert C. Thorp, icttag secretary In Latin America tor the oomminlon tions of the United Preebyterian Church, will be the gueet speaker at the fifth family night Thursday at the 1^ Presbyterian Church. Aa opeahar tor the dxth program ths foUewhig Thoraday arin be Dr. J. Hervey Base, inedleal dtiaetor of the tAbad Mtmton arm I 6:30 p.ni. Rev. Thorp wiU tell ot the work being done in Guetemala City through personal ministry to university students, teaching, preaching, radio and theater actlvitlee. The Ruth Shaln Class in Interna-tlonal Aftoiis wUl be ’held tomoD row at 10 a.m. at the Cbmmunity House. With The Qaeen Ot Beevea" ever radio etotton WOFL In Ohieaga. He has authored several books and is well knoarn In the Chicago for his efforts In behalf of the nursing profession, sponsoring and organizing the arorid’s only Nurses Day parade. On March 28 the discussion ariU revolve around Laoe and the East Asian situation. George S. Cooper has been appointed to the Cranbrook Institute staff with the Utle of Instructor in physics. His duties will be concerned Roberts Drives'61 Pontiac to Victory HANFORD. Calif. (AP)-Glenn (Fireball) Roberts of Daytona Beach, Fla., won the second annual California grand national 260-mila late model stock car race at Hanford Sunday. He averaged 95.62 miles an hour. AAA Roberts led from the opening p and finished two full laps ahead of second place .Eddie Gray of Gardena, Calif. Roberta was driving a 1961 Pontiac. Third place went to/Danny Letner of Downey, Calif. ezhbMte la tfto field ef phyMeo. Cooper received bis training at the University of Detroit, Wayne Stata University and the Rochester hostltuta of Techaolocy. He was formerlj^ science editor for the Fine Arts Broadcaster. The Rev. Charles Brissette, 0. 8- M„ former national director of the Sorroarful Mother Novnna and dlractar of Novena Notes, will speak at an the Masaes Sunday at Our Lady Queen Ot Martyrs 'Smrch, Pierce and Dunbloine itraets! Father Bzteesfie haa bean a toatared apaaker tor ll yaare 4W Heater Kills Father, 2 Sons Failure to Place Call Results in Rescue of 3 Others in Windsor WINDSOR (UPI)-A makeshift heating unit uras blamed today for the aqphyidatlon deaths of a taUter and two of his sons in their Sandwich East home. Three other members of the family were saved because Boy Scout officials were unable to reach the house by telephone and asked police to find out why they got no inswer. PoUee broke Into the home of Robert MeNab, 45, Sanday after-Booa and found McNnb deod In n ohnlr. Hio irite, Ctalr, wns yetr-old ndopted son, Bobert, wns on file living room floor. The mother and young Ix^ were unconscious, but stUl alive. Officers then ran to two bedrooms at the rear of the one-story house and found tbe couple’s three older sons. Wayne, 16, was dead in his bed, Billy, 13, and Richard, 12, were face was pressed against a crack in a window and he vras gasping for air in the stifling IMegree Produced Enough in *S9 for 30 Chickens Per Pot CHARLESrrON, S. C. (AP)-A presidential campaign slogmi dnee suggested that a chicksn hr every pot helped make for a contented Now comes word from the Charleston field office ot the U.S. nt of ewnmerqe that -commeretel hatcheries in the South, produced enough broilers in 1959 \ to put nearly 30 ebideens in every Long or Short Seasion? U.S,, Reds Argue Agenda for U.N. UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) —A showdown is expseted today or Tuesday on whether the current sessicn of the U.N, General Assonbly is going to be shbrt and weet or long and bitter. Some smaUer-power delegaficns planned consultations aimed bringing out once and for all whether the Soviet UMon and the United States can agree on what should be on the agenda. OiOSINO DATE? The prospect is that the 3l4iar tkm steering committee ot the ' assembly would m Wedneedoy or Thursday to fix a closing data for the sesoiaii. which resumed last Tuesday. There was talk of closing on Ainit 21 and leaving all unfinished business over to the 1961 regular session, ahich starts Sept. 19. Neither the steering committee, the political committee nor the special p(ditical committee has met yet because delegatee have Iieen waiting to see whether the Americana and the Soviete could reach an agreement. The agenda contains 39 Items left over from the first part of the current session. These include such controversial issues as Korean unification, U.N. membership tor Mauritania and Outer HiongoUa, and racial troubles in South Africa. * The Americans want to put off until next fall all items except disarmament, fito Congo, Paleatine refugee rdlef and trusteeship and budgetary matters < ■— adth the avowed aim of easing the cedd war and amoothing the way for East-West negotiations. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 13. 