f' a ■'; . V . i- A J in V. V :o ::oTO Kic v]i] ». or:o Th» WMher VJ. WMiktr Bar**! rwMut THE PONTIAC Home r Edition VOL. 121 NO. 71 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, V^EDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1963 —60 PAGES ‘ Cohfinued for 3 Months free parking program.on downtown municipal parking lots for another three months. But approval of the cooperative venture with the Downtown Pontiac Business Association (DPBA) didn't come as easily, as passage of the initial free parking plan three months ago. Last night‘s vote was 5-1 favoring renewal of tnc plan, which provided free parking on meter Commissioner Loy L. Ledf^rd^ was out of town on city bttsl- In’t V Commissionier Charles H. Harmon strongly opposed the plan, charging it “may constitute illegal use. of public funds” and that it “certainly is morally wrong." Harmon voted against the Other commissioners, while Failure of DP^A officials to fur: nish them with results of a survey to determine thd^ merits, of such a free parking program. TIED TO REDEVELOPMENT Commissioner William H. Taylor Jr tied his Vote for the program to redevelopment plans in the downtown urban r e n’c w a 1 area. “I won’t vote for this again,’ town teO ns what their pbns are in the redevelopment of our central business district.” Taylor said that “the city has i ^eat deal at stake in development and construction projects downtown” and .indicated he Taylor was referring to unofficial expansion plans being contemplated by Sears Boebuck and the owners of Waite's Department sJ . - StoreJ thought the city was wasting its time trying to help merchants if Uilder temss«Mbrfree^MHdE-^ ing agreement, the.city will pay |5,C2S from its general fund and the DPBA wUi pay 55,000 they wouldn’t commit themselves (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Urged to 6et In Public Affairs Gov. Romnex. Makes Appeal in Speech to U. S. Chamber WASHINGTON UFI ^^ov. Geor^ Romney of Michigan told businessmen today they should get into public affairs, but in doing so should take off their business hats and participate as citizens. Romney addressed the annual meeting of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, receiving standing ovations both at the beginning and at the end of hrslpeech In which he deplored what he called the trend since the 1920’s toward massive federal government. -GasWlanfes af Rockefs K Had Removed AP Ph*tel*i said he has invited Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York and Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., to visit Michigan. He said he would like to have the people of Michigan get an Opportunity to become better acquaints with Rockefeller and Goldwater. On the basis of a better acquaintance, he said, tile people of his state could make up their Says Colburn Blue Shield Attorney Makes Claim in^ Court From Our News Wires DETROIT An attorney for the Michigan Medical Service chared today State Insurance Commissibner Sherwood Colburn was out to destroy Blue Shield. The purpose of the insurance own, minds as to which they (.Q^ynissioner (is) to destroy would prefer as the Republican presidential candidate for next year. Romney said voluntary coopera-,tion of free men and women had been the mainspring of American Blue Shield as it has existed for 23 years,” attorney Henry R. Sills, said. He made the charge in his opening remarks at a show cause hearing before Wayne County strength in the past and is ndeded circuit Judge Theodore R. Bohn. (Continued on,Page 2, (3ol. 7) Flash > TOKYO (IIPD - The Japanese Maritime Agency said today that it had been advised that a Communist Chinese freighter was torpedoed and sunk in the Yellow Sea between Korea and China. i In Today's Press Air Future Future of Pontiac as ■ airline city isn’t known— PAGE A-14. Minuteman Missile director denies weapon hits snags — PAGE B-9. Sweepstakes New Hampshire expects i 54-million yearly dividend - PAGE A-li. Area News .... .......A-4 - Astrology " Bridge D-9 Comics D-9 Editorials A-6 Food Section .. , , L D-8 Markets D-16 Obituaries D-12 Sports D-l-D-4 1 Theaters A-I5 TV-Radio ftograms D-17 Wilson, Burl . D-17 .Women’s Pages B-2^B-S j FROM OUR NEWS WIRE^ PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti—Haiti has agreed to the Dominican Republic’s demand that 22 political refugees ip asylum in the Dominican embassy here be allowed to leave the country in safety, diplomatic sources said today. The decision by Haitian President Francois Duvalier’s government appeared to ease further the crisis between Haiti and its neighbor re-* public on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola. Myron A. McMillan, assistant Michigan attorney general, said he objected “to this scurrilous remark” by Sills. The outburst came in the midst of Blue Shield’s efforts to raise its rates 19.3 per cent over the objections of Colburn. The new rates were to have been charged today, but Bohn yesterday issued a 24-hour re: straining order and erder^ show cause hearing. , Bohn, who had' granted a quick hearing on the temporary restraining order until th? case is adjudicated, began reading legal documents filed with him by Blue Shield which formed the hospital’s service’s reply to Coburn’s petition. ^ The proposed 19.3 per cent increase is effective June 1. However, Blue Shield was to have started sending out bills today at higher rates. Sills contended the court had no jurisdiction to rule on the matter arid said (Colburn did-not have the authority to bring the suit to the courts. Sills said Michigan law specifies the commissioner can Institute legal action only when, dealing with the re^ivership^br insolvency of an insurance firm. He added legal restraint is “expressly prohibited” unless it is brought by the state jittomey general. The Blue Shield attorney also contended the court could not act unless due proce^ was followed, (^bum did not issue an order. Sills said. Me said the 1554 administrative code states that administrative orders must be made hy!»i*gis-teiTd mail 15 days in advance. He^id^lbum did krid a let-ter^oni theTat^ hike, matteV but “a letter did not purport Ur be an order.” It was communicated to,Latin American diplornats as a five-man team from the -Organization of American States (OAS);^ investigated Dominican charges that Haiti violated the embassy last Saturday while searching for Old Mao Winter’s frosty heart opponenU of gime. Haiti Grants Safety 4hlitkal Refugees Winter's In Retreat Before Warm Trend LAST MELTING ^ CharlejtrV^ director of the Michigan Department of'Mental Health, closes the door on the last meeting^of the Michigan Mental Health Gommission. Com- mission members froriileB7 dfter Wagg, F aid F. VanderVeen. Andrew-W. L. Brown and Kenneth R. Magee held their final meeting yesterday at Pontiac State Hospital. Cubon Chief Appeart in Place of Honor at May Day Parode Mental Health Unit End of an Era MOSCOW (^ — Fidel Michigan Mental Health Commission met for thp last time yestep Castro got another fleeting day at Pontiac state Hospital, glimpse today of the types of Soviet rockets Premier Marklrtg^tlie end of an era. UjoilawiThe diVector must be a^al-j, Wagf T Khrushchev pulled out of Cuba last year at President Kennedy’s insistence. The Cuban prime minister appeared with Khrushchev in the pl^e of honor atop the Lenin Related Story, Page A-5 The commission, w h 1 c h reviewed appropriation^^ by the State Legislature for state mental hospitals, would be abolished when Gov. Romeny signs a new bill revamping the administration of.atate hospitals. According to Charles F/Wagg, soon to retire as director of the Michigan Department of Mental Health, the commission was es-tablifhad in 1121 and bakUts first mteting at Pontiac State Hospital. ITie comrnission wiliZbe^ ified pyschiatrlst^ - Iproval of planning money for the Wagg said the five-member j Proposed 80-bed children s unit at commission Is even older than Pontiac State Hospital. The new advisory council will “study and make recommendations to the governor and director for the immediate am| long-rarige needs of mentally - iU children! Plymouth State Home and Train* mausoleum at the annual May Day parade in Red Square. He appeared to enjoy the military review and workers’ parade, which U-S. Ambassador Foy D. Kohler boycotted, because of Castro’s presence. Kohler >vatohed the celebration on a television set in his residence. Castro conversed animatedly with Khrushchev as the Soviets rolled out a 10-minule review of their ipilitary hardware. pladed by a 12-member advisory council with a director appointed by the governor. Under the new Among the weapons that sped Dehnke's Wife Terrorized by Masked Man the Department of Mental Health, which-was established in 1945. The legislature okayed .515,-000 for preliminary plans on the new facility. The mental health director said construction has been authorized-, at the Hawthorn Onter, North-|ville; Lafayette Clinic, Detroity- and adults. The council will also suggest practical programs to meet these needs.. Headod- by RichaVij r. Vapd^- Veen, chairman, the commission reviewed recent aoDWpriatlons by ing School, and Ypsilanti State Hospital. The commission discussed the appointment of the new director for the state mental health de* the7.Slate Legislature -and..ii.L&-cussed ways to implement legislation calling for community mental health centers. vlser to Rie governor on xneatal iz health, reported that six to eight candidates were hhing ★ ★ ★ County Ready to (jrry Out New Mental Health Plan The wife of Bjoomfield Town-,| ship’s chief of police and their past the reviewing stand were ^ I five children are no longer stay By JIM DYGERT Oakland County is ready to be the first to take ^d- to 700-mile range rockets similar‘"6 at home alone wee she was vantage of a new state law authorizing counties to set Spring’s sunny smile melted the Duvqlier re- this morning as he quietly withdrew for the season.. - The incident led Dominican President Juan Bosch to threaten the use of armed force, unless Haiti withdrew a polipeman from the embassy'grounds and guaranteed the safety of Dominican diplomats and the Haitian political refugees sheltered in the embassy. Bosch mobilized land, air ‘ and sea forces to back up the demands. Haiti withdrew the-policeman yesterday. . Duvalier told" a cheering ^owd of 10,000 last night, “No-bddy can dictate to Ifee —1 ^m the personification, of the Haitian nation. The weathennan said fair and warmer is the forecast for Pontiac area residents for the next five days, with temperatures 2 3 degrees above the normal high of 64 and normql W of Showers for the period will measure less than one half inch mostly late Sunday or Monday. Mornihg. n o r t b to northwest winds at lO to 20 miles an hour will become light and variable tonight, and southerly at ^ to 15 m.p.h. tomorrow. to those withdrawn from Cuba during last year’s crisis. Western observers spotted nothing new among the rockets shown. liii Cuban, leader reportedly was deeply/offended by Khrushchev’s failure to notify him in advance of the decision to withdraw the rockets under American pressure. A freezing 30 degrees was the low recording in down'town Pon- T will keep power,” Duvalier,nac prior to 8 a.m. The mercury (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Ihad climbed to 50 at 2 p. Castro, dressed in white shirt, tie and dress uniform for the first time since he arrived in the Soviet Union last weekend, was the center of attraction in Red Square. terrorized by an inifuder early yesterday morning. Chief Norman Dehnke said today. Mrs. Phyllis Dehnke, '35, was scratched on the neck wiOi a knife during a brief scuffle with a masked man. She^aid she awoke about 4 ajn. to find the man standing over her. Her husband was on an emergency call at the time, and their five children were sleeping. up tjieir own mental health care programs. But it may be a year or two before the county can act under the new legisla-*—"'^--------------——-------- tion, ^even though- Gov. George Romney has signed the bill into law. Sen. Farrell E. Roberts; R-Oak-land County, estimated a year and a half would be needed for t h e Michigan Department Hunt Convicts as Four Try-fa Steal Car Khrushchev enthusiastically led! According to Mrs. Dehnke, the jMental Health to work ,out de^ ........ .--.V.. - itailed, prxweduces and guidelines glimpse of the revolutionary lead-j®”d said he would-“^me bajk;for the new approach to meptal jto finish the job.’^ She described,health care. Castro listened quitely a.s the him as a yaung Negro,, a^ut 6 Soviet defense minister, Marshaj feet tall with a meiTium build. Rodion Y. Malinovsky, ohargedL “reactionary circles” of thej The Dehnkes live at 722 Crest- United States with a pqjicy of ag- . , gression and provocations against i''*®"'- Dehnke has been township Cuba. . . |chief of police sirtce 1957. Roberts’ sponsored) the bill in this year’s regular session of the Legislature. The measure was! backed by Romney. Pontiac Reaches New Production Peak Although the county plans no immediate construetton of new H j facilities, it will begin its ihein-^ I tal health! program by. working I with existing hospitals, according to Board of Supervisors Chairman Delos Hamlin. GOLDWATER (UPD - Michigan and Indidna police threw up roadblocks near the state line today in the search for the four convicts who escaped last week from Southern Michigan Prison. They acted after a fisherman said four men tried to steal his car at gun point this morning. However, the fisherman- was unable to positively identify the nien he had seen as'the .convicts. He was shown photographs of the < Roadblocks were thrown up on roads near this ^uthem Michi- During the second shift at Rontiac Motor ■ Division yesterday, production for a month topped the 60,000 mark for the first time in the division’s history. The GM executive attributed part of the reccH'd showirig to “outstanding support we have received from the home folks.” “This was the- first time that we have reached or surpassed that figure in one month’s time.” Pontiac CreneraJ ‘Manager E. M. Estes told the Pontiac Kiwanis Club. The total number of cars produced during April was 60,259, or 375 units higher than the previously established record set in March 1555. , . Estes compei4M thtoTigonr’fte ThUi’lfSd cars built in 1908. the first year the Oakland . was introduced. Jt also matches the number of Poriiiacs built in the entire year of 1926, he added. Better than 36 per cent of all new car sales in the metropolitan PontiitJ area were Pontiacs and Tempests, according to latest registration figures. “That’s better than one -out of every three cars sold,” Estes pointed out. He said Survey^ indicated no other Gen-„«ral Motors home toWn had greater loyalty to ijs automobiles. if you can sell them at home, you will be able to do so across the country,” he said..''“And you’ve_^ certainly helped us do well here.’’ ■ ' , gan city. A state police airplane I circled the area and police dogs The new law gives courityj were brought in to hunt for the boards of supervisors authorityimen, set up a mental health board The fishermaa, George E. and hire a mental health di- Wilbnm, Goldwater, uid be rector. was Rshiag at a creelTeast of OUTPATIENT BASIS town this moralng when he , ProvKljiB Mlh ^ “* on* an outpatient basis and keep- .. . " ' ' ing patents near their home in' 'h*’ «PPrOac»jrf local hospitals even when ’hos- Uw men pidkid pitalization is required has been « Wilburn said, he ran toto, hailed throughout the naUon as He said he looked the solution to the' growing ***‘^*‘ the .men flee on mental health problem. '*'hen they failed to' sftirt ... his car. i'. ^ ‘ . .. .. u ' police said Wilburn waJla- Experience In other states has photographs of the four* shown that outpatient mental|j,<,^„ but Was un- health service cuts long-term j,bie tnOink ^m posiUvely (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) jthe men be had aaea. ( ^ f 'v: /, 'r ■ ^ 3::a£ POXTUC PRESS, WEE>yESDAV, MAIT 1. lOM City Okays Funds Bid for Sewer fhe tiiy Commission has au* thorlaed Manager Robert A. Stiirer to apfdy for scnne $778,500 in federal grants under the public works acceleratioa program to pay half of a propfllia IKS-millkm sewer project on Pontiac's EastI ,Slie. CsauBissioMrs appreved re-selatioas last night cemmitting 000 la the dty’s INS and 1004 if the federal grants are ap- tMer the federal program, grants are approved only in aonunts equal to or slightly under matdiing expenditures sport locally oil projects. The city aRiir^ for a $240,500 «federal grant toward the proposed Murphy Park Relief Setror, estimated to cost some $401,000. • filed asking $5»jm in federal * funds for the estinuted $1,077,-' 000 ttelleway Creek sanitary in Second Day; Delibffqtion Goto On in Trlaf for Murder MUSKEGON (UPD-The Muskegon County Circuit Court jury trying to decide the fate of Herman Barmore today started its second day of deliberatims. Barmore, the 41-yeareld ex- BIRMINGHAM - A Summer ^ts wiU op^ Friday at a‘^0 Thm Swim Club involving 20(k|) 250 studente will be initiated here . his life behind ’hiht and was the first defendant ever to conduct his own defense in a Mkhi-js the July 5, ISH of Evanston, Rl., boy scoot Peter Gorham near Camp -ANO"CTMfc'=»' Cuba's* Prime: Ehlcl' Most of the local share would come from 'Sj^ial assessments lo affected property owners lying within an assessment district yet to be determined. - ’Ttw! Sss^ figured an acreage basis, would pay off bonds sold to finance the local share. 1710 effect of federal approval of the grants would be to substantially reduce the, assessments to property owners. ] Castro was down on one knee, bill he wasn't proposing anything more than a snapshot .during his visit to the dotiniry home of Nikita Khrushehev. Open to proposals' however, was ---------------------------------......—~:-xr-rmmr*' Jayne Manafieid, who divorced husband Mickey Hargitay in Juarez, Mexico. With her is friend Nelson Sardelli, who accompanied her to Mexico and back. . Tid Irucks Coming Back DETROIT (^Ford Motor Co. Extend Free Parking Three More Months (Continued From Page One) AMC Reports Xluarterly Profit DETROIT 'American Mo- Haiti Grants Safe Leave for Refugi ees Isembly to Michigan for the first I time since 1957 as part of-a $35- ! million expansion program.-- The company said it will convert an old station sragon plant at Wayne, Mich., outside Detroit, to truck assembly and expand die plant by t2$,IN square (Continued From Page One) „ , warehouse since 1959. into the parking lot Tfind for the i dklliTIhInk free^parklng was 1^'* ^^® 29 million, egual to 54 three-month period. [ an aid to sheppOTf ^ @ » share, for the first three , - — - imohths of 1963 The cost of municipal lots over ‘Tve talked to many people! a three month period is $13,625. since thep and nearly all favor! compared widi $8J5 It goes toward retiring bonds that it, so I’m convinced it must be I million, or 48-cents a share, in were originally sold to finance the worthwhile," he said. 1 the similar period a year ago. tots. Commissioner, MUton R. Henry] -pHe quarter is the second ir tIm. i.u.t h.. P^y®***® •" an-j agreed that continuing the pnj-jAMC’s fiscal year, which began « r hI!L .«I~!L mo "**** installments throu^ 1970. ! gram ‘‘might result in a-smaIl|o^( j Mayor Robert A. Undry urged,increase in our tax burden, but! sales for the first.six months “Baarihl»7, a jury convicted Barmore of second-degree murder after deliberating for three days. The State Supreme CJourt overturned that verdict because of prejudicial errors by Muskegon ^unty , Circuit Juilge Henry Birminghpm Area News High School Poo( Setdor fe^Swi Patio Club fiti this summer. The Seaholm4iigb^Sciipol i^^ and adjacent patio wiU be reserved for teen club menrbers frond 1-3 p.m.'Monday throu^ Friday during the summer. i»jn. reception Thp approximately 5M sta- The path) will be furnished as lounge area, complete with Barmore, who was represented in the first case by his court-appointed attorney John Boescb- ord player. A concession stand serving light refreshmoato fe-40^ "up'Putside the premises, according to Donald Martin, re^ reatlon director. ^ : Membership in the club is lim-, ited to junior and senior high school students in the Birmlng- dents will be hosts to their families and friends at the aaa«f-atloa's headqnarters, l$l$ Oran- Codiairmen of the event are Mr. and Mrs. TRlliam Lyman, 5395 Hickory Bend, Birming^ m, and Dt and Mix. L. Jerome Fink, 44300 “ Instructor^ are Maiy Jane Big- ir ■dlr1hiiisf*-tt*‘*‘ * r fl8.Ull6l!ll D Bfl%h, Robert Brener, Betty Conn, Svea Kline, Albert MuUen, Jaek Ramsey and Dorothy SiddaU. Terence ,M. BM Service for Terence M. Bird, 23, ham School District. Any boy orjof 5860 Snqwshoe Circle, Bloom- girl who has completed seventh grade by June 15 can qualify. field Township, will be 4 *p ib. tomorrow at Bell Otapel of the William n HamlHnn fVi #VmTnm-jr n. misiiiiM/ii cilia* will foUow in Wiite Chapel Memorial Crematorium, Troy. Mr. Bird died ymteniay.. He was an employe of Reilly Bird The program will be held from June 17 to Aug. 10. Registration blanks were dLs- (hi« Hm. iMith thM ^ • - gleuM fnn. jMbiaJaai^^ail termr'“ ------------- ----- advised istratioa win be handled on a Barmore through the second trial, first come, first serve basis, made only part of the closing ^ , .. summation for his only officiiS' ^ ^ sponsored by role ithe recreation board in coopera- tion with local PTA’s and the Pr^Mtog JiMlg, ‘T Wal, a Krai Cranly clraiit jodgs * . i^iy Hills, recently retlr^ presi- RenrofTOTdnnii^^ Leape The jury finaUy decided retire for the evening at 1:5$ p.m. and began deliberating again this morning at I a.m. Vander Wal gave the jury only three choices — guilty of second degree murder or manslaughter or innocent. of Women Voters, wijl speak at a Friday meeting at the Congregational Church of Birmingham. Mrs. Hilfinger’s topic will be ‘The Citizen’s Role in Govem- Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Reilly Bird, with whom he made his home; a sister, Sheila H., at honie; and a brother, Michael D., of Ann Arbor. County Ready to Implement MenfarBWZ~ commitments almost to Hamlin said. declared. “God is the onlv one. C«r ^™bly Pjants at Dear- continued, support of toe free! if we losUur tox base d^^ year wctc a record ___ii #______________ _ .1 born ana WiXOtn Will be exiiana- narl.;r.n fkoi i Wo’fl 1n«A a WlmlA Int nf taT»« V ______ .... '' ... . . . . who can take it from me. MET WITH OAS Duvalier had Just finished meeting with the members of the OAS peace mission. born and Wixom will be expanded as will plants at Norfolk, Va., and Kansas (^ity. Mo. Beginning next month the Wix- Dnvalier’s regime imposed parking pro^am on grounds thiat^e’d lote a whole lot of taxes, ' ^ g million'and profits totaled “we must do »mething to bolster Harmon based his objection |$22.44 million, or $1.19 a share, downtown businessmen d u r 1 n g „„ n,e „f general funds, ihis period of transition in thel mised through local taxes, to ; om plant,^here all Laneolns and^ urban renewal program and peri-1 retire bonds Thuhderwds are assembled, will!meter road omstruction. I The previous high in sales ' was set in the first six months I. of the 1962 fiscal year and to- OAS mission arrived. after the The U.S. government protested incidents last week involving U.S. Murines. The wife of a Marine sergeant was mauled and arrested by a Haitian guard and a^ noise bomb was set off at the home of another Marine sergeant. In Washington. Rep. Armisted /Selden, D-Ala., said he had a report that an estimated 300,000 Haitians may be in Cuba. He said Fidel Castro could use them to iavade their homeland if he wished. Selden. chairman of a House “We told the people no money fatAd $$84.6 million. wou]l^ome^om^|n- [ed by 78,000 square feet.1 . ,, . , iti^iljl00:square leet m a. TOnTeht todav to retire__bondS. We vith*$18:07 iraffion. or 98 cents a i^ing pr^am which began STceJSf bmS'dfeJS'S P«^'‘“8;Lre. in th™finl’siJ! months of| ist year. Second-quarter-sales rose $272.7 million last year to ! million this year. American Motors was withdhe 19^ model year. the central business district is ! meter revenues, bleeding. j for-free parking in prin- “In • my opinion there’s no cipal. I’m against this method moral laxity whatsoever in trying I whereby we appropriate money to do something for the good and we have no right appropriating welfare of all our people. ” without asking the taxpayers to Freeing of the Slaves Markecj on New Stomp WASHINGTON (UPP - President * ♦ ★ ; vote on it.” Kennedy today unveiled the de-| Commissioner Winford E. Bot-j City. Attorney cirrn o cnAniol efomn rttortrimv tnm ooroA/f An OTAtin/lo tKftf William A. sign of a special stamp marking tom agreed on grounds that “we Ewart’s opinion was that the rsary of Presij|,af« trying to keep the business procedure i was legal. last of the passenger car facturers to report earnings for the Janu^-March quarter. General Motors made a record his opinion on a $414.3 million, up $40 million Following her talk to the supper club of -the church, she will jconduct a question-and-answer Barmore will be returned to session on the new constitution. Iprison even if/te is acquitted of Reservations for the 6:45 p.m. the murder charge. 