: The Weafhei • ' 'Y'jwr him*’1 ?n ^ f V7 v*1aV> i * A V { Hh > ' V ftW ^ Y ■ H | ■ ’ k 4 -- Y • " ]f / '',V_L * V A 7> . ■■. - "r ' 'A . g® • .* j | ; ' U9J| §Sjk -•• -■ IkBftat *, -i* n I he hyge. station's waiting room ..for 8 hbursThefore' boarding a train for Toronto. f It was in Toronto that the boy, described by Ms missionary father as feeling “under the' weather,” was taken to a doctor and eventually to a Canadian bos- U.S. Public Health Service officials said there was. no doubt. iiigiliMiGi- r v^| Authorities here, mindful of the contagious nature of the disease, em&arked on a hunt for everyone who may have contacted him here. k Canadian authorities said the boy's illness was virtually certain to be smallpox, although confirming' tests were still to be made- This included passengers on the plane and the train, customs and airline personnel at the ajrpojrt. a taxicab driver, a luggage porter, and all those who may have been in the terminal's main waiting room while James wag there. The ifjjf.' Public Health Service announced In Wnablngton that all peraons on the plane that brought the Orr* to this country had been located and Inoculated. The highly contagious disease, which may bring death to as many 35.of each 100, victims, was last reported in this country, in 1947, ' James entered Riverdale Isolation Hospital in Toronto Saturday and is, in no danger, according to doctors. " Clinically the boy has the disease . . . but ,there is no need for panic or alarm. We do not anticipate'!^ epidemic," said Dr. Matthew B. Dymond, Ontario’s minister of health. The boy’s missionary father, James Robert, Orr, aattl his son probably cutfidM the disease In the Interior of Brasil, where the . family of five had been on * mission until they flew to New York via Argentine Airline* Aug. To copb with the challenge, the New York Health department set Up 12 vaccination centers in Mam Indian and the Bronx, while issuing a call for all those who may have come in .contact with the boy .to step forward without delay. * + * * * 11. While the city vaccinated more than -ton persons at Its, centers yesterday, the U S. Public Health Service gave vaccinations to more than 400 others at Idlewild Airport. • Centers in the city and at the airport were pot on i round-the-clock schedule, while officials tried to hunt down the cab driver who transported the Off fam- ily. The lather, who first 'described the driver as a Negro, later said he was .while wijh a dark complexion and a foreign accent He rttnembered the taxi • ■—-——♦the- technological race with 1 the Soviet Union. ' 6-Million Year r$een for Autos The Soviets have built a nuclear-powered ice-breaker; but '.their Ford Veep Predicts Big Salejkior 1963 Modols ered • merchant ship field are believed to be still , in the blueprint stage. The Savannah is not expected to enter regular commercial serv-for about a year and a half. Meantime it will make demonstration • trips and Hi By HARRY d. REED Managing Editor, The Pontine Press DEARBORN — Lee I&cocca, Ford Motor Go. vice 'president predicted today that the auto industry would sell 6.2 to 6.4 million units in the 1963 model year. Iacocca told newsmen attending a press preview of the firm's line for 1963 that a six million performance in the coming year would mark only the second time in’ industry history .that this has been accomplished' in back hack years. The goal w achieved in 1959-60. approximately 340,DM imports. Ford will offer 46 more mod>ls in, four lines. 13 more than last year, company official* revealed. 13 MORE MODELS included In the Falcon, Falrlane, Galaxie and Thunderblrd series will be 13 more models than Jasi year, with a convertible Jn popular Falcoti line. Atomic Energy Commission ficials said the vessel is not expected to operate at a profit because it i* the first ship of its kind “and costs of such a prototype are necessarily high." , Amonj passengers aboard the great while ship for the run to Savannah, Ga,, were Georgia Gov. and Mrs. Ernest Vandiver; Rep. and Mr*. G. Elliot Hagan of Georgia, and Mayor and Mrs. Malcom MacLean of Savannah. The ship -was named in honor of the 326-ton sailing vessel with auxiliary steam power that first crossed the Atlantic in 1819 using steam power part of the way. Although the Savannah has i dergone previous sea . trials, the present trip marks-her first ex-ursion to a regular commercial port. News Flash EDWARDS APR. Calif. CAP) —An X15 rocket plane roared across the desert sky today at dose lo five times the speed of sound, Its stubby wings red hot from the air friction future space ships must endure returning to earth. namese troops sprawl in after charing Communist guerrillas for four days through the southern swamplands of Viet C.'S, helicopters, fighter planes and armored Brer craft. — (Story on Page 2.) Delegates at Geneva Reds Reject Partial Ban GENEVA IB — A Soviet spoke*-tan today rejected proposals for partial nuclear test ban treaty ren as Swedish scientists reported the Russians set off a new atmospheric blast in (heir current testing serie*. A treaty lhat would ban all but underground tests ".wiU not, settle this problem," the spokesman told reporters before the opening of the 72nd session - oMhe 17-nation disarmament conference. tests without delay to east fallout dangers. Swedish scientists reported the pew test in the Soviet Arctic proving grounds was In the range of 12 megatons, the equivalent of 12 million Ions of TNT.,^It' is the third recorded by Sweden in the current The Idea of a half-way treaty has been advanced by Brasil, Sweden and Italy because the nuclear powers are deadlocked on' methods of enforcing a ban on underground testing. Their Idea, is'to stop atmospheric DELEGATES ASSEMBLE There was no ’mention of the Swedish imports as the delegates assembled and heard chief Soviet Delegate Vasily Kuznetsov assert Being Built for MSUO Sports wage apdrta contests Under steel girders now rising for MSUO! $.1.5-million Inlramlirnt Building. The ifMxfto-foot gym Is the second major part of the building to gd up. Wot shown IS a 102*97- toot swimming pool building which only awaits * completion of the Ulterior to be ready tor use. The two buildings will be connected by 'Wtj ad-ministration building for which concrete £as been .poured. his government "will do,everything possible to come to speedy agreement to end all nuclear weapons tests.” Conference sources said he made no reference to the possibility of the partial treaty rejected by hi* spokesman. Hut he laid stress on the words "all tests.” Kuznetsov said every effort must be made to achieve some resuWs on the Issue before the U.N. General Assembly meets next month (Continued on F!gc 2, Got. 1 Strike at Space Center Is Apparently Resumed HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (A — A strike at the Marshall Space Flight Center apparently resumed today when workers, after returning to their Jobs briefly walked off again. A spokesman for the flight center, heart of much of the nation’s missile and Furious Mob urls Rocks, Insults at Reds Violence Is Continued Despite. Brandt Order for Crackdown BERLIN (A1) — Furious West at a bus full of Soviet soldiers again today as It sped through the city carrying a change of guard to a war .memorial. Some bus windows were broken. A crowd of about 400 shook fists and shouted swine" and "murderers’ bus passed' been stirred •hooting of the wall Friday and that he lay dying in plain sight Just out of reach of thr West, After bus stoning* on previous days, West Berlin police gave the bus today a heavy escort—two trucks of alert police. But youngfllera with their pockets full of rocks were able lo gel within 30 yards of (he bus. The Soviet soldiers did not rC' to hot anger by the shooting of c reaction be seen on their faces, It wa« the third day In a row that Soviet vehicles have been attacked by young West Berliners. RASY TARGET ply lo the attack, nor could any they come through Checkpoint Charlie, the crossing point on the wall for non-German vr hides, every evening between 5:3 and 6 p.m. Tonight’s bus arrived at 5:3 p.m.. and the crowd was there to meet it. The buses Demonstrator* Obstacle Course! ____A wET GREETING president Kennedy, staying at the home of his brother-in-law Peter Lawford at Santa Monica, Calif,, headed across the beach for a swim in the ocean yesterday and was almost mobbed by both meni and women. Some went into the water fully clothed in order to shake hifl hand. JFK Goes tor a Swim; Crowd 'Swamps’ Him LOS ANGELES UP)—President Kennedy, weekending here, decided to take a swim In the Pacific—and was almost swamped by a throng of 1,000 admirers. The scene was reminiscent of Coney Island on a muggy Fourth of July. The*— Secret Service, to a man, cleared from the Immediate Ue ; was in a mild state of shock. Bystanders walked into the sea target be-1 fully clothed as the President si rode into the ocean In front of neighborhood of the checkpoint, on Frledrichstrasse, but they lined the first cross street, Koch-slrasse, and the nearby Wllbem- his brother-in-law, Peter Lawford. on Wilhelmstrasse that most of the rocks hit. Glass from the broken windows littered the road.- The attack occurred despite an order from Mayor Willy Brandi to West. German police lo crack down hard on rioters as a result of wild weekend demonstrations which saw Americana as well as Soviets attacked. East and West Berlin police also (Continued on Page 2, Gol. 7) development work, space said: ’Although the federal district irt has enjoyed the strike, virtually all the lineal 55ft International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers members expected lo resume work, failed io appear at construction sites. ID l 'A majority of other akilla involved In the strike did report to work sites. Although some of reporting started to work, now left Marshall spokesman If operations at the space Were again at a standstill. He replied: "It would appear so." The spokesman said he did not know what would be the next step In the space agency's effort* to end the strike that started Inst Tuesday In a dispute over ' " l* / ret It happened Sunday during the President’s (H-liour visit to southern California, a flying trip which ended shortly before midnight when the presidential Jet took off to return to Washington, D.C. The President arrived In Washington al 7 a.m. (PontInc time). It had been billed as a lion-poll-^ Ileal trip, although the President obviously helped (he cause of Diemocratic Goy. Edmund G. Brown when they dedicated the $511-mlllion San Luis Dam in cen-•h! California on Saturday. There’s a chance' of thundershowers this evening, but skies will dear tomorrow, the weatherman says. Tonight's low will be 64, Tuesday's high Is expected to -each 82. ’ For the next five day* temperatures will average 3- to 4- In Today's Press ^ Who's on Top? In Hungary, no one’s sure as ex-dictator- ousted a from party —PAGE 29. 600 Milos High New radiation belt discovered.—PAGE S. Considine Columnist, ready to sue ‘unkind’ electronic psychoanalyst.—PAGE 16. Holp Othors ;■ Studying doesn’t need to be hard work.—PAGE 24*. Aren News ... Astrology .... Bridge ...... Comics ...... ifljbfltfi . TV mid Radio Programs SI Wilson, Earl ..... 31 Women's Pages 14-tl The President spent imieh of his tiny- In southern California with lawford — whose wlf«, like the President's, Is vacationing In Europe. The President and his film star n-law spent,, much of Sunday. lounging by (he pool of the actor's home, tosaing around a football, and enjoying second helpings from the Lawfords' well-stocked larder. Film stars Doris ‘Day, Janet Leigh and a bikini-clad Sue Lyon (.the films' "Lolita"! watched the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) BULLETIN DETROIT «- The Weather Bureau said this afternoon that sovere thunderstorm* might develop aero** southern lower Mlehlgmf between 3 p.m, and • The storms will be accompanied by hall and damaging surface winds, forecasters said. Thunderstorms This Evening; Clear Tomorrow degrees below the normal high Of 77 lo 83 and normal low of 83 ti Wednesday wilt be somewhat armer with cooler weather reluming Thursday and Friday. Pro* ipiiation. will total - one half to hree quarters inches as showeif r thundershowers mostly on 'hursday. , - The lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. In downtown Pontiac 69.- At 2 p.m. thp mercury stood at 71. * THE YOKTtAt the Day in Birmingham Fire Threatens Several Blocks in St. Louis ipj^meht of Students Set by Public Schools Army Offensive Foils as Guerrillas Hide in Mangrove-Swamps^ Plan* for a recount in the. Democratic primary^ election for drain commissioner probably will b« abandoned by Daniel T. Berry, hi* campaign -manager said today. j (AfGON. South Viet Nam (API I'd |ard-core Viet Cong guerrillas, ft lowing military tactics which w n China and North Viet Nam ft communism, have survived a n issive government offensive in tl ( southern swamplands. They are urged to register at their respective schools, which wflt be open for registration from > Of four days crack govern-tt troops, supported by U S. rlne Corps helicopters, fighter tea and armored'river craft, sd across Cfl Mau Peninsula ting 2,000 Communist guerril-who have turned it virtually, a lit ile Communist state. government Ugh command i arguing with American advls-over the tally of Viet Cong The government claims the Americans M. The Viet dang main body .get awny again. Jrap four-day operation was the mtlM^hild of Gen. Paul D. Hark-1^ limtnander of U S. forces in Vwt1Nam and Thailand. Harkins add his high command. Worked ■wfl were highly optimistic when I itfgot under way. Jij. advisers now are thumbing fully through Communist guer- rla textbooks which say, "When tip enemy attack! retreat.” jm/I DISAPPEAR , |fcammunist guerrillas in, mu, faced with an overwhelming government force, just pitted into the mangrove swamps eftt their women and children. Ja. How do you get and hold th*:Warner Drive, Green Lake. For attention of a 3-year-old long!the last six weeks she has held enough to teach h.im how,to swim? swimming classes for tiny lots it Ask former Olympic diving a*- the 3-to-5 age bracket, pirant Mrs. William Murray of 3579| Tuesday mornings the Warners’ t»nop* pulled out, the Reds up-Wed another guerilla law, feet when the enemy Is tired." f oovemment columns moving : of the swamps met frequent i but the Communist fire-1 came from Inaccurate old .loaders and shotguns, ment dead ’at operation’s I four. potter aircraft hovering region early Sunday saw ck-clad guerrilla patrols mov-> hack jnto the blackened and istated training camps and Bileta. Reds Reject Partial Ban | (Continued From Page One) 1 added: “Mg is now up to the Knited States.” |Slr Michael Wright of Britain re-m that the persistent Soviet op-bsition to the idea of spot checks the Soviet Union to guard ftainst cheating raised doubt that Moscow ever would agree lo elective controls. iWrlght, said the United States ■lid Britain had agreed to cut their inquest tor 20 annua) on-site in* Sections to 12 and now were ready tj agree to an even smaller num- [India urged that U.S. delegate ' Jrethur H. Dean and Kuznetsov, the dhnferenc* eochairmen. begin dismissing questions to govern on-site :tions. CHIN UP •-'ThTee-year^ld Debbie Hall of ’ ' FuSUfnuWiu 4100 Van Stone Drive, gets a lesson from Mrs, eluded a six-week swimming course for young* William Murray on the correct way to relax iter* under 5. Many of her 22 pupil* now “dog- while floating. The instructor has just con- paddle" along the edge of Green Lake. ‘Blowww Bubbles, Children’ Crofoot School Seeks OK on a Hot Lunch Program Seated in a big circle on the grass and with arms on their knee*, the, tender-aged group learned correct breathing habits while swimming. 'Take a breath and blow bubbles,” chant* Mr*. Murray. Everything is done'In rhythm. The Crofoot Elemental^ School PTA has won a recommendation in, favor of a hot lunch program from the Pontiac school administration. A final decision on providing the initial $4,000 capital outlay for equipment is up to the Pontiac Board of Education. Winnie to Head Home Tuesday Frpm Hospital LONDON (AP) — Sir Wlnsion Churchill will leave the hospital for home tomorrow morning, hi* wife said today. The,*T-year>oM former prime minister has been In Middlesex Hospital since June 2* recovering from a broken thigh sustained In • fall In Monte Carlo.’ The request Is on the agenda for the 7:30 p.m. Thursday Pontiac Board of Education meeting at 40 Patterson St. Asst. Supl. Richard C. Pell will present the Crofool would-be the 18th elementary school in the Pontiac school system to get a hot lunch program. SHOW* INCREASE ‘ Past surveys at Crofoot had indicated auch a program wouldn't be supported but the present survey shows a marked increase in community interest, All hot lunch programs are run on a self-supporting basis, financially. Results showed that 168 children would buy lunch every day and others, several times -k. Only 27 families voted against the proposed program. I lake-front yard Jias been tilled with tl youngsters lying flat on their tummies doing the flutter-' kick, back float and dog paddle. At tint everything is done out the water during the land nxer- In the dog paddle practice, "Remember children, a dog swim right In dose. Now pull, pull, pull, pull." The whole class "Pulls'' and joins in the chorus. Then come* the "floating” an land, hying flat, hands over the head, small chins are raised and feet flutter. "This exercise is, for when you get tired,” says the petite Mrs. Murray. ‘NOW, BARK’ Finally, it's “Everybody on their hands and knees, bark lige poodles crawl down into the water." By the time the youngsters are ready for their water-learning, any previous fear or shyness has been literally washed away. "Whether the children actually know how to swim at the-- end of the course, is Immaterial,". Mrs. Murray said, and added that at least they know what It’s all about and their bodies have gone through small physical fitness program. Pull U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy with thundershower* likely tonight. High today *7. Low tonight (4. Tuesday generally fair and cooler. High 82.. Weat (o southwest wind* 8 to 18 m.p.h. becoming northeasterly i tonight. His doctor, Lord Moran, Churchill and told newsmen: "You! make an intelligent guc about Sir Winston leaving." I O ★ ★ S * ★ ★ * * * fn listing their reasorfs for want-J The swimming classes are Later Lady Churchill emerged ^ a hot school lunch provided’lsummer extension of the Lakeland from the hospital- and Mld^-Inmost pSicnis said there seldom I Cooperative Nursery program, would be leaving belore lunch to- j wa8 an a(juit at home at lunch practically the same children am time. together during the winter months; * * A [at the volunteer project In the Or- The food is lo be prepared at chard Lake Presbyterian Church. Central High School, which has a ' ........- cafeteria next door to Crofoot. Mueh of the cost will be equipment to transport food ! Central to Crofoot nnd tor w ment to wash, sanitise and ■ compartment nerving trays I flatware at Croloot. The transporting equipment, the method of transfer and the entire j food service plan have already iwon the approval of the Pontiac Board of Health. The Weather Beat a Calm Retreat to Avoid Getting Stung A study of the plan was made [by Crofoot Principal J! Albert Hen- JACKSONVILLE, Fla. W*—. If iu're threatened by a bee, make calm disengagement instead of panicky retreat to avoid getting' stung. That’s the word from the Florida Board of Health, which also rounds you to leave oft flowery-smelling perfumes and wear light-colored clothes because perfumes ning, Food Services Coordinator'attract and dark, clothe? provoke Margaret Johnston and represerila-lbeea, When appeasement tactics lives of the Crofoot PTA, Fell re-|fail. douse the stung spot with, ported. * | calamine lotion. ST. LOUIS (API -* Flame* engulfed the old eight-stoiy Carson-Union-May-Stern Building at l2th and Olive Sts. in downtown St. Louis today, starting a aeries of fires that threatened several blocks of the central business district. ' Nine firemen were treated at city hospital, most of them few smoke inhalation. Fire Chief James Mullin, who suffered 'from smoke inhalation, and one other fireman were admitted to the .hospital aa patients. The flames quickly spread to the old Post-Dispatch Buildiiig across the street, and a stiff wind scattered burning embers over an area of several blocks, starting several other fires. Ford Veep Predicts Great Sales Year (Continued From Page One) dollars will be saved for consumers by the extension of service-saving features throughout nil 'We will be offering our customers Thunderbird-inspired styling in'cars from $1,800 to $5,000,” said M. S. McLaughlin, Ford Division assistant general manager. Ford will have 15 sedan*, 10 hardtop*, 6 convertibles and 15 tion wagons. Fifteen of the model* will have bucket seats. New -high* of reduced maintenance for all lines were outlined. MAINTENANCE REDUCED The 1,000 mile inspection has been eliminated except for three van-type vehicles and the Falcon line. First maintenance after delivery will be at 6,000 miles proxlmately six month* for the average driver. The Thunderbird will have 100.000-mtle, or 8-year chassis hibrlcatloa. In all other Ford lines the chassis lube interval has been boosted to 36,000 miles. New in the Falcon Futura series re two convertibles, a Fastback hardtop, a Fastback sport coupe nd a 4-door sedan. The Fairiane line gains five models for ’63 with addition of a 2-door h a r d t o p, sport coupe and three station wagons. -The restyled Galaxle will offer new 4-door hardtop in the 500XL series. Throe of Ford's lines will offer 4-speed, floor transmissions. Other new features are syncro-nizatlon of the first gear in the manual shift arid swing-away steering wheels. No longer will shifting Into first while moving provide a clash of gears. Ford experts indicated. This will be offered on all Galaxies and Falrianes with V-8 engines. Thirty-one* per cent of Ford transmissions are three-speed manuals. Swing-away steering wheels will f offered ’’on the Galaxie line this year in addition to the Thunderbird which had it previously. only,- be actuated* when the gear shift lever is in the "park” position. Final results of an election canvass Completed late last week showed Berry the loser to Roy J. Russell by 83 vote*, 7,398 to 7,315. First unofficial tabulations pegged the margin at only *2 Berry’s campaign manager Carl O’Brien said it appears \unlikely his candidate can pick up the necessary votes in a'recount. PRIMARY CONCERN He pointed out, however, that nal decision has not yet been made. Continued From Page One) L. involve! In the melees, ndt appealed for calm in radio speech.^ Thousands of angry West Berliners marched, shouted and threw O’Brien said Berry Is primarily concerned With results from Springfield Township, where he said more than 100 Democratic voters’traditionally turn out. In tha Aug. 7 primary, O’Brien noted that Berry end Russell received a combined total 'Of less than 50 votes while Berry’s challenger at the polls reported more than 100 Democratic voters. O’Brien said Berry is also investigating the results in Royal Oak Township. 2 Funeral Services Set for 3 in Family Two funeral services, one in Detroit and tile other in Ionia, will be held tomorrow tor State Police Trooper Gerald J, Tafei, his wife and son. who were killed In an auto accident last Wednesday. The’ 32-year-old policeman was transferred to Paw Paw in- June 1961, after spending 10 years at the Pontiac State Police Foat. One service will be held at I a .in. tomorrow at the Feed Wood Funeral Home, Detroit, followed by another at 4 'p,m. at St, :Jo|»"; Lutheran Church, Ionia. Burial will be in Oak — Cemetery, Ionia. Berliners Continue to Stone Red Buses BERLIN 1C—Communist East' Oermany’s Defense Ministry claimed today a Wert German air force jet was shot down after it flew over East Germany Saturday. stones at Soviets, Americans, the wall, East German border guards and their own police Sunday RED SLINGSHOTS Huge slingshots were used to, hurl tear gas grenades from the Communist side. The rioting was to protest shooting by East Berlin border guards of a young refugee trying to escape. He was left to die slowly on the East side of the wall while American troops and West police watched from the other side. Maj. Gen. Albert Watson, the U.S. commandant, disclosed the Soviet command had refused invitation to discuss the increased tension with American, British and French commandants at U.S. headquarters. Watson had offered to lift a ban on the Soviet commandant visiting the U.S. sector. Purpose of the workshop Is to acquaint teachers with materials to be used during the 1982-113 school year. Major emphasis will be placed on revised programs in arithmetic and social studies and on the areas of language arts and science. Sessions wdl include consideration of objectives, content, utilization of instructional materials and methods of instruction. A spokesman for th< three West-H ern powers dwtaritt the Soviet roll (Usal and declared: Killed with the . trooper by the two-car collision near Emporia, Kart., were} hlS wife Mary Lou. 31, and their 9*year-oid son Gerald, J. eni^r ’-^ft&ber of the family, William Tafei, 7, was critically injured in the accient. He is in Newman Hospital near Emporia, Kan. “The Irresponsible action* of the East German regime In the Soviet sector and their muffler-, ous use of fire en defenseless Individuals have produced a grave situation. ' “The acting Soviet Commandant cannot, by refusing to discuss the situation, divest himself of his direct responsibility,’'----- Joseph Letter Joseph Letter, 79, of 998, Pop-view Drive, died unexpectedly yesterday at hi* residence. His body is at Manley-Balley Funeral Home. Service and burial will be in Chicago, 111. Surviving are his wife Elizabeth: a daughter, Mrs. Robert Eckholm of Birmingham: a son, Richard, of Lakeland, Fla.; and foul- grand children. Herbert Hoover Enters Hospital for Checkup NEW YORK IP—Former Pree-ident Herbert Hoover, 88, entered Harkness Pavilion at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center today for his annual physical, checkup,' his office said. He is expected to remain at the hospital for two or three days. Iraq Upsets Turkey ANKARA. Turkey P— The tori elgn ministry said today violation! of Turkey'! air space by planes from Iraq have caused a grave situation itlang the frontier. * , AP Phttofti kinsiv COUSINS — Four-year-old Caroline Kennedy gets set to bestow a kits on the cheek of her cousin Anthony Rad-aiwill, 3, after a stroll together in the Italian retort town of Ravello. Caroline and her mother Mr*. Jacqueline Kennedy are vacationing at the Ravello villa of Princes* Radziwill. Mrs. Kennedy’* sister and mother of Anthony. day asealoas Sept 8, Counselors,are now on duty to test and schedule new students at Seaholm Senior High School and Groves Junior-Senior High School, to the announcement. Testing of new student* at Derby and Barnum junior high schools scheduled for 9 i n), next Monday. • A pilot program of advance registration tor both new and returning students is slated to begin next Monday at the Groves School, All students will "be able- to pick ' up their schedules and pay their fees next Monday through Friday Aug. 31, although students who are out pf town will be able to register Sept. 4 and 5. If the advance registration system proves successful, it may be adopted throughout the schOoLdis-trier in 1963-64. Parent* whose children will be (ary school for the first time a (ary school nearest their home. Kindergarten ’ children must be five years old and first grader* six years old by Dec, ,1. Further Information. is available atthe board of education office. Birmingham elementary school teachers, student teacher* and substitute leathers will participate In a three-day elementary school....... | fkshop' Aug. 27-30 at Adams School. JFK Gives Crowd Damp Handshakes (Continued From Page One) President’* swimming jaunt, but weren't in the presidential party and stayed clear of (he mob scene which ensued. security guards, emerged from Lawford’s beachfront home and set .out for the surf 100 yards across the sand. The house fronts on a public beach at nearby Santa Monica. Some 100 batters, who had been waiting tor hours for just such an appearance, let out a wild cheer. The cheers brought other* bathers from out of the sand, from ‘ under blankets, from everywhere. They closed in on the smiling Chief Executive, many trying to shake his hand. Affably, he obliged for many. He dived under a big breaker. Most of the throng followed him Including one fully dresaed woman and one fully dressed news photographer. SWIMMING ‘PALS’ For 15 minutes he swam vigorously. The crowd swam with him. The Secret Service, late, in catching up, watched helplessly on the beach. The guards didn't breath* easily until a hastily summoned life guard patrol boat cruised up near the awtmming President, ' 2 § Dem Lt Gov. Lesinski Hit* Welcome to Durant *Romney Hasn’t Gats to Lead His Party’ By The Ansoriated Pro** Democratic Lt. Gov. Ti John Laainskl yesterday termed Georg* Romney a than "who doesn’t' have the guts or stamina to lead his owh party.” He referred to Romney,’* acceptance of controversial Richard Dur-ts a Republican district leader after Durant resigned from the John Bircfc*Society. indicated i ar Photo*.. — Scattered thundershowers'are ex-Florida and from the Ohio Valley tea. Warm weather is due for most of cooler temperatures in upper , western Great Lakes qgglon. ^ 1 Saturday that aa UMOtoee tor governor he would Irenew efforts to have Durant sorted from hia 14th IMrtirlct vke ehalrmaaahip If he |* not aoti*-fled that Durant ronlgned a* a Btrcher “Ip, spirit aa well ca In letter."y' , ■ “If his disavowal of Bitch principles, is not genuine ana complete," Romney -said in a state- ment, “and If he does not prove capable of real leadership, then I will go to the people of hie district; direct personal basis and seek his removal from party leadership responsibility." the primary election losses of Sens. Carlton Morris, R-Kalamazoo. and Charles Feenstra, R-Grand Rapid*. Lesinski, addressing a Kalama-io County Democratic organization barbecue, declared that “Romney couldn't beat Durant'so he took him to his bosom.” n “1* tht* whit yea call gut*?” he asked, “ip Mile a man who to willing to pay tho price to In governor?” : f Leilnskl, later predicted to news-men that * tax revision bill lo--luding an income tax will be passed next year, “particularly the obstruction to removed." REFERRING TO' MORRtt ' He apparently was referring to He complimented Detroit television stations for donating air time to? the scheduled debates. 'DEAR .DICK' LETTER \ Rooutey. who concluded an Upper Peninsula campaign swing Saturday, rent Durant a; “Dear Dick” .letter saying ‘The news of your rertgnation from the John •. J Birch Society to very Gov. Swainsom *t.a meeting of *nd a decision "which Democratic feeders- in Hartland Saturday, also Spok* of what he called the ‘.’Durant sellout.’' He declared that the GOP would make any appeasements in an attempt to gain votes. Swatasau said he welcomed tho opportunity to debate with Romney on television fe October -over progress la Michigan under 14 year* ef Democratic lender- Durant reacted heatedly when portions of the letter were read to him. He said he might have i* comment "after l*ve • fetter. • » your [rapacity for leadership.” newspaper (The Free u Rat Dnrast mhl he had a received If. In a news release following pub1 Ucatlon of the letter, Romney told Republicans: "I urge the people of hi* district to watch closely I will — to determine hia real intention. That aeteNtttnattofi should take long to mnte.” ^M to raUtod st benwood. Crystal week’s tear, day at the Upper Peninsula N Pair Is Escaasba. Alvin Bentley, Republican candidate for congreaeman-at-iarge, followed Romney to tha Upper Peninsula Saturday. He told newsmen at Iran River uat he would advocate a federal Thf former American Motora Carp, president hit hard at'Mtcb-Igan’a job problems on his U. P. trip, where unemployment runs as high as, j8 per cent,in some places. ‘KNOWS WHAT IT TABUS' spent a’ good deal of my life saving jobs and creating jobs,:' Romney declared. “I know what not in theory but from actual' experience.”,,.f , • •; (\ f leaves today for f fkree- tour *f southwestern I ural resources If that were nsces-sary to avoid reliance on foreign suppliers for defense purpose*. Tati Blamti 'Fascists' rl MOSCOW (R - Tats said todijy the weekend demonstrations In Whet Berlin were caused by VFas-ciet-mlnded hoodlums wflp enjoy, complete freedom Jn the ‘Front-stadc (front-line dor.)” fSiltlSiPpfl the pontiac Press. Monday. august 1962 M: :klf. | ^ IP HS DETROIT (AP) — An educator proposed today that a' federal commission be created to plan this government’s future role in ROCKY TREjtfre — GO?. Nelson Rockc-, feller of New York treats Rofer Walker, 7, of Queens section of New York to a hot dog at Coney Island yesterday. The Republican gov* ' emor was on a political jaunt via helicopter through New York’s crowded beach areas with Sen. Jacob Javits (center) and Louis Leffcowitz (left), state attorney general. ' education in order to cope with Immense world changes. Dr. Qsroii G^-HwntrTJWrraro University’s Eliot professor of education, questioned the adequacy of present national policy in an address prepared for the American Federation of Teachers (AFIsCIO) convention SHOP IN GObt AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT CLOSED TUESDAY TO PREPARE FOR OUR GIGANTIC SALE STARTS WEDNESDAY 9:45 A.M. VA to Consider Dividend to GIs to Aid Economy WASHINGTON (AP)-The Vet-erans Administration will take a close look at its funds whether a special GI insurance dividend can be declared to boost the nation’s economy. A spokesman for the VA said Sunday night' that Administrator James S. , Gleason Jr. had ordered the study, to be completed by mid-Sepiefaber. On^Htdens of President Kennedy the Veterans Administration paid a special dividend of $230 million to policy holders a year ago in a move to pump new funds into the then sagging economy. Ad Executive Expires GREENWICH, Com. (AP)—Le-land G. Wesley, 72, a New York City advertising executive, died - .... . Saturday. Wesley, a founder of.^jjjy®^"1 Wesley Associates, Inc., formerly “ Asks U.S. Plan" IdueaWtote Theatrical Agent Dead YONKERS, N.Y. ,(AP) — Mas Laura Arnold, 74, (heatrical agent mid- former singer and actress, drea was bom iff Indianapolis. * SIMMS "Special" Prices Effective Tonite end Tuesday OPEN TONITE <■ Shop SIMMS Until 10 p.m/> t EducatorWants ^Bocfjrj Set Up to Map Future Course of Government When: $7.95 to $12.50 Garments Are Selling at $5.00 -You Have the Right to Know Why the Priee Is So Low! Simms reputation far always having "ready eo*h" when the manufacturer's price is 'right* pays off again. We were offered a lot of 10.000 garment* which was too many even for es. However, we did buy them and "wholesaled* all but 1800 te friends ef eurs who operate stores Inftfpff and “down east." This is mere proof that there's no limit that Simms will go la bring customers MORI for their money. . , /f For too long we b*ve ch*p” a federal courae to educa-t without a. compass, " Hunt said. "Where we are going and how and by what ' means the government intends to get there should be the concern of every American.’ Dr. Hunt said t&e government appropriates $2 billion a year for 300 education programs but that cohesive plan or policy is lacking. TO MAP FUTURE He asked the teachers union to propose to President Kennedy the naming of a commission of lay-ten and professional educators to lap a future program. He said such a program could a progcar help meet need* of the year 2,000, * ‘ popular! when America’s population will have doubled, according to predictions, and her school and college enrollment will total 85 mil- lion. 'I can think of no action this convention could initiate that would be .as far reaching in significance," he said. Dr. Hunt, former school superintendent in;Chicago and Kansas City and former U.S, undersecretary of education, was principal speaker at the .federation's first !! The AFT, which claims 70,000 a member of the board of|teachets as members, ha*i*| con-directors of the United Publishers Wi J^ Includes CariK in New York Citv He wasplanning for expanded organlza-Sra to A^ Sch ition. Collective bargaining tech- ' _ niques for teacher union contracts / 0N" ■m // 1 r ^mimk are on the agenda. Approximately 750 delegates are attending. Ex-Utah Bishop Dead SALT LAKE CITY" (AP)-The Rt. Rev. Arthur W. Moulton, 80, Episcopal bishop of Utah for 26 lyears before his retirement in 1946, died Saturday attpr a long lillnes*. Before his appointment j bishop he served 20 years as t tor ol Grace Episcopal church in Lawrence, THE OPERATOR HEARD, AND THEN.,. Naur Supor-Sensativa ASA 25 (Rated 2 VI Time* Fatter) MOVIE FILM i •ty«nsiv* Toko color ir^ Combination Special! “TECHNICOLOR” 8mm Color-Movie FILM WHIl PROCESSING ft MAILED to Torn Homo ft for all makit 8mm rhovl* Comoro* . , . TECHNICOLOR ASA-25 color film permit* earlier ond later day-light plctwre-taldng . . . alio bettor indoor movie* with les* lighting. Quicker DEVROFING-maifed la y*ur 96 N. Saginaw -Main Floor It was 2 o'clock in the norhlng ond 'Mrs. Marian Manwell Of Mayville, Michigan, wot asteep on tho first floor of her two-story homo. Her husband worked nights, io sho was alono with her ;hlldren,-the seven-year-old twins downstairs and five wungsters upstairs. , - ' Suddenly, she awoke with I choklng'cough to find the louse engulfed in smoke. She stumbled through the smothering darkness to the stairs, roused hor oldor eons, ind told them to help the jthers. Mrs. Manwell then groped her way along, the wall to the telephone lh the dining room. Despite blinding smoke the Wes able to dial "0". Whan the operator answered, Mrs. Manwell eould Only gasp, "Fire!" Instantly the operator rang Mayvllla'a firedepartment— and repeatedly asked Mrs. Manwell fbr her address-until the desperate mother was able to answer. . _ , Volunteer flrameh quickly arrived at 'that scene., The >yhls rest Is happy history... Mrs. Manwell and ail the children ,t In a letter of gratitude addressed to "A very special operator at the Michigan Bell Telephohe Company,” Mrs. <\ Manwell later wrote: "All eight of Lis passed safely-without even a scratch or burn-only three feet from the flamaa, to the Outside. Tour quick reaction to my urgent need seyed my home. We have to much to thank you fbr and we don't eyen know your name." This story Is true. But not unusual. Telephone operators seam to have a way of being near whan people are ’ In trouble... A comforting thought, isn't It? , I lity as well as value SPECIAL Pl^CHASEoLQYetJBCDV! 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AUGUST 20.W2 be Man Killed in Gulf; Shark Is Suspected BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (AP)-ian was fatally mauled by what he said Was a shark; while fishing; in waist deep water id the Gulf of Mexico Sunday. Hans Fix, about 40, of McAllen, Tex., died shortly after the fish almost severed his right leg, but conscious when rescuers pulled hha-ironr-the water; Queehie Holds No Truck With Petty Thieves Russia, Syria AgreR to New Cultural Pact DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — The Soviet Union and Syria signed a new cultural agreement Sunday to foster cultural ties between the road in the U.S, there are abputj ‘Brazil Is aaid to ft the world Sj $.74 per cent that ara of stand-] largest potential producer of vege-an* ItaMe oU and Its by-products. ' £ Speckled trout craitetog in many .lakes. reported In-of Ontario's ,, RICHMOND, V»- U£«M is Jones looked on in astonishment ^ noninterference' in while an unarmed customer rifled domestic affairs’’ of each other, the cakh register In her restaur-ja joint communique announced, m I The accord provides for artistic, ' „ . u \ . scientific and .educational ex- She walked up. jo the man and phanBM__________________ !. demanded hef-~reoney~bac)c: refused to hand it o fAdverti«im4rat> Now M««y Wear FALSE TEETH With Mora Comfort Bob Lauer of Hariingert, Tex,} >*»• »>» hf *nd was swimming a short distance cowed him on the head, from Fix and heard MW scream., ' * ★' . ★ 'The water wan toiling around I Police arrived to find George him,” he said. [Franklin Spears, 45,'kitting in a As I pulled him from the wa-!bopth in the restaurant—holdingi ter he said a shark hit him once his aching head. He was chargedMMI. _______________ . on the leg and then again,” Lauer.wrth petty larceny and held un-| said. *der $5,000 bond. more nrml* Tv w C">mfort. tud'spf TZETH or---------- . AP Photofai INTERNATIONAL BEAUTY — Tania Verstak. 21, Of Sydney, Australia, wears the royal crown of Miss International Beauty after her selection Saturday night in the International Beauty Congress to Long Beach, Calif. She to 5 feet, 5'.i inches tall and weighs 120 pounds. from King Cobra MIAMI, Fla. (AP)—William E. Haast, owner of the Miami Ser-pentarium, was reported Improving after being bitten by a king cobra Sunday., Hearst Marries Sixth Wife Second Time LAS VEGAS, Nev. fAP) -George R. Hearst, 58, oldest son of the late publisher William Randolph , Hearst, has married hto sixth wife for the second time. The deadly 14-toot reptile struck Haast to toll view of 145 persons Hearst and . his wife, Rosalie, who were watching him extract,were wed July 16,1960, to Juarez, the snake's venom at the serpen-.Mexico. The couple were rewed tarium. , I here Sunday. They said they Haast. 52, was tyshed to Var- wanted tp.be remarried to the iety Children's Hospital and given)United States. They live to Palm massive doses of serum. It was'Sprtogs, Calif. l snake bite but his first t king cobra. Better After 'Burial' GRAND RAPIDS on - Floyd - Clark, 14, who was buried more than 10 minutes under four feet'of sand Saturday, was reported stiji in serious condition but somewhat improved today. Floyd was digging into a sand bank with companion! when it collapsed. , Hearat to vice president of the Hearst Corp-, and president of the Hearst Foundation. His son, George Jr., publishes the Loa Angeles Herald Examiner. A twin daughter, Phoebe, lives to San Francisco., More vessel! pass through the Kiel Canal between the North and Baltic Seas than travel through either the Panama or Sues Canals. I. Stelnman. O.D. Opsn Daily 9:10 to 5;JO 109 N! Saginaw St rest Friday 9:10 ta 8:30 Every Dollar of Your Savings is INSURED TO $10,000.00 TRY AN AGENCY OE THE U.S. GOVERNMENT WHERE THEY j-iEAiwr...;. 4* o CURRENT RATE OF DIVIDEND PAID QUARTERLY PEOPLE’S V FOOD TOWN FOOD MARKETS SUPER MARKETS 12*3 AUBURN 1465 f. PIKE ST. 1700 AUBURN ST.1868 ORCHARD LAKE AVE.j (MstMnswm ■ | orw i days a wik ■ wmuknim MWMMII I WINWHUTiki I f AM. Irll 10 MA I . , I PEAK SEASON 211$ liate Highsreiy|TMSlU^a«^R3!^M^^^«* JVan Allen, who in 1958 discovered it may mean five years. We drejceivaUy could lead also to delay 1. It could imperil astronauts hvthe principal radiation belt en-^maiiitainlpg constant ob'servattonmn yimilar flights by Russians, future space flights, and hence,circling the earth. 'and I hope that by Sept, j we| Variations of the Van Allen might cause the Unit^T States to INTENSIFIES KING ’ ' |may h*ve mor< in^<>rmatlon•', jbelt’s radiation *«• stu*ed for it twit 'with trie towp of i satellite called Injun, launched for scientific purposes on June 1961. delay Its Project Mercury program. 2, It emits radio frequency. Big- ..»» ------— ,— nals and therefore may Interfere,^ intensify the so-called Van potential danger for manned Dr. Van Allen Mid previous So-with, some radio astronomy. [Allen radiation ring* . (space flights,” but detailed explo- viet nuclear blasts had not affect* ★ ★ ' I The new ring, he said, consists ration and scientific examination ed the radiation belt the presence of the radiation of high-energy H-bomb ’electrons,!is needed before the effects on belt,'600 miles and higher above invisible atomic particles, which Project Mercury flights can be the earth, was disclosed by Dr.'follow the path'of the earth’s mag- determined. - INTENSIFIES KING The 'Colorado scientist said the j At Southampton, N.Y., where he effect of the Pacific high-altitude j8 vacationing, Dr.'Van Allen said test blast last month was to great-) the new belt has "Increased the Epidemic Hits ColombraTown - Bronchitis Ou t b r e a k in Floroncia Following Flood Killing 41 BOGOTA, Colombia — An epidemic of bronchitis broke out today After floodwaters swamped the jungle town of Florencia, killing 41 persons and leaving 136 missing. The avalanohe, set loose by i burst dam on the River Hachi* swept. tree trunks and huge boulders into the / sleeping town early Saturday. About 3,000 of the 20,000 inhabitant* are homeless. No Injuries / were reported among members of an American military /mission stationed In Florencia,/280 miles south of Bogota. - - / Capt. K. w. Vansandt, member of the U.s/team, making a geodetic suivey, said: , “It was a nightmare. Streaks of light from flashlight's were all that illuminated the darkness as groups of people/ ran widely crying and screaming.” fro than 1,000 cattle perished 30,000 tons of rice were de-■ strayed, dealing another blow to (tjw town, which experienced the tost severe winter in years Milk cows In farm herds ii United States total 17,400,000, down 200,000 from a year ago. CROWD VISIT THE NEW GOODWILL INDUSTRIES STORE 15 E. 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Each “state'' of the union is represented in Congress by two Sen*, ators and our House of Representatives is chosen by population. The House represents the people and the Senators the states. Our Congress should be a guiding light. , LeRoyDean Highland :/\ . ... , . ■ It Seems to Me Our Own Scientists Assert We Will Reach Moon First In Chicago, they secretly laugh Chicago’s convention program is booked almost, solidly for 18 months. The bid auditorium,’* man* agement and labor give all visitors a fair shake with no leather bed* ding and no silly unfair rules. They want the business, the vis* itors and the employment and they get it. F. B. Perhaps it’s a clear-cut case of whistling in the dark, or searching foil {he silver lining, but there is a modicum of comfort in the current assertions of our own scientists. They predict that we’ll reach the moon ahead of the Reds. ★ ★ ★ Personally, The Press will continue to serve you daily, whoever lands with the first live cargo. There are many things more important. But this would be a comforting palliative and n definite sop to our injured pride add international ego. Furthermore, it woujd enhance our global standing, and that’s important in the everlastihg cold war which we are compelled to wage with the bloodthirsty Communists. ★ ★ ★ A couple of weeks ago J sketched future communication with some very, very distant planets, and our interstellar musing will conclude with a final observation, I just read that we may eventually send an exploratory ship to a planet so distant that these incredible circumstances must prevail. s ★ ★ ★ The ship would start with two* or three hundred on a journey that lasts a century because of the distance involved. The oldsters would be in charge at the outset , and as they died off and were ’’buried at sea’’ the next generation would take over and by the time the expedition landed, this generation might be wholly or partly in the land of departed souls. The younger girls would be bearing children and so the landing party would consist of a high . percentage of people who were ' actually born en route. • ★ ★ ★ The return trip? My talented prognosticator leaves that for your own imagination. The'party might remain. In the meantime, we’ll take comfort In the word of our own scientists who quietly predict that we’ll reach the moon first in spite of the current Russian triumphs, and we grant that these are noteworthy, spectacular and outstanding. The Reds are “on the ball.” Their accomplishments tend to attract quick attention and are Showy, while our own are aimed toward permanent achievements and things for the progress of all mankind. It’s time foreign aid was cut from countries that abuse the privilege. And that doesn’t mean “next year.” It means NOW! Too Secretive ... . One of our most outspoken Americans is ex-President Habhy S. Tru- - Hence, when he was interviewed on the- current Soviet * achievement, it was no surprise to hear him say: “I congratulate the two Russian astronauts—If this is true. They’ll have to prove to me that it is. The Russians never told me the truth all the time I was dealing with them.” ★ ★ ★ And the New York Mirror adds: “No one from the West has ever witnessed a launching or a recovery. Why? What have the Reds to hide in their “peaceful exploration of space for the good of all mankind”? Foreign Aid Abused.... Each year, we’ve been giving the African Republic of Liberia $50 million. Insider's Newsletter disclosed that her President Tubman just paid $28,000 for a Rolls Royce. ★ ★ Whose monejy was that? Of course, it might have been - an inheritance from a * maiden aunt. At the same time, Tubman spent $25,000 for new furniture and clothing. Then he threw a “thank you dinner” for the Queen of England and picked up a $5,000 tab. Whose folding money paid for that?'Ours? Mebbe he’s moonlighting and picking up heavy sugar m the side. Mebbe. |i ★'' ★ ★ r When Editor John w. Fitzgerald returned a couple of years ago from B European survey with other editors, hie asserted that some of our “foreign Bid? was keeping curvaceous cuties i$i Paris apartments and that the hoad of one country had just bought hhpSeif a nice airplane. ‘Chicago Handles Conventions Well’ Trouble ’on the Launching Pad David Lawrence Says: JFK Tune Just an Old Refrain And in Conclusion.... Jottings from the , well-thumbed notebook Of your peripatetic reporter: The Associated Press reports that newspaper coverage of Marilyn Monroe’s death was simply staggering in volume.............Trainer Fitzsimmons celebrated his 88th birthday with a big champagne lunch. . Asked whether; he intended , to retire he replied in sbtne astonishment: “No one ever retires as he reaches the prime of life.” ..... Germany is drafting a law to prevent those on paid vacation from taking other employment on the grounds that it’s unfair to those without jobs and the workers need the rest anyway. ★ ★ ★ I can’t prove it, but I’ll bet a sugar cookie you’d wince if someone pronounced “schedule” as l though it were . | “shed-ule,” but . you’d be wine-ing in a lost ! Trusted | scouts advise me Joanne Beverly r*/, , Hill is one of the t I r«,l rtlrtctly. young ladies in the area. Nomination supported .............Governor Rockefeller’s home state popularity is spurting unaccountably *.... European shopkeepers are wailing. Cutting the U.S. tax import allowance from $500 to $100 hit ’em hard .......... Local experts tell me the current apple crop will be simply enormous— and of a high quality. Good. ★ ★ ★ E. L. Johnson: “If you want to know what to do until the doctor comes, I’ll tell you: Go out and borrow some more money."......... Senator Tower: v'T haven’t anything against Harvard. It’s a great institution — especially since the faculty moved to Washington.” . ......... Wilt Chamberlain, country club bellhop seven years ago,, just drove tip to the same place in his $27,000 ‘British Bentley. It could only happen here ........ Waterford mother; “I don’t know whether that boy down the block feels insecure, but the whole neighborhood does.” |. Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: .the C’s—-those Russian cosmonauts and scientists: the J’s senator wayne morse 1 (repeater). ■ * . —Harold A. Fitzgerald WASHINGTON - I* there anything really new under the. sun— for instance, in the fundamentals of national politics? The query came to mind as this writer stood during the weekend in front of the governor’s mer mansion Sea Girt, where 50 ago—on Aug. 7, 1912—it was his assignment, as an Associated Press reporter, to cover Gov, Woodrow Wilson’s speech accepting the Democratic party’s presidential nomination. Mr. Wilson had won it a month before after an unprecedented struggle of 46 ballots at the Democratic National Convention at Baltimore. A relatively unknown .Jiguro in politics, he Had defeated the popular Speaker of the House of Representatives, Champ Clark gf Missouri. The address by Gov. Wilson resembles to no small extent, as one rereads it today, the statements by spokesmen of the Democratic party of the 1960s. It Is always Insisted when comparisons like this are made that “circumstances are different now.” But are they really? Here are some extracts - chosen at random from that 191? appeal to the Nation to support the Democratic presidential seem strangely familiar as he said: “I am' not one 9f those who thihk that competition can be established , by law against the drift of a \ worldwide economic tendency; neither am I one of those who believe that business done upon a \ great scale by a single organization—call it corporation, or what you will—is necessarily dangerous^ ta the liberties, even the ecotlbmic liberties, of a great people like but own, "full of intelligence and indomitable ener- “I am happy to say.that a new spirit has begun to \sliow itself in jjj* las), year or Wo among influential men of business . Only a very little while, ago men of business were ufiited in resisting every proposal of change and reform as an attack on business, an .embarrassment of ail large enterprise, an intimation that settled ideas of property were to be set aside and a new and strange order of things created out of hand . . . “The so-called labor have not yet found thi right In adjusting the of labor and capital . * , . History does not record whether a majority of the American peo* pie approved all - these sentiments. For, while Mr. Wilson was elected in , November that year, He received only 41.8 per cent of the popular vote. Yet, due to a split Pncfraitc In the Republican party, he ob* * VIMflllo tained 819 per cent of the electoral vote. The Almanac By Ualted Press International Today is Monday, Aug. 20, the 232nd day of 1962 with 133 to follow. Hie moon is approaching its last quarter. The morning stark are Mars and. Jupiter. The evening stars are Jupiter, Satum and Venus. ★ ★ ★ On this day in history: In 1741, Alaska was discovered by Danish navigator Vitus 'Jonas Bering. la 1776, | Geolrge Washington eluded the British In Brooklyn, N.Y. and tdok his arniy across the East River to Manhattan. In 1914, Germany occupied Brussels, the capital of Belgium.. In 1960, Russia retrieved the first living., creatures- from- a two-day orbit of thf earth. Here’s How to Make Americans Happy ,__President Kennedy’s persistent wooing of the minority groups could be ’eliminated and everyone made happy by the following NAn: \ , • # ★ * ' The American people could bp divided Into two group* m those who have stocks and those who do not. For those who do, th*< government could Insure lavee* tors against losses by guaranteeing to purchase securities at parity. Parity would be the It# highs before Kennedy’s Bine fc' Monday. The certificates an to 1 be stored In Billie Sol Estes cot- Dr. Hayqld Hyflfaan Says: Blood Prmure Changes Under Varied Conditions “Plainly, it is a new age. The tonic of, such a time is very exhilarating. It requires self-restraint not to attempt too much, and yet it would be cowardly to attempt too little . . . - * . ★ ★ “Our difficulty is not that wicked and designing men have plotted against us, but that our common affairs have been determined upon too narrow a view, and by too private an initiative. , “Our task now Is to effect n greaf readjustment and get the forces of the whole people once more Into play,” There was in the political vo> cubulary of those days no such phrase as "New Frontier," but an emphasis on the “New Freedom" and on the high cost of living. Mr. Wilson said: ‘NOT AS EASY’ "It is not as easy for us to live as it used to be. Our money will ’not buy as much. High wages, even when we can get them, yield us no great comfort. We used to be better off with less because a dollar could biiy so much more." There was. of course, no eon'* troversy at that time about the AT&T and a worldwide com-, munlcatlons system by Telstar, but the words of Mr. Wilson Q — I-ast week, I was examined for life insurance and was told I had high blood pressure. T went Immediately to my family doctor who took my blood pressure and found it to be normal. How is this possible? A — Blood pressure Is a variable, not a constant. It fluctuates as widely as weather conditions In a single day. These fluctuations are determined by \ Its cancer commission "has collected information concerning 44 patients treated with Laetrile, all of \whora either have active dis-\ are dead of their disease, withXone exception. Of (hose alive with disease, no pattern has been fotand with evidence of control of cancer under treatment with Laetrile alone.” j By JOHN C. METCALFE If I could be with you tonight . . . The little dewdrops-all around . . . In glimmer^ of the dawn would shine . . . Like, diamonds on the ground . • ■ Ana when the scarlet morning sun ... To heaven’s fairest blue would rise ... My happy heart along with it... Would walk upon; the skies . . . And even if no singing wind . . . Should dance across the noon of .day ... i think my mind with melodies ... Of tender love would sway . . . And were the clouds in afternoon . . . Of grayest and of grimmest hue ./. . To me they would be gay tmd bright ... In dainty dreams (if you ... Oh, darling, (if I only could ... Be at your side again tonight ... I think the whole wide world to me . . . Would glow with peaceful light. be called Stoclcare and be a part of our social security program coating only |M a year. ★ dr ‘ dr The government could pay those who do not own stocks a certain percentage of the 1962 parity depending on the type of stocks they do not own. The more stocks a person does hot own the' more he . will receive from the government, lie In the Sky for Everyone Cabs Continue to Spark Interest Has Milton Henry been responsible for the cab company permit for Louis Unteau? How did Lin-teau acquire his “limousine service!’? The Commission has become a source of amazement to many folks. ft dr dr Did Henrj) tell the cab company It had lo hire some Negro drivers? Most colored folko are kind and considerate but Mr. Heiiy is not helping his race. — ♦ ;■ 'dr ''"af 1 If a shopper prefers A "yellow" (and I do! try to get one at Waites. The Commission has gone off its rocker. It is driving people out of town. Mr. Henry should remember when he could not drive a Cadillac. , Less cab stands downtown mean less business. The City Commission has driven business to shopping centers and out of Pontiac. Shopping Center Patron The City Commission has told the phople that there are too many cabs. I hope these Commissioners say the same In the middle of winter when there,is more business than ail the cab* can handle. Let them tell ladies such as the one .who, with her three children,* waited at a grocery store for an hour ’ before she could get a cab. The whole public suffers including all ages and classes. A Cab Elder The Identity of the examiner (higher with a stranger), the reason for the examination (higher at induction physical than at routine checkup), the nervous state of the subject at the time of the recording (higher during emotional etress), the position of the subject at the time of the recording (higher when lying flat), the distress caused by the examination (higher if arm band is too tight or kept on too long). ★ * # *- Thus, each of the readings made by the insurance examiner and your own doctor may have been UOrraCt. . - But, since the conditions at the time of the recordings differed, different levels were noted. , To prevent your being rated up by the Insurance company. I'd suggest you hove your doctor re-‘ i the Reviewing Other Editorial Pages The Country Parson "I don’t think a husband has any more right to abuse Ms wile with an evil temper than with a And he may, if he desires, prescribe a sedative or a tranquilizer for you lo that the insurance examiner gets a more accurate pic-ture of your circulatory status. Q — Have you heard of a new cancer cure called "Panga"? A— I have heard of no cancer euro. You may refer to Pangametih, also known as Vitamin pl3H8. According to a report just issued by the American Cancer Society, there is “no evidence that treatment with Chymotrypsin, Laetrile and Vitamin B15H* or Panga-metin results in any objective benefit in the treatment of cancer, or tHat diagnosis by the Anthrone Color Test ie a reUMrie method of detecting cancer in human beings." Both the test named and the product* to which reference' I* „ made la this report were Intro-duced by a Texan whose doctorate Is In philosophy, not) medicine. oAnd the Cancer Society's estimate is in agreement with - one made in 1953- by the California Medial Association. : " , 7/ I'm Elected' Atlantic Monthly j During the 1960 presidential car paign (lie central theme of candidate Kennedy was to "get America moving again." .This wa/s to include the military machine and the economy, as well as the national Sense of , self-confidence. That America has improve;! its military posture is evident. That a sense of self-confidence has re-Jtu^ed also is deary But of all the Kennedy Campaign promises, the one on which he has fallen ' down hardest is the pledge to do something about the sluggish economy and its exasperating low rate of growth. / It Is true that production, profits, and employment have reached all-time highs. But everybody knows that the up- problem in communications. Certainly the President’s "S.O.B" crack, served as a catalyst to bring forth a wide reaction of business venom. * ★ ★ The President’s Initial reaction, aside from auger, to Ute attack* from business was a sort of “What do they want?” The President announced that he will propose for enactment by the next Congress an across-the-board tax out for corporations and Individuals, retroactive to January A, . But i Mg fax rat, one which will pump more money Into the economic bloodstream, very probably will create a new up. ward pries movement. It Is argued that commodity prlcea gan shortly/after Kennedy took office and /not as a result of anything h* did. The Administration did spur K mildly Inst summer and tall. But. In (net, the President took itch n con* servative economic lack that the upswing lias been only 'moderate hud less than hla own advisers hid predicted. Furthermore, It was just sufficient to rob him ol the power to gain from Don* gross other measures he sought. ' it * . Hr To the* liberal* who supported him, the President turned out to be a prisoner of such Conventional wisdoms as the balanced budget. In short, he talked like a liberal, but he acted like a conservative. He rejected the idea that a little ,, inflation is good for a nation and made a fetish of his anti-inflation policy. I > If the steel masters were blind in their anticipation of ^hat the President might do, so tfas the of the nation’s economic capacity la Idle,' that there Is no chance of too much money chasing too few goods. A lot of observers , In the Capital think that the psychological pressures will all be for another Inflationary spurt. A * * Just how much effect on the nation's economic growth rate will be produced by measures to be passed this summer by Congress or by the tax Cut next year is a matter of conjecture. The probability is that there will be an effect on the plus side, though whether It will cut into unemployment to any considerable degree is more debatable. And whether a higher growth rate can be achieved without further Inflation it doubtful, at The Supreme ~fcourt ram* in for most of the Satterfield denunciations- Earl Warren’s, tribunal was charged with exalting the “liberties of Individuals at the expense of equally valid 'Indivisible liberties ot all citizens.” Especially, Satterfield complained, Is the Supreme Court moving In on the states’ enforcement of their own ertmtna! laws, so that nil crimes before long may become federal crimes and all police federal police. The present President and Congress, the speaker added, sore aiding and abetting the Supreme Court. ; ; It happens that, ex • President Eisenhower voices similar misgivings In the Saturday Evening .Post, about President John F, Kennedy’s constant reaching for more power for himself. U,S. Economy New fork Times While the economy is at a high, levbl and may even continue to ad- * vance, it Is failing far short of the ambitious goals set by the Kennedy Administration. Even if a downturn is avoided, Washington cannot be satisfied with the present* signs of, stagnation that will not absorb tb* notion’s resources of , State's Rights ' New York Daily News Opening the American Bar Association convention In-San Francisco,’Presjdent John C. Satterfield President blind aa to the effect of .took a wide swing at all thrise what he did on the business com- tranche*,pf the U. S. Government munlty. Some in the Capital feel for trytag to) grab too much power that, basically, the trouble is a away from Ah* states. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 80, 1962 Flying Fighters for France Meet in State gfs >Vidow Expire* YORK (AP) «. Rosemary Jenet, 64. widow of poet I Vincent Benet, died Fri- .Foe of PeGatilte Senator Warns afJobFighting Communism Fay Homage to World War / Comrade NIFTY - THRIFTY BATTLE CREEK (APl-Amerl-CM flying heroes who fought for France in World War I towed gray-inf heads in a solemn tribute Sunday to a departed comrade. ' Tears glistened in the eyes.of some of the dd-tjlaera as an American Legion rifle squad fired ttoee, volleys and i bugler played ■ "Thp«” in, memory of®. Fred* F trick Wf Zinn, who fought with • them, in the French Foreign Le- • gion and the Lafayette Flying Corps. t Taking part hi the ceremony t were a handful of the few aur* l vivors who volunteered for serv* I ice with the French forces before the United States entered Worid France to Join in the reunion of War I. _ , the men who* fought in hie coun- Zinn, the JUmt American aerial try’s behalf before he was bom. combat photographer, was buried As the fir heroes paid theirre-—at his request two years ago-in epects to Erin, they Were Wei) Memorial Park Cemetery off the aware of (heir thinning numlifn. end of the runway at Battle About S5 survivors are believed Creek's Kellogg Field. scattered around the world. .Of pi aoitf lTNVRnm ^ 2®
V HE 2-0291 Nehrv'sQfiinoPall^ Backed by Parliament MADRAS, India (AP)—The Na-j tional Council of the Communist party of India has passed a resolution supporting Prime Minister Nehru’s policy toward Communist China. ' • * Golf Novice Gets Ace After 3 Weeks Play ST. LOUIS (UPI) — Mrs. James piark, mother of eight, scored a hole in tme three weeks after tak-ing up golf. ^ * Ar notofu* TEAR FOR HERO - Col. David W. King of New York City, former member of the French Foreign Legion in World War || wipes a tear from hia eye at plaqued dedication ceremonies for the. late Col, Fred W. Zinn of Battle Ckeek yesterday. > the resolution, at the end of thfe party’s six-day meeting in Hyderabad Sunday night, supported Nehru’s policy of seeking a peace-fid settlement of the border dispute, with Red China while taking measures ter defend the remote, Himalayan frontier if necessary. The Scenic Travel HU of * the Summer — Final 2 Friday Sailings — Enjoy X Them, M 32nd Street Resident Have No Heart at All TUCSON, Ariz. m - The Tucson City Council is convinced that 1* residents of the southern, Arizona, city have no romance in their! hearts. , AWAMIMJJMb (sSADVENTWE CRUSE The average man, jvho was so sure at 20 that he could save the worift,/wishes at 40 that he could Just save part of hia salary. . . An old-timer, notes John J. Plomp of Detroit, remembers when a woman spoke cf her part-time Job —and wasn’t inferring to her marriage.—Earl Wilson. ■ THIS FRIDAY tHE AQUARAMA SAILS NORTH To tho Blue (iotewuy Wstcr* «( htkt Hurra. iT.Holrott Duck, foot of Wert Or»n« Bled.. SiM A.M.-feturu that e*«Ou» S:tS r.M. TUk.U lor thla •eenie, ever yopulor cruler now m *>l* •« »»•»»• Children I4.SA. Cull your Auto Club, Travel Afrat M AQUARAMA UNI, 1841 First National Bldg.—WO 2-6911 na.lv Vi.b.1 AHIka Asian NaIsm All lilUBfl '» The council changed the name of East 32nd Street to Valentine Lane., The 16 residents protested and dee manded the old name be returned. to Bring Y ou Dramatic Hued Area Rugs Count on Pennay's similar ones for far more! Penney’* worked with top mills to bring you these newest floor fashions at savings prices ! These are the vibrant colors, exceptionally beautiful in tone, . color-expert styled, skillfully blended, that dec* / orators are so excited about thla season! ' Thick, heavy, luxurious rayon and acetate pile, with latex skid resistant back. Choose yours today .. * but come early 1 MAGNIFICENT DECbRATOR COLORS ff goW/buff f bone/fawn/black • branps/rutwt - f slate/pewter . T- • plna/forest graan/blu* • chsrry/haliyhock • cocoa/bulgu /'. • periwinkle/lavaqdiir CHARGE IT at MONDAY OPEN - Thru SATURDAY 9:30a.m.tor-:^—W;mwm\.'' . '■■ ;/■; These Low9 Low Prices on Thrifty’s Own... 22 100 CAPSULES, Only $1 250 CAPSULES, Only $249 500 CAPSULES, Only $449 1000 CAPSULES, Only $79S HURON STRCCT Oornor Talograph 4896 DIXIE HIGHWAY Naxt ta Food Fair Packago Liquor Store .i ioof-Win*-Chompog«o Ike Burns IJp § Golf Course 1 in Scotland 1 TURNBERRY, Scotland <* — Dwight IX Eisenhower burned up the tough Turnberry championship golf course today.- e was not only good." said professional Robert Jamieson, 'he was marvelous." The former president. of the United States, who will be 73 in October, scored an 86 over the 6,770-yard, villainously trapped ie, which will be the scene of next year’s Walker Cup Tour-ent. It was Ike’s best score on this course. '•‘{I think my best score before was an 87," said the vacationing general. Per for the course Is 73. If his handicap of 16 strokes is counted, Ike would have had a ir three under par. Lohdon Papers Hit Arrival of U2s State Man Hurt, 3 Die In Car Crash in East HAMP8TEAD, N.H. (II - Walter C. Shultz, 51, of Chesaning, Mich:, was reported in fair condition toddy from injuries suffered Sunday in a two-car crash which left three persons dead; The victims were not Identified immediately. The accident i curred at an intersection only few miles from the northeastern Massachusetts line. Stool Executive Dies LATROBE. Pa. (API—Lloyd D. Bowman, 60, chairman Of the I of Vanadium-Alloys Steel Co., since 1961, died Sunday of a attack. | Bowman, -joined the company in 1917, bom in Ebensburg, Pa. LONDON (UPI) - The basing of three American U2 planes on Brit-drew more' newspaper criticism today and a suggestion the matter should be discussed in Parliament. ★ * ★ The planes arrived yesterday foam LaughUn Air Force B a s e, Tex., Via Plattsburgh Air Forqe Base, N.Y, 1 ' Moscow radio quickly charged they would be used for "spying" purposes. The United States said they would mske high altitude meteorological flights over the North Atlantic. The plane gained notoriety when Central intelligence Agency (CIAt pilot Francis Cary Powers was dowped over Russia In 1960 while a flight over the Soviet Union. QUESTIONS MOVE The Daily Sketch, which generally supports government policy, editorially, "Can (Prim*! Minister * Harold) Macmillan say* no If the Americans decided to fly one of the . . . U2’e over Rue lia»" Lt. Col. Arthur Loatherwood, 41, eommaador of the U> detachment. said the pianos "will be, engaged la a high-alUtude sampling program for the Defense Atomic Security Agency and the Strategic Aig Command (SAC).” The Sketch commented on this statement tyy saying ot the Amer- ican plan: "Nobody really believes The planes are stationed at Upper- Heyfard, SAC headquarters in Britain.. ★ dr W Member ot Parliament Frederick Lee said he saw "no physics necessity of their (U3’i) presence' in Britain. "I believe that the time for this step is inopportune," he said. '•k , W ★ The Express suggested parliamentary discussion. 'Too many shady-looking cisions come to light while NO’S on holiday,” the - newspaper said. GOP'62 Win Called a Must Chairman Says Party Won't Have Chance in '64 Without Victory WASHINGTON (UPI) «* The Republican party will have to “look under a rock" tor a 1964 presidential candidate if it doesn’t win key election* this fall, according to GOP National Chairman William E. Miller. Miller said yesterday that since the Republicans controlled neither the White House, either House of Congress, less than a third of the governors and the igtate legislatures, "we’d better win in ’62 and not worry about winning In 1964." He said In a television Interview.,that the OOP had every reason to bo optimistic about tho November oloetlons. He said that in 19 months of control of the White House and Congress the Democrats "have delivered on their promisee"’ WOULD BE DEAD Miller, who is also a New York congressman, said that If former Vlcb President Richard M. Nixon and George Romney lose the California and Michigan gubernatorial races, respectively, both would be finished as potential presidential candidates. New York Oov. Nelson Rockefeller's presidential stature In would depend on How well he wins In New York this fell. Miller said. Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Arlz., 'Would have his chances enhanced by any of thq things which might befall the other candidates of an unfavorable nature," the GOP chairman added. Miller aaid that if Rep. William Scranton is elected, governor Pennsylvania he could become an important figure ih the Republican party. 1 075 W. Huron St. Phono 334-9957 If You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! TV Sal*! Director Dios NORWALK. Conn. (AP)-Klrk-ham Wright Tomey, 53, television sales director of the Seven Arte Associated Corp. of New York City for several years, died Saturday. Thatcher, itt end Warner INSURANCE $T” JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED - HIGHEST PRICES. 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TEN y THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1962 WM Defenselsck i Nevada Dem Claims U.S. Open to Attack by Rid Space Craft WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. Howard W Cannon, D-N«y„ said today the United States stands de-against attacks that MwesrSeen^^ By MURRAY S. BROWN Notes from the foreign news ca- rould come from orbiting Soviet space vehicles. • . By placing the major emphasis of its space efforts on scientific exploration and^dvillan applications, it may be offering the Soviet Union the opportunity of “an and possibly * enormous _ mountable- military advantage, Cannon said in a speech prepared for Senate delivery. * * ★ "I see i» evidence that there Is a national, authoritative intent to accelerate the earliest practicable development of urgently needed military (space) capabilities,” he said- - ' , “Where, for example, Is \ necessary project to develop means of Intercepting, inspecting and destroying, if necessary, hostile satellites that could bear super megaton bombs down on ua?" HITS DELAY Cannon, a brigadier general and Jet pilot in the Air Force Reserve, said that such a development program, though advocated by the military services, has been spe--.................. ‘vifian Wayne State University will offer college of education courses MU fall at six off-campus centers including Pontiac. . cificaliy delayed by civilian officials. “lb the best of my knowledge," Cannon said, “no defense whatever exists at this time against any military attack that might be made from the space region even though such attacks are within the present capability of the Soviet Uhlon." fit Pontiac, the registration date is Sept. 11 at Pontiac Northern High School, 1051 Arlene St., where Bourses will be taught. f Classes are scheduled to begin at the end of September. Other centers are St. Clair Shores, Redfold, Port Huron and Southgate. Before a student may receive credit in an off-campus course he must have officially been admitted to Wayne State University. Students must present either a copy of the most recent cumulative record or admission’s credentials at the time of registration. Cannon is a member of both the Senate Space and Armed Services committees. Sen. Alexander Wiley, R-Wis., said in a statement Saturday that Congress should conduct hearing before adjournment into the military potential of the Soviet ,Un-ion’s orbiting twin cosmonauts. The dual space flight, said Wiley, ' raises "new questibns about * the niURary dangers to free wdrld security.” From 10 to 15 percent of all deaths in the \jjprld are caused by cancer, medical authorities believe. MO Mttfsm Rmm Modut Rats* Iron **.*• Guaranteed reservations with war FREE Hamilton Hotel “Preferred Quest” Credit Card - Write ter nun today MARKET MANEUVERS Look jfer top-level behind-the-scene moves in jVestem European capitals,and Washington to pave the way for Britain's entry into the European Cbtnmon Market. Prime Minister Harold Macmillan la expected to appeal In- in addition, London is hqpefplj that the United States will inter-l vene discreetly with thfe European'' leaders in favor of Britain's admission. 8ECOND THOUGHTS President Charles de Gaulle ft reliably reported to have dropped for the time being his pet project eellor Konrad Adenauer to per-auade French Pwstdeat Charieo de GanUe to stop rocking the bdat. Similar appeals also are WSU to Offer Courses Here in Education Graduate students in education may apply not more than 24 quarter hours of off-campus work toward a master’s degree. Fully ployed teachers are permitted to take not more than six quarter-hours of work while undergraduates elect no more than eight quarter-hours. ( Cash for fees will not be accepted. A check or money order made payable to Wayna State University! required. NY Student Driver Launches Accident! NEW YORK (AP)-A car with student driver at the wheel went out of control in the Times Square area Sunday and set off a chain of accident*. Seven persona were injured. Four vehicles and store front were damaged. Police said the car, driven 1 MorHs Loewi, 37, first struck taxi on 47th Street near Broadway injuring the cab's two women pas-, scngers. The auto then mounted the sidewalk, smashed into a store front window, all d along the pavement for 25 feet, bowled over five pedestrians, rammed into two parked and finally ground to a halt, against a parked truck. Name New president of Nazareth College KALAMAZOO (*> - Nazareth College, a liberal arts school with enrollment .of 300 girls has a, new president. Sister Mary Verona was named Saturday to succeed Sister Marie Kathleen, whose failing h e a 11 h| forced her retirement.. Sister Verona has been supervisor of De-i trait high schools operated by the. Sisters of St. Joseph. WINNERS OF 25,000 TV STAMPS 10,000 Trading Stamps ORintlDI M. CHURCH 107 HolM Ml., RaoktiUr 1.000 Trading Stamp* JKAN RUftir WU r*Ut, CUrkatM 1.000 Trading Stampa JAMKS A. ATTARI) 1,000 Trading Stamps BARBARA >RYK 21000 Trading Stamp* YOU WILL INVEST IF YOU INVESTIGATE BECAUSE EVERY DOLLAR SAVED IS A DOUBLE DUTY DOLLAR EARNING 4% DIVIDENDS, O PAID SINCE 1952 PUIS LIFE SAVINGS INSURANCE TO $2,000.00 If PONTIAC CO-OP FEDERAL CREDIT UNION BMSOJif, Huron St. .to amend the constitution to provide for the office of-a vice president as in the United States and direct elections of the chiefexecu-'tive. Parliamentary opposition to the changes has proved unexpectedly strong. OOMMimr CRACKDOWN The big three Western allies are considering measures to curtail Communist police activities on the PINCH ON PBEPIMg Reports reaching Hong Kong say Communist China Is feeling thi pinch of being deprived of Soviet aid. Peiping’s leaders are said to be making a point of telling the people about the lack of Runiah aid. to goad them Into greater domestic productkmefforts. COSMONAUT CLOSEUP A news conference that will pro- vide the first opportunity of West- tion is bring considered. Only ern correspondents to apeak to airi about one out of seven women see cosmonauts Andrian Nibolayeviapplicant* enter Vanderbilt under and Pavel Popovich close up is ex-lthe private school’s limited en-pected in Moscow early next wcek/roilmcnt AT n surgery. Ml proved this re rate of heeling. It* lling properties also hi nt infection. Idllii vent_________$ In one hemorrhoid case after another “very striking improve- ment" was reported and verified by a doctor’s observations*. This improvement was maintained In cases where a doctor's observations Were continued overnperiodef months! Among these sufferers were n.-wim variety of hemorrhoid Conditions, some of 10 to 20 years’ The secret Is this new healing substance (Bio-Dyne*)1- discovery of a world-famous research institution. This substance (avow obtainable in oint-merit or timpotitory form known as Preparation H*. Ask for Preparation H Suppositories (COBvenient to carry if away from home) or Preparation H ...._ Preparatio------- Ointment with special applicator. Available at air drug ne of the Years BestBuys Motorola TV 18,000 VOLTS OF PICTURE POWER DELIVERS SHARP CRISP PICTURE full year Guarantee, on all parts and tubes Precision crafted hand wired chassis with operaUag trade-la No extras to buy—Immediate delivery *199* 283 Sq. I>. \ NO MONEY DOWN Motorola 19” Portable TV Full year EASY 2 in 1 Washer Guarantee on all parts find tubes ADMIRAL Dolma Refrigerator 9 cu. ft. 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AU^USf 20, 1WM| jtroir PONTIAC MALL ; TELEGRAPH and ELIZABETH LAKE RD, OPEN DULY 9 to 9 Monday & Tuesday Only SHOP FOR YOUR BACK-TO-SCHOOL HEEDS! ALL INCLOSED-AIR CONDITIONED-FREE PARKING SPECIALS 54N0 CARS m MONTGOMERY WARD Save on NIW BULKY-LOOK I ton ORION* *00 • Machine washable • Never any Making | • Wen's shrink* fsMla fWhen have you toon a value like this? Smartly collared stylet In fashion colors that highlight skirts, dresses. Snap them up of Wards. SAM RAYBURN FIRST DAY COVER sot Be sure you get this and all future FIRST DAY COVERS JOIN OUR 1st. DAY COVER SERVICE * Stop in or call (We Buy Coins and Collections), Air-Conditioned CIMftCDf C Pontiac Mall rillllEn O Shone I92-04H Open til I P.M. Appointments Now Being Taken for BACK-TO-SCHOOL EYE EXAMINATIONS Pontiac Nall Optical Center Dr. Paul C. Feinberg, Optometrist—Ph. 682.1113 3 GIANT DISCOUNT RADIO BUYS FROM HIGHLAND! 9-TRANSISTOR FM-AM RADIO ITS PORTABLE! PONTIAC MALL Next Door to J. L. Hudson Co. EMPIRE SHOE SERVICE f* LADIES' TOP LIFTS Leather er Nylon 49* Rag. *1* While You Wait At the PONTIAC MALL See Your Favorite n Radio Personality Mon., Wad., Fri. 7te*PJL In Person DON MeLEOD He will spin your favorite record*. Bring yours with yog. Plus, autographs. ■ / ■ THE SHOPPING CENTER WHERE WE CONTROC THE WEATHER Lair Pamperiaf Pie Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Monday*, Vtaraayt and Wednesday* we are able to offer that Utile “extra” beacu.e our pace ia more leituraly on theae day*. Start the week right then-come Ini and get a permanent wave and thampoo, *et and »tyled haircut, combined. *8*5 donnell hair stylists Continental Salon PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTS L Open Daily 9 to 9 Appointment Not Always Necessary # MONTGOMERY WARD SAAART SLACKS For Little Guys |il A special sala of better quality slacks — ideal to start off Back-few School. You'll find several styles; colors to choose from sizes 3-6x. KODAK MOVIE CAMERA Now on Sale *12” Regular $29M k PONTIAC HALL SHOPPING CENTER IN. 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MONDAY* AUGUST 20, 1962 Charges Clique* in Avondale 1 School District School Board States Case IVotes4thTime A charge of attempting to be a "behind the scenes" governing clique has been leveled af the Avondale School District Improvement Association by the four board of education members th§ association seeks to oust. A statement issued-by the tour also referred to a “deal” between the group and LeRoy R. Watt, who resigned two weeks ago as school superintendent to accept a similar position in Wooster, Ohio. The tour - Floyd L, Cobb Jr., school board president; David W. Hackett, Vice president; Ray- mond N. Baber, secretary; Mro. Genevieve Porter, treasurer — added that the Avondale Board of Education Is concerned with the education and welfare of the district’s school children, The improvement Association was; formed after Watt's resigna- ----BLUE AND GREY SHOOT — Members pf the North-South Skirmish Association fire their muzzle-loading rifles in individual matches at the Blue and Grey Shoot held Saturday and P«allst Frtat Fhats Sunday in Daviaburg- The second annual event drew aver 150 civil war enthusiasts to participate in the two-day shoot sponsored by The Davis-burg Junior .Chamber of Commerce. Old, New Will Be Featured at 90th Annual Armada Pair ARMADA - A dash of the old and a twist of the new will be among the attractions of the 90th annual Armada Fair that opens here at 5 p m. Wednesday. ★ ★ ★ The old ip a display of antiques and the new is really a twist —- a contest of, the nation's latest dancing craze by the same name, scheduled for Saturday night. Both will be new feature* at the fair, along with participation of boy scout and girl scout groups, according to the fair’s secretary-manager, Ervin Klus-endorf. Sponsored by the Armada Agricultural Society, the, annual event will last through Sunday at the 19-acre fairgrounds at the village limits. Entries in, hundreds of categories will compete for more than $10,-000 in premiums and prizes. Pair visitor* will be treated to a number of treto attractions in addition to several hundred display*, exhibits and demonstrations. Among-tho-attrariions -wUL he professional wrestling, variety [shows, baseball games, band con-Is, drill teams and circus acts, estock judging, horse and tractor pulling contests and dancing also are expected to be among the most popular activities. ♦ dr ★ A large variety of home economics displays is anticipated, including canning, dressmaking, child care and family living themes. Farm Implement displays will Find Missing Pilot's Log Floating on Saginaw Bay SAGINAW W - The log of a .haze over the bay about the time Michigan airplane missing - since the plane would have been in the Thursday was found in a briefcase area. It had no navigational lnstru* floating on Saginaw ’ Bay yester-|ments. day but officials had to call off .an air search because of muddy waters. No trace has been found of Albert Copeland. 44, of Capac and Lawrence Bade, 50, of St. Clair ■ who were last seen In Lapeer Thursday when they slopped to re-Uuel on a flight to South Branch. Civil Air Patrol official* said search planes were unable to see belew ihe surface of the bay yesterday. State police and Const Guard boat* were expected to resume the search today. A fisherman found the briefcase floating near the mouth of the Saginaw River. Copeland was on route to pick up his wile Margaret who had been visiting her parents at South Branch. The CAP said he had not filed a flight plan and the plane's failure to arrive was not reported Until late Friday. Officials said there t thick Examination Asked on Liquor Charges NOVI TOWNSHIP - Richard .Wagner, owner of Wagner's ,tion Barn, demanded examination Saturday on charges of selling lj« quor without a license, on arraignment, before Township Justice of! the Peace Robert K. Anderson. Wagner, of '43400 Grand River A/ve., was released on 3900 bond with examination set for Sept. 6. Stale police from the Bedford and Brighton posts along with Novi police obtained a warrant tor Wagner’s arrest Friday. The officers ■aid they had a witness bought moonshine liquor from Wagner. MAYFIELD TOWNSHIP - Back from their honeymoon trip Northern Michigan are newly wed Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ray Lee who exchanged their vows in the First sbyterian Church, Lapeer. Rev, Op display at the Michigan State Fair tills year will be a wild boar, captured in the Eecrglades^of Flor- be some of theJ largest In the state, according to Klusendort, who says the Armada Fair (■ "one of the few such events that continue to promote agriculture." Bernard’ Kalahar, chairman Of the Macomb County Board of Supervisors, will crown the fair’s king and queen following opening ceremonies Wednesday-ALSO 4-H RULERS Also the county’s 4-H king and queen, they are Mary Babel of Richmond and Tom Jackman, of Ray Township, both 15. A 4-H hone show and n variety show are also slated for Wednesday evening. Judging of all exhibits will take place Thursday, which also will feature 4-H dairy and beef cattle, open class horse entries, a tractor pulling contest and a horse pulling contest. . Open class ' cattle judging of state-wide entries is scheduled for Friday. Another tractor pulling contest, n Little Laegue baseball game and professional wrestling also will bo among Friday’s activities. Saturday will feature the Macomb County Holstein* Black and White Show judging among Holstein breeders, a tractor haul, Little League baseball, an Armada High School band concert, the (wist contest and dancing from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. The Livestock Grahd Parade is set for Sunday, which also will feature two performances by the Port Clinton, Ohio, drum majorettes and their 90-girl drill team, a tractor haul, a band concert and small circus acts. tion and began action to bring recall vote bn the four board members. Members of the group plan to begin a circulation of petitions latey this weeK, with an Oct. 10 target date loir filing them with the board,. The members of the group, many of whom live in Bloomfield Township’s Ch a pe l Hills subdivision that once sought to leave the Avondale School District, have charged Watt was forced to resign by the board. ' 4 WARNED BY RESIGNATION public statement today, Watt said he had told the board when he was appointed three years ago that he would resign if conflict arose between him and board members because "the job of education was too 'big and important for the superintendent and the-board to ‘fight* with one an other.” - Watt said the board did not re quest his resignation. • "In my opinion," Watt Continued my philosophy and methods of obtaining a quality educational program were in conflict with those ot the majority of the board, "These methods did, however, coincide with the community which was evidenced by the overwhelming i support of the recent bond and miliage issues. In anticipation of such passe and with the offer of a position of greater responsibility and opportunity, 1 asked to be permitted to resigh.” THREE DAYS LATER The school .board appointed _ e o r g e E.’ Shackelford, former principal of Elmwood Elementary School, to the superintendent’s post three days after Watt resigned. Complete text of the statement by the four board members under attack is as follows; ★ it. . dr. ■ ‘The basic question is whether the Avondale School District M governed by the legal authority, the elected Board of Education, or whether a self-appointed s c h o o ‘ board, the Avondale School District Improvement Association, be the actual "behind the scenes’1 governing clique. Apparently this group had a at’ with the former super-A legally uonstltuted board of education makes no private deal*- "Avondale citizen* have always supported good schools. This board of education is concerned with the education and welfare of all the children in the Avohdale School District. "We shall continue to serve the citizens of this community in the best interests of the boys and girls attending our schools.’’ The Improvement Association has charged that the presence of the four members on the school board is not conducive to administration of quality education, that they have been influenced more by teachers and. administrators than by the wishes of voters, and that they have refused to give a rea-why Watt’s contract was not renewed. . A board of education meeting scheduled for 8 p.m. today at Avondale High School. Honeymoon in North Newlyweds Return MBS. ROBERT R. LEE Clifford Haskins read the candlelight service. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Hugh C. Newton, 1287 Bowers Road, and the Robert E. 730 Glaspie Road, Oxford Township. For her wedding the former Sue Ellen Newton chose a princess-style gown of silk orgnnza nnd embroidered Alencon Inee featuring n bouffant fkirt that ended In a chapel train, A pearl-encrusted crown held her fingertip veil, and she carried cascade ot Stephanotia, ivy oi whiln roSetfes. ★ ★ ♦ Attending as matron of honor waa Mrs. James Walker of Durand. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Jack Mauk, Jacqueline Lee, sister of the bridegroom, and Kathleen Burgess of Detroit. Dwight Splker of Oxford assisted as best man. beating the guests were Robert Wooloox, Duane Wlldey, Dale Splker of Oxford and Ward Newton, cousin of the jiride. The reception whs held In the American Legion Memorial Ing, Lapeer, after the nuptials. The newlyweds now are residing Monroe-Street in Lapeer. Lyon Twp. Deciding on .Operating Revenue/ Athletic Program SOUfH LYON m for the fourth time in as many months, Lyon Township School District voters go to the polls today to decide on renewal of a special operating tax. Cavanagh Refuses to Debate Over Tax The proposal asks for five miiki for. one year. Stakes on whether voters repeat three previous "no” decisions, or change their minds this time,,are $106,000 In revenue, the district’s athletic program and the use of It* newett school. School board members voted to close the Sayre Schdol Snd . abandon the athletic program after the last defeat. ★ i They will be faced with trimming another $35,000 from the budget if the miliage proposal fails again, and if another election next week on authority to transfer $105,000 in building funds to the operating account also is defeated. ; , A ★ The board of education ordered the fourth vote on the miliage issue after receiving a petition signed by more than 400 residents requesting • the vote. It had said it would not place the issue on the ballot again unless it received: such a petition. THREE TIMES Voters turned down a 6.5-mill renewal request in May and again in June. - They followed that with a July U defeat, ot two proposals, one of five mills and Without the renewal of .the expiring special operating miliage, the board would he- forced to operate on only the 8.37 mills allocated by the county. ★ ★ No increase over last year’s tax would result from approval of the miliage renewal, according school officials. , DETROIT fUPI) - Detroit May-r Jerome P, Cavanagh wants no part of debating Berkley Mayor George Kuhn, chairman of tbe Mayors Vigltanqg Tax COpunittee, because, as Cavanagh put it, Kuhn “misinformed about Detroit’s 1 per cent income tax," " Kuhn tried to force Cavanagh’s hand when he claimed Detroit’s deficit was only 86.8 million In June but Cnvaiogh retaliated, saying that despite the fact that the etty’e actual Cush shortage as of June 30 was abou 86.8 million, Detroit’* obligation* for pensions, welfare and other responsibilities pushed the total over 830 million. Cavanagh turned down Kuhn's invitation to debate Detroit’s fiscal posture. He said, "I am not participating in Mayor Kuhn’s promo- tion of misunderstanding and misinformation about the Detroit income tax.’’ '; :• Kuhn toad he was not "surprised” at Ca^anagh’s rejection. I'm still fighting for equal time on Detroit television stations to answer Cavanagh," Kuhn said; Cavanagh addressed.a local television audience last week and put the city's deficit at $30 million. Kuhn accused the young Detroit chief executive of "confusing the public" with his figures Area Motorcyclist Rams Into Car> Dies’ SHELBY TOWNSHIP — A 24-year-old Washington motorcylist was Wiled last night when be rammed into the side of a car making a left turn from 24-roue Road onto Van Dyke Road shortly before 9 p.m. Dead is Larry C. Kleinow, 5ffi81 Van Dyke Road, -V Driver of the car was Harry A-Antonuk, 67, of Detroit who told Shelby Township police that he had stopped before moylng:. out onto Van Dyke Road. He said he started his turn after one: car went by and he saw nothing, else on the road. Police Chief Robert Smith said today that Antonuk was issued a ticket for'failure to yield right of way. The Detroit man was to make a’ formal statement today, Smith added. The Berkley official lost his flrtt round with Cavanagh last month when the Wayne County Circuit Court declared the Motor City’sl per -cent tax was valid on pay-checks of resident* and nonresidents alike who work in Detroit. . better Literature' Unit to Draft Constitution ROCHESTER - The newly formed Rochester Area Council for Better Literature will draft its constitution at .its second public meeting Wednesday in the Rochester Municipal Building, All those interested in this group and it* aims are invited to attend the 8 p.m. session. Youth Drowns in Gravel Pit Armada Township Boy I Fails in Attempt to | Swim Across Point ARMADA TOWNSHIP - A 16 year-old Armada Township youth drowned in an attempt to swim across the point of a privately owned gravel pit here Saturday afternoon The victim was Kenneth R. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. WiL Ham Smith, 17D2q E. 32 Mile Road. Aooordlng to Romeo State Police, Smith was swimming I Steiner’s Graiel Pit with three friends, James Adams, 15, sod Bill Duruola. 17, both of Armadn, and ’Kenneth J. Maohi Southgate. Adams and Durnoia hud swum serosa a 200-foot point with Machus and then Smith behind them. About midway across Smith screumed tor'hclp. FORCED TO LET GO Machus got ahold of him but wot forced to let go when he was pulled under. He broke free# was unable to reach Smith a police said. The body waa recovered aboht IN feet from shore la about M foot of water by Romeo and Service will be ,3 p.m. tomor-JII row *t Roth’s Home for Funerals | with burial to follow In Bruce-j| Armada Cemetery. Surviving besides his parents ait a fitter, Darlene, at horpe; three brothers, Rector T. Harless and Nathan and William Smith,I both at home; and his grandmother, Mr*. Sally Dyer j of Knoxville, Tcnn. JHggMj THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOXDAy. AUGUST ,y, 1WW Th* done* floor Isn't Mi* only place wh*r* people are enthusiastic about .Mi* now twl»H Right hsrs, thousands of b*dg*Hnled*d housewives aro “going for" RAYON’S now twist In food rstaOngl Thoy llko our policy thot bring* thorn low prlcos ovoiy day on ovory Item, roltwr then covings •n|u*»*f*w*p*cioU. Ussy Pc* being *«• to provldo tholr famllloc with good food, good moalc, for l*«s money. And tboy Ilk* being abl* t* *n|*y maximum cavings m all tholr fends and household noods without “Imp, skip and lump" shopping. Why not try one-stop shopping at SAVON yourself. and loom how thrifty It can b*l fomflfS** Delicious Baked or Barbeeuedl Savon's Low Price U.S. No. 1 All-Purpose MICHIGAN WHITE Potatoes 10 n29 COFFEE SALE! Hills Bros., Beecb-Nut,Chate& Sanborn or Maxwell House-59 HOBANCO BRAND Creamery Chicken Soup Eeyk® liRmauarters Fresh Batter diHin aids mad NibletsCorn...... Deep Burn Libbys Pork S Beans ■fill Peters Grade 1 ’ 19° Ring Bologna.«,. ."t 111* Peters Grade 1 Large 19 Sliced Bologna WM III lUe Keraoekl Brand Grade 1 ft* Skinless Wieners... » Krarr.!.. 111* Armour's •'CfoverWoom* HI0 Evaporated Milk.... (Ho Fancy Hawaiian . 19 ! Dole Pineapple Jnias 9° j GoltMNedal Floor... IS* ........ iMfcm Pur* Whit* Shortening 19° MBM*......... |||tt , , Light, Dark Brawn or Powderad Fin* Granulated White Satin Sngar. Kraft'* Salad Dressing Miracle Whip...... Special Label Qxydof, Tide or Cheer..... UltaM Alaska Salmon.... Snack Delight Potato Chips...... Special 1 e Sale! Salads Tit Bait. g. Butterfield Brand Shoestring Potatoes Assorted Flavors Hods Conned Pop.. Soald-Sweet Florida Orange Juice...... LtSPreeenres..... Ruby Bo* Puns Strawberry Preserves Pure Whit* Graph RapHn.... Shades F® twowti Salad Dressing..... MASON'S King Sii« Hoot A1V10|N|QUALITY BRANDS YOU KNOW & TRUSTIES A1V[0|N|yOU SAVE MORE at SAVON-ANY DAY! SET YOUR TABLE FOR LESS! CASH SAVINGS COUNT MOST! PONTIAC MALL Next to Montgomery Ward GLENWOOD PLAZA Next to K-MART OPEN DAILY 9 to 10 SAT. 8 to 10 SUN. NOON to 7 t THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONflAY, APGUST'20. 1962 FOCRtEEIT Sorority , Sharon Wolfeand Marshall Rice Has Outiria Exchange Vows in. Eyeaing Rite Mm. Andrew Vitt entertained Sharon Yvonne Write and mendm of thfe XMPMChap. Marshall D. Rice spoke wed- ter of Beta Sigma Phi Soiwity ^ vows before Dr. trail •Kontz.Srtertvev.Btog to the The engagement “T »•“ 1 d Patricia Ann. WffiB'tlfM • ’ Brown is SS*Jefferwn. Ohio, gam Us niece ' . The flrrt fall meeting to to marriage. She to ttedaugh-announced by Sept 18 at the Pontiac Yacht ter of Mrs. Martin C Wolfe Aer Barents the with Mrs. Enar West as of Linden Road and toe late Mr. Wolfe. • ■ Her bouffant gown of white Chantilly lace, was How-length and worn with a silk illusion veil and princess crown. She carried sweetheart roses, white carnations and popcorn chry- The engagement of Betty Louise Fierier K»... Richard Lee J McIntosh it announced by, her parents Mr. and Mrs. Bluitt Flatter of Clayburn Drive, Waterford,— ■ Township. Ris, parents are the Basil Mclnfoshes of • r Rochester. Chanel Look MRS. MARSHALL D. RICE PATRICIA ANN BROWN BETTY. LOUISE FLENER Neome Drive ' were wed Ask First :to Change Any Gift By the Emily Port Institute ' Q: I was married recently and received a lamp for a wed. ding present from a friend of mine. It was entirely out of keeping with the rest of my furnishings, so I took it back to the store and exchanged it for another one. When this friend came to see me the other evening she asked about toe lamp and I told her what I had done and said I hoped she didn’t mind. She said she didn’t but I could toll she was hurt. I always thought it was the bride's privilege to exchange some of her wedding presents. WOT you please tell me if I was wrong to have exchanged thia friend’s present and should I have asked her permission before doing so? A: A bride may exchange a present that is the duplicate of another she receives but If she exchanges any other she will always risk hurting the leelings of the person who picked it out, unless told by that person that she may do Winter vows are planned by Susan 0. Lawrence, . daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mer man J. » Lawrence of South Tilden Avenue to Ronald B. Hairier, son of the Stanley Hainers of Orchard' Lake. City Students Plans for College ATTENDED BRIDE Marvel Wolfe, her sister’s maid of honor, and their cousin Mrs. Vonda L. Thompson, Dorto f J. Bohland, Lansing, and Frances J. Reese, bridesmaids/ wore emerald crystalette and car- ' ried variegated green carnations. ^ 'Ar, 1 ;# 1 Attending their brother were best man Philip A. Rice and Warren Rice Jr. of Jackson and Charles W. Rice, Elyria, Ohio, who ushered. They are Wed Satur day in Bethany Baptist Church were Sharon Yvonne Wolfe, daughter of »Mrs. Martin C. | Wolf* of Linden "Road and the late Mr. Wolfe, to . . Marshall D. Rice, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. Warren Rice of Florence Avenue the sons of Mr. and Mrs. F. Warren Rice of Florence Avenue. James 0. Shaw of Ann ■ Arbor completed the usher list. SANDRA 0. LAWRENCE Eyes Tired - Looking? Take Make-Up Tips Q: My husband’s brother, -who is a paster, soon will be observing the 25th anniversary of his ordination into the ministry. A large dinner is being given by his parishioners in his honor and my husband and I have been invited to it. Is It necessary for us to take a gift, and if so what would you suggest? A: Bringing a gift will not be necessary, but If your husband knows of something his brother would like, he will surely appreciate your giving it to him earlier to the day as a family remembrance. Or you might, if you wish to do so, give him a check for the poor ip his pariah. How many times have yot been hesitant about keeping an evening date because your eyes looked too tired after a busy day? No need to worry, since you can easily regain a, fresh, wide-eyed look by following these make-up tips. Before applying your makeup, place cotton pads, dampened with cool water and a few drops of skin freshener, on your closed eyelids and relax for a few minutes. Next, cover-up any dark circles under your eyes with erase stick. To conceal the red-rimmed look and to make your eyes appear wide awake, line your upper eyelids with black or brown fluid eyeliner and define the bottom lids with pencil. Make the whites of your eyes seem clearer by £ using blue or green eyeshadow. To ^offset the sad look that tired eyes so ofteij have, \arch your eyebrows slightly higher than you normally ^uld ’ with artistic, hairlike takes from a flneline eyebrow pencil. Complete your eye make-up by applying mas-, cara generously to your eyelashes/ Six Michigan state University Oakland students, including William Davis of Pontiac, will attend the six-day national convention off the Newman Club, which opens Aug. 27 in the Penn-Sheraton Hotel in Pittsburgh. Rev. Thomas F. Hinsberg, director of the M8UO Newman Club fund psychology instructor at the Sacred Heart Seminary in Detroit will accompany the delegates. Richard J. Fisher, son of the Junior Joseph Fishers of Peacock Street, /was accepted at Cartilage College and will enter the Illinois campus as a freshman this fall. He has been active In football, basketball and track and Intends to major in physical education. ' ★ ★ ■ ★ Robert Klelst of North Shirley Avenue eirned bachelor ot, science In education degree at summer cfmito'ericement exercises Thursday at Concordia Teachers College, River Forest, 111. Some 700 students enrolled for summer studies during two five-week sessions. . ★ Hr ★ ' v /. Jane Rihdfusg, a school of nursing senior, Will be returning to Ann Arbor and the University of Michigan on Sunday. Her brother Stuart is enrolled in the freshman class in the literature, science and arts college. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Owen Rlndfusg of Nelson Street. it rUti " ★ }i /: Darlene E. Woodhull of Lincoln Avenuta Is attending the Ann Arbor Practical Nurse Education Center Which to affiliated with Pontiac General Hospital. She will graduate In January. ___ V» 1 ‘ —-j-aa 4^, ~ fthr - y# Marcelene Jean Dennis, daughter of Mrs. Herman Dennis of East Huron Street, and the late Mr. Dennis, will be a physical education senior at Flint Junior College this fall. Gail Woolis Newton, daughter of the Newtons, Morris Plains, N.J., and Frederick L. Roeser, son of Dr. and Mrs. Waldomar 0. Roeser of Saturday in St. Pauls Episcopal Church, Moms Plains, N.J. Co lee n Nichols, Madison Heights, and Debra Rice, Jack-son, were flower girls. Charles D. Rice of Elyria carried the rings. TO RESIDE HERE Receiving some 300 guests in ike church parlors, Mrs. Wolfe wore mint green silk organza and Mrs. Rice appeared to champagne beige silk organza. Both wore pink carnations. The couple will live in Pontiac after a honeymoon to the Catskills. The bride graduated from Ferris Institute and Mr. Rice attended the Society of Arts and Crafts, Detroit and Highland Park Junior College. ★ ★ ★ Jay HUbom of Flushing, N.Y., a member of the Metropolitan Opera Chorus, sang at his niece’s wedding Add the •bride’s grandmother, Mrs, Sherman Hilbom of Marietta was a guest MRS. FREDERICK I. ROESER Marry in N.J. Don't Let, Hairs MqpP' Beauty! Repeat Vows Bright Colors iUPI) — Bright colors spark fall outeiwtar for- the young set. Sample: brilliant orange duck all-weather coat. The double breasted coat, buttoned in wood, is tailored at toe bodice with welt seaming which falls into inverted pleats. Birmingham Girl Is Wed in East; Couple Will Live Virginia Hills Penrose married Thomas D. Wright, son of the Russell O. Wrights of Fombell, Pa., Saturday afternoon to Siasconset, Mass. The ceremony in St. Paul’s Catholic Church was performed by Rev. Bradford Johnson, assisted by RevrJ; Moulton Thomas of Hartford, Conn. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clement A. Penrose, Jr., of Birmingham and Siasconset, the bride’s gown of crystal white peau de sole with baroque braid buttons had a bell-contoured skirt and court train. She wore cm heirloom Brussels lace cap, with veil, and carried white miniature carnations, Stephanotis and ivy. Barbara Ellen Latham of Birmingham was maid of hon- Virginia Hills Penrose, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clement A. Pentose Jr. of Birmingham and Siasconset, Mass# was wed to Thomas D. Wright, son of Hie Russell 0. Wrights of • Fombell, Pa. ■ Saturday in St. Pauls Church, Siasconset, or. Bridesmaids were Diana Muldaur, New York City; Ellen Munson, Cambridge, Mass.; and the bridegroom’s sister Nancy of Fombell, Pa., and* Julia Hodges of Detroit, dr ★ dr Bouquets of variegated pink Elegance carnations comple-• mented their pink silk shantung dresses, with tulip overskirts. The bride's mother wore ice-blue linen with Chantilly lace inserts. Mrs Wright’s pink linen sheath dress was em-, broidered with chiffon and white petal applique. Virginia Kathryn Dowlijug, daughter of the Franklin J. Dowlings, Bloomfield Hills, and James W. Schultz, son of the Lester R. SchuUzes of Bay City* were wedvSaturday at Kirk-in-the-Hills. A garden, reception at The New Hampshire House, Convent, N.J., followed toe hup-tials of Gail Woolis Newton to Frederick L. Roeser In gt. Paul's Episcopal Church, Morris Plains, N.J. Rev. Roy J. Hendricks performed the afternoon ceremony. The Grant W. Newtons of' Morris. Plains are parents of the bride, who chose white arilk organza for her wedding. Chan: tUly lace accented the neckline and full skirt, styled with ohrtp-el train. A pearl crown held her silk illusion veil. She • carried white roses, Stephanptis and ivy. V Wearing green linen sheath dresses with overskirts were maid of honor Marcia Mack of New York City who carried yellow daisies, and bridesmaids Mrs. Frank Geiasler, Morristown, N.J., and Mrs. Paul Terreri, Mendham, N.J., , Whose bouquets included white daisies. Nancy Tyler of Barre, Vt., was’ her cousin’s flower girl. Douglas Roeser was his brother’s best man. They are toe sons of Dr. and Mrs. Waldomar 0. Roeser of Neome Drive. Seating guests were William K. Niemann of Des Moines, Iowa; James Spotyar, Detroit and William t. Herndon, Darien, Conn- Leaving tor their Cape Cod honeymoon the bride was wearing a gold Italian silk suit and black patent accessories. Both are graduates of toe Uni-versity of Michigan where Mr. Roeser is presently attending dental school. White orchids complemented a shell pink organza sheath for Mrs. Newton., The mother qf the bridegroom appeared in beige lace over row- Her oi> chids were pink1. Few grooming omissions defeat a high fashion appearance ^ more easily than allowing*' hairs to mar your facial beauty. However, according to a noted beauty authority be sure you know how to remove them so only beauty results. Fuzz from your upper Up should be removed with a de-. pilatory made for this purpose, by electrolysis, or by merely bleaching them to non-apparency. Tweeze out the stray hairs from around your eyebrows and from your chin, being sure to apply astringent before and after to cleanse and normalize the pores. Never remove’hairs frtam 'a mole without first consulting your doctor. Hairs inside the nose should be clipped short enough so they won’t be seen. Don’t ever try to remove them with tweezers. As a beauty reminder, removal of facial hairs should be done before you retire so the skin will have time to recover from the process. Womens Section MRS. JAMES W. SCHULTZ Schultz-Dowling Rite Build His Ego, Abby gays He Must Feel Unloved By ABIGAIL VAN BtJREN DEAR ABBY: My, husband does hot drink, but every time, we go out , to public no one will believe he is sober from the why he acts,’ Last Saturday night we went asked her to autograph his chert! He unbuttoned his shirt and she did. Everyone laughed but 1 didn’t see anything funny about it. i He's always doing things like that. When I complain, he says I have no sense of bttmor. Is he right or am IT WORSE HALF DEAR WORSE: Your husband Mutt feel unloved And-unapprcciated at home or he wouldn't try so hart for laughs very “profession • conscious.'’ They don’t care what a man is Him,,as long as he’s a doctor. 1 started dating an totem who * turned out to be a Jekyll and Hyde type. In the company of others he is perfection iteelf, but when we are alone he If aggressive and brutish.. My parents refuse to believe anything bad about him. My brother totems with this fel-lbw and says I am chiMlih And old-maidish about bis friend’s advances to me. (This to a loving brother?) I am 23 and don't want to be shopworn < before I many. When I told my family why « I wasn’t gating out with this wntoual again, my father laughed and said, ’Hs Is only a / mnn *' A ml mv mrthew mania I# / k Shoe. Bog , (LTD —• The «Kbe tote bag is becoming a favorite with n^ lSHSflher, , who wants a neat package for carting an extra pair of shoes to office or on a trip. One tote is an elongated number printed 'in unborn ”fttr" calf, with an outside pocket for cosmetics, stockings, and change. JA gold chain adds dash. i THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 20. 1962 . i, ,, v - , wgaarra Girl Scout Reports From Encampment Epilepsy-Scleroderma Q. Thin flwiiM in being submitted after I road yaw column on epilepsy. A relative of mine han spells in which ha has la (top and ha aary still for a fete minutes. Ha breathes fast and gets pale, but sloes, not froth at the month or fork* Aftor a fern minutes ha gate ester U. If thin is epilepsy, sehet drugs should hs take? A. This is more or less typical of petit mSl epilepsy. Don't encourage your relative to try do-it-yourself diagnosis and treat; men! but urge, hint to see a physician. The doctor should be given a complete and accurate description of just w|)at occurs during the attacks. There are several very effective drugs for this type of epilepsy, but let the doctor decide which to use. Scleroderma Q. I hose on Incurable shin disease eollsd scleroderma. My right arm is effected. Hour long trill it he before my arm becomes useless? A. It would be impossible to say, because scleroderma goes through periods of activity and let-up. In some casey the affected area will tend to clear'up*; while at the same time a new area may become involved. Scleroderma can appear suddenly and progress rapidly. More often, however, the onset is slow, the process requiring years for full development. (For the benefit of other readers, scleroderma is “hardening" of -he skin and underlying tissue, including muscle.) Stnd fuMt(MS to Seism* Editors, f. 0. Its 1174, iMlwilto I, Kit. Prescriptions called for promptly .and delivered quickly, -Nlllihsd Si 4 Pufcllt Servicely PERRY- PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS PR'OFEtM^N’A'i.lY, PERFECT 689 j 1251 East Blvd. | ' Baldwin at Perry ' at Columbia 313-7151 j #33-7057 (Editor’$ Mote — Lynne Springer i$ The Pontiac' Press’ special correspondent at the Qtrl Scout encampment at Camp White Deer in Wisconsin, this is the first of her series J 1 By LVXXE SPRINGER Camp White Deer (320fcres) is located about 22 miles directly east of the Eagle River fit Wisconsin. , It is bordered on (ite west by 12,000 - acre Butternut Lake and qn the east by 60-acre White Deer Lake, a spring-led lake with White sandy shores and uniform water temperature. • Part of the e n c a m p-ment offers wonderful opportunities for short Hikes isild over-night pack trips. The site has i of trees in all stages of growth and a variety of wildlife. , FIRST WEEK , The first week of camp life centered around activities in patrol living, a special feature of the encampment program Is that patrols have the opportunities to “exchange” friends at meals. A guest speaker from Egypt may possibly speak to our patrol. Last Monday we had the opening of the1 camp flag ceremony. On Thursday and Friday we had the first encampment. campfire end, introductions of the staff. ’ These two, days were also reserved for demonstrations which were very interesting and educational.. Last Saturday we had a progressive troop dinner. Each petrol prepared a different part of the meal. It turned out very well because we all enjoyed the food and had Our share ot it Many of the girls had different verities of swaps (articles ■ representative of their home regions). Some of the girls are very clever and full of good ideas. Bermuda Coat (UPI) — The knee kamper, also called the Bermuda coat, falls straight line from shoulder to knee and is tailored with large carry-all pockets and welt seaming. The coat, teamed with Bermudas or shirt dresses in calico prints, will debut on-college campuses tRis fall. It comes In suede cloth and wide-wkle corduroy. The colors; loden, vicuna and roy- The average American foot size has increased-by oAe and a half sizes since , the, beginning of the century. Doubly dramatic! . Crocheted oval, round doilies in large, pineapple design. Pattern 524: directions 15x21-inch oval; smaller round doily. Thirty-five cents (coins) (or this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for lst-class mail. Send to Laura Wheeler, care ot The Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept., P. O, Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N. Y. Newest rage —smocked accessories plus 208 exciting needlecraft designs in our 1963 Needlecraft Catalog — just out! Fashions, fur nishings to crochet, knit, sew, weave, embroider, quilt. Plus free pattern. Send 25 cents now! Fafaiiiy Tote* Example 'Employer Papa By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE N-401? Dr, Max and his wife has sevep children in grammar and high school. Miller’s 25th Annual AUGUST FURNITURE SALE Fine Quality New Furnishings Come in and browse around save m to m FURNITURE Our lower overhead will always save you money. ‘‘Ask any of our many - good customers” , Careful Free Delivery Terms arranged—up to 2 years to pay. No Interest or Carrying Charge on 90-Day Accounts ★ ★ ★ OPEN EVENINGS MONDAY and FRIDAY closed Wednesday Afternoons "So my wife and I had a showdown last night. But our children said in a democracy the rule of the majority should prevail so they demanded we all vote bn the issue. “Well, our oldest girl voted with us, but the final tally was 6 to 3 in favor of later TV curfew hours. "Dr. Crane, whajt do you say to this matter of using a majority vote to (determine justice?” REPUBLIC vh, DEMOCRACY In a democracy, whether of the true or representative sort, the mere majority vote detei> mines justice. But that is wrong! Christ was thus crucified in a perfect democracy because the crowd voted 100 per cent to send Him to the cross and release the murderer, Barab-bas, So our Founding Fathers made this a Republic — not a democracy? \ For in our Republic we don’t let even a 100 per cent vote of Congress determine justice. No, indeed! We have a previous written document called the Constitution that defines or rights. ★ a . a And the nine faithful watchdogs, called Supreme Qourt Justices, can nulllly any bill passed by both houses of Congress! In a democracy, the majority rules — but the minority then can be pillaged, looted or slain, (or it has no further rights. So a democracy is based on the jungle rule that “might makes right.” In our Republic, however, we operate according to the Golden Rule, -so we grant equal rights to minorities, whether they lie Irish or Jew, Catholic or Prqteetant. Alas, however, employers •tin function much Uke “Papa.'.! before the millions Of workers. Even though employes ate adults In age and are voting citizens, most of them still react like .overgrown children, so they often oppose - the. bettor judgment of “Papa,” who is the boss or employer or "management.” By mere mass voting majority, they think they can produce justice in labor disputes, just'. as Dr. Max's children claimed their 6 to 3 vote proCed it right and just for them to sit up and walch TV an hour longer. ‘GROW UP* Our big problem in America is how to persuade the adult "children” to study the real facts and then side with “Papa,” like that one older daughter of Dr. Max. The average citizen is so naive about business and finance that he seems to think Uncle Sam can just print money in unlimited amounts to furnish more welfare and ever increasing fringe benefits. Unless we can educate our youth — and 8 million new potential voters will be of age in 1964 who were too young to vote in 1960 — we are soon going to see a fascist dictator in America! Then the adult "children" will be disfranchised and ordered to work as Hitler ruled Germany just 20 years ago. To prevent that tragedy, send for my bbbklet "How to Save Our Republic,” enclosing a stamped, return envelope plus 20 cents 'and pass it around quickly! • dr dr it Signed totters, not more than one rage or IM words long pertaining to lereenal health and hygiene, not disease. dlagnotle or treatment, will be swered by Dr,- William Brady, if a imped, eeff-addroeeld envelope te sent The Pontlao Press. Pontiac, Michigan. (Copyright 1962) 8 0Z. size (Boom Bail's fins fact (ptlon, now available at • pries lo low you can uaa it ms bedy lot Ion I) For dry skin proWoms and • youngar looking, smoother complexion. MOISTURE LOTION staffs instantly to giva your skin a dsop moisturizing boauty treatment, Each daily ap-‘ plication restores youth-giving moisture to vital lowar layers of your akin-helps rataln moisturs which years and waathar tafcf away, ft’s light, it'a nan-grassy, a perfect make-up base far parfact protection Out yaaf 'round./ available oaft * y. FERRY PHARMACY • 669 IAS* BLVD. at Fax? «**» •flOWlM 111-71 S3 III-70S7 Notes of Interest The Wallace,a. Browns of Sogth TUden Avenue were hosts at buffet dinner Sunday when the engagement of their daughter Patricia Ann to Bennie R. Pawley, was announced. ' , c. Among' some 30 guests from the Pontiac area were Mr. Pawley’s parents, the Keith R. Pawleys of West Walton Boulevard, his grandmother, Mrs. Myrtle Pawley, and Susan, Marie and Dennis Pawley, , ,Mr,.and Mrs. Paul B. Cornell, came from Glen Dale, W. Va. for her sister’s announcement. Other guests were the Burl Morrises and daughter, Judith, Drayton Plains, Vicki Edwards and Shirley Beacom of Waterford Township, the Joseph Murphys and family of Flint. ★ ■ fir ft Preparing to join her husband Spec. 6, Steven J. Oeorgeff, presently stationed In Manhetm, Germany, is his bride, the former Kathleen Dolores Jinkerson, who Is visiting his parents the Peter Georgeffs of Lakevlew Drive, Waterford. 1 ' The Couple married May 19 In St. Raphael’* Church, St Louis, Mo. where. Mrs. GeOrgeft’s parents, the Harold 1. Jlnkersons, reside. “ ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. James Stott (Carole Smith) of Kenilworth Street, announce the birth of a daughter, Cynthia Denise, Aug. 10 In Pontiac General Hospital. The Floyd Smiths of North Genesee Avenue, Mr. and Mrs. Lester English of South East Boulevard and, the Joseph Stotts of Auburn Heights are the baby’s grandparents. . * Great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd English of South Sanford Street, the Fred Hulls of Charlevoix and Mrs. Emma £mlth of Detroit. '"T'T -y—. The Donald Hortons of Owosao were weekend guests of her mother, Mrs. George Horsley of Marquette Avenue ★ ★ dr Several members and guesta of the Insurance Women of Pontiac attended a performance of "Wedding Breakfast” starring Piper Laurie, Thursday at Northland Playhouse.' A dinner!^ '“nte Sign of the Beefeater" In Royal Oak, preceded the theater party. dr ★ : Jk Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Green (Janice Lynn Smith) ot Midland announce the birth ot a son, Mark Charles, Aug. 14. The L. K. Smiths of Lotus Lake and the Charles F. Greens of Middle Belt Road are the baby’s grandparents. ' ★ ★ dr Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Berge of Concord Drive, Bloomfield Hj]i«, are spending a few days at Del Monte Lodge, Pebble Beach, Calif. ★ dr ★ . Mrs, Norman Barievl, children Karen and Steve of Chicago, were recent guests of her aunt, Mrs. Laura Brown of Malcolm Street, Waterford Township. ' They spent a day with Mrs. Brown’s daughter and son-in-law, the John W. Wrighte In Port Huron and were dinner guests of Mrs. Barlevi’s sister Mrs, William Cope and her husband of Grosse Pointe Farms. The visit closed with a trip to Battle Creek to see Mrs. Brown’s nephew and niece, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Abbey. ★ ★ * The Milton Fosters (Mary Jane Leahy), who have been Hying at Sand Lake since their marriage July 14 in Our Lady of Refuge Church, Orchard Lake, will spend next weekend with her parents, the Edgar T. Leahys of Beverly Road, Sylvan Lake. Mrs. Foster will teach in Litchfield this fall. Mrs. R. Edgar Leahy, visiting the Leahys since her granddaughter’s wedding, returned to her home In Ebens-burg, Pa. * ¥* ¥ The Robert Potes and son Robert ot Dick Avenue returned together with Mrs. Charles Pote of Telegraph Road from a trip through Ontario, Quebec and the Oaspe Peninsula. They visited the New England states and Niagara Falls on the way home. | Have You Tried This? Pork Steak Casserole Goes, Together Quickly 'Secret Agent' ’ tUPt)’We*rr alt going to look'like'secret agents this toll,” arid New York milliner Saliy Victor as she opened her toll collection. Many hats in her collection had the “secret agent" look.lo go with the same Mata liar! influence In other toll ready (o wear. There were bowlers, visored caps, 1 and small forward-setting hats with ;heavy veiling to wrap the face completely. An average of 5.100 doctors at medicine are graduated each year by the nation's 7T medical school*. ‘Harry’NICH0LIE CALLING— T Lei Our New LIFE INSURANCE DEPARTMENT Serve You and Your Family INSURANCE PLAN 'Bud1 Nicholie Insurance 149 Mt. Clemons Street FI 3-7*58 =All Permanes= COMPLETE WITH CUT AND SET $095 NONE HIGHER Expert licensed operators to give you ot» aosy-to-manage hair cut, long lasting permanent gnd becoming hairstyle. No appointment necessary, permanent complete in two hours. HOLLYWOOD IIAUTY SHOP 78 N. Saginaw Over Baxley Mkt. 333*9660 Sometimes our favorite recipes don’t have a name. We used to have a rich pudding0 when we were young that was I called* simply "Our” pudding. « Today’s recipe had no title when Mrs. Robert. Wright gave it to us. She says it is good for those occasions when you have lo furnish a hot dish. Mrs. Wright Is interested in design and decorating. She likes to sew. The Waterford Junior Chamber of Commerce Auxiliary counts her among its members. ________ Rainiaww r♦ ^ mmi PORK *N* NOODLES - By Mrs. Robert Wright m pounds pork steak 8 oz. wide noodles. 1 can condensed chicken ric* soup 1 can cream style corn Cook noodles in salted boiling water. Drain. Cut meat jf into small cubes and brown thoroughly. In a casserole put alternate layers of meat, noodles and corii. Season to taste. Pour soup over top and sprinkle with cracker crumbs. Bake one hour at 375 degrees. Makes 6 servings.__________ CHRISTMAS in AUGUST? Yes - Now is the time to plan for your Christmas Portrait , Make ah Early Appointment WitUU If. PHOTOGRAPHER 511 W. Huron St. Near General* Hospital Evening Appointments FE 4-3669 Luxury AM! Call George, who has hod 24 years of carpeting experience, for your carpet needs. “IF YOU DON’T KNOW CARPETING, KNOW YOUR CARPET DEALER" save on reupholstering DURING OUR ANNUAL SUMMER SALE SOFA . . . . «... *8950 CHAIR . . . tin, *395° Quality materials and expert craftsmanship throughout! Choose from fine nylons, and brocades. WILLIAM WRIGHT I Furniture Makers and Upholsterers 270 Orchard JLska • FE 4-0558 ] Serving Onlttond County Ovsr HjTstnl ^ _ wwiwyiitoMw i»l sixteen \ ■ •39? P? THE PONTIAC. PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 20.1 M2 I * i , ’ '• | iSpW» ’* Electronic Brain 'Unkind9 in Psychoanalysis Sctibe I , By BOB CON8IDINK ROCHESTER, Minn. - Sell your stock in the company that makes couches, for psychologists, psycho* analysts and psychiatrists. The Age of the Computer has caught tip with.those dodges. The President may soon have to consider a retraining program tor the disciples of Freud and fellow tinkerers with the human mind. Watched IBM take carevof the whole spatter here at the Mayo dttdc the oOier day. One of Hot's workhorse' electronic braina, Model 1SS0, has been harnessed to a tiyear old pay-ehologle test devised at the University of Minnesota by Dr. Starke Hathaway, Ph.D>, and the late great psychiatrist 2 West 2 David C. Young. Elmhurst. Julia A. Douflai, 311 Aqua Coi Donald E. Campbell, : mlnsham and Jean E. Howl, Hlrntlngham. James R. Burns, 20 Bi A. Hunter. 1201 Roselawi Diane M. Saltbrun. *»04 Coni lee Lake Samuel R, Martin. Chatham. Onlaidn. and Bonnie J. McIntosh, moot Borbman. HuntTnston Woods. ^ Southfield and Marlle A. Sandusky. 23410 Oak Olen, Southfield. David C. PI nicy. Detroit and Elisabeth A. Yokl, 22000 W. 11 MUe. Southfield. Joaepb H Bamaey, 411 E. Seventh, Royal Oak and Sandra L. DeVos, 121 N. Altadena, .Royal Oak. David i. Boyd, 3004 Bradford and Maureen L. Thoresen, 2101 Warwick. Bloomfield Hills. John R. Llppman, 23313 Davcy, Haul p»rk and^Mamle E. Cbx. 23313 Dsvey. M‘rlon Md William if. L Hornbeck. Los Anieles. Call!., wad Jacqueline L. Macartney. 1003 Bonnie, View, Royal Oak. , • Richard D. Vanderkolk. 2210 Beach-moM,ICt*»q Harbor and Patricia E. Worth, 4U E. Walton Dai* A. Jaynes. Bllverwood. Mich.. and Chrieten* K. Broaiman, 12011 Clark. • Daviaburr John T. Hotan, Rattle Creek and nor due nor bint, is overlooked in the treatment: of a. patient. The ■'trbe” pr "false” strikes one as highly irrelevant in places, though it hag weathered a quarter of a century of constant testing. Hwe are some "true” or ‘‘false” items: i- ■ . be a lump in my throat much of the time . . . once in a while I think of things toq bad to talk about . ... I am’sure I get a raw deal frobi life . . . at times I have very much wanted to leave home "During one period when I was a youngster I engaged In petty thievery ... my soul sometimes leave* my body... everything Is turning nut just like the prophets of the Bible said It would ... I do not rend every editorial in the newspaper every day . . , "I used to like ditop-the-handker-ehief f, . I sometimes tease animals . . . I think most .people would lie to get ahead table manners aye not quite as good at home as when 1 am out in company . ... often J can’t under- stand why I have been so cress and grouchy . .'. if-I could get into a movie without haying and be' sure I was not - seem, I would probably do it . . ." , THE BITTER ‘TRUTH’ "True” br "false" is indicated by pencil marking. The cards then fed into a machine which discerns the locatkm.ofpenci! marks and punches a hole at that spot. A second machtof duplicates these holes on other cards and, apparently,, hHhe same limp jogs all-the memory pools within the ultimate machine, dastardly old 1620. ■ • Then the autonishrlng payoff. One's 650 answers ire gulped by 1620. It make* g sound not unlike a park Avenue psychoanalyst clearing bis threat aad spec-. ulating on what be can charge the dowager on the couch for telling her she’d be, better off taking In washing. ^ -Then a sheet of paper spills from the top of 1620. It is laden with abbreviations for such disturbances as hypochondriasis (worry over physical condition), psydiasthenia (how orderly, disorderly), and hy-pomania (social or antisocial): My cards passed the reviewing, stand like drooping Bags even though I answered; "true’’ to such virile propositions as "in walking I am very careful to step oyer sidewalk cracks-” ,.I think it was my marking of true” to "I used to like dropthe-handkerchlef” that brought about 1620’s decision. Will fight it to the Supreme Court. Mm*! I Korlhao. 1311 PI* ml COM. JUrmln«h*i M^Lurero. J3»1 Donley. Charier E. Htrdlnu. 11 ftnd Merit C. Stamm. Ill A.' Ha/t*r, RfTndxlord.,< Oar* V. Richmond Witvriord and Janice E. WlllUms Lake. Weterfor MONTGOMERY WARD CO. 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Utica *a« Oxford thru K*V A>* ■ I 50 EXTRA ««m STAMPS J SO EXTRA STAMPS^ | m WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASI OP I WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCMMI OP I I ONI KROOIR ■ ANY IINOIRAY / ■ HUNGARIAN RINO R STEAK OR ROAST 1 I Coupon eallS at Krofor I* Ponllae Mali Narth ■ Coupon valid at Krapar la PeMIte Mall, Narth ■ Parry tlraat, Miracle Mila, Praytm Plaint. ■ Patry Strati, Miracle Mila, RraytairPlalaa, m Kama lahe, Utlea aad Oaferd thra Bat.. Auf. ■ Union laht, Utlra and Qatari thru tat,, Aar. B l^’wETiwi ■■' woi' i ■ p THE PONTIAC PRESS SEVENTEEN PONTtAC, MICHIGAN MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1062 Maxwell Clubs Ex-Teammdtes Charlie's Sunday slam. — bis 10th home ran of the season — came in the sixth inning off loser Sam Jones. Jones already had walked in a ran that broke a 4-4 tie. Another walk and singles by Sherm hollar and Joe Cunningham loaded the bases with two outs. BIO DOUBLE Maxwell came up with the bases loaded again in the, eighth and doubled off Paul Foytack, driving in two more runs and making the score 11-4. Loses Only 2 of in Match Play Action; Detroiters 2nd and 3rd Carmen Salvino of Chicago, who came here with little fanfare as a Professional Bowlers Association contestant, burned up the 300 Bowl lanes Saturday and Sunday to come' on strong from a slow start and win the $3,000 1st prize in the $23,000 Pontiac Open. He won 14 of 16 championship matches In yesterday's rugged afternoon-night battle involving the 16 top qualifiers. Faatiae fraae Ffc»w» by M t PEP tsijc — junior tennis players, members of the Pontiac Tennis Club, get a last minute pep talk from Harry Wenzel, director of the tennis program of the city recreation department, prior to their two weekend matches against Sturgis and Kalamazoo netters. The 17-member squad played in the two cities, Friday and Saturday. CHICAGO W -- The Detroit Tigers could have used -Charlie (Paw Paw) Maxwell, the man they traded tor-Bob Farley, in yesterday’s doubleheader at Chicago, dr * * The White Sox used Maxwell, who usually rode Detroit’s bench, and his grand slam home ran and two-run double beat Detroit in the opener. The score was 11-5. Not Farley, but Billy Bruton evened the doubleheader and the four-game aerlee by leading the Tigers to an ft-3 nightcap victory with another grand slam- The victory left thf Ti8ers dill one game behind a .900 won-lost percentage and still 2Vi games behind the fourth-place White Sox. Lions Give Watkins 'Pat' gan with three, runs in the third inning, but homers by Rocky Colavito, Steve Boros and'* Dick McAuliffe put the Tigers back in the game briefly. By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press CLEVELAND, Ohio — Step out and hear this you doubters. Detroit Lions’ coach George Wilson wants it known that Tommy Watkins, criticized strongly after his opening performance against the Browns, has proven himself. Watkins took all the assignments the Lions could give him Saturday night against the Dallas Cowboys and ha received an A on his report card for helping the Lions to a 35-24 victory. The game was part of the first pro doubleheader ever played before 77,683 fans who came out to boo Milt Plum and to cheer the hometown Browns to a 33-10 triumph over the Layne-less Steel- The record breaking fire-season crowd had a few pro-Plum cheere when the ex-Brown was Introduced na the starting quarterback but It was predominantly n hostile crowd that was aching to cheer at every Plum Plum played the first half and ari Morrall directed the signals trough the last two quarters and [though it was Morrall who pulled le game out for the Lions, they lanaged to play on pretty even rms statistically. Each threw 15 asses and completed seven. Plum sd one intercepted, had 66 yairds nd one TD. Morrall had one stoi-i, had 141 yards for three touch* )RRALL BIG FACTOR Surprisingly, Morrall was as big [actor with his running. He toted > ball three times and picked up yards, one a 25 yard sweep that t the Lions in scoring zone for i TD which put them ahead /hen the fracas was over, full exciting play, sloppy play, and gh play it was Watkins who w the praises of Wilsoh. Nison referred to stqries out of Ireland quoting Paul Brown tor [flpg at stories about Watkins’ tntlal stardom with the lions, imeone should send Paul pi Mpy the statistics. He never really w Watkins a chance ab how can criticize Mm.’’ / *, ■ ★ ■ Catkins carried the ball 12 «s in the first half pick up 74 ds, was used on punt and kick-returns and established him ! for regular dutlep with the ’his way be bad news for Dick Tipton, Texgs rfcokle who was standing in training camp drills, cut of players is due Tuesday h 9 rookies still on the squad, I this may be down to five. »lum directed the Lions to their it touchdown after the Cowboys I a 7-0 lead after only seven * "............m the game. penalties, the Lions finally started to move. Two big Dalles penalties, one for defensive holding and an Interference penalty put the ball on the one. Plum carried himself and It was 7-7. The game iee-sawed. Sam Baker shot Dallas ahead with 25 seconds in the first period with a 48 yard field goal, that just went over the bar. Wayne Walker missed a 32 yard field goal attempt, but a few minutes. later Detroit regained the lead 1440 when Plum flipped to Ken Webb tors 5-yard TD. Chuck Howley intercepted a plum pass, lateraled to John Chaisson and Dallas had the -ball on the 10, from where Meredith passed to Pettis Norman to go ahead 17-14 at half time. The prettiest picture play of the day came midway hi the third quarter when Morrall passed from midfield to Pat Studstill who took the ball on the 9-yard line over his shoulder and pulled away from defender Cornell Green, the All-America basketball played from Utah State for the TD to make it 21-17. v Cleveland made the Jim Nlnow-ski trade look good again as the ex Lion threw three touchdown in the first half, calling bis own signals against Pittsburgh. In two exhibition games he has throwh five touchdown passes as compared with only nine in two years with Detroit. Aparicio’s triple gave the Sox 1-0 second-game lead la the third inning. But Kaline ers’ fourth with a ward center which nicked starter Juan Pizarro’s pitching hand and knocked him out o( the game. rushing..... nrst downs passing ...... First downs by penalty.. Total yards galnoa ........ Yards gained r—*-‘” Yards galnsd p Railflplitter Takes Honors Weather Helps Dogs in PKC Outdoor Show "It didn’t rain.” This was one of the triqst frequent comments heard after the 34th Pontiac Kennel Club bench and obedience show yesterday at Waterford High School. In fact, the weather stayed on the cool side until mid-afternoon. This benefited dogs and handlers alike during the long day of aqtlvi-tics( on the football field. Least bothered by the occasional strong gusts of wind was Oh. Cappoguln Rallspllnter. The miniature poodle owned by TUo Stables of Bayshore, Long Island, N.V., and handled by Robert Forsyth, Chappaqua, NX, won The Pontiac Frees best In show trophy. m winning its second beat in show award, Railaplitter'moved up from a third place in Saturday’i non-sporting group in the Flint show. 'This is the best weather we've had for our outdoor show In several years,” said PKC president Volney R. Cotton. “The attendance was good, we had to close the main parking lot once because it was filled. “ 'We had 571 entries, an excellent turnout, and the show stayed right xi schedule.” Rallsplittor got the nod from Judge Louis J. Murr of Spring Valley, N.Y., over five other group winners. A springer owned by Mrs. F. F. Gasow of Troy made the best county showing. Ch. Saiilyn’s Crown Royal placed second in the sporting group. A golden retriever, Ch. Mitzle’s Son Vickie, owned by Charles Barnes of Pontiac, was fourth in the sporting group. Detroit’s tlaal run was scored by Farley, Who finally made aa appearance pinchhlttlag tor Foytack and singled to right. Singles by Bruton and Al Kaline brought Mm around. The Sox chased starter Phil Re- Camilo Carreon's single and Luis Don Zanni replaced Pizarro Colavito smashed his first for his 28th homer and of the day. Zanni gave up walks. Verle with a 2-0 walked' him and then got two-before giving up another, walk, ing in a run. That’s when Bruton made It n seven-run Inning by belting bis 11th homer Into the right field Mato. Kaline came up again and alH^e0*lh#haM stranded when Colavito grounded out. Chicago knocked second-game starter Howie Kopiitz out in the fifth with a double and a single. Hank Aguirre came in and both baserunners scored — on a single and a sacrifice fly — but the were charged to Kopiitz. Aguirre gave up only one more hit in his five-inning stint, lowered league-leading earned average to 2,25 and picked up his 11th, victory against five defeats. Zanni was given the loss and now is 6-5. PRESS BOX Billy Bruton, Hank Aguirre and Al Kaline will be honored by the Detroit round table of the National Conference of Christians and Jews baseball brotherhood night Tuesday at Tiger Stadium. Ceremonies will precede the Tigers’ game with Cleveland. Bill Johnson struck out 16 and allowed only one hit as Des Moines, Iowa, blanked Kalamazoo 6-0 Saturday in consolation play of the north regional Little League cham- HAPPY WINNER — Carmen Salvino, 28-year-old Chicago-bowling professional, took first place in the $23,000 Pontiac PBA Open which ended yesterday at the 300 Bowl. Besides his 1 * " "iy• , Fontuo Pr.ii ftau 13,000 first place . check he received this mammoth trophy presented by Joe Puertas (left) and PBA tournament director Harry Golden (center).. Third place finisher Mike Totsky of Detroit and No. 5 man Ray Bluth, St. Louis, were the only others to lead the pack on the lust, day of the 1st Michigan PGA event. Former Birmingham resident John Nickell of Daytonl Ohio walloped the titlist 209-184 and Johnny King, Chicago, took him by seven pins but otherwise Salvino was head man. His big games were 248 and 247. » ONE OTHER WIN The pfeady 28-year-old was not even on the top 25 money-winners going into the tourney. His only preyioui triumph was in 1961 at Albany., /. Salvino, who zoomed from 46th place to> 3rd Saturday in qualifying, was on the ABC champion* in 1954 after gaining the nama "The Boy Wonder of Chicago” by teaming with Joe Willman to take the national doubles honors the year before at the age of 19. Popular Detroiter Billy Golem-blewsld thrilled the crowd with a strong stretch run to finish 2nd and win $1,500. < He put together 247-215-247 in the big move. Totsky took home $1,200 for his 3rd good showing In four Uppear-ances. Bill Pace of Kansas City was 4th for $1,100 and Bluth took $1,050 of the purse. MICHIGAN LEADERS — These Michigan bowlers had top money smiles after finishing high, in the Pontiac Open. Dick Preston (left) the only amateur ever Jo lead a PBA tournament qualifying field, finisher) 15th in the finals. Fenttsa Cmi FhoU Others left to right were Mike Totsky, third , place; Joe Joseph,'sixth and Bill Golemblewaki, second. George Howard a 5th Michigan bowler in the picture was 14th. Medal Honors to Robertson Dick Robertson, one of the big mg ball hitters among area ama-iurs, fired a 71 over the Mu-cipai course Saturday to take qualifying honors in the men's city medal play golf championship. Robertson and J. T. Howard finished in a first place tic, but when time came for a playoff, Howard did not appear and thus Rdibert-son took medal honors vfa default. . A total of M players, tying the all-time filed of entries set In 1M0, took part In the qualifying, and S4 players will go Into the 36-hole finals next Saturday and Sunday. These qualifiers will be joined by past champions and the low scores of last year's final filed, The pairings for the finals will be announced later this week. PBA Tourney Scores Carmen Salvino, Chicago . .. Billy Oolemt Detroit Minneapolis .. Ill-M 3111 Joe Donato, Schenectady .. 118-30 3380 J>Mlnneapolui ..111-18 BIB Dan Senecal, Jacksonville. Fla. 111-01 1.101 Johnny Kins. .............. Chicago ... 118-11 1388 Ron Oaudern, Bt. Louis .... 118-18. 1338 John Nickell. Dayton, O. ... 114-31 3361 George Howard, - iJafrolt .. 114-18 3388 Dick Praston. Detroit ... 108-18 1108 pX8 f*80,' Tea.” 108-10 *010 The qualifying' round totalai A-Dick Preston, Detroit ... ill) Pace. Kansas City ...... to*! Carmen Salvino, Chicago .... 6006 Ray Bluth, Bt. Lotda 8044 Billy Qolemblewekl, Detroit .. George Howard" Detroit ....... Roy town, El Pa»o, Tea..... Ronnie Oaudern. Bt. Louis .... Jim it. John, Minneapolis .... John NIckefi, Dayton, O..... Mike Totsky. Detroit ...... .. Dan Senecal, Jacksonville. Fie. Earl John son. Minneapolis .... Joe°Donato,(>8ohaneclady, N Y. Roy Rosland. Chicago --- Oordy Hlauter. Grand Rapids (63381 -■ Havas, at. Louis ... <8338) rl Belli. Kokomo. Ind. ... i$330l Lsrftb.............. .mo. I) Strampe. Minneapolis .. <83061 try Smith. Bt. Louts ..... (83081 :it, Wilier. Bt; Louts..18300) I sobaufert. Cincinnati (8303,80) .. Jim Pantaaldes, Detroit (8383.80) Monroe Moors, Pontiac .. iI388i Jim Schroedsr. ----Vanda, N.Y........'. 1*3101 Wilkinson, I__„jk. Cal, ......-... . (MM Glen Blakesley. Kansas City, 181181 Herb Squires, Montreal; Can. (Mil) Ed LuMmiki. Osi Van........... Vic Lwlew, Detroit ........... Vito O/Uols, Syracuse, N.Y..... Bob Olrioh, Detroit .......... Sop Crawford.D8trwt • ........ “ ” urdaee. Freano, Calif. .......... IUI _____Bpargo, Southfield .......4IH JiL'YLSWSe'k.T.;-:;:.® Tom Hennessey. Bt. Louis 4M0 HRm*:::::: Si! le Seavim batroit ..........4l|4 um Rutkowskl, Southfield ...4813 [ Pettersoq- St. Louie .... 4101 KSdkMSUat SB Oar land Ingle, Winchester, Tenn. .. 4188 John Forrett. CUveland ..... 4111 Bob Kwolek. Detroit ............. 4110 PSHSteijS;:! Andy/Rog^mea, Chicago . ---- Bill Landowakl, Fortune. Calif.<783 A-Boh Walter, Lapeer . . . . 4180 Lee Barrett. San Mateo, CUM. nil fiohllr.ker. Detroit .. __ RflRWSSpfr: 538 Pie Wuoherpfcnnlg, Minneapolis . -------llehael, Pontiac . ■ mm I............| “ | eT 8h?k»hy, Detroit" Dick‘Cermak. Parma, Ohio .../ Sou DeLoaoh, Lansing ......... Darrell Ducat, Toledo ........ Jack McCormick, Alma .... hob Brumley, Ashtabula, Ohio . Lew DeKraker, Grand Haven ... A-Feui Miller. Pontlae . Don Johnson, Kokomo, Ind......... Ted PhelT, Jrwln, Pa. ........... J. Wilbert Blme. Chicago ........ Joy Morya, Union Lake ........... Jack Henry. Buena Park. Calif. Ray Orf. (It. Louie ............. A'-Bob Brlarlon, Ml. Clemens .... Carl Compton. Cincinnati ........ —-1I«. An(------*“J Tony PUglle. Roseville .......| A-Arley Sherfer, Pontlec Ruse Tlllaon. Dorchester, Mess. . Mike SemardaIJi, Pontiac ...... ------ CleMlAUd ", Ralph Powell, Tellahoma, ' Bud Scbalbly, Chicago „ M_________ Orand Raplda ......... Jack Lang, pstrolt....... ......... Ron Lowry JrA Union Lake .......... Allla Brandt, Loekport, N-Y........ John Sledlcckl, Orand Rapid! .... Chuck Hamilton, Gary, Ind.......... Billy Kllbourne. Brownsville, Tex Paul Bobbey, Newton Palls. Ohio , , Charleston, % Va. 4 qn, Akron, Ohio . Dan CaMpball, St. Clair Shores Joe Bonflflto, Pontlae . Oene WeSiook, Saginaw Tharm Olbaon, Detroit . ■gal George, Pontiac .. ... Pieti, Pontlae ... >... Harold Asher. AUanta, r 80-Foot Pitch Shot Wins Golf Meat for Leonard VANCOUVER, _B.C. (AP)-Stan Leonard of Vancouver Won fifth British Columbia Open Golf Championship in a sudden death playoff Sunday fay sinking an 80-foot pitch shot, on the first extra hole, , Leonard’s opponent in the playoff, Rpd Funnel h of Spokane, Wash., almost matched the feat on the 41T-yard first hole when his 40-foot chip' hit the cup and bounced put Leonard and hinseth Were tied at*290 over the regulation .72 , Joe Joseph of Lansing ranked 6tli for $870. Nickell got $625 for 13th, tiny Detroit star George How* -ard was next for $610 and qualifying cinderellaman Dick Preston, Detroit, 15th for $600. Preston made hiatory Saturday when he finished 107 pins ahead o( Pace to become the 1st amateur ever to top the Hat. That feat earned him a large trophy. The Farmington Classic ace totaled 5,185 pins and led three of the tour rounds. Only five amateurs had ever even mad0 the finals before. MOORE GETS |2» Two other Michigan men shared in the money awards. Jim Pants-zldes, another Detroit amateur, ranked 27th tor $202.50 after being 3rd going into his final six-game block. Host pro Monroe Moore was next tor $285.' Monroe had been 9th and 10th early! Among the other area contestants, Bill Bull, PonUgc, had 4.606, city man Paul George 4,372. Union Lake’s Bob LUwry Jr. 4,o84, Al Pietz, Pontiac, 4,313, Mike Sam-ardzija, Pontiac star hindered by a thumb blister all weekend, 4,623, Syl Thiel of,. Royal Oak' 4,589, Southfield alternates Bill Spargo Jim Rutkowskf 4,852 and 4,812, respectively and Bpb Walter, .Lapeer, 4,750! Also, Bill Hazlett of Grand Rap-ids, 4,386, ML Clemens' Bob Briar-ton 4,690, Dick Carmichael of Pontiac 4,563, local men Chicfa Chicov-sky and Joe Bonfigllo 4,840 and 4,430 in that order, Joe Morya of Union Lake 4,690, Arley Sheffer, Pontiac, 4,626, and Paul MiUar of Pontiac 4,442. A score of 4,958 was needed to tftake the finals. Over 1,000 fans atended the finals and some outstanding performances to cheer. 300 proprietor Joe Puertas made the presentation of awards follow- 1 ing the heated action. Junior Netters Lose Matches at Kazoo, Sturgis* The. youthful junior membership of the Pontiac Tennis dub can chalk up their first big venture to the strong tennis dtiea at Sturgis and Kalamazoo to experience. In the weekend matches in them two cities, the local netters Were defeated 17-3 in a 20-match affair and 20-5 to Kazoo' in 25 schedule matches. ' Winners at Sturgis were tom Hunt, Tim SMfeman and Roger Bergo and Shirennan in doubles. At Kazoo, Bill Malr, Brace Bigler, Bergo, took singlee and'Hunf-Mair and Beijgo and Shireman,scored in A total of. 17 junior players made the trip in cars, chaperoned by -Mr. • and Mrs. Harry WenWl. AW Photofex Cardinal*, had hit “Night.” She leaned against her mother and - held pop’s hand during the ceremonies Giants Continue Slump Dodgers Explode in 9lh for Victory By The Associated Press Speed, power and pitching have kept the Los, Angeles Dodgers on top of the National League standings. Innings by Joey Jay, the Dodgers feinnati. Jay, an 18-game winner, chased the Reds' right-hander in the ninth and continued their eault on iouthpaw Bill Henry to score five runs on two home runs, two bunt single^, a walk and A sacrifice. Here is how they did it: Frank Howard opened with game-tying home, run, his 21st of the ' season. John Roeeboro walked. Don Drysdale sacrificed. M^ury Wills beat out a bunt single* Exit Jay, enter Henry. Jim Gilliam beat out a bunt single, scoring Roseboro to put the Dodgers in front 2-1: Willie Davie hit three-run homer, his 17th of the dropped his 10th. The Dodgers stole three bases giving them. 136 for the season, twice ha many as the total* of their closest pursuer. Willi sc counted for one, his 65th of the season and the most in the Na-League since Bob. Bescher stole 67 for the Reds in 1912. He needs 16 more in the Dodgers remaining 37 games to top Bes-cher’s modern National League record of 80. Dryedale made short work of the Reds in the ninth to finish rith a three-hitter for his 22nd victory and his first complete game in his last 11 starts in Cin- Curtis Cup Victory Easy U STRAIGHT Henry Aaron smashed his 32nd and 33rd home runs In the Braves’ triumph over the Giants. Hie slugging outfietder, hi boosting his average to .342, third highest in the league, ran his hitting streak through 19 consecutive games, longest In the majors this season. Willie McCovey had two homers for the Giants, one off Claude Raymond, whose strong relief pitching through the final three Innings sealed Tony Goninger’s fifth triumph In seven decisions. COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo. iAJPHWalt ‘til next time” was tine sustance of comment of Britain's Curtis Cup players after suffering the worst beating In the history of the international test this past weekend. U.S. i defeated the young British team 8*1 in the 2-day competition. Only Mrs. Diane Frearson produced a point for the invaders, who played for the first.time west the Mississippi., She downed Judy Bell of Wichita, Kan., 8 and 7, aa she shot a 3-over-par on the 36-37—73 Broadmoor course Saturday. Mrs. Frearson, at 18 the young-_jt member of the British team, downed 25-year-old Miss Bell, who was supposed to know every blade of grass in the course here where she Is co-owner of a sports shop. STOP THAT VAICE1 NOISE Get your car a new Midaa muffler GUARANTEED for as long as you oWn your car. Free installation takes only 15 minutes at your MEN DAILY «>I0 A.M. Mm.. Tun*.. Wed., Thun, 'til JiM —*• 'Frldsy ’HI 1 Saturday 'Ml S P M. , f-Z CREDIT TERMS 41S jt. J*|ln#w FE 2-1010 FUTURE PLANS Mrs. Frances Smith, non-playing captain of (he British team, said “we are definitely building for the future wttji this young I (mow the experience of playing these' excellent American golfers Will help them tremendously.” The non-playing captain of the American team. Polly Riley of Fort Worth, Tex., said of the visitors that she couldn’t “Imagine a finer team, either as golfers or girls." drove in three runs with his first mon0poly was an “olds- major league home run and Ken 9n.v«,u,^,irf wit. Jean Roberts, 19, the English champion, staged a terrifice comeback before losing to Phyllis Pruess of Pompano Beach, Fla. up. At the end of 18 holes Miss nUie u-„« I flvf. Houii then evened the match, on the 32nd hole before final defeat. In other matches JoAnne Gunderson. 23, of Kirkland; Wash., defeated Mrs. Angela Bonallack, 25, 2 and 1; Mrs. Ann Quest Decker, 24, Seattle, downed Mrs. Marley Spearman, 35. 