1061 9 Lose Lives Over Weekend Michigan Road Doaths Equali Total of Lost Two Weoks Nine penoni loet their Um on Michigan highwaya during die weekend, equaling the combined traffic death toU in the state fpr the two previous weekends. Traffic accidents claimed five lives a week ago and four p«> sons were killed on Michigan Mgh-ways one-weekend eariler for the lowest weekend death tott of 1961. Victims the past weekend lost their lives in nine s^arate acd-dents. They included; Joseph W. Lunch, tl. Grand RapMi - killed Sunday when his small Isrelga spsHs ear struck a parked car In Grand RnpMs. William Van Luster, 3L Corn-stock Park — fatally injur^ Sunday in a head-on collision on M37 in Newaygo County. Melyin Lowry, 23, Rockford — died Sunday of injuries auftered Friday night in a head-on crash at U.S. 131 and M34 in Kent County. Car Bearing Snakes HitSi 5 Are Killed SLATON, TVx. (UPI) - Five persons were killed and one passenger injured critically Sunday night when two cars collided while of them was carrying 50 live Sute police aakl the loadad in fenir sacks and a can In the car trunk and remained in the accident. Ihree sUte policemen beat the snakes to death with sticks to make sure the poisonous reptiles would not hurt anyone. The aaakeo were Samuel J. Stevens, 30, — killed Saturday ni^ when be was struck by a car while crossing a Wyandotte street. Waynird Hagedom, 51, Tecum-seh —< killed Saturday ni|d>t when the car in which he struck a utility pole and a tree in Manchester. Max J. Morey, 47, FuKoa fatally lajuied late Saturday w^ea kis ear atnrk a ~ marked grade erhssing ia Kala- Mrs. Isobel Payeur, 31, Nankin Township -> killed early Saturday when the car she was driving collided with another auto ip Western Wayne County. Fraidi P. Morang, 48, Freescdl — died Friday nl^t when his pickup truck collided with a bus south of Manistee. Oaude A. Gay, 68, Saranac — struck and Idlled Friday night while pushing a stalled car on a rural Ionia County road. Tmc.. rattlesnake kuat. Hie accident victims were identified as: Eldmi Estes EU Sr.. son Qdon Jr., 19, a Texas Tech student; Mrs. Patricia Eli Baucum, 28, all of Sweetwater; to CisnfOB, 19, of Southland, Tex., and Gilberto Hernandez, 15, of Slaton. -William D. Ferguson, 19, of Mount PiMsant, Tex., was luiMiit-Ized at Lubbock, Tex., in critical Krmlngham, Ala., an important steel dty, was not established until after the CivU War. Sees Real Hope on Nuclear Pact Chances Are Good for Test Ban Treaty With Soviet, Says Humphrey WASHINGTON (UPI) Chairman Hubert H. Humphrey of the Senate Disarmament subcommittee reports that chances of reaching agreement with Russia on a nuclear test ban agreement are better now thui ever before. The Minneaota Democrat said that, thanks to the Kennedy administration, U.S. negotiators will be armed with a clear cut American position on the issue when they resume talks next week with the Soviets in Geneva. Ia a radio report to kii earn-stituento, Humphrey saM V.B. ■egetlators la the past did not have "a clear purpow and dla-ttnet offera to make” to Russia. He also said the Americans often were at a disadvantage because political and technical aspects of a test ban treaty. While wary of Russia, Humphrey said in recent wedM he had seen evidence that chances for success at Geneva are better than at any time in the past. Police Question Deputy hlARBLE HILL, Mb. (UPI) — Tornado damage and heavy rain masked the escape route of a 27-yeaiMild fugitive fromyCalilomia accused with two other policeman. . Officials resumed ^ air and ground search at «wn tor the deqtorado, Douglas )Wayne Thomp- Next time you see a truck or truck-trailer on the roads remembei>-everything you eots wears or use comes all or part of the way to you « by truck transport. r ■on of Bakersfield, Calif.,*who wu a rifle and a pistol. 'Tbompsonfs two Calvin WUUs Johnaon, 23, Sammy A, Tucker, 26, Fresno, Calif., were captured separately Saturday and charged with first degree murder and felonious assault in the fatal shooting Friday of Herbert Goes, 67, an auxiUary polleentan. Car Barges Right In When Everyone's Asleep KNOXVnJUE. Tenn. (UPD-Mra. Thelma Seay was awakened Sunday by a noise fihe thought was caused by one of her children falling out of bed. ★ * * Closer inspection showed a driverless automobile had rolled down an embankment and crashed into MAKE flVffl her Uving room. Denisge was esti- her Uving roim. Demsge was estimated at $700. U.S. Farmer a Producer NEVV YORK (UPI) - The American farmer produces enough for himself and 22 others, a more than 100 per cent increase over 1940 when he produced only enough for 10 others, according to Olin Mathieaon Chemical Corp. WMrytf FALSE TEETH I ...ON PURCHASE PRICE ..;0NC0ST0F INSTALLATION ...ON OPERATING COST ...ON COST OF MAINTENANCE THINK OF IT! A GLASS-LINED i HANDLEY-BROWN GAS WATER HEATER FOR ONLY- :V ‘ THE PQNTIAC PRBSS, MONDAlf. AtARCH 13, mi PET DOCTOR •rA.W.M*NM.O.V.M. Wasteland* Becomes Valuable U.S. Base i Q. Hhen dOFfi a dojt !«UH B.t STANLEY’ HALL : it waati^lh-« site (or training mis-VANDENBERG AIR FORCE: silemen along with maintaining an IbaSE. calif. (UPP — This once!erational missile force, ‘unwanted piece of real estate on' * * the shores of the Pacific has been That is tt»e prime rea tran.sforroed in the last two det'-j^enberg has fca" beings But scien* lades from 65.000 acres of shifting!tists soon found it was perfect, sands and scrub oak into ope ofifoo, tor Ipuitching satellites Into this country 8 most important orbit over the poles. It is one of space age bases. {the few places really suited for I The transformation has beeni that in this country, gradual. The area first came tojoVER ANTARTfCA the attention of the military short-| ..you can shoot a rocket south ly before World War II when an ^ said, " armored training base - Campjthe first land mass it crossei Cooke, was established there. Itiy^^^ca. 6.50D miles away." was closed in 1946. reaptirated!