'dinner meeting are to be made He was -also convicted of a by Thursday at the church office, morals charge in 1960 and is also 3M N. Woodward, wanted ih New York State fori >r|; parole violation on an armed rob-! An -e x h.i b i t of the work of bery charge. Bloomfield Art Association stu- De/ns Ignore Warnings, Push Recount Urges Businessmen (Continued From Page One) nil,” The county W9uid .jaad-fto^>^ mental health patients to local hospitals with psychiatric wards and clinics, according to Hamlin and Roberts. The county would maintain contracts with the hospitals. The state would pay up to 60 per cent of the cost of the local under the new law. County Probate Judge Donald E. Adams has said the new ap- to Enter Public Life ;and more effective freatment Only the most serious cases can (Continued From Page One) again to solve problems at the ™«ntal health help at the I ANTCIM/- «mn »«• U State and community level rather present time, Adams said, andf LANSING (UPD ^ MI c h I g a n Democrats went ahead today on „ .. , , , . „ ' J Romney said the only way probat^ court procedures set up plans to challenge with a recount ^ ^ullt and the econ- to prc^t individual rights. the lOOth anniversary ^ , _ dent Lincoto’s order freeing the people downtown and increase ----- ----------- . luians i« cnanenue wim a recoum a a .. slaves. loiifcddsi^town tax base so some- state Supreme CJoUrt ruling in a from last year. Ford, at $121.3||“ ^ ^ At a ceremony in,-his office.!day we can reduce taxes to all fcase several yea^p ago, support- million, was off 5 per cent from aaopuon or the states newj cga Kennedy said the Emancipation our taxpayers ’’ ling the transfer « general funds!last year,- .constitution. ciple of fiscal integrity. Oakland County’s proposed 1964 Proclamation commemor-; Commissioner Dick M. Kirby ko the parking lot fund at that . Chrysler increased spectocu-| ★ * * -| uniegg ^e trend toward exces-budget includes $200JX)0 for emer- ative stamp which will go oni said that three months ago he kime. ^ action came despite give federal government is fe-gency mental health cdre. This millions of letters “will serve as'- subcommittee on inter-American'a reminder of extraordinary ac-' affairs, described the report in|tion in the past and unfinished ^ poiloW VictilTl^S Rouf© a radio, interview. - ImilUon while Studebaker’s los: jincreased from $2.6 million $6.4 million. isiness in (he future.” The Weather J*:::; Fall U.S., Weather Bureau Report ' PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Sonny todav warmer in :aftemora high 51 Fair and not so cold tonight loW 36. Thursday fair and warmer high 65. Winds north to northwest 1$ to 2$ miles per hour today becoming light and variable and Motherly 5 to 15 miles Thmsday. . Marchers Face Arrest ^ CHATTANOOGA ft —Ten white Marchers are to' be accompan-ahd Negro men. who say they ied by a truck drivien by a are determined to finish a hijte; member of the National Associa-through the South begun by a tion for the Advancement of Col-postman who was shot to death^ored People, last week, left today for Jackson,PLACARD '^The self-styled freedom march-■ M(we was wiring a placard ers face almost certain arfest which proclaimed that Ne^o«« and white persons should be al- Deputy Warden. Picked at Jackson Umpcnturc Drecedinij I i.B Wind tcIocUt I I I Wednridar at 7 32 p.m. r Aga la Paalia The State Board of Canvassers officially certified yesterday the April 1 vote that gave LANSING OP - The provisional! the ' constitution a 7,829-vole appointment of Merwin Kircher, margin of victory. The action 56. as deputy warden of the State gave the Democrats exactly 48 Prison of Southern Michigan at honrs to file their recount pe-jackson was announced today by Utlons with the secretary of (Corrections Director Gus Harri- state’s office, m. . I But even before the papers Kircher has been servii^ as^„^ Auditor Gen. Billie S. assistant deputy warden at the „ . . .a Marquette branch prison. He '^ho made the survey on 'The “freedom marchers” saiditered the corrections system asjWhich the party decided to chal-f they are intent upon walking to a parole officer at Port HuroniI**'g« the election, warned “the warnings the effort will prove fur versed, he said, state, Jocal an^l mon^ pays for temporary hostile and costly both in dollars and individual responsibility will be de-ipitalization at St. Qair Hospital prestige for the state Democratic dangerous mental r . ! What is needed. Roirtney said,.cases and, persons committed to ^ ^ ^ is a political party responsive to state hospitals but not yet admit- ^ * citizens and not a political party]ted because'of overcrowding. of big business or wealth or any e * * Other pressure group. Such a party, he said, would be controlled and directed by citizens who are not advocates of or beneficiaries of unlimited government. Survival of the nation depends on activity in public affairs by businessmen and others willing to put citizenship above economic in-' terest. he declared. / However, this program is inadequate because it only provides treatment when a patient has reached an extreme state . of mental illness. Judge Adams says. Dr. Peter Martin. Gov. Romney’s special adviser on mental health, told the Michigan Mental Health Commission yesterday in Ptmtipc that the state will take an active part in stimufating com- OK Purchase of Boots MUSKEGON iP - The Muske- to develop mentaf health i*'sS W lhe march began,t»g«bcc ■ny^b»«JMa^nette branch prison He en.; lassass’"— sai—m»fr».)«.rrr.mr . ....„____________ ‘we.tor'’a*JlidT-d«y: rtto 4 night If™!" a pa^ng car into the fa^S j^^^^^^ ,chances of reversing the results gon County Finance Committee ^‘**'rL*'**.Kr*”‘.J'’“**'*‘*"* at two ot tne group. i ®®|tegration views to C>ov. Ross Bar- Kircher will replace (Tiarlesiare not feasible” has approved the pur ch a se of' ♦ * ♦ jinjured. . I nett. " Cahill, who submitted his resig- ♦ ♦ * jfour patrol boats and has alio-. Dr. Mhrtin said the state can nation following the recent escape] Farnum, who has gone over the caled $10,000 in operating costs]‘‘aid, consult and guide” the es-of four inmates described' as des-!elecHon results . precinct-by-pre-|for a water-safety program. The taWishment of local centers and perate from the Southern Michi-lcinct, said, ‘"Thm has never;program is aimed at curbing the;maintain high standards, through gan prison. His resignation is ef-been a recount in the state wherelreckless use of motorboats on its control of state matching fective June 2. - )the vote has been overturn^.” county lakes and waterways. (funds. ^ rt TragfraUr* (liart 4S 23 Fort Worth . ... 40 30 JacksotlrilK II 13 40 20 Kanaas Ctlg M “ Vaara^ _____ About 100 persons gathered' 4iinear the Greyhound Bus station ’H'** was Moore's intention _____ ____U to hear Lovert Berkley, a woman; when he was killed. An Ala- Muara^JkV.*** M 5Ji m i n i s t e r foT Chattanooga's bama grocer, Flq>-d L. Simp- grL~“ g SiFoiirth Avenue Church of God,' ««>. ha* been charged with the 13 “jdeliver an impromptu, sidewalk slaying. 5? sinlVk^ff-To 2 sermon in favor of the march, j The walkers plan to set out “ - -™M*a'r’2* « “I Then, carrviug a placard pro- ;Irom the bus station here from ' 15 “i claiming. ”‘Equal Rights for i which .Moore began his ill-fated " ■* All (Itnssissippi or Bust).” the trek. They call their walk a me-I group began walking south to- imorial to Moore, a white man. ward the Georgia line. J ] “We want to hold AmeriGa’S| Cries of‘‘Nigger lover.'Nigger'awhile yet." they lover.” t,a u nted the single-file ® formal statement “We marchers from passing cars, reiterate this man s single, which sometimes jammed traffic, and from bystanders who lined sidewalks along the way. Celebrate Law Day U.S.A. The marchers plan to trace the route started by Baltimore postman William L. Moore, who was found shot to death April i* be-jside a road near Attallh, Ala, •' jUke Moore, t epnied a placard which reads, VEat hi Joe’s-both black and i*w|«le.’’ NATIONAL WEATHER -«^Rain is forecast for the norttfern Pacific Coast tonight wiUr showers predicted in the northern Hid central Rockies and parts of tbe. northern Plains. R will jeither, the ^Congress of Racial j , 159-foot-long wall yet profound purpose — to ex-, press the ideal of human broth-' erhood by. a peaceful walk| __________________. _____________^ through thh* American country-|in the mitWirof Wichita’s ('kan.) side.” 'main street today symbolized the The Alabama kafety director. M*"? b«‘ween Uw^Day At Lingo, has Mid aay such I" S.A. observances and the Ctom-demoBstratori will be arrested munists’ May Day celebrations and charged ' with disturbing I*® Moscow. Kansas Cop/e^ Berlins Wall By United Press International mounted machine giin was A 6-foot high, 1"' • ........................ parked near the wall. associations to foster respect fori the law, to jeach the*values and ing through “Checkpoint Charlie' to give them Law Dpy literature. OUR RED SQUARE In CincinnaU, Ohio, famed Guards halted motorists driv-^^ of citizenship and the roles of law and courto in protecting individual liberties and* rights. The Loyola (Chicago) Stn- Coanally said the natfoaHlra-ditioo starts with respect for law and tbe “affinaation that we have coaseatod to be fov-eroed only by law. Oar law mist be Uviiig and dynamic exprestioBofinrUfe.” , T ” r- A. ■ A .Fountain Square .was converted! ®®*" plaaaed a . The Antericin Bar Asaoclation the peace in Us state. j ^ ugly, cinderbleck wall, J^j special seminar en the new iesUmated about 100,000 programs “Our intentions are to walk! J***^*^® «tr*ids ef annual salute to free- ****“®*‘ J**b;lal constitntioiial of various kinds would be held ross^Alabama,". said Richvd! 'dom under the Uw. Former Pres- to conjunction with Law Day. across^Alabama,". said Richyd! 'dom under the Uw. Former Pres- teS’eSto wall ”®"'y S Truman had been, In Texas. Gov.. John Cohnally! . . Florida,. A4M College, a Npgro] :Scheduled to speak but had to told a “Law Day U.S.A” banquet Ceremonies were arranged by Each marcher is a mmter of school. , i Pei^l from neartyAMcCtmJcancel out because of illness. the three major elements of a U.S. Army insUlUUons in France, iUley. a Negro; teri we mtend nell Air Fort* BaM donned‘‘ag-j ^ r ♦ free society are ‘‘the rules of Italy, the Canal Zone, Japan, ^ *** cooler in the |p,^ity or the Student Nowlo-to f»r«^ antihing, a perfect |gre^ uniforms” to patrol the. Uw Day observances were law; a poiiticardeniocracy "andiRybk>Ti^ aaitrm aad wetesrn tfairdi. .. j. (lent Ctoordmating (toininittee. ■ jpicture of ^ce. iwaH. An armored car with ajSponsored iii many eases by barjirtdividual freed^.” ~ Rich. ,)■ l:YJ- ’ t- THE POKTIAC PR£SS. WEDKESDAY. MAY 1, ms Umf^d Nations Transfer (AP)|control of the western hajf of theiyears of struggle by, Indonesia for pum« th. w land s East Indian empire, today D^ias M^rtfrthur’s wartimeP^ R®**^*!”* 700,006 and renamed K WfisLIrian. headquarters. jPapuan people, it»ost of them still . The United Nation^transferred!' The pegteful transfer ended^^ 131living |n a Stone Age cplture., ; ( Australia governs Eastern New Ifliiiufifii) OPEN tomorrow at 12 Noon Until 9 P.M. At Guinea^- In keeping with Sukarnp::s policy of erasing traces of Indonesia’s (formeij Dutch masters, West New Guinea was renamed West Iriaq (Hot Land). Hpllandia^ the capital, jbecame Kotabaru )Nt»w Tnumi FREE?ARKINe In Any Downtown ^ Foreign Minister Subandrio led the delegation of Indonesian officials at the ceremony. Th^ Dutch government did not take part. The Dutch flag was lowered for the last time Dec. 31, thrw months after the United Nations started [administering the territory. I SUKARNO DUE Sukarno Js ^e here Saiufclay| and Will have^ 12,000 troops oni hfiid-^o greet him. The sleepy jlropicalcapital already looks like] an armed camp. Indonesia began| [shipping in infantrymen and mil-itarv equipment Monday night. The flag ef'the United Nations was lowered V tl»e *nain square for the last tinpe. There was no |fl|g raising. The Indonesia^ red, ^ : [and white flagbas nbvm^^ * r*’® 31 as! " [a token of Indonesian jsoveri^ignty| ^•-|i)ver‘"ttie‘lefntory Sfikarno once _ jthreatened to take by force. _____WEARY REFUGEE -» Mrs. Rosa Battle nestles her ,15- | month^d son aflerTeaving TCfugee fifeghter Ameri&m 1 - veyor in Port Everglades, Fla., yesterday. Jligh windk caused Tdivesting itself of the first trust seasickness among the 675 abbard during the 240-mile voyaga territory it ever administered di-fr»"»Cuba. • . IrecUy. ^ ——--------------------------------1——--------------________.i U.fJ. Secretary-General U nigilfi New Leader j Back From Dead, mony, expressed confidence that [Indonesia will obsefve. its agree-jment to grant the 700,000 nativ^/ r I n L r\ i 'Papuans of West Irian a plebis- of COP States \ Baby Passes Away „ /ifS -SI"^'7TJt7X!CC*"Mexico (AP) — A| ^President Kennedy, In-a mes-| baby discovered alive as funeral Isage to Sukarno, hailed the trans-! ALbANY, N Y. (AP)-Fred A.'f--"--event Tor both! v^.ng f).i.jng nv.r t^dey'as ^ ^nd the , principle of H5, n«., MartiTT Alvarcz de Rosita, 20 peaceTuT settlement of dlsputesbe- in tween states.” publican chairman In New York days old, died Monday afternoon tween states.” ^te. said ^ would push Gov ^^Aubanel Clide officials Nelson A. Rockefeller for next year’s GOP presidential nomination. nounebd Tuesday. ^ ^ ^ The baby’s mother,. Marie Lu- * * 'isa Alvarez de Rosita, discovered ‘Tm going to make every ef-jhe child was alive last Wednes- T(H^^ maSeTlo^ inee,” Young said in a television interview. Young commented in response to a question on his views towabd. Rockefeller’s White HoUse potential. I take onp last Jook at bis face. Hie Bookworm Pontiac* On/jr K»al Booktior* SIMMS 25 SOUTH Saginaw Street STORE HIS REACTION Voung also was asked for his| reaction to Democratic National [ Chairman John M. Bailey’s statement that the- Democrats would carry New York-State-for-presF|- “ dent- next year. ' , ‘ Bailey has a surprise coming. [ We're going to carry New York: State next year t “ feller," Young said.' 2 S of PANTS le etna uptaiee a j 0“ TWILiri rt$7 y ■’ : COnON gORD PANTS - ideol for of/00%> ideol for ^athmer'w ibej) cotl wnjfbrii^' JnP^fuSr-"S e)y)e,'atpper tfont— IIKIRKfAIITS Worth ^ ,.. . . thin Double-Edcc Style Qillotto Bladtt-2 Pkgs. 35c pod«ii»-of-t«; -.if A*-• Moke shoving lost ond Faboue Krankt Refrtshing \ AFTER SHAVE LOTION — Teoves youY" foc« cool ona rofresKod. A niinf# ly>ft.*4 ■ , , y>» . . , 36^ 1' ^ - -BASEMENTj pBBBB Pacb^ 300 Sheets ^ ...iJgMweitlifi ^ Men's SI PacjLOl 300 Sheets KLEENEX Tissues PaekaiaetlH ASPIRIN tablets ^tegular 1^ — fbr relief ABc ,of.minor J\eodtkh« ond musculor,pains. Strain. . WW eSeSSTlhavewitMl^^ SUPER SHAVE BOMB 1f«yular 1.10—14 ounco Size"Kronk* Sup*r S\\av ^ * m IpbNy lor ^ FREE - Valet Knife wifti I .OO value v. FREE with every tube of Command . — hbndy,volet Lnife. . . . 53*’ Two Sle Size Tubes ^ Llsterine Toothpastir Mpfi's SPORT OXFORD t-vglue -ene eydtet------- .Crey^'hi ie'-fiibbereple.'Sis* N ''' LISTENINE ANTISEPTIC Regulor 59c Value — Generous 7 ounce size of - irimnin germ fighting ornl nnti.fptiV ....... FREE 48e Size-Fam^ut Large S ez. Creamy Rich Men’s Spoij^hiits VaUiej/$l.t9 ■,/J 1,00 Value - 8 oz. 4|As» CANNON First Quality ipreads. or Drapes Flashlights EVEREADYBatfkries I Charles Aniel Nylon Comb A Bruth HAIR CARE KIT 59e Value — Corry in your purse. Clear plastic pouch. ^11 nylon comb 39« Sizes S-M-i.„ 'Tull cut shirts for _________^ work or Sports WTOr. Dark tone prints in full cut (or comfortable wearing. Woven spreads sorted plaids. N6; ironmg.' Full or, twin size spreods. Main Floor CLOTHING DEPARTMENT Regular 20c' eaih — Evereody standard cell si?« : Eirtro power, limit t -MAIN FLOORi Odoreno Medicated CREAM DEODORANT Regbtor 1.00 hr*vr - anliperipiront. Medicated I Odofgno cream deodgr. 29* NcsHee Super Sot WAVE LOTION 39c Value — 8 oz. b^e 6IRLS’ First Quality SHORTS 7 Ounce HAIR SPRAY Regular t.50 hoir spray ^ Your chojee of 'Liqulnet' 'Nestles Sproze' hoir sprby. Ideal for hoir styling. $l.29ya1ue — elastic woist, hem leg, pockets and S( hove zipper in bock'. Checks, Strips ongl solid colors, American mode. Sues 4 to 12., 'Painted White-Sturdy Wood" PICKET FENCES Main Floor SUNDRY DISCOUNTS GIRLS’PAJAMAS and 60WNS DOG ELECTRIC CUPPER SET $1.59 value —American made 100% wash- ' cotton Baby Doll pajamcis with ryffles, loce trir ossorted colors and styles. Also 'girls' cotton g^ 4 to 12. Yo'Or choice .. 1 00 $17.95 value — genuine 'WAML' Clipper set with comb,'2 trimmers, altochments, i^^loit mosspger. sheors ond oil. Only 6 sets.left 12« GIRLS’ ACRILAN TOPPERS $6 95 volue — washable Acrilon toppers with ocet lining. Pmk ond white colors in size 4 only., for Sn' and Summer Wear. Only 38 Igft'.... M4 Protective picket fences for flower beds, shrubs, corners etc. 35-inch widths'. Limit 12. -t2ND FLOORj Special Let LADIES’ Dresses Values to $8.95 —gold 2-pc, style with matching jpck.et, or green 2-pc. style with jpeket or.brown itripe.wosh 'n' wear cotton. Sizes 8-16-12.only. Your choitd.' I (JO S«(|il SniHlESS STEEL 1-QT. MIXING BOWL BOYS’ BOXER PANTS Regulor $1.39 value elp.slic waist boxer pants in .assorted checks and colors. Sizes 3 to 5 fqr young boys. 2nd FIddt HARDWARE DISCOUNTS EAGLE DOOR RITE LOCK $2.19 value — eosy to ipstpll yourself, pin tumbler lock jivith 2 keys. Limit 2 ;sets per person. ...........'... 77‘ H 1« 47- $1.00^ J| /C talue, Bai ef 88 Sticks-CLARKS CHEWING GUM For Ret or Cold Orinke HERSHEY'S COCOA MIX Requio'r 49c value. Clorks Budget gum in 3 os’soiied 49c pound tin of Cocoa IA4 A which mixes instontly hot 4 1 ® oc cold. VI Magic Like Figuring With Pocket Calculators luHt In Sharpener With / . > CRAYONS & BOOK ' /n Regular 69c volue.-'Add Olid subtract instantly, Imporled pocket size. CM* Regular $1,98 value — lA Prpiect Wjok with croy-. • 1 '7* ot» lor children I | ‘ Exact Full Size Model 'Luger'Water Pistol $heets-r5 Notes NOTEBOOK PAPER 49c seller — replica of luger pistoL Shoot 4** ftoiimlesswater...VU Regulor 98c pock of filler paper for 2 or 3 nng' MU* notebooks. ... . Mwl#’ Stom'ess- steel bowls for mixi chores in the kitchen. .Won't n or tornish,,easier to clean. -2ND FLOOR X ‘Factoiy Reject’ Cigars-50 for Regular $2.00 box of 'Foefory Rejfect' 4c smoker* with iiole-in-the-heod feature ................................. 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS Full t8-6allen Galvanized GARBAGE CANS $3 29 valui handle, liu' 1 66 Chrome Finish-Fre Focus 2-CELL FLASHLIGHTS 87-' $1.29. first quoilty flosh. light takes standard bot- Cemplete far Installation DUTDOOR TV ANTENNA $9.95 volue -Eosy W insiotl. , 5*’ S-Lepf Fen Type-Painted WODDEN TRELLIS ^ 94« Chetee of 2 Famous Names Yb^ ELECTRIC DRILL Choice of Speed Stiopcrofi. Georec $18,95 valve, r..' 199 Northwestern Red Cedar Child’s Picnic Table- ‘WILSON’ GoR Balls-12 for 57.9.5 .I nine 197 Regular 9j0c V/ilso_n 'Corry.Middlecoff' autograph boll* for distance and long playing. I Limit I dozen per. customer.:' ’ ^55 4* 36 inch table .with built p benches bench stands 22" off ground. KD for easy carrying., -2ND FLOdRj Woven Wicker-2S Inch CLOTHES BASKETS Siii? vot.e . WESTERN or REMINGTON All Metaf ‘SNAKE5FEARE’ Custom Made ‘North Woods’ LEVEL WIND REEL 8-FT, FLY RODS '$5 9.5 seller — bait cost- Aflfl i''q Teel by Shokesoeoie. 4*® ,tvtodeU902 W $9,95 value - 2 pc. fiber- QQ gloss roai with locxmg ‘Newton’ Nylon Braided 3-Pc. White Bvenware CASTING LINE-50 YD. MIXING BOWL SET , iinouba'g'e line in ^2-15* ft ^ 20-25 pound test W $1.59 se!ler-sef has ~3 bowls in decordted whne W^BA* toys; .n I do FLORIENT AIR DEODORANT 80c Box 314-HP 20” Power Mowers $49.95rvplu« j-e fyli 2(rinch cut, rotary mower with 3Vi IdP CJinlon Engine. 14-Go. Steel deck', offset wheels, troctor type tires. 36 67 68- Regular -50c freshen up st6le c of Colgate* Florient olr *proy fo ir, kill odor* etc. Assorted fragroficei. 33- Full box of 50 shell* in .22 col. long rifles. Limit 10 boxes p< -2NDFLCX3R, ALEMITKMagto White. Lubricating Qraasa $1 value — waterproof | 10 for hundred* Limit 3 tubes. 25* Genuine •WEH’ ELICTRIC SDLDERINQ GUNS $5.95 volue 'HLliflht.. |. 100 w 399 All RUBBER I X 24 Inch STAIR TREADS 39c volue — bJock Sr brovyn “rubber freods or# fibbed. No limit............................... 25‘ Famous Brand INFANT’S Biouaa t Diaper Cover ll-Inch'Mechanics All, STEEL TDDL BOX ftr.OQc $6 95 volue-19 X 7 x 7, mck#». l.,n out talajyoy. Remtorced booom....... 497 proof (Loper .shortr- Size* Sm'oll to E*tro Large. ’ -MAIN FLOOR. Sturdy Aluminum Construction ICE CREAM SCOOPS 60c sellar - fors«rumg ice cream, roihed poto- ■ * toes, vegefobles etc “ ■ Decorative ‘Nappy Nome* TUMBLERS-SetofS $1,20 set— sofetygfoss- MVW* ‘.wares'with assorted pot- ,■ BA* ferns 4'des.gns. IV Woven Splint Style-Largo PICNIC BASKETS $l.S9.eiler-lorg. I8x A 97 IHg X 10 inch size witu' Holds Knives, Forks, Spoons WOOD CUTLERY TRAY , $1 value i-13lkx9L5x A>*Vae 216, Inches for cutlery ,. BA | * drowers. Varnished. V I Cleent A Shines-Jehnsons JUBILEE WAX-14 ozs. 69c.'siz»-theonlvcieon- er that deans and st>nes ■ * ‘Net Clo’ Nardwopd CHARCOAL^B f^undt 39c". volue-perfect M #BeV|k , outdoor bqrfa^ues, L'mltf M V * 2 bogs per person . ,.A mt ■ 98 N. SAGINAW— low prices piussehuce ' A—4 PONTIAp PBK^S;. WEDNE^DAY^:^^^^ l, 1003 Ro-Hi Club Project GOP Leaders I 4-Wers Use the Same Livestock Bam TalkEyion — Tm»flner i(^F^4i di^d(^ fb tiy her|St^rs visit the barn before going the plight.of the 4-H'er Fho doesn't live oh a farm—especial- begin looking ly if he decides to raise a steer tot his club project. > hor*«- Pathodc ittJttli. -pelatti-ewMer eachlaaeetHs *' ' Five members of the Ro-Hi 4-H Chib turned this next-to-impossi-ble situation to their advantage -'they are housing their livestock In a community barn. The Idea started with James Patnode, 850 MHnger...His 14* year-eld daughter Sim last year “These kids are doing it the tmrd way,” beef chib leader David Laniley commented. \ors ns the at training a __________________________ 1 looking for more adequate they return for toelr chores.-quarters for the a n i m a 1 s. He found them in an unused bam owned by Carl Munger. The Patnodes were willing to j share their good fortune with oth- Langley »id there are 18 mem-er prospective members of Ro- h«rs in tiw beef chib, which will Hi’s beef club. its/ctivities this month. The c, 1 .u- f iO t h e r s keep their livestock at Since early this year five J steers and three horses have ________■ „ been quartered in ^e bam. FOSTERS FEtXOWSHIP Others who Jbined Sue in theljT^^??*^! thefr competition, Langley sights on blue ribbons nt the 4-H Fata-in Angiat. ' La^ley plans to schedule chib meetings at (he barn. '"‘It’s better than going some- place that's Just got onm#nimal.” Romney, Gbld^ter Diseuu Poiiy llnity However adaptable the cohunu-nity barn may be, its primary function is providing the means fdr 4-H trork — without it there would be no projects for the five enterprising youngsters. WASHINGTON fVPI) -Two Titans of th^ Republican party discussed unity for the 1964 presidential campaign yesterday in the nation's capital. dov. Gmrge Rompey of Michigan conferred, about 45 minutes with Arizona Sen. Barry Coldwa-ter about unification of the Republicans., Both Romney and Goldwater are viewed as possibilities for the presidential nomination,-although both have disclaimed any intention of becoming candidates. Romney said he had reminded Goldwater that he had made a ^mmlttment to- the people of Michigan that he would not be candidate for the presijiency. Asked if they agreed about is-Suesr^ldwater^jjcUthey did not talk much about issues but believed they would agree. Professional Twirler fo Judge Compefifion mLAY CITY-The profesiilopal batW twirling talents of Nancy StWn will find another important new outlet later this month. will be chief baton judge International Ban4 Fes^ Romney, who attended a De-i troit Chamber of Commerce din- Approximately 75 bands from the Unito4,^«totes and Canada will compete Among the band adjudicators from the two coun^ tries will be Dr. William DJ Revelli, director of bdnds at the University of Michigan. While there,f Nancy,* who lives at 1929 Webster, will conduct a band clinic for majorettes wjth the competing bands. neTIoTa Michigan congressionaf. delegation, (bid newsmen he and' Goldwater discussed how^ “We ought to do everything we can to have a unified party in ’B4.’‘ NANCY STERN .the hlghigtrutting.-. ^e said Republicans must maintain communication with one another, “be Concerned about the basic issues, and conduct the kind of campaign that will command the respect of peopte throughout the country." Ronmey said he had held a similar talk about Republican unity at--«.bi«akfaat->viiieo(ing--hi Yoilr-wltlrpsvrNelsbint^T^ ffellei, who is now regarded^ aathe **front-runrung_ifflntct^ FoundaUon. OXFORD'-On‘May. 20‘, Village [gore, who will act as his guide ON-THE-SPOT LESSON - David Lartgley, leader of No-Hi> beef club, uses the group’s community barn as a classroom for a bridle demonstration. Seated on a haystack for the >c Vrnf VSotM impromptu lecture . are (from left) Randy Randall. Rieky/Ran(^ll, Sue Patnode, .Jeff Hayes, Ro-Hi jeader William Irish and Tom Hayes. ! President Allen E. Valentine will relinquish his administrative 1 duties , to Edson Harley — for one day. tWarB^enes^nJDropoufs Planned by Teachers Club Harli^* is .president pro-tern of Hartford, | community of 1,800, northwest of Kalamazoo. inircd la exchiiip~^iAB for .^ayOr’s Exchange Day, in conjunction with Michigan Week activities throughout the- state. When Harley arrives in Oxford,. he will be ^eeted by Village Manager Michael M. Kil- HQLLYy-Mecture series aimed United Automobile Workq,rs and [fourth grade at Davi^burg Ele-T at ^evelbpihg a. better under-1 chairman of the UAW’s Legisla-'mentary School, crted’figuresre-, standing ,of the school dropout jtion Committee. . i leased by the Chamber of Corh- proWm will be . launched early I this month by Ihe floU:^ Teachers Dr. Walz. who Is director Ghib. ! 