5 and 4; Gifford Ann Creed, Alexandria. won over Sally Bonallack, 6 and 1 and Barbara Ann Mclntlre. Colorado Springs, beat Sheila Vaughan, 5 and 4. CHICAGO (AP)—Seldom has the resurgence ol athletic youth been so underlined than by the complete stranglehold camp on the National Senior Women’s AAU Swimming Championships by brigade of bobby-soxers. A pair of 16-year-olds from Los Angeles, Caroyn House and Sharon Finnema, and 15-year-old Donna DeVarona of Santa Clara, Calif., led the record-busting pain the 4-day meet which ended Sunday in the Portage Park 50-meter Olympic pool, , This- trio, plus a group just as young that either Won' events or were pressing for first all ’the time, can make Uncle Sam rub his hands In glee at the Women’ prospects in the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo. TWO REMAIN Five world, five American and two additional meet records were undercut in the splash, party. Only two events—the 100 Ynefer back-stroke and 100 meter freestyle— did not produce record efforts out of the 14 ’women races. Miss House won the freestyle titles at distances of 1500, 400 and 200 meters, repeating as Individual high point performer with 26. She bettered the world mark of Rookie shortstop Dal Maxvill erased the American 2:15-5 with 2:14.6 In the .200, and smashed the meet mark of 4:46.9 In the 400 with 4:45.3. Miss Finneran bypassed the listed world standard of 2:32.8 by churning the 200-meter butterfly in 2:31.2, and did the same in upsetting defending champion Miss DeVarona In the 400-meter individual medley. Her time of 5:25.4 dented Donna’s world listing of 1:34.5. Miss DeVarona won two titles, repeating in the 200-meter individual medley .by blasting her own American mark of 2:33.0 with 33.3, and beating defending champion Nina Harmer of Philadelphia in the 100-meter back-stroke in 1:10.4. Cracking Boyer had a double, two singles and two walks in the Cards' third straight victory over the Mets. Relief artist Lindy McDaniel, in hla first start, went eight innings for his third triumph in 10 J~ dsions. Reuben Amaro’s run - scoring single in the ninth snapped a 3-2 tie between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, giving the ■ Phils’ Chris ter”i-Germany’s 20-year-old WU-trud JJrselmann. She won the 100-meter breaststroke in 1:20.6 to better the listed American mark of 1:22.3, and matched the meet record of 2:33.3 in the 200-meter breaststroke FOREIGN WINNER The only other foreign winner was Vancouver's 16-year-old Mary Short his seventh victory against __many defeats. Elroy Face, In relief, was tagged with the loss, his fourth in 12 decisions. The CUbs regain eighth place by beating the Colts, behind Bob Anderson's tight relief pitching and hefty hitting by George Altman. Anderson replaced Bob Buhl in the eighth wtth two runs in, Colts on first and third and one out and slammed the door. Altman collected four of the Cubs’ ten hits and batted in two runs. ■ Patterson Changing Site of Camp to Illinois (AP HIGHLAND MILLS, N.Y. Heavyweight Champion Floyd Patterson boxed six rounds Sunday in preparation for 'his title bout with Sonny Liston at Chicago, Sept/ 25. Trainer Dan Florio said the champion would do only road work and light calisthenics Monday before breaking camp here and heading to, Illinois for the final stage of his training. YOU ARE 5 YEARS AHEA0 WITH A BRODIE’S 5 STAR MUFFLER if>X There is no Installation charge for front or .rear pipes when purchased at the sarne time as muffler,, * 1 BRIDIE’S MUFFLER SERVICE 121 WoynoSt. tTUJtpAI FE 4-4900 Mexicans Split Pair to Whip Yugoslavs MEXICO CITY, (AP)-Mexic American Zone Davis Cup champions next take-on Sweden in the lnteraOne semifinal here in October—and things won’t be aa easy they were against Yugoslavia. We know they’ll be tough,” said Mexico's Captain Pancho Contreras today. “But our boys are up." The Mexicans wound up opera-dons against Yugoslavia Sunday: by splitting the final two singles for a 4-1 victory. But it was all decided Saturday when the Mexicans won the doubles with Rafael Osuna and Antonio Palafox after two singles victories on Friday. Contreras Inserted himself as a substitute and dropped a 6-2, 6-2, 9-7 decision to Nikola Plllc. Mario LLamas whipped Vladimir Pre-seki, 6-0, 6-i, 6-1, in the other singles. Ulf Schmidt'and Jan-Erlk Lund-list fbrm the Swedish team that upset (he favored Italians in the European Zone. Earlier this mer, Lundquist defeated Osuna in a tournament. Stewart* She sandbagged the world mark of 1:08.2 in winning the 100-meter butterfly In 1:07.6. Joining the U.S. “sweet, sixteen” club were Glnnie Duenkel of Summit, N.J., and Rdbyn Johnson of Arlington, Va. Glnnie surpassed the world mark of 2:33.2 in winning the, 200-meter back-stroke in 2:32.1, Robyn took her second straight crown in the 100- [ meter freestyle in 1:02.2. Australia’s Murray Rose dominated the concurrent international men’s competition. He bettered the listed world mark of 4:15.9 in the 400-meter freestyle in 4:14.4. He also surpassed the American record of 17:21.8 with a 17:15.7 job in the 1500 freestyle, Another world-better chore was by Gerhard Hetz of Hof, Bavaria. He was timed through the 400-meter Individual medley In 4: 54.9. The listed world standard is 4:55.6. Matching world records were 16-yeaobld lion Schollander of Santa Clara hi the 200-meter freestyle with 2:00.4, and Indianapolis’ Thm stock with 2:11.5 in the 200 backstroke. Blows Lead , Third-Time Burkemo, Bone Rallies Fall Short; Bar hum Fails to Defend Pete Brown* throttled in the pest by hie putter, used’ it effectively yesterday to edge hard-luck Tom Talkington for the Michigan Open golf crown in a three-hole playoff. Brown, the 1961 National Negro champion, banged a 28root uphill putt eight Inches frdm the pin on the par-3 third at 'Farmington Country Club to win the coveted prize. He took home f756. For the frustrated Talkington . If was just another Utter final round in Michigan Open play. The 36-year-old Washtehnw golfer blew a lead for the third straight year in the final round. He was forced to settle for n bogey four on Iho final, playoff hole. Poor first and third rounds pushed Pontiac’s Gene Bone out of contention. NOT CONSISTENT The Warwick Hills pro opeiied with a 76, then shot a 69. only to stumble back to a 76 on the third round. He closed with a 73 which gave him a 72-hole of 293, five , strokes behind the leaders. Franklin Hills’ Wally Burkemo almost overcame a disastrous first round 79. Ho finished with a pair of 70s and a 71, but trailed Brown and Talkington by two Talkington squandered a two-stroke lead in the final 18 holes and ended up with Detroiter Brown at 288 to set the stage for the play- ' AP Phslsfsi MICHIGAN OPEN CHAMP —Pet* Brown of Detroit holds the large silver tray presented him after he won the Michigan Open golf championship yesterday at Faimlngtpn Country Club. John Barnum, the chunky pro from Grand Raplds; Blythefleld, held the lead going..Into yesterday morning’s third round." Defending champion Barnum held a one-stroke lead after two rounds but the veteran pro soared to ?7 bi the morning and 78 In the afternoon to finish. tied for 14th with ' a 296. Honors in Softball All to Rochester Talkingtoi) was bidding (0 succeed Bamufii, who Was gunning for unprecedented third straight title; when he missed a chance to wrap it up before the third extra hole. On the second hole, a par five, Talkington rolled the putt from the fringe three inches from the pin before it lost its momentum. John Molenda, the low amateur from Lakepointe, was tied for fourth with Chuck Matlack of Cadillac and Reggie Myles of Lansing. It should be plain enough by now where (he best softball is played around this area. Two more Rochester teams district titles Saturday night to give that V111 a g e all four champions. Shelby Oil took Huron Bowl 6-3 In Class D here and Gtrrom nipped Spencer Floors of Watefr-ford 3-3, In 10 Innings In “C” at Ferndale. McElroy Collision had wbn Gass A and McNeil Insurance “B” earlier. They start regional play at Port Huron tojnorrbw night. The other two open Friday at Owosso. KAItLY LEAD Shelby took a two-run lead in the 2nd and led all tjie way adding the others In the 6th while ahead by one. Lee Sherby won allowing four of seven hits in the 7th. Terry Plutter and Ben Tavler each hkd two hits'as did Joe Bigler of the losers. Huron had made the finals by downing Bob ii Larry's Bar o( Waterford Saturday, 0-4. The Bar guys came from behind to He twice but Jim Bendtg doubled In what proved to he the clincher In the Mh.. An Insurance tally was added In ,the Oth. Vcrle Sheldon won sided by two- Vet Sports Scribe Dies CHERRY HILL, N.J. (AP) John S. ■ Webster, 60, veterah sports writer and columnist with the Philadelphia Inquirer, died at home in Cherry Hill, N. J. Sunday after a- long Illness. Fries Duo Top Sailors 1 hit efforts by Dick Macintosh, Bill LaRose and Dale Badder. Bob Smith and Dick Nicholes had the same for Waterford. - Waterford hopes to get back to its league playoffs tonight despite the inclement weather, Spences is matched against Strohs in Class B at 7 and Bob & Larry' Haskiq • Chevrolet at 8:30 in Ward Outduels Foyt in Milwaukee Race Roy Beattie, Southfield Jrry Berles, Grand Rapids horn Roaely, Belmont ...... Bob Zimmerman, Sherry wellone. . MILWAUKEE (AP) — Rodger Ward and A. J. Foyt raced 100 miles at 100 miles per hour with only exhaust -fumes separating them Sunday, with Ward clinging narrow lead to win a 200-mlle big car race. A crowd of 29,755, brought to its feet by the sizzling duel; saw Ward, of Indianapolis, and Foyt, of Houston, Tex., turn the Tony Bettenhausen Memorial Oassic at the Wisconsin State Fair Into a two-man race, lapping the field 1 they fobght for the advantage. The pair also beat 93-degree heat which raised track temperatures to 135 degrees and resulted In heat exhaustion tor three of the lop 10. finishers. |HR| .........ME Four crashes, one of them In- Jos. vblving five ears, marred the nick Bury. Detroit 72-Glen and Jo Fries took the snipe race, but there were no Injures. c“,1,m®eW«r«re“' ■lass honors In the Watkins’Lake 'Ward, winner Of the 1962 In' Yacht Gub races Sunday after- dlanapolis 500, and Foyt the 1961 Tommy Wetroue, '' noon with Dave and Jo Green as winner, started their personal jTomrrntngh. runnersup. In third place was scrap with Ward seyr-^mg^| Bone drove 370 yard* and slammed ft 3-wood short of the green. His ball skipped up, rolled up hill and Ml Into the hole. Bone placed seventh. toif tournsmont at Farmlnstos Country Club (par 37-30—73): Pet* Brown, Detroit ......... 70-78-68-72—291 |7M (Won three-hole playoff). Tom Talklnfton, ... ..... 70-71-71-7 ____ three-hole playoff). Walter Burkemo, Detroit ........... 71-72-70-71—202 buck Matlack. Cadillac .......... 70-07-70-70—222 0120 east*' Myles. Lanilnc .......... 71-72-70-73 -202 f.120 ene Bone. Pontiac 70-00-70-72—203 0270 1-00-77—204 0200 72- 77-71-70—200 0100 70-70-72-70-T2M 0110 73- 74-70-73—300 $100 70-71-71-74—SOS I Qrand R*.. A-John Law,, Bast Detroit ... •Mike Andonlan, Pontiac ... . -Wayne Kramer. 74-73-70-70-200 I 74-72-13-71—2N , I 7X-70-77-7B—2S0 I 77-70-01-70—207 70-77.70-70—217 A-utk ReynoU mtl . 70-70-74-77—307 70-74-77-74—207 78-711-70-74-2(17 Bruce and Fred Brede. '•& . ,, ^and less than a car length a they In the thistle class. Harm Gillen WQmi ^ finillh im* was first, followed by Don Zanneth and Carl Krietz. Next Sunday the WLYC hosts n invitational regatta. SUPER DISCOUNTS COLOR TV; BLACK grid WHITE TV RADIOS, STEREOS Bfkfei*You Buy... Check Our l«w,low Pricn* Guarontwwd to Sava You Monnyl' '* ' RCA immyrn^awryaum ZENITH • . I Term fajrorinacn to Color TV TRY US( Open 9 to 9 Monday and Friday CONDON’S RADIO & TV 730 Huron I seconds in [front" Foyt trailed by one second Tiger Averages laX.:: H&uttHt' INBIVWITAL BATTING _ I ) BATTING Sir daimiM . . ... 'll : •« -J33 Parlay .Ail *...41*0 1S03 .141 moino lilHi Jonea . ....II................J Tat ala .. ■ * :T- . I i 4.30 .13 i 1m . t f.ll Jim Picard, Orchard Lake . Paul VanLooaan, Union Lake -Olenn Jobneon, Oroias Ita . .. John Dalrymplt, 77-74-76-78—2P* lit)) 74-73-70-70—289 000 74-70-77-74—S0f 100 77-71-77*70—300 000 . 73-14-I1-1S—301 MO . 74-70*73-03—302 020 ' . 70-74-77-71-303 ISO . 73-70-77-70-203 Ml Moxieant Closer to Title KINGSTON IAP)-The Central American and Caribbean Games go Into the second and final week Monday with Mexico almoft the certain winner of the team championship. ... ;> ... Thq powerful Mexicans captured Si of the 3^ gold medal* In awlmming and hava been making strong showings in other' sports as well. Ths Mexicans are the defending champions 'In aoo-' si ii )mi Tndt so far are undefeated. xWTj-, ^ .....^ di THE POOTIAC PRESS. HONDAY, AUGUST 20,1962 ■--.- ..■. 'v- / -srr ' S- * ,,v : v- - 1 NINETEEN1 | Class A Playoff Title Goes on Line Tonight The chips go on the line tonight *t Jaycee Park as league champion Huron-Airway faces the R. T. Clippers for the Class A baseball playoff championship and the right to advance to state competition. Each team won. once over the weekend. The Clippers started things Saturday with'a 7-2 triiunph but the bowling hoys got even 4-2 last night. In the opener, Huron-Airway got a quick 2-0 lead but R-. T;, c back with seven in twb frames and coasted to victory as John York pitched shutout bail the rest of the way despite allowing seven hits for a total of 40. AMEK1CAY . LEAGUR Won Loot Pet. Behind New York ...... 74 41 .to? — Im Angelas .... 71 54 .Ml- 4(4. Minnesota ....... 70 5« ’ .556 ' -6 Chicago .... .. 6} Si .SIS U Detroit ........ «i .486 )3'i Baltimore ....... 00 63 .400 l4Va Cleveland ....... 50 65 .476 M Boston ........... M 66 .466 17 Kansu City . . . . 57 66 .436 Utfa Washington ... 45 71 .$71 It SATURDAY'S RESULTS ; Kansu City 5-7, New York 4-U, twi-ntght Washington 2, Los Angeles 0. ntgbt Cleveland 4. Baltimore 3. 10 Inning* Boston 12, Minnesota ! ‘ Chicago 2. Detroit 0 . . SUNDAY’S RESULTS New Yort"21, Kansas City 7 . ... Los Angeles 5, Washington 2 Baltimore 6, Cleveland 5 Minnesota 4-7. Boston 2-4 Chicago 11-3, Detroit 541 TODAY’S OAMES New York (Sheldon 1-7) at Kansai City (Rakow U-13) Boston (Schwall 6-13) at Minnesota (8tlg- Oniy games scheduled H •— TUESDAY’S SCHEDULE Chicago at Baltimore, night Cleveland at Detroit, night Washington ai Minnesota;' night Boston at Kansas City, night. New York at Los Angelas, htght NATIONAL LEAGUE Wea LeU Pet. Behind Los Angeles _____ 13 43 ' .636 - San Francisco ..76 46. .628 Cincinnati .... 7S 40 .605 Pittsburgh .... 68 52 .570 1 St. Louie ...,.....,68 55 .557 1 Milwaukee .... 66 58 .328 1 Philadelphia ..58 61 .460 2 Chicago .. 47 7S .376 1 Houston .........'d5 77 .368 3 New York .........30 66 ..240 I SATURDAY’S RESULTS Cincinnati 12, Los Angeles 1, night San Francisco 6, Milwaukee 4 ~ Pittsburgh 3, Philadelphia 2 Houston 2-5, Chicago 14, twl-nlght St. Louie 7-io. Now York 44, day-SUMMY’S RESULTS Los Angolu 5, Cincinnati 1 Milwaukee ULSgn Franclaco S Philadelphia 3. Pittsburgh I St. Louis 10. NeW York 5 Chicago 4. Houston 3 TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles twilltems 12-8) at Ctoet (Purkey 18-4), night San Francisco (non* 114) at MtlwaukM (Spun toll).. night Houston (Farrell S-18 and Odlden — Philadelphia (Oroen 54 and Mahaffey 15-15), (I), twl-nlght. _ .... PlUaburgh (Friend 13-11 And Mctoan 1M) at New York (H5pk 7-i» and R.L. Only i DROPPS STARS Dan Dropps led a nine-hit winning' attack with three singles. Gene Cox, who nlade the catch of the game to save a run, added a pair. Jim Wagner and John Flcser had three .each and^Al Barkcley two in defeat. dutch-, relief pitching by Don Picmann was a big reason H-A got even; Huron scored two each pt the 4th and 5th frame* to give starter Jim Ray a 4-0 advantage, The Clippers tallied twice in the 7th and had the tying runs on base when Picmann took ow fanned the last batter. Stu Dell homered, John batted in one with a double and John Lucadam stole home tor three of the winners’ tallies. Th: Clippers slammed out four straight singles in the 7th after two outs, Boyd Thomason’s 2nd of the night to chase in the 1st run. Chuck Handbell batted in the other. Grid Rookio Breaks Leg SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Bookie Bolin, highly-touted rookie offensive guard with the New York Giants, broke his right foot Sunday in a game agi San Francisco 49ero. By The Associated press Most every kid learns, at one time or another, that when you’re playing with the big boys, you 'on’t want to make ’em mad. The old lesson was impresi on the Kansdx City Athletics Sunday. The A’s had the audadty to take two of -three from the New York Yankees, the biggest kid on the block, and the Yankee retribution waa swift, painful .and a little humiliating. They punished the reeling A’s with a 20-hit attack, including four doubles, two triples and four SAn .FrweloeoeL Nwr Yw-k 1# SATUBDAY’g GAMES _________ty 41, St- Louli 14 Cleveland S3 Pltuburgh 10 Detroit 35. fawn 24 • TAngoloe UTMtonfiota 34 illadelphla 25. Chicago 16 Houatpn 61, Boiton 10 !«a*ssTr **l am proud to have more than threo million satisfied customers. Their overwhelm* ing acceptance of my quality auto painting at my ona low price of $29.95 has made it possible for me to open locations in over 100 cities coast to coast!* “Don’t miss my (past auto painting offer. 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"A bank president signed a card of 100 tickets.” Dixon says he thinks New Orleans is the only two, under serious consideration tor a new AFL team in the Immediate future. That would expand the junior pro circuit to nine teams. Atlanta also has a $25,000 deposit with the AFL but the Georgia city's chances were hurt when it recently had to cancel out two exhibitions because of poor attendance. Lamar Hunt, the wealthy oilman who owns the AFL’s Dallas Texans and heads the loop's pension committee, said in Dallas he didn’t know a whole lot about the crowd in New Orieans “1 sounds very encouraging. We are'tn'()* 86b. ■!»<■> tons 147 loitt ktlxw It. _WglMW FIRESTONE NEWT TREADS APPUIO ON SOUND TIRE NODlEt OS Oli YOIIR 0101 TIMS TUBELESS WHITEWALLS (Narrow or wide! ANY SIZE 49 49 Cur tfnr Tread*, identified by bfedaVtan mi stop mark or# GUARANTEED t, ApM itofwrtw fn Workminahlp and ih«t*rl»la dntwc Ulnar tlMgl 3. Againat normal rmui hawrda Idxeapt r-Dair«bl- mneturaa) naiiMIM lima of adjuatmanU rated «• Uaad waax and haaad M A/pW STORE HOURS Open every night till 9t00 P.M.' Monday thru Friday * jwn i pp rnmmy THE PpXTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1662 -mi 'SpaceTwins' Taking It Easy Red Cosmonauts Rest With FamiHes Prior to Facing West Newsmen MOSCOW (UPI) - Russia’s history-making “spare twins” rested with their families today prior to facing Western newsmen for the tost time since their marathon tandem flight in the cosmos. Hum was no official word -on the whereabouts of.Maj. Andrian NUroiayev and Lt. Pavel Popo-vich, bid they were said to be on • hero’s holiday following Sat-urday’a mammoth Red Square n of their feat. ’ Tomorrow the cosmonauts were expected to hold a news confer, cnee at which Western correspondent! will get their first opportunity to question them about their million mile-plus flights. T Ire i r appearance Saturday in Red Square was their first in Moscow since they landed last Wednesday from parallel flights that exceeded all previous records for distance and endurance. Nikolayev was’ in space about four days, completing 64 orbits of the earth. Popovich orbited 48 times in abodt three days. .Both traveled at 17,500 miles an hour. U. N. Issueo.15-Nation ‘Honor HojBf.V ■ , Growth of Women's Voting Wghf^Cifed quirements not demanded of male voters. it is on the honor roll for granting women eligibility for election to parliament. Saudi Arabia’s Prince Talal termed himself a political exile yesterday in Beirut, Lebanon, and said he has wide support at home for his demand for a democratic government there.. Talal; King Saud’s ' younger brother, said all airlines had been ordered not to take him back1 to Saudi Arabia but he nonetheless planned to return. Kalamazoo Man bies Boarding Chicago Train ■BADS TRIBUTE [ Premier Nikita S- Khrushchev, led the nation in paying tribute to the space twins in Red Square Saturday. He also used the dcca-j sion to reiterate his demands that Western allied troops must get out of Berlin. He said no troops from any NATO' country should be in the divided city. While Khniscbev and the cos- CHICAGO UP—Herbert De Young, I, of Kalamazoo collapsed and died yesterday while boarding train in Chicago's La Salle Street Station. De Young, a truck dispatcher for a Kalamazoo paper factory, was returning from a California vacation with his brother, Peter De Young, also of Kalamazoo. Cause of death was undetermined. performer* of the celebration, Popovich's 6-year-old daughter Natasha stole the show. In a country where families of public figures keep ini the background, Nataaha arbited-lnto fame. The little girt whjj has become the Kremlin's answer to Carottae Kennedy was in the forefront of all thfr Red Square activities. Moscow's television cameras followed almost her every move. Pop# Slates Address to Catholics Sept. 11 VATICAN CITY IP - Pope John will addrees a radio message to Ronlan Catholics all over the world Sept. 11, exactly a month before the opening of the Ecumenical Council, the Vatican has announced. The 80-year-old pontiff will speak over Vatican Radio. UNITED NATIONS UP — Th e, Women in the Eastern and West* Unitell Nations has issued a sort ere regions of Nigeria may vote of honor roil of 15 countries that .and are eligible have taken steps during the last they are barred in the northern two years to expand women's voting rights. It discloses that nine countries still bar women from voting or region. SOME CAN VOTE Swiss women cannot vote or be elected in federal elections. They dannot vote and fire not eligible to holding office. Two, Saudi Arabia hold offices in cantonal (state) and Yemen, also bar men, from elections except in the cantons of yoting. I Geneva, Neuchatel and Vaud. in Afghanistan, Iraq, Jordan, Women may vote and are eligible Libya and Liechtenstein women |l°r elections in some Swiss fed-have ao voting rights and are not .^ration cities, eligible for election. I Seven other countries Impose i kind of voting bur that i vote but can't Se elected to ot- JAKARTA,, Indonesia (AP)<~ President Sukarno Ins ' ordered construction of two ,modern hotels • lon' Sumatra lh*ah Effort'firattract There are about 1.200 species more tourists to the l,U0-mile long and sub-species of birds in the UJ.jisiaqd. does not apply to men. In Guatemala and Syria women] are subject to a literacy test not! required of men, , . In Iran andMonaco women may vote and are eligible for local gov-, ernment office. . . xne countries cne< In Portugal, women may vote In P the last two years . . Li? ..... . . Ivl Unm» where women may vote in all el n an equal basis, with men. all election* und are eliglbIe forlE1 Salvador, Mongolia, Pakistan, * '—gji Syria, T* election subject to educational re- Sierra l«oi»e, quirements not imposed on men.[c*nada' Con» qualifications as those prescribed! Lebanon am* Niger, for men must be heads at families.! Although Syria is listed as h la San Marino, women may 'iting women on educational Island Entices Tourists | STORM WINDOWS - DOORS | jr 4^TBIPLE TILT ALUM. Combination Window* Ml95 C. Weedon Co.- • Alum. Siding O Awning* • Potto* • Screen Pall** • Parch EocL ALUMINUM COMBIMATION DOORS $2295 —1032 W. Huron—334-2597 ini/PEriNSEHUir RESISTS BUSTHIM6 AND PEELING An amaring MW kind of jhouaa paint. When ap* plied on properly prepared surfaces — wood or masonry — A-100 Latex House Paint, provides protection against blistering, peeling, color fading, chalk washing — never before possible. Lit |ks show you how Sherwin-Williams A-100 Latex House Adits With proper use, caty give your home a new kind of protection, a new. kind 'of beauty. FREE HOUSE INSPEMN Hit Sherwin-Williams Co 71 Wi Huron $t. FE 4-2571 FRM PARKING IN REAR OF STORE EARLYBIRD VALUES Good Through Tuesday, August 21st SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY-One Price as Advertised PORK LOINS 7-RIB PORTION LOIN END PORTION LB. 35' 45 Pork Chops ‘wy 79' MICHIGAN—SWEET, JUICY Peaches 325' LEGS LB. FRESH FRYING CHICKEN FARTS BREASTS m A. 49* 45C Attached “SUPER-RIGHT* GROUND jaIlIty— BEEF LB. "SUPM-RIOHT” CENTER CUT Smoked Pork Chops »• 79c Prepared Fresh Mv7:'‘ TH* OWAT ATtAHTlC B FACIttC ttA COAATANV, IUC.' SAVB Be — JANE PARKER PRESH, CRISP Potato Chips is SP Ap>5»uper . AMtRICA'T 0IMN0AWI FOOD MIACHANT SINU IASI FREE WITH THIS COUPON ONE 9-OZ. PKG. OF FROZEN AGP French Fries MON., TUES. or WED. August 20, 21 or 22 Good in all AAP Super Matfce*» la ONI PIR PAMULY — ADULTS ONLY SiifeiJ3!5 THE P( ^KT|a6 PRESS, MONDAY,'AUGUST. 20, 1962 Committee Trying to Kii|l Golden foose? ' n. . v/> J.;^ _ 4. -v ; '',:y Eying Second Site for Center By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON A? Things, as say in Wonderland, are getting curiouser and curioiiser. It Is a well-know lact that a nationwide drive will be launched on closed-circuit television in a hundred cities this November to .raise thirty million dollars for a national cutltural center. The odd part of ft Is this: Although-Congress has already passed a law authorizing the center, and has donated, a beautiful park site on the Potomac River near the Lincoln' Memorial, the cultural committee is quietly negotiating with railroad executives about the possibility of buying Union Station instead. To do so would require another act of Congress, ■incei'tbe one creating the center specifies the free park site. More importantly, it would also remove from the taxrolls the biggest district taxpayer In every year but one since the cavernous granite structure was erected 55 years ago. Union Station is Jointly owned by the Pennsylvania and ,the Bal- timore ft Ohio railraods. In the year just ended it paid $1,882,354.-, with nearly a million and a half of it going to the federal government. dr ’ iff A'j*" The remainder went' to the hard-pressed' District of Columbia which i$ losing taxable property at an alarming pace each time the government razes a block of bouses to'red a new office building, or another foreign government comes into being and buys an embassy here. CAN'T BLAME RAILS No one can blame the railroads for trying to unload their heavily taxed-properties. Because of stiff competition from planes,, trucks and autos, the financially em-l Pennsylvania Railroad had already made a deal with the Madison/ Square Garden Carp. ecrap Pennsylvania Station In New York City. Unlike the cultural negotiations, however, that land would remain in New York tax rolls. An official spokesman tor the proposed cultural center, queried He did not identify the pressures, but said’ the committee took about the reported negotiations for Union Station, conceded that they have been going on. He said tin group would prefer the parklike setting that Congress Dixie Churches Bar Negroes, Whites ALBANY, Ga.. 59I . 4S S. Telegraph A Ope* Mhr 'll 9 pas- 1495 No IW«^I . Oma Mm.. Tees., Set. '* * Olhe» ftbyt /Ml 9 Two Michigan Men Armour Star or Imperial Deep Hickory Smoked, Sugar Cured Smoked HAMS Butt Portions 4 to 6-lb. Average Smoked Ham Whole Smoked Hams 49t B9 *■ ru Peschke Brand, Loan 9IICGQ DOCOII &•»<>»«* *** 3YI Portion 5 to 7-lb. Fish Specials Fresh UksWMtaflsk *.49‘ Canau Shrimn Shrimp Ahoy Brand 4*0. ■ «nlFJf onnmp Breoded—Roody to Cook Kg. Green Giant Sale ! Gt«W' ®'sn' ^*iSm Special Label — Strawberry, Raspberry or Cherry Royal Gelatin Economy Size . M _______L Economy Size ^ ?s t°° I 2 *5.25* save 5 el MI TexSun Unsweetened SAVE + «m- ft0 | 136 *AVE A 3W \ * Grosn SAvt Q C*«* - V 1 O Co«* * 11 C 30$ 1## H s c*«» M i»sj00m Del Monte Peaches TexSun Unsweetened Orange Juice 3 46-oi. Cam Sliced or Halves Yellow Clings SAVE 19c N°; 2V* ON 4 c*" 89 25 Shank Average Monday and Tuesday Only ■* Lily, Crade ‘A,’ Large FRESH EGGS C With ^ This Dox. in Ctn. Coupon thra Tiraa., Am. 21. Limit eao par customer & Sanborn — Reg., Drip or Fine Grind Chase COFFEE SAVE 10c With This Coupon Caupan goad thru Sat, Aug. 21. Limit ana aaupan par SAVf Wc Win Sealtest Cbqc®'*** Ice. Crew" rocket Gaylord Pure Creamery VALUABLE WRIQLEY COUPON With Thla Coupon and Purchase of a 4-Piaca Ploca Sotting Old Curiosity Shop . Dinnerwere Die in 1-96 Accident MARNE <* — Two West NJlchl an men were killed early today rhen spilled from a car which vertumed and rolled about 700 set -out of control off 1-06 lame, state police Mid. Troopers identified the victims s Harold L. Bishop, 23, of Grand lapids, and Richard Laughlin, 25, -ho, officers sgld, lived part time t Rockford and Fruitport. One ody was discovered 128 feet from ip eastbound auto and the other bout 15 feet. > Actor Dias on Staga BERLIN (AP)—Axel Monje, 52, well known Berlin actor,' col-la peed on atage during a performance of “My Fair Lady” Saturday and died of a heart attack en route to a hospital. Save 16c — White, Pink, Yellow, Aqua Kleenex Tissues Breast O’ Chicken —• Save 15c Chunk Tuna U.S. No, 1 4 £ 1°° YELLOW ONIONS 3=89* Mel-O-Crust Farm Style Sliced White Bread 2^35' Butter T -59 Pascal Oalary 2 „ 25' Lettuce u•'»» GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS 'HHHiiHiitiiHfHiifiHHHmHMfmimitmmmiimMtmmmffmimfiiiHnHmHtHU ip^ THE IfOXTI^O PRESS. MONDAY, 'AUGUST *2P, 1&2 f \ TWEffTY-^HlIKg *[ iff for Businessmen srr^iici tram hu. me. 24th Mjm:1 Meredith WMsonS: ■k THE HOST MAAVaOUS MOVIE EVIR MADE I WWMHJrMttWMWIlWaHi wmmmtM' mmn HATFIELD, EngMd (API— The De Havilland Co. is turning out > new businessman's oruvate Jetliner called the DH125. Designed to seat eight passer the twin Jet plane ha» a .i Of 500 m.p.h;, a range of 1.200 miles and sells lor T420.806 HUriridlM ROT MM MM BW*^K.gmf iMHMHM kirkI DOUGIAS] imsl Cousin,’ " complained Joseph kiewicz. “Nobody ever talked about . play—all b(pj cause some idiot* With a pistol took a shot at President Lincoln. Mankiewicz, is the man who dt-: r e c te d “Cleopatra,” and everybody seemed to want to talk about] something else be-1 sidesthe movie Itself. Here to put the film in final BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP)-Matyas Rakosi, Hungary’s formed dictator, and 34 of his Stalinist followers have been booted "from the Communist party in a purge of the purgers. Karoly Kiss, regarded as the leading Stalinist still in an important position in Hungary, also was demoted from the ruling Politburo. The new purge was i a communique Sunday follow-_ig a four-day meeting of the party’s central committee. James Kadar, the party chief and premier who was jailed in one of Rakosi’a purges, .presided. , • ★ . ★ n The expulsions from the party we ordered six years after the JaS Hungarian revolt threatened to topple the Communist regime which Rakosi established with his South End Union Lake Rd. EM S*0M1. — Upon 1 P.M. icommerceH TONITE J6RRY|^M|S awohlb HD Jf storyl Merrill's Marauders lUEFF CHANDLER mi GJRUCU, tas&rxjuumN ssn Slttlt TUESDAY Bob HOPE Ring CROSBY ROAD TO BONO KONG llim I -IN THEATER’ NOW ALSO' ONCE UPON A NIGHT SHE STARTED MORE THAN JUST.,. ACADEMY AWARD WINNER.., SOPHIA LOREN CHEVALIERGWiN color SET YLUR EARLY BIRR ADMISSION TICKET FROM YOUR OASO “ SERVIOI STATION! "If1! the talk of the town" EXECUTIVE LUNCHEONS Served from 11 A.M. Every Day — Also PRIME RIBS OF BEEF Served Every Day 2325 S. TELEGRAPH RD. MIRCALI MILE SHOPPING CENTER HORRY — HORRY LAST 2 NIGHTS ALL CQLOR i ^ PROGRAM *‘7 OPEN 7 P.M.->Hl KIM NOVAK MY£L|fr JAMES GARNER TONY RANDALL IN A MARTIN RANSOHOFF PRODUCTION II fimi >!^N)TY^FOmt Help Others in Distress mm Tllti POyTlAC 1»RKSS; MONDAY, AUGU&f 20, 1962 ##M : v. II DRIFT MAkbO ByDr. I. M.l4ritt. Top clokt tod PhflJSr>Bi Learning Doesn't Need to Be Hard Work .: fiy LESLIE J. NASON, Ed.D. ITOPSWr VI Miuowron, University of Southern California Many educators insist that children must always work hard. They even set up special classes to provide enough work to keep (he youngsters working bard I disagree wyith| these educators. Learning need not be haid work. It the student] hap the propen background in thef subject, he can grasp a concept without arduous work and g r e a t expenditure ot en-l ergy. DR. NASON I recall a student named Joe who breezed through engineering in college with little effort. At the start of his freshman year he was living in a rooming house near the campus with 11 other freshmen, most-ot-Miero engineering students. Joe’s background in mathematics was good.1 He was. .able to complete his assignments In tall to three-quarters of an hour/ e a c h evening. Then he helped tips others understand their assignments. As 1m continued to help hi* meats came easier until, by the spring of Us sophomore year, he was spending only IS mtaufeo a day an calculus assignments and was making near perfect scores on his exams. Ed, another freshman, lived in the same rooming house. At times did not complete all of his assignments. Regularly before exams, he turned to Joe for a final briefing. The briefings pulled Ed’s grade' from a 0 to a C itt math. By the spring of {iis sophomore JACOBY ON JACOBY By OSWALD JACOBY Hand eight-In the World Championship series represented the first big swing for America. They picked up 13 International Match -Rotate -to- go in | front by seven, At' both tables toe opening bid e spade by West. The North players looked at | their 10-card heart I suits and each one ■■ decided on the unusual call of five hearts. Each East with a defenseless hand (queen and ohe trump aren’t going to be worth anything against a man who SI 4 None VAKJ 10 865432 111 . 4K (D) BAST 4Q8872 4Q7 ♦ None 4 J10117 8 SOUTH -.. 4J18A V None ♦ AQJ108 4 4A4SS No one vulnerable . West North bit Seatli 14 AW 8 4 Double Paso 0 4 14 Double Pete Pisa Pane Opening lead—V A After the six heart bid the Italian East-West team felt that U had done enough.. America was allowed to play that contract and because East could not open a diamond a grand slam was made. Bobby NiM, sitting Rast on the U. S. East-West team, did not take ____ ft; have done my duty” attitude. He reasoned that North had gone to six hearts without the queen and undoubtedly had tja coming out of his ears. Bobby Vi that,six spades wooldn’t be hurt muefi and refused to gamble against the heart slam. year, Ed was spending at least two . hours a day on math homework. And even with this expenditure of tithe, he was . pleting his assignments. With struggle and hard woric, managed to get a C in the course.- -4W| jj It was not the, learning that was hard work! Joe actually learned more than Ed with less ef-nrt. It is not bow hard you study, it js the way you study that brings results. - PRINCIPLES OF LEARNING Whether you are in, junior senior high school or college the same principles of learning apply: Start listening on the first day. Keep ahead of the teacher with your reading. Start right out doing high-quality homework. Make a careful note of each assignment and Its due date. „ Try to understand the course by studying for understanding, rather than just to complete the assign-. ments. Tt)ink through the course from the beginning every few days. It will help you assimilate (erial into the overall pattern. ★ dr ’ ★ Be ready to help your fellow students in distress. This will give you an opportunity to discuss ideas using your own words, This is the very best practice for complete understanding. Resolve to bring the course to -a high level of understanding, then harry it at that high-teveL'A few hours at the beginning will save you many more hours later. Follow these ideas and you, will,, find that teaming wil] be easy and pleasant — and not hard work. (You may obtain a copy of Dr. Nason’s “You Can G4jl’ Better Gradea” booklet by tending SI to “Bettor Grades,” Box tin, General Pont Office, New York.) iftr T Hamlin 4AKI48 ft 4 K 8871 4Q8 Haying at six spades Mervin Key, sitting West was able to hold his loss to down two. V+CRRDSeMet* Q—■'The bidding has boon: North East Seatli West Pais I ¥ Pass 2 N.T. Pass 8 4 Pais 14 Pass i T You, 8outh, hold: 4A4I YKQ74 41878 488 What do you do? A—Bid tour spadte. It will be up to your partner to oarry « from bore. bids five right off the bat) went to -five spades and each South doubted. Each North player took his partner's double out. He knew that he couldn't be hurt at aix hearts and that his hand wasn't going'to take many tricks against spades. MHmII Forecast ^ lo appreclgte s Stil. Tonight W could ____________ ____ _________| ______ ■ But frsetsst suosess indicated lo oon> motion with entertainment, Uluiion, presenting ioo4 self-imgge. Th* »ky could be the limit. Us# your ImeilnaUonl OKMINl (May >1 to duos St): “ time to permit youtsell to tire or M escenee- Tski tints to reet, (MU strength. Westing energlee could be 'Mneds' mleteke. Tonight excellent for rjjM^M. leernlng. Belle ohengee r Ceneer (June n to July lltt'PrJ ship te yeut life .todiy. Accept It l Q lime for travel, chenie, brisking out rut. bMHgg Intuition lo peroefvo (i tng. of those MOM to you. Be MOtll... to MBBOB •( others. You'irbe empty repaid. lso (July is t heed own coun--‘ je “out pt SML much toy (eying TUB to neighbor. Attend to elvfe duties lor seks ot Fu-TVR* hermony. viboo (Aim. SS to gept. sa>: Key is your ability to PNOJIICT. See pro-■ram as a whole, Rcluat to be die-courage by Ted tope. Answer is YIB. LIBRA liept. SI ts Oct. »i: Aid fiirn martial dr busmen partner prove, valuable. Muon Is your favor today, l> you refuse to be discouraged by one who ''bluffs." You bold "wlnnini hand. (Set1. JAWlH. Ten-dency is to sss eituetion through rose-colored glasses Better to Mlk delay. Tns longer you hold out today the better ter ultimate euoeoM. Me time to Brt. «•!! tsritanalni. Dlplamtoy > supw toy takuti «ym-ian by Imlitlng on your -H ISM for collecting The following ape fop price* covering sales of locally grown; produce by growers anrf sold by them, in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Wednesday.' , Produce Apples. Crab, bu.............. Apples, Duchess, bu............. Apples, QNcniae, bu............ Apples. McIntosh, bu. ..... Apples, wesithr, bu.............. Apples, Woi( River, bu. .......... Blueberries. ,crt....... .......S Csntsloupe, bu. ............3.24 Pesches, inerts, bu. ...... 3.as Peschee, Red Haven, bu......... ■* *" Peeches. Qoldsn Jubilee, bu. ...... Peaches, Hale fUven, bu. ....... Plums, Burbank, %-bu. Plums, Dawson, % bu............. ..... Watermelons, bu. .............. 3.24 , VEGETABLES NEW YORK JAB) - Aircraft and electronic Issues led the stock market higher, early this after The market was a little more active than on Friday, Gains in' the aerospace section •ached 1 point' in many1 cases but the remainder of the list showed mostly’ fractional advances. W ★ ★- The market leadership was the same as last week when the popular averages rose to their high- Beans, Una, bu, ............. Beans, Roman, bu............. Beets.' da. bcha' -.......... Beets, topped ............... Broccoli, as. bch. . ........ Cabbage, curly, bu........... Cabbage, rdd, bu. ........... cabbage, sprout*, bu. . ... Cabbage, etandurd variety, t Carrots, bch. .............. Carrots, peUo-pak, 3 d*. .... Carrots, topped, bu.. ........ Cauliflower, da............ . celery, da. alia............. Celery, Pascal, 3 to ads. erti celery, whits, 3 to ft d*. ert corn. a"—a j * da — NEW YORK W -* Light trading and only minor price changes marked the opening of bond markets here today. Top grade corporate bonds showed little, movement on the showed no change at all. New York Stock Exchange, although a few issues climbed major fractions and Pacific Gi Onions, green, ds. bchs. . Onion, plekUng. lb. Parsley, curly, da. bchs............. , ., Parsley, root, da. bchs. ............ IS* Peas, blackeyes, ™ Peppers. - Cayenm Peppers, hot. bi Radishes, .... Squash, acorn. ... butjntcup . Squash, butternut,-bu. . Squash, Hubbard. b" Cabbage, HI Celery Cabbage, t)s. Collard, bu.......... Endive, bu. .......... Eudtve. bleached, bu. Esearole, bu......... Escarole. bleached, bi Kale, bu. Lettuce, Bibb. pk. Lettuce. Boston, ds. Lettuce. Mad. bu. Lyttueo, leaf, bu..... Mustard, bu. ......... Romalne, bu........... Swiss Chard, bu.............■•■■■ 1-3* Turnips, bu.....................3.ao Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT. Aug. 30 iAP> Prices paid per pound at Detroit for No. 1 quellty live poultry: Heavy type hens 18-11; light type hens 8-9. heavy type roasters brollera. and fryers 3-* Mm | : Whites 20- DETROIT EGGS __37-39; .medium Jfl-30%; small ! 19; grade B check's 22-23%. CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO, Aug. 30 (API - Chicago mercantile exchange - butter steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged to % higher; 93 score AA 57',. 93 A 97Mu 90 * - - Tar- “ B 9TV«; 80 C 99‘ Electronic, Air Issues Lead pst point since the week of the May slump. The Russian success with twin orbital shots hag convinced many investors more money will be spent on the Vi S. .space program. ' , * * ★ Also displaying a ' generally higher tone were steels, motors, airlines, utilities and oils. Among the aircrafts, Boeing was up around 2 and gains of about 1 were made by McDonnell, Republic and Lockheed. Douglas Bond Mart Trading Light Electric 2%s of 1976 rose 1% to An over the counter dealer in government' securities quoted most treasury issues unchanged to 1-32 or 2-32 higher. Short maturities Early price /changes among corporates, included a % advance to I0i% by General Motors Finance. General Dynamics and Martin; Marietta^ were ahead by H more.1 . ' ■ . RAILS MIXED. Wall Street market letter* recently have been full. of, items about the aerospace issues and projects such as the Gemini, Apollo and Saturn. Rails wert* mixed while tobaccos and drugs tended to slip in slow dealings. Ford led the motor group with a gain of almost 1 as it previewed the 1963 line for the pressi GM, Chrysler, Studebaker and American Motors, trading ex di' dend, were up small fractions. ★ ' A Prices oh the ^American Slock Exchungq^dfso were highe moderate, trading. Kirby Petra-leum was op around 4. Atlantic Research gained about 1, as die* Martin - Marietta warrants. Free tionally higher were Paul Horde hian, Star Industries, Technical Materiel, Apollo Industrl Syntax. WILMINGTON, Del. » - Lam-mont du Pont Copeland., a great-great-grandson of the. company's founder, today was elected president of E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co., Inc., succeeding Crawford H. Greenewalt. (hvonewalt, 60. resigned after holding the presidency for nearly 15 years. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK to prime heifers Hogs 900. Barrows, sUis »nd *ow; steady; saverarTot# mostly No. 1 19I-22C lb. barrows and gilts 18-19-10J6; 1 andi s 400 lb** *»3n? &JSBb lb. 14*14.18; boars 18.80-14.80. Voalere 200. Steady prime 37-30; |00d and choice 30-37; standard 20-30; cull *MMep 8?0: Ml early 8*1*8. ' CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO. AU*. 30 (API—Hos* actjvt. but*'--- j. Con HudO 1.0 Con A 8W l.« SerroCp 1.10b Ort-teed .90 CulhaAlr t Champlln 1 Check Mol Ches A Ob 4 Ch M BP Pa ChIPneuT 1.30 Chi RI Pac 1 a m steady to sfri - --2 200-328 . d 300 hood ( d KM M il ¥ Mb" lbs. TWO-llOO; bulk 300-338 Ib», 11.78-19.00: load around 338 be. 18.16; several lots 1*1 around 1B0 lbs. 18.p0-tiu; load 2*3 230 lbs, 18,26. NViri] loiSs 2*3 315-326 U>«- 17 36*17 60; m ud ®3 W-38b lb i0WS 18.76.llM; 1M-409 lbs. 16.00-17.00; 3-3 400-480 lbs. 18.M-16 00; 480-628 lbs. 1440-18.60; mM 12 00-13 00. ,_ , - Cattle 13,100; calves utters grading choice ai tng over 1,900 lbs. m< »M > W/ :t. 36 Ihrffr: hsllsr. araSlng choics aml prime weighing 660 IbsTand IIP moderately active, steady to 9ft hiuher- steady to weak; cows fully e weigh- loads prime 1.331 and 1,4*7 lb. »l»ughtjr ft B utility 18.00- tljlty an/ commercial cow* 14.6 cMnin and cut tars 13.25-16 76; and commercial bulla i8.*A-*AmA* anf vaalar* 20.00-26.00Vc sl*wg*h&r,fi. Sannsi 8*4-7.09, mostly 5 t .00; oull Mid utl[ltv_ 1100- toaday's lot Wvldeada Itotlawd Rale ttSi ffiioird afle IWl m '' REGULAR Indiana Gen I wot i “I * ^ i -SI t?i DOW JONES t P.M AVERAGE* ‘f Tndft.o.iilo. u- * { L ta H i ft ^isflM M*UP "l^ Int Bus Mob ; Pack .25+ Paper 1.05b MTolfcTol 1 ITECkt Brk I >8% 84% 88%+ 1% Briftt My OSe Burl Ind 78o Kalsrr AI .90 Kays Roto .40 Kspnscott 3.7! Kohi C Ld 2 Korr McGee . i 14% 14% 14% + 1737%-- 7 42 41% 4114+ % 1 28% 38% 28%+ % It 38% 38% 38% ... 39 21% 21% 21%+ 1 74 11% 17% 18 +1 17 18% 18% 11% .. 1 24% 24% 24%-- ■ 18 48% 40% 49%- < • A-£ 2?^i ,!.• k ia a8.-- 84 36% 36% 36% ... 14 49% 49% 49%+ • 12 02 98 It ♦ J Colum Gas 1.19 Col PIct T.12t Com) Crod L60 (Joint Sol .90b comwKd 1.30b Con Edia 3 Sana i NOas 2.30 lUmPW 1.40 fe L80 Ins 2.90b HfW .« Coni oil l.ooa 138 38% 38% 38% 16 44% « 74 11 86% 14 10% 10 10 ... 17 80% M% 80%-89 40% 48 46% + " 41% 43% 43% .. •uc BU .80 inaliy Pkd jrtls Pub CurtUs Wr 1 Dan RIV M Dayco Denf*Bui> 1* ‘ »i ROW I KdlS 2,30 oil cn i «y ,40b 0«*X I 20a ......is M .70. _ doug Aire l.Ut -D— ?r. i 20% 30%+ 4 £ 3 84% 84% I 13% 18% . . . i 1 sS st 36 46% 47% 46%+ 8 23 f% 23%+ Iff East Air L . Is ar.i: J&: 6 17% 17% 17% 43 44 «% 44 • 34 99% M% J8%-I SR »%- *l%-29 .39% II.. ?M4+1% _____ ■ t,5 Evcrslmip Lip jLlW Bkv ml ■.. iMfipi’4 —-G-— V20 3 '41% 41% 41%. lb i 1S% 10% 18+4 Gen Pub Sv .39. - Pub Ut 1.21 _____Ry Big 1.20 O TelftEl .76 Oen Tire .40 Oa Pac Cp lb Oatty OU Gillette 1.10 94 36+6 387/* 2SV 82 69 68+k'. 66% 10 70% 701, 70% . 9 207/s 36% 26%— % 197 93% 83% 83%. . 36 30% 37% 38 +1! to 10 8% 8% 8%... Ml 13 30% 30% 30%— > Revlon 1.11 Reyn Met m s Safeway St 1,00 0 38’s Ban P t t 16% teg Pap 140b ,10,20% 1 D Imper U 15 11% Oran C8tl 1.4? Ot ASP 1.20* Ot No Ry 3 9 41% 40% I 12 38% 36% 9 18 19% 19% 1 27 38% 38% 1. . 37 36% 38% 35% it c~ PG.NBt.Vs? Vs 7 % —H— lave* Ind SSg 22 21% ! Jerc Pdr 30h U v,u- Herts 1.30 HoH *Eleot Homestk l.OOa , Bit 1 2f * 9% 9% 9%+ % k p ia 8ou Cal Ed .90 Southn Co 1.50 Sou N Oat -2 Bid OU Oh 3.1 i I Pkg War 120 Bterl Drug 1.1 > 18% + • 30% + : $n\ I Bail i l%+l%lTr* 0 Prod IV- %1 Tex O Bui , % Tex Ins 40e % Tsx PC&O 1 - X PLd .SOI I 32% 31% 33% + % 20 84+« 83% 9 -k 18% 18% 18%+ % 22 38% 38's 357k 4 18% 18% 18%- l 72% 72% 72%+ 8i 18 43% 43% 11% 18%+ % -on# 8 Oas 16 2P*4 28% 28% • 1 17 19% 19% 19%- 1 28 21% 21% 2I%- ,80 0 47% 47% 47%.... 14 48% 48%' 4S%— % OBe 2 41% 41% 41%+ % —M— I If 30% 27% 381#+1% ,75# 0 20% 20% 20% ' ,L 22 27% 97 37%- larquardt , Itruo M 1 Mc‘&on Ah- 084 28Vs 24% 25% • 10 40% 48% 48%- I •? S?% 9% 87 07 06% 0»4t- Vs isTf55 *! Ik IK Ji+'% j 11 i m ^&2.r 18 Q g ft:*# " {& TAM2.40 11 4g 4?lj + % LT A 38 B% M «% + JrtD Ut 1.40 3 20% S%~ Monl Ward 1 22 28 27 a 97%.. Motorola 1 *V,*9 89 f N— L g m fiV j|^+l lit await I Param Plot 2 Parke Bill,. p#ab Coal'll Penney .Jc j.JOa Du Pont Scion New President founder's Descendent Elected to Head Firin' ;■ in Wilmington, Del. WASHINGTON <14— A labor union is about (o’bc charged for the firtt time in the 27-year history of the National Labor Relations law with illegal racial discrimination in refusing to process a Negro worker’s grievance. * * ★ Stuart Rothman, general counsel of the National Labor Relations Board, announced today he has authorized the Houston, Tex., NLRB office to issue a formal complaint based - on charges brought by a Negro worker employed at the Hughes Tool Co., Houston. Kothnuui said the complaint will be lodged against Local 1. Independent Metal Workers Ua- , He was elected the board and of the board’s nance committee, taking 0 those offices from Waller Carpenter Jr., who will rent a member of both. The 57-year-old Copeland becomes . Du Pont’s eleventh president, Formerly a vice president and a member of the board’s ex-committee, he is descended from Eleuthers Ironee du Pont, who founded the company in 1502. ★ ★ Or , His career with the company be-in in 1929 when he went to work in tile Fairfield, Conn., plant of tiie fabrics' and finishes department, • worked in control, market analysis and sales until 1941, when he joined the development depart-nt. He was made a director in 1942 and a member of the finance committee the next year. Cea .781 14 23% 23% 23%+ % —U-- UiTcwrMde 3.60 3 91% 11% 81%- 23 27% 26% 27 - I S 24% 24% 2-1% . 140 29% 29+k 29% + 21 26 V# 27% 27%— 8 43% 43 43 - . 2 30% 36% 38%— % —z- : Bfc ________sorp 1 Wn Uo T*T 1.40 (tg A Bk 1.40x ...JIC El 1.20 WhtiT Cp 1.40 Wljito Mot 2 Wllion A Co 1.00 Woolwth 2.90 Worthing 162* Yale A Tow lb Yngdt SHAT 5 Zenith R 90a falea figured art unofficial. Rate* of dividend! In the fortgolni iblc are annual dteburaomento baaed ot l* last quarterly, or «*ml-*nnua) declern extra d”v*dcnd* are*M)t"tncludeir0 ft—Also extra or extra*, b....Annua) rat< 14 stock dividend, a Declared or pale 1901 An* otoek dividend, e -Deelarec rid to far IMS' year, /—Payable lr during 1801. entlnihted oath valui ex-dlvIdMid or e*-dl«tribulion date fiiuo with dividend! aiyiaenaft in uipaain. u~r . dividend oihttled. deferred -Declared or p«ld ln 1882 plu* alock rldend l-P*yab!e In —Liquidating dive ex-dlfttrlbutton i IlSvtC”1’ xr Mrftuted. wt-i*y delivery. vjLin bankru being reorgenlw STOCK AVERAGES si i a m ms fA « P.ft”Ur 6 80 29% + V« 1 44% 44% 44% T YL Wk w.. +, % 84 40% -40 «%+ % 41% «% 46% +1 " *! 1 S I1? .111151 10 aS$ 2? * 8§ l^8>t 80% >01 Ti at © Sitt» , 1 iS’S m £ *lSr SKJU IS Sh 'Hi'® isii 1181 NOON AVERAGES Highe! grade rails . „ Second grad* rail* > . 612 62. . lJI.fl . ,r. 87 n American Stock Exch. (Pigurn# after d*ein|*i» tri In olgtithft) Teulp Pet ... 34 6 Mu*k ■ P Ring.. 10,6 Mr;:: 1 p%i« iMZ'-B»| |l loiter Indiis.. 0.2 Teehnieo 124 Grain Dealings Busy; Prices Dip a Little CHICAGO 0T> -- Early grain fu-, lures dealings were active and mixed with prices little changed, but generally easier today on the board of trade. 1 crap soybeans came urnje fairly heaving selling and prices slipped about a cent during the first several minutes. Dealers have said, however, they expect ralher broad and rapid shifts in the August contract during these final three days of trading in it. The open interest in the August delivery is rather large, neevsitat-ig a good deal of evening up. Congressional action on the 1963 irm program again was a major ictor where dealers bought p more confidently. Grain Pricai Union Faces Bias Charge He said Local 1 is made up of white employes while Local 2 is composed of Negro employes. The two locals are the Joint bargaining agent for Hughes Tool Co. employes. 8III NS GRIEVANCE The basis of the complaint against Local t, Rothman said, is that it' has refused to process a grievance with the company in behalf of Ivory M. Davis, a metal Russia Fires Third N-Test Continuer Arctic Series With 12-Megaton Blast Sweden Reports 2.18% M.^ 1.00% |ep. 'iTivt b. • From Oar News Wires UPPSALA, Sweden — Russia today continued Its new series of nuclear test* In the Soviet arctic with an atmospheric explosion of 12-megaton force, capable of, wiping out a large city, Swedish scientists said. The blast was recorded at the _„>)smological institution of UppSala University and an official announcement said the explosion was oet off at 4:02 a m. (Pontiac time). The nuclear test was the third I (he current series in the Novaya Zemlya area. - The first was a huge Ion, bomb, the second largest ever exploded by the Russians. II was sot off on Aug. 5. The second bomb was exploded n Aug. 10 and had a blast power of 3 megatons. An Institution spokesman said no I other tests have been recorded recently. The most powerful bomb ever recorded. 57 megatons, was set off by the Soviet last fall. That test and today’s were made over the Arctic Novaya Zemlya Peninsula. UppBala scientists estimated the latest blast to be about 12 mega- .... equivalent to explosion of 12 million tons of TNT. Stocks of Local Intorost Plguren liter decimal point! art olihthi • Bid I Allied Supermarket* .......11.7 i Pood Store* RtoSwell Electronic* Capital Electronic* international . Prito Co. ...........t...... Andrew Jerfane ............. Pe Drilling ... . Traneeonttnental Clift Pipe Lin vernpra Ginger Ale .......... Winitiman'ft ................ Wolverine Shoe ,............. i' ifotte Chemical handler employed by Hughes since,. - Rothman said Davis charges that 1942 and treasurer of Local No. Rothman said Da via complained the company has refined to consider Ms application for the company apprenticeship program to train for the better-paying job ot machinist nnd tool-maker. 2 Are Well' Alter Rare Transplant LONDON (UPI) — Two British doctors were reported “doing well' today after one of them sacrificed his kidney so ft could be transplanted in the other man to save his life. Sr it ★ In a six-hour operation last week British surgeons took a medical gamble by transplanting a kidney from Dr. David Spencer, 32 to Dr Ian Clark, 34. If successful, It Is believed It would be the first time such a transplant baa “taken” In n kidney switch between people not related by blood, “Everyone calls my husband hero," said Mrs. Spencer. It night, "To me he Is just a kind, ordinary man." ^ MET IN FEBRUARY The two doctors first met last February and had had little contact with each other when Dr. Spencer learned that Dr. Clark, who had only one kidney, was sinking lower and tower because his one remaining organ was not loing its job properly. Mrs. Clark said that Dr. Spencer came to visit her nnd her tiling husband one day and antd: “What are you worrying about [ have a kidney to spare.’’ “We were very moved bjl this Incredible offer,” Mrs. Clark said. 'He said it flippantly but I « meant it." Dr. Spencer meant it all right — because, according to his wife, he felt that “the world could not afford to lose a doctor as good Ian." 'ommonwoalth Stock levition Electronic . Illnuton Equity Wellington Purnl Bid Aftked .. 7,20 7.71 . 6 46 10.91 ’1*1 MjJ BOND AVERAGES ' Week Am, Month A| r#»r Atm 1802 High Ball* lad. UUI*. 'rta'";L.Vd. ' SI i fi Hi |t i 11 i i 76V *8:1 Si *3* Sot Treasury Position Tire Sales, Garage Opened on Perry Street Alter serving as service man ager for the Firestone Store for 10 years, Les Pitts of 650 Columbia Road, has opened the City Tire Co., at 5b8 N. Perry St. The tire Sale* and service garage specializes in Goodyear tires. Pitts, 36, served as a store manager-lor the Spiegel Co, for six years previous to working for Firestone. At 20, Pitts was the youngest store manager the store'chain News in Brief Walter Brtskom of Detroit ported to police yesterday that 20 windows in his cottage at 3930 Mapieleaf, Waterford Township, had been broken. Loss was estimated at $55. breaking a early Saturday morning $100 in cash and an undetermined amount of motor oil was taken tram Larry's Gulf Service, 1798 Telegraph Road, Waterford Township. A complete set of goff etnbo and miscellaneous other golf equipment valued at $428 were reported stolen Saturday from the home of Robert Bums, 1270 Malcolm St.# Water-Township. The stolen articles stored near the unlocked back door of the home. Burglars took 9tS In enoh and I,-10 trading stamps over the weekend in'a break-in at Maxwell’s Quit Service Station, 9805 Elizabeth Lake Road, White Lake Township, owner Dexter Maxwell of 968 First St., Holly, told Oakland County Sheriff's deputies. About |IM In furniture vw» efel-i from his cottage nt 4508. Clinton Road, Independence Township, was reported to sheriff's deputies Saturday by Harvey C 4974 Dixie Highway, Waterford Townfhlp. _ Fashion Shew: All ladle* invited. Airway Lanes, M-50, Wednesday, August 22, 7:30 p.m. Committee Okays Drug Bill Revision WASHINGTON Mxl revision of the pending drug bill, saying the changes would provide safe aud In some InataiHw* cheaper medicines tor the public. The not a alngle dissenting volt at Hen. Estes Kefsuvcr. D-Tcnn., chief sponsor of the bill# released a statemoet' sfter the vote declaring that the measure “should not only result la better, aafor and more effootlvt drugs, but In addition should provide physicians wtth honest Information concerning their (the medicines) properties and prevent the dls-Hcininatlnn of false and misleading Information to doctors. Local li'fiah refused to represent him in processing a grievance with the company. , * ★ *. ★-The case edmes at a time when Negroes are becoming increasingly more vocal in complaining that labor unions cooperate with employers to freeze Negroes out of ap-_ prentice and other training pro-' grama, that would enable them to qualify for better-paying jobs. The two local unions at Houston have represented Hughes employes lor . more than M years. Rothman said' hie investigation of the case shows that “by tacit understanding’’ the better jobs go to white members of Local 1 with Negro members of Load 2 eligible only for lower-paid jobs. TO TEST RESPONSIBILITY Rothman said the case will test the extent of the responsibility of labor organization to handle worker complaints and problems with equal consideration regardless of face, He said it was the first time such a case has come up since the National-Labor Relations Act was enacted in 1935. Eastern Plans Full Service Sept. 13 Date Is Sat Despite Strike Throat by Machinists MIAMI, FIs. < breaks when struck bf an auto dMVpa by Joseph Poe, 87, of M Police said poe. who was driving ■ south on Bloomfield Avenue, had detoetivebifkes and failed to yield tJ*-rightof way. Poe old Wyke of Pontiac; 13 grandchildren;*^ brothers and two sisters. . .... BRECHBIEL IMLAY CITY — Service for Rue-sell L- Brechbiel, 64, of 125 >W. Fifth St. will bd 1 p.m. Wednesday the Muir Brothers -Funeral Home. Burial will follow at Willow Grove Cemetery, Armada. Mr. Brechbiel died at Community Hohpital near Almont last night (ter an extended illness. Survivors' are his wife, Bessie, two sisters and three brothers. JOSEPH A. GRIM8HAW KEEGO HARBOR - Joseph A. Grimshaw, 66, of 3025 .Moss St., died yesterday at his home after long illness. Mr. Grimshaw was a retired sheet metal worker at General Motors Truck and Coach Division. His body Is at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home. Surviving are his wife Gara; two sons, Lowell A. of Garkston and Robert of El Monte, Calif.; three daughters, Mrs. Robert Dennison of Layton, Utah, Mrs. Charles Thompson of Fullerton, Calif., and Mrs. Stanley Seymour of Chicago, 14 grandchildren; three sisters and two brothers. MARGARET i MeQUEEN MILFORD TOWNSHIP—Service for Miss Margaret McQueen, 66, of 4600 S. Milford Road will be 10 tomorrow at Richardson-Blrd Funeral HomerMUford.