------------------------------- _____ , _ __ _____ ^ , briefly during the Korean War.! «nTnVuk 'iei.'th s^ whea'^’^j and then abandoned again in 1953. < tiange to pemanent teeth? How n, |>rcember. IISS. two Air Ml knorf that he U having j.-,rce offleen. arrived at oM ie? t uoghi. ttione c„„p j n one of SM Park. N. \ dtea being investigated as a poa A Some nnlk teeth aiv UMiaUy »dhle plare to establish the Air present when a dog is born Within Force’s Ural missile base. - a few wwks h«’ has a full wt. yhe abandon^ camp was not Between four and five months he impressive .site. Trees had starts loosing his milk teeth to be over the roads, sand blew replaced by his pi i-mancnl teeth. the tops of fences, and the a process which will be completed relentless wind and sun had by six to seven months of age. 1 drained the color from the few re-* * * maining buildings. During this period your dog will ♦ a * chew on an\-thing available to get „ ^ t. j j-j ui rid of the old teAh aod encourage ^ ^ut he Air For« dmded old^ the new teeth to cZe through. ( ooke was perfec-t for what Petrified bones and imitation bones made of raw hide or nylon will be i r> i a great help, an even greater fur- QcLIQUIQI F6618 niture saver. . ,, «, . . i *11,™/ Should Shai6 Although your dog s gums may _ i n • i be inflamed and he may be a j|j SchOOl Aid little cross, his natural cheerfulness should carry him through this! ^.j. (AP)-Joscph Oil a drizzly Dec. 16. 19M, first auccesiful m i a a 11 • launched from Vandeoberg. It was a Thor and It mdured 2.500 milra out into the Pacific. Since then, some 50 other missiles have departed Vandeaberg—Thor intermediate range missiles, ------ ICBMS, Discoverer and Midas tS. IM) made Vandeaberg, slightly painful period AMAZING PSORIASIS Cardinal Ritter of St. Louis sayi he is opposed to federal aid to "'^ education—but if it comes. Catholic children should share it. Cardinal Ritter told the arch-: dioevsan Council of Catholic Men| Sunday: "Do we rcalJy want fed-j eral aid? I personally am opposed | to it. ft's my personal conviction ithe parents ought to keep the schools in their own hands. STORY Jan. W. 1960 - Pittsburgh. Pa. "Doctored for psoriasis 30 years. Spent much money to no avail. "Nevertheless. federal a i d might, before the year is over. I become a fact. As it is now pro- S uTd GHrointmTnt and Tablets for 2 weeks. rti«. mmd but that it discriminates appeared as if by magic. In 6 i against ehildren who attend pri-weeks skin completely cleared vate schools. If public funds are and clean. First time in 30 years, raised for the educational benefit Thanks for your marvelous prod- iof the children of America, then ucts." This much abbCeviated re- | a|, children should share in that port tells of a user’s success with ,fj, •• a dual treatment for psoriasis not? : ____________ made available to all sufferers. Co.. D,ot. 2690 Eocitport, Maos. Bandleader-Composer Cod! Written Guarantee she: From HouMt. Aporimenis Gtocorios. Facterios and Rntaurant*. Remain out only on* bout. No siuns uaod. Sox Ex Company HOLLWOOD (API - Actress Jane Wyman today is Mrs. Fred Karger for the second time. I She and the bandleader-composer were remarried Saturday at : Newport Beach. Miss W’yman, 44. and Karger. 4.'), were “married in 1952 and were divorced In 1954. Previously she was married to New Orleans manufacturer Myron Futterman and actor Ronald Rcagap. aloag with Cape Canaveral and Wallopa Island, Va., synonymms with spoM reaeareli. Particularly so on a sunny August afternoon last year when a Wscoverer, No. 13', sent back the first man-made object from orbit. Three more recov«1es followed quickly, planes catching them in flight off Hawaii. HAIL RECOVFJUE8 Scientists hailed the recoveMet as proving that plans f« the Mercury man in space imogram would work. n»ey pointed out that the mechanism that fired the capaule out of (H-blt and down toward the I>acific was similar to the one planned for the Mercury astronaut capsule. Nineteen launch pads'^aie scattered around Vandenberg and its adjoining Navy counteii>art, Pofait Arguello, Including four pads for tlw short-range Thor where Air Force crews still train British Royal Air Force missilemen handle the IRBMS positioned throughout the British Isles. Within the next two or three months posidbly, the first Titan ICBM will be fired from a silo leo feet below the sur-l face of a Vandenberg hillside. - SHOE REPAIR SPECIAL! - $2,75 Vol w WiHi Coupon Only 179 Pp. ALL IVORK GUARANTOD Toes, sad Wad Onlv S. S. KRESGE'S tARLY-WUK VALUeS "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY CORNED FLAT CUT POINT CUT A&r* OWN FINE QUALITY Allgood Brand Sliced Bacon ~ 47^ Fancy Sliced Bocon MOHl Thick-Sliced Bacon moh?' SEMI-BONELESS-"Super-Righr Skinless, Fully Cooked HAMS^65 "SUPER-RIONT’' QUAUTY ‘SUPER-RIGHT " 2 TO 3-POUND Beef Rib Steaks •• 79c Spare Ribs 39c CLOSED SUNDAY AS USUAL CALIFORNIA SWEET Novel Oranges 49 DOZEN 113-SIZE A&P Offers an OUTSTANDING Buy on Chicken Breasts FOR FRYING, ROASTING OR STEWING Jumbo Chkkan Broosts with abundant tender, dolicious, white meat. Ideal fors^ndwiches, salads or (Ribs Attoched) main cours^ LB. 45 Cut from 3 to 6 Pound Selected Roosting Chickens DEL MONTE-CHUNK STYLE Tuna Fish............4 A&P BRAND-OUR FINEST QUALITY Tomato Juice 4 A&P PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT Fruit Drink. 