'the National Defense Counseling * * and Guidance Institute at the U. fiierce of the United States pointing up the urgency of the dropout situation. . In.announcing the series, Mrs, Elizabeth Siddall, program chkir-man, term^ the dropout problem one of the most critical issues facing American communities today. \ Mrs. Siddall said fiiat if the present dropout rate coatia-. aes, about 7.5 million youths will quit school In the 1949s. the first two speakers on the of M.. will speak at 8 p.m. Monday in the Holly High School 'multipurpose room. Reuther will Speak at the same time and place June 4. . Dr. Walz believes that dropouts are not a ne% phenomenon. “Unemployment among youth under age 21^ in the labor force three times as high as in the .adult population,""she said, “and over* half these unempl« * S**"*-*- what we refer to as the‘dropouf Davisburg Junior i In addition to'this weekend’s ,problem.’” |Chamber, of Commerce and the activity, club officials announced . ,1. I 4 ■ Oakland County District of the [that the group has given ope-, Admission to [Michigan Education Association, year subscriptions of Coin World. - ! series i* free, and nfi nicr- bracing the school districU-of;a weekly coin paflTr, to 12 area! ested persons are invited to at-I Orion, Ortonville. West [libraries.! ! i Bloomfield, Avondale. Novi, South] j Mr^ Siddall, who teaches! L^onjgublin and Holly. ‘------------ i Meetings are 7:30 p.m. on thej ' [second and fourth Mondays of^ EAST LANSING liB-Traffjc accidents have killed 456. persons in Michigan so far this year, provisional figures compiled by state police showed today. The toll af this date last year was 388. 4 Area People Put on Board When she returns home. Nancy win mer baton clinick for majorettes to be jield at her home. She eaUs h^*’ venture, for youngsters 7 years old and Over, River Bend Farm Twjrl- ..^ ^ ^ Receive 3-Yeof Terms ta Serve Hospital have IjeiLielwtedto three-year terms on thTCSinmui /They are Addi^ToWnship Supervisor Frank Wqbber, South School Principal Bruce Linsday aiKf^rs. Edward A. Jacob, both of Romeo imeo, and Lawrence Thatcher of Imlay City. Re-elected at the foundatiohjs annual meeting were Mrs. *111011188 Rickards, Graham Terry, William Muir, Mrs. Charles Fer^son, Dr. A. J. ShuU, all of Almont;. and Sam Mbrson-pian, John Riemanb and James Hough of Romeo. "Others were Miss Jane Scott and Richard Poljan, both of Wl^^oh ; TO ROCHESTER — A 30-minute operetta will be combined with the film “Hie Vagabond King,” ill the Rochester Tuesday Musical’s special program at 8 p.m. Tuesday. To be staged at the New Hills Theater, the event is being held in conjunction with National Music Week. ‘The-Telephone,” a light opera by Menotti. will begin the two- Soloists are Mrs. Lyle Marshall, of 1212 Peveril, Bloomfield ton; William Khight> Inflay City; and Robert Van Nostraiui, Ar- Tr^tees re-elected to three-umilirms were James D. Ligon J^^^^Wade, both of Almont, M^j^Hklin O’Conifor, Armada; an^Jarleton Van Wagoner, Imlay City. il.yeattold will give four performances nightly, make radio . and television appearances and lead the winning band in the big parade on the final day of the festival, I Among the many titles Nancy holds arc >TOTpirBtatB~Bemffl^— Championr Misa U^ette of. _ Michigan, Miss National Blue Water and. Mis^ International Band Festival, all. awarded in 1961. She has won 387 trophies, medals aqd placques, and has attended camps and taken iiv struction in almosj every state in the union. , „ ’ _ Art Show Scheduled at Center SOUTHFIELD - “An Eye for , Art,” the Tourth annual student art exhibit at Northland Shopping [Center, will* be staged during jstore hours trorn May 3 to May TROY - Avondale Sc ho ol^^- .. „ ... . Board Treasurer. Mrs. Genevieve]-_.SP«"sored by the Northland L. Porter was. ejected to the post Jr Schoor Board Member Gets PTA Position ’ state director of district serv- Township, and William L. Van-ices for the Michigan PTA yester-deryen, 1400 Pine. They will be|day. accompanied by Mrs. Gertrude Gregory, of 422 Castell. Mrs. Howard Wilson* 1^8^' land, will direct. Tickets can be purchased from any club member. She- is presently attending the annual state convention of the association in Kalamazoo. Mrs. Por- iChamber of Commerce and the Oakland I Art Educatidh Association, the show will feature the work of students from kindergarten to senior high school. Chairman of the show, which ter will rerve in her new capacityi^^” center’s ^esic for three years. She lives at 1869:^™®- M"- Barbara Hallman W. South Blvd. Boyal Oak. Her assistants in- —^^:----------------------------Iqlude OA.E.A. President Julius Southfield Boy Struck by Car SOUTHHELD - A 15-year-old youth is in critical.condition in' William Beaumont Hospital. Royal Oak, from injuries recq^ved, when he was struck by a car onj 10-Mile near Rackham last night.’ Edsrin Carr, son of Mr. and , bbx. Merrill Carr, 19799 Hilton, | ku severe bead and chest injuries, hospital authorities said. Driver of the car w-as Mrs. Anna F. Wagner, 49, of 19358 W.| 10-Mile. She told Southfield police she was driving west on iO-MtIe. when she h|t the boy walking on her side of the road. She said she was temporarily . blinded, b:^ the lights of an on-1 ''coming car. The accident hap-! pined about 10:48 p.m. . Mrs. Wagner wis not held. . each month at the North Hill Lanes. 15() W. Tienken. The pub-, Jic is invited. J Fix-Up Week Starts Zeek Star fMoffliri on Sunday Morning 4-JtEEGO HARBOR - The.annual^ cleanup, paint-up. fix-up week will get under way here Sanday morning with a' trash pickup. . _ Detroiter Dies of Burns WED SI Years— Mr. and Mrs. Hugh E. Yates will cele-brate their golden wedding anniversary with an open house DETROIT if* — William Mar-j Sunday at the hoipe of (heir, nephew Eldward H. Keith, 7161 lowe, R.W Detroit, died of burns! Wedworth, WatwTord Township. Married in Pontiac‘'ljttJ“ May-suffered when -a fire started in-^ j;* I9f^. the couple lives at 4884 Georgia, Gingellville. They hia bed yesterday. Detroit Police "have five sons, Jack and Robert, both of Union Lake_^ William -said Marlowe had a h|bit,..^(^ uxil James, • • ..................................... . -r * __ All junk, newspapers and dis-I carded articles should be placed! at the curb by 9 a.m., accords ling to • Deputy. Fire Marshal Jqhn J, Allman, chairman of the dtive. i Sellman said trucks and-volun-, teer workers are needed io make the project a success. Those wish-^ ing to help should he.-, at UieJ Keego'Harbor City Hall not later-than 9 ato. i , Kusey, of Rochester, and Sarah mith of Oak Park. The artwork of students' from . Huron Valley. Bloomfield Hlfls, Rochester, Farmington, Waterford. Walled Lake and Southfield school districts will be ^own. ■ Other schools to be- represented” include Holly, Oak Park and Wht Bloomfield. Seeks Second Term on Education Board FARMINGTON'-"Mrs. Wen-dell Brown is seeking election to her second term on the board of education here. Mrs. Brown’s term will be the loniy one expiring this year,^ Candidates’ deadline for filing petitions is 2 p.m.. May 11, according to Sopt. G. V. Harison. He . said each petition must have . the signatures of exactly 50 qualified school voters. K«ego Harbor Cpuple Plans Wedding in June - CHECK BOOKS — Stacking up used books and 0* Neego Harboa. qnd ,Edwin at home. The /T Couple also hits 11 grandchildren and Tour greht-gr>ndchildrefr. Representatives of the West ready tor pridit^ are tWo members of the Bloomfield Kiwanis Club are c6-< Rochester Junior Woman's Gub which is spqn-I operating with the City of Keegoj soring a Book' Mart Monday through May TO. Harbor in the drive. I - at The. rear of Morleys Drugs, 340 Main. Mrs. rjautf rrKki Paul T Williams (left i is scheduling Chairman and Mrs. Carl Piearson, a volunteer worker.; Hours of the sale are from 9^ a.m, to 9 p.m. ;' 1 Mouddy.and Friday and 9 a.^. other days. ^ KEE(^ HARBOR - A June wedding is being planned by Nedra TOs. ,1820 Cass Lake Front, and Christian C. llloord-hoOm, 1148 Cass Lake Front. The bride - elect is the daugh-|ter of; Mr. and Mes Leonard Rolfs of Waukon, towa. Her fiance's parents are*Mr. and Mrs. 'r’i'if.' it' ■i’ 'iht to 6 p rft. the C. H. Noordhoorn qf CulVei* City, THE POfJTIAC PRESS, WED^yESDAY. 'Red^ndif hmdiMtif^Gy Celebrations Conununiat minfarles too|c the lead in celebrating May Day today irt traditional displays 6f military might coupled with the ustUd protestations of peace. ------------- In Moscow, Cuban Prime Miiiis-ter Fidel Castro appeared with Premia' Khrushchev in the place of honcH^ atop the Lenin mauso-kuppurevleadng the show of Soviet military hirawarc at the annual paradfe through Red Sqtuure. Rtim Fidel in Moscow, Us brotth a and deputy prime minista' Raul Castro, took diarge of the massive raUy planned in Havana. ~ Government tiropaganda organs went all out to round up the expected 140,000 fa the rally at Plaza Revolucipn. Pirewaks burst from atop the Uibor Ministry and revolutionary enthusiasts shuffled ...rlown streets beating conga drums in iM'edawh festivities. 'Communist East Germany rolled out its military arsenal to celebrate, but the usutU threats to West Berlin'were absent.* About 2,000 army and air force men marched in a niixture d Rus-aian drill and Prussian ponm- In Rome, Pope John XXIII re-cieivied 10,000 persons in. a'May Day audience. At the same lime ,000 woricers gatiiered In front of the Basilica of St. ^phn Lptaan,' the Pope’s see as bishop of Rome, to hea Communists and Socialists hail victoy in the Italian national SkecpuTBunaiy. ITro VIEWS PABAOE President Uto of Yugoslavia re- Nbyomy of Czechoslovakia used May pay celebration to call fa a German peace treaty and for a sohitiar to the Balin problem. The Pope said frit ti^ woe becoming Jess cmtrovei^l. He spoke optimistically of the church’s mission in striving fa about 45,0W mardiers.'Streets of Bel^ade were decorated with pictures of Uto, Marx, Engehf and In the Pacific, leftist leaders at rallies on the big U.S. base island oftkinaw ' ’ iwa denounced U.S. administration. About 4,000 marched in a In Prague, Presidowt Antonin parade at Naha, Okinawa’s capi- Winter's Still Throwng Last Punctia held by the Nationalist Chindw on May Day, Some 3 million people papked into Peking’s Central Square to take part in holiday celebrations^ the Soviet news agency Tass ref po^. Tass also reported a rally & 200,000 in I^ongyaiig, Korea. Wintry May Day weatoa frosted crops from Kansas to. Kentucky today, spread snow across Ohio, New York and western Pennsylvania, and pushed the tempaature to record lows. LouisviUe, Ky., and Erie, Pa. recorded 31 d^green, both May records. The 29 degrees at Indl-ahapdis w as another record bret^. Salt tmd» hit the streets in Oeveland, Ohio, where three inches of snow fen. Winds np to so mUes an hoar blew a cMtttmction-staid fate Lake FVeezing~ rains nnd wet' up to two inches de^ fell throughout western New York, whae the tempaatures hovered in the 20s with little relief in Erie ud imocked out eleciric powa to about 1,000 homes. due east of Port' ris. SHIP ANCHORED In Lake Huron, the Canadian tanka Cape Transport was reported anchored new the Haon Great Lakes vessek gjiipped^iKht *hip, nato^of4he-Blue Wa-: W£>yal to exU^ bending, there tWU be ter BrklBe cdnnectinc Port Hur-Pn»eron. in «ir about by ,70-mile4n-hour winds and 30-foot waves, limped to safety. Tile U.S. Coast Gnacd reported that two vesaels, stridden hy high winds and stormy Hm are oat of Howeva, the search' continued for two men reported to have Youngstown, Ohio, recorded an been aboard a boat found cap-inch of know on the ground. isized fa Lake Michigan about 30 County Projects Hit Walkout Halts Iron, Steel Work ter ft'idge cfainecting Port Huron, Midi., and Sarnia, Ont. Coast Guard dficials said the vessrt was awaiting.the arrival of parts needed to repair electronic equipment was^ away byhigh The vessel had been upbound,| off Habor Bieach in the Thumb tal, waving Japanese flags. This si^ied a demand to vTetum to sovereignty. Red China announced its annies i^ver Hotels iide f^ile to ’^haraoh Land dAlHO Ml — Two floating ho-fa, each capable of acromipo-itfag 150 passengers Jn aound->f. cabins, ply lietwen Cairo Aswan on IflMay round trips. WASHINGTON (AP) — Sovieti (hopeful) isn’t a word that’s fa . Premier Khru^chev has sent pe^! my vocabulary.” OFFER MASS The Roman Catholic primate of Argentina, Antonio Cardinal ~ for laborp The General Confederation of Lp- I fTo cope with the cnrrent toar-fat boom, the United Arab Republic hu ordered two rlva-b^to that win faclade aU com-fhrits fa tile tonrist who wants to' bask in the son on a 400-mHe, 1100 round trip, npriva to the land of the phwaohs. For the athletic type, there wiU ibe^ a swimming pool, a tennis 8“'[S™“^‘;ciirt, ping pong tabled, a sofari-0'-8«"“«‘.raUyJun, tu/kish bath and sauna, called for small protest meetings] throughout the country. Leaders] For those whose'chief sport is A—« Harrfman Tells JFK K: Try to Setite Laos Kennedy and assurances that, the Soviet envoy fa Laos has been told to work with British and American ambassadors to try to settle the Laotian crisis. This was the oral message Undersecretary of State W, Averell Harriman said he conveyed Tues^ day night to the President. It was the reply to a written message Kennedy had sent Khrushchev. But, he added, the civil war in Laoa been transferred from the battlefield to the political arena and U will “be there fa sonM time to come, I. thinks’ Why didn’t Khrushchev send a written reply to Kennedy’s message.? The Beard was about to arrive,” said Harriman, fa reference to Cuban Prime Minista Fidel Castro, and the> Soviet premia Noting that he saw missiles on _ area when the waves gushed its: .Harriman, who returned fromT* IfMoscow Monday night, briefed the President on his 3V4-hour talk with Moscow streets for the Commu-Khrushchey. jnist May Day parade and celebra- After his report, the tort-, tiort, Harriman remarked with a ' tongued Harriman talked wilh|smile: _____ __________________________newsmen in the White House “They are giving him ((fastro) I nightly shows'’in air condition^ lobby. i , ] another look at the missiles.” Japanese workers assembled frr I night clubs featuring beDy danc-| Was he “hopeful” about a Lao- ---------------- rallies and nwrches throughoit ers and Wwtern-type acts. tian settlement,-a newsman asked.] Americans eat an avaage of the country with a host of dtj ★ | “Everyb^y always asks men pounds of frozen vegetables ranging from more pay to . 'However, If you want to get that,” said r Harriman. “Thatipar year. . ’ refusing U.S. nuclear submarines away from it all; youxan spend] permission to stop at JapaiKfr'the night in your air-conditidnedl jports. An estimated 210,OM cabin watching TV a listening I massed fa Tokyo’s Meiji Park.; to the built-in radio, pUot house and swept away fae'~|irainWailipiifaaBBBBiEBBBBBaiEBB^ electiuaic ^uipment. On'liJto Michigan, Coast Guard officials said .the cruise ship South American was under yray under redured power and due to reach Manitowoc, Wis., at noon. The stop was etf ^ie to Manitowoc from tifater quarters at Holland, Mich., yesterday with 42 crewmen aboard when an en-gasket blew out. The Coast Guard cutter Woodbine stoog by to assist the South A wafrout of iron woriiers hast the Detroit chapter of the Assocl-[of the Petroit Associated General Amaican fa emagency repairs brought to a halt structural steelVted General ^ntractors ofjContractora. ^ lyestenfay and escorted tiie ship and iron workon building, bridge Amaica, said “Any major build-j Lonnie West, president and fa about 15 to 20 miles today. end highway projects in Oakland fag using structural steel will bejbusiness agen^of Local 25^ said] --------------------------- Counfy'ahd dffier coupties fa east- affected by ffie waftdu'lT” ~tthe union will not statm. pickets 'era lower Michigan-. i ctty boUdfag inspector C a r 1 we find The contract between Detroit i Alt said this morning that be- so™®body doing oiu work. Iron Wakcrs Local 25 and two steel cratracting assaiations ended last night at rnkfai^ Fedaal and state mediators mediators worked until 9:30 p.m. yesterday to brinjg the parties to-getha. However, when the Sion broke up, they were still fa apart pn wages and fringe benefits. cause most major building prbj-. ats are either past the iron worker stage or just hegfaning, the impact will not be felt right away. The city water and sewer plants would not be affected, he said. Iron Wakers Local 25 voted yesterday to reject the latest offer of the Steel and Metal Brec- , A continuation of talks is scheduled for Firday before fedaal mediators. Dies in Auto Crash William Stewat, secretay of tors Association of Detroit andlant. MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) -John Berry, 41, of rural Mecosta, died yesterday after the ca he was living smashed into a tree beside M20 west of Mount Pleas-jcept small donations for the serv- Typlng Servicies Collect $33,587 for Charities JUNK GARS WANTED USED AUTO PARTS FOR SALE I FE 2-0200 ■BBBBBBBBBBBBIri>miAc$aur BBBBBBBBBBI fiEDUGI EAT and LOSE OP no us. a WEEK CAPSULESI EASIER TO TAKE ANDMORE EFEEC-TIVE THAN THE POWDERED AND LIQUID FOOD SUPPIRIENT, AND COSTS LESS IN-CLUOING CAPSULES SUITED TO YOU INDI-VJOUAUY BY UC PHYSICIAK, MO. NO GASTRITIS OR.IRREGULARITY WITH MSOC-WAY CAPS. D0N7 DIET-JUST lATl AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE, YOU CAN bOtf S, 50 OR TOO LBS. AND KEEP IT OTH NEDIC-WAY 335-9205 LANSING (AP) - UK Smtc.] tary of State’s office reports that] $33,587 was^Ilected for recognized chaiua and conununityl organizations by typing services! fa license offices set up daing! the busy months of January and' February. Groups were permitted io ac-i ice. MTOeRS W^lGl »»!. 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Sizes 2%to6 10 to 2 .. 3» PERHErS HIMCLE MILE STORE HOURS S:S0A.M.to liStW THE PONTIAC PRESS ^ 41 \¥«t Huron Str^ Pontiac, MIdiigan Voice of th€ People: WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1963 RAKouo A. rmoBiuu> Md niSfiiMr County*8 Democratic Party Commends The Press WHEREAS, the. fair presentation of both sides a concerted effort to inform the voting public on both the assets sM liabUitles of the new consUtution: And toereas,^the edItdHal posiUon was not allowed to govern the content or viewpoint of these stories — The legal profession had a good idea when it came up with Law Day for May 1. ★ ★ ★ Although it never gets the attention that the Communists achieve with their worldwide rallies, it does promote one of the best things abopt democracy — respect for the law. ★ ★ ★ Oakland Ceuaty Democratic Cemmittee Reader From Flint Enjoys Feature with the PoUce Department since April 6,1937. NOBLE After graduatii^ from the Uni-veraity of Michigan with an A.R dagiM Ja history and .politioi science. Noble selected police wm4t as a career. Pontiac is fortunate that he made this decision. In 1966, the former detective was chosen “Clllzen of the Year” by the Dakla^ Cotmiy MiidstotoL ship. This award was well deserved. never have thousands wav-ing banners in the streets about it. But our legal system, and the rights it guarantees, is something that is ingrained in the hearts of the millions In the United States. I would like to know why the area choaen to teat dive the submarine Thredier was 8,500 fCet deep. When no submarine can op- I enjoy your “Power of Faith” by Wo^i IshmSel and the writeup that appears with It. Please keep printing them. What Ever Happened To The Big Parade? David Lawrence Says: Candidate’s Divorce Irrelevant World’s Leaders Generally Old WASHINGTON - Politics is ho respecter of privacy. Already the talk among the politically minded throughout the countiy By JAMES MARLOW Associated. Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - All around Jhje world along with the high praise he re- younger iron are "in. the wings, waiting to ■ ' ^ . taira ovar II Innk like some U’J»f cently received from the Pontiac City Commissioners. We can permnAlly vouch for the high integrity and outstanding leadership Nob|e haa displayed. He, could safely number his friends in the hundreds. Mr. NoBLE.^or a job well done, we commend you on behalf of the citizens of Pontiac. take over. It look like some wait. Power is. like glue. When a wan has it he sticks to it unless he’s pried loose or„there's a rule against sticking too long. There are few such rules. So the . world is run mostly by old-timers. President Kennedy at 45 is the only leader of a major nation under 69. TTie oldest, 87-year-old Chancellor Adenauer of West Germany, is the only one who shoi^s signs of stepping down this year. not ceitaiif. MARLOW Death of President Is Great Loss to Israel Israel has lost one of her greatest citizens in the untimely death of President Itzhak Ben-Zivi. His own In between Kennedy and Adenaner are Macmillan (Britain), Khrmhcbev (Russia), and Mao Tze-tnng (Red China), all 69; Tito (Yugoslavia) and Franco (Spain), both 76; DeGanlle (France); 73; Nehru (India), 73; Salazar (Portugal), 74: Chiang Kai-shHi (Nationalist China), what STi^“a prospective marriage by Gov. R e-ekefeller might have on his winning the I Republican presi-1 dehtial nomination and whether, if .nominated, LAWRENCE this factor would prevent his election. There is nothing in the political rule book which bars a divorced man from lieing. nominated. The Democratic.Party twice nominated”" for the presidency Adlai Stevenson, who had been divorced after his childi^en had grown up. The comment usually heard in . poUilcM dTc^ ihat tiie "antidivorce” vote is largely Catholic and that hence Gov. Rockefeller would start with a handicap in that segment of the electorate. But the Catholic vote, accord- 1932. The electorate didn’t know not matter whether Goldwater or Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt of RockefeHer or some other Repub^ New York too well, but it did lican is the nominee ^ the Refeel, rightly pr wroi^ly, that publican nominee would win, any-Preaiidept Hoover wais res^nsible how. " f(f The erohdmic depi-e^^ iQmversely, F Die natioh is en- caiised 12 million persons to be joying prosperity or If interna- erate with any real factor of siEde-ty at much more than one-tenth that depth. Those who descend to her grave will find precious little enlightenment, but had she gOrie down in 800 or 900 feet of water, there is Uttle reason tb doubt that some light' could be shed on the matter. Norman Kaback Pointed-Toe Shoes Still a Problem Offers Comment on ‘Drive’ Article For the sake of humanity, won't shoe manufacturers please stop producing those pointed, spike-heeled shoes?* They’ro bad pnough for adults, but to manufacture them for children is unforgivable. In those formative years the foot bones are pliable and do not reach maturity until, the age of<^, .--------------------------- out of work. If economic conditions are really bad or if thjs -country is dissatisfied over vacillation and indecision on Cuba or in foreign policy generally, then it would tional problems are in a critical stage, such as happened just before the 1962 Congressional election, the voters would not wish to "change horses in midstream” ^ and Mr. Kennedy would win. Bob Considine Says: Readers From Milifary Gripe About Pay Raise . Mr. Girard must feel proud after die article he had about the cancer drive. I was nearly driyeh out, of my mind by phone calls. WWW. Thank God there still are people who think for themselves and realize It takes a lot of money for research. I have seen plenty of benefits from both the Michigan Society on Cass Avenue and the American Society. 75. - S,-Sgt. C3i^ EcJ»rdt, 4J^.^ Force recruiting service, Oakland. writes: “When it comes to raises in pay, the military always get the neck of the chicken. When the raise finally ing to the polls, was around 75 comes through, per cent pro-Kennedy last time, it’s never retro- - eally true and forcefulrU saudl p e r c e n t age of experienced. In the past 10 years only one top leoder personal hand and mind played to'"''Slepped aside because of a rule. This was «tremely impottant part In the PresWee. Enenho.,. «ned two tem» formation and creation of the nation. ★ ir if He was in the foremost ranks of the aggressive young Zionists who settled in Palestine before World War I'and was a close and valuable ally of Premier David Ben-Oumon. ★ ★ , ★ ■ The stale recentir increased his salary to $6,000 and he offered strenuous objections. When these were overridden, he donated half his pay to research. His “Presidential Mansion” was a three room prefab ojf the variety’that immigrants occupied. When historl^Ms trace the early history of this lusty nation, the name of Itzhak Ben-Zivi will necessarily be etched in stars. and could not have run for a third, even if ;he had wished to, because the *Cnn.stitu-tion bans-it, SOME CHANGE The departure of each elderly man now. heading ohe of the countries mentioned above will 'mean some change. But in none of t’nem can any safe prediction be made of drastic change of reversal when he’s gone. Adenauer’s Cbristtam Democratic party, over bis protests, has picked a successor for him when he goes, if he goes: Vice Chancellor Ludwig Erhard. I( there’s a change it probably won’t come before next fall. Erhard may reverse Adetiauer a bit,-swinging more toward the United Statdk, less toward France. No one is suggesting he’ll fuss wtih the NATO alliance. (Thances are he’ll try to make it stronger. ' ★ -k it ■■ Khrushchev loosened some of the tyranhy of Stalin and loosened the unity of 'vorld communism by his'downgrading of Stalin. He taU(ed 'about getting along in a peaceful' world. This didn’t mean he Wouldn’t trv to grab all of it. if he could. No one expects his successor to be less-eager. STALINISM UNLIKELY Still, it’s unlikely^ the new boss, when Stalin-wanted to. So. if sectarian loyalties of this kind influence the voting, the argument of Gov" Rockefeller’s friends is that he would not have been able to make much c f an inroad politically in that area anyhow.. Certainly to run as an unmarried man. as Gov. Stevenson did. is different from the position in which Governor Rockefeller would be if he remarried. If a president were’ not married, the White House would be without a First Lady to help receive' foreign dignitaries and their wives. iUa ti'ru skiiiej military personnel are being forgotlea. “This amall percentage, and we are in no means including Orchard Lake ourselves, are themen and women who remain in the military because of a sende of duty and love of countiy. To this small percentage goes the credit of keeping this country, as you put. it, -number one.’ ’’ I was glad to do what I couM for the drive and I’m proud of the people who had to bring their pa(*F tb~ n»: W thanks to each. They did a good job-after all. Mrs. Reardon Portraits By JOHN C. METCALFE There are many kinds of kissca ■ We receive throughout the years . . From the moments filled with laughtjer . . . To the saddened ones with tears .-^-.-There are kisses from the children . . . When at apron strings they tug . And the ones they give at bedtime With a tiny tender hug There are kisses from the youngsters In their late or early > teens Some of them from active or on time. "As for the last pay raise (four ^years ago) I was upped 14.50 a week. It put me in a new tax bracket and 1 actually c a m e CONSIDLNE mi( J1.25 in the " red. I was lucky. A buddy lost thre^ dollars after the raise.' “.What I’d like to know is how can a man on recruiting duty, and thus living off the base and away from the mess hall, survive dn the legal allowance of $1.25 a day? We work up to 14 hours a day. • “The way;! figure It, i get a 40 dollar raise for,this work and „ , lose 44 on subsistence. I'm sure ^ All this sounds as if divorce my wife wUl be happy.. We have and remarriage are politically a\fine son who boards out each H Martin, and this (Editor’s Noie: ’The Press agrees with Ml*. Girard completely. This area will either have 56 different drives a year or our United Fund. It’s that simple. We support the one-campaign plan.i from the boys in jeans There are kisses from„ your* Mother . . . And the ones from Father, too . . . And those labeled purely friendslup And from relatives to you . . . But the kisses which I chbrish . . . Are the ones each loved one knows . . . And the other kind as warming . . That my little dog bestows. (Copyright 1963) Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Hughes Dismissed The Chicago Tribune Also, If Gov. Rockefeller is nominated and should campaign with a pretty .^'ife at his side, this would surely draw bjg crowds. Dr. Harold Hughes is being kicked out as professor of eco-Iipmics at West Virginia Wes; lelyan college because his classroom viewpoint did not meet the approval of the state boss of the AFL-CIO. The. union official Miles sensitive questioas that might affect a considerable number of voters. But a Candidate’s divorce would hardly be consequential as an issue of public policy POLITICAL FUTURE Nelson Rockefeller’s future in day. so my wife can work. He's 10 mbnths old, but I’m stare he’ll understand.” timorous administrator promptly bow^. 8or. or advocate of left-w\pg causes gets in hot water, Hie American Association of University Professors can be counted on -to come promptly to bat, breathing fire and hotly indignant about the invasion of the martyr’s ri^ts. Will this zeal be displayed in eqtial measure if the professor who is given his walkings papers is at the other side of the ideological spectrum? We don’t have to tell you, and .you don’t have to' gtiess. tive in Democratic circles, and by Lyndon Johnson, in whose native Tezal’ the plane will be prodnced by Genml Dynamics. An airman’s mpfher; •'My son is',? dedicated service man with an excellent record Legislators Fare Well on Important Measures.. ' Mao Tatung in Red China has gathered congratulate our County’s around him tru.sted men dedicated to the same view as his: conquest. So things will politics is basically unrelated to. during his nine years in uniform, afty such issues as divorce and. and he is aj|$6at asset to the Air remarriage. He represents and Force. We legislative. contingent on its effec-tivtoess . during the'latest session «f the State Legislature. Hitting seven for ten. to Use a baseball batting yardstick, Oak-bnd’s representatives saw seven major bills spoiuiored by them atar** while three of lesser im-' .fortancc struck oat, hardly be better under his successor. Ten leading Mmerican League batters and their averages: ^... imlta. BalUmrr 3^. AMrtcl*. ■IdIm. WuhlnctM . - Ckkrlct, Kaaut .Cl(r . Utm Tart BaMam. Cklrac* . it, '■ it - ★ Those passed and either signed by Got. Romney or awaiting h|s expected signature are acts relating to such a wide ipnge of' interests as the judiciaiy, area Citation, mental health, edu(;atlon and ’institutions ir it '■[ Approval of these measures by ' , the tegiaihtare and the quick gabernatorial aee^taaca whi|dh -faMmred ai* tins Owiiemta U reflects today a different conception of Republican party doctrine than is held by Senator Barry Goldwater. his most formidable adversa|*\. Which candidate — Goldwater or Rockefeller — has the better chance to defeat President Kennedy?ThisHs the paramount question which the Republican conventiciv' delegates will have to decicto. They will in the last ’analysis decide it oh the basts of whether the.country prefers the (toldwater or the Rockefeller programs and policies. “He speaks French, Japa-nfse. GiiKU and, of course, English. I know he would- like more than anything else, to stay in t h e Air Force as a ■ 'J)r. Hughes said he presents both sides in the classroom, but “I do not take a neutral position and I aiq, critical of what I think is wrong.” To $Ir. Stanley this si^ified that the professor was a lig^t-winger. Ap-pamtly the rest of the faculty meets with this nnkm gentleman’s approval, and the reason Is aet difficult if the analysis of a former tnutee is accepted. Witless The Lapeer County Press Life seems to be a battle of wits, and many people must fight it unarmed. Tbe contract award was a choice of civilian defense leaders over opposi^n of the military chiefs. Perhapn a greater problem is what batons to a major defense contractor, when its effort and facilities are directed solely in one direction and a shift is mandatory, ' *\v 'Simpler Solution' Chicago’s American TF)( Contract The Daily Oklahoman Verbal Orchids to— “But it’s such struggle to make ends meet One has to siee to believe. When I visited him and hi.s ' oung wife at. a Middle-West airbase last summer the commissary was empty. “My visit was a‘ feast day for them, because I brought along a steak and a.few chops. To buy ‘outside.’ my son — as well as many others on the base -- had .bad to take an extra job.” “It seems,” said Harold G. Gutright, “the school is being run by a little group of left-wing collectivists, teachihg Socio-Marxist thinking, and that the Methodists and the Kennedys have now joined up with Pope John to rule the world by a United Nations, dominated world government.'’’ Dr. Hughes o|^sed the whole-outlook. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Myers of Gingellville; 56th wedding, anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd English of 95 S. Sanford St ; 51st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Helena Bnechler of Oxford; 85th birthday. Mrs. Ella (Dave) Wiatun^ of 290 Whittemore; 30th bir^y. ' Mr. and Mrs. Oai^ Ei^^testaw of Howelli &Ist wedding aanlvinsB^.. Most elections are won on a negative basis. It is what the w * » country is “against" that rolls up Two Navy corpsmen first class, the biggest vote. Gen. Eisenhow- Donald R. Gray and Richard er.liras popular as a soldier, buT Tluibert, note: he wasn’t elected because of bis ••Everyone hf the services popularity. . would like to see an increase in He was elected because ( Ameriew people were impressed by tito slogan “eommo-Korea and corruptioH,': 'Ki ! !-v. The same thing happened in their pay. ‘ This .pay fncrease would not onV have its monetary yahie but would be a vote of confidence from the American people. “Although your recent tftl-de an thia subject was bnsi- Tbls is the flrst example that • union boos can set himsdf up as a persdhti accreditation ageacy, with totf-hnposed authority to judge tl^ oompetence of coDege teachers. A more in-. teresttog questtoo, however, is what protection Dr. Hughes may expect from the academic, politicians wbo are always squawking about ' “academic ,, freedom” and the sacred rigbt ',.oftpaare. ■ Whatever a (tonmuihst profes- IMore questions than answers, still confuse the multibillion Contract of General Dynamics (torp., for development of a tactical fighter aircraft. Boeing Aircraft bid $411 million less than General Dynamics, originally on the basis of two planes, adapted for carrier or land nse, against General Dynamics’ single design. Now' an aerpnantical engineer testifies that addition of thrust re-verser braUag to the General Dynamics destga, necessary for supersonic afreraft, wiD re> ! •\'- .1. ( Boeing faKlnded this hi Ha design wHh convcuttoaal hraUag «■!»• tr Mentioned and then dropped in the current investigation was General Dynamics’ shaky financial condition resulting primarily from its losses on a jet transport. Unmentioned in formal in-dairy but rumbled was a possible bijectioB ef interest by Frank Phec. fonaeC bead ef General Dynamics, ttiB effec- Postma^Jer General Edward J. Day’s response to a cut in the postoffice department’s budget is to announce that Saturday deliveries vriU be ended after July 1, that people who move into new ^igh • rise apartment buildings Won’t get any mail deliveries* until their buildings become 90 per cent occupied, and that there will be a reduction in third-class (largely junk) mail deliveries. ' All this is designed, obviously to intimidate the Senate into rejecting the budget reductions which the House has passed. But there might be a simpler solution to the problem. What’s the matter wHh getting another postmaster general if Duy doesn’t feel like operating the mail system on the amount if money Congress thlaki he. rnght to have? IlM AMOBUtod WNH U —UUBd MtehulTBiT to to* for Mttoa M aU to»Bl W UiU oiwips^r tow M tol V JS.’ITStSStiSCeSJS S£“ASS“ti,!S"'Si ■45* teMW OoonUc* Itb SU.M • ttaHrtMf* to MleblcsB Md DUdwii to* StatoB Sar. *AU toad aubacniitkoo MraSR U-' "t" THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, 1903 A^7 ? 1^. r ^ r’‘">v I' ‘ M' ^ f * v< : . rV/'-' ,.\ . . i‘’.u;.5!i;WL''!y -,; ~ A' LENGTH LENGTH 11 Vi-WIDTH | DOU8U 45' 63' 90“ 3.57 pr.| 5.57 pr. I 9 J7 i>r. 4.57 pr. 6.77 pr. ,11.77 pr. 5.57 pr.! 10.77 pr.! 15.77 pr.'21.77 pr. 36" cofes ....2.77 pr. I Volonces ...1.77 White Lake Township and Duane!^. Hursfall of Independence Tpwn- shin' and Walled I ake Mavor T*8hl angles .was killed yesterday A pJhIh ^^y®>hen thd vehicles collided. One' c ^ Jfiremgn also died and nine others “Southfield .Mayor James S.lwere injured, two critically. Clarkson, Berkley Mayor George ^ , . ..... Kuhn, and either Birmingham into the ; Mayor William BurgUm or Mayor] Pro tern Robert Page wiU also! 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Save 90c now| -Matching 72x11" voloncei ,1.29 SAVE on patcfiprint qiiilh with or without ruffles Repeat.«te1 Twin or full re- ^ ■H versible-quilts in 2 .charming ^ |ks styles. Bound edeges, rijttlesi Pink,4>lue. Sove^on thesel OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Mondqy through Saturday- Ai- DERX. STORED r J-; Jl .-''i I'' 'F'l'i ^ I’.U DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON tUINS •8 THE PONTIAC PRESl WBPyESPAY, MAY 1. 1968 M X"' Republican-Dixie&dt Combo No Longer Dominates Congress WASmfGTQN (AP)—Th« (no« powarfUl oooMrvathrt coalition In the Boon has Ipft evoy teat ao far in tha proaent Coog^ ■ A# linifc^nTtinn today, In aa|wgnlaitaten1e«a,__ the combinirtl^ of RepuUicana and Southarg DaoMcrata Out dominated the HooM tof nearly a generatloo just isn’t what it used to be. em Democrats are voting like Northern and Western Democrats. However the four votes are not U claircut indicator! of cpnserv-Uve strength. There is s6me in- tve put their best foot forward by brtoging up bills on which they f^ their chances were best A review of the four ifiajor test votes that have tllken place in the house since the new Congress con-vened.in January bears them out. What has happened is fois; the ever, but more and more Soutb- ^atlon split among the Southern lion for emergency public works. Democrats on the four votes: • The split was tMS. ^ ats on the four votes: —Jan. I. to keep the Rules Coin' mtttee membership at 1$, aliped at makinf it easier to get admin-Ma 1o"1he ilouse floor; Southerners voted SO-44 with the For the. purposes of the analysis, the votes of the » Democrats form the 11 states that made up the oM Confederacy were examined. The total party division In the House is 257 Democrats and 177 Republicans, with e vacancy. Here is the pro and anUadmin- /aster -AprU 10. To rdatora $450 mil- from the doctoivdentist training bill Southerners 25. Against killing tha '*"'‘*'*“*"**^’s feeg grstais bin. 'U.5. Bombing May Start War Southerners 07-10. Attack on N. Viet Nam Too ^llsky—Mansfield WASHINGTON (APT - m. -Apfil M, Against removing a chairman of the House RepubUcanlhu waned L the Hth Congress. Policy Committee, ud a top party “Thire’s no doubt about what's nan on fleca| matters. happene"»duUy subdued by day takes our daily Mfe grows more b^c so hiU control, and saddles us with does the pace of P^hiful nightmares. \our dreams. Remember the / dreams of Investigators have, found that widi most adults dreams are not an escape from our worries, but a r of them. What troubles to write on a broken typewriter • or—worst of all-on one that has a stuck T’ key. It doesn’t seem faiTrdoes it, that the vexations that plague us by day should hagride us by night*^ No wonder so , many people wake up all worn but. All night long they've been shadow-boxing with their fears, anxieties and Ipsuf^ ficiences. > W a a Science, which offers each night every homely would b? the belle of thb iSu,!?*'^^ machine. If you got JERUSALEM, Israel (AP) — Israel’s third will be elected by I^llament May 21, it really jwed a nounced Tuesday/ Two groat names^ Richman’:^* ^ and Zefran*.. comiihie to giile you wery shipping room cjerk would g„ ^ ^ , be a Napoleon of' industry, every racetrack gambler would win thb dally double, and we’d all inherit the kind of money we need to live in the manner tp which we’d like to become accustomed. dreaming of s us, but in a'v to be able to do. *® Of course, there’s a . potential -R- dreaming all day in your swivel you wouldn’t have worry about nightmares. It’s too much daydreaming that causes nightmares.’^’ That’s one'of the moski things about bosses. ’They’re too often. ^finding the pave-^ \m e n t studded with coins, or ___ discovering sud- BOTLE denly that by waving yourjarins you could soar through the air l(ke a glider. Such dreams are common to all aggerated manner, in our sleeping thoughts. OCCUPATIONAL TINGE ’There i^ a strong occupational tinge to our dreams. ’The housewife dreams of family woes, the buslnessntan of business problems, llie iMocrastinating ctdumnist som^ing here. Couldn’t it come up with a push-button machine ttat would anesthetize our guilt feelings and give us again the kind of happy dreams we knew when young? ~Egypt Opens Po$T[ He will sucQCM President Izhak Ben-Zvi, rM died last Tuesday. Prime^nister Ben-Gurion’s Social Qef^ral Mapai party, Is-biggest, decided to back Shazar, a 74-year-oW W leader, for the presidency. 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Tom Mclh- voter sentiment was followed. F« li.-j I Tk. ..Mt.m, nt th« «vr* NH who unkwifled confi-mors thsu B decado Kelly Hm td* vocatod a lottery in Mamaohu- ^. By GORDON A. GLDVER CX)NCX)RD. N. H. (iD-For better or (or worse, New Hanjpehire in the only state in the Union today with a legal sweepstakes. - Not since t»4. when the Louisiana lottery went out of business, has there been a state-sanctioned lottery in the nation. In a dramatiq appearance before the Republican-dominated' legislature. Democratic Gov. John ;j|lf, ,King said Tuesday he signed th#‘ sweepstakes -into -law “at a time when our people are carrying's cross of taxation unequaled in history. " . win be allocated to communities for the support of their schools. King’s action in signing'the bill was deemed certain to result in Intensified drives in other, states which seek to bolstei^ theijl- revenue from race track tatting oi some other Torm of gambling. The sweepstakes.bill brought ad WpOnSlDlllCy. ILWniWIMUV W.Q. wa. *vass avavass- [land. ^ I The general secretary of thejtyre, N.H., who expressed confl- The Rev. Hartley T. Grandld.lMassachlisetts CbuncU of Church- dbnee the sweepstakes will be sid-aT ttu Maw!o8 *h* Rav IV Rnmuit I. KnsDD. ministeced “in a dean sud hoDCst ine nev. narmey t. uraiiaia,ijn«aHK.'iiuacHB vuuwu w lexecutive director of Uw Newies, the Rev. Dr. Forrest L. Knan>, I Hampshire Ooundl of Churches, icalM the measure “deebmctlve termed the sweepstakes “a poorlactlon—we must struggle harder way for a state to fihaiiK^ its bust- than ever to mainain high stand- in Massachusetts, Francis E . stakes a “legitimate fiscal experiment” that has the backing of a roajorliy of New flijmpahire cltl- Gov. John H. Reed of Maine, a Republican, aaid he did not fa-; in MaSSaCTiuseiu, rTaiiwis Cs. • fic|iuuuv«ti| mmtu iiv wm Iway for a state to fihahee its ^i-|ttian ever to mainain stand- Kdly, former lieutenant govemorivor a sweeps for his state. I |ness. It puts New Mwnpshlre irt'ards in public life and policy.” land attorney general, said Mas-1 Gov. King called the sweep-j King said-his legislative coun-sel-Joseph A. Milliraet-had con-iferred with JusUce Department |liwy*s and was satisfie^ that a properly reguUted kweepstakes would be legal. The Haintpshire swaepa will actually be a combinatidn lottery and horse race. The tickets drawn wUl be nasignad by chance, to the horses, in b particular race. The winning horses determine the winning tickets. ■ ----iR^t remark, the governor fe touched-on what was probably the., greatest impetus for passage of: the sweepstalies bill. New Hamp-■shire is one of the few stalM that derives lio tax revenues from! broad-based levies such as sales j or-'income taxes. Fully 70 per M^nt of New; Hampshire’s yearly] tax revenoes of $26 million are, collected via the .so-called “sin taxes” on liquor, tobacco and horse racing. The biggest part of the tax biB^ den is bom by pr^rty dwners on the local level. The.4[Ovemor and other 4sackers of ^ .sweepstakes expect a harvest M14 mB-lion annually from two swwp-stakes races a year at Rockingham Park. the. state’s only flat racing track. All of the money Mefro Gets Lines From Willow Run DETROIT (API - Three major airlines operating out of Willo^ . Hurt Airport reportedly have signed contracts to move to Detroit Metropolitan Airport. It was expected that three other Willow Run lines, known as ,“k>-cal-service carriers,” would also announce moves shortly. James M. Davey, airport manager and managing director of the Wdyne County Road Commission, which operates Metro, said yesterday the contracts were coming in “but we feel it would ___j3eJmpgqie;:-.iflL designate Jriiidi ones until we have a complete package. ” Spencer Leroy, a U a I led Airlinet official who b senrlnf as OBofficial ipidiesipaa for the lines still at Willow Ron, said it was his naderstaading Oat Eastern, United and TWA had signed and that the contracts were on their way. The three local service carriers mentioned were North Central, ' Laite Central and Mohawk. ^ ^ Construction is expected to be-* ’gin at Metro in July on a |3^ million expansion program that will provide for all the airliMa* needs. -The expansion is expected to be completed iirMarch 196S. Commons Approves Rail Cutback Move LONDON (APt-The British House of Comons has approved ! the Consenative government’s program for drastic overhaul of the nationalized railway system to; put it on a paying basis. | The plan will close 2,300 stations { and withdraw passenger service, from 5.000 miles of track. > . Tlje National Union of Railway-1 nwn has called a three-day rail j strike May 14 to protest the plan.; Ardb President Departs j tor 6-Doy Algeria Visit Tense Nerves Block Bowels re«i^iy,wi5i9iiiwl«»eorn!erv- DUIUW, — bl(paied^Bd you become eontii-' paled. New Couauv uMeu relieve tiue mtiwy wWi a anK|DC emme imn k"- McoialbidlunsKtMiiureooiiiiiiemied •_______ ta MW OocuM. RefolfT CdioMAiD iHiwfoar ' ^ feel afeat! Gc CouMeM today r eoloa back 10 wofk-iM<*y ovcrnialit. Yoo Get clinicelly-provad .ts Win A Shore of 956,000 Sfllfl J, pogg ns PrisM in this mi effective throaqh Sotwrdey. Mey ♦-Ri^ reserved to NMit qaoatMi SfAMP BONUS CONnST! 5«torder.-h%+44b —^ ^ ^ ----- I Coup^No, S et any of the 63 f-ood Mef- *^**e»ww*_ ) S * H Green Stomps FREE in this Bonus Coupon | FIM RTasipi * "I f lir , I mMY SAHpQfi M I . AU “T'ronu****' "inrsisr markets end deposit your Mystery Bonus Coup^Mo. 5 at any ®f «»• “, Itets. Ym eari^n up to IPO.OOO S * H Groan Stomps FREE In this Bonus Cou^ Centeitl If you hava mislaid your Contort Entry C^n,^ use !ha^^^poiLatJhe__ .!-Lii n«»'4 pIaUwI Sill Auf end detkosit vour antrv coupon now! Wmnari names Centeitl If you have imsMia your voniesi tnrey riohtl Don’t dalayl RH out and deposit your ontry coupon now! Wmnari names II be posted in each Food Fair Market following the dose of the contest. f!o6d Fair "Parsonally Salaeted" U.S. Choice Beef Name....... * address... ... f env .....I. 2bne I ; ■ I '*^oneno. ..—■ AICtSALE ; ^ Agency not e|J, CHUCK ^TEAK kC ROUND STBAK SIRLOIN OR RIB c T-leaa or Cuba......... .lb. »8e Ground |aa« Chuck ... .lb. Me ■enalcis Top Round ... lb. 98e Ground Bonf Round ... .lb. 79e Linda Lao. ko9- luHormili WHITE BREAD........... 2 I'/a-Lb. Loevet 39- tMn end. I AO* POLISH KIELBASA ..........:. ■ it'- “ S.S. No. 1 _____- finti J SAVE 25c! PENN dutch Mushrooms Pieces UB Stems 5 4^0. $100 Cant I PURE COFFEE CREAM '/> Pt. I g« Ctn. tan* Maid Crotmod COHAGE CHEESE 30-Ox. 39c Ctn. Cef Corn'or M ,|0-Ox. Oft* BIRDS EYE PEAS ...................Z AT ■ All Purpono MAINI POTATOiS 25-lb. 1,^ Bag teed toir. Our Finot* Froiun STRAWBERRY HALVES 5'C99‘ feoe I Oci Family Siio 34-Ql. ^ftC Sava Ha ea }l 12-Ox. A HORMEL'S spam ....... Can SaVa 14a an II Ckwnli, U«M Tuna 6'/l-Ol. ftP* .CjHICKEN OF THE SEA ... Can ZD Campkall’t—■ Chaiea at ♦ Kindt! ■■ Z.ft* VEGETABLE SOUPS ..... 3 c... 07 Sava lie an J! Crneker larml ' |.Lb. I ftC CRISP SALTINES .............. Be* I Y Campbtll'i — Cbalna at II Kindt m Oft* MEAT cHoiN SOUPS ..,. .3 C... 07 Sweet Pofts 12 Food Fair Golden Corn — Hershey Chocolate Syrup . Pineapple Juice .. ..... Dole Sliced Pineapple /. Gold Medal Flour....... Reynold's Aluminum Wrap Craam Ityia .. Sava 14a oa 1 I? Sava la I • Oa } Cant ii] ir Fa«d Fair li- 25‘ Sava la Alt Furpata ' Sava 4a 49 * Sppeial ■ • Savinqt! 25-F9. t>7a Roll 4L/ ALEXANDRIA. Egypt (AP).-' Presidefit Gamaf Abdel Nasser bailed from Alexandria yesterday-on the special yam Horriya (Liberty) for a six-day state visit to Algeria. j' He was invited by Premier ^ Ahmed Ben ,B e 11 a Nasser is .scheduled Uv arrive in Algiers. SatHtday, ^ WEDNESDAY. MAY 1. 1963 A—ll STARTS THURSDAY, 9:30 A.M. JgPyLgBAMBQAT 1119 Bdle.,ar.LQUlsYJlleJt,„„ left far behind as the Delta Queen from Cincinnati (right) opens up big lead to win a steamboat race on the Ohio River by 2H miles yesterday. The Belle had trouble with its boiler but finWied the Kentucky Derby festival race about 30 minutes behind Delta Queen. I Litterbugs Should Be Named \ By PHYUJS BATTELLE NEW YORK - You see the -wian toss the crumpled Tigar-^ ette pack onto the curb. Maybe it doem’t bother you much. ___Just^-jnother guy, you think, who was brought up wrong. He just didn’t learn to be neat An expert sees him dif-. ferently: Ibemanwho j € a suall^ leads the individual to i *Who am I?’ ’’ •n the vice president for ^ motivational research company, in addressing * the “Kjte p Amer^. ica Beautiful” volunteers. So the man or woman who litters the streets of the land may be a lost sloul, who thinks of himself as an insignificant cog in the great big industrial machine. may have had an inunaculate upbringing. He may be the best- -Sott Spading for the Navy This feeling alienates him from the other anonymous peo-phr who hinr,-a n-d- loosens his sense of social responsibility. He treats the community through which he passes, facelesily, as a resentful renter treats somebody else’s home. It*s not really his; why-should he bother keepiaw it, nhat. He’s just the ibar sucker who’s paying the ^ (or, ia ttis case, taxos.) If we’re to “Kew America beautiful,” more ^citizens have got lo —ipng^term lease on civic/luc. On May 3. American Airlities. celebrates the 30th anniversary 'Of its first flight with a steward-^ ess to serve passengers. The flight: Chica^ to-^fewark, with stnps in tvTrolt Flying time,r^ht-hours. Stewardess: Misi0elma Maul. BQis Maul recalls ttat the (If a t stewardesses devised. Never voice your own pCT-sonal opinkm about such topics as politics. Instead, turn the conversation -back with, not sure . . . what do y o u '"""'nhink^’i^ ; Never discuss your hood, too. ,His trouble is, not a lack of aeataess, but a lack of ia-dividaality. , He is anonymous. Society has made him forget who he is. He is lost. “The growing anonymity of the individual”' in our society > “encourages littering.” Rapid cultural and social changes over the past-two generations have cony>licated modern life to the point where the individual “often feels lost and powerless.” NEWPORT. R.I. fAPi - Thel cerenjony for the Officer Candi-! date School’s new dormitory at the Newpoh Naval Base went off| snioothly, thanks to some advance spade work. * Despite icy weather, the Navy made certain the ground wouldn’t be too frozen to break in the gronndrhreaklng ceremonies. ual Is re.sponsible for other problems too. According to Arthur Schlesinger Jr., if men are, less masculine today, it is their life of conformity — of being swallowed up in the suburban mouserace — that contributes to the problem. A 3-foot square plot was excavated in advance. The SQil was carted off to a warm buiUing to fiiaw oversight, then carefully replaced and topped with thin sod I * * * just before officials stepped on I He has “an anonymity which 'their chrome - plated shovels. i If a man is immersed in the conformist domestic and civic duties of a suburban . life, he gradually loses his identity as he doesn't know quite who he BENTON HARBOR UP - Gerri Ann Glidden. 18, of Mattaw^, was named Miss BiossOm Time of And if he doesn't know WHO J1863 yesterday. She will reign he is, how can he be sure what during the annual Blossom Tinto sex he is? icelebration May S-11. APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAYS COUNT TO THREE ... before you buy any appliance, TV, Pr stereo this week. 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MICRO-TOUCH 2G tone arm vnth**free-fl ‘FYench-Canadians have deveLjof a mass, continental market.” sage’s program Is “r remarkably and. at present, j MacLennan said PrenciKCanadi-jenough" so that separatists—those they have superb leadership in «» are emperated wheniwho would split Quebec off from 4Ns provmoe. They are going, to i Canadian of Englidi background canola—caiuiot find any funda- canipaign, Pearison. like other Mberal party leaders, acknowledged the n^ for urgent action to improve- the lot of the'country’s million French-speaking citiaens. He indicated he Would ftropoae a commission to study the'problem. arts into an English-dominated culture. Both French and English are ofHcial languages. WON’T PULL PUNCHES FVehtepeaking Canadians live < in Quebec, miich in- going, lojwsnaaiam Of EngUA baekgroundjcanadh-cannot find any funda-exist and thm have never .be^n in cling to the notion that Canada is Liental quarrel with it. He said the a stronger position than now to bound to develop as a sort of^nective ambitions Quebec’s maintain their existence. ’The Le- British state. 'cttlsens for a sense of Identity sage government is determined! Historian Michel ^net of the depend for. fulfillment largely upon the powo* and competence! Jean Marchand.mresident of the of the Quebec government. J Confederation of National ’Trade A separatist spokesman, Andre Unions, said separatism “Isn^ d'AUemagne, described the Le- strong at the moment:* He held sage progrun m ‘ crwtive na-that an. atmosphere mUst be created in which Canadians of tionalism” hut he'said the goal can nev(^ be achieved a provfaidal fovemn^. either language can feel at home anyedicre in the country. A disposable butane cigarette mi#keted. Quebec’s liberal premier, Jeu Lesage, has hit hard at the national rovernment’s attihide in die The fact .that the Liberals are now in power'hrOttawa is not expected to m a k e him pull any eludes the city of Montreal and punches oh tlMjssue. is “after Ontario—the secondmost • populous province.’' A terrorist organization called the Quebec Liberation Front has The Canadian Press asked a dumber of prominent Quebec residents to state their views on their province’s role in confederation. pulled off several bombings in the Almost invariably .they expressed past few months. It says it; ob-!a belief that L(^e Is moving ject is to separate Quebec from toward a strongo* role for Quebec „ thie rest of Canada. 'in the national picture. i-Junior Editors Quit on QUESTION: How did the myth of the unicorn come about? ANSWER: To the civilizations of Greece and Rome, much of the outer world was a mystery, and travelers would bring reports of strange places and animals. Such reports, when male into.stories and pictures, would often be far from the the dragon was such a mythical animal; but the most interesting of all whs the nnkorn. » The first report speaks of wild white asses from India with .long horns on their heads. Writers and artists added to this purely imaginary idea by giving the unicorn the beard of a goat, the tail of a Uon and the hind’legs of an antelope, while the idea of the horn projecting Irom the head came from the “narwhal,*’ a whale still found in northern waters (upper picture). ^ Perhaps because he was so beautiful, medieval artists and craftsmen used the unicorn in many ways. Onr own artist has taken his unicorn pictures from a Mtb centurv tapestry. The unicorn was us^ in heraldry and became an identifying mark for certain knights and noble families. FOR YOU TO DO: Make ybur'ovm picture of a .magnificent unicorn prancing through a tapestry-like field of flowers. These beasts were generally shown as pure white, so the grass and flowers should be quite dark to make the unieorn stand out. ' EARN MORE ON SAVINGS SAVINGS IN BY THEIOTHOFTHE MONTH EARN FROM THE 1ST AT COMPOUNDED AND PAID QUARTERLY . . OR -YOU CAN PURCHASE Advanced Payment , Shares Certiticates A ( urretU Knit IF HELD TO MATURITY 1 AVAIUBLE IN UNITS OF $80 PER SHARE EttabK»h»d ia IB$0 — Mavat mittad pariag a diridaat . T0ott oi toond aiaaog*m#n( — four ^ssennics of Mcaritf. Amo(j new oror W miHioa dsUats, CAPITOL SAVINGS % A LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 West Huron FE 4-0561 Dewefewn Ootroit M(a»f»n«toinJlvd. tldg. Comor Stot* W9 2:1078 Hm»« Offje*: Lontinn 0 CURRENT RAT€ Southf^U Officar 272IS Southfiald ' at M Milia Rood KE 7-61 25 ■i THE PONTIAC PRESS. TOD^ESDAY, MAY 1, 1068 A—ia Orm Way OiA of the Comer > Rules Chairman'^ After JFK With His Snickersnee V BUTH MONTGCniERT t WASHINGfON-PKridentKen- tMdy may' ____ ■^^riBf'afta’ftowarful oon|T6ia-oum nearly twice Ms age, Jw-tauae the cnstyi>ld genttaman is i^w . threatening to “get out Kmmedy administration hard time until H pressured the House last sassiaB to “pack” the members. Still smarting over that wound to his pride. Smith drawled: “I thhik the Presidort ever-stepped himself. . I believe, hi the Constitatlon as it was writ- terenca_ mudi'of his kg^) islation would be RUTH 1 UMONTGOMER1 approved IfMONTGOMERY Smith’s committee would only let it, come to a vote. The courtly Virginian, who has bottled up more bills than Km-nedy has relatives^ toM this correspondent: “I do iKd agree. “rm not a quarrelsome person, I’m peaceable,” he drawled, “but when they back iqe into a comer, I have to get out my sniAersoee.” that he didn’t think the nembers had ' things much,” deqiite the “psldir Ing.” “Of course, there are times hen they send up their _ brigades, and some of our rules committee members buckfe der,” he averred, “but the only difference is. that there are more of ’em now to bring -jnessure Tlw dictionary reveals that 1 formidable octogenarian, who still lives in the same farmhouse where both be and his mother ishing a “bowie knife.’ A succession presidents have discovered that they need Howard Smith more than practically any othier nmn in Congi^. This is due to the peculiar house system which virtually grants the rules committee Mfe-or-death power over legislation, by requiring^ that all'bills must first clear through it. ance the majority of the rules members were nearly as conserv-' ative as chairman Smith, the U.A.R:, Arabia OK Pulloui inYembn UNITED NATIONS, N.Y (AP) —Secretary General U ’Thant announced yesterday that the United Arab Republic and Saudi Arabi had agreed to pull out of royalist-republican war In He said a U.N. observer team 1 see that the agreement is carried out. Thant disclosed details of the agreement in a report to the U.N. -Security Council He told the 11-nation^ body he was dispatching MaJ. Gen.. Carl von Hmu of Swedm, head of the U.N. truce supervision organization in Pales-tim, to Ihe capitals of the two countries at once to aitange for the arrival of U N. observers. d to have three sep-t coequal branches.” nyerhe _ 1 this year. It’s not gonha gat anywhere.” Asked about criticism Qiit Congress la too heavily contndled by a few aging commlttae cbairmeo, Smith smiled pleasantly: “That may be sound criticism, but hOW are they donna remedy H? Some fOOu ttok that we older chairmen may have outgrown our usefulness, and this may be true — but we don’t think it is.” PBOPW RIGHT Warming to his subject, he continued: “The people elected lu. and the party doesn’t elect us, but the people. Are they proposin’ to take that right away from them?” PhUosophlsiiigaboBt his need for a “salekerawe” la a crisis, bin is not la the pablie Interest. I have to ase any fawtraiBent at my command, and my vote la the rules committee k eae some exptfience, he’s more apt to settle down to some sound-epn- The Virginian left little doubt that be thinks plenty of the Kennedy bills fall into that category. Induded among titese ^*vttlalns” are medicare, civil rights, mass transportation, foreign aid, and the youth bills. TIGHTENIN’OUR BELT An implacable foe of them aD, ‘I think we oughta take the President at his word about ti^t-enin’ our belts and cuttih’ down on the heavy ependinl" Some of his most Ubt^ scorn was reserved far JFK’s proposed Domestk Peace Conis, Young Canservatioa Corps, and Natkpal Service Corps. Remarking that he has Smith scoffed: “I think tiiey’re a perfectly cock-eyed conglomeration! I’ve never been able to fully understand what each of these three youth bills is ’sposed to do. “One would camp ’em out in ihfc, woods, -and another roost ’em somewhere in towns. That bill died in iny committee last year, and I will oppose it ceptkna (d his duties and funo-ons.” The .aal^ lawmakar aaid he oent es-he does twelve years, he scoffed: ‘T don’t think well el that pbm. because my fiUare k hridad me, as tim sayk’ goes, hat I same In Congress as la said^he is adamslntly opposed to ‘ mass transit bi^. swamped Congreu with propooak for new le^ala-tion, tw said: “Every darned eae of them has seme new scheme for speadkg federal money, .when we oughta’ be bon to $107 billion since be took dike" Smith sool * ■Af ”That’s an Increase of 34 per cent in two years. Pm terribly disturbed about thk fiscal situation — every year an increase in the debt limit, schemes to start new projects, and big spending bilk which endanger the stability ofourdollar. - “I’m very concerned about all tiik kdacal extravagance.’' MOREOPPOSmON Smith, whose only hobby k dig-gatsighig-h^tfae vegetabk garden-of ‘ hk SSdnere Virginia farm, whk^ has been in hk family since K3p, approach,” he cUdefi“The'ad- fore the eyes of city coagress-mea and says if they’ll be good they’ll give them back a mO-lioB dollars of their olira tax money — after they’ve taken out the tolk, of course. Why, the federal government r no business buyin’ more budes ter New York or Detroit or Smith supported foreign aid for i the first few years after the war, but Is unalteraUy opposed to con-1:-tinuing it. - He thiaki we should confine our aid to “this hemkphere,” and desptte some mkgtvhigs about “tr^’ to help peo^ who don’t want democracy,” be favors the Alliance for Progress. “Latin America k our real op- ji portunity to help,” he said, and!;L.; then adied with a sigh, “I’m will-1: j iiiTto tu^a chance there — atS j least ford while.” I:;! i ’Round the Clock, ’Round the Calender V; * ' M\ MIRACLE MILE AitgrMay7th^ you mav never touch a drop or “Harrf’Liquor CALVERT DISTILLERS COMPANY, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY Position Open to Head State Welfare Board LANSING (AP) ^ The Michl-Igan Social Welfare Commission has called for appUcaUons for the position of state welfare director to siicceed the kte Willard Maxey. Deadline hr filing of applications haa been set for May 20. 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Fl Antonmtie Defrost REERIGERATOR Irae Zero Frecser NO MONEY DOWN GE 19-IN. PORTABLE TV Comidete Whli Stand' 51 , W.EM Ft 4-1555 HOUSEKEEPINCi o£ PONTIAC DPEJf HON. aid M, TUL 9 i ' r Executive Clothes TROPICAL WEIGHT 2 TROUSER SUITS Clock your smartness and double the wear wittr oiir 2 trouser suits of Dacron and wool blends. Meticulously tailored conventionally styled models are ideally suited for id months of the year. Extra trousers mean extra wear and assure a freshly pressed look. Save dollars on double duty. Select yours from subtle stripes, plaids, checks or solids in grey, blue, black -or oliVe. 65 >> for men who demand Smart Stitch and Turn Wiog-TIp Bluehur in-Black Importud Calf or Antiquu Brqwn. Sizst IVk to 12, B,C,D Widths. If you’ve never experienced the pleasure of wearing PORTO-PEDS, a real tmt awaits you. There’s nothing quite equal to the “air-bome” oomfort—^tbe magic of special construction. And a glance telk you these shoes are miles ahead in styling authority. Drop in and look over the wide Variety of. interesting new numbers tpday. . ' *23 95 Use A Uon Charge With Option Terms A—14 the l^ONTIAC PRBSS. WEPNgSDAY, MAY I, l063 What Does Future Hold tor Portf\ac as ar\ M^ 3AB lAight UmTOtt'S NOTE — This U fht $econd in a atri»$ of artt-cle» on' Fonti^e Municipal Airport—present, and futureJ « By DICK BUCK ........Bdlter..............“ “Use it or k>se it." Utis was the- mandate given Pontiac when it was granted airline service rtwre than two years ago by the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB». " I ■Rie city was .t^ if would have! to show an ayffage nf five out-^ bound passengers a day from P 0 n t i a c Municipal Airport to keep the service. Daring the past several months, this average has dwindled to abont bm aday.'"'.. ....... North Central Alrllhds (NCA), the ca^jbr serving Pontiac, has told the CAB, in effect, that the city isn't using it, so it siiould [lose it (airline service). ; I Pontiac has replied that it sim-| ply isn't getting the service it' wants and needs. ' he stinalafed into flying north — daring the morning or any other time. And most nave lost interest in going to Cleveland hy4^p.i TbatTTfie iliii if 'which a through flight to the Ohio dty had left Pontiac the past sevet^l months. SERVICE EUMINATKD ilnate.|. now leaves^ at 3:M, ikmina at Detroit. The a^Ve > mentioned snr-veyt were taken at General Motota Truck and Coach, Poa- local travel agaaeies. They hint strongly that KCA would see quite a few more faces at the 'Pontiac Municipal passenger gate 'with morning flights' to Chicago and Cleveland, plus Even that service has been 1 i m i n a t e d in the new NCA.tutii tips Ip the evening, schedule which took effect Sun- A * * day. The afternoon trip, which! The airline explains that it’s rfrf Until Next Year's Trip lirable to have flight person-1 CAB’s preliminary hearing into that nel and planes stay overnight in North Central’s request to end the Tri-City-Airpbrt area because'Pontiac service, the‘crew members are awa; ‘ t designate froth home and equipment qway from regular'maintenance ladlliiei: .............. City officials arc , to why the prospect of operating a botentially profltr able moming flight through Pontiac woaldn’t meit these barriers. North Central hasn’t explained why. Also baffling is why NCA is uneasy about terminating flights for the night in the Saginaw area when its schedules show one This hearing will tale place to Jetember^ No dedaton is exr pecte4 for several months after that. The CAB camwt tell an airline at what time of day to scheduie its flights. It simpiy assigns routes and cities to be served on these routes. ' There’s always tl)e possibility dlfferenfiiairline to serve Pwiltac inasmuch as NCA wants out and the tity wants schedqling which this line says it can’t provide. A. A In this connection, mention of United Air Unes (UAL), the nation’s largest, is Inescapable. United, according to Hoskins, ‘has shown some interest’’- in serving Pontiac if seemed to favor such a move, .pothered by ( UAL inherited Michigan routes' (NEXT: which include. Grand Rapids, Muskegon. Lansing. Saginaw-Bay City-MldlahCl and Flint along with Detroit when it merged with Capital Airlines. From United, Pontiac could conceivably get not only'direct service to' Chicago and C1 e v e-land, but also possibly to New York and Washington. It’s a big dream, but Pontiac. Municipal Airport has seen en ough of those to not be ■ one more. Qrowiag pains) ' , _ flights from there in AGANA, Guam iT^Damages ^ . caused by Typhoon Olive were continuliffTI I 'This would make it possible I to sun'i somhboiiiM fttght ------- i ! flights from there in the mom- | WASHINGTON (AP)—President isibility of an audience widi PBjpiej ,at Pontiac, Kennedy plans to skip Rome on |John XXIII. A papal audience for lleveland or his trp to. Italy next month, but the first Ron\an"CathoIic president estimated at $5 million today as. d„g|eg ,o Chicago. pfficiaU on Guam and three o^r, shown that the^.*"™' ‘“^ether on a state isianos ..„ .. visit next year. ;he and Mrs. Kennedy wU tour the of the United States almost certainly wil be a part of next] year’s program. Pacific Trust Territory -------- . . tonUnued to survey the rubble Potential Pontiac passengers ■leffm M sTdrm’s'wake.: : direct mormng^ flights '‘o’ . w A - these two Cities. Although the------------------ The office of Gov. Manuel' • * ♦ * ^ ten(ative. there appears to Be lit^ . --.geid^-yteteteaiy cMg- - veys placed losses at |2 million ‘‘ect service to Chicago; a mom- ing his mind. For one thing, he for public facilities and about $3‘"8 flight from Detroit to Flint, does not want to detract from million for privatep roperty dam- Saginaw-Bay City - Midland,'Al- what promises to be a glittering ...H nr hv Ihi> uriladv- Pellston and Sault Ste. Ma-.visit to the Italian capial wih the agea. or oesiroyeo oy uw ' rie; and an afternoon flight from First Lady. ' i Mncrnu/i AD^ iitoS"Sto'aMaTt Ctovdalld ‘^®"'Unment named Osca Niemlye^ Detroit and, at last. Cleveland. jn«,y „ow .plans to fly directly |of Brazil, one of Latin America’s I from Washington to'Milan. He ia leading architects, today to re- Brazilian's One 'of Lenin Prizes North Central is the country’s [largest local - senrice airline, With 90 cities in, its repertoire. Itrs0 u nd busings policies brought a profit last year — a rarity among airlines these days. Local officials would like some of those sound policies - applied to service from ponjia** _ Municipal Airport. *They'plan to hit hard on the- THI TOWN HOUSE >$6,890-$50 DOWN $69 MONTH 3 B«drooms. 1 Bath. 960-S^Ft. Alum. Siding THE AMERICANA >$7,600 >$50 DOWN $76 MONTH 3 Bedrooms. 1 Baths. 1,056 Ft. Alum'. Siding THE PLUS-FOUR-$8,400 >$50 DOWN $84 MONTH .4 Bedrooms. 2 Baths. 1,200 Sq. Ft. Aium^ Siding COMPARE TODAY! These tremendous values are made possible by our exciting and pnique owner participation plan! All you need is a lot and $50 tb take advantage of this arnazing offer—If you need a _ ^new Tidme 6e" su^ see i« FIRST. 23 mM^^ Monthly payments from $43.00 12 year terms. WE BUILD ON YOUR LOT ANYWHERE WXITI SOR nil UTIRATUH 01 VISIT OUR MODUS TOOAYI DOROTHT SNYDER UVEMHR, lelRef 7001 Higtiland Rosd IM 3-3303 like Olive. Jose Benitez, deputy high-commissioner of the trust territories, who arrived to Guam Sunday before the typhoon struck. Mid today he had asked PresMent Kennedy to declare three of the islands major di-taster areas. Guam, victim of one of the Pa- ’ Ten States Covered '♦Jej. - . ______ t lings with the Italian pemier at a {prizes. ' 'retreat not far from Milan, an in-l Niemever was fhe chief archi-dustrial city 30 miles south of the tect for Brazil’s new capital Bra-; [Swiss border. ^ jsjiia, and was a ipember of the *1 * ■■* * {team that designed the U.N.'head- „ ! Rome originally wai^ to have [quarters in New York. . rtlie liigli point of Kennedy's „ _ when ’lYphwn Karen struck the I North Central Airlines h a s European tour, with the President j other winners of the 10.000-ruble isl^ iMt Nov 11, was rak^ by I routes in 10 states plus Ontario.jand Mrs. Kennedy making a state L-about $11,000-awards are Pres-hi^ winds and rams as Olive from JCleveland jnivisit. jident Modibo Keita of Mali, Greek swept past^t not criUcally hit. the east to Port Arthur, ()nt.,l . Plans were changed after the ,communist leader Manolis Glezos * * * and International Falls, Minp., in;Easter Monday announcement [and Bulgaria’s first deputy pr^ Of the 500 temporary structures the north; and to Minot, N.D., and|that the First Lady expects her Liier, Georgi Traikov. erected after Typhoon Karen. 2821 i^apij City, S. D., in the west. I third ehiW late in August. Two ------------------—,— were destroyed by the 110-mile- a a ♦ {days after Easter, the White' W II <; an-hour winds, Guerrero's office j its southernmost city is Oma- House said Kennedy would makei a. 41, • -i. J ^ working visit to Italy in June SEOUL. Korea (UPI) - Kim No (toths were attributed to. The airline operates two types!and take Mrs. Kennedy there for Chung Yul, South Korea’s new the typhoon. Pass Resolution Paying Tribute A resolution paying Aibute to the late H. Russel H^nd, retired Oakland circuit judge, was passed last night by the Pontiac City Commission. Offered by Commissioner Mil-ton R. Henry, it expressed the sorrow of city commissioners and officials at the loss of “a good friend of this-city’’ who • had “the respect of lawyers, judges and laymen.’’ The document emphasized' Judge Holland’s forthrightness, fairness and sincerity. “He will be remembered for! his serling character and loyal--ty.” the resolution concluded. Holland died April 23-. Boy Scouts Get $336,000 From Teamster Union WASHINGTON - “Many! Teamsters Union members were boy scouts. Many, boy scouts one day will be Teamsters Union member/, With these words. Teamsters President James R. Hof fa Tuesday gave the Boy Scouts $33C,6M on behalf of the union for construction of a hew scout center to Washington. ‘"nie Teamsters Union has a strong interest to the Boy Scouts of America; the most effective’ agency for citizenship building to the country," said Hoffa. iOf two-engine planes — the 44-a state visit early in 1964. {ambassador to Washington, will ! passenger Convair 340 and 26- In bypassing Rome this trip,'leave for his post May 13, it was (passenger Douglas DC3. Kennedy virtually erases all pos-!announced yesterday, BAZLEY'S MARKETS Quality Meats Since 4348 DIXIE HIGHWAY 78 North Saghiaw-OPEN FRIDAYS ’til 9 P.M. DRAYTON PLAINS 0|WRTlMn.tlnSiL91LM.t9SP.M. STEMS THE^ONTliG WEDNESDAV. MAY L 1963 A—15 OPEN DAILY 10-10 - SUNDAY 12-7 —igmmw 3-DAY Coupoto Scde ! Thurs,, Fri., Sat. PERRY St. at GLENWOOD illllillllllllK-MARTCOUPONlllllllllim I 3 Days Only With This Coupon S ■' SEUHiSS I nillHlliiiiiK-MART COUPONlilillinilli E 3 Days Only With Tki* Coupon s HESH nLONS POLY FOJUi BED PILLOW pf. In PliQ. of 2 Pn./64c Fim qvality, in ninUHie and ^ mittone..Siiea 9 thrn 11.. m LIMIT 2 PAIRS Tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifl illilllimiiiK-MART COUPONi E 3 Days Only With This Coupon E = LIMIT. 2 uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliimiiiHiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiNiilmiiiiiiiiiill illlllllllllllK-MART COUPOHllllUlllllil ” 3 Dayg Only With This Coupon g MICHICM ^EEHIOS^ * 9-voIi traniistor radio bat> teriea. Save now at K>Mart! . limit 4 PIR CUSTOMER TiliHlllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllUlllllllllllllltllllllllll 57' (Mant 50*lb. bai; at thii low S dixcount price. 