— Miss McQueen, who died Saturday after a long fitness, left no known survivors. Low-Priced Structure 'Essay in Protestant Simplicity' MRS. FRANK 8TIMSON GOODRICH — Service for Mrs. Prank (Mary A.) Stimson, 89, of 11073 Horton Road will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonvifie, with burial to follow at Goodrich Cemetery. Mrs. Stimson, a member of the Goodrich Methodist Church and of the Atlas Grange, died Saturday at Flint after a long illness. Surviving are a son Merle Wickham of Goodrich, six grandchil-17 great-grandchildren and a sister. NEW YORK (UPI) — An architectural essay in Protestant simplicity and liberalism has been ’written" on a six-acre slope in Norwalk, Cohn,, The structure Is called the United Church of Norwalk. It was built relatively modest price of $115,000 and yet was designed to last as long as the most massive European Cathedral. -A congregation of 100 members raised funds for the church then -gave the architect, Victor Christ-Janer, only one set of structions. They were to express trends and liturgical aspirations of the modern church movement, and to merge the Individualism of Protestantism with the group approach to religious experience. Christ-Janer concluded that a nonsymmet rlcal enclosure embody-ing the traditional function of the New England meeting house would be the answer. To achieve this, he used modern materials, which are cheap, light and durable and a construction system that enabled workers to assemble the structure as they would a jig-saw puzzle. “Disciplined disorder," Is the way the church members describe what resulted. Die church exterior consists mass of triangular panels donlng Jhe traditional atydlght lines of churches but sense of space. Serving Each triangle, consists of Sandwich" made up of fir plywood and insulating -materials inforced and coated with a protective finish, / More than 5,(|io square feet of floor apace have1 been enclosed in single vapor-scaled shell prefabricated so that it took work-only seven days to pul the church walls together. Inside, the building la divided Into reception and worship area*. Pew seating has been provided lor 380 persona In n variety of bench slice to tit edulto dren. The "traffic pattern" has been arranged so that backs are neve turned to the chancel and departing worshippers Must leave in clusters through a side exit. At a time when new churches are being built at a constanly accelerating rate and construction costs are rising, the United Giurch of Norwalk’s leaders hope they may have made a contribution as economical as it is ecclesiastical to the liberal Protestant movement. Woman Wouldn't Got In —Couldn't Fool Hor KEY WEST,- Fla. <* -r Key West recently started using compact 15-passenger buses on some of its less heavily patronized city routes. A driver pulled up to a stop the first week the little buses were in operation and got an icy gfore from it woman who thought the, object of a pick-up "That's Mt a. bus, young fnan,’ she snapped at the driver. .“I Don' try to fool me!" ■/ WASHINGTON — The lights of Manhatten’s skyscrapers are at night by hundreds of small, shining eyes — the eyes of deer, mink and niuskrat who thrive across the rttor fit New Jersey’s“Great Swamp." * The 8.000-acre Great Swamp, wilderness virtually unchanged since the days of the Indian, is of the largest, unspojled natural wetlands between Maine and Virginia. A 35-acre section of the swamp Is now opea as a aature center. Trails run through this and ad- The Great Swamp, five miles mth of Morristown, N. J.,/ and less than 30 miles from New York GW, has been called the greatest living museum in the New York metropolitan area. Ornithologists have identified 154 species of birds. More than 5 species are known to nest and rear young there including the black duck, mallard, artd wood duck. Pintail ducks gather in the swamp during the spring migration. As one of the major resting and feeding grounds for waterfowl and small birds on the Atlantic Flyway, theswamjr istt vitaltinklnthe chain of wetlands from the breeding grounds of Canada to the wintering areas far to the south. MRS. ALFRED W1LFORI) SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Alfred (Opal) Wilford, 55, of 46149 Wace St., will be 2 p.m. tonforrow at the William R. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester. Burial will be in Utica Cemetery. Mrs. Wllford died of a heart attack Saturday at Park General HOspital, Detroit. Surviving besides her husband „re three daughers, Mrs. Gordon Walters and Mrs. Henry Collins, both of Shelby Township, and Mrs. Keith Hartman of Virginia; twO i, Willie E. and Gyde E. Sha-ban, >t»oth of Detroit; a brother and 12 grandchildren. Few Dry^pots Found jvU. S. Mississippi Only State but/Aany Counties and Tqwns. Forbid Liquor [EW YORK IF — Liquor laws {cross the United States vary greatly concerning who can sell certain . individuals, or just the state — how it can be sold by drink, or Just by package — where it can be consumed -public, or Just in private. Oklahoma’s repeal statewide prohibition, is the only state which remains dry. But many counties and towns are dry in other states, under local option. A county-by-taken by the Distilled Spirits Institute showed more than half the counties dry. In . Alabama. Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky. North Carolina, Tennessee and Texas. And a lesser percentage counties were dry in Florida, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Minnesota, New Mexico, Virginia and West Virginia. A study shows crime increased 28 per cent in OklAhonm in I960 over the previous year, while the increase nationally Was only 14. cent. "This c n only be attributed to jdry leader said. On the other hand, a liquo director doesn’t believe repent was a factor In the of crease. He said Improvement In the reporting of violations to the FBI coupled with the shift In population.to the urban areas could he factors. He said hundreds of former bootleggers are now gainfully employed — but not in the legal liquor business. This year only 13 Oklahomans have federal liquor stamps who are Presents problems. Small children chew-up toll tickets. Dogs,bite the hand that collects the money. Drivers swallow coin! held between, their teeth. . ,»/ But there are compensations. For three Christmases a jolly motorist drove along the Connecticut Torn* pike singing carols to toil collectors. 13th Century Traders From East Had Them for Sale NEW YORK (UPI) - The next time your partner trumps your ace in a bridge game, count to 10 and then let off steam by reflecting on the colorful history of the playing card. Consider, for example, that playing cards have beem enlivening or depressing, but always entertaining mankind for more than 600 years. How many tees have been trumped, or similar booboos perpetrated In that time may make As far back as the 13th or 14th century, traders from the East brought with them spices, fine cloth, gold, ivory — and playing cards. And the cards had much of the elements of today’s. CALLED TAROCCin The expensive, rare and richly worked ancient decks were called "Tarocchl” and found mainly in Medieval Italy. They consisted of a trump auit of twenty-two "atouts" in addition to four 14-card suits. Warring tribes buried their tomahawks at what is how Hot Springs, Ark., so all the braves could benefit from the salubrious flow. ROMAN BATHS The Romans built baths at mineral springs throughout Europe. An outstanding one was the pres-end-day Belgian towjn of Spa, which became a popular health resort In the 16th century. Spa was known La Cafe de l’Europe, but its proper name became generic for watering places and a hoop to crossword-puzzle makers. •/ Bath, England, wns the site of elaborate Roman baths, The resort gained Its greatest feme In the 18th century under the guidance of Beau Nash. most Important forces affecting mankind, such ns' religion, lightning, disease, war and death. The common suits were basically the four suits of the decks we have now. They represented nobility, clergy, tradesmen and peasants — today’s spades, hearts, diamonds and clUbs, respectively. CALLED CAVALIERS Face cards were essentially the same except that Knaves were called Cavaliers. Cards originally were made by hand of costly materials, including ivory, metal, silk and wood. Many were gold-encrusted. Gutenberg, father of printing, brought hla discovery to cards and fine quality low cost cards began to receive wide popularity. Amohg the 120 million Ai cans who play cards today, Contract Bridge and Canasta are played the most. Pinochle, poker, solitaire, rummy, 500, Auction bridge, Hearts and Gin rummy also are favorites. Nash’s rigid code of conduct for his famed ,Pump Room transformed the noveauxrrich Into gentlemen — afieast while they were In, Bath. George Washington bathed Berkeley Springs, W. Vn., while op7 a surveying trip in 1748. 'He returned to Bath, as it was callid, many times, but In Battle Creek Man Dies in Canadian Accident ENTERPRISE, Ont. m — Frank Graham, 56, of Battle. Creek, jellied and Frank Icles, 62, also of Battle Creek, was Injured Saturday night when their car crashed tree stump near Enterprise, abiut 30 miles northwest of Kings- ton. Ides was reported In satisfactory condition In Kingston General Hospital. rood — 88 miles an hour — bit fe n recent month 1 managed to exceed It. icnnsas Turnpike officials reported that in the last five years 42 ’ ears have been abandoned on the Last GOP Legislator Succumbs in Alabama HALEYVILLE, Ala. (UPD-The last Republican to serve in the Alabama legislature died yesterday after a short illness. Rev. Benjamin G. Dodd, 69-year-old Baptist minister, represented Winston County during the Gotten Person administration in 1950. He the only GOP house member at that time. Detroit Man Leaps to Death From Bus ST, GEORGE, Utah W — L.C. Scott, 35, of Detroit, was killed Saturday when, .notice said, he dived through the front window of bus and was run over. The driver of the bus was quoted as saying Scott had been “acting strangely” just before the accident tf. S. 91 near the Utab-Nevada state line. NOTICE or PUBLIC SALE August Slit, IMS. At 1:00 p.m. St .... Collier Rd.. PonttM. Michigan. 195* Chevrolet station Wagon, aortal No. D5SFM2900 will bo told at Public Auction (or cash to highest bidder. Car may be inspected at .bora tflrgO^ ^ “ gland County Croat Union ASSESSOR'S FIAT S7 NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEAIUNO tloo la hereby peon that a public ng has been eoheduled by tbe Pon-Clty Commission to be bold Tuesday. ...nber U, 1061, at I o'clock p.m. ___.T. In tbe Commlasloa Chamber, CUy Hall. 30 8. Parke Street, (or the purpoee of amending the Zoning Map o( Ordinance “■■ --------- “ulfdlng Zone or- arty: t 2, A ugUan, li Lite Insurance.. Complete Planned Protection Savings Ratirament Many Others Three Generations in insurance 1044 Joslyn FE 4-3535 deplored the “growing dissipation" at the gay resort. their 19th-century heyday; European spas were frequented by crusty old gentlemen with gout, liverish colonels on leave from the tropics, matchmaking mothers and fortune hunters; Many German marriage contracts of the period specified the wife's right to visit a spa at least once a year. Entire families, with voluminous baggage and a retinue of servants, settled in health resorts fdr the sumlner in both Europe and the United States. Leonard Man, 72, Dies Driving Car A 72-year-old Leonard man, Matthew J. McCarrtck, died of a {heart attack yesterday while he, and his wife were driving on Drahmur Hoad in Addison Tpwnship. McCarrlck’s wlfe Neva, 79, said they were traveling only about 10 mfiea an hour when her husband w|i stricken.. The car went appreciated. f Our sincere, alert and friendly t service anticipates many duties , and needs — and relieves the family thereby. Be assured that all receive this same gracious \ hospitality. federal gPxfyS \ 4.4IU, Oh Our (Pnrnm ^Donehon-Jhlms /MSwSt HURON ST. FONT1AC . v T&E I^ONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 80, ,1002 V CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING P_ DEPARTMENT CLASSIFICATION INDEX (REVISED JULY 21, 1962) NOTICES | f;j Cord of Thanks !. I In Momoriam ....... 2 Announcements . Florist. .<. v*. .1 Funeral Directors Cemetery lots *. Personals... Lost and Found . ... U ..,.v4 .. . 4-A ...5 EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Male________ 6 Help Wanted Female .... 7 Help Wanted ...........8 Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A Employment Agencies ... 9 Employment Information 9-A Inst rue tions-Schools .... .10 Work Wanted Male ......11 Work Wanted Female .. .12 SERVICES OFFERED Building Service-Supplies. 13 Veterinary . .......... .14 Business Service ...____15 Bookkeeping & Taxes ... 16 Credit Advisors ;... 16-A Dressmaking & Tailoring .17 Gardening .... ..........18 .18-A ,18-B Lit ...20 ...21 22 Landscaping Garden Ptowifng .... Income Tax Service . Laundry Service , Convalescent-Nursing Moving and Trucking Painting & Decorating .. .23 Television-Radio Service .24 Upholstering .........24-A Ironsportation ...____1.25 WANTED Wanted Children to Board 28 Wonted Household Goods .29 Wanted Miscellaneous Wanted Money Wanted to Rent . — Shore Living Quarters Wanted Real Estate .. Death Notice •ggsagsana.'S •*: belevedwlto of Chirl*. Brew-ta: dear mother of Mrs. Margaret tynaau «|d Richard 8u*r7 -aUo tai-vlved by one eiater, brothers, six grandchildren._ three great-grandchildren, mner-M servloe will be held W, day,.Augart 23.at it i Sparka-Ortffln Chapel with w. R. Sohutxe officiating am- recerseurg. rat., father of Frederic M. and R geth H. Cart; dear brother Mrs. Agnes Wood and Mrs. Fl_ Wa. Holtomer: alia survived by three grandchildren and two . great - grandchildren. Funeral eervice will be held Tuesday. Au-|U«t II. at I:JO p.m. at the oparke-OriRtn Chapel with Rev. The family suggest* contributions he made to^the Central Methodist i' AUGUST IT, I M2, *h* merly of 213 South Airport Ra.; age *4; deer mother of MrajjMable Waste end Mrs. Mon Theresa Anderson: also aurvlepd by one granddaughter. Reettfctlon of the Rosary will he Tuesday. August 1L at 7:,34_*t the Huntoon Funeral Home. Funeral service win he held Wednesday, August S3, at M a.m. at Our lady of the lake with Father Delaney ofnelanng. Interment In Ferry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mm. Douglas jUl Ue In state at ikOLUNb. John 40M loved hue! "Auditor"" Ifotorwey; uid of Mgr nhc JCnjlund; iund: deer brother of Mrs. Alma Malmouist, Mrs. EHn Nordqttlst. Mrs. Olga Anderson, and Arvld England; also survived by two grandsons. Funeral service will be held Wednesday. August 33. at 3:30 p.m. at the Gloria Del Lutheran Church with Rev, Charles A. Colberg officiating. In- . Colberg officlauntTI Mr. Englund wHI lie* - Spsrks-Orlffin Fum » auai. The family sulgei contributions be mad* to t **'--*- Del Msmor’’ — ‘ RENTALS OFFERED Apartmonts-Fumishod ... 37 Apartmonts-Unfurnishtd .38 Root Houses, Furnished . .39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 Rent Lake Cottages ... . 41 Hunting Accomodations 41-A Rent Rooms------.......42 Rooms With Board —. .43 Rent Farm Property......44 Hotel-Motel Rooms ......45 Rent Stores ........ . . 46 Rent Office Space ,......47 Rent Business Property ,47-A Rent Miscellaneous ......48 REAL ESTATE Sale Houses ......... Income Property — Lake Property ....... Northern Property ... Resort Property...... Suburban Property .. Lots-Acreage......... Sale Farms......... Sale Business Property Sale or Exchange . A., FINANCIAL .,.49 ...50 ...51 .51-A ,..52 .. -S3 ...54 ...56 :57 .58 Business Opportunities .. 59 Sale , Land Contracts —60 Wonted Contracts-Mtge. 60-A Money to Loan . .........61 Mortgage Loans...........62 MERCHANDISE Swaps ............... .63 Sale Clothing ...........64 Sale Household Goods — 65 Antiques .*............65-A Hi-Fi, TV & Radios......66 Water Softeners........66-A Sale Mlscellaneops .M.. .67 Christmas Trees .......67-A Christmas Gifts *......67-B Hand Tools-Machinery ..68 ...69 ...70 ...71 ...72 ...73 ..74 ..75 ..76 ..77 ..79 .80 81-A .82 Do It Yourself Cameras • Service Musical Goods ........ Office Equipment .... Store Equipment .... Sporting Goods ....... Fishing Supplies * Baits Sand-Gravel-Dirt ---- Wood-Cool-Coke-Fuel . Pets-Hunting Dogs ... Auction Soles ........ Plants-Trees-Shrubs . Hobuies ft Supplies ... FARM MERCHANDISE Livestock ...............83 Hoy-Groin-Feed...........84 Poultry ...f.............85 Farm Produce.............86 Form Equipment ..... . . .87 \ AUTOMOTIVE Housetrailers ......... 89 Rent Trailer Space ......90 Commercial Trailers ...90-A Auto Accessories ;,.... .91 Tim-Auto-Truck ..........92 Auto 5«rvlce ............93 Motor Scooters — ..94 Motorcycles .............95 Bicycle! ..............96 Boats—Accessories ......97 Airplanes ...............99 Wanted CaifvTrucks . ..101 Used Auto-Truck Parts:. 102 New and Used Trucks..«103 Auto Insurance.........104 Foreign Cars .,..*....105 New and Used tors' —106 ORIMSltiW," Attowit ■ 13. 1M3, Joseph A., 303S Moss, Keego Harbor; age 33; beloved husband of Clara E. Grimshaw: dear father of Mre.. Robert (TvoOne i Dennison, Mre. Chart** . Stephen Funeral arrangements to* at the C. J. Oodhaiu. >e. Keego Harbor, where Mr. of Melvin ana Pant ... ______ officiating. _____ Kemp will then be taken to t Alexander Funeral Home. Sul von. Ind.; tor final aerviee ai interment In ihelburn, Ind. rioya, u umgeu u*.; age ov; we-loved husband of Emma Kimball; dear father of Robert Kimball, Mrs. Bomadiho McCarUu, Jesse Slebert Jr., and Mre. Victoria Prlnti. Funeral terries wo* held today at 1:33 j».m. at the Huntoon Funeral Rome with Rev, J. E. VanAllen oftlclatlna. letor-ment In Ferry Mount Fork._________ mcqueen. a066st m. 15557 Margaret. Milford, formerly ot Detroit; age M; survived by Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Wluon. fu- - nerol eervlc* wilL hs Tuesds y. August Nr bead— >t the Rlchard*on-Bl Funeral home, Milford. a.m. with Rev. Alexander Stewart officiating. Miss McQueen will ' hMS. Grace l,., (Of voorneis ltd.; age 13: dear mother of Mrs. Leland G. Luenbergerf dear sister of Mrs. Myrtle Tenhles; also survived by four grandchildren. Funeral jMrvlc* will be held Tuat-dty, August 31 at 1:30 p.m. at the ponelean-Johnr - Funeral Home. Mr*. Meliter will II* In state at the Donelson-Johns Fu-I^rry. Auocer it. ten Ruth A., 4110 Crocus. Waterford Township; ago M: beloved wife of Pete Fern; dear mother of Dr. Richard Ferry. Mrs. Violet Burrell, Walter, Lillian and Peter Perry Jr.: dear sister of Marry Crane; also survived by 13 grandchildren. Funeral eervle* will be held Wednesday. Auyuat 33, at 1 &m. at tht Spsrlu-Ortffln Chapel, r*. Ferry wtfl He In state at e Sparks-Orlffln Funeral Home I LOVING MEMORY OF LARRY IN LOVfHO MEMORY OF O0R dear soo and. brother Wilfred Bow an who pooaad away seven ysarr ogo today August 3*. "SsJSSff ^“SCSitor. Brother. Major ogaMuiffi, ,r. MICHIGAN CREDIT . COUNSELLORS ;t and largest budg- l6i»^iBoHT SAFRLY i AMD imleaiUy with no< t Dlet tablets. I Pay Off Your Bill* — without a loan — , . Payments low as W_ vt Protect your Job and CredR Homo or Office Appotntmeats City, Adjustment Service 114 W. Huron______ FE M3P IFBCTAt - COLD WAVE RLW; Dorothy's. 433 N. Ferry. ,VB 3-1344. Open ~ COATG FUNERAL BOMB __ DRAYTON PLAINS OM 3-TW1 D. E. Pursley FUNERAL BOMB Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME HUNTOON FUNERAL HOME Serving PonUso lor MTYesro 18 Oeklond Avo7. ; FE 3^133 spa^ksGriffin Voorhees-Siple —BOX REPLIES— At It E.RB. TWtojr there were replies at Ito Press S, «. 1, t, It, Jl, », M, tl. H, M, CL N. 71, 78, 83. 88, 86, 87, 88, 1M. STlMSON, AUOU8T 13. 1M3. MARY HOW Horton Rd.: Goodrich: I* M: dear mother of Merle rickhom: dear sUter _____„j. August ... ... MR H tno C. F. fner-men Funeral Home, Orton* “ with Rev. Hubert Potrlok u... dating. Interment In Goodrich Cemetery. Mre. Stlmaon will hi Mate at the c. P. ahem Funeral Home. OrtoovUl*. WYE*, atiOUST 18, 1M3, FLOR-eneo L„ 33 James at.-; beloved wife of Jaae Wyke: dear mother of Mrs. Edwjna Laney. Claude Calhoun and Harold Wyke: dear sister ofClareno* Burchfield. Mr*. Ethel Ayers, Mr*. Minnie Campbell and Seth Burchfleid: also survived by 13 grandchildren. Mre. Wyke will Ue In state *t the Vooniees-Slpl* Funeral Man* until 8:00 p.m. today at which timt' she will be taken to the Moody Funeral Bom*, Bryson City. N.C., dor servloo and Interment In Arlington Height* Came- >nr.- READ THESE Classified Columns CUeiification 106 for the car of your choice. Regioti Dealers And Individuals... Keep this column fresh with daily listings of your favorite model and make at competitive prices. IF YOU ARB IN THE MARKET NOW oreoontobe Consult Classification io6 _ ; TODAY! To Buy, Rent, Sell or Trade Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS Cancellation Deadline 9 a.m. day following first insertion CARNIVAL By Dick Turner 8 Tftraw>Ua§ ftTodtarieg 17 lift hWoifWWRS, * WANTED • SO tad 3*. • a.m. . 4.00 p m. Tuesday. Wednesrlar and Thumiday. Detroit Rtaed Service, M 8. Case. FEijltJ. 1 EXPERIENCED. DRESS MAKING i and taUmtug. aha 1 Rea* . nrlo*r.U4a«M. h*w» taiiftwwyfjq|^ ^ ^ ALS COMPLETE LANDSCAPING. : : aoddhig. grading ptaMUagg tret removal and trimming, disking. Black dirt, top toil aid excavating 716 scott Laka Road, nt 4-433* Or OR 3-8134. coMPLsm: lawn wdak. nii- E3T A BLWHED WATKINS OlOtfY*. Open for right man Or woman. Age 33 to ». Average earning* for (air dealer tl tu as per hour. Apply INI North Perry, HELP WANTED MALE OR, FEMALE in email 4oed plant. No dtaertmt “natUm Apply- altar 13 neon. Monday Atuuv JMh. Ron s Flag*. **l Joalyn Avenue. KITCHEN MANAGER Expertehood kttehen manager. rn % OIA. km rm. tag, 4ta M. OR.' "Ot course I wits good’. To enjoy yourself at a where that sour Mrs, Higgink Is chaperone you've got to be good!” Experience Sunday I try helpful. Earn OlOw mw «iw up. No competition. Write John Hudiu CO.. 23 Wmt Madlaoa St.. CARETAKER FOR 30-FAM Apartment building. Iluat b rled, over W yeart o'- '■ ■ repair Salary work end Interior tied pgr month plus 3-room opart-ment. Anyone so social security person only. Drinkers will not be hired. Recereocas required. E. O. Hempstead. Realtor, tin E. Huron. COOX. SHORT ORDER..........EtRADY. ; Kesteuranl. Miracle Mile. College students Needed at au*. 1 met* EV O MSUO. PE 4-6830 0-3 . for oppoinnnents. TED*S DEMONSTRATE TOYS WITH S4|WI Moljl, M«iS ■ fdlMlS 8-A CDS CUT. CoRvktcaHt Weh1r| excellent i tag AM TrudOUf 22 Ur CAREFUL MOVING LOW tales. ULtWOt. DiCETEtiNf 23 Fapertita- XAA PMNftNO"' AND * 30 years exp. Ro—. . ttee. Phxme UL1-1134. INTERIOR'' AND EXTERIOR PAINT-sxldentlal homes and ulldlng*. Free sett-.atea. K. A 0, Palnt-Decoratlng. FE 8-9443. MASON THOMPSON DRCORAIOR. Interior, exterior. FE 43304. , PAINTING AND WALL WAlhlNd. ■ 'fit*. iM tar* h We deliver dell Yeur boetoeta* fe tarn, ataotfo. j -’p. you. 1___________ Fellow'i Hall. 334 E. Mta Lanataa. Iflchlgan. ______ EXPERIENCED WAITRESS < OagtaaW. FE 3-3434. j-»i* .HHL „ EXPKRIBNCED WAITRESS DAY Pontiac i An rkoeUent opportanlty DELIVERY. MUST BE . < EXPERIENCED. D E P E N DABLE )| carpenters. ME 4-180*. after 7 p.i i IEXPEHIENCED FARM BAND' BY }'EXPERIENCED SALESMAN. MENS' }i clothing and furnishings. ? Mens’ Shop, 106 N. Saginaw Personals ANY ptRL OR WOMAN NEEDfNO a friendly adviser, phene FF 3-M33 after s pm. Or IT no an ewer rallFE 3-8134. Confidential DAINTY MAID ■OPPUK 133 Menomlnea. FE HIM. Oil AiU> AFTER THU DATE guM 30. 1803. I WIU not be raepon-alble for any debt* eonlraotaa by any other than myself. Denali Her-— -■ lew, Drayton Plains, AROUND MACHINIST RE-tred for dose tolerance expeti-mtal engine parts, WllUamt Re-xrch Cor,).. 1380 W. T A MANAGEMENT POSITION Due to opening of t new Mere, 2. ambitious and ueat-*pp**r men are needed to learn bueln Experience not necessary but helpful Salary, bonus end other — pany benefit*. Age* 30-40 Mr MoUroy, OR 341701 8-0 . ABLE CONOmfcilbN" whfcEBRS. I, Baltimore 3, Md. ATTENTION, MEN! Needed et one*. 3 men for ft— time work. 078 a week and fringe benefit*. Call Mr. Baker, fl 3-3243. Attention When you jjtan^a^permanent e entering11 a* growing buelnoe*. No are tome of the thlmn we off' to you far lb* rest el your 1M f. Flseeant dignified work 3. Association with a tout •uootMful aompany. 4, Steady year around month after month. 3. Security raaerdleei < business conditions. This opportunity I* dedicated to people who wish to earn a t-“— than avarage living. You di eoUecttqg. moke no dollvoiles. ry no mmole*, and keen no b You une all yourself, Hits antoelttlon St,l, career In which they I . proeperous, happy and eecuri hum have a ear and be read to atari Immediately. Call F, 341438 for tatervtew. T & C FOOD CO„ INC. ao6V "War Wanted. HXficKt- enoed only need apply. HRdH|a YOU arc just one of our 185,000 readers.. * ■ To jrekch '! thejbther 184,999 7' Ilial FE 2-8181 ■ Ask for th«| -.' Want Ad Department . i ■ EXPERIENCED RETAIL SALES-man will consider young aggro*-jewel-, parse ' Connolly’ i. Apply In rx Mlrach wfihamxnlfiwlve *?n'V 3<7M>l"M-M naar PuckTake Road. OA8 heatiSg and appuancb Installer* to work tn Pootlao area. Apply at 30041 John R. Madison Heights. MEN TO PICE APPLES ABOUT SSimJi.T'. I Plateau 3-2433. MARRIED MAN FOR RESPONBI-M» position with largo or"—* Hetrmuttaa orgonleotten to Moor mechanical aptitude NATIONAL CONCERN OFFERS opportunity telling specialised petrol sum products. Must have late me del ear. Knowledge ot tractor* ant machinery helpful. Sate* experlen, not necessary We tram If hbwd Drawing account. For perianal in tervfow write qualifications, ad Tanguay, P*pt. ,192. Dalian. Tax* SAI0. 1 O. I OPENING IN CITY FOR LIFE hospital Insurance lalet. t.______ llahad territory. Salary. Commission. Vacation ----------—* —■ tlop. FE 3-1731. REAL ESTATE SALESMAN Full time. Bxpoftmwo preferred. Member of Multiple Listing Serv-tee. Phene PE »4MU for appoint-moot, icon W. Sehrom. Realtor. STRAIGHT B Readl itniy auea *30. 30 a.m. Arrive* i Pontiac 1:38 WawteJ ChiMron to Board 28 CHILD CARE. LICENSED HOME WOrM HMiMftotd GomU 29 CASH FOR FURNITURE AND iff* J lienees, I pee or LcUstfuL carxoo'i FE 4-7M1. let Us XuV rr 61 YOU. OXFORD ' AOCTIOWr > DRAG UNI n. MA 5-3204. GOOD 4 OR 3-BEDROOM BOMB WITHIN 14 Mile-Woodward, *1 " Dyke. OReenlcaf 4-0117. RESTONttmLE FJpBrlr NEEDS 2-3 bedrm apt. or house In Drayton-Clarkslon area by Sept, lat. Must be clean. MA 3Wj. ” . , Short living Quorttrs 82 WILL SHARE MCE HOMS WITH worklua ledy. EM 3-8835______ Wanted Koal Estate lug. quick cl..—. B. I-WICL. 7184 West Maple ■ BUILDER ED* 1 OR MORE Loti. City of Pontlai tS/^Lt^fO* io. CASH _ « HOURS-HOMES EQUITIES—LAND CONTRACTS ~ VAl/U-WAY FE 4-3331 GASH \ RIGHT ” t Oaklond Avo. FE 3-8441 ““EaSh' buyers' waitino >r good S-bedfoom home* In and out of 'city. Do hot feel obligated. Call u* for our honest opinion. W* htw-Aeil anti Tr0e, DORRIS * SON. REALTORS 2335 pixie Hwy. MULTIPLE LISTINf MIDDLETON REALTY CO UST WITH Ut We have teveral buyer* for food homes and land contract*. A. JOHNSON & SONS REALTORS FE 4 2533 1704 a. Telegraph owners’ ’ W* need llstlngt on house*, farm*, acreage. W* buy and sell Innd contracM. Call u>. ' PONTIAC REALTY 07 Baldwin FE MW PON MLB AND FOR RENT Buyers Galore 7733 Highland «0,40t, WANTED TO BUY LAROR older home la Waterford Twp. PE 4-7714, CDROOM DBLCXB KITCREM, > apartment. Newly deodratad! rt noor, parking at door. ,Oa» lmJmw iSSL '■: . < 2-ROOM APARTMENTS. bath. UHUnS*. 3MI1 E ~HOOM BACHELOR. UmiTDU furnished, can between 7 end 8. MY3-W31. , ■ ■-■■ . '4y,'.v I ROOfOL FHCTliyiOR. FRL 8 ROOilS.' BATR. Opi - n 3-MW rlZrJ, m Kata i ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH AND IlS*' ______________2-T4237^WiiWM LARGE _pOOM8^ WKKK IU Osmun. . _ . _ 2 BEDROOM NKWLY;DECORATED. 1 or 2 children ‘ 'ItOOME HEAT FURNlSIPCD. ■ 812,71 per wk. 30 Stout St-- .-- gfgyjgg1 ’ bath. FI 8-S4S*. 1*4 M 3 LAiiiMi'7ioitoi-''SiniW ■ and entrance. UtUUlee. Fum. gSS N. Perry. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. CLEAN AND floor, oldorly woman or « Si??' JfflC L eeparatqd b*d-koilltioe, children 1 icomc. near school. 1 ;, SLATERS rotoo at. WaM* FE 4-31 W ntiak, 'm 53 N. Park* Ot. Days FE 44344 Nights FE 4-3137 1 ROOMS.' MAIN PLOOh. 'MUlR hue * tattoo, geo heat. pvt. Min, ~ References retJUiTOd. Apply 130 N. 'mow and' ‘I floor, adiute only. I Inquire 273 Rlanwlr 4 ROOMS ANb BATR. CLEAN. Mt)'' drinker*. FE S4II3. ■ 4-Xoom ANb 'Oath. 6ffeI. »7 Fork Woo*. WE 40*13. 4 rooj^b Xnd bath, fru/atb . hooiai. roMFLRTBLY W|L . nlshed. Utllltlel Included, t " tor Ipeoid*. MM337. unooi teacher*. COLORED. after : cotffei 3 ROOMS. UPPER.- tED a rooms And rath. ’ welcome. Elf per week. 4» orenard Lake Avenue. Phene ' 33*4051. FULL TIME ' COUNTER GIRL doy*. Ajrplv In person. 133 West1 OENBRAL. LIVE IN. TOP WAOES. HIGH SCHOOL GIRL_______|_____ ’ riper, 4 to T. vicinity Harrington line. FR 3-3794. HOUSEKEEPING. CHILD CARE. > walled Lake a INTERVIEWS MONDAY .... l ight bookkeeping ana general office work. Orinnell Brother*. IT S. MI^Lo4d af t*t SECRETARIES PRIVATE EXECUTIVE STENOGRAPHERS LEGAL EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL COUNSELING ha’-----1--at OALS tn? housework. White only. Cal r 4 p.m. FE 0-1334.________ MOTHERS do you need money? Avon -con metlca has Hie earning opportun Ity .you need. Uae your eitra bom profltublv by being an AVON reeentatlve. Phone today FE t or write F. O. Bax n, On COUNSELING 958 E - Metric suite tit Ml 4-3273 TYPISTS dale, aired is-35^ tor biillog M idwXtt l.’.inployniPi Pontiac State Bank Built ________FE 5-9327 Instruclions-bchools Finisii High Sthool _____o *’P-tnVFEJR003j_, ■ PLANT COUNTER txperleneed checker Inapecte dy tn porsen Father ant —| “’H Jcelro, booklet write to Nallmal,Sch*o! of Horn Study. Dent. PP, Box — -Detroit 34. Michigan. Work Wontsd! Mala EX-SERVICEMAN ^JTI FAMILY. PLASTERING. ALL KI NO 8. R. Meirera. OB 3-U4B mrwoehOmhiib it EXPERIENCED WHITE WOMAN bv week. Own transportation. Re-ply Pontiac Prow Box 26. 1RONINOS W A 1 - DAY POSITIONS AVAILABLE Registered Nurses In New Intensive Care Unit Pediatrics *j ' - Chief Physical Therapist SALARIES OPEN LEILA itSySpTTAI, BATTLE CREWt, MICHIGAN tSES FOR APT-erooon shut. Slnall hoapltal with benefits of a large haeplta). Roch-estor^Area. Phone Mrs. UcXInMy. RROtStiRED NURSEfT Expansion^, lie* created exc.... owportunltlw* In 3M bed general hospital- 1223 To atari, mer" " crease* to 5358. top benefit* coiled or write Mrt. Rudolt iTalIty riiV cirauinx plant, steady, Doualas Cleaner*. 334 g. Woodward. Blr- _—~Xf BIO ___ Prtye-Io. 2413 Dixie Hwy. waitrim6 Wanted.' aptly WantIid. oirl rfih" babyIKP had proylMM exp*n*L„ ._ flee work. EkHlleht working diUene, atoody employment. .. interested pit*** stxt* age and IRONINGS WANTED TWO WOMEN washing. A-j Wore, ra i-un WANTED sewing, plain, fancy, or altwratlotiiS|lj^l487,________ WIDOW WOULD LIKE CARE OF Bvilfling Service—Supplie* 13 AAA-1 ALUMINUM RIDINO Save BIG money by luatalltog jfourseh All lypec 1" *lot'k — NO WAITING lnit8lli(,(fii ivuUbifl — ftlorni ' * JOE VAt.LELY OL 1-6633 , ____FE 5-9545 BOIL DING MODERNIZATION. ALCOA ALUMINUM SIDING. ftmftohMCB Strvica Architgctural Drawing CW HOUSE AND REMODBLINO plans drawn. 914 383-4844 Asphalt Paving 4IVEWAYS — ASPHALTED. Auio Parts HOLLERBACK AUTO PARTS :I4-403 I 273 Baldwin OAK!.AND AUTO SUPPLY 0 8, 0*88 at Ftk* FE B-41.1t RKPT’II T MOTORS lasamaiit Watar Proofing KAR-UFE BATTERY CO STARTERS AND REGULATORS GENERATORS $5.95 UP laairty SKiaga EDNA’S BEAUTY SALON LET'S HAVE F yourself 1 oneblr Sit-0134. CEMENT CONTRACTOR Driveway». pattoi »i»d city side* vasilu. Oulnn'ft ConnUuotion Co. WitfkWr IroRR. all iiStis Free estlmatox. OR 3-4741, (5cm1nt wi^. ^L MiNDe, #pe' elal prise. Free estimate*. Phone OR win er OR 3-4444. VSXBimm vmM e*s. PAxioi. alee sidewalks, Fl 3-4447. deal wrrR~Btn!jDEiro^ addltto-is. recreation rooms. Van-flic kls Bldg. Co. 343-4741> MckYinStih..... fepUc Ryr — bookAefitno^aLl taxes fttni wkiit ft TnilnHiig ~1^ BANK terms Open Friday Eve. SUNDAY 10-3 Harrington Boat Work,* Your Evtnrud* Dealer • m i S. Telegraph____FIC 2-303 Building Modtrniiation YEAR MOHT-»in«, Oftragfli, m.......... Wthmy pcrypi PAUL (iHAVES CONTRACTING FT—jcIiam wjm imil AWNINGS L I ADDITIONS. S SSSj MY 3-1111. JOLJ ADDITIONS - — window* - heating. conversions. Easy down payment. Call John w Ca'ples, Modernlaallon, HOME IMPROVEMENT SPECIALIST ‘ Additions, perch**, garages, interior aiuratlens end remodel* 'Ins. -Cement work — elty sidewalks. All work fully guaranteed. Outen’s Construction. FE 3-9122. BeMODEUNO ATTICS. ADDITIONS end garage*. Haadauartars at Alnwrl lumbar eempany. Call lor WwC eatlmates, . ” airport Lumber 4871 Highland Rd. ANCHOR FENCES No Money Dewa. FE 4-74 “roiinAC rOtcrn co. 3832 Dixie Hwy. OB MR A-l . FI.OOR 8ANDINO THURMAN WITT FR 5-2722 FABULON - WATERLOX - WAX CARL Z. BILLS IK.. . #LodR Sending. FE 2-5148. ' |, j John taylor. floor LAvtNG. sanding and finishing, 25 yaart ex. perlcnce. 33SWW73. HNYDER FLOOR LAYOWl. FURNACE CLEANINO. *14.43 13-Mlle Radius 34-Hr. Service Bush Oleanlita ‘ J H. EDWARDS AND RONS Healing—cooUng—estimates tie* or Oll-FHA terms Clsatvlnt-Reprtrsdlervlce t-l MERION SOD OR KENTUCKY Laid 33o aquarc yard. Seeding gad redressing ,---------------— — t-l MillGN ' ILCE SOD. DRLiV-arles made,or you pick up. 2141 Croek* Rd, UL 2-4341. 1-1 COMfllflrLANDSCAPntO -Fra* astunates available, teem cutting mid lertlllxtng, Robert Coley, OR 3-MHO. ____IfCAliAT-. I. SODDING EM 3-3414 PlastarlRi tarvtt* PLASTERING AND REPAIRS. as. Fat Lee. FR 3-7813 Wallpaper Steamer Floor senders, polllheto, hand sanders, furnace vacuum cieanaoi Oakland Fuel a Paint. 414 Of- Hi-Fi Strvica Traa Trimmiag Strvica ACE TREE URV1CE STUMP REMOVAL Tree removal, trimming. Oal eur Old. 4B2-3»;c or FE t-tTM :AB TREE SERVICE. TRlkshkO and removal. FE 2-0848 er VR removal. Low i Genera! Tree Service'. -w b“- •» TRIMMING 6 I0W cost. FL . Waterford tree' SSmn,.: oval. OR HAULINO AND RUBBISH. your price. An| time. Wi "HAULINO AND'RtiiBll.. „ Prompt Servlc. LIOHT HAULINO AMD.^:CA)B5iJ' T—lua. FE 3-7428, FE 3-7447. ' -anT5.........heaVy "TBpOPEv, NRIDERICK BUILDING SERVICE Home, Garage- Cabinets, Addition* FHA TER3IB FE 4-494« Trucks to Rent : Pickups Uk-Tee Stakes TRUCKS.— TRACJWia ' AND EQUIPMENT TALBOTT LUMBER Complete Building Supplies 1023 OAKLAND AVE FE 4-4848 TRADE-IN TELEVIfllOl ■SERVICE CHECKED’ I2R 95 and up Tarmj - At little |i »|.ft GOODYEAR SERVICE Nonary School* Pontiac Farm and-........ I iu1u stria I T ractor Co. » 'r Open Dally In--— 3 _ Uphoj lTHOiiAil1lj"' ". ..'■ liana ImiRf Miracle MB* 1 1108 FAST ACTION uirwift wan _ au* FRderal 2 4434 ■ TUNIITO AWB RmlAIll..-- . tear fbhmidt PR M2I7 ' ■ .....-/---_—— ' .j^jsvt'-i.^5::.Js~:\:r^• -■;•• • * /•■ •'<••.■ !• ’• ' ., Ww. I 1 PO^TI THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY^ AUGUST 20, Ifl62 inontobt 'J s&h TWENTY'SINK ,Jt . -■ T* LOTS _ In one , of .Oakland Co molt dealrabl* locations._,__ Heights ob sparkling Loo* Lake and Stiver Lake Height* *Jtt: private beach privileges lnelud- $3500 A*S ORION. WDIANWC.„ __ Subdivision. 1 or 2 beautiful lake lota (0 A **• HlCUy restricted between 2'lakes. For as' “ er. MY 2-S134. - - ;... lakefront 74 ft. water trontafe oa Pontiac Lake, lit ft. deep. Esc. building site, $3 20a on terms. PONTIAC-W ATKINS 3 sites available. 100 * 150 ft, 01.ISO to 02,100. Terms worked out to suit. H. R. HAGSTROM, REALTOR 100. w. Huron OR V0350 OR 3-6926 M-ll’* ACRES. ACRES - WITH GOOD PRO-lectlve restrictions and, suitable for better type home. Only I6M1 miles from Pontiac City limits ‘ ' ol bus in front. Good sands , Only 04400 and real,easy a. Ask tor Mr. Brown. Ft 0. Evenings OA 2Q616, TOD SHttULUSaTME ' NEW BUILDINQ IN, herokew Hill* I Cohtrolkd to protect bettor homes,. It'o MB ft. wooded, rolling sites altar country seclusion with cVo.e-lh convenience Drive out KUtebeth Like Rd. ' mile w a* Pontioo Mall — Scott Lake Rd. Turn right 3 blocks to Lscota. ARL W. BIRD, Realtor 3 ''Community NatT Bank Bldg. 77 ACRE FARM ' 1 mile off M-24 on blacktop road. 3.900 fact of road frontage, 2 berns, 40x40 and 110x60. 4-bedroom modem home, gas heat. All this for only *90.000. Terms. Call today. Peterson Real Estate OA 8-1000 After 6. MY 3-108) 02 ACR roads *7~ACRES' ALL 'DSABLE — Long , man frontage near White Lake tii- mile ,tu pavement • *-room home with baseme bam — oiher outbulldln 17 ACRES —‘ 3 bedroom older home - - basement — borders on Highland OoH Course — $16,500. 4 ACRES - Fruit trees — garden — good home — fireplace — part basement — garage — 69,60. IEAL ESTATE ‘s-l&E 120 ACRES FARM. OOOD HUNT- lng. Beaver Dam IB-------— “ 3-0079. OR4-Q56I ioSf- OR BY OWNER. 9 ACRES ON MAIN hiahwa* mu Clarkaton and new la picturesque setting, fireplace, full base- Salt Mmm Property S7 TRADE ittrartfve 20x28 buUdini- 7 years old. good location for barber shop . or Office. *750 down Clarence C. Ridgeway BROKER FE 9-7091 299 W. Walton f.OOft-FOOT BUILD-mg tese rnsn 2 yys. M 12.000* parking. Rainy tlac Press, Bog 74. Sale or Exchange n good ares. d clesr houses BAUMAN REALTY 0928 - FE 1-7161 377 S. Telegraph Busiatu Oppertenltfei 59 AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE lean, modern eervlee station, good location. Reasonable ln-veulmeht and rental. Major oil company. FE 4-iMl.__________ ATTENTION OWNERS /To Belt Your Business List Now With REALTOR PARTRIDGE Partrime^A a*m>c,. inc. "MICif11 BUSINESS GUIDE" New Odltlor going to pres* soon I Assoc, cilices thruout Mloli. fiuilNEBfl OPORTUNITY. 8ERV-Ice station for lease. No limit .to oanittlgs. Call standard ou. approximately OD.Ouo down pay- Brewer Real Estate JOSEPH P REIS/ SALES MOR. 04 E. Huron 8t. DRUG STORE ■ If the only drugstore --Orton-i. covering an area of at least illea In all directions. The pres-ownei retiring. Everything goes jdw- the building (22x60). flx-s. business and Inventory. All for 621.000, 97.000 down. Living rters^ upstairs Includes 1 ^bed- , owner. MA 5-9000. MODERN COFFEE SHOP 'for”lea»*. For f?t-wrlte Box 59 Pwi- giving background, present work, age, references, end phone num-ber. Ponllsc Press. Box 63, SPACE FOR BARBEtt OR BEAUTY shop in dsepplng center, (feat end soft water rurrtlthed. > Alio rental SINCLAIR bee modem, 2-bey eervlee station on M-lg, moderate Investment. paid dealer training, JKfff. Phone MB 1-fl41. U-IuWa N Ran64 styTTe apartments In rapidly, growing Oakland Co. area, seventeen 3 room apartments In beet of con-dttUm. All brickyeanrtrBctlon black top drive. Spacious owner-manager’* apt, Room for many mar* OTlU« this near 3PpBt*MAlKjik. tM^W.' £rat-gable neighborhood .sapor mar- ■ snta&sRAaia: able with or without reel estate PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE. REALTORS Member Partridge * Ageod, In« Associate Offices thraout Jr*** MSOW; r----- highway . caukpped Terrtflo lXke grocery *DM »nd living/ quarter*. Ov*r *125.0##imi lust yew. Muni sell ®RIG AN BUSINESS- SALES corporation » at,Wmes«fr 'azos UkiM *2.500 EOtHTY FOB property. hotter i skating excellent location and well establlshe# Other inle^sis i lull time. WOI discount f Phone owneri EM 3A61A - ” WESTERN , AUTO ~ OFFERS YOU Opportunity /pi FOR 'inancial Independence PROVEN OVER 3.700 TIMES. BX-CELLENT LOCATION AVAILABLE. RETAIL NATIONALLY ADVERTISED AND ACCEPTED BRANDS OF MERCHANDISE. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. WE OFFER FREE TRAINING, PLANNING AND INSTALLATION AID. minimum-jiNifflngmmr 015,000. -SEND FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION, Western Autoi Supply PO Box 990-Fort Wayne. Indiana Phone EAstbrookr/331 Name . v........Age. Address *. ...,.. Phone... City, State .. 20 PER CENT DISCOUNT. BAL-ance owing of 12.206.40 at 6 per cent 21 *2912 to handle. Seasoned 3 years. Several outer contracts al 20 per cent discount. C. P ANGUS, Realtor ORTONVI1XE 422 Mill Street • NA 7-2019 ~ AN IMMEDIATE SALE TOR YOUR Land Contracts Wanted Cqptracts-Mtg. 60-A ABSOLUTEIY 1 ACTION On your land contract\ large i smell, cel' Mr. Htlter. FE 4-39S .‘Broker. 3660 EH* Uke Rd._ IN rmfEDIATF SALE " TOR your )*nd contrsrl or mortgage I, See us before you deal! Warren Stout, Realtor. 7 N. Saginaw, Pontiac. FE 9-gllB. 1 AKC MALE BEAGLE. • months old. has shots. ‘ let. good cond.. 2 GRAVES IN WHITE CHAPEL--- anything of equal value or tell tor " taoCpf 2-7oej. Ffamily ‘income wax. wtADEi r rent, also WS5 Pontiac, and j ijgd Ford convertible, tell ck-up. FE 5JBM. • ELECTRIC CENTRIFUGAL vump 220 - 3 phase. Also hydraulic Ustlegate. Anthony- Sett or swap. . What have you* OR 4-1146. 'lO-INCH ADMIRAL TELEVISION. *19. 4-speed portable store m new. $75. Victor tslkini chine. Beet offer U ELECTRIC ftANGE AND WARM . morning heater for: shotgun — “ FE 0-2391.' _______- CH. FLORIDA. SALE OR TRADE. FURNISHED BEAUTIFUL WEDDINO GOWN, pure etik organsa with r* e)| broldered Aleneon lace b chapel train. AIM 7-6. P condition, Call after i p.o GIRLS CIAITRINO. SIZE 11 - L AROE SHIPMENT OF CLOTH-Ing lust In. Open dally House ol Ritmago. 44*9 M-9^M|H|j^M weddino HSHBT from Bake Fifth , cosl 1400. Will i 6-6505. BIZ E" /o re., ortarmsl Sale Heeieheld Goods *5 >{| PRICE «- REJECTS. BEAUTI- LAND CONTRACTS WANTED Immediate cash Earl Garrets. Realtor, 9917 Commerce Rd.. Orchard Lake. EMpirc 3-2911 or Money to Loan $ $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE Auto or Ottwr Security FAST. CONVENIENT BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN. BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN Pontiac — Draytoh Plains — Utica Signature \UTO or FURNITURr Up to 2* month* to repay PHONE PE 3-6206 OAKLAND Loan Company 262 Pontiac Bute Bank Bldg. . loans!** TO 9900 BAXTER - LIVINOSTONE ll Pontiac Stele Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 LOANS Need 1^25 to $500 , See Seaboard Phone FE 3-7617 )§85 N. Perry St. PXRKlNO NG PROBLEM Seaboard Finance Co. TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MATN 214 E. st: CLATR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS *M TO 6900 PL 2 OL 1-6791 WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 We will be glad to help yon. STATE FINANCE'CO. 90S Pon* ac State Bank Bldg. FE 4-L574 Mortgage loom________________*2 A Mortgage Problem? jwirm?*dui™rnenU* An*"* property, any amount. Prompt. drpnuaPnlG eervlee. , Remodeling snd_ construction toe»». Ceeh, and consolidate debts • * ‘ _ Cheff Miirteage end Realty Co. _ FE 3-1769 or 963-979* CXsi-1 LOANS $600 to $2500 On homes any piece in Oakland County. You receive full amount in cash tno deduction*', the lame or very next day after meklng free application. neve ouiy uui y •mall monthly payi Call at our office t No obligation un closed and cash Improvements, for r other purpose. ~casb avaiuMjc hdW . It tl^TirXj you get a home unuKvamant on your house Musi have SO per ceul equity ar mor* nie faw Cunstructlm Co FE CASH ■ Loans to $2500 Lean* avsllsblt to home purchedee on autoe,' home equities, end furniture. M-48 months to repay. Group all your debts with only out small manthhr payment. , Family Acceptance Carp. *•* ***^te*Sffc^e -1*"** aurM Telephone rm a-sew CaMMUK:7ir NAfidiAL BANK ffcr Horn- Ownereiilp and SZSKrOAtit On ne Acii W. wth Ubfeet Iron'see No a» preieal fee. B. Dv Cherles, Suitable Farm Loan Bervike- 1717 g. Telegraph. FE 46)21 -Fay’ bills, tkFROvMhiirrs^oa - • finance your sale . Interest •4/up. Century MVge.. Ml M ‘ •. ;. • l 8N$ALL~DRE8SER, *3.00: CHEST endr four • poster bed. 130. 68219047 afte*. 6. .___ * ! SWIVEL ROCKER, 1 GATE LEO table, 1 youth mattress. 62 In,; 2 chrome chairs, 2 TV chair*. I occasional chair. 1 student desk, l army cot. FE 3*396. ADMIRAL TELEVISION. 144, BIO eavings on clean, guaranteed stoves, refrigerators ana washers, all sixes 910-2106. Bedrooms 929 up. living room. 626 up. bookcase 29. des9k 212, dresser ba«^ metal s, tablet and rugs. rScf RWMV BEDROOMS, sofa beds, dinettes, rugs end mattresses. Factory seconds. About '/* price. E . ....... ...... Cast St Lafayette FE 2-6842. Open 'till " Monday apdFrlday. _ 2 PIECE SECTIONAL. JUST RE upholstered, 226, occaslonet chair. $10, 17 In TV. 925. 339-9265. _ 3 PIECE SECTIONAL. TUROUOISB b)uc. living room suiie. Oood mg ditton. 256. FE 4-7729. eitTWcffl".. ............. ASPHALT TILE. Euh PLASTIC 1TLB. Each "BUYLO" TILE 162 8. Saginaw 8MM BROWNIE CAMERA ~AND AC-EM 3-7429. ini a Month buys 3 rooms of 1 pc. living room suite Wt step tables. 1 cocktail table. 1 pc. bedroom lit with Innereprin* 9386. 6*12 rug included. E-Z R at the Wyman Furniture Co E. Huron.________________________ I CUBIC FOOT FREEZER. 692-21 TELEVISION, 9 (Alton TV FE 2-2297 Open 919 B; Walton, comer of Jo*lyn_ OdSCH FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC range. Exc condition. 699. Owner 1 PAIR OF sfEP TABLES. MATCH- make fancy designs, monoerems. ' embroiders, appliques, buttonholes, etc. New payments. 95 month or *61.20 full price. Phone Waite's. FE 4-2911. ANTIQUE 3-plece cherry bedroom suite with marble tops. Call after 6 or week-end. OR 3-6827. mcONOftiONER REPOSSESSED 1150 USED TV'S 919.95 AND UP_ SWEETS RADIO AND APPLIANCE .... HURON___________FE 4-1133 R ZIO-ZACI make butto^o?ev,^sew^on hem,’ embroidery, applique cast. tssIdon^dMMrdng^^i a HI Itch Balance due 94 94 50 mon'hlv Phone .Elec glenc. FE 9-7623. . kBOUT ANYTH1NO YOU V TOR THP HOME CA POUND t* r *■ * |AU AUTOMATIC n i „ ...... -jf of the way but a lot less lo« pay _Furnlture ane E. of .Auburn He'ehls on Auburn, M59 UL 2-3396 ___ AUTOMrATTC DEFROST flEFRJG- BEN HUR FREEZER, fuj Queen washeiy *79, FE «' Bia. BIO vALUi .tebullt dryers . .. , Easy Spinners, rebuilt .. Speed Queen Wringer . Ilf-Inch _TVt, rebuilt*. New ' ...9 » n«,w R Motorola . ^ ^ New^Eleotrtc Dryers ..1116.06 GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of P«ntl*» 91 W Huron St__________FE 4-1996 BUNK BEDS iWROUOHT IRON', (■ampleto with springs and mat- blond trundle' Ain CONblTIONERg All Display Models 1-2 H P. - COMPACTS 20% OFF MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL V| PhMtiJ ..... ■ vinyl Flooring BhO TUe FE 4.____________ CLOSING out Bedroom set*, box inriais end^met-Sftre. ’'tempT'pad *t*tiie».^ ob unit ,. comFOtb ’ ciloicB or iiouse- E56f’Sic~ffoTk. oooD owtW tlon, 925. 662-1663. ^Ntiehigaa1'- 'orSteriel IMB DELIVERY - MARMADLKE By Anderson & Leeming JANtntOL SPACE OAB HEATER. ---------TO 4-74*7. - LAROE ..lection - of kab-i tnete with or without light*, sliding doors. Terrific buys. »v r\ \ \ \ \ Maa/ ■ji Sale HeateheM Good* 65 • cabinet. 11$; drapes s - FRi: EZERS PRICED FROM $146.88 TERRIFIC SAVINGS b-snds. Scratched.- OOOD UBED TELEVISION. 918. Peer Appliance. EM 3-4114._ HOTPOIN T AIR CONDITIONER, one ton. R. B. Munro Electric KENMORE AUTOMATIC WASHER. 236, PE 6-2267. KENMORE ELECTRIC WASHER. ------ --- Good as new. Cell n -l2Qt&P*i NEW tL ZIO-ZAGOER. canmei. singer lowing machine makes fanes’ design*, monograms, buttonholes, etc. will accept 25 06 for 7 month* or *31.60 cash. Plume Waite'*, PE 4-2911.________________ LOVESEAlY ANTIQUE. GENUINE Rosewood, brocade eatln. Excellent condition. * LOUNGE CHAIR. SOLID, uuraplc. green-black mixture. $15. FE 9-2564, .________ MAPLE TWIN BEDS. COMPLETE. $40. easy spin washer, 929. gas stove. 238. OR 3-9691.^_______ MUST SELL sYNOERT IN LOVELY wood console, makes fancy stitches, buttonholes, etc. with Zlg Zag 91.26 per week or pay total 121.36. , Capitol' Sewing Center, PS 9-9407. MOVING - TABLB8. PICTURfcS. blinds, dishes, springs, rugs, drapes', mltc. Phone 332-6095______ MAHOGANY DROP LEAF DUNCAN Phyfe dining room set and bedroom set Perfect condition. 9123 ONE MAYTAG WR1NOER WASHER 239. refrigerators, all slues, from tl9. 8-plece dinette 112, Oas and Sal* Miiullentewf r. FE 2-9378, Orchard Lake—38. 9X12 RUOS .................. ..... "BUYLO" TILE, 162 8. Saginaw fLAYE'A",",FlANO. LIVING ROOM tend-Grev>l-e-Plr» 7i EXCAVATIONS----BULLDOZINO - BepUc Systems. EM 84*11. l^REE! FREE! FREE! 80.000 yords ........ Z 3-0623. I '-yourself. Duane. 32-14 W. NEED YOUR TRAILER I Any Slee—any type buyers WArrmon .— •- atea in end let wv eelL—ram your trailer fo# you! • • —WE BUY-WE SELL--WE TRADE RICH BLACK DiStT. ChXaP. dS ’ .. lI%il,Dur*Vn,1ii?,el1 St asrivi 115210 Holly Rd. Holly ME *g771 R^ BLA^biltT, TOP_80IL__$,4j * JaSM^LraHTOEMWT HTuMBINO BARGAINS; SHOWER stall with nttlugs. $32 *5; toilet*. BIBBS: 42’ cabinet alnk With trim, ’646.tr; marred tub*. Ill) up; 3o-iei giase lined /heater, 24**9; eump pump. S32.M; 3-PC. white or colored oath *at* with trim. 676,95. Copper, steel, *oll end plastic pipe and fitring* at wholesale prices. 2 part stainless steel sink, 922.98 SAVE PLUMBING CO. 172 8 Saginaw FE 6-2100 h;; *xi . plugged and touch sanded *4 65 PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO, 1462 BALDWIN AVE._____FE 2-2843 RANOX HOODS. $26 M; MEDICINE .......... REMINGTON RAND ADDING MS chine, almost uew; It fl. Chippewa runabout with a Mark «> motor and controls. 7'» Firestone with tank in good condition, 250. Phone NAtlonal 7-2525. SEWING MACHINE^ ZIG ZAO SINGER. Doo* all your deoorattv* stltohe*. blind hems, sow* on buttons. ete.. all .with one DIAL. No d, 997.20 oath momn. Capitol Sewing appointment. FE 8-0407. TAV BOXr AND MO-12x36 window, lor. $80. M-l Rifle. %(S. 672-1473. _____________M „___ stainless -sriBL cari.rjm bob- CORNICES, 220-GALLON OIL ble sink. 830 *5, whlte double sink, ank. *19. lO-gallon electric *11.95. O. A. Thompson, 7005 M52 niter heater, 810, Lavatory . West. :htome legs, faueft a»djgTALL | DOORS aei-l. * -24x24 Royal 18MALL^ new. 682-3247’ iplete, *15. . Pc ■ I«p ,-uiawri desk, *12. 3 Bernebury Dr., Union Laki 3-3142. 3-PIECE-GRAY COLORED BATH-room *et at terrific savin**, toed quality, cast Iron tub with trim 9132 99. O. A. Thompson. 7008 M-99 ICT SCORE n - standard mr !'«•* plasterboard P m.......n mahqgany plywood 94." BURMEISTER’S LUMBER COMPANY 7940 COolcy Lake Rd. EM 34171 Open I a.tn. to o pin. M end PHI. TUBS through T t a m. to g p.m. 8und»y 10 a,aa. to 3 p. 17 INCH CROSLEY. MAHOGANY aeblnol. excellent oondltlon. Tor Poodle, male, black. 11 mo., bes offer. FE 9-0002. OtTwiI BTO OIL FURNACE AND tank. A-l condition, can be seen _ln operation, reoe. priced. 9974730. ARIZONA BOUND. FRIcSdAIRE — ---- refrigerator 1 yilSi Floor lam*» .......... {• "P Kitchen be-c cablnete • , 99 up WKC Warehouse 26 W. Alley REFRIGERATORS 1061 MODELS, perfect, new jmerentoe^ fo^8 t used machine. No down payments, Michigan Fluorescent. 363 orchard Lake —*. RECONDITIONED REYNOLDS OE apartment sin refrigerator, as Is CRUMP ELECTRIC CO. 3469 Auburn Rd. FE^4-3t73 RENYXl - RENTAL Blngor Sewlt pontiacTmall RENTAL CtnUr RCA VICTOR DUAL AMPLIFIER ------T"». 491 Telegraph Rd., and auto, wkshei oondltlon. Mlsc. Ml .. .... pay you'to see these. OR 3-9846 AOTO&ATiC ZIO-ZAO'siwiNO ’chine, blond cabinet, pay olt count Ui 8 months at U per m or M2 cault balance. Universal FE 4-0903 ■ TTaLUMINUM gipifit*. GENU-lne BRICK VENEER; »lu~ —storm windows, awnings, eavi troughs, shutters. Alt' available OL 1-6623 ~ ___■ FE 5-9*49 BATHROOM FIXTURES. Ofl, AN" gae ftirnaoee. ■ Hot water an Steem Holier. Automatic w a t • heater. Hardware, elect, suppllei crock and dips and fitting*. Low Brothers Paint. Super Kemtoo end Rmitoieum HEIGHT SUPPLY 9918 Lapeer Rd. PE 4-943 lilEF" ANlf*POR6 - HALF AND quarters. Opdyke MkL FE * ‘ 628-1711. BROKEN SIDEWALK FOR RETAIN-Ing wall. TO 9-8941. Cones Rental. CRIB WltfH InnerefrinoT mat-treu. blond mahogany, Ilk-new. (28. 3670 Bathabaw Rd Drayton Plains. -CONCRETE "MIXER. JAEGER, V. feet. Oood condition. OR 34610. ! 1 CAlBINBr MAKlitO KITCHEN CABINETS Free Estimates Day or Evening FORMICA TOPS PONTIAC WOOD PRODUCTS PORMICA TOPS 3696 Bccohgrovc__ FE 8-6661 DdtPPRBEZE Cleerent-e Chest or Upright OOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 0 B. Csss Ave. FE 9-6123 'LUORES- RUGS lilt Poem Beck ...... Braid* Braid* ....... ___J Bread loom ... KARENS •________ ROLLAWAY BED, TAB EWING MACHINE. 2HO-ZAO FUI-lv automatic, needs no cams, ^re-Kuy<,*SNew guarantee. Vacuum -'enter, PE *4340. ...---- SEWING MACHINE; WHOLESALE ■■.n^^eSSMCo!!!: choose from. Curt’s Apnll-646'JHatehery Rd. OR JrilOL SlNtiER SEWINO MACHINE. ZIO------- In lovely maple deck. Pay or mo cash balance. Jnl- jCq. FE 4-0965 ______> fifPPAN^JA^RATOE. OOOD USED TELEVTSIONS Some With t^t B^jJ.*r*n ** JOHNSON'S RADIO an* TV 48 B. Walton near Baldwin ^eUeebme^tjL^Ctoe^uhi^.