6V2-OZ. CANS 46-OZ. CANS 4 46-OZ. CANS 99* 89* 99* ARMOUR'S-5c OFF LABEL Beef Stew.... 2 89' NUTLEY BRAND Margarine . .5^89 7C—OFF LABEL Abft Fine Quality Solod and Cooking Oil dexolo 49* QUART BOTTLE lOc^FF LABEL A&P't Own Pure Vegetable Shortening . dexo SAVE Tic JANE PARKER PLAIN OR SEEDED Rye Bread 235* SAVI 14c—JANE PARKER Pineapple Pie 39< ONLY A&P BRAND Sweet, Frozen PEAS 4 - 69* Dog Meol 5 39c All prkoe in this ad effectiva thru Tuns., March 14th in all Eastern Michigan ABP Super Markets 3 ^ 65* TNt OMAT ATlANTtC 4 PACtPtC Tf A COMPANY, INC. J^arkets BMIBKIi DfPIlfDBBtl fOOD MtBCNAMT SlN(( IRS« \ THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY. MARCH 13, 1961 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. OWR ft Can You Ideptify These Busy Entranceways? Do you pride yourself on knowing where you are going? How observant are you? The little photo quiz on this page should help you find out. Presented here are five pictures of entranceways to well known Pontiac buildings. Hundreds of people walk through these doorways almost every day. Do you know to what buildings these portals belong? Test yourself on these photos by Pontiac Press photographer Eddie Vanderworp. Then turn to page 31 in today’s paper for the correct answers. Student Play Secs Outsiders Getting Into Art Thriller to Be Offered at City School By DICK SAl’XDKRH 'matic effort unparalleled in the Approximately 75 Washington school’s history. Junior High School students will waHhlnglon pioneer Play- see several months of hard work| ,,e attempting something -bear its fruit Friday night at 7:30. i on both a dramatic and lechni-The product should be as sweet j cal level — usually reaerved for as 8UCCCS.S can be. ; '*cnlor high and college acting ♦ ★ * gmu|w. When the auditorium lights dim,! •‘This is the first time a play th^ audience _will be thrust intojof this scope has been attempted “ dra- at the ju.aior high level anywhere, I flight will be Bob Dudley i "Flight Into Danger" 'm as far as we know,’’ said Glennifood poisoning w-h F. Hartman, director and speech|Los Angeles. in. tructor. ^ ^ ^ I’MQl'E STAGIMi Other key roles will be played • vimM In.,. n»nnnr- Ko Knon' 1" 30 attempt to achlevc rcHUsm iby Mark Walker, Joanne Lynch, fni K ^ A, I®"** vividncss of evcnt, the produc-iJon Hartman, John Hofmeister, i±rl,lpt tt T be unique in the factjAnn Fulton. Cindy Morrell. Betty nninhrftla . ®!that Staging facilities are being Nyhof, Char Everett. Carol Dodd celebrated television play by j^„ger Putnam. ^ ninP.Pvmkn« arming n.,nr,(c: interior of an airliner andi . ★ ♦ whiS take place when the crawb " com Also in the .student cast are Ju^m of a huge airliner is stricken with'*“^“'^‘^ "" ^'‘ke Harmon. Susan Ca- •\ control tower has been i-on- ^Vri Wyrick, Christine Bex- : striicted ill the first few rows of K'.'- ^®bian Jones, Dave Brown, | auditorium seats. j Diane Mitchell, Jack Blestein, Rus-j sell Underwood and Bob ! ‘The fuselage will be built about 3 feet off the stage, and the floor Assistant dire<-for is Elaine of the 8 by 10 foot control tower! H.vrms, English and speech inwill also stand some feet above j liructor. floor level. | heads include Pamela I.a- * ★ a iLonde. stage manager; Dave Dun- The lower will be glassed-in so!'®P- Publicity; Diann Mitchell, ad-jthe audience will be able to scei'-^rtising; and Jeanie Jenner and ithe action clcarl,\. [Jack Bletstcin. ticket chairmen. I ’The play’s "curtain’’ will bci The students are charging 75 ilighting. The lights will fade from^'^n's for adults and ,'io cents for one set as they ri.sc on another.'students to sec the show. Tickets ,AY KEY ROLE ’This calls lor plenty of planning and timing for art instructor Trav-cr Miller, in charge of lighting. Miller and his crew of seven students play a key role in the pro- The technical side will have a Michigan Bell Telephone Co. sending technicians this week install radio communications tween ‘the control tower and airliner. They will also provide head phones for the actors. General Motors Truck & Coach [Division is donating 10 seat.s for the interior of the airliner. be obtained from Washington students, at the door, or at I'clicf Quality Market, 238 S. Telegraph Road. It will be the first evening dramatic performance at the junior high school in eight years. Board Will Consider Black Topping Streets ’The only items scheduled for tonight’s Waterford Towns Board meeting are a hearing for black topping two streets, according to Clerk James E. Seeterlin. (XINTROL. TOWER CREW — The most unusual setting in Washington Junior High’s production will be this control tower ofl-stage at audience level. It ia now partially constructed. Finishing touches will be added this week. Actors and actresses who do scenes from the fower -are (from loft) David Brown, Michael Harmon, Nathan Jones. Cheri Wyrick, and Diann Mitchell. The production, originally a television play, is being attempted for the first ji" *be production, time in this area. ' Appearing DO.NATE HEADSETS Robbins Flying .Service, at Pontiac Municipal Airport, is ijonat-iing headsets for pilot and copilot. Personnel from Robbins is also assisting in an advisory capacity to insure realism and authenticity lead roles The hearings, scheduled from 7 to 9. involve a stretch of road on Cheeseman