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Pro-' tects your cllch. ___________ * UMIT 2 _ niiiiiuiHimiiiiiuiiitimiuinniiininM^^ LIMIT 2 Tiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lllllHllltlllK-MART COUPQNllllllllUI| 'g ' ' 3-Days Only With This Coupon BUKETBALL I SPECIAL Otficial aljiie aitlfmiiht-:^able ntbber cover.'SiiTel i - , I I I , ' .UAMti '■ Tinmnimiiimnmiinniniiiniiiminmiiiuiiw^^ illlimiliiiiK-RAART COUPONmilllliim - 3 Days Only With This Coupon s illlllinillllK-INART COUPONIIIIUIIIIIII E 3 Days Only With This Coupon z SLEEVELESS TOPS i I . LIMIT 4 r iiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliji ......... COUPONlllllllllllli ■ 3 Days Only With This Coupon \ GIRLS’3-14 I Polished; cotton, knits, prints Z n solids. S-M-L. * 5 LIMIT 4 S luiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiijl i i BOXER SHORTS 50' nillllilliiiiK-AAART COUPONlllllinillli E 3 Days Only With ^his Coupon s WOMEN’S NEW | aCAS I Poplin or gabardine. Regular — shorts or Jamaicas. E - LIMIT 4 E Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiuiiiiiiiii Sizes 10-18, Ready to wear. S Many styles and colors. - ........I limit 2 PAIRS I iHiiiiiiniiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii illlllllllllllK-AAART COUPONlllllinillli E. 3 Days Only With This Coupon E PIIIIIIIIIK-MART COUPONllinilllllli z 3 Days Only With This Coupon z CHARCOAL UGNTERI 1-QT. SIZE ‘ I I Liquid charcoal lighter fluid. E Save now at K>Mart! S LIMIT 4 S iiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiimiiinniiiiininiiinninniiniiniinnO ininninuiK-iWART COUPONinnniini 3 Day) Only With This Coupon WOMEN’S NEW LACE CLOCHE 2.68 Face framing cloche in white and pastels. - -------------------- LIMIT 2 £ iliiiiiniiiiiininnininiiiiiiiHiiiininninniiiinniininT iniiiiiinnlK-MART COUPONniininnii 5 3 Days Only With This Coupon 5 14K, DIAMOND I LIMIT 2 Tninnninfflnnnniinnnininininnnnnnnnniinini niinnnniiK-MART COUPONinniuiuH 5 3 Days Only With This Coupon' BRIDAL SET 6702 rtnsfad, tn K-Mait Certified Perfect*. YeDow or white lUc gold. Rjfijr to thoui doioU s TinnnmnnnnnnnninniinnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnT MEN’S SUCKS WERE 3.ST! 297 Siaes 28-42. Ready to weari Many styles and colors. LIMIT 2 PAIRS niiiiinniniiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiinill j)iiihnnniK-MART COUPONinniniiiii § 3 Days Only With This Coupon S ALCOHCL I i s iiiininniiiK-MART COUPONiininiinu 3 Days Only With This Coupon BCVS’ COTTON SUCKS. Savs! *5 U ninninniiK-MART COUPONiiiinniiiit 5 S 3 Days Only With This Coupon = One pint! 70% Isopropyl. g =--------- — LIMIT 2 S riliiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiitiiiiiil for Compare at 3.95! Ivy styling. g Reg., slim, husky. S LIMIT 2 g nniHnnnninniinnniinnnnnnninnninninniiinin nninniiniK-lMART COUPONiniiniinii E 3 Days Only With This Coupon E MEN’S DRESS SHIRTS 14-17 3J5 Short Sleeves. Popular collar 3 styleL White and colors. g' - . limitj3 S niininiiininnnnnnniiinniiiiiiiinninnuninnniiiil niinninniK-MART COUPONininninii E 3 Days Only With This Coupon E 48 Conirt I MODESS I Regular Sanitary Napkin 3 AQUANET Hair Spray 1.33 79' LIMIT 2 = TllHlIllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllHIlilllllllllllHIIIIIillHIil pilllilllllK-illART COUPONllllllllllll 3 Ddys Only With This Coupon WOMEN’S-MEN’S HODSESLIPPERS 96' Marshmallow vinyl with sgtVk lining, S-M-L. y" innnnninninnnninnnnnnnnnninnnnnninnniH iiiinninniK-iAART COUPONinnniiin S 3 Days Only With This Coup^ | TERRYCLOTN | NODSESUPPERS Women’s, childcjsny i with crepe sole4. >9, lOA. innnlnniinnnninnnHnminnmiiiniiiiiiiiiiinnn nnunnninniinminnnnniniHjHnninnnmnimnl A—16 THR PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. MAY 1, 1968 Setback at Polls Puts Fanfani %on Shaky Ground Ten thousand different eom-pounds have been tested as pos-ghle antiradiation drugs. One. of these has been used with 8uc-\‘ MM on monkevs. Bjr GERALD MILLER ROME (AP)~Talk mounted in lUly today tljat Amintor* Pan-fani's days as pred^ler are num- Democratic party’s worst election In periiamentary elections last Italy Altered _ by Prosperity OGcats have been confirmed as the biggest single party even H aora^ remained Italy’s largest party but drr^)pod 430,000 votes. The Oom-nuinists picked up more than a million and thC right-wing LU)er-als, who opposed Ffmfani’s ’’opening to the left alliance” with the Nenni Socialist^, increased thekr vote 50 per cent. DEPARTURE UNLIKELY Antonio Segni—himseif a Christian Democrat—would ask I Faidani to fwm Emilio Tavianl and Industiy Min-isttt-Emilio Colombo. It appeared obvious tet &e diversity of Christian Democrats had hMn their updoiiy, p| a concision of views to the electorate. . Fanfani’s faction made his Ml- Christian Democrats who might replace him include party chief Aldo Moro, Interior Minister Paolo The premier’s outgoing coalition still had a majority of 142 seats in the Chamber of Deputies if it icouldhdld the support drthe Neh- i ni Socialists. But the reduction in TV Sets, Supermarkets Christian Democr^ representation—to 260 of the*630 seats— Change Way of Life I putpanfani's party in a tight po-jsition with little room to bargain. MAY GET IN CABINET R0ME-4W — Italy is getting i The Christian Democrats thus more like America every’ day. jmay be forced to admit the Soar «★ - - icialists to th«> cabinet to get a The country that once devoted voting majorify. In Fanfani’s or- ist program of ecomnnic reform aaue. Rightists in the par-ty opMdy displayed their distrust of his policy white others tried what they considered Christian Democrat ineffectivenett. > atrikn a middle RrouncL aiqr voters also apparently become ezaqierat^ with HiMe were a variety of explanations for the new Communist In the IS months since the al- - hanoe sdth the iSociaHsts, ! tion has been plagued by a rash of strikes affecting almost every arM of the economy. The easier atmosphere between may have convinced soiW| voters that the Communists aren’t so bad after aD. NY City Council Approves Hike in Sales Tax Set Programs on Warfare its talents and riches to building magnificent cathedrals now is putting up supermarkets. Its people, with some of the world’s great iT"o¥¥ ^ compulsivi ’They drive fast cars, Mt packaged foods and spend leisure racing frantically along overcrowded highways to get to high-priced overcrowded resorts. NATION IN TRANSmON Italy is a nation in tmnsition— slowly but unmistakeably gearing itself to high-speed, hi^pressure living and a guest for creature comforts. '' said in a television statement 'the results indicate that the parties of the coalition have either improved or maintained their position and that the Christian Dem-' All this has been made posri-^ J)le, and inevitable, by money—a commodity which was in short supply in Italy until a few years ago.’ iginal “opening to the left,” the Socialists gave voting support but got no cabinet posts in return. YORK w- Ah incr^ in the city sales tax from 3 to per cent has been approved by the City Council as part of a program to get revenue for a proposed record |S,0»,600,000 budget. Mayor Robert F. Wagner, Democrat who proposed the must ImM a publip hearing before signing' it into law. No date was set for the hearing. Detroit Area Residents to See Demonstrations A close-up look-at the armed forces in' action is in store for Detroit area residents. May 11-19 has been designated as Armed Forces Week with ac- ti^packed programs scheduled aT the Detroit Arsenal in Warren on^May and Jtt Selfridge Air j-F(^ Base, Mount Clemens, on May 18-19. AMINTORE FANFANI cil’s' finance committee to five hours, and for 2ti m went into the program last year. cipients, including oral contraceptives if a physician deems them essential to a woman’s health. The department stressed that it pays only for drugs, not mechanical devices. It did not estimate how many vfomen received the pills, but they were believed to be few in numbpc. Huntington. N.Y^ has essential- fered In Wightly more of the counties in connectibn with maternity clinics. They are for poor women acting on a physician’s advice. courts and the Illinois Legislature'***^ oT religion lead-^igent mothers who request themjly the same plan. limit ctnip hirth mntrni hpiplers waS divided, but a Georgia’s* Health Department conducts a family planning Information program for needy families. It’s on a local option basis. Dr. Helen Bellhouse, director of maternal and child health, re- Welfkre Department doM not pro-vida birth amtrol information or devices to women oh relief rolls. But social Workers sometimes refer married w o m e n to the Planned ParenBiood Association. liie ' wwliiri JeiiillSHir"^1n Otero County, Cblo,. provides birth control supplies to relief recipients. They are prescriW by doctors and paid for by the county. No estimate on the number was available. In some areas, social workers refer interested public aid i^ cipients to private agepcies in the child-spacing field. . For Instance; the Maryland Envoy Tqlks in Maioya KUAU LUMPUlI . (UPI) -New Zealand Defense Minister Dean J. Eyre, en route home from a SEATO meeting in Paris, conferred yesterday With Malaya Premier Tengku Abdul Rahman. He will visit New Zealand forces stationed here. Police Officer to married women living withl^?^ spokesman condemnedl their husbands. , ' ' WonMUon .nd conM- form; Of public assistance. The; Air Shuttle Boosts Eastern Airlines ceptives to persons on welfare: liggest Bank Robbery I >***■* CAUFORNIA CONSIDERS ling a lone passenger on a 95-pas-4sei^r Service Commission cjpared a M-] troiman yesterday of charges he faileij to take proper police at-, tion in the states biggest bank] "•i^bery.------------ n inTnvTTA in 1 ivnnia'. Tivil A Similar plan has been sug-California is contributing about LIVOMA '-P - L'voma s California by State‘|80 million to the Aid-to Needy By ROBERT J. SERUNG measure has been shelved by ^««*ger ConstellaUon (which has I House committee | WASHINGTON — It was two happened five times since the Sen. Weingand has noted that ye*r» *go yesterday that EasternjshuUles began, much to fte de-- Air Lines put two new words in|light of Eastern s pubhcity de-the aviation dic>-| tiwnwry^: A4 r-Shuttle. On April 30,1 1961, Eastern completely out of the Washington-New. York market, and reduced even-mighty American’s competition to almosta token status. users-indicating the shuttle is servers 'around to Patrolman Archie A. Hewett, won his appeal of disciplinary action ordered, parlier by police officials. Hewett and another officer were at the Bank of Livonia while a holdnp man was mak-ing aa escape with $153,909 in iNtJan. 29 The commission voted M to reverse the disciplinary action. On Commission Top Singer Here? City Commissioners last night discovered a ‘Rudy Valero’ among them. aments. Commissioner Charles H. Harmon wanted them rend — word for word. It was a pretty even debate reverse me uuK-iHuiwiy j The revelation came after * „-«) . little ex Commissioners ordered the U-^running argument about whether!"" 1:1..' vonia Police Department to re-it is necessary for lease agree-,’ store Hewett’o test pa)^and4eayo;wients and contraety to-be i days. jaloud before they are adopted. He had been reprimanded sus-|. commissioner Winford pended for wven days-without the lengthy pay and ordered to forfeif 15 readings of such technical doc-leave days. ‘ Sipartment). In two years, the air shuttte Increased Eastern’s share The fantastic Success of the shuttle hu furnishiNl immunitimi to those who claim that more fly if (t) fares were continuing to attoact new business even though it is two years old. PLENTY OF BUSINESS There are 120 regularly-sche# ulod air shuttle flights daily, and bn one occasion, Eastern had to operate 45 additional sections to handle the demand. launched its periment of nofrills. no-reservations air service between Boston. New York and Washington. SERUNG The idea was not exactly qew; Allegheny Airlines, a local serv-Ygrg ice carrier, actually had pioneered the concept of a no-reservations commuter service between Philadelphia and Pitts-little exasper-'burgh several months earlier. ...... Rudy But Eastern added a final touch from 30 per cent to simpler, particularly trips over heavily-traveled routes. In the holdup. Hewett and his. partner walked in the fronf door. The bandit left by the rear door. The commission based its deci-Hev sion on evidence Hewett had no prior knowled^ of the heWup. The second officer was ewnerat-ed earlier. County Parks Get Tummertibrari^' FoqcI Demand WM Be Met, Expert Says No one had an answTr Jot thatTshuJtle flight. If a plane was full, >. a standby aircraft and crew were w * « available even if it meant carry- ‘My-time is your time," Har-, ^ j mon explained, referring to,the: title of a Vallee hit of several' . i 1 nf decades ago. AlOKe PlOnS I come down here at $ | every Diesday nl^t and I| for Library JH more than 70 per cent, which means Eastern now is carrying seven out of every 10 passengers between the three, cities,- while competing against seven Airlines bn the New York - Boston route and eight other carriers between Washington. • Boomed total traffic in the market by a whopping M per cent, four times greater than the growtMea the entire airline indnttry; the fignre is significant becanse it obvioni-. ----------- huge new market. sengers showed np for a Washington-New York shuttle; it took sta extra planes to carry them. Do the shuttles make monby? Eastern keeps the exact figures operation and actnally fly on the planes. One airline pluted a “passenger” aboard with nothing but a $109 bill for his passage; it was the first and only time an Eastern stewardess was caught short of change. Nor has Eastern over had a passenger try to “free hud” a trip by getting aboard witn no monqyT plied both factors, only low fares, bnt awng wiin the no-reservations featnre have checkiag, fare collections the planes and schednie fre- Malcolm Macintyre says simply: “It’s solidly prbfitablo.” For that possibility,'’ says an stenijpfficial, “we have set up ample •procedures.” This presumably does not include throwing the passenger off from 7,000 feet. Eastern last January completed a survey of its shuttle passengers which disclosed at least one startling statistic: 20 per cent said if Because the 95-passenger Con-! stellations were depreciated longj ago, Eastern can break even withi only a 40 per cent load and traf- it were not for the shuttle. they[fjf «mning ak would have used a train, bus or private automobile. Knocked Northeast Airlines And 25 per cent were first-time lyant to know what’s going ' if we have to stay until miu- Bight i ij Bottom had objected after a 20-; minute reading of a lease contract approved last night. He said he felt that if City Attorney Wil- Waterford Tax Collections ""‘'"'’T'?’ Turns Ouffo Be Rise $1 Mioir Old Lighthouse per.cent jince the shuttles began.' The only figure announced publicly was a ‘$709,999 profit , dbriog the first three mouths of I 19K, and since then shuttle business has increased snbstan- ' tlally. 'Originally, the shuttles operated every two hours. Demand | UNITED SHIRT MSTRIBUTOBS fflUHoron Shopptnt CmUi How To Hold FALSE TEETH Moro nrmly !■ Pkiet DofourtelM __________________knaoTADS •*- bAna« by allpiilag.diopptns or trob-bllnf wban you mt. lAugn or tAlXT ... , . u - I:. • J I LANSING (4V-Sales and use Waterford Townships Fnendsu^jj collections in April on March of the Library. encouTaged amounted to $40.64 mil- LONDON —A “unique property with an unrivalled view,’’| despite the opei __J whan you aot. laotn or tal ,, . Juat aprlnklo • Uttla PAsTEPTH prompted Eastern to increase the — frequency to an hourly basis ex-' «««r<»tabi» cept on Saturday and Sunday. , --------------- - — I Oat PA8TBSTH today _________________ JjtUBlDl' .paitytaatoor foallniOnaa nr Cbocka “Plata odor*' (dantura , EAST LANSING - ‘‘ThereZt toe ^ an incZrof $U1 m is little doubt that we can meet'*' — H»cionarino sh* wxidinff id ..... . J increasing demands for food in I* : : . V,. 1- |Uon, an increase 01 pi.ui niiiiiuii 90 oy «« leei, lurneu upi w i* i,«v« nosted an on-time di advertised recently as having ■|problems involved with so manyl living - dining room measuring departures, the shut-' » by « feet, turned opt to be an ties have posted an on-time de-| COMPLETE OPTICAL SESVICE PONTIAC MAU OPTICAL CENTER John N. Fmis ot the Michigmij^“‘*''“‘*"'^ _______________________________________________________ State University agricultural however, recommended •“’■'’y designation. Township Icwnmissioner, uid these are ten-ihavhm3(id^fr u^ . L J BcoBOBiics department. otronclv that all such contracts be Board members also ear- tative fieures due to an unavoid- occupied beonise age, old-fash-! lonri s^p^t. or W Ppen Ewnings nw 9:19 m-HII in of policy. Harmon sided withj -*" tentative 4964 township jfigures on automobile sales. 1 «wims out at hiih tide ■B* .1... ....j' hiulw»t ciihmittMl vrsteriiai to . .. ; iwuns libraries this summer. • ^ to 30 per cent population in- J«y-^ ^ ^ j submitted yesterday , to They are the Bal^ Mountam crqase in the Uhitrt States by f Recreation Area in Orion Town-1957, he predicts. against anotner contraci up ror ^ ........ ship, toe Highland and Proud, * , w * |approval a few moments later. Lake recreation areas in Milford I Increased per capita consump- " third rontract was and the Orto'nville Rrereption tion of beef and declines in milk, b” *be brink of deferral when Area -'9 eggs and wheat cereals were Harmon, sans megaphone, con- ★ jforecast by Dr. Ferris, who said frssed his similarity to the croon- The park libraries, located, injproduction of these items willl*''- _ -the park manager!s office, aver-;still have to be boosted to meet _ .. . ' j • r u age approximately 200 books the demands of the larger pop^. .-^0..contract was read in full each. ulation. ■ . ,and approved 641 Onb man Uses hit to “get away from it ail” -r rowa or ' I WHAT DO DOCTORS It is.altogether Hkely that j climbs a ladder which he pulls I recommend the Most For construct a new library building.' More than $800,000 of the in-at five shillings a night. | The library group'must-also de-crease, he said, is represented by As lights become automatic, termine whether to go it alone the telephone tax that. Was not in Trinity House, which owns mostj on the library or to join a li-effect a year ago. ] of the functioning lighthouses in | . brary co-operative. Lock said other tax collections! England-and Wales, rents out the - are rilnning closely to revenue keepers’rooms but keeps control estimates made-4n4amuary with of the buildings, i the exception of, cigarette TaifesT! [which are lagging two to three! 3Q Underwater P(^CO per cent below estimates. TENSE, NERVOUS HEADACHES? ANACIN* eontainu th« pain raHavof doetora raeonmand moat for haadaehoa. In minntaa—pain goaa, ao doaa Ha lontal fatigna and dapraaaion. Army Contract Work Take Refresher Course EAST LANSING (APi - Thirty to Be Done in Boy City I state police underwater recovery ' ^ leniaoA^ ‘mAmKArc #aa1t a squad members took a refresher WASHINGTON (AP) - The.cdUrse this week at the East Army has awarded a $1.9(M,743 Lansing headquarters. 'contract to American Hoist & The two-day course included a Derrick Go., St. Paul,. for 66,night diye into a water-fill^ pit, [truck - mounted ..crane shovels, near Williamston, a five - mile Sens. Philip A Hart and Pat. j hike and a physical examination. McNamara, Michigan Democrats iannounced. { I The work will be done at Bay Icity, Mich. ! Reject $100^ Cloim | in Auto Crash Death Now York, N. Y. Medical repoTta confirm that tense, nervous headaches are by far the most common kind. Th^ are camed by muscle tension that presses on the nerves. But fortunately, one can get remarkable relief in minutes with this special tablet— Anacin. Anacin not only relieves the pain, but also relaxes its tension and releasM painful preaaure on nerves —^bringing you fast ‘all-ovet’ relief. Anacin is like's dpctor’s piesmption. That is, a com-bination of ingredients. The reason Anacin Tablets are ao effective is because they contain the pain reliever' doctors recxxnmend the mort plus an extra ingredient not found in leading aspirins or buffered aspirins. And Anac^p has such a gentls. action. Doesn’t leave you depressed or ‘let down.’ ^ This big difference in Anacin makes the big difference ih the way you feel. Buy Anacin today. Equalization Increases PLAINE DES JARRES These moss-covered jars are scattered across a large area of the Plaine des Jarres (Plain of Jarst in northcentral Laos. They date to pre-Laotian tipjes. The area is a strategic crossroads of the tiny Southeast Asia GRAND RAPIDS - The Grand Rapids City Commission! j WHITEHALL 14^ - Whitehall [yesterday turned down a claim Township equalization was in-of $100,000 by the estate of at] increased 123 per cent by the’man killed in a car crash with State Tax (temmission, Robert F. a police cruiser on Sept. 6, 1961.1 iCasSube, county equalization di-| The commission also refused a AP pkniofai Ifector ceportej yesterday.’The claim by the .driver of the car. Kingdom, where roads connecting the north and south have*^.neW figurd of $964,707 shows an'who was found mnOTcnt of liegli-been the scene of recent ‘ clashes between Communist and increUse of $531,233 over last gent homicide. Both claims were ^utral factions. 1 year’s <433.474^_______jdenied without comment. FRESH FISH ARE CHEAP! FrashlAKE PERCH ....y^.Lli. 35< Fnsh WHITE BASS . ./f. U. 39< Frnh CHAHHEL CATFISH . . Lh. 49< WW II Defense Installations Are Still Intact By HANNS NEUERBOURG FRANKFURT, Germany (AP)-Britisli dokliers Used to sing; “We’re going to hang bur washing on the Sie^ied Line.” ‘ ___________ __ You can stiH | BAaOKMINDl hang out y 0 u r lauDd^ oD the massive German der in France, is still there, too. in 'shape. Ten thousand bunkers of steel [to r*“ to^rest. and concrete, miles of “dragon lions of World War n. Nine- . the Magihot Line- they see no future need for the ikcts. made them undesirable as Allies. The sentence was too dif-1 According to ^ficial esUirates too'It is even keptiMaginot Line, but it could be put [factories.. A suggestion, to use ficult to carry out. [it would take $40 million more back into operating condition with; them for storage of NATO sup-littld effort. iplies also came to nothing. Fi*nch and GennanSi who built! They are unwilling to let the in- * *. - these fortification systems ajstaUaUons fall into ruin. After all, ‘D>c^ Magmot Line remained as quarter of a century ago, now ap- the Maginot Line host 500 miUion a ghostly chunk of military bric-pear to "W politically closer than (prewar dollars. U-brac It includes 25 big forte at afiy time jOi the past 1,000 lefT UNDAMAGED ‘ *™1 hundreds of lesser positions.^ r^ie iob of razing most of them years. - \ ^ ^ f World War ll left Maginol prac-’ Small maintenaKe^ AMITY PACT , Latly undamaged. German troops re^ BT ruJ**" T' ___ij.j E-......,. ,.i. n«ijxeeping macninery reauy ro run , miMa r^nm th« Fnsh SNEEPHEAD or DRUM .. Lb. W Fnsh RUFFALO FISH...... Lb. 39< Largs SHRIMP ........ ...Lb.98« teeth" tank barriers and hundreds of other installations had been I^ilt by the Nazis from 1937 to 1940. Many bunkers are so overgrown with shrubbery it is .hard to find their entrance. Others stowly rot away as waste dumps. Fanners store hay in deserted bun^. tontos of themlOP THE NEWSl i*nd President Charles de Gaulle remaiifi more or less intact. It stould cost too much money toj AITUII rnr.1 . “OBny “'CTVikAi.ninp machinery Chancellor' Konrad Adenauerjinvaded France via neutral , have signed an amity pact Ger- linvaueo rrance vj« ijcuiiai dci- • " arc reiuuvunj •■iiiies ..u.u gium and rolled up the Maginoft*"^ *'iarea took years-and scores !S!iwcU u-69* Boneless Chuck Roast Boneless Beef Stew " u^79* ^69* . Fee fiwaw , 1 Mkhieee 1 FioM Quality I fCBl PfBSGfl • Pis CitkcC ‘farcy*' h£uide BOOTis so FRESH STEWIMO SKIHLESS I BREADED FISH 'HERS FRARKS 1 SHRIEP STICKS -37‘ WHOLK •2::; 89' 1 1 Lb. Pkg. 49e 1 ’*99*1 ’^89* MORYHERN % Slokely-Van Camp's 2 nwm npni^ i Pdntry Shower Sole! ^ ▼ z^/yE Rich Tomato Flavor r 'taSBl "si»KB,¥ TISSUE "lie OfT Label GIANT SURF Ic 50 *•70 OfT Ubel............Beg. Iok 2U "lOe Off* Label BLUE RINSO 50* "lo Off* Lobol ........ .Bog. Bai Itc "lie OfT Lobel------Kiog Siie Bei ftc 4"29I I NORTHERN HANOI TOWELS . . .2 •*•* 39^ HoIoiL leeeh-Naf or Berber Sfreieed. All Veirletiet BABY FOODS Top Toite OeMea YaHow, Smooth Spreodlag MARGARINE^ Betty ^reclwr Oven Reedy, S# PeWeleat Served Hot! STRAWBERRIES Here'! Tim Perfeet Kiddie Treetl DeHeleat hdgdciM or POPSICLES .. . 12 CATSUP 2-^29* Slaiialy't Ffoaot APPU SAUCE 3"*c.r39* Stukoly Hoiiey Fa# SWEET PEAS 2“-d.i"39* Stukoly Faaqr SLICED CARROTS 3’*-,i.i"45‘' Stakdy Croaiu Styfo at Wliofo Kamal GOLDEN CORN r3“C'39* Stokaly'* FiNott, Cut WAX BEANS 2“U“39* Vae Caoie'i Now Orfouat KUFNEY BEANS 3"tJ.**39* J W w w w ▼ ir w ir w PORK&BEANS^ 3'^39* ^ U.S. No. 1, Medium Sise, Froth CRISP, WINESAR APPUS CORN 10'ST 50 US. No. 1. CelHenila CHERRY TBiATOES. AoderMi'i Best Quality 39*- RH!HIGM FEET, so .. H4. N*. I, iMliin S9* ;FREM TEES i Porte Ricaa •• 3 Lbe. 39* PallclaaE. Sweet Eodeg, Preeb lodlee Rhrer, 4B Sloe. WhHt or Ptok Seediest ' Laffe Loerel Oreee mEEY DEW EELOES 49’ SlUPEnUIT ... 4 .w 49’ PUS Lb. $149 Cleeet Like Mogie linU BO PiEP AMMONIA ,V: 23*- •ts^as* Newl OiMf Coei EAXWEU HOUSE COFFEE 11^ 3Q. rtf. Wwtra'i Mielon Fl.>ta SUGAR WAFERS . Seetbiee Pretk, Testy VAHILU WAFERS NeblAce Oreo Cream SAHDWICH COOKIES 39* Sabnw FtMit, Ml o< D.llcl..s Flovor RUTTER COOKIES . . . . . . ^ n‘^ 29’ Borden's Elsie ^ ICE CREAM Pkg. n-oi. Gel Cfn 69* WentM Coaveeieiit, leeneoileal SAHDWICH RAGS . . . :^.25* WoxtfK Heavy Duty " X ;kI'" ••A i-vZ I'u ■ •ir A-m THE PCfFTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. MAY 1. 1968 Concurs With Other Cofigressmen Dirks^n Fears World War III Forming in Midegst Pdwder Keg WASHINGTON (AP> — Senateippssible Arab a^es^ioft a««instjth)n to drift |oo long, becauaidrift things, Republican Uader Everett M^Israel. ' jis always ^ngwtws,” he...................... rkirtraAA a# lllisuvic (oHast _ _**lf it DH-kaeft^^ i 4o "ffrequip President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s armi^ and of using'every opporttmity to of threats to Israel’s security wili be met in full measure by UJL LOADEDPISTOL Humphrey declared that the increased buiid-up of arms in the Middle East is *«a loaded pistol pointed at the heart of all humanity” and represepts ”a lighted fuse whidt could ignite nuclear ar." UJ Humphrey proposed an emlMn^ go on arms dhipnients to thp area ----i-j igjgtonal arms con- a Jarger-peacekMping force, and the'assignment of UJN. observers throughout the Middle East. Sen. Clifford P. Case, R-NJ. pictured U S. policy as one of ‘‘wishful waiting” in the hope the problem would go away. The United States, Case declared, should make clear ‘‘the Sen. John 0. Pastore, D-R I., warned that an armed cluh be- Bill Outlaws Slot Machines m Egypt to estM>Ijd| ttie United Arab R^blic as a ‘‘IQO per cent polictJttalBlJEt)i» I*rse) is a kpral ally. Sen. Paul H. 