^ Ic&UM CENtScR^*' C Trail* ~mn TqrWiF(T ,A««LroRB xecutlve type brick home, 4-bedroom and convenient den, Urge living room, maple paneled, fireplace and dining area, 2 baths, large kitchen, full basement, activity room, per- C*tH LUMBER COMPANY Corner Crooke sod Auburn BARG Aim GUARANTEED OAg AND OIL forced etr furnace*. u*ed and new. will Install. Acs Heating and Cool- A. Thompson, bagC 'Tier*' Cone'e Ea^vHYe**^'’ l*6n arB arIa tor y6ur gas furnace, m—|a| unit, or water beater, -(-1591. ash geiee, ffljjj"'TOW.- REBUILT WAitiWI well pump end tank.. Took- OWN A ME AND Wo^riitiB COMPLETE who faucets end, cuitslm, 946.90 value 634.50. Lavatories complete with fauceti $14 93. TYPBWSnER. 935. HT'lifl O- trapli. 929. TO 6-4496 , TALBOTT LUMBER' Paint, hardware, plumbing, •lectrloal suppllee. Complete ttotk or buQdlnjr matertale., I0» OAKLAND AVE- FE 4-46*3 lit EAST LAWRENCE Everything to moot your noede. Clothing, Pumunro, Appliances. TO RENT A NEW hlNGER SEW-Ing mechlne. call Singer Sewing v Cent#?. 3lB-76>t, „ . ' ToitTrw " 9t2.50 value, in!s and 919.65. Lavatories 914 68 complete. Stall ebowera complete 961.00 value 932.50. Mtcli- USED BRICK FOR SALE AT Courthouse. FE 2-6794. USED OA8”FURNACE, LIKE NEW, fe m _ . . .: •__ USED B~FOOtf WIDE KECTIONAL YfSSB LUMBER 2x4h. So Un.; 2x6«. He li») : 2xilx. ll itn.; 2x20a. 13o Un. ('Ifin nhd d< Jlyered. FE B-8087. whitI pine scIbSn doors 29" X M" X Hi ......... *9 95 COMBINATION STORM' - SCREEN DOORS (12 90 and *12.90 BLAYLOCK COAL A SUPPLY CO. II Orchard Lake Ave,_FE 3-7101 C*nierai~-ServRe KONICHA. til M 39 for tingle^ end frai Metical Goods 71 Bargains at Betterlys Genuine eavlnge on all new and usen pianos and organs. Come and we for yourself. ■Mi- money down — 46 months to ‘’Yew bstterly music co. II O-m Free Parking Acroee from B’hiinMI^^^M _______ HoO%N SUPER' d&L- legiate. hendguard, OA 9-3124._ FENDER IcLBcYKiC HAWAIIAN guitar, amplifier end carrying esse Everything new, 2186, EM 3-6623 OULBRANSEN PIANO ”; i EV1NRUDE MOTORS s boate and' accassoriei «. i- Wood. aluminum, tlbarglas T "HARD TO FIND" * DAWSON'S SALES Tiplsco Lake ■ MA P-BW, Sain. ......... 3306 S. Rochestor_ Parichurst Trailer Sales -FINEST IN MOBILE LIVINO— Featuring New Moon—O'--- Veature — Buddy Quality Homes. i .netted hsU-wsy betweea Orion end Oxlord on M24 MY 2-4111 ixpFKf''MOB!Ll* i5S2di!»if aiA service f 11 o estimate*. Air* Rent and e.actetorlee. Boh Huti ison Mobile Home Calls. »«. 4361 Dixit Hwy Drey tun Plains or 3-1192. Sales and Rental* Vacation tratlore 13, ll, IT R-Wulvorino pickup campers. lllAKB RFSElItVATlOlPs’NOW F. E, Howland, Rentals 3248 Pills Set. |OR«jbI42* gHdMTs MOBILE BbiJHHr Oobd used horn* !ype traUon, To PER CENT DOWN. Carl wired end hitches Installed. Complete line ol pans and bottle gat •B 4-6141 3173 W. Hut THE NEW LIOHTWEIOHT AVALAIR Fully islf-contstnsd travel treUero. .Ellsworth AUTO SALES 177 Pixie Hwv. MA 9-1466 MODERN AND WRIT trailer lot. 761 Ports Rd. NEW SPACES. PONTIAC MOBILE Tiroi-Atite-lruck » AUTO AND TR* lllll, AUtO HIM. wmm tvwv diiirnRiUbB. M»uLAik.Uub- mr. low at 82.M. Motor Mart, 2.1 1. Montcalm. CRANKSHAFT GRINDINO H cor. Cylinders rebored, Zu< chine Shop. 23 Hood. Phoi NIFTY. THRIFTY. HONDA 96 228 ml. per «ai., 49 mph, he* electric *mrt»r. *M down. Aiider*on Seles. FE 3-930*. Metercyclti Bicycle. “botw tSl-a- mart. I Used hikes. Mli Frospoct. NEW SCHVtYNNS 934 99 ui*. dUAR- mbtrunrfflt— Boats-Accesferies 12-FOOT BOAT. TRA Vl^43 (@uw -TfiSLi *aa«jn Form Equipment 1996 JOHN DEERE TRACTOR * Drive. _ __' FArmall cub''" FTHTct" hyctrtuIlQ. i [rime* m (HEEL' hBrs'E -- MO Li NS tractor, tiller* — riding mowers, used tractor*—mowers—tillers Evans. 9507 Dixie Hwy. 6iM711 Reducing Inventory ON NEW EQUIPMENT Regular gelo .-Wheel Horae tractor 9V» b.p. and 33" rotary ----r ModalNO. 991 6912.86 1949,89 liman 26” riding motor wluteieo: •tartar, damonsirator 9499,92 $399,96 r. model Vlctt . ____ib*on self pro- EMM 22" rotary .. 1 Toro 19" roe) Scott'* elec, rotsry Toro II" rotarF wt CREDIT king bros. FB 4-0734 _ ___rB._4-lU3 BOAT. TRAILER. K _____jwer motor. Cell FB 4.1021 !oor ruITaSour'wFffTl'RAiL-er, 5-horeopower Evlnrud* motor. (U8. call only sfter 4, OR 9-7990. ■FOOT FIBERGLA6 *BOA'f' 8‘i a.p . reaj! FB 6-1492 FOOT" MOLDED PLYWOOD. 25 ?rfes»or!™flUasi:rUlce,’ 9398f ^41 N'B STARS and ' ts boa to being t< top In tonight. Cliff Driver end g “ ° FB 3-1961. i!t allon "Flat deck fill etlecl f>lv^bo»t trailer ( VKN'fi WAJIWK SUPPtJKS^ ^Uimift'BbAf. li FOOT. 35 HP. Evlnrude, (366. 18 fori^om- (495 POntlac’ Lake Mol el. 9236 Highland Rd, , • fTOorTiriiMA CRAFT . Queen Marie. la-up. JOHNSON Blectrle etarter with generator. BUILT-IN BEATS ILT-1N JO-GALLON GAB uke, USOO approved. RUNNINO LIOWT* GATOR TRAILER-COVER NEW, I9.37S YOUR CQST, 82.386 AFTER 6 PM. CALL 646-9637 Of MI 4-2M4_____________ — WPbW»'Vbb:AIi^^illBli-r- ? Tnwn*Otummen Boat^rfneri *?fp JOHNSON MOTOR* SEA RAY BOATS AERO-CRAFT ALUMINUM O'DAY * AQUA CAT. SAILBOATS PORTA-CAMPER TRAILERS ' Wo' Welcome Trede-1 n» Marino Aocoieonoa and Screw* * KESSLER'S MARIKA- 16 N Washington. OA 2-1400 Oxfoid. MARINE INSURA NICE > ■' 12 90. per hundred. 910.106 liability. $8.00 per year for mmt boata. Hanion Aganey. FE 1-7661. PONTOON RAFT BOAT ....CLEARANCE STAR CRAFT li SEA RAY BOAT,: CLEARANCE All model! of 1962 Johuoa motor*. ■ BILL COLLER BOATS k MOTOR* 1 mUo east of Lapoor on M21 Open all day Sunday through August- Open daily till • p m E$*y terms. 16 per cent down. TONY'S klARlNi Evlnrude motor*, tirrtfle discount. on boats and suppUos. Wo repmr all motor*. Labor guaranteed. Ph.';, 913-3660 2666 Orchard Lake Rlt I ■........r, trader. $2,195. 1991 ll ft. Mac Bay an, tarn, and trailer, 91.195 trailer, top end eooet*. 11.299. 1916 18 ft. osnevVil h.p. Johnson. 6999. WALT MAZUREK’Sr LAKE & SEA MARINA WOODWARD AT 2f Car«—Trucki 101 $25 MORE ; high gnu!# u««d < iri you Mil, He 40 Dixit Highway, ALWAYS BUTTER OF JUNK 1. OR 4-1491 99JUNK ACa4? - W|i TOW8 . TOP 966 - CALL WrlAw' * SAM ALLEN £ SON INC. ... CARS 'ARbTiWditsr wfclCKrbR JUNKERS ROYAL AUTO FARTS PI 94149 F&R THAT "TOP dAlLAR" ON SHARP LATE MODEL CARS Averill's i i.mI*** "ISM', " DOLLAR. JUNK 4^iRi AMU * ■rucks, rli 2-2699 days, evontng*. OUT-STATE MARKETS Extra Top Dollar 1 FOR LATE MODELS M&M : MOTOR SALES i Martin MoAnanlty. owner < Onto MoAnnnUy _ ■ JUST N. OF FOWTIAC PRITE-lN AMU DIXIE HWr . , OE 4-63«(* , 6R| 4-9366 j - PONTIAC WASTE. FE 9 0206. FOR CLBAN U9BO CAM GLENN'S'. *52 Wilt Huron St. E 4-7371 TO 4-1192, |$ TOP D6LLAir$$ TO* Clean Used Cars .*n JEROME :■! "Bright Spot" : Orclterd Lake at Case v" FE 8-0488 wx*mrwfrmr~r,: Ellsworth - AUTO SALES ;.f,i 4877 Dial* Hwy. MA 9-1996 New and UMd trucks 103 1989"MACK Better Used Trucks GMC site laiereace . wWff For Safe Drivers ‘ 'v $22.50 QUARTERLY *« On the average car, including 1 ‘ S25.UOO LIABILITY | - $ 1,000 MEDICAL ---- 14034* Fenton I ~ciib , Fenton. iTTEance close out OUTBOARD MOTORS i¥oF~ 1-29 H P. Reg. 9829 ... ALSO WRITE CANCELLED AUTO FRANK A. ANDERSpN AGENCY^ ' J°EVENIN09 IE 14612 , ; Forsign Csra .. "V, *181,; 100% WARRANTY ON ALL USED VOI-KSWAGENS Incluriee parte and IMhor. w Vhikawagan, i Volkswagen H Voikewaian H Vakswagan t-door. green m —; .j»f. blue ____atr«tom at Big flavlng* * WARD^McEWmlm,, '** W. Huron ■ THO*«f« wagon, No SAt JfflL fildLi'A," i-fadpti, ', a Ion. Ip now. luff brioa «p, Renault "Authorised Dealer" i qlJver^ BUfCK attrjEF.P THIRTY I ACfeOST ! ■ 1M 1 T» SEDAN. GOOD CONDI- 195* CHEVY WAOON V* AUTOMAT • g^seenjer 4-dopr. 374 Second ■ Hii ^’c^Stw.. S pX SMC MatetooMTumer. Ford. 'IB'^W^wOttCuiATE CONBI-MT**' ■ Sports Car wi'SftV5’/1 ©*t$#g* x*» moa........ .....turn Now Austin Boater ... How Austin Boater Sprite . HOW HO Midfat........*MJ*f Automobile Import Co. fe Service AU Makes 1*5J, CONVERTIBLE. Sates iw im Mtwccui. Ote owner, aow Ttoato. CHEVROLET 00..1*0 ,«■ WgO* ward Ate., Btftntngham. Ml 4-2733. 1*57 CHB^^it iOOO* WAOON. M&IIWOHAM. MI 4-3733. . M CHEVROLET 21#'4-DOOR 8TA-’Uon wegon. VS. Powerglide. radio, hooter, whitewall*. Mono poon finish. Extra ehwtbK**®: PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO -. IW g-WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM - Mt t-2733. ' — dBOEVROLET BISCAYNE 4-door, with 6-cyl. engine, tuto-tranemtesion. radio.) I—-*••■• and whit* *150 down, Ono Yoar New Mi UmpDOE SALES or SERVICE TOWN aSn»OTnn^WmM. In*. DODGE CARS and TRUCKS S2411 Grand River OR 4-6750 5 OrShSd SSoBd. KE «-0*06 A-l XUpitor 8-6010 StARK HICKEY, FORD i the Clawson Shop- ____a brand m ______— i, good wttb mo. Ask (or O'Brien, orodlt specialist. Z BANK RATES » 8-1007 - MTTRRSON tmEVROU 1056 CHEVROLET BEL-AIH. RJ* dlo and heater, excellent condition, no money down, assume #55nlMtoa Sin.' Ctell Credit manager Mr. White at Kltaf ™*l*e, Ml S. Sadtnaw, MS CHsIVt 7-DOUn. vmi uwu. 8. Con- ay dealer. 363-7365. 1959 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-DOOR hardtop. I cylinder, poworgMdo. radio, heater, whitewalls. Sparkling beige tlniab. Only 81.288. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM MI 4-»3S IMS BUICK CONVERTIBLE, RADIO, HEATER. DYNAFLOW. ABSO-, LUTELY HO MONET DOWN. Assume payments of *13.4* per mo. ' Can Credit Mar.. Mr. Parka, at Ml . WHO. Harold Turner, Ford. 1*55 BUICK CONVERTIBLE V tag whit dltion to ______heater and a glisten- white finish. Excellent con-‘ ‘ Pull price *187. - ^ (3.3S per , down. Call Credit-----M , Cook St PE »4M*. King Auto Sales Huron at Elleabeth Lake Rd. MM BUICK SPECIAL STdOOR hardtop. Sharp blu* r~* “*•"* - .... —,—*"i, radio. i jiiwortUd*. IMS. 2 DOOR, ( CYLINDEll CHi’ «l w* i. ostunwis. __ 1955 Chevrolet 2-Door Clean, with no money down. *11.4* . nor month I $197 Full Price ISO 8. Saginaw St. UNIVERSAL AUTO EXCHANGE FE 8-4071 1*35 CHEVROLET BEL ITi ____' WAOON bosuuiuI Sparkling Blue) 13 Putt Price *43 per month SIXTY : ' Special^ Payment Plan 57 CHEVROLET 4-Door Hardtop *43 $7 POIUt Fabriano Hardtop ....*497 83 CHRYSLER Hardtop .9*97 53 MERCURY 2-Door. Clean .. immediate Delivery SIXTY Need a Car? Bad Credit? No Money? Bankruptcy? If you want to get re-es^ l tablished, call Mr. Cos-' by, FE 5-9232. tnfttic inaiwuui heater, beautllul b finish, ----------* 130.34 Warranty I LLOYDS Llncota-Mercury-Comet lifts npvrMi « 437 Auburn. ^l^t 'b”ORYET*iE. 1M*. APTOMATTC White wttb *at 5o«? iSortf^Holly TO,. Holly. ME 4-931T. ___ IMS EDSEL 4-DOOR HARDTOP. VI. 1 AUTO. ABSOLUTELY HO MONEY DOWN Assume .payments of *27.8] per mu. Call Credit Mgr.. UKPerltr. at MI 4-7SM. Harold Tumor. Ford- . ... 1M1 ENOLTSB FORD WITH RA-dlo, heater, solid bteck and 1* a on* owner! *1*0 down, 131.19 per month 1 On* Year Warranty! LLOYDS. Llncota-Meroury-Cpmet Meteor-Engllsh Ford . 231 8. Saginaw St. _______PET-9131 1*32 FORD 2 DOOR SEDAN. HY-dr antic •brakes, 4 excellent 13 to. only 1*73. Superior Auto woiea, 830 Oakland Avar M CHEVROLET 2-DOOR BIS-cavne with # cylinder and stand-ard 4birt trar--i'-",“ ly no rust op swa condition, full prlo payments of 8S;6# — ----- ■ —•—i money down. Call tier Mr. - WET lah’wlth matching trim. Only 81295. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml ----- 1959 CHEVROLET BI80AYNE. 2-door with a 6-cyi. engine, radio, heater, standard tranmlsston. *130 down, and payments of *30.72 per month I Ono Yoar Warranty I LLOYDS Linooln-Maroury-Comot Meteor-Engllsh Ford 232 8. Saginaw -St. Ft *-*131 939 CHEVY 2 DOOR. POWER gltda. equipped, very clean. FE 8-6179. » CHEVROLET PARKWOOD 8TA-■ y wagon, t-eyitoder, automatic. Uo. boater, whitewalls Sparkling He finish. Only 91999. Easy ms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET HR engine. Powergltde. Power steering. Hun Tan copper finish and Adobe -beige. Only 91,493. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., JM 8. WOODWARD AVE.. BlRMlNOHAM. MI 4-—‘ 900 CHEVY BISCAYNE 4 DC-... V*. Automattc. powsr ateerlng. SI.-443. Don’s Used Cara. *77 S. Lapeer Rd. MY 2-2041. 1-1093. ____ , iSflOCHEVROLET BISCAYNE 2-DR. 6-oylinder. PowerfSwe.rgdlo. heater. Cascade green. 91.495. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 8. Woodward Ave. Birmingham. MI 4-3733. 1900 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR. HERE ts a real fall special for only *11M and tt has radio and boM-er. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER, two 8. Woodward Ave.. Blrmlng- ham, Ml 6-3900.___ !RB VROLBli AUTOMOBILE LOANS, tor now, pood opro. Low bank ratoa. Pontiao State Bank. 1961 1MPALA £. «;cL.?wormiKrioS 30 70 a month. BIRMINGHAM Ghrysler-Piymouth 000 COMBI 4-DOOH STATION wagon, radio, heater, automatic transmission, all vinyl Interior! Youre for 0118 down. *46.00 per month I On* yoar warranty I LLOYDS Lincoln-Meroury-Oomet Meteor-Bagllfb Pord 333 8. Begin*w St. i' Real amomevto trans-rwuu ..id heater, whlte-s. this week special price I down. BlRMlNOHAM HR. 606 8. Woodward 1061 < COMET 3 - DOOR WITH "radio, heater. • aujomatte..tmjsc finish. 0178 down, assume payments of 052.13 per monthl LLOYD'S Llnooln-Meroury-Comet Meter-EngUeh Ford 332 0. Saginaw St. lah. Only 91.095. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1009 S. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRM1NO- COMET. 1901. WHITE _ 4-DOOR ^SEj miles, radio and heater, auto. I mission, whltewslls 170 *i fashion trim, red and whlti I960 CORVAIR 4-DOOR SEDAN, Automatic radio, heater. SUvor finish. Only 91.093. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. SHASKINS CHEVY-OLDS i DEMO ttss CHEVROLET Impale *-door “ hardtop, with V-S engine, powor-flld*, power iwRrtnt. super sport oqulpmsiit,^radte. Mid SMlvtr- JM* OLDS P-18 Cutlass Coup*, ; _ with hydramatlc. radio, teeny ■ more acoessorleo. Beautiful ma-.. roon and whit* ESsh! IMS CHEVROLET Tm pula Con- varttbla. with vs turn*, power- iHASPNS Chevfoletpids Stjjjtsa tire. GLENN'S Sharp Cars ’02 PONTIAC Spattengtr MW PONTIAC CoteUns ........ ’SO CHEVY I cylinder, stick ’M PLYMOUTH 4-deor sedan *M CHEVY Bleeayn* < ’81 CHEVY Bat Air 4 *490 CHEVY Corvalr 'S3 FORD 4-door, doul ’37 FORD convertible, sharp ,8 ■ '00 FORD Faloon. stick shift Sl.l •oo PONTIAC Wason. power . St.t *17 CHEVY wastat. v-s. auto. » • ’ll CHEVY Wason. 8 cylinder Sl.l ‘M DODOE, hardtop. Oood oar 0 • GLENN'S EMOTOR SALES PIT West Huron St. PS 4-71717 FE 447*7 Now AmIUmnI tws 161 ■________m m *i,3»3. Easy term*. PATTERSON 4-3733 iii K^ FAIRLAiOD so*. VIC- torts, radio, boater. double power. Ibftt top. blwok AMn^^!%»^*kl*n& FE 3-2391. loti f^d %i jq;#ifc R^^o cylinder engine with standard shift, radio and boater, excellent condition. Full prtc# *307. Assume payment* of 13.33 per week with abacitttely no money down. Call Credit JtaaKfer Mr, Cook at PE 6-400*. King Auto Sales t Elisabeth Lake Rd. ~¥SSSSStM I960 FALCON 2 DOOR, STANDARD, emission, radio, boater, eolld r Extra clean, Only *1095. y terms. JEROME FERGUSON ueeter Ford Dealer. Ot 1-S711. 1901 FALCON 2-DOOR SEDAN WARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM. Ml $1695 John McAuliffc. Ford 030 Oakland Ave. • FE 5-4101 1950 ENOLIBH FORb AN0L1A with heater, real economy special with 33 II F.O. Yours at *25 down, 537.43 per month! One year warranty! LLOYDS LIncoln-Mercury-Comet . Meteor-Engllsh Ford 333 8. laginaw St. Pi 3-H31 FALCON 1*80 4 DOOR STATON wason. Esc, condition. FE 4-0839. 1960 Ford Galaxie Hardtop with VI engine, automatic transmission. whitewalls, power steering and brakes, solid white and la in excellent shape throughout. $1495 BEATTIE ‘•Your Ford Dealer Since 1*30" On Dixie Mwy. In Waterford At the Stoplight OR 3-1291 i030 1*6rdTHA8 1953 MERCURY engine, A-i condition. $660. Cftll MI 6-4034 after 6:30. BIRMINGHAM ChrysIer-PIymoutli mu. 1959 FORD CONVERTIBLE. WIFE’S ear. In very good condition, SLOW1 mil**, black with whit* top. Boi 150 FOK0 FA1RLANE 333. RADIO and heater: eaeettent condition. No money down, full price I3P7. Assume payments of $3.95 per week. Call Credit manager Mr. Whit* at King Auto Sales. 115 S. Baglnaw. 1955 FORD, OOOD BODY AND MO-’ - standard shift, 5150, can be „_Tj at 20 Croes St. 19UO~FORD. OOOD TRANSPOBTA; 1957 Ford Convertible with a beautiful whit* flnleh, black top, radio, hosier. Fordo-matlc transmission, »-6 engine, whitewalls, payments of 04.00 par $597 Full Price Estate Storage Co. 10*8. East Blvd. at Auburn FE 3-7101 _________FE 3-7102 1957 FORD 4-DOOR FAIRLANB. V*. Like new. 9545. FE 3-9187. 1957 FORD STATION WAOON. EX excellent ^condition. Call alter 6 19*7 FORD V9 STATION WAGON, very good throughout, bargain. 8. Conway Dealer. 363-7353.______ 1957 FORD 3-DOOR. RADIO. HEATER. V*8. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of 124.44 per mo. Call Credit Mgr,. Mr. Parks, at MI 4.7500, Harold 1957 Ford 4-poor COUNTRY SEDAN, radio, heater, wbltewatte. and only— $695 John McAuliffe, Ford 030, Oakland Ava. FE 5-4101 19M Cadillac. 2 door hardtop" $1,595 ROSE RAMBLER UNION LAKE . B -M3-4133____ EM 3-4, OLIVER BUICK 3 RBNaUI T Deluxe Demo. 313 2 MONICA 4 door, 4,000 . *l»- t BUICK LoSabro 3 door . 93795 1 CHEVY Parkwood Wagon *1905 1 RENAULT 4 cylinder Nice! *“' 9 CHEVY Impala 4 door ... 3 FALCON * duor, 3 VALIANT 4 ddor 8, BUICK I . *1*43 . 91493 BUICK Sedan, Lesabre . T-BIRD HaMtop PONTIAC Catalina 4 doc BUICK Eleetra 4 door ... JEEP PC "170" 4 door . BUICK LeSabro * door ., • ENOLI8B FORD Anglia . 7 BUICK 1Hardtop, dean .. 7 PLYMOUTH 4 Door ... 5 BUICK Roodmaster. I 4 JEEP Wagon, clean . >. 3 JEEP Pickup Nle* 30 OLIVER BUICK J/ FE 2-9101 ' Y • ■ Ntw and Um4 Can 10$ M#W m* Kni €m Nwnd VM Can \U 1957 FORD Falrlane *Uok shift, clean throughout, runs fine, lull price *195. No “?I^r PACKARD Clipper Super, hardtop, boautlfi ^l^t^cflEVY' 2-door hardtop, stick shift, radii heater, very, (tea running coed price $125. ' SURPLUS MOTORS full powor/ftttty equipped. FE 9-1*24 or ’PL if-3W. ISAViNd FOT^OBRliANT. MUST •ell '58 Dodge Coronet hardtop, Radio, heater, power etearins. whltewoUs. clean. FE 2-31*3. sedan. S cylinders, standard di radio, heater. On* owner. C~, 1993. Easy term*. JEROME FERGUSON. Rochester Font Dealer. 3* 1-9711. ■tee, automatic transmission, dlo beater, power steering. Extra sharp. JEROME FERGUSON. Ro-cheswr Ford Dealer. OL M7I1 1961 FORD Falrlane 4-door, V-S, automatic 91,398. u- van Camp Chevrolet, Inc, Milford MU 4-103 tool FORD CUSTOM “300" 2 door with rsdto, heater, stand ard shift, *8 cyl. engine, a rea economy special at 9200 down 040.15 per mo. Onc-yoar war ranty. * LLOYDS Llncoln-Moreury-Comot' Meteor-Engllsh. Ford 233 S. Saginaw 8t. LAST OFFER- ‘ 7 moving 8 Fdrd ConvortlMa . .... . Cadillac eoovertiblai. '52-53 ‘34 Aijok Conyertmie^ . 'OS Nash Rambler and P*d Cadillacs. ’8*-’37, . ... Bulcks-Pontlaea. ’33-’58 ew 1063 Flat •...... ... j— . lenty othar late modern -Economy Owd C$y 22 Auputo 1933 MERCURY. BKCBPTIONAtLY clean and mechanically top*. Uy oar. All daylon.. after Mon. Lesvtos town Wod.. Au_ _ 1 A. F. Cook. MS New England Dr. Rochester. Christian Hills Untsh, exceptionally clean. 9375. OR dltion. No money down, ’ full price 9*7. Assume payments of *1.80 per week1.' Call Credit FORD. TWO TO i LLOYDS LIncoln-Mercury-Comet Meteor-Engllsh Ford 332 8. Saginaw at. FE 2-8131 _______ 1931 METROPOLITAN. .GOO? CON-dltion, *380. 604-7021. Milford. 1W' METROPOLITAN 1-DOOR. A KFftfid new eftr. ft reft! buy for only** down. BJR>«NCf2^« RAMBLER. 666 8. Woodward Ays., Birmingham. MI 0-390Q, 56TM5N2A COUPE. POWER, (lido transmission, radio, heater, dedlt*da»h ^and’ ^autlful*met*lllc green finish. Thle futty effttpoed gem sells for S1895. CRI88MAN CHEVROLET. ROCHESTER. n1 2-jfftl. 1M‘'mON2A CORVAIR IN W derful condition. Lady one-oa oar. Clean, last, and llkt-new ulterior. Poworgild*. radio. - electric GLEAN Birmingham Trades WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC , 1350 N. Woodward Birminghahi boi % „ FORD STATION . WAOON. . door, radio, heater, VI engine, standard drive,! tone^oolor. jordy OUSON 195* FORD FAIRLANB John McAuliffe, Ford 830 Oakland Ava. FE 5-4101 060 FORD STARUNER WITH VI engine, radio, beater, autematlo transmission, power steering and brakes, a sharp rad eolorl Full pries 01,003. Op* year warranty. LLOYDS LIncoln-Mercury-Comet LLOYD'S Linooln-Mircury-Comet’ I960 FORD FAIRI.ANE VI 2-DOOR. ?:bl.r*h¥?lcidUt? tell You'll like this one. People s Auto Sales, “ Oakland, FE 2-2331. FoSd 2booS GALAXIE hardtop, full power, like n< trade. Superior i . Only i. 330 Oakland 4 981 FORD 'BUNLINIR CO vertlble. sharp red finish wl a whit* top. Full price *l,tl LLOYD'S LIncoln-Mercury-Comet Meteor-Engllsh Ford 313 s. Saginaw at. ~t 3-H31 5iil FORD GALAXIE 4-DOOR hardtop, .radio, hooter, power steering and brakes, a real sharp oar. at only $1*5 down) Payments of 9*6 66 per moothl One-year LLOYDS FORD low cost- sank loan Pontiac1* State 8anf.H,E>»3a* Valiants NICE THINGS COME IN LITTLE PACKAGES 1963 8IONET. The eporty bu sett 1 model. Loaded with e factory accessory available, eluding power steering Interior. Low mileage, si minum engine. Bank i we’re running It In t ad. A splendid 1*91 i 2-door hardtop,. big . 4tomatlc transmit ' perfect whitewall gorgeoUa interior in vinyl ___ C‘ ited nylon. This , light blue uty sells tor *1,645. IM1 VALIANT. A plus. ’ well equipped V-M0. 2-door eodan. , This sparkling blua beauty will maoulate tntortor,. perfect and ohrotea, Hava him--dollar* at our low price perfect paint hundreds of rio* of tl,M8. original ownarL lust L—P new battom, spark plun, points , and' oondenser and will recom-/ mend tba ast.. oomnlatily... But? gate prloodi at *1,1**.,. I960 VALIANT. A V-16S 4-dOOr. Ixoellent basic transportation. Standard transmission. good tires. Bala priced BIRMINGHAM .CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH 812 tVoodward • MI 7-3311538 1959 IMPERIAL A ff1MMI>lse solid white 4-door fierdtop.. luxurlotu swivel soaw, power steering, pwiror windows, imaiactuate throughout. Tbit fno-osmer, low aMleiw*. new. star trade-in Wtu . gly* ycjl jaxury beyond you* dreamt. *2. too. -BIRMINGHAM Oiryslcr-Plymouth W, Huron at. at Bltxapetn ub m, 1*37. PLYMOUTH SAVOY. RADIO manager Mr. White at King Auto Bales. Ill 8- Beglnaw. FI 8-0403 ■ ■■ .........• BIRMINGHAM Oirysler-PIymouth *12 g. Woodward_m Mill *63-1193 1964 FON1IAC. takf ”-----—— -J-“- with green te- ilpped. original hart now. 960 FORD FAIRLANB 506, town eodan. radio, heater, autematlo whitewall*. ExoeptlonaUy-clean. 295. meciiahio MnmuTWf' cW LUKURT SPECIAL 1186 Oadlttaa Fleetwood 4-door lovely blariTlto-teh. Uk* new totortor. exeellem flr*e.( 4-w*y power. You’ll roall; .SUBURBAN OLDSMOBILE 155 8, woodward .. / ■ ’ MS 6.4461 N*w BRfl Utad Can 17 PLYMOUTH. NA* STICK shlfti and V8 engine. Oleam ng Jet Black flnteh. and shining wutewen areir ridio and hest-«r. excellent condition Full price 9291. Aeeumo paymonte of per week no money down. Owl credit Manager Mr. Cook at FE 1-46*9. Kmg Auto Sales TBS&.ISBJM.’iK 195$ PLYMOUTH A spotless an 11•JSL.aaFttrl* ■ wagon, rust-free', Florida ci Splendid Interior. excellTOt tire ... FONTIAC WAOON. SHARP, $595. Alex Motors, 624-3192. . 19S7 PONTIAC 8TATTON WAOON 2-door. radio, heater, etoorta* , brakes, beautiful green and wl—-Whitewalls, excellent condition, and ready for that vacation!____ CLARKSTON MOTORS «49 Orchard Lake iiil tturiTAC ckii -n— -UO —,diO, heaver, power brake*. 1175 down, * af HI M per door wtttf steering ' tton%t 1919 PONTIAC, HYDRAMATTO, dlo. heater, white--1'* M"**" 91.200. OR 3-3073. 1666 4 DOOR PONTIAC CATALINA Russ Johnson USED CAR SPECIALS AC 4-DOOR HARD- 161* PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP ............ ........ Power eteerlng and brake*, matte. . 195* PONTIAC STAR CHIEF HARD; Power' eteerlng iabd brake*. -1 DISCOUNTS ON CONVERTIBLES 1962 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE ......... Dleoount Kimberly blue, power etei power brake*, taiy eye slats. 1*62 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE ......... Dleeour* *™1 Ensign blue, power etebring. 1182 PONTIAC CATALINA VBRTIBLE ....... Disco— .... All white, complete equipment, power steering and brake*. 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA C O VERTIBLB ...... Dleoount M.. A beige beauty, power ateering and powtr brakes. 19*2 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE ................. Dleoount *1 1962 RAMBLER AMERICAN CON-VERTUUJI iH^MnjiEailllM All white. Thle Is a demo with all wi flnleh, power eteerlng and bral and taty eye glae*. Ntw 1 warranty. 11*2 FONTIAC CATALINA HARDTOP ........................ 92996 All whit* tinted, power eteerlng RUSS, JOHNSON PBtlVATE OWNER 1(62 Chevy Impel* OmvertiM*. e.ooo east miles, bucket Mate, radio. PoworgUde. 256-h.p.. power •tearing and brakes, super sport equipment. *2.7«TCall FE 4-3313 1*66 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR LLOYDS ______n-MerCUry-Come Meteor-Engllsh Ford 232 8. Saginaw ft- ' YE 2*131 ■ Special > i*96f PO^TISC 71 . r Tempest 4-door Sedan and. It te * Uftt* t«m with all the little extra* »r en- M SSi? , $1895 . PONTIAC RETAIL store 65 Mt. Cleimen's St. . FE 3-7954 1(5* RAMBLiR lmnON, WAOON. Drive It out, tt is a beautttul buy for only 81.96*. BIRMINGHAM ' RAMBLER. 666 8. Woodward Ave.. Birmingham. MI 19*9 Rambler station waoon. A real gas saver and It haa radio end heater aul te to ex-cellent condition. FulT price 9*97, teMMli -* .sff ___Orodtt Manager Mr. Cook at FE M999, W. Huron St. at Elttahoth Lake Rd. 1959 STUDEBAKER LARK WAQ-on. a-cyl. engine. OTerdriy* with radio, heater, a real economy carl Uk* now! 9150 down, 934:04 per month. On* Yoai' Warranty. LLOYDS Linooln-Maroury-Comot „ LBMANZ CONVERT-uue, sue* Mack with rod Interior. 6.060 miles. 334-1744 THREE 19*7 CHEVROLET'S, PRICES start from 9498. all wttb no ’ money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES, "Pontiac’* IT' MMHliifi. Saginaw. FE TWO 1961 FORD 2-DOORS. P I and autematlo transmission. Real — --------wr( puu price ... money down. LUCKY SALES. "Pontlae'e Die-count not,” 199 S. Saginaw. 4-2214. 11.195. 1 1960 BUICK LE SABRE 9-DOOR ■ hardtop, radio, heater, power steering nnd brakea. sharp bli'-finiehl 9200 down. 9*9.6* p< month. On* year wnrrantyl . LLOYDS Llnooln-Morcury-Comet Meteor-Engllsh Pord 332 8, Saginaw st. ■ FE 2*9133. SELECT Used Cars 1962 RAMBLER Classic Deluxe 4.door station wagon, with radio, heater, whitewalls, and only 12,609 miles on’ thle on* owner, ftetehed In platinum gray! $1775 1957 Plymouth Custom Suburban with a V8 engine, automatic tranemteelon. radio, heater, power steering and - tinted glass, 81,900 miles oh this one-owner I * $895 1948 Jeep Universal OJ-2 with nn alum, cab, excellent condition throughout! $695 1961 Simca Aronde 4-door eodan. with radio, heater, white wall*, and In exeellant condition I About 39 mpg., 4-' speed transmission. Thle sparkling blue beauty 1a $1095 1960 Chevrolet j4-Ton Fleetilde, long b— “■* MB * jsr 1955 Ford Custom with VI angina, etlck ehlft, radio and heatorf $195 1961 Falcon Custom 2-Door with atandard shift, many axtn*. $1595 1961 Rambler Convert. with bucket seats, radio, heater, wbltewatte and standard shift. $1895 1961 Pontiac Convert. Loaded with accessories! $2695 1962 Rambler American 4-Door with radio, heater, white-walla, 1.590 miles on this beauty' $1795 1959 Chevrolet Bel Air 4-Door Sedan with radio, heat* $1295 / 1951 Chevrolet Pickup $195 1959 Pontiac Catalina 1- Door Hardtop with power steering, nutomntle transmission and many othor extra* on this sparkling beauty! $1395 1959 Rambler Wagon with atandard transmission, whitewalls, radio and heater. $895 I960 Rambler American 2- Door with radio, heater, etlok shift, solid rod finish and all vinyl interior! I a t r a ntoo throughout! $1195 BILL SPENCE Rambler.- Jeep HURRY - HURRY - HURRY BIG SALE AT BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER New 1962 Rambler 2-Door , $1689.50 Credit No Problem 111 ' > $99 Down OVER 100 FINE CARS TO CHOOSE . FROM^; ' - Also "Select" Used Cars SERVICE FINEST EVER 666 S. Wood^vard ' BIRMINGHAM MI 6-3900 | Used Cars m ROSE RAMBLER UNION LAKE . EM 3-413* ■ CLlA^ANCE'SALT" i q$8 Lloyd ... .....- 9291 1957 Renault. .... -939» U5f Chevy, iharp .... .... .87»5 1958 Buick conv.. like new..*1,093 mu Vnni 9.dnnr clean .....1345 No Fair Offar Ratoeed ^ Superior Auto Sales / 550 Oakland Ave. "DON'T Buy until you check lUAUTY AND PRICES WITH, Ul 1*59 POOR s-aoor nsrt 1858 Plymouth14-door . 1*89 Plymouth wagon 1959 Ford wagon 1959 Ford 2-door 1999 Plymoitth^2-door hardtop . 1959 Plymouth wagon , 1951 Plymduth 5, 3-door 1957 Ford 9-P**iengor wagon 1957 Plymouth wagon Many Transportation Specials SEE US BEFORE SAYING YES TO A DEAL R 6c R Motors Almost Everybody Is Happy Who Deals With SHELTON 1962 BUICK Special Deluxe Convertible. Power steering and brakes, Dy-naflow. radio, heater, whlto-watts. Many othor occosiorles. Beautiful red finleh with whit* top and rod leather trim. Sav* 1962 BUICK dows. power seat. You name It, It has It. Sav* 91.660. 1959 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coup*. V-S on-gin*, powerghde. radio, boater and whitewall tire*. All white finish with turquoise Interior. A beautiful car. 1961 American Ramblar custom. Power steering, powtr brakes, Hydramatlc, radio, boater, whitewalls. Yeah, man, It’s economical and; really loaded. Only 3.(00 actual mites jtwtnty six hundred) that’s all. Just Uk* naw. 1961 Chevrolet Bol Air 3-Door Hardtop with 6-oyltndor engine, standard transmission, radio, heater and whitewall tire*. Beautiful red finish with trim to match. *.600 1958 FAIRLANE 3-Door Hardtop. V-a I tires. 36,660 guaranteed actual 4-Door Custom Sedan. Standard transmission, r a dTo. haater, whitewalls. Dark blu* with trim to In a ten. A moat economical automobile. 1219. Easy term*. 1961 FONTIAC heater and Whitewalls. We nave two of toes* to ehoose, one blaok ftsKte «r,w whltewalT’irros’ and factory ft re*UyU°ioa5ed. Y#tSS, 7.“* demonstrator nnd your chance to save 8190. 1960 CHEVROLET tk-Ton Pickup. Standard transmission, t-ovllndor engine, and 1958 CHEVROLET 4-Door Wagon. V-9. Powergltde, radio, heater, whitewall*. New blue paint job with trim to match. Hurry on thin on*, th* prlo* te right nt only 9998. 1958 PLYMOUTH Sport Suburban Wagon. V-l engine. automatic transmission, 1956 PONTIAC . 4-Door Sodan. Hydramatlc. radio. hooter. If you are looking for th* right prlo*, don’t pa** this on* up: Only 99M. 1955 PONTIAC 3-Door Sedan. Hydramstle, radio, hoator. Wonderful transportation for only IMS. 1954 CHEVROLET lot Air Convertible frith standard transmission. Ye», folks, ft’* that urn* ot yoar. Priced to moko you happy at opiy ties. 1960 Pontiac Bonntvtll* Convertible with rnywH ,llMnATiNfitt.,9t9M1 ft’s that tims of .year so^coas* i£te*%U£;1 1958 OLDSMOBILE loaded. Factory l 1957 PONTIAC dows. Hydramatlc. radio, h 1959 PONTIAC Catalina 3-Door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes. Hydra-matic. radio, heater, whitewalls. Beautiful White ftolsh'snd ready te go. A real sporty ear. 1960 PONTIAC full decor group. Beautiful caravan gold.' It’S a honey for 1961 Rambler Automatic transmission, radio, hsater and whitewalls. Light graso finish with aateblng trim. An IdaaT second oar. 1961 Pontiac Star Chief with pawar steering, power brakes, radio, boater ana whitewalls. Dark rsd finish with 1959 Ford CouAtry Sedan Wagon. Power steering. V-S engine, automatic transmission, radio, haimr, whltewslls. Beautiful whit* fln- Bel Air with standard transmission. Hera’s one you'll find hard to beat for onty *100. 1960 Chevrolet Bel Air 2-Door Hardtop. Standard transmission, V-S tnglne, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Beautiful blue finish with trim to mateb. Llk* naw Insld* and out. 1959 Chevrolet 4-Door Wagon with pjwer^ stfsr- ecunomtcal family 1 1961 Pontiac > Catkltns sedan. Power steering. 1961"Ford Country Sedan Wagon. Powtr steering, power brakes, automatic transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires. A solid white beeuty with red trim. Save a bundle on thte uo*. 1958 BONNEVILLE Sport Coup*. Hoe power steering power brake*, Hydramatlc, See or Call One of Our Courteoua Salesmen: PAT JARVIS JQHNDONLEV ' JIM BARNOWSKY RON SHELTON GUS CORSLINE "v VAN HIPPS;.; SHELTON t PONTIAC-BUICK Rodiester ■’ QL 1-8133’ THE POldlAC >RESS, MjQNDAY, AUGUST 20, 1962 THIRTYipygi Program* furnished by atatlona listed to tUa column are subjected to ohaag* without notice cmeiMi *—wjbk-tv Omuwi 4-wwj-tv 'icao*m 7-wxyz-tv "'eao*»»t altmw-Tv oumt i*~wtot MONDAY EVENING 8:00 (2) Movie fCont.) (4) M Squad (7) Action Theater (cont.) (9) Popeye (cont.) : (56) Americans at Work 9: If (56) Introductory Psychology «:2» (2) Weather (4) Weather 6:31 (2) News (4LNew* (frNews (9) Rin tin Tin 6:40 (2) Sports (4) Sports 0:48 (2) News : (4) News v (7) News, Weather, Sports 7:00 (2) Danger Man (4) George Pierrot (7) Manhunt (9) You Asked For It (59) Your Marriage 7:30 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Pierrot (cont,) (7) Cheyenne (9) Movie: '.'Son of Lassje.” (1945) Laddie, son of beautiful collie Lassie, is mischievous but lovable and courageously devoted to Mis master ■ who goes off to war. Peter Lawford, Donald Crisp, June Lockhart, Nigel Bruce, Leon • Ames.' ■ '•■) (56) Live and Learn 1:00 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) National Velvet. (7) Cheyenne (Cont.) (9) Movie (Cont.) (56) Into Tomorrow 8:30 (2) Father Knows Best, , (4) (Color) Price is Right (7) Law of the Plainsman (9) Movie' 0:00 (2) Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour (4) 87th Precinct (7) Surfside 6 (9) Concert___——*—j »:'30""T2rCdhieciy Hour (Cont.) (4) 87th Precinct (cont.) (7) Surfside 6 (cont.) (9) Concert (Cont.) 10:00 (2) Hennesey . (4) Thresholds for Tomorrow (Special) (7) Ben Casey (9) News to: 18 (9i Weather 10:30 (9) Telescope UAW 10:30 (2) Money Talks (4) Prison Camp (Cont) (7) Ben Casey (Oont.) (9) Singalong Jubilee 11:00 (2) News (4) News (7)News (9> Movie: "Song of the Thin Man." (19471 Slaying takes place on gambling ship and Nick and Nora Charles come out of retirement to find killers. William Powell, Myrha Loy.. Keenan Wynn, Dean Stockwell, Leon Ames. 11:19 (7) News, Sports . U:l8 (2) Sports (4) Weather 11:20 (2) Weather (4) Sports |7) Weather 11:91 (2) Movie: "And the Angels Sing." (1944) Sister act made up of four Angel sisters becomes involved with bandleader who hasn’t any money to pay boys In his band. Dorothy Lasnour, Fred Mac-Murray, Betty Hutton, Diana Lynn. The TV Features By United Press International PETE AND GLADYS. 8 p.m. (2) Mickey Rooney is guest star. Repeat. LAW OF THE PLAINSMAN, 8:30 m. (7) “Clear TUlp ” Repeat. THRESHOLDS FOR TOMORROW, 10 p.m. (4) Science's new frontiers are examined. Repeat. BEN CASEY, 10 p.m. (7) "Odyssey of a Proud Suitcase." Francis Lederer plays an Austrian refugee doctor. Repeat. HENNESEY, 10 p.m. (2) Dr. Chick Hennesey purchases hi-fi set and discovers he’ll have to assemble the equipment. Repeat." MONEY TALKS, 10:30 p.m. (2) The first of five special telecasts i about the American economy. Carnegie Institute of Technology professor John R. Coleman will be essayist. The series runs five nights this week. TONIGHT, 11:30 p.m. Groucho Marx will host the show all week. Groucho's guests include model Gale Del Corral, songwriter Harry Ruby, comedian Charlie Manna, singer Joannle Sommers and E. G. ‘Marshall, star of "The Defenders." (Color). SnOW BCSING8S T“ r r r- r j- T r- T r rr IT nr IT nr TT rr hr at I Sw1 mme zr ■ 2 L sr 2T r 1 Sb 1 HT sr ar ■ R sr ■ w 3T sr ■ 35 sr i 1 ■MM* u ■ 40 MR IT 3 jr H sr 45 46 47 or sr RT BT KT 5T r mmm bS"1" mmm J9 (7» Movie: “Corvette K-225.” (1943) During World War H. crew of British corvette in North Atlantic is menaced by enemy from sea and air. Randolph Scott,. Robert Mitchum, James Brown, Ella Raines, Noah Berry Jr, . 11:99 (4) Tonight Show TUESDAY MOANING 6:16 (2) Meditations . •:99 (2) On the Farm Front 8(88 (2) News 6:39 (2) Spectrum '62 7:99 (2) B'Wana Don (4) Today (7) Funews 7:39 (7) Johnny Ginger 8:09 (2) Captain Kangaroo 8:39 (7) Jack Lal.ann 9:99 (2),Movie: "Every Glr Should Be Married." (4) Living (7) Movie: “This Is Life," Part 2. 19:00 (4) Say When 10:20 (7) Tips and Tricks j0:25 (7) News 10:80 <2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hun (7) Life of Riley 10:88 (9) Billboard (2) December Bride (4) (Color) Price is Right (?) Ernie Ford ' (9) Holiday in, Canada 11:39 (2) Brighter Day 14) Concentration . V). Yours tor a Song (9) Movie: “The Square Peg." TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) First Impression (7) Jane Wyman 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow T4) Troth or Consequences (7) Camouflage 12:48 (2) Guiding Light 12:80 (9) News 12:88 (4) News 1:00 (2) Star' Performance (4) Best of Groucho (7) Gale Storm (9) Movie: "High Barbaree’ 1:28 (7) NeWs 1:89 (2) As the World Turns (4) People Are Funny (7) How to Marry a Millionaire (4 > Faye Elizabeth (2) Password ’ (4) Jitn Murray (7) Day in Court ', (56) Big Picture » 2:39 (2) Divorce Court (4) Loretta Young , (7) Seven Keys (36)Discovery 3:00 (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day (7) Movie: "The Yearling,’ Part 2. , (56) Survival in the Sea 3:30 12) To Tell the Truth (4) Our Five Daughters (7) Who Do You Trust? (96) huckskin Bob 3:89 (2) News 1:00 (21 Secret Storm (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstand (9) Vacation Time (96) French Through TV 1:39 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (56) Tomorrow’s Craftsmegj 4:89 (7) American Newsstand 1:68 (4) News 1:09 (2) Movie: "Flying Down to -...Rio,".. (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Action Theater (9) Popeye and Pals (56) What’s New? 6:39 (56) Detroit Heritage (4) Carol Duvall * Or. Coier on 8 singer Perry 2 Bite of ToJ H Of Vi*eummei JO Sho9hoaeon Ckrolinei so Weary S2 Aetreee Oerdner ' 53 High itoiea . 54 ConUaent end family S Actor Karloff g Tv’e Flaming 7 Neweman Brooke S Ltd* 4 Forlent 10 Spar tl Table ecrape 24 Waetara atate 26 Alwaye 27 Perela 20 Aeeletant S 3» Negatives 31 Baking chambar 35 gplatartea 37 Ounamoke a Kitty 31 Paladln'e 43 Italian painter 44 ftiioua 45 Ceramic pleca 45 Algorlan' port 47 Remainder IS THIS PICKETING? — This was the scene to Los Angdes what Teamsters Local 420 ordered the five drivers at the. W. E. Cooper Lumber Cbmpany to go on strike. Drivers Hyman Spiegel (left) and Bud Ellis relax in comfort AF Fhetafai using equipment furnished by the firm they are picketing. Lola Ogborn (right), a company office worker, carries a sign against the union. But Vice President Cooper advised them: "If you’ve got to picket, you’ve got to picket, that’s all." Old Testament Translation to Eliminate All ' LONDON” (AP)~A panel of biblical scholars is weeding out "nonsense" passages and such words ’irgin and Jehovah from the Old Testament in a revolutionary English language translation rhich aims at more accuracy and readability. «* * ★ Prof. Godfrey R. Driver, director of the 10-man panel, said the changes are expected to stir as much controversy as did those in a New -Testament- version- by. Winnie's Daughter Faces Drunk Charge BRIGHTON, England (UP!) Sarah Churchill, daughter of Sir Winston, was arrested on drunk charges during the weekend and taken to a hospital early today. T-W * * The 47-year-old actress was scheduled to appear in Brighton Court today but the court agreed to postpone her hearing until she is well enough to make an appear- She faces charges of being drunk ind disorderly On the beach front of this popular south coast resort. companion group of scholars. It published last year. NAME NEW ENGLISH’ The two-new translations will be combined as the New English Bible which is sponsored by joint committee of Britain’s major Protestant churches. Prof. Driver said the revised Old Testament, which has been in the works for 15 years, may be ready for printing in four years, a year head of schedule. The panel” hi using the 9th Century Hebrew text for part in the first major British revision of the Bible since the King James version appeared 351 years ago. Driyer, 70, professor of philology at Oxford University, aaid the Dead Sea scrolls proved "very disappointing indeed from point of view. I do not think there to-e moreHharr twodozert places where they gave us substantial help with a difficult passage, though they do provide a complete Isaiah, probably or possibly of the first century B.C." A NEW RHYTHM Prof. Driver said the new wording will give the Old Testament a wholly new .idiom and rhythm. Passages of poetry will be redone In verse, affecting nearly all the books of the prophets and particularly Isaiah. The word viigift. will bet replaced in Isaiah’s "behold a Virgin shall conceive" and other passages because the original Hebrew sans only a marriageable young woman, whether virgin or it,” he said. “Jehovah” disappears because it was a deviation produced in 1520, and “leprosy” goes since in biblical times it meant a sldn disease now called psoriasis. Find Old Polish Road WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Ar-cheologists say they have dug up what appears to be the remains of a turnpike built in the Middle Ages at Krakpw, in southern Poland. They raid thick, carefully finished strips of oak and pine, believed produced in , (he century, were uncovered. Mort Folks in Canada OTTAWA (AP)-rCanada’s J»] ulation totaled 18.6. million July i Increase of 831,000 over last year. \ • - - Today's Radio Programs— WXVS (12711) WCAB (IIM) WPON (1464) WJBK («*•> WJBK. 'Bobrrt K. t Wwj. kutiDMi mm WXYZ. AIM Drtior • CKLW. Bud Davlti WCAB, Art CMMr k:skjc 1:*4-WJN. OMrt Hou»» WWJ. fhon* Opinion wxvb. M Mojjkn v WJIUl! Jork DM BoUbOf ’ WCAR. o. «•»*•» . , 7 WPON. MSWtt Tin# 7:J4—WJS. Choral WWJ.,Mom Opinion CKLW, S. Walton WXVZ, Lea Allan *:44-WJi. Concert CKLW. 1. (talon WPON. Nam. JIM *:50—WWJ. F*y. Kltr.aheth 0:54—WJR, Tonight ' WPON, Nam, Ttao 5:J4~WJB. Waahlnfton Vie* WPpN. Hew«, Tlno ln;30 -WJ5. Rtqueet WWJ Wort* No«o CKLW, Joa Oantlla WCAR N’awa. Sports WPON, Ntwa, Tlno 1:14—WJR, B. Reynoida WWJ. Organ M>t»l«. CKLW. B Staton _ WCAR. O.N. Waah WCAJR, O. Btevana 4:00—WJB. Votna rt A*rt wxvz. ;r.*d wr cklW. Par«. ty» OBs* SjjlBRgV. wfON lam, TJ* *“■* 4iS»—WJR. Mm m hi . WJBK. Nam, Afirp WPON! N.Vi, Don tfetoas 1:54—WXTB. Ne*a. Woll cklW, tram, ttajfi wjbk, Nawa, Awry a oo-WJR. n»w«, i. omit - WWJ. Nawa. Roharta wjsg m*i. Awpr WFON. NtCa,*0*> MeLtod WJBK, Niki. Avery *:«*— WJR. seara. Mur WWJ, Nawi, Mariana WXYZ, Paul Harvey. CKLW, Neva, David WJBK, Nawa, Avery WCAR. NrMariya WPON, Nawa. Don MoLaod Staa-WJR, Jack Harrla CKLW, Bin Moriiaa wxvz. Pri| Wolf I4i«a-WJR. Karl Man WWJ, Newt, Mariana WXIflL Sraakfaet Club CKlw -too Tan .. wjbk. Nora. RoM . WPON Nawa. Jerry on ran. nevi, neon Nawa. Lynkor , 1 ^ Tima <0 Chat m w WCA TOBSPAT APTSBMOON Itito-WJR. Newe. Pana. WWJ. Nowe, Lnttar' win, Nawa. .wiaMr , OEM, Nowa. 4mM ' ,. wjaz Nawa, mid WCAR, mVK'fari* _ WPON. Nawa, Jerry Olaan ljJ4^jR^T1nia far MUile NeweV*R*ld WXTB Wlntoij Now* 1:00-WJR. N5W5. Show wxfZ. Wlntor Nowe newe, onow: WWJ, Nowe. Kultnon WXYZ. Wlotcr NOW! CKLW, New*. Joe^Van WPON. Mom! lob Oroo Sita—wjr. mm. SHowowao WJBK, Nawa, Robart Laa WCAR. Nawa, BHeriovii WPON, Nawa. lob pntob aisa-wjp. Mote Hen wwj, mnpbMla, Rultmaa CKLW. Kennedy Cellini Rebel Leaders Seeking Office Most Algerian Chiefs Included in Lists of Election Candidates WILSON First Auto Accident Happened in Ohio City By EARL WILSON VAN WERT, Ohio—Who’s this Henry Ford they talk about and whereto this town called Detroit? I’ve Just interviewed a great old boy named Jim Swove land, 91, whose face should be put on a stamp. He was in America’s first horseless carriage accident—and he didn’t sue anybody. , Not only that! he even claimed Ihe felt perfectly fine for the next 70 years. “Yessireeeee,’’ he says,1 "the year' was 1891 . . .’’ The gas buggy (a three wheeler with fringe-on-top) was smoking and roaring down Main St. in a town down the road b piece called Ohio City, Ohio. The driver suddenly saw a tree stump in the street. He swore a little, — “Carn-sarn!" pw»b-; ably — swearved, but glanbed off $he stump— and crashed rattlety-bang into a- hitching post. He was doing a torrid 10 miles an hour, he scared the horses tied up nearby, and they started kicking. So did the village constable, who came panting after him. The driver was John William Lambert, who also built tho ear. And Lambert's 1191 car was a year ahead of tbo Duryea Brothers’ 1892 ear generally credited with being first—«o the Lambert car was really No. 1, says our hero. ■ ★ ★ Here In Van Wert they are happy to let Ohio City have the first car and the first accident. . . they Just want to claim to be the peony, capital and .the only plabe where lelderkranz Cheese is. made. They laugh when folks boast about "Imported” lciderkranz and find lfs from Van Wert. ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN,*LY. ... A Ramfls Trujillo’s trying to buy back hia polo ponies, impounded by the Dominican government". (Texas oilman John Mecom bought 20 of ’em) ,.. Martha Raye’s been asked to star on Broadway )n the bib of Folly Adler., ..Sophia Loren’s Illness put her film, "Condemned at Altons," three weeks behind schedule. Ricky Nelson will add trumpet playing to his act... Joey Dee and Gary Crosby will team in an album of ballads. EARL’S pearls: Abe Rothberg reports his three-year-old son has the making of an executive: "Already he takes two hours to eat lunch.” . * ^ ; TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: It’s a recession when you have to move in with your In-laws; a depression Is when they move In with youT-Hwold Coffin, San tranglgco Examiner. WISH I’D SAID THATt You don't know what real courage ls.ti^l you've danced the twist with a girl carrying a pocketbook. Everybody's impressed by the phone company spending 13 million on Tblstar. .why, they mgke more than that from teen-agers on a ralny Saturday. That's e»rl brother. (Copyright 1992) ALGIERS (UPI) - Meet of the men who led Algeria’s nationalist forces through the seven and on half year war of independent today were named candidate* for the nation’s first national bly. * ' * * ... The list of the 196 candidates submitted by the National Liberation Front (FLN) tor the Sept. 2 elections was published today. Among thoae named were atrongman Ahmad Ben Bella, P r o v I al oa a I Government (GPKA) Premier Ben Yoaasef Ben Khedda and former provia- The publication of the candidate list followed weak* of wrangling between Ben Bella’s ruling political bureau and the leaders of the powerful willaya (military district) councils. ALL REPRESENTED Supporters of all three contending factions — the political bureau, the wllliayas and the deposed Provisional Government — were In iluded, i Tbo election of those named on tho candidate Hata^waa virtually certain. No oppoaltlon party Hat* had been Hied by laat night'* midnight deadline. Among the prominent leader* left off the candidate lists Col. Houari Boumedlenne, head of the wartime exterior army general staff. ■ # 4r ★ It was believed Boumedjenne’i name was omitted because the political bureau has st ipulated army personnel elected lo the assembly must become Inactive. Four of the seven members of Ben Bella’s political bureau were included. They were Ben Bella. Itadj Ben Alla. Mohammed! Said and Mohamed Boudiaf. Bomb Blast Reportsd in China Nsar Macao MACAO UN — A bomb’ exploded' sat night on the Chinese sidej of the border, the fourth such losion this month. , Macao residents living near the] border reported they heard gunfire on Chinese territory elmrtlvl before 10 p.m., and the bomb went] ott about 20 minutes later. Space Work Will Repay Billions Being Invested WASHINGTON (UPI) - There's gold in space. , Space agency officials say direct dividends such as those from weather and communication satellites, and incidental harvests from improved electronic gadgetry and materials, will repay the billions being Invested in 'the exploration and.exploitation of space. Take the incidental payoffs first. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) says they will be tremendous. For example: ★ ■ Rr ★ •Miniature sensors used to monitor, astronauts’ reactions are being converted Into "electronic which keep watch at a distance on hospital patients. -■8pace-proof material* are being made Into nearly indestructible toaster*, refrigerator*, pota and pana. These; however, may tuhi out to be petty pickings compared to the dividends already being realized from weather satellites and anticipated from communication stations in space. WEATHER SATELLITES The United States launched the first of. seven, planned TIROS weather satellites on April 1 1960. Rr Sr # Already TIROS weather eyes aw i credited with saving many lives j and preventing a billion dollar* in property loss by providing advance | warning of hurricanes and other »vere storms. t The big benefit .from meteorological station* in space is that they keep a global watch on the weather. Only one-fifth of the earth is covered by conventional weather observation methods. The thousands of cloud cover picture* taken by TIROS satellite* have been fed Into the world's forecasting network*. The latest TIROS weather stations are »q designed as t o cover 22 million square miles more of the earth’s surface than was photographed by the earlier ones. TIROS DATA . Although the weather bureau has been using TIROS data In Its regu-j lar forecasts for sometime, it does not expect to have a weather satellite system operating routinely on a world-wide basis until NIMBUS, cotnes along. NIMBUS,* considerably more advanced than TIROS, will bo lamwhed Into north-south polar orbit*, which means It Will observe practically every spot on earth once every 12 hours. The performance of TIROS' Is1 limited by the fact that It Is I launched Into east-west orbits. Unlike TIROS, NIMBUS will be I oriented so thRt Ha cameras are aimed constantly at the earth. < The television eyes aboard TIROS pointed at empty space much of the time. In addition to these research and development satellites paid for by NASA, there will be four NIMBUS satellites — two each in 1964 and, 1965 — bought by the Weather reau for use In a full-fledged, completely operational apace weather system. But not even NIMBUS will satisfy the weather man. He wants more than one view of the local weather every 12 hours. He wants something thtf can keep k steady, eye on a storm, of whatever' ufc-ture, from beginning to end. .v To aeecmpiMi this, NASA (a plannli.g AEROS. tentatively scheduled tor lauuchtog to 1919. AEROS satellites will b* fired into equatorial orbits 22,300 ndles high where they will seem to hold1 a fixed position in reaped-to-1 i point on earth under them. They will be able to scan the earth constantly over both hafod- Even if weather satellite* merely brought about a 10 per cent improvement in forecasting accuracy, it twould result in savings to fanners and others' "totaling hundreds of millions of dollara mutually.’’ (AdvtrUatmaaD IS Don t Cot Com Calluses, Warts UseNe*MagSeRab0ff Ttumaaada af wKwan fiw sSifam fonaulMtoa that auk* (baa aff saialtMlr and lately without denser of nfectioa 11*00 ctelling, aeide or aacativoi. Secrai 10 a GAS CONVERSION BURNER $6495 Automatic Controls OFFER GOOD FOR 10 DAYS ONLY Chamllor ■ Hoifof Go Gas! OR 3-5131 4431 Parnell, Pontiae Cost of Development $80 Billion in Decade WASHINGTON (UPI) — About $80 bUllon was spent on all types of research and development in the United States In the decade between 1951-52 and 1961-62, according to the National Science Foundation.- The expenditure was approximately. tour times that of the previous decade and equivalent lo the entire federal budget for 1991. The Science Foundation survey covered research and development spending by government, industry, colleges and universities and nonprofit Institutions./ RENTAL SOFT WATER Unlimited Quantities only $3 per month SALES'— $99 UP CITY SOFT WATER CO. ~ SOFT WATER $2 PER J MONTH Hard Water Trouble? CALL US Wb Servic* All Mokll LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. Division of Mich. Haollno, lac. II Nawbarry St. fl &M31 MICH. CRC0IT COUNSELLORS CONSOLIDATE YOUR 0KITS Fhsat Ft 5-44*4 j FoalUi-'a Oldf.t >04 UHNl D.kl MaD.a0n.0i Oi. St0l0 B0taUl.« — Ll00*»0a — B*te04 Until the; Civil War, peanut' glowing and eating in the United States was confined to a small of eastern Virginia. \ I 1962 AIR CONDITION IRS $161.00 SWEET'S Radio & in. LET US BUILD YOU A | BASEMENT!] .1 Only , .-<1 H THE COST S */• or Ml I SDDITION I To HbocI Foot Society WASHINGTON.» -r Dr. Earl G. \aplan. a Detroit chiropodist, hasj been named, president-elect of the American Podiatry Association. in la past presides! of the American College of Foot Sur-godh I. j | prii xstimaVii j Up to 20‘Year Payment Plan • ADDITIONS '• GARAGES w MODIRNIZATION j I CONTRACTING , COMPANY | Call Us Anytime ' . 0| 4^11 I GRAVES ■PC'^V.- / ‘ ~ 1 .—’fi=t^YTT "jjfjp^' ■ lyt IS IliiMfifi®slfflw '':::' ,■ t ''/••'/'•('■ Curiously, though the Pieta Is one of the moat beloved religious masterpieces in the world, it has no historical basis. The Scriptures do not indicate that the Virgin Mary had a single moment alone with Christ after he was taken down from the Cross. A MOTHER'S GRIEF Michelangelo’s purpose, how-ever, was to portray In gleaming marble the grief of a mother for her martyred son. Michelangelo overcame many technical difficulties in carving the Pieta. He wished to depict Mary as a youthful woman, her purity unmarred by age. To the Son he allotted His full 33 years. His genius made the anomaly work. 