Street from Frembes Street to Sashabaw Road, at a total cost to property owners of $10,200. A second hearing be held at the same time in-, volves an area on Riveria Street from Elizabeth Lake Road to Beechgrove Street. BCHBAR8INO PLANE flCBNB — These Washington Junior Hi^ 'School students are rehearsing a scene which will greet >n audience in the school auditorium ' Friday Tfie plsy, "FUgtit Into Danger." tahes place on an airplane. This is __A. .! «i. II lA -------^ *1 I codfpit and a patjsenger area of the giant airliner. The ar ra«M>i actors and actresses are (from left) Bob Dudley, Carol Spanburg, JoAnne Lynch, Jon Hartman, Roger |Putnam, Jim Briney, Susan Capuzzi, John Hofmeister, Betty Nyhof, Cindy Morrell, Cart^ Dodd, Char Everett and Mark Walker. ■' : ■ '' ■/■ TIIK roXTlAC PRKSS^ MONDAY, MARCH ] Says Recession ' Has Hit Bottom but Aid Needed indicate the buiinett outlook i* brightening. I But he said a temporary income j jtax cut probably '^•ould not be, jneedea to pump more purchasing 'pott-er into the economy. Kennedy j had pnimiscd to consider such aj WASIINGTON (ITIi — Oonv eut if busjncs.s dW not improve by j jmcrce Secretar> Luther H. HodgesisprinR. I '•ays the rer«si(»J has "hit , the: ^ bottom- and the economy is re- Ffpods Holting Ferries I ,covering but that President Ken- ^ ,.r» I . ..,,1 TIPTONVILI.E Tenn. lAP'— netty sWtioH'ession program stillyat Cottonwood Point.' is needed. ipotvell’s Landing and Tlptonville Hodges said leRlsIatlon to help I have suspended operations due to : areas which have suffered from 'Mississippi River flooding. The| ehranir unemptovnienl — the so- 'nearest bridges are at Cairo, 111.! *r depressed areas — was and Memphis. NOMCSATED - William Me- P^rthnUri.v e»s.nilal. . -----------------— Cormick Blair of Chicago has Hodges rejected the contention: Whaling nations of the world been nominated by I^residem of ^ number of Republicans that-signed an agreement In ^ not Kennedy to be ambassador to Kennedy's antireces-sion proposals |to take cow whales running with Denmark. Blair has been a law should be strapped because some calves, partner to Adlai Stevenson |stert and Longshoremen wtil re-iport to work as of this morning." i A similar strike In Los Angeles, Liz Breathing Teamsters to Half Port Strike On Coast SAN FRANCISCO api)-Attor-Boys Steal Fire Truck,” ney Sam Kagcl announced earlyU . - . i today tlmt an agreement had been Tok® Fost Siren Ride j reached to end the four-day strike QtANDALL. tex. IAP)-Three of TcamstPi-s against the port o1\\^ gfoip cjfy'g fifj, truck SIA), the Team- Boys In the fire truck, thinking: fctera Unioa, and the Interaatlon- | the car occupied by police, j al I^ongshortsiien's and Ware- swerved into a deadend road. hoDNemen't I’nloo (ILWl’)'. . Two boys on the truck fled. Thej The San Francisco attorney de-'thiiyl waited for police to arrest, dined to give any of the details him. Officers are loddng for the, of the agrement, but said "Team-other two. _____________ Hmk HOSPITAL-SURGICAL INSURANCE FOR PEOPLE 85 YEARS or UNDER MEN 66-IS $4.00 WOMEN 66-85 Ysars of Ago, Incluslw CHILDREN UNDER $ .85 • HEN 1.U $1.75 - WOMEN IMS Yaara of Ago, Incliiaiv MEN SS-6S $2.30 WOMEN 48-65 Yaars of Age. Incluaiva OLD EQUITY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Write lot P.O. BOX 5011 DETROIT 35, MICHIGAN Mail Coupon lor complete iaiormotion about this Low Cost Plan (Form AHS) WORLD 2222--------------------------------------------------- WIDE _________________________________________ COVERAGE Siix___________________________—5!2!e--------------- Actress Talks Freely With Eddie and Parents; Recovery Assured LONDON I APt—Actress Elizabeth Taylor was breathing naturally today, minus the special throat tube she used for eight days in her fight against double pneumonia. Removal of the tube in a five-minute procedure Sunday at the, Lemgon Qinic was a sign of, further progress in the movie star s recovery. Her critical ill- > ness had made necessary an ox>- | gen-pumping electronic lung ma- j chine, a „ blood transfusion and intravenous feeding, now ended. * . w ♦ "Miss Taylor is now going along very nicely.'' said a spokesman at the exclusive hospital. Miss Taylor. 29. conversed freely during the day with her husband. singer Eddie Fisher, and her parents. i Fisher praised the team of doctors and nurses and the clinic ■ staff w’bo had fought to keep his I wife alive. ' He added: "There is now every reason to believe that she will re-| .cover fully from the dreadful 111-] ness which so very nearly took, her life more than onCe this past! week." He also expressed appreciation, "to the many thousands of fnends throughout the world, unknown to: us personally, who by their mes-, sages of prayer and encouragement and faith helped us importantly to keep alive our own sometimes faltering hope." COUNTRY CLUB GO KROGERING . . . EARLY WEEK VANILU • CHOCOLATE • STRAWBERRY • NEAROLITAN • VANILLA-CHOCOLATE ^ 1/2 Gal. ICE CREAM BUY HALF GALLON REGULAR PRICE S9c SECOND i/a GAL 29c Both for 88e 1-Lb. Con .... ^lUi north bay brand 25 Exfr» GRATED TUNA..............19 DEMINGS FANCY RED SALMON........ POUND CAKE...........