'Douglas, D-Ill., said one of Nasser’s avowed purls to “drive Israel into the Alto/^US, Md. J. Millard. Tawes signed a bill yesterday to outlaw slot machines in The bill provides tor elimina-tioii of the gannbllng devices daring ftie nest five years. The slot machines had been legal in four counties of southern Maryland. His signature ended a bitter battle over the slot machines. Tawes had promised during his campaign for re-election last toll that he would try to get the slots LEARNS to FLY — Patrick Hemingway, 34, spn of late author Earnest Hemingway, is shown at controls of a light plane in Berkeley, Calif., yesterday. Seated with pilot Dick Hill. Hemingway' is learning to fly in order to more easily count big-game herds in remote areas,. He is a student ' don’t see how Anyone can get sexy over tins of t^ed beans oF| pre-packed bacon. “Yes, we do use fnusic in all! out stores, but it’s noV^sexy. If: just light, pleaunt b^kgroundj .music.” Missile Fli^s Over Houses SREqiSION \ WteTCH REPAIR ^ ' Yww Wmit • WATCH BANOS WHITE SANDS MISSILE iRANGE, N.M. UT UlTHMt WITH FRLSE TEETH BRIMRAS nASTMJNER |Fw Outdoor Living GmI temporary fioM. Brimim f***»^‘^ •dheres to yow J Indoor or Oofdo^r PATIO TABLE owinAitiwo pum Doeorotod tobio wHh brass logs U9 2 FOOT IT S FOOT AU METAL FORTASU ' nsTMBio a TV TUBES FBEE FOLDING TABLE Felds < if wirirvcHoiu. Mbb| for 5.98 9UIK-CHEIC Wf Sope Vosfcr *»y. Nh While ye. •bN9«fton. sliop. Box of 80 COETS IRiU lick BRUSH STROKE REPRODUCTIONS NiRfly QuNtod COnOM SQUAREI Calorfal repredacKwn of water icaMt, land-: Fcapat aad many ethar : pictvra* to daaarata : iha-kema. Bnm Ball TEN-0-SIX4 LOTION eemiotie tiiet holpi ^in tg •neturai b( EvCivday Low’ 2.SV—.SOee- TRI-VI-SOL U9UID VIT4MINS AMERICAN express m Remeifiber MOM 1 OnHwMyl < SEND American Gr^h Americon CARDS The Sof«-v Convenient WoytpSend Money o"<* Pay Bills While You Shop! AMITY billfolos Senuinp |p,g^ Z’-f, ^ ♦» dioose froin. 395... BAND-AID natlia4fript Hewer hgeroweelirem*." !^XBPr Al wide strips. New for _ ProfMcf Kour ^yot frtun Glaro ^sferGront ftHerseto* hermful rttft. 1.98 We'll Compound any Prescription Your Doctor Orders! -'f. -rr THE PONTIAC PRESS; B^DAWMAY 1, 19C3 DtrCOtOR ,K—1- Boneless-Boston Butt PHfc Roast AQUA NET Hair DEL MONTE GREEN PEAS N^303 RECIPE-PINK BETTY CROCKER SALMON Safflower OH T-ib.^ jtQc : Toll Con •# y 14-oz. 00 C Bottle jLw ORANGE or GRAPE Hl-C DRINKS 25‘ RSUIHET; nafs -------- R IX3EX /: ^fc-tACHRO 46-oz. Cant SS5S3 14h>*. AtfQtpl Pius Tax «I»0W HOT HOUSE fONIATOES lb. \i large IO-oz. jar OPLE’S FOOD TOWN I f 263 AUBURN | 465 f. PIKE ST. 1700 AUBURN-ST.| 883 0RCHi(RD LAKE AVL| ...... T Ofl't/CAYIA f A M. r.il J9 f.M, ■ t‘iJ)AWlWlWlUlWlVttttlUlWlWlt(4ii(l)Ta4lWl)OUiWlW|Wii-]B-i ?iUTuuMuvutMt»ui(Mun»wuntMiM;nt>M>UMtijx • P»opl«'s-f^d Town Bonua Stomp Coupon . >3§ Pt»Hle’t-Footl Town Bomis StaMp-Coupan^ cil cfl 50 FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of Any Fr«»h ?' BEEF ROAST ID U} iii V:rl!i»tiMUc;M!nUWMHinNUI\WUUIM/‘iW)UfU>>'li^^ >g^i Pfpple’t-Food Towrr Bonus Stamp Couyon Igr jf 11^ S§> m M >25 limit 1 Cowfflow-ti^fw Mey S, tP6i v§5»TtwiwtiiiuiutiDuiwnViiiiuuhvMuwnfiwtHi?£ 111 gi (II (l Bonus Stamp Coupon 50 FREE GOLD BELU Stamps With Purchase of 2 lbs. or AAor* BACON iiwtt (iwiwiwiwiiown m (twii nwii/twiwn^ PeoHle’s-Food Toon Bonus Stainp-I^ ailgl Utnit 1 CoMpon-tKpirw AHay $, )963 iSry :5AlWrtAUAAUiWiWlWI>AWUllWlUlWAf(WtWilfrtUr^£ ;V H-2 THE PQNTUC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 1. 1963 Prepare for Codntr/ Auction lAm ol the ViUtge n’s ebb have been ran^ C ibeir attks fof con-oni to the Country AUetkm and PIm Market Saturday at Bloomfield HUIa High School. A preyiew of the auction and the Flea Market ule begin at 10 a.m. with the auction itarting at.U;M a.m. j m e n t s will be available throughout the aale. Preoeeda of lha aak wUl of the, club; to provide ^ucational, cultural a lid philanthropic proframa fbr the eommu-Blty. SPECIAL EVENTS During the pact year, 28 elaaaea and ap^al events in the flelda of religion, art, muale, current history, theater, language, antiques, travel “--------- arrangement have OU Arts Council Will Present 7 Programs in 1963-64 Series the Birmingham Community HouS^ ' and other organisations have also been aided. Jlrt. Dbe 0. Miller Jr,, and Mrs H. N. Wleting^?®-chahtnan^ 'are being assisted by Mrs. Robert Chissus, Mrs. James Hubbard Jr. and Mrs. William T. Collins Jr. ITEMS FOR SALE - Among the items for sale -will be a Haviland tea set, an antique inlaid (pecker-board table, Venetian glass and an 1876 commemorative plate. Oakland University community arts council wilP'-pre-sent seven programs in its 196344* series, aecordlng-to Dr: I^weU EJtluib auLMra. Edmund L. Windeler, council chairmen. Four of these will be evening events at the .Pontiac Northern High School auditorium with the other three scYieduled for Sunday afternoons on the university Handmade j featured in otie booth while soother will display creative arts. The site is ope^ to the campus. Pianist Ruth Slenczynika will perform opening, night, October 5. A native Califor-'hian and the daughter of a More'fun! They're sorting and priaing articles . for the Flea Market to be held in conjunction with the Village Woman's Country Club Auction Saturday. In the front left corner is Mrs. Argyle E. Campbell, Birm- ingham. Behind her (from left) are Mrs.. James Meagher, Union Lake; Mrs^ Miller Hanson and Mrs. Paul McConhie, both of Birmingham and cochairmen. Discuss Education in Europe '‘Education Today in Europe" was the subject of a discussion by Mrs.. Renw music . teacher. Miss Slen-ezynska was a child prodigy, giving her first recital at the age of tour. ^ FOLK SINGER Arrangements are being made to have a folk, singer for a Sunday in November. The council’s recenT survey of members showed this to \ be one of the most popular attractions. * The Pontiac Symphony and Oakland University Chorus will present the Christmas portions of “TTie Messiah" December 22 on .die University campus. MRS. WINDELER paign director with Mrs. Norman Cheat and Mrf. Russell Grinnell cochairmen of the talent committee. Philip Wargelin is housing chairman; Robert Harris, staging; Mrs. william F u r 10 n g,' ushers; and Mrs. Ralph Nor-vell is in charge of artists’ arrangeniehts. Flowers, Foliage Nuptial Tradition p a r t m e n t of modern languages at Oaklahd University Monday evening. The event Was a meeting in , Cen- By MADELEINE DOEREN ceremony since earliest times Flowers and foliage have when the bride carried sev-played a part in the wedding eral stalks of wheat to ex- press her desire for a prosperous marriage. A crown of orange blossoms was a Saracen custom introduced by returning Crusaders. In EUiabethan England, a kiising knot of croton leaves and rosemary was bung over the happy couple. Chives and garlic in the bride's bouquet, following an old Swedish custom, kept the ___dwsrfi front botttfringi Jicr- on her wedding-day. Many Grecian brides, even today, are festooned with vines and in some places in Europe, an ear of corn is placed in the wedding bou-Jl'***!- dresses look best with nosegays or semicascades. Simplicity is the keynote for this year’s bouquets, expressed in white - miniature roses, or combined with large roses; softened with Stepha-n 01 i s. Geranium blossoms and Boston yellow daisies or marguerites are replacing Shasta daisies. PMtUf PrMi Pk.t< Lytine Benter of East Iroqilqis holds a prayer-book arrangement of cymbidium oichuis and stephanotis, otie of tjue'e nif^t popular bridal Imuquets. At left, white miniature roses, white varnatinns and lily of the valley are sty led in colonial tradition. Spnt/ig alstro-meria and ivy comprise the cascade bou DEAR;^A N N 0 Y E D:' it means that if one girl; wears ■ shorts to school the other girlsT'Would follow. - " And the shorts would prob-, . ably become. shorter apd fighter until they’d be wearing short ehorta and ponibly bikini bathing, suite,' 1. don’t j)lame the jprlncipal. ^ While most bridegrooms prefer the conservative white carnation boutonniere, he may wear, instead, a small white flower from the bride’s bouquet. The bridal bouquets in the acco'mpanying picture were designed by Mrs. Dorothy W. Brooks of Pearce Floral Co. , Honeymoon in Mexico _ Honeymooning in Mexico . City are Ermtnio Trevino and his'bride, the former Elvira Torres who were wed in St. Michael’s Church, ■ Parents of the cotjple are J Mr. ,,and Mra,' Adelfa Torres - of Garner and Grlgorio Trevino, Port Arthur, Tex. The bridegroom is the nephew of Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Maldo-nato of Oakland. Hortor attendants afthe re-' cent ceremony were Mr. and Mrs. Friuicisco Cordcva and Eitela Maldonado. TKe owple , will live In Rochester. bers of . the Will-O-Way Ap-prentice Theatre are the actors. ' PrPceeds from the perform-aivte will go to Pknhellenic’s scholarship fund. This year’s award is held by Frances Hoopingamer, e 1 e m e n tary education sophomore at Eastern Michigan University. Tickets, which are 75 cents, will be on sale Friday and Saturday at the J. C. Penney Store, Miracle Mile. They may also be obtained from any Panhellenic member hnd will be on sale at the door the day.ql the performance. JoAnn Van Tassel is ticket chairman, assisted by Mrs. Robinson Bronoel, Mrs. Wayne Pyke, Lynne Benter. Mrs. William ^laney and Mrs. Wayne McCandlen. SOLO PERFORMERS A regular chorus member,^ soprano Paula Robinson added her voice to 'good effect to those of two outside soloists, sopranb Mary Louise Lindquist and contralto Rose-mdry Murch. Miss Robinson’s voice, which is clear with an almost brittle tone, -produced a fascinating effect in combination with Mias Lindquist's fuller tones in their .duet, "Laudamus Te.” Miss Murch’s contralto voice floated like a melancholy butterfly out of an introduction rendered by harpsichord and cello in "Domine Deus, Agnus Dei." How much beauty there can Tte in a single human voice! . Garden Group to Hear Talk on Forsythias Rehearsals for '‘King of the Golden River" keep these young itctors. al Will-O-Way Apprentiee IHeater ■iusyy In'the perjormaitc^ 'scheduled for 'Mdy lt at . Pontiac Northern High School will be l\ri.s Kreeger, Orchard ixtke; Ken Turner, West ■ Long Lahe; and. Donald lHerchbe^ger, Troy, .. BrooKside Branch, Wom-. an’s National Farm and Gar-, den Anociatton, has chosen "The Forsythia Teghouse’’ as ti^e theme’ for a luncheon Thursday In the Village Wom-- an’s Club, Bloomfield Hills. Jonathan M. Ball of Birmingham. guest speaker, will be introduced by Mrs , Adolph Magnus, horticultural chair-, man. - _ S om e 35 members and ■ gpesla will attend the affair arranged by Mrs. Charles GaMoway and Mrs. Thdmasv Jlarris. The orchestra excelled in two tour-de-force pieces, Saint-Saens’ Overture to “La Princesse Jaune" and Dvorak’s “Slavonic Dance Jn C Major.” Th e motto became, “Watch the Birdie," in tha following fine-feathered pieces, “On Hearing the First Cu(*oo in Spring” by Delius and excerpts from the “Fire Bird Suite” by Stravinsky. The more difficult Stravinsky work is typical of the kind of pieces which Reshick schedules because the orchestra can alm()st play them. Rhsnick held the four movements together as boojeends hold together a small library: but between, the ertd pieefcs the pages were flying. Last nighL as throughout the season, Conductor Res-nick and the Pontiac Symphony earned themselves — through hard work — the laurels of true musicians. '7/..J' l/j .. i . 'k';. ;•/ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEpyESDAY, MAY 1, 196.3 B-3 Four From j^rea Qef All A's^^f Michigan State Card Party S(^edu led by Secretaries~at OU Qakland University secretaries, known as the SOS Club, will sponsor a card party at 9>,p.m. May 8, m Oakland Center. wiUbr used to as-sist students with tuition fees, books and .other educational expenses. Group Hears Ex-Mayor , Carl’s Ck»lf Land Since its organization* two years ago, the clifb has raised some $1,500 and has proft'ided emergency aid to enable seven Students to remain in col-leg^ ‘*Drawn ‘together by a com-mort cause in the fa^-grow-g university community which is employing so many new secretaries" ‘ says Mrs. Norman McNeil, SOS president, "we hope to raise some . FwUme PrcM Pk«tf Dolls will be one of the aUraetions at the LeBaton School annual spring festival Saturday from. 2 to 5 ' ction are-festival chairmen Mrs. Hrurry Miller, East Beverly and Nita Wheeler of Third.^ _ ____ __ Schedule School Festival LeBaron School PTA will sponsor its annual school spring festival Saturday from 2 to 5 p.m. ; Mrs. Harrison Miller is chairman ' of the festival with Mrs. ^enneth Marsh as cochairman. outdoor r i ti e-s , refreshments; games, door prizes, jewelry, and toys. Highlighting the fair will be a 5 p.m. performance by Ricky the Clown. I Among the attractions will be Exclusive FasBTons fbrl^men who WdF~ MATERNITIES • UNIFORMS MliiACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER OPE^ EVENINGS UNTIL NINE $300 to continue giving emergency aid." Two of the students helped were members of the university's first graduating cBasi^ Extra features of the party will be guided tours of the campus beginning at 7 p m. fron^ Oakland Center Lounge. Floyd Bunt of Bloomfield Hills will- play, organ selections,d u r i n g refreshments. Local merchants- have donated table and door prizes. Omicron chapter of Delta Kappa G a m th r- sorority heard former Birmingham mayor Mrs. Florence H. Wil-. Jett - during their luncheon i|)eeting Saturday. A short business meeting followed at the Hunter’s Whip in Franklin Village. . ^ 1976 S. Tflfpgrapli Rood FE 5-80 v>^ — ATTENTION — I LAUIESVCOFFEE CLUB EVERY THURSDAY, 10 Initruction*—«as finished, yoy could see all of this through the organdy. Is there any other way to treat sheer materials? Mrs. Li S. Dear Mrs^L. S.:- Yes, there is another way to treat fabrics. Because you can see through them, don't grade seal clip or notch curves. __________________________________ MAtTtl) LADYMATie too. This can be taken care of by trimming both seams hbeitt %' inch from the stitching line. Be sore to trim nice and . If you trim seams, this close, the notching is not necessary. ^ ' Organdy has been used for Jackets, bionses, and especially rollars this season. It will perk up last year’s dress or suit, too, as well as giving, this year’s clothes that “new” lode. ■NO •‘FORGET-TO-WHiID" when you wear an Omega autoraada Needs no external source of piWer lb ke^ S r^^ u you wear it Off the wrist,-will run 40 hours or more. Hand-winding it optional, The modem watch REDMOND’S Jetvelers-^-OpU)metrists 81 N. Saginaw St. FE 2-3612 light, supple- dxw you’ll wadt for your smart Eastm parading... and for every qiecial occasion that follows. Shaped for flattery widi the season’s newest designer touches. It hiu that fabulous feeling of instant comfort that makes a Red Cross Shoe your first hhoice in fashion I : FAULTS S STORE 35 N. Saginaw Open Friday. Eves, ’til 9 P.M. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Dear'Eunice: Since I’ve been reading your column, I have learned the' answer to many stwlng problems, indudli^ • few I Jast finished rnddiig a large ergahdy collar (which b detachable) te wear with a imvy bine dress for iprtag. I dU all my grading of seams, also notched oat Go exceu rhaterlal on the corves. st^r earns. OTsamaaamommmmamMm8wammammBiK80!®s38®9iSK*i*i^ SEWING TEACHER WINS BOARD | Mrs. Bowerfind, La Mesa, Calif., sewing teacher at | idw^41igb, adult education, suggei^-a way4o4»e-capri ^ pants or slacks which are ali^y rmale and not lined. “Make a pair of pants out of lining material, firm but p not too heavy, and wear these under your unllned pants^ ^ r This uTgreitfbr wearing undo: khltd belps keep them ^ fmm ctwof/«kin(T from stretching.* I hope all the sewing classes will use and enjoy the Tailor Trix pressing board Mrs. Bowerfind gets for this r. winning suggestirm of the Week. f Expects Explosion To Stop Tarnishing. W^e Resents ileeknm Placing a piaoe of t^iaircoal wrapped In tissue paper in a silver diest will hefo keq> the silver from tarnishing. L G^RGE W. CRANE CAffi P-423: Tim R., aged 27, is ^ quiet personality. “ Crane-,’* he began. her Jiave hgT ^R^JS^ her own way, she still picks at me end constantly tries to start a quarrel. “What is wrong with a Woman who is forever nagging herhusband?’* ' Shakespeare expertly described Tim’s wife and all other nagging women when he wrote “The Taming of the Shrew." “A nagglfig wiTe Ts iisUairy trying to prod her husband into laying his hands on her! Dear Eunice Farmer: I have seen large snaps used in place of buttons on many suits and dresses recently. They are covered in fabric. Clan you please tell me how to do this? Mrs.F.A. Dear Mrs. F. A.: Covered snaps used where they will be seen look -much nicer than the 9hiny metal ones. First, use a larie snap (at least half an inch wide). Cut a aboot V4 inch larger than the snap. Hand-sew a small running stitch around the edge of the fabric, place the snap in the center and draw up the running stitdies until the fabric fits snugly around the snap. Clip the fabric in the center for the prong of the snap to show. Fasten the raw edges of the lining together tightly With an overcasting stitch. If the'^circle of fabric used was too large, this will appear too thick on the wrong side. Carefully sew the snap in place the usual way, making the stitch^ nice and neat bemuse they will be lunre noticeable and WON’T PUCKER Mrs. R.D.F. says: Sew slam binding on with a zig- ^ zag stitch to eliminate the pucker. ’’ Dear Eunice: ^w can we make a square neckline from a pattern with a rounaed one? j " Mrs.W.G. Dear Mrs. W. G.: This isn’t too much of a pattern change. (See illustration). Whenever you make a change of this- type, it is best to make a muslin sample before cutting your good fabric. Cut off the seam allowance before trying the mnslin on and yon can see exactly where the finished neckline will be. If your square neckline is rather low and happens to gap in [front, there is a way to remedy this. Attach a narrow elastic at, an angle (as close as possible to the inner, comer) on the wrong! side of garment, oyer the finished facing. Hand whip about *4 inch on each side of the elastic at the comer. Slip* the dress over your shoiilders and, before pulling age-old device for forcing a meek, half-sissy male into asserting his supposed masculine dommance. Since their,earliest girlhood, women have expected men to be stfdnger and more forceful. Although they want: their husbands to be gentle and gallant, at leasts at times, they simply cannot have the proper respect for a male who is forever meek and docile. she hu grown ap mm ehiki-hMd rwith tM eqiectathm that men are blunt, forceful and sometiRies rough. fn Tim’s cam,'therefore, his Wife has beo^ tired of his self - effacing personality. She doesn’t want him to be her perpetual “yes-man.'” She tries-to nieedle him into growing so a n g r y ■ that at ■' moori least once in a blue he’ll thunder a vociferous masculine “No! Besides, she has never v4)een fully stimulated in the j physical aspects of marriage so she subconsciously feels it is due to bis feininine meek- MORE THRILLS She figures; wkoy wives, that she will obtain far more thrills from a rough masculine mate. So she nags and nags in vain hope that she will ii^ TM to laying hiia hands on her. . Even ifhp paddles her or tie, she would actually welcome such rough treatment, at least once in her marital career, just to know thereafter that Tim’s meek nian-ners covered an iron will. - All that is needed in most cases, whether in dealing with children, or wives, is for them to realize just once that there is a steel fist under the kid glove.. Thereafter, a parent's tones carry more authority with Job's Daughter's Fete 'Mason's, Star's Night' Pontiac Bethel No. 5, International Order of Job’s Daughters celebrated its 29th anniversary at a Monday evening ‘‘Mason’s and Star’s Night” meeting at the Masonic Temple. ... ‘JMaspn:s.afld.Stat’s Night”,, is set aside for itiembers of th^ Mason and Eastern Star orders tp observe the organ-izatidn's initiation ceremony. Mrs Paul Hagle, the first guardian, was hundred guest at the anniversary meeting^ down completely, bring both ends of the elastic under your arms to the middle of your back and mark the exact spot where thd two ends crip. Don’t pull the elastic too tight or it will pull the front of the dress out of shape. Finish the ends of the elastic with a hook and eye. The elastic can be slipped over your straps before being fastened and will keep them from showing, as well as keeping the low square neckline firmly to your body. YOUR SEWING GLOSSARY Trapunto: A raised effect which is similar to quilting, because of padding, to form a decorative design. HAT SALE 1/2 OFF ALL THE VERY SMARTEST, ' NEWEST SILHOUETTES FOR SITING SANDRA BUNCE Graduated in April from Oakland University with a bachelor of arts degree and teaching certificate was Sandra Kay Bunce, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James A. .Bunce of Navajo. New White-Patents are Iridescent) Jacqueline 25Hatt.^. . Originally 4-98 .,, ......2.49 1 30 Hats... . Originally 6.98 ,.. 3.49 42 Hats... . Orif^ally 10.98,.. 5.49 40 Hat»... . Originally 15.00... 7.50 . 1 !25 Hots... . Originally 16.^,., .... ...8.49 20Hats... ,OtiginaUy22JO.». .....11.25 i gracefully- curves uppers of ' peorly white patent leather . . . the better to flatter, youf fo.pt! l}iis pump rates rave- '’TRe'mceQnf^ openlS-wflh a tribute- to the Masons given by Russell Kneale, ★ ,★; ★ In charge of the decora-tiort committee was Eleanor Stuart. Serving refreshments following the meeting were Mrs. Tom ^isneiwski, Mrs. Russell Kneale, Mrs. Kenneth Tibbetts, Mrs. Clegg Bordeaux and Mrs. Fred Knis-ley. Bethel members will meet Saturday at 8:30 a.m. for a trip to Brown City. Election of officers will be h^ld at the next meeting Dance Club Sets Final Season Fete Wagon Wheelers , S q u, a r e Dance Club of Waterford will hold its final dance of the seafon Friday at Dawson Elementary School, 8:30 to 11:30 p. m. Tickets will be available at the door. The dance is open to the public. Looking ahead to summer square dancing, the Wagon Wheelers have.arranged fr^ weekly dances in the Drayton Plains shopping center parking lot off l^xiq Highway. The dende sessions begin Friday, June 7, and will be held each week from 8 to U p. m. until Aug. 23. 9ife !fo dUMde , once she has been vividly Impressed with who is the phy^ leal boss of their home, she will purr cpntentedly , WOMEN'S WEAN foor* (9ht ar Their blissfel comfort actyally s in your face. A lovely shoe in e newest fashion • h‘*corre«t materials and colorSf—sd right with your every daytime fashion. . $1095 PLEASE NOTE: If Mother has bought shoos here, we have a record of her size. Other Suggestions For llllother PRINCESS GARDNER^ ^ FRENCH PURSE Allrocllv* cvt-oul l«of poUtm und.rldy on Lov.l/ Cewhid*. CoHum. «olori. jrencH PURSE $roo /Aolchlng piKtt ^ ■ from $2.9S plus tax HAND BAGS $R95 „ WOMAN’S HOSE SLIPPERS..... $C50 $000 by Ooniol Grom............ 9*0 K.1««..a.rs *8”-*16” 20 JL-JfMroa. FE 2-3821 SHOE STORE Entire Family r~ International BUFFET FRIDAY EVENINGS .5 P.M. to 9 P.M An exotic airay of sea foods, Italian, French and (rerman dishes including salads and sauces - renowned throughout the, world. , PER PERSON includn everythina Call for Reservations lively entertainment TUESDAYjlmi SATURDAY EVES. DORMAN’S OLD MILL TAVERN Waterford, Michigan ' OR 3-1907 m ■ ; MiOiM*rySatoH—’SteomiFU0r - IT; noricesi. As ff otufied in Harper's Bazqor. *14” Sho* ShUm . ■ ‘ .* if. WATCH THE MAIL FOR YAHKEES 15th BIRTHDAY i . I-#' ■ THE POyTlAC PRESS> WEDXKSDAY. >IAV 1. 19(^3 O^eumode ifICE-A-YEAR 82 N. Saginaw Stl Farm Hout*. ' ROCKER ..._____I iBolonlal Honst '5$;AlaiRSt,£laiblen^ —■ProfessItjTipl PERMANENTS Styled as YOU Like it! RAIRCUTHN9 - THIT8 IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON , 2I9 Auburn Ave. FE f2878 , N® Apppintment Necessaty •_ Revererld ^ to Address V Church’Unit The Rev. Edgar H. S. trrme president of the Church F«l-erathm of Greater- Chicago, will speak to the Episropal Churchwomen df Christ Church Cranbrook on the subject “Refugees” at the May 7 luncheon meeting at the church in Bloomfield Hills. Mr. Chandler was director of refugee service for the World t^uncil of Churches^ih By JEANMAltlE ELKINS Spring house cleanii^g appeals mieabqiutas muchasmylittfo brother’s wet washcloth in . the bathtub does. But since my assigned me to Write a story to help women with their spring cleaning, I reluctantly began , to learn about it. If you want something done right, go to an expert, I’ve been told. So off I went to see Clarice Jeffries, executive housekeeper at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital and He has written extensively on immigration and refugee migration. He has been decorated by the governments of Elngland, Greece, Germany and the Netherlands. At present, he is serving part time as a religious adviser to the United States Information Agency. 