'There also was the problem of portraying, without awkwardness, s full-grown man lying In his mother's arms. Thlj he accomplished by giving Mary delicately folded robes to form a pyramidal compooltlon. The artist enlisted the aid of many Roman Jews, in their early thirties, to pose for him as the slain Christ on a wooden framework .simulating the seated donna. His Mary Was the-composite of many youthful Italian women—the daughters or wives of friends. He gave her Florentine features. To make the white marble glow when he had finished the carving, Michelangelo polished it-painstakingly with pumice. RECEIVED 4M DUCATS For his two years of dedicated work, Michelangelo received 430 gold ducats in installments. He and his, young apprentice often went without proper food and clothes. It is assumed that the Pieta will be insured for at least a million dollars before it is brought to New York, says the National Geographic Society. Oddly, the Pieta is the only art work that Michelangelo e v signed. While In St. Peter’s day, he was annoyed to hear Informed visitors speculating about the possible Identity of the sculptor. Again, under cover of night, Michelangelo returned to the Vatican with his hammer and chisel. band that is part of Mary’s garments he wrote an inscription: “Michelangelo Buonarroti of Florence made this.'* Plastic Bomb Explodes Near Franco's Villa SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain (AP)-Officials said a small plastic bomb exploded Sunday near Ayete Palace, summer residence of General Francisco Franco, The blast damaged only the windows of a nearby villa. Officials said police found 'an unexploded bomb in the same area. New Honor for California Publisher Anti-BirchFighter, 85, Wins Journalism Award druggist, be bought tiurSlRtA Barbara Daily Independent Storke’s News-Press, « daily of more than 31,000 circulation, Is the lineal descendant of the little "In* Starke acquired. WATERVILLE, Maine W-New honor came today to an 85-year-old fighting California newspaper-— already twice honored for challenged, last year, the activities of the John Birch Society, a mill-tanily conservative group. A committee, including noted ewspapermen, now has named Santa Barbara publisher Thomas More Storke to be the 1962 recipient of an award given yearly by Colby College in memory of an alumnus, martyred; editor Elijah Parish ’Lovejoy. When shot to death in Alton, 111., Vov. 7, 1837, Lovejoy was defeating — against a mob — his neWs-iaper plant and his right to publish truth as he saw it He has jeen hailed as “America’s first martyr to the freedom of the press.” The award< to be presented Nov,. 8 at Colby’s observance of the lStth anniversary of Love-joy’s si ay log, will reeogalze Sforke as a newspaperman of “Integrity, character,’ the Lovejoy heritage of teuton*- Owner-editor of the Santa Barbara News-Press, Storke is dean of California publishers, having given 61 of his 85 years to running his newspaper. , ★ it ' ytjr ,> ■ Today's Colby College announce-tent noted ..that storke last November received the Lauterbach Award given each year to American newsman for outstanding work In the field of .civil liberties. He was cited tor “pointing out the dangers to American free- dom created by extremists of the radical right-” In May this year, the Colby announcement also noted, ho received the PnHtxer Prim for editorial writing — tor calling attention to 'what bis newspaper said was a "campaign of hate and vilification’’ by the bn Birch Society. The committee .that chose him for the Lovejoy Award consists of Herbert Brucker, editor of the editorial page of the Hartford (Conn.) Courant; Erwin D. Canham. adittu of the Christian Science Monitor; Dwight E. Sargent, editor of the editorial page of file New York Herald Tribune; Robert E. L. Strider, president bf Colby College; and Reginald Sturtevant, chairman of the Colby College board of trustees. The ruddy-fared Tom Storke includes in his Ancestry Spanish lieutenant Jose Francisco do Ortega, who discovered San Francisco Bay and the Golden Gate in 1769. Storke went to work as a |6-a*week cub reported in 1898 in his native seaside *™cttyr Three years later, with 32,000 he borrowed from a Try to Half Copiers SAIGON, South Viet Nam (*» 4 Communist guerrillas are sticking 15-foot bamboo poles Into paddy-fields surrounding Viet Cotig villages to prevent landings by troop-carrying U. S. helicopters. Register in Mexico City MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico Qty tbllege wgisteredT^ tT“S. students for the 1961-62 school terms, officials report. >NIW LOCATION Mil HATCHIIY ROAD OR 4.1101 ' t; WMjm M-M' w jUrpw* M„ lUrtfc W toMnqr, ' ~»wi w '; 'Iflou fyudt C^an’t {Seat 5^kat 'flatlona^ Iflfjeat! EXTRA LEAN SLICED BOILED Lb. Pkg. “loiy Slim" fully Cotkod WhoU or _ — Boneless Hams ’“iST “• 69* Sliced Bacon . ^ National’s Com Fed Roof Chois* Chuck Steak National’s Cam Fed Roof . Soloct Swiss Steak. & ** pzt VALUABLE COUPON SAVI WITH THIS COUPON -. Ixtra Loan, Slicad. BOILED HAM 79* Ring Bologna . 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The stricken boy, James William Orr, 14, flew here from Sao Paolo, Brazil, Aug. .11 on a plane with more ---t.............4 than 80 other persons, in* ' ' eluding his parents and a 46 Fora Models Offered for '63 Newsmen at Showing; Four Series Extending Their Mhes < By HARRY REEI) Managing Editor, The Pontiac Preen DEARBORN — Forcl will offer 46 models in four lines, 13 more then lust year, company officials revealed today to newsmen attending a press preview of the firm’s new line tor 1963. Included In the Falcon, Fairlane, Galaxie and Thundcrbird series will be 13 more models than last year, wltlf a convertible in the popular Falcon line. Ford officials said millions of dollani wHI be saved tor consumers by the extension of service-saving features throughout all models. “We will be offering our customers Thunderbird-inspired styling in cars from 91.900 to 95,000," said M. S. McLaughlin, Ford Division assistant general manager. Ford will have 15 sedans, 10 hardlops, 6 convertibles and 15 station wagons. Fifteen of the models will have bucket seats. New highs of reduced maintenance for all lines were outlined. The Thundcrbird will have 100,000-mlle,. or tl-year chassis lubrlcalloti. In all other Ford lines the chassis lube interval has been boosted ■ to 36,000 miles. New in the Falcon Futura series are two convertible^, a Fast bark hardtop, a Fastback sport coupe and a 4-door sedan. The Fairlane line gains five models tor ’63 with addition of a 2-door hardtop, sport coupe and three station wagons. The restyled Galaxie will offer a new Moor hardtop in the 500XL series. Three of Ford’s Tines will offer 4-speed, floor transmissions. Iraq Upsets Turkey ANKARA, Turkey lift- The for-eign ministry said today violations of Turkey’s air space by planes from Iraq have cau&d a grave situation along the frontier. brother and sister. He , passed through IdlewUd Airport, traveled by cab to, Grand, Central Terminal and sat in the huge station's waiting room for 8 hours before boarding a train for Toronto., If-was in Toronto that thle boy, described by his missionary father as feeling “under the weather,” was taken to a doctor and eventually lo pital. Canadian authorities said the boy’s illness was virtually, certain to be smallpox, although confirming tests were still to be made. U.S. Public Health. Service officials said there was no doubt. BEGIN SEARCH Authorities here, mindful of the contagious nature of the disease, embarked on a hunt for everyone who may have contacted him here, i * * * This included passengers on the plane and the train, customs and, airline personnel at the airport, taxicab driver, a luggage porter, and all those who may have been in the terminal’s main waiting room white James was there. From Washington, telegrams were sent out to 71 of Die 74 passengers on the boy’s flight, Argentine Airlines Flight S2. New York Police reported today they Had located all but six of M New York-bound passes-gera. The highly contagious disease, which may bring death to as many as 35 of each 100 victims, war last reported in this country in 1947. ‘IN NO DANGER’ James entered Riverdale Isolation Hospital in Toronto Saturday and is in no danger. according lo doctors. “Clinically the boy has the disease ... but there need for panic or alarm. We do BERLIN DEMONSTRATORS — Youthful West Berlin demonstrators rush past police near Checkpoint Charlie at the Berlin wall yesterday , AP rhotof.l to reach a Russian bus carrying Soviet guards. Police cleared the crowd from the wall niter the bus was pelted with bottles. Delegates at Geneva Reds Reject Partial Ban GENEVA lifi — A Soviet spokesman today rejected proposals for partial,'nuclear test ban treaty en as Swedish scientists reported the Russians set off a hew atmospheric blast in their current testing scrle A treaty that would-bap all hpt underground tesla "will not settle the problem,*' the spokesman told reported before the opening of the 72nd session of the 17-nation disarmament conference. The Idea of a half-way treaty baa been advanced by Brasil, Sweden and Italy becauwe the nuclear powers are deadlocked on methods of enforcing a ban on underground testing. Their idea is to stop atmospheric tests without delay lo east fallout dange Swedish scientists reported the new test in the Soviet Arctic pri ing grounds was in the range of 12 megatons, the equivalent of 12 million tons of TNT. It is the third recorded by Sweden in the series. DELEGATES ASSEMBLE There was no mention of the not anticipate an, epidemic," said {Swedish reports as the delegate Dr. Matthew B. Dymond, Ontario's minister of health. The boy’s missionary father, James Robert Orr, said his son probably contracted the disease In the'Interior of Brasil, where the family of five had been on a mission until they flew to NeW| York via Argentine Airlines Aug. It. . To cope with the challenge, the New York Hctillh Lepdrtment set up 12 vaccination centers in Manhattan and the Bronx, while Issuing I :all for all those who may have come in contact with the boy step forward without delay. ★, ★ * While the city vaccinated more than 30U persons at its centers yesterday, the U.S. Public Health (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) assembled and hoard chief Sovic Delegate Vasily Kuznetsov aracr his government "will do everything possible lo come to speedy agreement to end ail nuclear weapons tests." Conference sources Maid he made no reference,to>- the possibility of the partial treaty rejected by his spokesman. But he laid stress on the words “all tests.” Kuznetsov said every effort must be made to achieve some results the issue before, the U.N, eraT‘Assembly me^t* next" month and added: "It is now up lo the, United States." Sir Michael Wright of Britain re pli&l that the persistent Soviet opposition to the idea of spot checks in the Soviet Union to guard against cheating raised doubt thafjto agree to an even smaller num-Moscow ever would agree fective controls. h h ★ Wright said the United States' and Britain had agreed to cut their (conference cochairmen, begin din-in-! cussing; questions to govern on-site ‘equest for 20 annual on-s spections to 12 hnd now were ready inspections. ★' ★ Russia's Third N-Test Blasts Out Over Arctic FROM OUR NEW8 WIRE! UPPSALA, Sweden — Russia today continued its new series of nuclear tests in the Soviet arctic with an atmospheric explosion of 12:megaton force, capable of wiping out a large city, Swedish scientists said. The blast was recorded at the seismological institution of Uppsala University 2 Are'Well' After Rare Transplant LONDON (UPIi - Two British doctors were reported "doing well’ today after one pf them sacrificed his kidney so it could be tr planted in the other man to i his life. ★ * it Ix-hour opera l ion last v British surgeons took a medical gamble by transpiarttthg a kldriej from Dr. David Spencer, 32 lo Dr lan Clark, 34. It successful, it Is believed it would be the first time such a transplant has “taken" In a ^kidney switch between people not related by blood. and an official announcement said the explosion was set off at 5:02 a.m. EDT. The nuclear test was the third in the current series in the Novaya Zenilya area. The first was a huge 40-mega-ton bomb, the second largest ever exploded by the Russians. It was set off on Aug. S. . The second bomb was exploded on Aug. 10 and had a blast power of 3 megatons. An institution spokesman said no oilier lests have been recorded ently. The most powerful bomb ever lorded,. 57 megatons, was set dff by the Soviet last fall. That test and today’s were made over the Arctic' Novaya Zemlya Peninsula. Uppsala scientists estimated the latest blast to be about 12 megatons, equivalent to explosion of 12 million tons of TNT. Orders Police toCrackDown on Wild Protest Demonstrators at Wall Hit GIs, Reds After Escaping Youth Killed BERLIN (A^-Mayor Willy Brandt today ordered West Berlin police to crack down on rioters "with the necessary vlgof ” after wild weekend demonstrations at the Red wall brought attacks on Americans as well as Soviets. East and West Berlin police also were involved in the meelees. Brandt appealed for calm in a radio speech. Thousands of angry West Berliners marched, shouted and Itirew stones at Soviets, Americ wall, East German border guards andlf their own police Sunday. RED SLINGSHOTS Huge alingshots were qsed hurl tear gas grenades from the Communist aide. The’ rioting was to protest shooting by East Berlin border guards of a young refugee trying to escape. He waa left to die slowly on the East side of the wall while American troops and West police watched from the other side. Maj. Gen. Albert Watson, the U.S. commandant, disclosed the Soviet command had refused invitation to discuss the increased with American, British and French commandants at U.S. headquarters. Watson had bffered to lift a ban on the Soviet commandant visiting (he U.S. sector, ★ ♦ ★ A spokesman for the three West m powers deplored the Soviet re1 fusal and declared: “The Irresponsible actions of the East German regime in the Soviet sector and their murderous use of fire on defenseless Individuals have produced a grave situation. "The acting Soviet commandant •annol, by refusing lo discuss the situation, divest himself of his direct responsibility." RIOT INTO MORNING Young West Berliners — best available estimates put their ber al about 5,000—rioted into the early morning hours. A red-haired young West Berliner called tor another demonstration Obstacle Course! The Western spokesman said "Sen. Watson sent his letter to-the acting Soviet commandant at the height of last night’s rioting. Watson warned a situation was developing rapidly that "could (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) ap raster** A ,WET GREETING r- President Kennedy, staying, at the home of his brother-in-law . Peter Lawford al Santa Monicii, Calif., headed across the beach for a swim in the oepan yesterday and was almost mobbed by both men and women. $ofoe went into the water fully clothed in order to shake his hand. JFK Goes for a Swim; Crowd Swamps’ Him LOS ANGELES (Al—President Kennedy, weekending here, decided to take a swim in the Pacific—and was. almost swamped by a throng of 1,000 admirers. The Beene was reminiscent of Coney Island on a ----------■--------♦ muggy Fourth of July. The Thunderstorms This Evening; Clear Tomorrow There's a chance of Ihunde showers this evening, but skies will be Clear tomorrow, the weather-nan says, Tonight's.low will be.64. 'iiesday’s high is expected to reach 82. For the next live days temperatures Will average 7- to 4 degrees below the normal high of 77 to *2 and normal low of it lo SO. Wednesday will be somewhat warmer with cooler weather returning Thursday and Friday. Pre-■ipitation will total one half to three quarters inches as showers Ihufidershowers mostly Thursday. f-** . •• - ★ • * ★- - The lowest temperature preceding 8 a m. in downtown Pontiac was 69. At 1 p m, the merdtory stood at 71. Secret Service, to a man, was in a mild state of shock. Bystanders walked into the sea fully clothed as the President strode into the ocean in front of the Santa Monica beach home of his brother-in-law, Peier Lawford. It happened Sunday during the President's 17-hour visit to southern California, Allying trip which ended shortly before midnight when the presidential jet took off to return to Washington, D.C. The President arrived in Washington at 7 a.m. (Pontiac time). * ★ It had been billed as a non-political trip, although the President obviously helped the cause of Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown when they dedicated the 9511-million San Luis Dam in mitral California on Saturday. The President spent much of his time In southern California with Lawford — whose wife, like the President's, Is vacationing In Europe. The president find his filni star In-law spent /touch of Sunday lounging by the pool of the actor's home, tossing around a football, tContinued on Page 2, Col. 8) Signals New Era on Seas YOU, 120 NO. 166 A Being Built for MSUO Sports £l \ir,! GIRDKRKD FOR rattle — This fall, students at Michigan State University Oakland will wage sports contests under steel girders now rising for MSUO’a 915-mllUon Intramural Building. , The 109xi 50-foot gym is the second majpr pari of the building to,go up.f Not shown Is a 100x97-, toot swimming pool building which only awaits completion of tms interior to be read^ for use. The two buildings will be connected by an ad* mlnietratibn building for which concrete Has "Everyone calls my husband a hero," said Mrs, Spencer * Inst night. "To me he is just a kind, ordinary man," MET IN FEBRUARY The two doctors first met last February and had had little con-lacl with each other when Dr. Spencer learned that Dr. Clark, who had only one kidney, u was Sinking lower and lower because his one remaining organ not doing its job properly. Mrs. Clark snld that Dr. Silencer came' to visit her and her ailing husband one day and said: “What are you worrying about. I have a kidney lo spare," "We were very moved by this incredible offer,” Mrs. Clark said. "He said it flippantly but I knew he meant it." Dr. Spencer meant it all right — because, according to his wife, he felt that "the world could not afford lo lose a doctor ah good as Ian." , Herbert Hoover Erfters Hospital for Checkup NEW YORK (R—Former President, Herbert Hoover, 88, entered Darkness Pavilion at Columbia Presbyterian Mediqal Center today for his afimtal physical checkup, hte office said. He is expected to remain at the hospital for two or three days. SPiSB' AEC Chiel Believes U.S. Weapons Tops WASHINGTON lift— The magazine U.S. News matter where Simply phone the Pontiac Press vacation address. sent to I your ■s ■■ i N-Merchant Ship to Shove Off ABOARD NUCLEAR SHIP SAVANNAH (AP) - This 22,000-ton vessel — the world’s first known atomic-powered merchant ship — shoves off today on a maiden voyage which signals the opening of era in commercial passenger and cargo hauling on the high seas. The 2'4-day voyage from historic Yorktown, Va., to Savannah, Ga„ also will mark an American advance in .the technological race | with the Soviet Union. / The Soviets have built a clear-powered Icebreaker, their plana to enter the hucl -Rep. and Mrs. G. EMot Hagan of Georgia, and Mayor and Mrs, Maleoin MaeLeart of Savannah. The ship was named in honor of the 320-toh sailing vessel with aqftillary Steam power that first crossed the Atlantic In 1919 Using steam power part of the way. Although the Savannah has undergone previous sea trials, the jresent trip marks her first ex-■urslon -to a regular commercial port. / believed to he still In the blueprint stage. The Savannah is not expected to enter regular commercial servlet;-for about a year and a half. Meantime it will make demonstration trips and possibly take m some paying passengers for trii» ran American ports. ■ | NO PROFIT BEEN Atomic Energy Commission officials said the vessel Is not expected to operate St a. profit be-[ it is the first ship of Its kind “and costs of such a prototype are necessarily high." . tor the run to Savannah, Ga.. were Georgia 6«v. and Mrs. Ifnies* Vaadlvwj! In Today's Press Who's on Top? • In, Hungary, no one’s sure as. ex-dictator oiuted | from party.—PAGE 29. 600 Miles High ' /. ,/New radiation belt discovered.—PAGE 9. Considine , •/ Columnist ready to sue ‘unkirtd’ electronic psycho-' analyst.—PAGE 16. Help Others Studying doesn’t need to be hgrd work.—PAfiB 24. .... it Obituaries ......... ** ,...24 Sports............. W*#h ^Theaters ............*9 Condcs ............ ...u. M * TV and Radio Programs « ! Editorials ..../..... • Wilson, Earl « Market. ......L...... » Women’* Pages ....... 1*11. Area News . Astrology . ., "nr THE PQKTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUCCOT 26,lftgfr ‘mm *? mM The Pay in Birmingham Winnie to Head Home Tuesday From Hospital Enrollment of Students Set by Public Schools LONDON ( API - Sir Winston Churchill will leave the hospital for home tomorrow morning, his wife Mid today. The S7 jre»r-oid former prims Berry's Manager Says ’Petition Probably Will Not Bn Filed American Arrested as Senator Accused of Violating Graft Law BOtMmGHAM ~~Students tolling fo Birmingham Pub would be ieaviii betoe lunch tomorrow. 1ANILA tit — The Philippine gi /eminent filed crifninal charge* jy against Sen. Fernando Lo-pA of the opposition Nacionalista patty and arrested fen Americ ^io-tefovtsion executive on * tiiS^tJiirgM,*~ e actions were part of a wave charges against t officials and business-Bn directed by President Dias Marapagal since his deft of American industrialist firry S. Stonchill. ' Criticism of Macapagal's ku-ling el the gfonehlB cat manat- I 4. * WM«»M « Apngai "acted • aarw tea I CHIN UP — Three-year-old Debbie Hall A 4100 Van Stone Drive, get* a lesson from Mrs. William Murray on the correct way to relax while floating. The Instructor has just con- FmUm Pr**» PkiM eluded a six-week swimming course for youngsters under 5. Many of her 22 pupils now "dog-paddle” along the edge of Green Lake, i the PhmS^/wM This ‘Blowww Bubbles, Children* wh having had a financial inter lta the sale of land by a gov-foment corporation, violation of Y Antigraft Law; violation of the t Census Law and falsification § public documents. t&OTHEK CHARGED Ilia brother, Eugenio Lopez. ,fods the family's large business , was also charged with Elation of the Tax. Census Law ft] falsification of* .public docu- al tent ion of a ' 3-year-old long enough to teach him how to swim? Ask former Olympic diving pirant Mrs. William Murray of 3579 j. American Robert La Rue Mew-ftrt. operator of i radio-television kpown radio-television personal-ft, was arrested m deportation 1 i filed by tee government fie was taken to the immigra-i bureau’s detention center at | Manila waterfront pending ac-s petition, for bail. formerly of Denver, Colo., was charged with Interfering %‘phlections. a crime for aliens, rupting public officials and vio-; radio control laws. |he so-called "Lopez bloc" has & under bitter attack from Ma 1 since early this ycaK Hi d that the group was seeking | control. congress in order to * their business interests. 1959 Balloons Found Bpbbying Miles Away She Teaches Water Babies How, do you get and hold the Warner Drive, Creep Lake. For the last six weeks she has held swimming classes for tiny tots in the 3-to-5 age bracket. Tuesday mornings the Warner*’ Crofoot School Seeks OK on a Hot Lunch Program The Crofoot Elementary Schoofifrom the Pontiac school ariminis-PTA has won a recommendation tration. favor of a hot lunch program A final decision on providing the Rain Dampens Sections in East of Nation initial $4,000 capital outlay for equipment is up to the Pontiac Board of Education. lake-front yard has been filled with *t youngsters lying flat on their tummies doing the flutter-kick. back float and dog paddle. At first everything Is done out the water during the land exer- Seated in a big cirde on grass and with arms on theiir knees, the tender-aged^ group has learned correct breathing habits while swimming. Take a -breath aand blow bub-s,” chants Mrs. Murray. Everything is* done in rhythm. In the ddg paddle practice, it1 "Remember children, a dog swim right in dose. Now pull, pull, pull, pull." The whole class “Pulls’’ and joins in the chorus. The request In on the agenda for the 7:M p.m. Thursday Pontiac Board of Education meeting ■I 40 Patterson St. Asst. ftupt-Richard Fell will present the By The Associated Press Showers dampened scattered sections in the eastern" half of the nation today but generally fair and garni weather prevailed most areas. The shower belt covered an in the central plains, the middle Mississippi Valley, the eastern Ohio Valley and in the northern Atlantic coastal states. Only other] JaNDOVAL. III. (P --Officials of* this Southern Illinois cMtennial committee wc prised to learn some of the helium-fifed balloons released during the areas of Washington, centennial celebration in 1959 were! Unseasonable found bobbing in a Florida Crofoot would be the. 18th elementary school, in ,^he Pontiat school system to get a hot lunch program. along coastal j portly bar SHOWS INCREASE Past surveys at Crofoot had dicaled such a program wouldn’t be supported but the present survey shows a marked Increase In community interest. All hot lunch Iprograms are -run on * self-sup- 1.00 miles away in May 1962. the mystery was solved win fisherman explained he wi _ the discarded balloons to let fishing technique during rida vacation. , :c a I fit Fjbric Iral region Sunday. The mercuryI Result! I cached 105 in St. Louis, the high- would buy est mark in eight years. It was 150 others, 102 In Kunsas City and 101 In Springfield, Mo. The 105 leading in Little Rock. Ark., was a record for Aug. 19. children v ami Ties comes tee “floattag” on land. Lying flat, hands over the head, small chins are raised and feet, flutter. This exercise is for when you get tired," ays the petite Mrs. Murray, NOW. BARK’ Finally, it’s "Eve •ybody on their hands and knees, bark lige poodles and crawl down into the water “ By the time the youngsters are-ready for their water-teaming, any previous fear or shyneas has been literally washed away. "Whether the children actually know how to swim at the end of the course, is* immaterial." Mrs. Mutray said, and added that at least tjiey know what it's all about and their bodies have gone through small physical fitness program. Plans for a recount ill the Democratic primary election for drain commissioner probably will abandoned tty Daniel T. Berry, hisj campaign manager said today. Viet Cong Pulls Retreat Action Army Offensive Fails as Guerrillas Hide in Mangrove Swamps Bcny's. campaign manager Carl O’Brien said it appears unlikely his candidate can pick up the necessary votes in a recount. PRIMARY CONCERN He pointed out, however, that final decision lute not yet been made. O’Brien said Berry is prim*- SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) -Hard-core Viet Cong-guerrillas, following military tactics which won China and North Viet Nam tor communism, have' survived a massive government offensive in the southern swamplands. For four days crack government troops, supported by U,S. Marine Corps helicopters, fighter planes and armored river craft, rolled across Ca Mau Peninsula seeking 2,000 Communist- guerrillas who have turned it virtually into a little Communist state. In the Aug. 7 primary, O’Brien itad that Berry and Russell received a combined total of less than 50 votes while Berry’s challenger at the polls reported more than 100 Democratic voters. O’Brien said Berry is also estigating the results in Royal Oak Township. In order to request a recount, candidate must file a petition with county clerk’s office by Wednesday. A recount costs a candidate |5 per precinct, the money refunded if mistakes are found which change the results. Hm government high command Is arguing with American adviser* over the tally ot Viet Cong dead: The government claims 194, the Americans B. The Viet Cong main body got away again. The four-day operation was the brainchild of Gen. Paul T). Harkins, commander of U.S. forces in Viet Nam and Thailand. Harkins and his high command worked and were highly optimistic wl it got under way. U S. advisers now are thumbing ruefully through Communist guerrilla textbooks which say, “When the enemy attacks retreat. JJL'ST DISAPPEAR Communist guerrillas Mau, faced with an overwhelming government force, peared into the with their women 1 At exhausted g O nent columns moving - swamps met frequent but the Communist fire- Only In listing II The Weather lime. The food is to Central High Sdu cafeteria next dot r------------------—---------------------- Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report 1 PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy with ftlittndershowm likely tonight. High today 81. Low tonight |t. Tuesday generally fair and cooler. High 8£. West to • MMithwest winds 8 to IS m.p.h. becoming northeasterly tonight. to Crofoot. 'Mach of the ro*i will be for equipment Central to The swimming classes are summer extension of the Lakeland Co-operative Nursery program. Practically the same children are together during the.winter months. the volunteer project in the-.Orchard Lake Presbyterian Church. the region early Sunday saw black-dad guerrilla patrols moving back into the blackened and devastated training camps and hamlets. Beat a Cairn Retreat j to Avoid Getting Stung km u ■pwrvvffsPra?' JACKSONVILLE. Fla. - President Kennedy said today Amer-privately owned family farms an inspiration to freedom-loving people artntnd the globe. Kennedy made the comment In message of greetings to the opening of the three-day annual summer meeting of the American Economic- Association. Some 1,500 farm experts from Russell by 83 votes, 7:398 to 7,315. First unofficial tabulations pegged tee margta at only 88 Hunt Those Exposed to Smallpox Victim (Continued From .Pjge Ope) Service gave vaccinations to more than 400 others at Idlewlld Airport. Centers U the city and at the airport were -put on a round-the-clock schedule, while officials tried to hunt down the cab driver who transported tee Orr (am- The father, who first described the driver as a Negro, later said was •White with 1 jft * -xion and a foreign membered the taxi only as being ht-colored. Birmingham urged fo do as possible before the Sept. 8 opening of schools for the 196^63 year, the Board of Education announced today. ^ They are urged to register at their respective schools, which will be open for registration from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday beginning today. Counselors are now . on duty to test and schedule new students at Seaholm Senior High School and Groves Junior-Senior High School, according to the announcement. Teittog of new students at Der- Brandt Talks Tough lit W. Berlin Rioting (Continued From Page One) have grave consequences extending far beyond the city itself. Recent incidents on the wall, he said, hav*e produced tension that increasingly jeopardizes peace and order. ,, The spokesman said Watson’i was returned fo U.S. headquarters ‘htrite th* statement that the acting Soviet commandant did not wish to discuss the contents of the letter.-” The Western commandants nevertheless still ready to discuss the situation, the U.S- spokesman said. Mayor Brandt. In his radio appeal for restraint, did not refer to the U.S. note fo the Russians. Brandt's efforts were directed to patching things up between’ the Western allies and the police side, and West, Berliners on the other. The West Berlin mayor said i everyone was stirred by events at the wall, but declaed: Birmingham elementary school teachers, student teachers and substitute teachers will participate in a three-day elementary school workshop Aug. 27-30 at Adams School. Purpose ef the workshop Is to acquaint teachers with materials to be used during the lMt-W school year. Major emphasis will be placed m revised programs in arithmetic and social studies and on the areas of language arts and science. Sessions will include consideration of objectives, content, utilization of instructional materials and methods of instruction. which Individual groups of demonstrators took action agninst our allied friends and West Rer- an urgent appeal. When we permit anch actions, we are advancing the cause of tho other In Bonn, the Committee for an Undivided Germany, representing all major West German political parties, said it would go before the United Nations Human Rights Conynisaion to accuse the East fote»’ •« a n Communists of waging mman terror’’ daily along the Many AT rtwlafsi hissiv COUSINS — Four-year-old Caroline Kennedy gets set to bestow a kiss on the cheek of her cousin Anthony Rad-ziwill, 3, after a stroll together In the Italian resort town of Ravello. Caroline and her mother Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy are vacationing at the Ravello villa of Princess RadriuMl, Mrs. Kennedy's sister and mother pf Anthony; MflF A pilot program of advance registration for both new and returning Students is slated to begin next Monday at the Groves School. All students will be ahle to'pick up their schedules and pay their foes next Monday through Friday Aug. 31, although students who are out of town will be able to register Sept^-suaiA—rman and one fully dressed ws photographer. IMING ‘PALS’ 15, minutes he swam vigor-The crowd swam with him. The Secret Service, late in catching up, watched helplessly on the beach. The guards didn’t breathe easily until a hastily summoned life guard patrol boat cruised up near ** the awimming President. Dem Lt. Gov. Lesinski Hits Welcome to Durant Romney Hasn’t Gats to Lead His By The Aaaoclatod Press Democratic Lt. Gov. T. John Lestnskj yesterday termed George Romney a man “who doesn't have the guts or stamina to lead his vn party," lie referred to Romuey's acceptance of eofttroveralal Richard Dur-u Republican district leader after Durant resigned from the John Birch Society. nd if he does not prove capable of real leadership, then I 111 go to* the people of his district n a difect personal basis and Is removal from party’ leadership responsibility." [toted tonight in soul hern Florida and from the 0T1I0 Valiev d to mid-Atlantic states. Warm leather is due for most of 1 nation except for somewhat cooler temperatures In upper 1 region. Missipp^Vnilcy and Info^westem Great Lakes Iff his dlsnt’owal of Birch principles is riot genuine Until Com-" Romney said in, ^ stale the primary election losses ot Sena. Carlton Morris, R-Kalamazoo. and Charles *Feenatra. R-Grand Rapids. Lestnskl, addressing a Kalama-hi County Democratic organisation barbecue. declared that "Rom-couldn't beat Durant so he took him to his bosom.” 'Is this what yon call guts?” asked. *Ts this 1 man whe Is /Wtillng fo pay the price to he governor?” Lesinski later predicted to newsmen that a tax revision MU including an lncothe tax will be passed next year, "particularly since the obstruction ir removed.' REFERRING (TO MORRIS apparently was referring tjo revision would net be achieved It Romney wins In November. There nttu are eonservetlvea In the state Senate, he esld, who would “cut a man like Romney Gov. Swainson, at a meeting of Democratic leaders in Hartlaftd Saturday, also spoke of what he called the "Durant sellout.” declared that the GOP would make any appeasements In an attempt to gain votes. He complimented Detroit television stations for donating, air time for the scheduled debates. DEAR DICK’ LETTER Romney, who concluded an Upper Peninsula campaign swing Saturday, sent Durant a "Dear Dick” letter saying “The news ot your resignation from the John Birch Society Is very welcome” and a decision “which enhances your capacity for leadership.” A Detroit newspaper (The Free Swainson said he wek-omeg tee opportunity to debate with Romney on teMvMoa la October aver progress la Michigan under 14 ywre of Democratic fonder-' ship. % ■ * Durant reacted heatedly when portions of the letter were read to him. He said he might have comment “after I've seen' day. Bat Durant said he had ate received It. In a news release following publication pf the letter, Romney told Republicans: "I urge the pepple of his district to watch closely —' I will — fo determine his real intention. That determination should long to^ make.” '1 / % Romney attracted large crowds Falls and SaoM Ma. Marie la last The former American Motors Corp. president lilt bard at Michigan's job problems on his U. P. trip, where unemployment runs ss high as 18 per cent fo some places. ‘KNOWS WHAT IT TjfKES* . 'Tv* spent a good deal of itiy life saving jobs and creating jobs,” Romney declared. "I know what it takes, not in theory but from actual .experience.”. leave* today Jtor a day tour ot southwestern ) Alvin Bentley, Republican candidate for congrassmareat-large, followed Romney to the Upper Peninsula Saturday. He told newsmen .at Iron River that he would advocate a federal subsidy for iron ore and other natural resources if that were necessary to avoid reliance on foreign suppliers for defense purposes. Tass Blames 'Fascists' MOSCOW m — Tass said today the weekend demonstrations to West Berlin were reused by “Fascist-minded hoodlums who enjoy complete freedom 'fo the ‘Front-Xtadt’ (fnfiMtae. jetty.)* i , . ' ■■ / : , : ■ , THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST, 20. 1962 May Delay Space Flights Find New Belt of Radi BOWLDER, Colo. (AP)-A new’Jamea Warwick of the Univeraityinetic equator. The Minneapolis| “I don't want to prejudge the and perhaps menacing radiation!of Colorado’s Wgh-altitude observ-Tribune described the new radia- data,” Or, Van Allen said, "but belt is in the atmosphere around! atory, in a copyright article, by,tlon ring as probably a temporary the radiation is a matter of con-the earth — put there, scientists science writer Victor Cohn of the:layer under the inner part of thejcem and It is conceivable that say, by. a United, States high-al-: Minneapolis Sunday Tribune. Van, Allen belt. . iMercuiy flights might have titudemscleartee^blart-July^ Warwick's comments were) ,l . | space flights," but detailed explo- The new ring, he said, consists ration and scientific examination iik presence oi me radiation1 of high-energy H-bomb electrons, | Is needed before the effects on belt, 600 miles and higher above invisible atomic particles, which Project Mercury flights can be the earth, was disclosed by- Dr.‘follow the path of the earth’s mag-idetermined. HOFFMAN’S MKT. 526 N. Perry St. Open 9 to 6 Daily-9 to 9 Friday We reserve right to limit quantities MONDAY-TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY SPECIALS! GUARANTEED TENDER or DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK I Hoffman's Own AfW||fA . CAt “Butfcher Boy” STEAKS Wit l'/s-lb. Am SLICED UUVER and ONIONS” Calves LIVER 69 iron non—i 5 1>» of the Season—SWEET JUICY WEALTHY APPLES Van Allen said the situation conceivably could lead also to delay In similar flights by Russians. Variations of the Van Alien [belt's radiation have been studied for a year with the help of a satellite called Injun, launched for scientific purposes on June 2§jt Dr. Van Allen said previous Soviet nuclear blasts had not affected the radiation belt. Epidemic Hits ColombiaTown Bronchitis Outbreak in Florencia Following Flood Killing 41 BOGOTA, Colombia tfl -epidemic of bronchitis broke out today after floodwaters swumped the jungle town of Florencia, killing 41 persons and leaving 136 missing. The avalanche, set loose by a burst dam on the River Hacho, swept tree trunks and huge boulders into-the sleeping town early Saturday. About 3,000 of the 20,000 inhabitants are homeless. No Injuries were reported among members of aa American military mission at allotted In Florencia, IN miles south of Bogota. Capt. K. W. Vansandt. member of the U.S. team, making a geodetic survey, said': "It was nightmare. Streaks of light from flashlights were all that illuminated the darkness as groups of people ran widely orying and screaming." More than 1,000 cattle perished rid 30,000 tons of rice wer stroyed, dealing Mother blow to the town, which experienced the most severe winter in years. Milk cows in farm'herds in the United States total 17,400,000, down 200,000 from a year ago. IAIN VISIT THE NEW GOODWILL INDUSTRIES STORE 15 E. 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FALL FABRICSrSALE DAN RIVER WASH A WEAR "STARCREST" FABRICS Reg. 1.00 SaW 38c o yard on these lovely notion wrinkle-resistant ' fabrics in fresh, erlsp foil shades and designs including ploids ond (Austral stripe! ROBEST FASHION PRINTS IN DRIP-DRY COTTON Reg. 1.00 Fabrics.. .. 4th Floor 100% fine cotton fashion prints-that ore wrinkle resistant, machine washable, need little if any .Ironing. Many fall prints and color! Save 3pc a yordl j RUGGED SOLID COLOR f PINWALE CORDUROY Rog. 1.19 Sovlngs of 27c on edch yard of this long weoring, practical fabric for children's clothes and sportswear. Choose from a huge array of foil colors In 36" to 46" widths. DACRON POLYESTER PRINT FABRICS *122 1.99 ■ ya* __e beauitful fall prtnfi ore new Iron, wrinkle resistant and retain pleats . . , they make perfect travel clothe* Yours ot 77c o yard «ov-fngol - • , } Hi? I ' SjiSls r" ' 1 \ ' . ■ ■■■ -r;;. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1982 PONTIAC MALL ■' A Monday & Tuesday Only SHOP .FOR TOUIt BACK-tO-SCHOOl NEEDS! ^ jelegrAi ELIZABETH LAKE RD. OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 ILL INCLOSED-AIR COHDTTIOMED-FREE PARKING THE SHOPPING CENTER WHERE WE CONTROL THE WEATHER SPECIALS 45,000 CARS % MONTGOMERY WARD Save on I SOPT ORION*' *oo • Machine wefheble • Nmr eny MedUni • W*n’* shrink* tede When have you seen a value like iMsf Smartly collared slylti in fash- skirts, drosses. Snap them up at Wards. SUM RAYBURN FIRST BAY COVER Be sure you get this and all future FIRST DAY COVERS JOIN OUR 1st. DAY COVER SERVICE Stop in or call (ff’e Buy Coins and .Collections) SSSKS FINGER'S Phene 1124411 Appointments Now Being Taken for BACK-TO-SCHDpL EYE EXAMINATIONS Pontiac Hall Optical fouler Dr. Paul C. Frinbrrr, Optomelrl.1—Ph. 682*1113 .1 (JIAINT DISCOUNT RADIO BUYS FROM IIICH LAND! 9-TRANSISTOR FM-AM RADIO irs PORTABLE! Hi,III) powerful. Rirh ton.. 1 Huill in nmnu-Mi. Iplrefopn, #T. Inrludr- carry <•*».. .arpbonr LOUT,ST PRICE IN I .S.A.! *29" (irnml Elfflrir CLOCK RADIO K .k. in Sweep r round hand, '02 mi •ir $990 PONTIAC WUAiictto.1" \ MALL Next Door la J. L. Hudson I’m, EMPIRE SHOE SERVICE LADIES' TOP LIFTS Leather or Nylon istH” 49* While' Yon Wait At the PONTIAC See Your Fa corite Radio Personality in Person DON McLEOD Man., Wed., Fri. 7tllPJLrt. He will spin your favorite records. Bring yours with you. Plus, , autographs. '/ HR Pie V''j Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Kynf day w pempar our patron*, of r-uiw. but Monday.. Tun staff. ..., . *'...................... 'These two days were also reserved To r demonstrations whiclj were very interesting ' and elucational. Last Saturday we had a progressive troop dinner. Each pa-tori prepared a different1 part of- the meal. It turned out very well because we aU enjoyed the food and had our share ot it. , Many of the girls had dif--fcrenl varities of swaps tar-tides representative of their home regions). Some of the girls are very clever and full of good ideas.\^ Bermuda Coat e of age in 1964 who were too young to vote in 1960 — we are soon going to see a fascist dictator in America! Then the adult "children” will be disfranchised and ordered to work a* Hitler ruled Germany just 20 years ago. To prevent that tragedy, send for my booklet “How to Save. Our Republic,” enclosing a stamped, return envelope plus 20 cents and pass it around quickly! Signed letters, not more then < rjtge or ISO vorda long pertaining personal health and hygiene, not- dll , diagnoaln or treatment. will be xwered by Dr, William Brady, If | imped, self-addressed envelope f* It The Pontleo Press, Pontlon, Mlchlgi (Copyright IMS) 'Secret Agent' 8 oz. size I plus tax XV. J (regularly *6.00!) (Bonn* Bell’s fin# face lotion, now available at a price so low you can use it os a body lotion lj For dry skin problem* and a youpgor lookfitg, smoother complexion. MOISTURE LOTION (starts instantly to give your skin a deep moisturizing beauty treatment Each daily application restores youth-giving moisture to yitol lower layers of your skin- helps retain moisture which yarn i »nd weather take owiy. It’s light it’s non-greasy. a parted make-up Mil* for perfect protection the year ’round. AVAILABLE ONLY AT * i < FIRRY PHARMACY 69* EAST ILVD. at Perry , 119*7112 I2S1 BALDWIN ’! st Columbia 339-7057 (UPI) — “We’re all going to look like secret agents this tall,” said New York milliner Sally Victor aS she opened her fall collection. Many hats hi her collection hud the "secret agent” look to go with the same Mata Hari influence in other fall ready to wear. There were bowlers, viaored caps, and small forward-setting hats with heavy veiling to wrap the fac? completely. An average of 5,160 doctor* trf medicine atb graduated each year by the nation’s 77 medical schools. Notes of Interest The Wallace G. Browns of South Ttlden Avenue were hosts at. buffet dinner Sunday when the engagement cf their ’daughter Patricia Ann to Bonnie R. Pawley, was announced. , . Among some 30 guests from tho Pontiac area were Mr. Pawley’S'parents, the Keith R. Pawleys of West Walton Boulevard, hit grandmother, Mr*. Myrtle Pawley, *nd Susan. Marie and Dennis. JEKRlg.------ — " v Mr, and Mrs. Paul B’. Cornell came from Glen Dale, ,W. Va. for her sister’* announcement. Other gudsfcs were me Burl Morrtse* and daughter, Judith. Drayton Plains, Vicki Edwards and Shirley Beacom of Waterford’ Township, the Joseph Murphys and family of Flint. it. ir ★. Preparing to join her husband Spec. 5. Steven «T. Georgeff, presently stationed in Manheim, Germany, is his bride, the former Kathleen Dolores Jinkerson. who 1* vl*-ltlng his parents the Peter Georgeffs of Lakeview Drive, Waterford. The couple married May 19 In St. Raphael’s Church. St. Louis, Mo. where Mrs. Georgeff’s parents, the Harold E. Jinkersons, reside. V ★ ★ ' Mr. and Mrs. James Stott (Carole Smith) of Kenilworth Street, announce the birth of a daughter, Cynthia Denise, Aug. 10 in Pontiac General Hospital. The Floyd Smiths of North Genesee Avenue, Mr. and Mr*. Lester English of South East Boulevard and tho Joseph Stott* of Auburn Heights are the baby’s grandparents. Great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd English of South Sanford Street, the Fred Hulls of Charlevoix and Mrs. Emma Smith of Detroit. dr dr dr ,, The Donald Hortons of Owosso - were weekend guests of her mother, Mrs. George Horsley of Marquette Avenue ★ ★ * • Several members and guests of the Insurance Women of Pontiac attended a performance of “Wedding Breakfast” starring Piper Laurie, Thursday at Northland Playhouse. A dinner at "The Sign of the Beefeater” In Royal Oak, preceded the theater party. ★ Jt A Mr. and Mrs. 'Charles K Green (Janice Lynn Smith) of Midland announce the birth of a son, Mark Charles, Aug. 14. ’ The L. K. Smiths of Lotus Lake and the Charles F. Greens of Middle Belt Road are the baby’s grandparents, dr dr ★ Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Berge of Concord Drive, Bloomfield Hills, are spending a few days at Del Monte Lodge, Pebble Beach, Calif. dr it it Mrs. Norman Barlevl, children Karen and Steve of Chicago, were . recent-guests of her aunt, Mrs. Laura Brown of Malcolm Street, Waterford Township. They spent a day with Mrs. Brown’s daughter and son-in-law, the John W. Wrights in Port Huron and were dinner guests of Mrs. Barlevl’* sister Mrs. William Cope and her husband of Orosse Pointe Farms. The visit closed with a trip to Battle Creek to see Mrs. Brown’s nephew and niece, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Abbey. The Milton Fosters (Mary Jane Leahy), who have been living at Sand Lake since their marriage July 14 In Our Lady of Refuge Church, Orchard Lake, will spend next weekend with her parents, the Edgar T. Leahys of Beverly Road, Sylvan Lake. Mrs. Foster will teach In Litchfield this faU. Mrs. R. Edgar Leahy, visiting the Leahys since her granddaughter’s wedding, returned to her home in Ebens-burg, Pa. ¥ ¥ ¥ The Robert Potes and son Robert of Dick Avenue returned together withYfrs. Charles Pote of Telegraph Road from a trip through Ontario, Quebec and the Gasp* Peninsula. They visited the New England states and Niagara Falls on the way home. § Have You Tried This? i Pork Steak Casserole Goes Together Quickly Sometimes our favorite recipes don’t have a name. We used to have a rich pudding when we were young that was called simply “Our" pudding. Today's recipe had no title when Mrs. Robert Wright gave it to us. She says it is good for those occasions when you have to furnish a hot dish. Mrs. Wright is interested in design and decorating. She 1 likes to sew. The Waterford “ Junior Chamber of Commerce Auxiliary coutits her among* its members. PORK ‘N’ NOODLES By Mrs- Robert Wright U* pounds pork steak 8 oz. wide noodles 1 can condensed chicken lice soup 1.............. ......• 1 can cream style corn Cook noodles in salted boiling water. Drain. Cut meat into small cubes and brown thoroughly. In, a casserole put alternate layers of meat, noodles and corn. Season to taste. Pour soup over top and sprinkle with cracker crumbs. Bake one hour at 375 degrees. Makes 6 servings. JNeumode r2 pairs $1.15 Neamode Hosiery Shop il Nerlh Saflaew Mrte* save oft reupholstering DURING OUR ANNUAL SUMMER SALE SOFA . . . CHAIR . . Quality materials and expert craftsmanship throughout! Choose from fine nylons, Iriezes, tapestries, and brocadat. WILLIAM WRIGHT All Workmanship uoronlea 6 Terns 270 Ordmrd Lake • FE 4-0558 •enrlaa Oakland pounty Over 31 Tears I 1 EASY BUDGET TERMS OR M DAYS CASB CHRISTMAS in AUGUST? Yes- Now is the time to plan for your Christmas Portrait Make an Early Appointment XOdOsd 9.PHOTOGRAPHER ’ 518 W. Huron St. Near General Hospital Evening Appointments « FE 4-3669 -All Permanents- COMPLETE WITH CUT AND SET $095 3 NONE HIGHER Expert licensed operators to give you On easy-to-manage hair cut, long lasting permanent and becoming hairstyle. No appointment necessary, permanent complete in two hours. HOLLYWOOD MAUTY SHOP 78 N. Saginow Over Besley Mkt. 333-9680 luxury AM! Call George, who has had 24 years of carpeting experience, for your carpet* needs. "IF YOU DON'T KNOW CARPETING, KNOW YOUR CARPET DEALER" 5390-5400 Dixie Highway ee smart-look smart A* smart •took smart *u\. w :'l. "TVit.1 • ’ • . > Tgp-PONTIAC PRESS, mompay, Aw.ua-1-2D,—, ^, .,-..:r~——<—*-»-— WM&orik Brain ‘Unkind' in Psychoanalysis of Scribe Try. POUTIAI PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST to. im §S By BOB OONS1D1NE ROCHESTER, Minn. - Sell your •lock in the company that makes couches lor paychologlats, psycho-analysts and psychiatrist*. The Age of the Computer ha* caught up with those dodge*. The Presl-rijnt may r^w ttt cnnsider a retraining program for the disciples of Freud and fellow tinkerers with the human mind. Watched IBM take care of the whole matter here at the Mayo ClMc the other day. One of IBM's workhorse electronic brains, Model ISM, has been harnessed to a M year otd pay-jrhologtc test devised at the University of Minnesota by Dr. Starke Hathaway, Ph.D.. and **--Inte grent psychlntrlst J ttj • ley McKinley. In one minute the machine, hav* ing digested certain punched cards, can render a verdict on a person who has answered the "Minnesota test" and whose "case" might have puzzled trained psychologists for hours or even days before automation took hold. Embarrassingly enough, Model 1620 ruled that I am "probably somewhat eccentric.” I have retained Edward Bennett Williams as counsel but his operatives have , not been able to find a way to serve the papers. Model 1620 has no hands or pockets. At Mayo’s, all those patients and visitors who care to answer the MO questions posed by the test may do so. The machine's „w, clue nor Writ, is overlooked in the treatment of a patient., ’ ■ # *V \ The "tiiio” or ''false” tost strikes one as highly irrelevant in places, though it has weathered a quarter of a century of constant testing? Here are ■oewie-‘%ueii-or lalse” items: •'I like to read newspaper articles on crime . . . there seems to be a lump in my throat much of the time . . • once in a while I think of things too bad to talk about ... I am aur* I get a raw deal from life ... at times I have very much wanted to. leave home a youngster I engaged In petty thievery ... my soul sometimes leaves my body ... everything Is turning out Just like the prophets of the Bible Mid It would . . . 