- t9‘ PMK’N BEAUS SPAGHETTI. Top Value Stamps WITH THIS COUPON AND ANY TWO LOAVES OF 17 VARIETIES KROGiR BREAD 79‘ SWEET or BUTTERMILK BOIDDI'S BISCUITS. KEYLESS MAIIE SAIINIIES. . CLOVER VALLEY BRAND SAVE 4c KROGER FRESH fii SAVE 20c ivs« GLA2ED DONUTS™- 39 U.S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN WITH COUPON BELOW ‘H Car Crash Trial Starts CAMERON. Tex. (APi - The trial of a 'Texas A&M student charged with murder without malice in the car wreck that killed singer Johnny Horton last Nox'ember starts here Tuesday. [ Jamee remote control door operator is designed for 30-minute installation and is so simple in construction that 90 per cent of service wdll require no t(^s, Berry said. It features a portable hand eh can be wed MARKETS The following are top prices coveriqg sales of locally grown produce' by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotationa are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, Friday. Detroit Produce ratirrs Lpplei, Delleloiu, bu. . jpict, ionaihtn, bv...... ::: In the house to open the garage door. TTiere is also a permanently installed button control unit inside the garage. The new operator can be used on any one-piece or sectional ga-reige door. ★ e ★ The new fiberglass canopied door is translucent and diffus^ a soft light to the garage interior. Groin Prices }..T; l.n^ ss*r M*y ..S4.M Ctbb»s*> bu.................. Ctbbesc. Red. bu............. Csmti. toDubd. bu........... rrrtfS-.:::::::::.: Oalone, dry. SO Ibi.... Psnley, root, bchs........... Pirulps. doc. Pbcks ......... PotstoM, se-lb. bw .......... Rbdllhci. BImek. H bu........ fUdUhM, RoUiouM, 4n., bchs. . Rhubarb. RMhous*. dM. bchs. Rhubarb. MoUiouse. Mb. boi Poultry and Eggs DBTROIT POVLTRT DETROIT, March If lAPi—Prleee pet pound delivered Detroit for No. I duality live poultry: Heavy type bene »-lt; lltht type hem II-H: haavy type rMttert ovr- * ’‘-]t-3f: brollon and fryer* 1-4 lb M-ll: Barred Rock SS-ll. DETROIT EOOS DETROIT. March 10 lAPi—Bit prlcei paid per . dosen by flrit reeelvi— llvered to Detroit, loete In M I. vhitei Livestock Student's Permit Lets Him Drive Bus to School BRIDGEPORT. Conn. (UPI) * Many college students drive to their classes in sports cars, jalopies or conventional autos. But Gordon A. Wagner, a senire at the University of Bridgeport, has them all b^at. DETROIT, pared laet areek chi liilly etcady. food ly . wtlshu ovi loarcr; good I alandard aleer ■ ateady; utUlli d belfert stead) , SO-I UO higher: t cholct Selected Stocks Beef Up Market NEW YORK (API-Selected is-sueg were strong as the over-all stock market moved generally higher In heavy trading early today. A ♦ * Specially situated stocks again were in the limelig’ht while key stocks performed routinely. An assortment of stocks was traded big blar the en-Dod^e Ml about a point. land the British and I^oreign Biblemajor churches.: lire eosi of translation and pnbli- The ticker tape ran as much new church- ^ revision but an enlirt'lyi cation and In r*Hum would be thrt^e minutes behind trading in;authorized translation of ™^*!^‘:new translation from the original the joint puhlishers of (he Bible. »rly “"J “T"' . m- m-t twl..- , year * '* * 1. ,1,1 j in the Jerusalem Chamber of West- Opening blocks included;Johns-; The pr^nlation of 'he New , Although a new transla"oo hy.H . Johnson was arrested .Saturday night after the shooting of Arthur Sheriff’s deputies today were h. Thomas, 19, of 67 Florida St. holding ri .vear iild Robert Young near Johnson’s home, of l|-| lAihis Drive, 'Waterford * * * Township, tor Investigation of ...... felonlus assaull. Thomas, shot in the left side, re- mained in satisfactory condition to- Young has not lieen formally,day at Pontiac General Hospital, charged yet. Should Rowley ^ie.{ pohee said Johnson’s only ex-Young probably will iv charged pianation of the shooting was that with murder, according to detec-he wa.s angered because Thomas lives, was asleep in the car and wouldn’t * ★ * wake up, Mrs, Young told deteriives her ’—^----------------- jhusband had left her and Iheir 17- }.;dgei1on, Edwaixisville. Ellin-I month-old daughter, Canoll Arm., La^in, Norton and Peabody, iat Rowleyis home .Saturday eve- Kan are all named for one-time ining, while he went out drinking, the Santa Fe Rail- I When her husband returned road Khnrtly after midnight, he went berserk, she said and started to ; choke h<‘r. She told de|Hities she managed to broak liioHe when the : iM-d fell on their daughter and dashed from the house. Hysterical, she phoned police' from a neighbor’s home. When ' deputies arrived, they^ found the child crying but otherwise unhurt. Young and Rowleyi wei-p both unconscious on the floor; nearby. Detectives said Rowley apparent-, ly had liecn severely beaten with; a bloody chair found at the scene. | He was roshed to the hospital, while deputies revived Young and j•brought him to the county jail for questioning. He was still being held toda.V. > land SEE US FIRST «r l.and Cantracta—Raal EaUte— Tniat Strvici DAWSON I BUniRFIELD R. J. Dawiaa. Jaha Butlarfield lt<> N. gajrliuir Bt. FE t-»4SO-F* J-IMS PaaUa* SMITH-CORONA $12950 Electric—Add—Sub.—Mult. PONTIAC CASH REGISTER 337 S. Sa«in>w FE •-980I ___________________ ,x%.. load and chotca ahom lunba M.Sd-M.i 177 hMd ptlOM wooM lamb* 10# I ~~ "I; cull to cboic* alum rwea t.OO-t.... Ltimatai for toda) Cattif IM. calvaa _____________n ■" ssr*i______________L ‘ . hlflier; cowa---------- — tmair lot* food xrada ataara; X3.M-2S.W'. atandard ataarai UlSy wear* utllUr^ Manvriila up It* at 69’'* on 6,500; t^gliah shares; General .Motors off at; 44’4 on 7,000; Lionel up *4 at 32 on 5,000; General Electric up '■» at ntnitadl67‘A on 5,000, and Brunswick, off utmtriis„ at 65'« on 15,000. marka the :ii«lh been discussed in England befon and atandard halfara 17.S#.SJ0: auiuyi ________________ cow* I*.#M7.0#i cannart and cutter*' riaur* after da< u.«».it.sa. ^ Vaalcra—aalabla U. Not anouch New York Stocks lEarly Morning Quotationa' anar decimal oolnU are algl Rob Neighbors in Bloomfield City Vice Squad Arrests 10 in Moonshine Raid • minster Abbey They organized the iwork by ,Allied Ch . mnr Aiu* cn*i abMp-Salablf 10# » ^ up_ quotktiona •uSltto'’**inArM: U head 'around StoiXium barrova and gUt* ll.M. thl* around; Am Alriin Je blshar; few aow* alcady but n«d:AmCan enough to act up quotation*. Compar^ Am Cyan taJrtVccUa.Hoac^ and sUta atoadr Am M & FOy . 25c hlEhcr: «>«. 25. lo..r. ; Stocks of Area Interest From Local Brokers Pliurea after decimal polnls i ACP-Wrlfley atorei. Inc....IS 3 Aeroquip Oorp. They also apiKiintcd a panel of literary advisors to scrutinize drafts of the translation. A i-cvising committee of three then . went Ten persons were arrested in a;,hrough the whole work. _i . ^ . A \A/ aL Saturday night on what ''cci vmr Thieves Get Away With squad officers described as * ' ^7 mo in Cash Tools Nebraska The translation of the New Testa- ^/,UUU in V.ubn, looib, formally approved on Cameras Etc -j . j u ,|March 23. i960. 13 years after work , ' ' The 11 p.m. laid netted .about jY\-grk continues on the j 3wo gallons of moonshine, accord-iQj^ Testament and the Afiocrypha. I More than $7,000 in loot vvaSijng to Lt. William F. Nesbitt, vice|(jp published several !taken over the weekend by^bur- squad chief. ;years from now. S * glars who ransacked two neighbor-idling Bloomfield Township homes. News in Brief Theft of $200 from his h WHS reported to the sheriffs department Sunday by Leo Capadagli of 1875 Lakeview Road, Orion Ttownship. Rtephen Adams of Detroit toM sheriffs deputies Sunday that his cottage at 9470 Private Drive, Commerce Township, had been broken into and $100 worth of fishing equipment stolen. A tape pecopdeg worth $131 and a radio valued at $75 were reported stolen from a summer home at 8494 Edgewood Road. Commerce Township by the owner. Dr. Raymond Forsyth of Detroit, affording to weekend reports at the Ihe^ iff’s department. ________ Osi Co. Baldwin Rubber Co.......... Borman Rood Btorr* ........ Curtlaa-Wright Corp Davidtoii Bro*............ Federal Mogul-Bower Bear Great Utkea Chemical Hoover Ball A: Bearing Leonard Rctlnlni Olln MathteaoD Chemical Prophet Co.............. Rockwell Standard ......... — ~oledo Ediaon Co.............21 # 22. OVER THl COUNTER STOCKJL*-^ The foUowlnf quotationa do not facea irlly represent actual tranaactlond bu re intended as a fulde to the approxl lato trading range of the eeeurttlei.' BMA*ke< Amerlcan-MarletU Co......... Detroiter MeMIe Hornet ..... Electronic* Capital ........ Electronics International ... FrKo Co..................... McLouth StebI Co........... Michigan Sesmiett Tub* Co. . Pioneer Finance ............ Shatterproof Olaa* Corp..... - Fibre Osa Pipe Line ........ Vernort OIncer Ale ......... Business Notes Gary Hendershot of Pontiac Tractor and Equipment, 1751 S. Telegraph Roa^. spent last week Atchison •Ighthe Avco Corn a>k.d, Balt A Oh ,„6^Beth Steel Sl.gl Boeing Air . 41.4 33.4 . 3S.S Murray Cp <•4 Nat Biac 77.5 Net Cash. R 14 5 Nat Dairy 2 3 Nat Ojpi 35.4 Hold till ohargos of o|H>rallng ' As to tlio hood foe a now Irans-aii illogal li(|iior place was Wll- latjon. a memorandum ciroulaled liaiii Nash, t', of the Nohrabka jwhon Iho piojctt wa.s first Ix'lng Street address. Nine others were |planned noted: ^ arrested for loitering. The.v are: ^ Loona Jones, tO, of 478 Nevada: H.sni, one main diffieiill.v of the ;St.: Pletto Canscy, 21, of 5.35 Ne-| elmreh is the differenee hetw<>en vada ,St : Lucille Stovall. 38, of 160 (he laiiKtiage eiislomarll.v used b.v Nebraska .St,; John Coward. 31, of (he ehnreh. and English as eiir-* * ^ 160 W. South Wvd.: Jphnnie reidiv s|Hikpii. Herro’s next door neighbor. Nor^^^ of 565\wyominj St.:! -There is tlangcr that archau p the impression Missing from the home of IU,v il 4. Ilerro of 7.T93 (ireenwich Road, . is S2..V)0 In cash, gold coins valued HI .SiHIO, three wrist watehrs, ' three eaineras. 5? bottles of ll(|-' nor, elolhes and power tools. av I Ilian V. McCarty told Bloomfield j,.ssie Johnson, 22, V 521 B''nh‘’h , , Township police that he was robbed St.: Fnxidie Haynes, 21, of 497 S.j n essage itself is out of «#of $240. McCarty lives at 7403;paddoc-k St . and N. C. VVilliamson,;*'-; Need ‘50 till payday? You can borrow $50 for two weeks for just 7(H The As.sociates makes loans from $25 to $500 ' bn your signature, furniture, or car Our terms are tailor-made to fit YOUR budget. Y'ou’re always welcome to our money. THE Associates LOAN COMPANY Pontiac: 125-127 N. Saginaw, FE 2-0214 Michigan Miracle Mile, FE 8-9641 Draytan Ploins: 4494 Dixie Hwy„ OR 3-1207 I briwern 2.VH • . 