1 do not rend every editorial hi the newspaper every day ... "I used to like drop-the-handker-chief . . . I sometimes tease animals . . . ‘ T think most people • would lie tu get ahead . ■ ■ my table manners are not quite as good at home as when I am out in company . . . often I can't under stand why I have been so cross and grouchy . . . if I could get into a movie without paying and be sure i wag. not seen, I would probably do it. I .V | the norm truth "True” or "false” is indicated by then fed into a machine which discerns thelocaitton of pencil marks and punches a hole at that spot. second machine . duplicates these holes on other cards and, apparently, at the same time jogs all the memory pools within the ultimate machine, dastardly old 1620; ,{^ , Then the ustoalshing 'pnypft. One's Md snswers sre galpnd by 1620. It make* a sound not un-tike: a Park Avenue psychoanalyst clearing his throat and spec- ■tetlag on what he can charge the dowager on the conch for felting her she’d be better oft taking in waahtag. Then a sheet of paper spills from the top of 1620. It is laden with abbreviations for such disturbances as hypochondria*!* ‘(worry------- physical condition). p*ychasthenia (how orderly, dlsorderiy), and hy-pomania (social or antisocial). My cards passed the reviewing stand like drooping' finis even though I answered “true" to such virile propositions as “in walking I am very careful tp ftep’over sidewalk cracks." I think it was my marking of ■true" to "I used to like drop-the- 1620’s decision. Will fight If to the .Supreme Court.' , ;',ir garded as Infallible by the nearly 1,000 doctors and "fellows" In residence at this remarkable Mecca ot medicine. But the reports, on the other hand, may shed Interesting light oft the nature, spirit, temperament, hopes and misgivings of those concerned — and'no bit of information, Gang's Victinis Identity Man Held in Chicago CHICAGO ID - Frank Yonder, brought from. an Ann Arbor Jail , Saturday, was held by Chicago police today after victims of a robbery-torture gang Identified him as a member of the gang. Nick Guido, arrested with the 23-year-old Yonder at Ann Arbor on a traffic violation charge, remained In Ann Arbor. He has demanded n lawyer and la fighting extradition. Guido, accused of being the gang leader, is scheduled to appear before Judge James R. Breakey Wednesday. At a line-up in the Cook County state’s attorney office Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Botlhof of Suburban Wlnnetka Identified Yonder as their torturer and one ot the men who robbed them of more than $8,000 In their home May 28. Marriage Licenses cm Adam* Jr., lit RMburn an Georgia W»»hln*ton, 114 Safi?"*®0' Ronald L. Coktfrov*. 113 W. Hurt and Ron K. D*a*. 106* Want Milford. David C. Young, Blmhurat. III., ar Julia A. Douglat. 311 Aqua Court. Hoy Oak. Jimmie R. Weaver, «40 Iajt Blvd.'i and Judith E ChltUck, 101 Pennacola. Donald E. Campbell, 300, Argyle, Bl mlngham and Jean S. Dtnimorr. 1* Haul, Birmingham. . Jamee R. Burn,. It Balmer and C*r A. Hunter. IM1 Ronlavrn. Jack D. Vowel*. Walnut, ftocheattr ai Barbara J. Butcher, DrydeA Mlclv Harold T, Law. 3101 Can Lake. Keel Harbor and Ruth E. Parmworth. 03 No Samuel It. Marti t. Bandueky, 33411 Oak Glen. aoutnneid. David C. Ptxley. Detroit and 1 A. Yokl. 12500 W. 11 Mile, South! Joseph H Bameey, 411 I. Royal Oak and Sandra L. DeVoi William H. Denmark, 111 Marlot Lillian A. Witt. 300 Marlon. William H. L, Hornbeck. Loe An.--.. ’ calif., add Jacqueline L. Macartney. 1003 Bonnie View, Royal Oak. Richard D. Vanderkolk. 3210 Be— mont, Keego Harbor and Patrick Worth, 400 *. Walton. Dale A. Jayne*. Bllverwood. Mich.. ChrUtene K. Broegman, 12011 C f'/®. torla C. Btamm, mo vnopm. ■ y L. Mann. 12 Pleasant and C Iter, R*f. Oxford. , V. Richmond, 4141 wind rd and Jahist E. McArthkr. MONTGOMERY WARD CO. HEARING AID PERT. If you can hear, but cannot understand, We can help you!I CALL US FOR A FREE HEARING TESTX In our office or at your home. 612-4940 Ext. 233 SATTIRIES; CORDS. REPAIRS ON ALL HEARING AIDS PONTIAC NALL 7 V ifl 1 TO KROGER LOWERS FOOD COSTS ", gives 475 Extra Top Value Stamps tool CENTER CUT RIB fresh GROUND [Ground PORK CHOPS 691 IBS. ‘ DELICIOUS ALL MEAT COUNTRY CLUB 49* WIENERS . - - 2«*98‘ HYGRADE FAMOUS SAIL ) PARK 59‘ («H9 W[°wJuC 6|Sh|| ! _ YOUR I CHOICE PACKER'S LABEL WHOLE KERNEL 69 ^ LB. WdSil FRESH COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS. mcor.»,.™...5S' wieners WITH BACk PORTION ATTACHED WITH RIB ATTACHED ^ 49* Chicken Breasts»59* H i i i i . R limit qaantltlec. I Prlact and Itema effective at Kroger la I Pontiac Mall, Narth Mile, Drayton Plain*. 1 jnlon Lake. Utlea nd Oxford through fue*., Aug. 'll. <**1- WITH THIS COUPON-COUNTRY CLUB BUTTER SAVE 59 UB. ROLL Kruger la Pantlae Mall, North Perry Street, Miracle MM#, I (JnlM L»kf, ■ »•»-*» aian flvfard thru TllOl.. AUC. il, lViB* » Limit Oat Caapaa pa* family. CORN...................-as 10* GREEN BEANS...............-10* PACKER'S LABEL CUT M a _ WAX BEANS..........”;10‘ PINEAPPLE JUICE........ .10* COTTAGE CHEESE.......... a 19* WITH THIS COUPON-EATMORE ->BJ I wiin imp Vwwrwt”fcn*f»»w«» margarine; 2oq | i at Krager la Paatlaa Mall, North rerry Street, MJvaala MM., | tine, Valaa Laka, Vtiee and Oxfar* thru luet., Aag. *1, l»*. g ^ Limit Oa< WITH THIS COUPON ' KAN DU DETERGENT j 49 SAVE 10* GIANT I SIZE PKG. I I----------- m WITH THIS COUPON . I7« mIVORYLIQUID | ** SAVE ML 72-01. I CRACKED WHEAT 1-LB. LOAF KROGER FRESH SLICED BREAD. SAVE 10*—CHOCOLATE DEVIL'S FOOD, SOUTHERN BELLE AND SHADOW SILVER LAYER CAKE............... .. .... 49* porwEs^^rlrriFr SaauSi£i...'tr 38* 22-OZ. PLASTIC CONTAINER | Kruger In Paatlaa Mall, North Perry Rtrect, Miracle Mile, ‘ ■ Valaa Lake, VUea aad Oxford thra Tac>., Aug. II, UWI. | 49 U.S. NO. 1 CALIFORNIA Bartlett Pears it U.S. NO. 1 CALIFORNIA Seedless Grapes 229* 2 25 U.S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN .. ... — POTATOES ........... EE &TGC ICE CREAM BARS! - 12 " 49 ! 2 PACKAGES OF 6 | Kroger In Pontiac Mall, Narth Parry Street, Miracle MUe. ifaei^n takte tlticA one Oxford thru Tu#*., Aug. 31, 1IW-r family. H Limit one Ceasea"gar family. | im^^mBBaiT •mammssari | SO EXTRA STAMPS I » EXTRA JSS. STAMPS | L«mor i'MiMfM1“i SALADS .I SAVE 50* TOWARDS THE PURCHASC OF ONI 4-PIICI PUCE SETTING MELMAC .iNHiawu* ' pint 300 EXTRA Tap Voluo Stamp* with coupon* from ynwr hanklet • SO Islft T.V. Stamp* vellh pmihats at $1 • S6 lifts T.V. Stamp* mi* parthat* el I-» at atarq la ftatk fndt* sad V*«afaUat. Eraftf Paaaaf latter. 6 M litre T.V. Stastat wHfc patches* #1 Ana • N hM t.V.Imt «M f*dta d H Mb. aasksaa *t mars Caaatiy Oak Gal. Caaalr* CM lea Cream nr »aM“* lentil**. Meat. V • Sharkal. . ______ BOR, WON OR CtOARITTU I t'auuon valM ai Krater la Pmdlae Mall, N*rth — y*"!7*atr**l Mtraeta MUI*. Urey tea Plata*. M Oaapa* »•** *4 Kroger la PMUa* . I 82 L.h. ’r«e* *ad Oaferd thra Bat., *ag. ■ rerry street. Mlruci* MUt, Droyteo Plato*. ■ ■ U-HtL tar famuy. | ValraLahe. WUaa «- Oxlar* thra B.V Aa,. ■ 1 50 EXTRA«mmSTAMPS ■ SO EXTRA,IS.STAMPS J I WITH THIS COUPONAND PURCHASE OF I WITH THIS COUPON^jkDi^OUNCMASO OF HUNGARIAN NINti ANY TEN0MAY | I. Caapaa ran* *i Krager la f Perry Btraat, Mlrael* Mila, Prayiea Vuten Laka, UU*a not * **■— *- L North ■ 3s. I STEAN ON ROAST ^ Caapaa *altd> at Krager ta^PcaMa* Mail. Narth I » THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY; AUGUST 20, 1962 Committee Trying to Kill Golden Goose? Eying Second Site for 1/.S; ■ By ROTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - Things, as say in Wonderland, are getting curiouser and curiouser. It is a well^tow tact that a nationwide drive will be launched .. on ctosedHdrcuilM televjgwn. _ _ hundred cities this November to raise thirty million dollars lob a national cultural center. The odd parti'of it is this: Al-though Congress has already passed a law authorizing the center, and has donated a beautiful park site on the Potomac River near# the Lincoln Memorial, the cultural committee is quietly negotiating with railroad executives about die possibility 1 ol buying Union Station instead. To do so would require another act of Congress, since the one creating the center specifies the free park site. More importantly, It would also remove from j the taxrotis the biggest district taxpayer In every year but one since the cavernous granite structure was erected $5 years ago. Union Station is jointly owned by the Pennsylvania and the Bal- timore tt Ohio railraods. In the year just ended it paid $1,882,354. taxes, with nearly a million and a half of it feeing to the federal government. dr • dr # ■ ‘ The remainder wentJaihe-hani: pleased District of Columbia which is losing taxable' property at an alarming pace each time tlie government razes a block of houses to rect a new office building, or another foreign government comes into being and buys an embassy here. CAN'T BLAME RAILS No one can blame the railroads for trying to unload their heavily taxed properties. Because of stiff competition from planes, trucks and autos, the financially embarrassed Pennsylvania Railroad had already made a deal with the Madison Square Garden Corp. to scrap Pennsylvania Station in New York City. Unlike the cultural negotiations, however, that land would- remain in New York tax rolls. .' .............., ....... on the committee to locate « He did not identify the gres: sures, but said the committee took Au official spokesman for the proposed cultural center, queried about the reported negotiations for Union Station, conceded that they have been going on. lie •aid the group would prefer the parklike setting that Congress has provided, ■ but Oat many Dixie Churches Bar Negroes, Whites pains to investigate such suggested land former First Lady Mamiei The cultural center is a mar-sites. He admitted that one;pos- E^nhOWer are honorary chairmenH*0"*- long-overdue project that sible drawback to, the Union St*- Lf the project, with Roger Stevens *hould have the enthusiastic sup-tipn location would be the "pon-'of the Stevens'Development Corp-.,P°rt ot every American. Foreigners sible noise and vibration’' from New York City, as chairman. |visiting here from abroad are trains arriving and departing just below, since a new station would |Bei>Qiif iajommirtK?pp^mitra^ iture, to str&ddle existing tracks now used by five railroads. ■ dr * * The plans loir-the center, to be unveiled in Newport, R.I., Sept 11 envision three basic auditoriums where opera, symphony and theater can perform simultaneously. First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy shocked to discover that no. Mrs. Hugh Audtlncloss, Jack- the capital city of America is l®’8 usutiiopi'ls chairman ter the ,lafg^Houiprio accommodate’ Tor Washington metropolitan ares, instance, the full cast of Russia’s and will oversee a big «lM.-a- I world-travelling Bolshoi Ballet, plate dinner and sever*, theater \- ig & CQm^my bipartlsan 1 IT ^"‘"•-'undertaking that Congress rushed M, when the fund-raising drive through in record time. The DeK*n8‘ jtion needs and wants it. Why risk Other $100-a-plate dimiers will killing the goose that laid the gold->e held simuitaneojilsy in New en egg, by going back to Congress jof thfse effects, and we have York and throughout the nation,|to change the site? ^....' Ifair control over these drugs." Warns of Drugs Causing Harm ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UPl) —, There still are drugs on the American market which may have the same effect on unborn children as thalidomide, a doctor from Emory University said .Saturday. . Dr Richard W. Blmnberr. chairman of the pediatrics department at Emory In Atlanta, did not name the drugs to which he referred. He spoke at the closing session of the 12th annual obstetric-pediatric seminar here. But, he said, "doctors are aware OSCAR FERRELL PLUMBING 24 Hour Service FE 8-2800 FE 5-7501 FALL REPAIR TIME '■■■ for i" - k VACUUM CLEANERS ALL MAKES ALL MODELS . PARTS—HOSE—BAGS BRUSHES—BELTS BARNES & HARGRAVE Hardware NORTH SAGINAW STREET SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY ONLY? s Finest LEAN and TENDER RIB STEAKS.. ALBANY, Ga. (UP!) — Negroes and whites attempted to integrate seven churches, here yesterday with ‘’knteel-in’^ * demonstrations' but were turned away. Three Na*i groes were arrested on the steps of| a. Baptist church. |t was the second consecutive Sunday the < Integratfonists had tried to enter the. churches. A woman who was admitted to St. Paul’s Episcopal Church last week was told to leave yesterday. Asst. Police Chief James Lairaey said three Negroes were stopped at the fop of the steps at the First1 Baptist Church by a deacon who asked them to leave.. When they refused they .were arrested and IH; charged with trespassing. , u Most of the demonstrators Were lllll Negro. A biracial group was |j|l| turned away from the First Pres,- CLUB STEAKS.. 39 49 1 II Skin Divers Find Ship '! 15 Miles Off Florida ST. AUGUSTINE,> Fla. (API— St I Two skin divers have found a M sunken vessel in the Atlantic Si Ocean 15 miles east of St. Augus-H| tine. A sheriff’s deputy, J. V. Hugas, hi I said a Compass found on the ateel-|jg hulled craft apparently was the ^ bne used on a shrimp boat, the Ml,Francis, which was reported mis- We're forced to vacate our store in the Tel-Huron Shopping Center by Saturday, August 25th LAST 4 DAYS! Everything Must Go! Drastic Reductions on oil Merchandise Absolutely Must Clear Out Entire Stock! UP TO 75 % OFF and MORE! COATS SUITS DRESSES PLAYWEAR SPORTSWEAR LINGERIE • FOUNDATIONS and ACCESSORIES • Linda Lee — Tel-Huron Shopping Plaza Open Evenings Until 9:00 PM. License No. 2400 Everything Priced to Clear! For tho ooBVonionco of our ctharge and layaway customers, your transactions will bo transferred to our new store in Rochester at the North Hill Plaza. CONFIDENCE ? YOU HAVE CONFIDENCE WHEN YOU BUY AT HIGHLAND BECAUSE YOU ALWAYS GET: discount .. PRICES*.«...... Highland combine, with ot S0 atorea nation-wide in group purchasing.. .This VaU,big-buying power OMurea you tho loweat discount price.! . BIGGEST SELECTIONS... No need to shoo from store to atore ... You will always find, the largest selection of top name brand TV^atweo and EASIEST TERMS... Term* to ault your eonvon. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED or your money back 100%!... You must bo oatiafied with your pun.li ate • • • EXPERIENCED * SALESPEOPLE You an tore to appreciate the courteous, competent assist, unco ot Highland's emperl tales staff urban maki- purchase! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Fast, careful handling of year purchase by courteous, experienced delivery men! ... HIGHLAND BREAKS PRICE OS GIG OF THE NATIONS G FOREMOST BRANDS! v low par meat thiefohr price Giant 13%00 FT. 2-Door Refrigerator Big family ;ice 120 lb. freeter on bottom. Automatic defrosting. Deluxe features. 5-Year Warranty, Never priced so low. Nobody Beats Highland’i Price* on Famou* Brand Portable TV! 19* PORTABLE Trim, slim portable cabinet. A quality' made set. Brand new In cartons. Don't mist dual Sale Priced) *93 Complete home Entertainment Theater SALE VALUES ON NEW HOME APPLIANCES SHETLAND Floor Polisher Cleans rug) and fie . Include# liquid lJ i penter, nig shampoo ■ New Loti) Price! HHhlrsragll WmWm 1 1 DEHUMIDIFIER 1 WITH BUILT-IN HUMIDISTAT I Newest model RCA Whirlpool 1 removes 3Vk gallons water every I B j Iv ,, |H 1 24. hours ... Stops rust. Built-1 In humldistat automatically.. plpt JP i 1 starta operation when needed— 1 then ttops. L ■ fgn $7090 I Free Delivery and Service, I Fully Guaranteed. New Low Price! RCA WHIRLPOOL Jk.I, "BSaxaw'S^ k GAS DRYER i. ' i n |~ ^ f J 1 ■ price!... 2-Cycle drying, gir fluff-I ingl Dial regular or wash V wear, B Tempered gaa heat dries evenly. 1 Many other features. Model LID- ■ 27. 1 *139“° Free Delivery and Service. VI i 1 Fully Guaranteed. ORDER BY PHONE • NO MONEY DOWN WITH AUTOMATIC SUDS-SAVER 'll ” 1 New 12 -Lb* Capacity RCA WHIRLPOOL Automatic Suds—Miser [ 2-cycle Washer I New low price for this 2-eyclo 12-lb. 1 capacity RCA Whirlpool with auto. 1 suds-miser. Watiwinw wsler tamper-1 alure. Dispenser filter, hefe for ell I fabrics. Model IJA-JO. Specially low 1 prioed with trade. ! $199*° x Free Delivery end Service Fully Guaranteed. ORDER BY PHONE • NO MONEY DOWN BPWPMRKiilptiMg” Value Packedl 23” TV-STEREO FM-RADIO COMB. Here** everything in family entertainment in one complete center . . . 4-Speed automatic changer. Multi-speaker stereo sound system. Ultra sensitive FM tuner. Equipped for multiplex FM stereo radio.. Genuine hardwood furniture cabinet ALL-TRANSISTOR TRANSOCEANIC PORTABLE RADIO World's most magnificent all-iranslstor portable radio! Tunee “ ■ • • hiding l.F FA Aw lees f r REDUCED TO ONLY.... 297 NO MONEY DOWN ALL-TRANSLSTOR PORTABLE RADIO Zenith “battery raver" double# battery life, MX) Milliwatt. undlslorled audio output. Itieh full tono ovon at high volume Royal 710 LK. CHECK HIGHLAND’S SPECIAL LOW PRICES TODAY WESTINGHOUSE STEREO COMB. *SB RCA WHIRLPOOL 30” ELECTRIC RANGE Bskra, broils or barbecues. All in big full width oven. “Mealtimer” marts and atope oven automatically, Oven light, other deluxe features. HE-340. ,90 *179 NEW MODEL PRICE BREAK! DANISH MODERN 23” DECORATOR LOWBOY TV Smart ultramlim decorator styling, Handcrafted service-saver chassis. Giant 280 gq. in. “Sunshine” picture tube. Plus many other' top quality features. Specially priced with trade. Exactly as illustrated. » FREE DELIVERY ► ORDER BY PHONE > NO MONEY DOWN :?■ ..v: v-( ’v r '\\r: ;x !Wik\rieph Auerbach, couaael for the court-appointed trustee* of the bankrupt. New •ylvanla-Ontral merger 4 Auerbach said the trustees favor Says Drug industry Backs lighter Rules WASHINGTON (UPD -’The drug industry told Congress today that It favored some strengthening of government control* over drugs but warned that medical progrees might be slowed If the legislation went too far. Eugene N. Beesley, board chairman of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association and president 6t the Eli Lilly drug firm Id: “in the emotional atmosphere hlch surrounds drugs today, ere will undoubtedly he pros-ire from eome tor hastily con- duce more harm than good.” Beesley testified as the House Commerce Committee, led by Rep. Oren Harris, D-Ark., resumed long-stalled hearings on drug control legislation proposed by the administration. HUM ■■ Jl»u«ht*r •teddy; llhrad Mjk ( !1«» Kto’rrwT.MjfJ .s »t«»dy l 1030 ll iow oholet __i gtondard mTxiS 16.60-18.60, it* up to 11.00, rannor* ‘WSj T fot *»OU*H to M|kl m5h**p 60. Hot «nou|b mri RB 2?lir»w« rs 31’i«m 1848-I8.16: I Mid 3 330-380 lb 17.36*11.38; y 3*n4Ufe*. fif brari 13 36-14.60 C(pmptr*d Ult borrow* Add «ll»8 itOMr U 16 lo*r*i: so** itiodr. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, AU|. 17 (API—(USDAL Hot* 3.600;. oatlv*. butoheri »nd *o*» l»Mh<"«nd*ir*und5ijO h**d }0I0;1»J» mixed 1-3 100-fOO lb» 11.60-11.00: **v- al.,%.76% »Vb5. lO OO-ll.wl 3-3 400-460 ira, 16.36-li.OO: | 14.75-15.80; eOO-MO lb* i3.1l ' 12.00-13.00. Cettl* 3.300; »lf*8 no.... - — Opened dotlT*. l»t*r modentjly jggi ■I*uRht*r 8to*r* etron* to 60 W|hu ru£tTiM,if *11 oHwaoi: rauph. ~~ prime 17ft Ib8.ft7.75: bulk f.noicf S fl.ftoj tood and ll aupplr fully atoM, lot* 4hol*o M>d prim* ^ .jrtas *i*u|ht*r wrnbi 11.60; mod iad ciiol« 21.00-r - Friday'* M BllSyS ‘ ; £wjp||mmif invMtor* aoroa/”SrM- 'wii! M 8s7ma,' i I h. 'IF BUSTS*,-S Sit? _er. — provided the New Haven to included. ‘‘On the other hand, the truetoes an unequivocally and sincerely convinced that If the merger of the Pennsylvania and New York Central goes forward without inclusion of the New Haven, railroad service under private enterprise in southern New England is doomed,” Auerbach declared, ★ ★ Pennsylvania Railroad officials have suggested that the New Haven and other New England lines be consolidated into one system. ★ ★ Hr Such a system would have access, the PRR officials suggested, to the merged Pennsylvania-Central and two other big Eastern systems which Would result from pending merger applications. They are the proposed Norfolk to Western-Nickel Plate and the Chesapeake to Ohio Baltimore to (Milo. The Penn*ylvsris-Ntw York Central mdirger plan has already been advanced in considerable detail. Tire Sales, Garage Opened on Perry Street After serving as service manager for the Firestone Store tor 10 years. Lea Pitts of 690 Columbia Road, has opened the City Tire Co., at 906 N. Perry St. The tire sales and service garage speclalizM in Goodyear tires. Pitts, 30, served as a store manager for the Spiegel Co. for six years previous to working for Firestone. At 20, Pitts wss the youngest store manager the store chain ever had. Treasury Position Mt^ei ytof iXM:?! UOW-JONE* NOON Jl gffii MINNEAPOLIS IB — Detroit at-tomey Philip Msroo has been elected secretory of Telex, toe., Minneapolis - based electronics .. manufacturing firm; Stephen A, — Keller was re-elected president. *tki* issuef” IV W. EastemPlans Full Service Sept. 13 Data Is.Sgf* Despite Strike throat by Machinists News in Brief MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — Strikebound Eastern Air Lines went ahead today with plans to resume full service by Sept. 13 amid threats oS-pressure by other unions In the strike by flight engineers. The machinists, Transport Workers of America, all AFLCIO members, threatened Joint action agrinst Eastern. HAS PLANS Airline President Malcolm MacIntyre, after announcing the planned resumption of full service, brushed off the threats saying, “I’ve known pressure. If the machinists itrike, we would have no alternative but to get an in- Walter Brlskom of Detroit ported to police yesterday that 20 windows in hto cottage at 3930 Mapleleaf, Waterford Township, had been broken. Loss was estimated at 695. tot a breaking aad early Saturday morning 6100 in cash, and an undetermined amount of motor oil wa* taken from Lany’s Gulf Service, 1796 Telegraph Road, Waterford Township. A complete set of golf elube and miscellaneous other golf equipment valued at 6428 were reported stolen Saturday from the home of Robert Bums, 1270 Malcolm St., Waterford Township. The stolen articles were stored near the unlocked back door of the home. Honiara took III to eash and .JO trading stamps over the weekend in a break-in at Maxwell’* Gulf Service Station, 9806 Elizabeth Lake Road, White Like Township, owner Dexter Maxwell of 868 First St., Holly, told Oakland County Sheriffs deputies. About flOO la furniture «u stolen from his cottage at 4508 Clin-s Road, Independence Township, was reported to sheriffs deputies Saturday by Harvey Cass of 4974 Dixie Highway, Watortord Township. Invited. Airway L a n e a, M-f Wednesday, August 22, 7:80 p.n The airline plans' to resume what MacIntyre called a full Schedule on a streamlined basis with service not expected to be on the same level as before the June 23 strike. ■k k k MacIntyre said the June 22 working force If 18J100 would be cut and that 4,000 to 5,000 employes in all categories would not be recalled Sept. 13. He said perhaps on#. or faro thousand of these would be recalled about the middle of- December when heavy winter traffic to expected. k k k Eastern is bargaining individually with the Flight Engineer# in-ternatlonal Association, in addition to accepting pitots’ bids and onuiiV* applications to fill the engineer vacancies. MacIntyre * said more than 10 per cent of the engineers had a* cepted the airline’s settlement of-far and returned to work. Business Notes Harold K. Pennlnger of 475 Lakeside has been accepted as a member of the National Association of Sanitarians, the professional ao-ctoty announced Pennlnger to A teacher at the Seventh Day Adventist School of Pontiac. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q, “I am retired, with about |500 a month retirement fund* We have adequate savings, and my only stock holding to MS shares of General Foods. I want greater Income. Do you suggest selling General Foods? If so, what stocks could I bay to yield more with safety?” L M. A. It to always pleasant to encounter someone like yourself retired without any serious financial problems. ' I. like General Foods, hut ! think ou are quite Justified ui selling I, in my opinion, the shares have readied a plateau from which no strong upward move seems likely. I would put half the proceeds in a favinga institution, aa A reserve for Investment when the market stabilizes. The balance would invest in Federal National Mortgage Association (Fanny Mae) traded OveMhs-Countsr to yield 4.8 per cent. This to a rising dividend situation, and the only Government agency I know of In which the public can partidpata. A It to a little difficult to t to you about this stock without knowing more about .your investment background. However, I’ll express my opinion about It Mjp assumption that you want security and good income. , 1 Manning, Maxwell 4k Moore at current levels sella to yitfW 6.8 per cent. Although the company to solid and well-managed, it opar-atea In «n am of tha economy (valves, cranes, and hototsj that to very competitive and very sensitive to changing business conditions. Earnings have been IB :A general downtrend since 1997, ttld although the dividend looks reasonably secure, lM continuance cannot ba taken absolutely Jar I have has Manning, been tMnklng «C The shares have shown vaiy poor relative action and are still around their lows tor th# year-In your placo, I would prefer Union Pacific, which yUMl a well-■cured 9.8 par can*-' ; Mr. Spear cannot anmrar aril mail personally but will an*** *■ poaaihre hi hto nit1 to General ____ Ooepi, 290 Park Ava., Nam) Yoik N.Y.' 4 (COPYRIGHT USD < THIS PONTIAC, yRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1962 Poritjqc> Nearby Are® ■Great Swamp' Near New York MB& CHARLES BREWIN Service for Mrs. Charles (Ann) Brewin, 64, of 35 W. Kennett Rd. will be at 10 a.ra. Wednesday at Burial will be fo Alpena. Mrs. Brewin died today in St. Joteph Mercy Hospital after an ill-mas of one week. Surviving besides her husband are a daughter, Mrs. Margaret ToUeAu of Alpena; a son, Richard Huggler of Alpena; six grandchildren; S great-grandchildren four brothers; and one sister. Mrs. Fred (Georgia) Palosky in Big Rapids. -She died there Wednesday in the Community Hospital after a long illness. She had been a member of First Church of Christ, Scientist in Pontiac. Surviving are. two sons, Donald of Springfield,. Mass, and Frederic of Sait Lake City, Utah; three grandchildren; and a brother. Service and burial were in Big Rapids. JOSEPH ML HAMBY Serwice for Joeh M. Danby. 89, of Wolf Lake, formerly of Pontiac, will be at 3:90 m. Wednesday at Hubbard Funeral Home, Mount ■ Clemens. His body will be at the Stormont Funeral Home, Grasss Lake until Tuesay when a prayer service will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the place of service. V Surviving are two 'sons, Leslie of Wolf Lakeand Thane of Pontiac; nine grandchildren; great grandchildren. RUTH A. PERRY Service for Mrs. Pete (Ruth) Perry of 4175 Crocus St., Waterford Township, will be Wednesday at 1 p.m. in Sparks-Griffin Chapel. Mrs. Perry, 58, was dead on arrival yesterday at Pontiac General Hospital. Survivors include her husband; two daughters, Lillian of New Baltimore juid Mrs. Violet Burrell of Waterford Township; three sons, Peter Jr. of Birmingham, Richard of Fraser and Walter at home; 13 grandchildren and a brother, Harry Crane of Hootiac. MRS. JOHN DOUGLAS The Rosary will be recited 7:30 p.m» Tuesday at the Huntoon Funeral Home for Mrs. John (Louise) DQOgla.s, 84, of 385 S. Airport Road. . Service will be lfl a.m. Wednesday at Our Lady of the Lakes CijSbailc Church.with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs, Douglas died Friday Tulsn, Okla. She was a member of the Maccabees and the Air Port 4 Garden Club. Btflndying are two daughters, MgMje Waste of Tulsa, Okla., and Mrs. Mary Theresa Anderson of-Oklahoma City, and oi daughter. MRS. JAKE WYKE Service and burial for Mrs. Jake (Florence L ) Wyke, 57, of 28 James St., will be from the Moody Funeral Home, Bryson City, N. C. with burial at Arlington Heightsjjters and two brothers. Cemetery. Her body will be tuken there from the Voorhees Siple Funeral Home after 9 p.m. today. Mrs. Wyke died Saturday after a brief illness at the Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. Surviving are. her husband; a daughter, Mrs. Edwina Laney of Keego Harbor; two sons, Claude Calhoun of Keego Harbor and Har- JOHN ENGLUND Service for John Ehglund, 69, of 4059 Motorway Drvie, Water-fold Township, will be 2:30 pm Wednesday at Gloria Dei Lutheran Church with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Jlfr. Englund died today. His body is at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. A retired foreman of GMTC, he -is survived by his wife Signe; two sans, John of Pontiac and Joel of Drayton Plains; two grandsons; one, brother, Arvid of Pontiac; and*fhree sisters, Mrs. Alma Malm-quist of Pontiac, Mrs. EUn Nord-quist of Chicago, HI., and Mrs. Olga Anderson of Arvika, Sweden. Memorials may be made Gloria Dei Memorial Fund. MRS. RANSOM KEMP Service for Mrs. Ran (Luevadie) Kemp of 104 Moreland Avtt., will be 8 p.m. today at Huntoon Funeral Home. Final service will be in Alexander .Funeral Home, Sullivan, Ind., with burial in Shelburn, Ind. A member of the Pythian Sisters, she died Sunday following an illness of one month. Surviving are two sons, Melvin of- Troy and Paul of Pontiac, and one sister. MRS. FRED PALOSKY Word has been received of the - death of former Pontiac resident 2 Hurt in Area Over Weekend No Fatal Car Mishaps Reported; Ort# Victim Listed as Serious No fatal auto accidents were ported over the weekend in Oakland County, but two persons were injured, one seriously, in area traffic! mishaps. Most seriously Injured i Harold E. IMIlon, 41, of 6060 Long Point Rond, Davtsburg, who woo repotted la fair condition today at Pontiac General Hospital. Sheriffs deputies said Dillon’ car apparently skidded about 360 feet off a Holly Township road * rolled over four times in ~ accident occurred at ltl3 Grange Hall Road, about le east of Eddy Lake i section of the ho*. ___ - head, chest and Internal Injuries. He was alone In the car. o ■ . Deputies were unable to obtain • statement from him because of hi* condition. S CAR COLLISION , In satlefoctocy condition at Pontiac Central Hospital Is Mrs. Olivia Keel, 49, Of 6ll Nevada Ave. who wu‘Involved in a two-car collision yesterday morning at Bloomfield and Nebraska avenues. . Mb; Keel toM PoatUe police i No- old Wyke of Pontiac; 13 grandchildren; two brothers and two’ slaters.. RUSSELL L. BRECHBIEI. TBEAY CITY r1- Service for Rus- -sell L. Brechbiei, 64, of V® W. Fifth St. will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will follow at Willow Grove Cemetery, Armada. Mr. Brechbiei died at Community Hospital near Almont last night after an extended illness. Survivors are his wife Bessie, two sisters and three brothers. JOSEPH A. GRIMSHAW KEEGO HARBOR - Joseph A. Grimshaw, 66, of 3025 Moss St„ died yesterday at his home after a long illness. Mr. Grimshaw was a retired sheet metal worker at General Motors Truck and Coach Division. His body Is at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home. Surviving are his wife Clara; two sons, Lowell A. of Clarkston Robert of El Monte, Calif.; three daughters, Mrs. Robert Dennison of Layton, Utah, Mrs.. .Charles Thompson- of Fullerton, Calif., and Mrs. Stanley Seymour of Chicago, 14 grandchildren; three sis- MARGARET McQUEEN MILFORD TOWNSHIP—Service lor Miss-Margaret McQueen, 66, of 4600 S. Milford Road will be 10 .m. tomorrow at Richardson-BIrd Funeral Home, Milford. Miss McQueen, who died Saturday after a long illness, left no known survivors. Church Builder Tries New Vane Low-Priced Structure 'Essay in Protestan Simplicity' MRS. FRANK STIMSON GOODRICH — Service for Mrs. Frank (Mary A.) Stimson, 89, of 11073 Horton Road will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at C. F, Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonville, with burial to. follow at Goodrich Cemetery. Mrs. Stimson, a member of the Goodrich Methodist Church and of the Atlas Grange, died Saturday at Flint after a long illness. Surviving are a son Merle Wickham of Goodrich, six grandchildren, it great-grandchildren and sister. NEW YORK (UPI) — An architectural essay in Protestant simplicity and liberalism has been ‘‘written” on a six-acre slope in Norwalk,. Conn, The structure is called the United Church of Norwalk. It was built relatively modest price of 3115,000 and yet was designed to last as long as the most massive European Cathedral. A congregation of 100 members raised funds for the church and then gave the architect, Victor Christ-Janer, only one set of instructions. They were to express trends and liturgical aspirations of the modern church movement, and to merge the Indlvldunllkm of Protestantism with the group approach to religions experience. Christ-Janer concluded that i nonsymmetrical enclosure embodying the traditional function of the New England meeting house would be the answer. To achieve this, he used modern materials, which are cheap, light and durable and a construction system that enabled workers to assemble the structufiL as they would a jig-saw puzzle. “Disciplined disorder,” Is the way the church members scribe what resulted. The church exterior consists of i mass of triangular panels abandoning the traditional straight lines of churches but preserving a sense of space. w * Each triangle consists of ’sandwich" made up of fir plywood and Insulating materials reinforced and coated with a protective finish. More than 5,000 square feet of floor space have been enclosed in single vapor-sealed shell prefabricated so'that it took workmen only seven days to put the church walls together. Inside, the building Is divided Into reception and worship arcus. Pew seating has been provided tor 250 persons In a variety of bench slaes to fit adults and children. The “traffic pattern” has been arranged so that backs are never turned to the chancel and depart ing worshippers must leave in clua-through a side exit, a time when new churches are being built at a constanly tierating rate and const’rucllon costs are rising, the Unit ChUrch of Norwalk's leaders hope they may have made a contrlbu-economical as it is ecclesiastical to the liberal Protestant movement. Woman Wouldn't Get In —Couldn't Fool Her KEY WEST, Fla. Wi -West recently started Using 1 pact l5tpassenger buses oh i of its less heavily patronized city fcnska Him ■ struck; by ' driven to Joseph Foe, *7. «f 86 Deland Court. Mice laid Poe, who was driving A driver pulled up to a stop the. first week the little buses whiie In operation and got ap Icy gime from a woman who thought she was the objectiof a pick-up dotytytive brakes and foiled to yield the/right of way. Poe wae not WASHINGTON ~ The tights pf ' Manhattan’s skyscrapers are seen night by hundreds of email, shining eyes — the eyes oldeer, And muskrat who thrive i the river in New Jersey’s “Great Swamp.” The 8,000-acre Great Swamp, wilderness virtually unchanged since the days of the Indian, is of the largest, unspoiled natural wetlands between Maine and Virginia. A 26-acre section of the swamp Is now open ss s nature center. Trails ran through this and adjacent areas. Plants and trees will be marked, and blinds will enable visitors to observe birds Hie Great' Swamp, five miles south of Morristown, N. J., and less than 30 miles from New York City, has been called the greatest living museum in the New York metropolitan area. Ornithologists have identified 154 species of birds. More than 5 cies are known to nest and rear young there Including the black duck, mallard, arid wood duck. Pintail ducks gather In the swamp during the spring migration. one of the major resting feeding grounds for waterfowl and small birds on the Atlantic Flyway, the swamp Is a vital link in the chain of wetlands from the breeding grounds of Canada to the wintering areas far to the south. MRS. ALFRED WILFORD SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Service for'Mrs. Alfred (Opal) Wllford, 55, of 46149 Wace St., will be fl p.m. tomorrow at the William R. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester, Burial will be in Utica Cemetery. Mrs. Wilford died of a heart attack Saturday at Park General Hospital, Detroit. Surviving besides her husband are three daughers, Mrs. Gordon Walters and Mrs. Henry Collins, both of Shelby Township, and Mn Keith Hartman of Virginia; tw sons, Willie E. and Clyde E. Sim han, both of Detroit; a brother and 12 grandchildren. Few Dry Spots Found in U. S. Mississippi Only State but Many Counties and Towns Forbid Liquor NEW YORk UR - Liquor lawi across the United States vary greatly concerning who it — certain individuals, or just the. state — how it can be sold — tty" drink, or Just by package— where it can he consumed ~ta| public, or just in private. Since Oklahoma’s repeal statewide prohibition, Mississippi Is the only state which remains dry. But many counties and towns are dry In other states, under local option. A eounty-by-eounty i taken by the Distilled Spirits Institute showed more than half the counties dry In Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee and Texan, That's not a bus, young1 man," 4he 'snapped at foe driver.‘DOn'l try to fool met’*.., . - $ And a lesser percentage of counties were dry in Florida, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Minnesota, New Mexico, Virginia and West Vjrginla. A study shows crime increased 28 per cent in Oklahoma In i960 the previous year, while the increase nationally was only 14 per cent. "This can only be attributed to repeal,” a dry leader said. On the other hand, a liquor director doesn't believe repeal wao a factor In the crime Increase. He said Improvement In the reporting of violations to the,FBI coupled with the shift In population to the urban areas could be factors. He said hundreds of former bootleggers ' are now gainfully ployed — but not in the legal liquor business. This year only 19 Oklahomans have federal liquor stamps who are > not licensed dealers. The dry* now are concentrating _ji an educational program and trying to get the state to strictly enforce Its liquor law, The group hopes to outlaw booze again, but this attempt won’t come soon, Oklahoma has finally admitted publicly, what the people always knew —» it likes a toddy •P, . 8,000-Acre Area Has Deer, Mink, Muskrat, Plus tourist Trails In the scientific complex Cape Canaveral, another generation of scientists works to probe the universe in reality. Princeton’s Institute for Advanced Studies and Canaveral’* sandy launching pads have one thing in common; They arc greenhouses for ideas. To put It another way, they Area Sisters Twirl Way to Top in Baton Contest Waterford Township’s balon-twirling Bums sisters, Debbie, 16, and Mickey, 12, both took first-place honors in National Baton Twirling Association - spent competition Saturday at Miracle Mile Shopping Center. Competing against girls from Ohio, Indiana and Canada as well as from Michigan, Mickey took first place in both intermediate twirling and in the style Show. Debbie won a first in military strutting and placed third in twirling. i The girls are the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Van H. Bums, Lakeside Dr., Waterford To rtrip.r No Fish Tales Here at $21 for Each Foot don’t exaggerate when they tell Theo Carter about their prize catches. Theo operates a fish mounting firm and at 321 a foot she says her customers speak only the truth when they bring in specimens for taxidermy wofk. A Mere 32,913 Pipes in Atlantic City Hall ATLANTIC CITY, N.J.-tft The pipe organ in Convention Hall here Is reputed to be the largest in the world. It contains 32,913 pipes, with seven manuals in the main console and five in a movable console. Tourists Speed Across the Country WASHINGTON - Turnpikes are speeding thousands of vacationers cross the United States. The toll roads retain their popularity in spite of a growing network of free superhighways. In 1961, motorists traveled almost. 14 Salk Launches Biology Center Doctor Says Why Not Bionauts as Wall as Astronauts RUSTIC TURNPIKE Florida’s Sunshine State Parkway cuts through almost'primitive glades,' swamps, cypress groves and piney woods. Travelers may see a flock of wood Ibis, herds of Brahman cattle, and the thatched huts of Seminole Indians, In contrast, the New Jersey Turnpike Is a corridor through the heart of the industrial east. By United Press International In the intellectual haven of Princeton, N.J., EinSfein pursued his momentous theories of the universe. for great minds. What Princeton and Canaveral do for the physical sciences, Dr. Jonas Salk wants to do for the sciences of life. Salk, developer of the tnti-pollo vaccine which bears his name, has launched a new Institute for Biological Studies where great minds can be gathered for a intense investigation on the remaining mysteries of life. A LAUNCHING SITE V as Salk himself describes the projected Salk Institute at Li Jolla, Calif.—a “launching site’ for “bkmauts.’’ (tincturing plants along the way. The Pennsylvania Turnpike, opened in October 1940, Is the oldest of the mpdera toll roads. Skeptics said Its dally • traffic never would reach the planned 30,000 ..vehicles a day. Some 80,000 cars *uid tracks now use the road daily, and about 240 million vehicles have sped over the smooth concrete ribbons since 1940. The West Virginia . Turnpike threads Its way over, under, and through mountains, giving* drivers spectacular views as well as travel. "If we speak of astronauts,” he asks, “why can’t we think of bkmauts’ — scientists who arc capable of doing in biology what Spas Booming in Europe, U S. fields of space and of atomic physics?” The National Foundation-March oi Dimes is sponsoring a campaign across the nation to build up and equip the Salk Institute. In, 1956, a year after his polio vaccine was declared safe and effective, Salk began to think about a “center for biological research where outstanding scientists in the fundamental disciplines would carry on their work In an atmosphere of intellectual imagination, heightened by ( the presence of the fellow workers.' DEVELOPED THE IDEA He developed the idea of‘assembling “men of great excellence In the fields of biology, genetics, MIAMI, Fla. UR — Fishermeir| biochemistry, physics and mathematics’’ along with “philosophers, historians of science and others concerned with humanitarian objectives.” “The attitude and the approach at the Institute will be positive. The aim will be to contribute to helping man make the best of his gift of life.” The site for the Institute’s three buildings, which will provide all the facilities needed by the nauts,” consists of 27 acres overlooking the Pacific jUst north of San Diego. Gift of the land, valued at 31 million, was authorized by the electorate last year. Old Town of Odense Right Out of Storybook ODENSE, Denmark (UPI)-tering the land of Hans Christian Andersen, the traveler steps into the fairytale world he expects medieval streets with gingerbread homes, thatched-foofed cottages, swan-dotted lakes and castles complete with legends. Odense, Denmark’s third largest city, calls the famed storyteller its own, but all of Funen Island makes up the fairytale land of which is the center. Odense boasts an old country inn right in the (tenter of town. Timbered and stuccoed, with bright copper and antique clocks decorating the brick walls, Den Gamle Kro (The Old Inn), dates back to 1683 Is one of the most unusual restaurants to be found anywhere. Castles and manor houses dot the countryside, the hedgerows along the roadsides are repented-ly Interrupted'by white timbered and stuccoed cottages crowned with thick matted straw roots. It is a place where the Danes go and .ask, “Could we have table in the yard?” — the op air lnsldd patio of the old building and read from menus chalked onto slate. Country inns specialize in the fish dishes expected of a north European island. Although a major manufacturing center with 125,000 residet Odense maintains its heritage one of Scandinavia’s oldest cities. in Odense that St. Canute was slain by Jutlanders in 1086. The old Cathedral here still holds his remains In its crypt. ANDERSEN’S HOME Andersen's home, adjoined by a museum, stands in a quaint area oflittle,steep-roofedbuildings lining narrow cobbled streets. The museiyn boasts an Impressive collection of Us handwritten manuscripts and mementos of hla,flfe. sack hi which he cabled the farewell letter written him .by the woman he wanted so to marry, RlbOrf Voigt. While many vacationists who ■lude more than Copenhagen on their Danish itinerary head for Odense — it’s a delightful 85-mile rail and train-ferry trip, 2V4 hours from the.icapital — the area still Is to be overrun by American tourists. Egeskov Castle, less miles from Odense, Is one of the showplactp of Denmark. The 15th Century * castle, stands in its weathered red! brick majesty on moat-made Island. f For those wondering where'else to go besides Copenhagen, there is ■Amalkiftor lUiivUn I^nmirlr i. trMro Milton ;vehide miles on turnpikes, an increase of 568 million miles over,I960. * Though the 3,000 miles of turnpikes are uniform In their high engineering standards, the routes diverse as the United States Veteran Jersey turnpike travelers don’t need maps and mileposts. They can tell where they are by sniffing the distinctive Playing Cards Long on Deck The road climbs 2,600 feet without exceeding a five per cent, grade. To accomplish this, the rected 73 bridges g the 88-mlle expressway, had to bore only one tun- Cuts through .rock are as deep i 256 feet. In all, workmen excavated three times the amount of earth moved in digging the Pan- NEW YORK (UPI) - The next time your partner trumps your ace in a bridge game, count to 10 and then let off steam by reflecting on the colorful history of the playing card. i Consider, for example, that playing cards have been enlivening or depressing, but always entertaining mankind for more than 600 years. Ancient Romans First to Take the Waters' WASHINGTON - The centuries-old custom of “taking the waters’ Is being revived. European spas are booming, and American watering places are beginning to regain their popularity. Therapeutic waters remain a prime attraction, but modern spas also offer the diversions of holiday resorts. American Indians and ancient Romans were among the earliest peoples to prize the bubbling waters, the National Geographic Society says. Warring tribes burled their tomahawks at what Is now Hot Springs, Ark., so all the braves could benefit from the salubrious flow. ROMAN BATHS The Romans built baths at mineral springs throughout Europe. An outstanding one was the pres-end-day Belgian town of Spa, which became a popular health resort In the 16th century. Spa was known Le Cafe de TEurope, but Its proper name became generic for watering places and a boon to crossword-puzzle makers. Bath, England, was the site of elaborate Roman baths. The resort gained its greatest tame in the IStii century under the guld- ama Canal,, says the National Geographic Society. Glaciers that pushed down from the north thousands of years ago create^ the major problems for the Ohio Ttmplke. Tbegtochd drift formed stable foundation for bridges, and in one case an additional $500,000 was needed to create a secure base for just one crossing. ed that in the last five years 42 m fe— abandoned on the road. DIVIDED FARMYARD In the Midwest, turnpikes sometimes slice forms in two. A possibly apocryphal story tells of a toll road that cut through one farmyard? WhOn the farmer wants to feed his hogs now, he has to get ‘ his car, drive 20 miles, and pay 50 cents toO. The Kansas Turnpike has Jhe highest speed limit of any toll Lost and -abandoned items on other turnpikes include a 10-cubic-foot refrigerator, a house door, ' and, inevitably, a kitchen sink, which turned up on the Sunshine State Parkway in Florida. Toll collecting also presents problems. Small children chew up toll tickets. Dogs bite, the hand that collects the money. Driven coins held between their | swgtow c ^ffthei there are compensations. For three Christmases a jolly motorist' drove along the Connecticut Turnpike singing carols to toll collec- tors. 13th Century Trader! From East Had Them far Sale HALEYVILLE, Ala. (UPI)-The last Republican to serve in the Alabama legislature died yesterday after a short illness. Rev. Benjamin G. Dodd, 69-year-old Baptist minister, represented Winston County during the Gordoit Person administration in 1950. He was the only GOP house member that time. How many aces have been tramped, or similar boo boot perpetrated to that time may make your own plight seem less bleak. As far back as the 13th or 14th century, traders from the East brought with them spices, fine cloth, gold, Jvory — and playing cards. And the cards had much of the elements of today’s. CALLED TAROCCHI The expensive, rare and richly American Indians and forked ancient decks were called ST. GEORGE, Utah (» — L. C. Scott, 35, of Detroit, was killed Saturday when, police said, he dived through the front window of a bus and was run over. The driver of the bus was quoted i saying Scott had been “acting strangely” just before the accident on U. S. 91 near the Utah-Nevada state line. Turocehi” and found mainly in Medieval Italy. They consisted of a trump suit of twenty-fwo "atouts” in addition to four 14-card suits. The .atouts represented the most Important force* affecting mankind, such ns religion, lightning, disease, war and death. The common suits were basically the four suits of the decks have now. They represented nobility, clergy, tradesmen and peasants — today's spades, hearts, diamonds and clubs, respectively. CALLED CAVALIERS Face cards were essentially the same except that Knaves were called Cavaliers. Cards originally were made by hand of costly materials, including ivory, metal, silk and wood. Many were gold-encrusted. Gutenberg, father of printing, brought his discovery to cards and tine quality low coot cards began to receive wide popularity. Among the 120 million Ai cans who play cards today, Contract Bridge and Canasta are played the most. Pinochle, poker, solitaire, rum-iy, 500, Auction bridge, Hearts and Gin rummy also are favorites. Battle Creek Man Dies in Canadian Accident Nash’s rigid code of conduct for his famed Pump Room transformed the noveaux-rich into tlemen — at least while they were In Bath. George Washington bathed qt Berkeley Springs, W. Va., while oh a surveying trip In 1748. returned to Bath, as It was then called, many times, but in 1796 deplored the “growing dissipation” at the gay resort. In (heir 19th-century heyday, European spas were frequented by crusty old gentlemen with gout, liverish colonels on leave from the tropics, matchmaking mothers and fortune hunters. Many German marriage tracts of the period specified the wife's right to visit a spa at least once a year. Entire families, with voluminous baggage and a retinue of servants, settled In health resorts for the summer In both Europe and the United States. ENTERPRISE, Ont. «f> — Frank Graham, 56, of Battle Creek, killed and Frank Icles, 62, also of Battle Creek, was Injured Saturday night when thplr car crashed Into a tree stump near Enterprise, ablut 30 miles northwest of Kings- ton. Icles was reported In satisfactory condition in Kingston General Hospital. rend — M miles an hour — tat ta n recent month I managed to exceed It. Kansas Turnpike officials report-: Last GOP Legislator Succumbs in Alabama Detroit Man Leaps to Death From Bus NOTICl OF PUBLIC SALE ____ ______ Rd.. PantlM, Chevrolet Station Wagon, DMF1439M Ij----------U ’ Public Auotlon . CLYMER Hand County Credit Union ASSESSOR'S PLAT 37 1 NOTICE OP PUBLIC MEAIUNO dice U hereby given that n public Ing boo boon eoneduled by the Pon- ___ City Coounloolon to bo bold Tueiday, September 11, 1M2, at I o'clock p.m. B.S.T. In the Commtulon Chamber, City “ “ 15 8. Parke Street, (or the purpoeo nullng the Zoning Map at Ordinance 14 known a* the Building Z ring dcacrlbed property: lortherly 395 (t. Lot 1, i Life Insurance... Complete Planned Protection Savings RsMrensnt Many Others Three Generations in Insurance NANS A. A A w w tm W tamUnewa 1044 Joslyn eJk OK. 4UUK 31. J.U It h 4 Quality Everyone Appreciates.. • Leonard Man, 72, Pies Driving Car A 72-year-old Leonard man, Matthew J. McCarrick, died of a heart attack yesterday while he and his wife were driving on Drahner Road to Addlsori Township. McCarrick’s wife Neva, 70, said they were traveling only about 10 miles an hour when her husband was stricken. The car went ott the road on a com but did not hjt The warm and sincere welcome * to all calling at‘the Donelson- J Johns Funeral Home is truly a * 1 service to the bereaved and is i < appreciated. Our sincere, alert and friendly i service anticipates many duties , and needs and relieves the f family thereby. Be assured that all receive this same gracious ( hospitality. L/«di!al w 4*4511 OnQurVnmh CDomlson-AoMS SS5 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC McCarrick was dead on arrival at Pontiac Genual Hospital. | J \ 1 1 mi.