36.2 Pan A Con Edit .. Con N Oa* .. ■ CoDiumcr Pw ContBak .. ,, . P*r*m Pl< * Park* Da •51 ®r" ,0.1 Phelp* D M i PIfUco 161 Phlll Pel 69 Proct St < Greenwich Road. Herro discovered the theft latc; Saturday and McCarty, early Sunday. I#.5 ijO, of 218 Earlmore St. Pledge for College Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS Keyatonc Incom* K-I Eeyttime Growth K-2 — Mom. InvaMor* Growth . Mau. Investor* Truat . . Putnam Growth .......... Wellington Equity ....... <2;Dei EdI* 112 01* C Se«g . n.2 Doug AIre . FIreatone Ford Mot Freep Sul Fruen Tr* 51 t I RCA aemibhc gevlon .. Eisplorer Scouts Study About Oil at Houston Post HOUSTON, Tex. fUPD-One of the most unusual boy scout posts in the nation is Explorer Post 655 fai Houston. The explorers have broken away from the usual concept of scout wandering through wood- O Tel A B1 2i.$ *r-w q gni iJ l TeltSin : Mr* ... S2.4 Tran W. A o.rhir PrnA ' *1'• Tmn**m*r .fJ * Twent Cen Training Center of Tractor and Implement Division. Ford Motor Co., where he is participating in intensive product and sales training in Ford tractor and equipment operation and features. EdwanI N. Cole, of ISTI KM-way Drive, Bloomfield Hills, genera] manager of the Chevrolet Division of General Motors, has been named chairman of oorponte leadership for the Detroit 1961 Ton* Drive. LMa Smllh, 6. of $M Hsuvari MoNeU St. was treated at Pontiac General Hospital for minor injurlet Saturday after she ran into Howard McNeil Strpft near her home and into the path of a can* driven by Jack Walker, ». of €11 Howard McNefl. cookery, and have begun a study of the oil industry Instead. The aooats, donaiag Hie steel helmets worn for safely by oil workers, have toured refineries to Hensfoo. have vtsHed oO la-aiid have They ran tests to determine the visooi^ cil oil and have heard a petroleum com-paniA the 28 ^members of the scoot post are quioed periodically by their advisor. Henry D. Schmidt, to see how well they soak lip Hie scientific loiowledge they fRid in their scouting activ-ities. I Royal Dut .. Safeway 8t ' liaM; k Shell oil .. . 2g g Sou Pac ... • 75.7 8ou Ry • Bid Brand Scout Officers Meet Ifor Training Course Officers and committee chairmen of Chippewa Lodge, No. 29, Order of the Arrow, met Sunda.v. in the Community Services Build-on Franklin Boulevaixi for -a training course. IlMH ially deplorable i Testament was written in me ! common’ language of the time.' d oil Ind . 47 g Goodyear . Gt A&P . Gt No Ry Grevbdund . Gulf on . big Rand DiUnd 8U . bwplf Cop mterlak Ir Un carbide 124.- 2R.2 US Steel . “8 Tob . . S3.' « Un Tel U.g 45.4 Weatg A Bk 2S.6 25.7 We*tg El 45.6 IBS Woolworlh .. 7* 4gJ Yale * Tow 33.2 M.7 Young - - - 33.4 Youn t ShftT 102 . 77.4 Zenith “ ■ 54.2 Lear . 20.2 DOW-JONES II A.M. AVE 10 Ind*. 004.01 up 0.40 30 Rail* 143 10 up 0.10 15 Util*. 100.40 up 011 #5 Stock* 323.07 up 0.20 Commuters Must Pay NEW YORK (UPD-Americans are spending neariy as transport themselves to and from their homes as they are spenif' (HI housing itself, according Architectural Forum, a professional building journal. The publication said Americans wU! spend n trilliort on transportation in the next 15 years. i GREENVILLE (^Management "The New English Bible" is| at Greenville Tool & Die Co., Mon-iplanned and diiw'*’'^ •’J' represent-day matched pledges of $1,400 by|alives of the Chunh of England, Tts .50 erhployes to produce a giftjlhc Churoh of Scotland, the Metho-| baling $2,800 for the proposed idi.st Church, the Congregational Grand Valley Slate College. TheT’nion, the Baptist Union, the Pres-school hope.s to he ofierating by byilerian Cliureh of England, the 1963 lo sene an eight-county w cst i Churche.s in Wales, the Churches; .Michigan area. in Ireland, and the Society of; _____________ __— I Friends. ; The Skilbladner, a paddle-iioat; * * * „ u , , Keprcscniativps of the Brisish joperating on Lake Mjosa, largesU.^^^, „,p ilake in Norway, has been running.;National Bible Society of-Si-otland; Lodge Ad'visors Van R. Braid-i'or 104 years. lalso sit on the Joint Committee, wocxl of Pontiac and William J. DeGrace of Birmingham said fhe (x>urse included ways to ironduct chapter and committee meetings, how to promote attendance at events, and the general oiganlza-tion of the order — a national society of Boy Scout honor campers and leaders. Following the course, as addi-, tional meeting was held for members who will be conducting elections for order membership in all the troops and explorer posts of the CHnton Valley Concil. COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE Fot Less Money No Membership Fees M. E. Daniels *' TeimS Vara M. Daniels Bmttela Tnsuraitre Agency 5(3 W. Hnion StiMt FE 3-1111 Ponfiac Man'Poor' Affer Fighf Sfabbing tabbing victim. Walter Andrew. 28, of 52 Vermont St. remained in poor condition at Pontiac General Hospital today. ★ * ♦ Police slid Andrew was stabbed in the stomach with a three-inch pocketknife dioing r brawl last night at 594 Arthur St. Facing possiUe charges of folo-nius assault is John Shaw, $1, of 623 Ditmar St- Shaw was held pending an investigation by detectives. The state of Georgia was named for King George II of Cnglai^ TILE-TILE ” Carload Prices PENNY PAINT SALE ?:.'.^rw^i.e $3.98 I 7«gc.*ll« .01 5095 Gal. Paiat » I ARMSTRONG ASPHALT TILE ICsnuine ArmsTrong Asphsj Tllo. Perfect qualify. All y< wear. Cerleed $elc. \l ARMSTRONG VINYL EXCELON T Carton 80 Pcs. $089 Carton 80 Pcs. Linoleum Wall Tile 54” High I Ijf |6’-9M2’WidetMyl’‘li9‘ Ribbar Base 9 iC Ft. BUY-LO “ 102-104 S. Saginaw (Next Dooi to May’s) Free Forking in Rear 9x12 Lmoleom Rvgs T OPEN TONIGHT and FRIDAY 'til 9 P.M. Eocli