7 meiiibei of the N "Betrothdhis Tokl The Harold C. Boughners of Whittemote announce the engagement of their daughter Patricia Susan to M. Douglas Robertson, son of the Walter Robertsons of Lake Orion. A June wedding is planned. IP‘l S«M and WALTER Delicious Sauso£0 Expert Gives Tips Organize for Spring Cleaning Can you remember toe-date the zation. Don’t just start cleaning porch was last paint^? What|witoout tome plan. Organize! kin^ of painty 7nd-i«rr mani/ glMHIfOUR NEEDS ‘ coats were used? J ^ . ■ .. . Who was the paintei- and how Organize to suit your own many gallons did it take? Information like this kept on a clip board would come in handy next time you decide to Daily, weekly, monthly and ticular needs. Here are a few suggtotions. '' One way oforganizing Would be to have one sKeeT on the qjip board for each room. Another method would be to have one sheet for each article, such, as yearly schedules kept on a clip rugs, and then list the rooms they jare in and when they were last cleaned.. tive Housekeepers Inc. Association. \ She is in charge of housekeep-mgjfor the hospital and adjacent hopie and has some iple working with her. 'or Miss Jeffries and her sUiff, aning is a daily job. Keeping a hospital clean is a monumental task , if you stop to realize that it only does toe room have to AIPPEAR clean, but it must be sanitary. [iss Jeffries stated that the fastest, quickest and most effi-dent wav to get a job done is to FOR "SHEAR” GENIUS-* IT’S CUSTOM TAILORING com* in looii lo w* con put eur ihaon to work. S** th* loroMt »*l«cHoniot tuHings in fWichigan for doUiing --fortow toilorod->k CoutmI ^ nui* RANDOIMI Marmaaii COMPLETE TAILOWNG UNIFORMS -. TUXEDO REhtTALS CUSTOM TAILORS 908 W, Huron FE 2-2300 Cleaning can be made muchi easier if all unused articles are' stored m an out-of-the-way place. The Norman L. Cheals of North Lake Drive have eight in their family. Mr. Cheal has a conveniently built storage wall in the basement. In it are drawers for storing blankets a n-d shelverfor hat boxes and shoes. With six children aged ^16. board would help organize house- plus two adults, the out-of-season Mr.s. Doris Did. all of Rarriftm Ti^rrncf the engagement her daughter, Helen May Dick-'all, to'Gary 1). Cutnmings, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rex R. Cummings of Fiddle. ColoF^ Telffevijsion HEADQUAMElCr Complete Stock of Radio Batteries I TAPE RECORDERS........,..$29.95 Up j Ste{(Dukl TELEMSION and RADIO »ALES and SERVICE 1157W. Huron MicIi.TE\\1V«,'llS6 FE2-6967 hememaker and asshre that noth- problem. Garments also go in the ing would be forgotten. |basement. I someone who dislikes No two people will clean exact- Throw away or give away any- i ly toe same w^y. There are many thing that is not used. Store out ways of getting a pibticuiar I of season articles so they w^jj j cleaning job done. ^. not be in the way. . ' ; Miss Jeffries sug^ts in teach-j Keep a daily cleaning schedule, ing children cleaning habits not Don't wait until it becomes a to concentrate on making them gigantic task. • do it a particular way. | So shake out your mops and Which is more important—the j start tlfStf SpHng cleaning now. ay you clean or how cleanjl/^ytu girls yill pardon me all things are when you’ve finished? this talk of spring cleaning has !also for home cleaning and re-j One main feature of any spring made me rather tired—guess I’ll pairs. house cleaning should be brgani- 'take a coffee break. give it doing it. He will be sure to find toe best way to get it done in the least amount of time. (Now I know why the editor assigned this story to me). A clip board is of invaluable use for checking on cleaning and repairing schedules. This is true MHami Bake Shoppa 5|not only, in hospital cleaning but THE POHTIACMALL ~ For hnmo rlpanin0 and rp-l ■■uauuaui TONTIACMALt Add 3Sc Potfas* for Mail Ordera (Sorry No-C.O.D.'il young looks New young shapes by (RiallCraft! Feminine Amj^ca^s on .the move, she goes like '63. She’s young, alive, alert, knows how tq high gear a shift as well as shift to high g^.'Here QualiGraft lays the groundwork for the new, young you. Basic ingredients: the fast-beat half-high heel, the square-cut sporty st^k, the demure strip-strap flat, the little pearl bjJtton look. Added dash, §oft white leather uppers topped pff by a young and modest price for fine fashion.. $3.99 to $7.99 TG SELECT GIFTS FOR iS/l For Sunday, May 12th STAR-ITMT * (Left) Confemporory design in on electric clock ... to please a modern-minded Mother. 26" in diometer. *24“ SUN-TIME A newivoriotion on the sunbuFst design in clocks. White with goH. ‘Battery 'powered, wide. *45 00 Plui Sm* ond Fadorat Tax Large Selection of Modern, Eorly • American ond Provincial Clocks.- RECORD CABINET Solid Rock Maple in Eorly American design with a utilitarian purpose. Shei!inoye.ifi *39” MARBLE-TOP TABLE (Right) A very special purchase of these handy ond handsome cigaret tobies with , " genuine marble fop. Fruit-wood finish base, 13" in diameter, T8" high.. *17” J'ery Special STIFFEL LAMP From 0 superb collection of these fomous'lamps Including Lenox, bronze, brass" . - ond wood bases. ' Set FTur Mont Oulilandin/i Selection ^ > of Wall Accessories, " Plaques, pictures, shelves, gift ideas! (Left) A prophetic note for the home. this attractive barometer to forecast the weoth^., Bdrameter — Thermometer, and Humidity Indicator. 1680 South Telegraph RoaO . FEderal 2-faJ48 Just South of Orchfrd Lake Rd. —'.Park Free Open Thursday, Friday, Monday Evenintes ’lU 9 P.M. Interior Ddeorattng Counsel Ai No Extra Charge vll-i IF f:,' ■ "^THE PONTIAC PRE^S, \VEDyESDAV, MAY ^ 1963~ ^ Miy. is a month filled with great AfcP valuei ta pep-up your budget! Brand-name foods... all the bnes you like... at lour, loai.29c BANQUET FROZEN DINNERS 49 Exceptional QuaKty...Econopcally Priced! ANN PAGE FINE FOODS SPECIAL SALE BKF, CHICKEN, HAM, TURKEY OR SALISBURY STEAK |C PKO. Freslilike Corn whpu kernel A 13-OZ. X CANS 39c Freshlike Sweet Peas . . A 14-OZ. . A CANS 43c Freshlike Cut Green Beans . A 13-OZ. . X CANS 43c Nine iWes Cot Food autuna A 60Z. X CANS 27c Dote & Nut Cookies Nabisco . 14-OZ. . . PKG. 49c Clapp's Boky FruH Jukes » . 4 BTLS. 39c Stor-Kist Tuna u»ht, chunks A 6'i-OZ. 0 CANS 89c Maxwell House Coffee instant ’ 1.29 Gold Medol Flour 25 ilo 1.99 Royol Pudding ...... . 4 PKGS. 41c Nortkem Toilet Tissue . . 4 36c Plumite CLOGGED drains . , 43-OZ. > •« . CAN 33c ANN PAGE Cheeri-Aid ^PKGS.|^C AnnPogeBEANS 21-OZ. CAN 1& with PORK RED BEANS IN CHIU GRAVY RED KIDNEY BOSTON STYLE ^ Ann Pago Preserves PEACH, PINEAPPLE, APRICOT or CHERRY 3i 1-POUND ■ I .00 ANN PAGE Barbecue Sauce 33* 49 m. 2-01BOT. I-FT. 12-OZ. lOT. c Bcpensi^ ALL-PURPOSE SHORTENING dexo m3<»59' Planning a chicken fry or a cake : : . bake? Use dexo and bring out the : i best in foods. Savc cash, too! ALL-PURPOSE dexolaOil 49^ rlb.liop ArPOIFFB VIGOROUS A WINEY reg,*I.7I 1-QT. BOTTLE V.--i Don't njiss this Special Sale on flavor-famous A&P Coffee! Up to the store... the only way to give you COFFEE MILL FLAVOR, 22^off the regular low price on^the 3-lb. bags! And what flavor/You /resh-^round flavor youcan’f^f in a can. Enjoy it during this Special •oe AfcP whole-bean Coffee ground for your coffeemaker rifehtjn Sale and make extra savings! . j. ;: ;: j Trim the cost of dozen of salads :; i offers you moi% fOTTOOrmon^a..:;^^ Gant Trend . . . "<« . 47c Chilii( Hot Beans 2'c!i£^33c Heinz Babyfood > >10*iiS? 99f Oitdi Cleanser • • * 2 riASTK 3Ic Click Deodoront Blocb 29c Swift's Prein . . . . . 49c ■Zk.- i' ^estod"SparkleScenf'."««« 68c_ Klewex Towels 2* ECONOMY ROUS ,\- 59c Fek Naptha Cleaner 14c OFP 10T. UBH BTL 07C v:. FRYER PARIS Cut from Top Quality Frying Chicktnt BREASn with Ribs P A&P BRAND—OUR FINEST QUALITY Pineapple Juice 4 "SUPER.RIGHr* l-QL , 14-OZ. ' CANS Florida Sweot, RpcMUpe— One Price os Advertised Watermelons WHITE BEAUTY Shortening GOLD MEDAL FLOUR MOTT'S Apple Snuce 5*49* 41*89* Ground Beef 43^ "SUPER.RIOHT" QUALITY - Polish Sausage^^4y HYORAOI Ball Park Franks^ . . . HI 59c NEW LOW PRICE YOUR CHOICE 99 EACH Jlershey Syrup 19* Dailey Din Pickles i2i^9c < Luncheon Meat 3 1.00 A&P PiHeapple:?^ 19‘ Miracle Whip Dog Food RED HE> Quart Jar 1.00 Fresh Pineapple'3 sni 1.00 Tomatoes mu» e • • • . u 39c SUPER-RIGHT CANNED START SAVING YOUR ^ GOLD REGISTER TARES NOW Samsonite FOLDING TABLE dkM- Stainless steel COOKWARE SPECIAL 3 QY. COVERED SAUCE PAN Corned Beef . . 39* Cottage Cheese 19*. LARGE OR SMALL CURD Swansdown CAKE MIXES MARVEL ICECREAM or ^ Crestmont Sherbet HALF GALLON CTN. 49 Betty Crocker Bisquick Puffin Biscuits ....... 6 Sr*” 49c Nutley Margarine . . . . . 6 oirs 1.00 Sunn^^ield Butter ORAMAA . • ., onrs 69c Fresh Skim Milk . . . .. . . 29c SPECIAL THIS WEEK ! '^"37* L WITH THIS MP , ^ REG. 1.25 SIZE r I I KINO SIZE —25c OFfTABEL RINSO ANACIN 79 Oeed through Sotwrday, May 4th ^ g in all Ecratam Michigan AAP Super Market* I I ONE PER PAMIIY —ADULTS ONLY Swan Liquid. • . . Vim Tablets iSS. Sihferdust Blqe :. OkhwosheiL all ... Liquid oR Wisk Liquid ..... . . . $% 74c 34c Lux Liquid ‘.SLSf ... iZfth 55c ouNTuu 79c Lifebuoy Bor Soup . « ..2 raI» ^35c 47c , Lux Bor Soap ..... 4 £gi 45c . . s% 63c * Lux Bor Soup ., e J SilS 33c . ^.1. ‘ r^h >11 ll \- ' B—8 THE PPytTAC press/WEpNESbAY, M^Y 1. 1963 Pontiac City Affairs Restaurant Leased at Airport 2r^'' Before knf, :^’I1 again be able to get a meal at MQcbigan’t The dty last .night teased its vacant restauram in the terminal at Pontiac Municipal Airport to William and Rose Stem, owners of The Donut Center at Saginaw and West Lawrence in downtown Pontiac. .♦ ♦ *; New name for"'the airportiOTHER BUSINESS restaurant will 1)e The Pilot] other biuin^^ actioj effective. Rates will be waa $13,000 bilow the estimated month until grops montl]^ I80,1fb0 cost of the wafer main fVom itfaen on, fee rent will be fignrad on a percentage of gross nMwfely receipts, nnless feey fall below |3,N. The rates range from ^ per cent of $3^000 to four p^r cent of $6,000 or more. Light.,.ply officials expect • thejdeferred onie ww^ cdfitraci b^ for water main inj operati^ before JuneT. jthe R20 urban renewal area. The The restaurant and kitchen action was requested by City equipment, owned by fee city. I Engineer Joseph E. Neipling. had been leased by Richard } Neipling was to have made E. Vaace Sr^ a Lansing res- a recommendation last night on all site improvement pro^un in the R20 project area. ’ Last night, however, Neipling said feey’d gotten their fignros crossed and fee cost estimate on the water- mains was $47,-OM. The ISO.MO estimate represented the entire site improvement program. —Thus, the-low bid- is-nearly $20,000 more than engineers esti-mated the. joo would cost, 'llie tanratenr, nntfl Vaace raoVed out in Febmary. The Stems .were reconunended by Airport Manager Homer Hoskins after he and a screening committee interviewed some 18 prospective tenants, including the Urxler the terms of the agree-te until July 1 when the rent rates bids received for fee work a week a^, but said fee bids would require further study by urban renewal officials before he could recommend a contractor. Low bid for the job was $86,874.40, submitted by Hay Brothers Construction Co. of Bloomfield Township., contract covers installation of new mains on portions of O’Reilly Street and O’Reilly Court, Park Place and Whittemore. NO ACTION No action was taken on a request from' Mitchell L. Bacow, Pontiac attorney, for upgrading of a tayem license belonging to his .clients, owners of the Trojan Lounge, 72 Auburn. __Bacow asked commission- dp. proval .of upgrading the license to class C status. Commissioners filed his truest for study and ... . .. .'diheussion ataiT informal meet- City officiali first said the bid before deciding on any formal Fast-Vote Equipment Stalled in Committee The installation of automatici Robert Lilly, secretary of fee voting equipment in the County boird of auditors, said it would Board of Supervisors* new aud^ greatly simpHfyod aftow rlort. torium has been 8hort-provement? Do you have hopes that the Minuteman eventually will be able to replace the Atlas aihdUie Titan? A. In many* cases, yes. I would. I not say that Minuteman' can do everything that Titan can do, because Titan carries a much heavier payload. I Q. You mean a bigger bomb, in the range of 50 megatons? mSTAR 1 ond 2 TYPiai ORBITS MAY IfBS at full intercontinental range in|^j<^ Does this mean that each •^fery case, but we felt we needed 150 to 200 Minuteihen The week-long bicycle ended successfully for the city and happily for a 7-year-old girl. the Senate by Kemer, a Democrat, who conceded that Maremont, also aDemocrat,-Irndout-^ liV'ed.his usefulness as (Pmmission p. chairman. The action by the. Republican senators app«ired as a retaliation againt Maremont’s charges that some GOP senators were ant^-gro in their demands that ceilings . be placed;onjrelie£i*edit Mare-_mOnt also had-charg^ that ihe Republican senators were opposed to a public aid appropriation because Negroes "help^ to elect" Democratic Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago to a third term last month. The Senate last week had con-“'Ttrmwt'IWarpmorrtras-xpnraflsston chairiTian. But after his remarks | at a news conference members 11 voted to reconsider confirmation! Nearly 3,500licenses were tesued during the annual event, according to patrolman Dave Slaterj* who was directing the program in 34 public and parochial' schools in the city. For Anna Marie Her-first grader at i « h a a L b«f the research data more than we needed the publicity. TWO FAILURES Q. Thera wwe Two Minuteman failures .last year at Vandenberg Air Force Base^ Calif. Caovyou had hit a serious snag-Mhat testsTexplafii^those? incorporates improvements suggested by tests of earlier wings? A. To some extepL We^dpn’t have shown it did not have enough power to hurl its warhead the necessary distance. DISCUSSES program In a rare exclusive interview at this headquarters of the Air Force purchase of a license during the special week has won her a new hr cycle. The bike was offered as ah incentive to youngsters to get a license. Anna’s new license number was selected from among all the Uceoses issued Jifftog lips diseased the Minuteman program. Q. General, can you say if there is jmr basis to these reports (of difficulties)? A.Ther^ is not. Absolutely no basis ai hll. Q. How. do yon think these re-portrPriginatedr ■ ” A. Possibly they .wera based on mistaken information. The dis- make major changes ki .every wing^ however, for a couple of reasons. One, the original Wing 1 missile exceeds the job for which A. Vandenberg is where thelit was designed. Two,, such ★ if... AF ReceiyeLBh MMe WASHINGTON (AP)-The 100th ready by the end of June, the Air Minutenum solid-fuel, quick-shoot ing intercontinental missile was delivN'cd to Oie Air Force at Malmstrom* Air Force Base, Mont., Tuesday, die Pentagon announce. This completes two^ the three Minuteman squadrons scheduled - ■ ^ jU bi for .that site. The third wj^ Force has said. Between now and the end of this calendar year, intercontinental’ ballistic missiles will be delivered at the rate of one a day, Arthur Sylvester, Pentagon chief of information, said. This does not teclude missiles for Polaris submarines. \ A. That, too, is classified. But -wJien -you have-a certain job to do. you can do it three ways: One, tremendous yield. Two/ you can use "lifiore missiles' of smaller-yield. Or three, you can send your smaller missiles to the target with greater accuracy. Cost-wise, the payoff for accuracy is .greater than the payoff for toe other" two. Q'. You mean the greater the accuracy, (he less the cost of wiping out a given target? A, Yes, Accuracy has secondary benefits, too, in reliabihty and in reduced weight. We know things that we can do to get perfotihance with less guidance weight, and crease either payload or range. fELSTAR ORBITS — Diagram shows path of Telstar I, communications satellite launched last July, and projected path of Telstar II, scheduled for placement in a higher orbit Tuesday. Q. Is the improve Wing 6 Minuteman the ultimate. Will toe program stop there? V. A. I don’t think so. Compjetion of Wing 6 will mean 950 Minute-men in silos ready to- go, but I fully expopt the force will be expanded beyond that.' We are updating our plans continually. • "Michigan's Beloved Basso" • Organ Virtuoso • Instruments, Solos, Duets D You caift get better baby dfts for fewer stmps...(myw^re You must be salisfied...l00% V.: Every gift pictured above is backed by this new guarantee TOP VALUE GUARANTEE NO. 1 You can’t get better gifts for fewer stamps, anywhere! • Heard by 10,000,000 People ju 40 Lands • Recent Returijiee frorn Viet Nam • World Renowned RcTdiocaster * 1st Baptist Auditorium-:. 34 Oakland Ave. 5th thru 12th TICKETS Still Available FREB... / call Ee 2-9154 Now Top Value takes the question marks out of Selecting those all-important gifts for baby. •How?.First, Top Value always means trusted national brands, In baby care, , names like Thayer-, Taylor, Welsh, Child-craft.- Pepperill.. and more! Then, Top Value addd an unprecedented protection It backs ecery gift with this ex-.. U. N. Perry «. ITeMte flie Penilif M.n.N. Perry »«.. ■ ?*'**'• MIncle Mile. DrartMT PUiat, Un I Leke «■< Orford thru h»t.. M»y KROGER HOMESTYLE OR BUHERMILK BISCUITS .:..6. U.S. FANCY T»M te flie Penilif Men. N. Perry M.. 1 5'!*'. ■ Miracle Mile DrartM- PlaMa. Ualaii I **S OxTerR Ikra 8at., May . Lake oLferd hLt%M 4 ! f ■ AM A MAM M A Ml JONATHAN I 50 EXTRA vISS. STAMPS ■ B > •xiTH TH5 COUPON AND PURCHASi m BIAHIITWIin * r lARGE OR EXTRA lARGfe ROltON | rlAIIIM BVII SECRH DEODORANT I , jar 59* pumtiara ■ WIHF^flP ,1. .™jl„ M.t » f,„, .1., * ..... .A Ike PoBtiae Mafl. N. Perry I ■ W. -------------- --------' “••• I Miracle Mile, Draytaa PUIaa, t'B Miracle Mi^. DraytM Plaiae, l■ Man. n. p« I sit'^Ml'yI Ufcr‘*aad“ oLfJSd'n^ N APPLES 3:1.39' I: E . U.S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN . } RUSSET POTATOES U.S. NO. 1 ^aufornia NEW SAVEsIT-BORDEN'S COnAGE CHEESE DRY-U-OZ. WHIRKD-14-OZ. CREAMED-16-OZ. CHIVE AND nNEAmE-16-OZ. 2-49 YOUR CHOICE BORDEN'S FRESH HOMOGENIZED HALF GALLON MILK 36* RED RIPE FRESH STRAWBERRIES FULL QUART • 000 . . U.S. FANCY 10 & 49‘ HOT HOUSE TOMATOES 39* L0H6 WHITE pOTATOISryrjT* FRESH ORAHCE lUICE.. Haa.»a 79* ' ■' >7 ■ ' : .1 r I V THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 19C3 . I.. I— ^:--------—:----------1 ■ ■ .!• I i-— 4-PUCE SETTING OF MAR-CREST ^WISS^CHAtHDiNNEttE SWISS CHALET DINNERWARE-OVEN PROOF-HAND DECORATED WITH $5 PURCHASE OR MORE AND COUPON FROM MAILED KROGER BOOK The gay, cheerfol design enhances the beauty of any dinner table , . . extencls < hospitable welcome to all guests. Hand-decorated. Oven-proof. Underglazed. MadO in America by skilled craftsmen. COUPONS IN THIS BOOK AR^' OOOD^ fOR^ON^«EMi«ECr-PLACE SETTING PLUS *7.50 I^ASH SAVlNcrON SWISS CHALET DINNERWARE AND 3,750 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAAAPS. BE SURE TO REDEEM THE FOLLOWING ADDITIONAL COUPONS FROM YOUR_ MAILED COUPON BOOKLET WITH COUPBII toword tha purchw wf otw Oompfotar 5wrt^~idt3rp^ bowls and 2 brood & butter plates) ef Swiss Chalet Dinnerware 50 IITRA TOP VMHl STAMPS with purchase ef $1 er more in Fresh Fruits M 50 IITIA TOP VAlll STAMPS with purchose ef 1-lb. er mere Sliced Bocon If y«w did not rwcwIvM ynwr mall«d ICrogloj' cowpwn, bdokUt, sww your Krogur Storu IManagur. 50 iXTHA TOP VALOl STAMPS with purchase ef 2 doz. Grade A Large Kroger ^ s^' ' - Eggse^ 50 IXTRA TOP YALOl STAMPS with purchase of Vi gal. Borden's er Ceyntry Club Ice Cream or Borden's Sherbet ' KROGER FRESH SLICED ENRICHED WHITE HEAD LARGE 20-OZ. LOAVES FRENCH AND CUT 6REEN BEANS 2 - OQf SAVE 14V NO LIAIITI SAVE 35* SWEET PEAS SAVE UP TO 17*-FRESHLIKE CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL SWEET CORN.^1 •ssasgr ““49 SWEET KROGER ^ _ . . APPLESAUCE SAVE 17‘-IN TOAAATO SAUCE OR MOLASSES ^ ^ LIBBY'S BEANS.. SAVE 19«-WHITE, YELLOW OR PINK SWANEE FACIAL TISSUE. SAVE 5‘-KROGER TART PITTED _ ___ ___ RED PIE CHERRIES IWporated milk CAMPBELL'S FRUIT COCKTAIL.. SAVE 16‘irKRQGER . - ^ ' ^|| AIIVEC GOLDEN YEUOW CAKE • SAVE 12‘-FROZEN BEEF, CHICKEN OR ^KEY • / MORTON'S MEAT PIES. SWEET NUTRITIOUS DOLE PINEAPPLE JUICE. . SAVE 16* • • • • • icomej 1-LB. BAG M.45 SAVE 14‘ KROGER ALL PURPOSE ^.GOLDEN SHORTENING [SAVE 10 3^48 WITH COUPON ON I OPPOSITE 'PAGE PEANUT SAVE BUTTER 2=59 WITH COUPON ON OPPOSITE PAGE tf-OZ. H(0$. t-OZ. PKOS. 4MiZ. CANS GOLDEN GRAIN r ^ 6-OZ. NPLi-RONI—»'t-OZ. k SPAGHfTTI CMt 7-OZ. SCALIOP-A-RONI TWIST-A-RONI l-oz: PACKAOf YOUR CHOICE * KROGER'" ^ LAYER CAKE SAVE* 20* lACH SAVe 9‘-0INTY MOORt ' ^ BEEF STEW. . 2 89' SAVE ifc-SUNSWEET PRUNE JUICE. . 0T .,t39‘ ffl-rURilKS .. 3 ,',1; ' ■t : ms. COLORS RDFtEASTEFU^ MICHIGAN ONlVi it / Win a fabulous 24hour§ of fun for 2‘oiy tretownIjn DErRpir...coMPUMEN7S OP FAMOUS UBBy^ CANNED FOODSI - i THR/PQKTIAC PRESS, WEDNBSTOAY, MAY 1. 1968 C-1 4.fS.PO&PINa€HiUK Um In yard, fold and padc •o boodi. burabla |ilaiHc wdbbing; 1* tubular alu-ininum framn. 3.8ft REO. 79c BRIQUETS Kingsfo'rd brand—th« fa-vorita of outdoor chnft %varywheral 10 lbs. 47* WM*«My iMii CAUQHO ftMM Suolt out molsturo ai|d savM on funL Usnt "flow-controT'cartiidgM.. .8^ CortridoM,..>3 for 66c SAVEI POCKET RADIO Reg. 12.88. 6-tran|istor AIRLINE’ with real powerl Built-in ontenna; uses one low-cost battery. 10.8ft MONAnm cuANn Wards powerfol 1-HP vacuum; 7-pc attachment set. -Lightweight, rolls on ballbearing wheels..«3t 44.9S CHINA FOR B Platimum rimi* dainty gray roMt In csntsr. S7'pi«c« Mt. for 8..........36.88 100 pcs. for 12... 59.88 POAMACKMIGS IN RAYON NLE 19*® Rayon pile wears well, tpot-cleaos quickly, f^tn-backed to ob> sorb shock. 4 colors. UQHTANOAIRY DACRON* PANELS 99. c CtaSI- ' Eosy-care Dacrdh polyester. Machine-washable, wrinkle resntaii^; little or no ironing. White only. ' WHITE WASHA8LE WINDOW SHADESI Me STH^xS’ •*e>u« Embossed heavyweight plastic is tear, fade and fire-resistant. Mc^nted on good quality spring roller. CAROL BRINT 2 "‘ 78* . Sheer flattery for Motherl Wards fop qualityseamless. In 9-11. REG. 3 FOR 1.25 MEN’S MCKS 3«.*l 20% off cushion foot crew socb of soft, absorbent cotton with deep terry sole, heel and toe. 10-13. BOYS* REG. 1.9B DENIM JEANS 2 for *3 Strongest 10-oz. denim ever . . . thanks td a rugged blend of cotton. Sbvel Size 4 to 12. STORE 9:3diLRIc9;00P.H. 80IIRS: BeidaitlnSaliinlay Pontiac Mall PHORE 682-4840 fdegraph' al EEzabsHi Lake Rd. C—2 ^ THE PONTIAC WEDNESDAY, MAV % 1968 SAVINGS ■NMWa.fS 244 ViinrAa IMa mCm »___ vvonn WM pnoi DVjs so Much fteMoryi Ihu cups of Ml Hm coNon bio on cirdu iSMwd, hiHy Rhod wMi foam rubbTte hml Agprfv coda to your upBfl^ ^ooMfy ohita vd2i doR~ cafe loot edges. Sbes 32 to 36 A and 32 to 38 B. Shop Vtords and save on foundaSons. SALE WOMENS' BETHR DRESSES W*rat.NI*21N *4.0*20 CLEARANCE SPRING TOPPERS .»7 Reg.to $11 I7.98.***********««*** 1 1 Large assortment of colors, fabrics c SAVE 144 PAKIY GIRDLE Reg. 3.98 3“ CHARGE m SAIFf WOMEN'S RAIIiCOATS Zip-outs-Fleece lined WarafpILSS »1G Spring Jeweiilf Sate* REGULAR 12-IS Hif SPARKUNG 7 7 * Imagine! Stunning new SpriM |ew^ ai this price! Warde greM colIpcHon includes necldacet, i|>int, earrings, bracelets—sbnu-loted some with fake ciyt- laln; brilliont pastwl and od^ beads, tfuny! USi WARDS CONVINISNT CHMtG-Ml ACCOUNf—OPiti ONE TODAYI THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY,'MAY 1, 1963 C—3 AA ONTGOMERY WARD 4 DAY more fun - more value SALE! TAPERED JIYYLES IN COLORS, WHITE Skips on a color spree, priced so low! Aririy dock, cushion arch, rubber soles. Women’s 5-10 N, 4-10 M. Misses 12'/2-3 M. BUMPER-TOE sum FOR CHILDREll Washable cotton army dock takes lots of rough wear. Has cushion archei. Rubber soles. Colors, white, plaid. ‘5-12 AA. SPORTS STYLES FOR ACTIVE MEN, BOYS •66" PAIR Rugged lace-to-toe oxfords feg* hire cushion Insoles, molded arch. Choose, black and white. Men's 6'/2-1 1,12,13. Boys’ sizes 10-6. NO MONEY DOWN Just S. fretter below has separate storage door, giant swing-out basket. Right or left opening door. Coppertoiie fMsh, $10 more. m EXCEUENT, AIRLim eORTABU iTRONO RRWnON AND SHARP W-IN.* MCniil *109 NO MONET eeWN AT WAROe « Our Ward Week ^ price for this handy portable is sure to please thrifty shoppers! Has tinted safety glass to eliminate glare,' automatic gain control for steady^ picture. Side speaker,.front controls. Slim, briefcQse styling, and just 37 pounds light. TRU-COhP FREEZER "MwtvraS SiogoMlIr 329-IS. STORAOl AT #30 SAVINOS Having this Tru-Cold in your kitchen saves hours of ehop-^ ' _plhg time and food preparation. Open refrigerated shelves for maximum protection at safe certified O” ns9 .V9M STORE 9-.30A.il to fcOOPA HOURS: HolMlartin Salonby Pontiat Mall PNONE 682-4940 Tol^raiili el EHaboHi taka Ri THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1963 C^3 •» ■ V, $a«e on Colonial for AH Rooms SAVE *40 NOW! 3 Pc. Bedroom Set Solid Maple R«S.»39J5 Op#n Stock on All Plecee Double Dresser, Reg. $99.95 $89 Matching Mirror, Reg. $30 $20 4 Drqwer Chest, R^g. $69.95 $59 Full or Twin Size.Panel Bed Reg.$39.95.. . . .. .... ..$35 ‘ i - ■ . i Faithfully reproduced for our Salem Square collection, this double dresser has 7 drawers, antique hardware. B $89 (AJ Large 3-cushion sofa has distinctive arms and wings trimmed in warm maple-finished wood. Resilient cushioning offers relaxing comfort with good body support. Home-spun-type tweed in brown, olive green, persimmon; or Colonial-style print in harnionizing color. Reg. $179.95,' . -----... 4159 (B) High-back'swivel rocker adds welcome, homey tou^l Available in 3 covers—tweed, print or newly-styled print/tweed combination; reversible seat cushion. Reg. $99.95....................... (C) Winged chair is comfortable companion piece, with pleasing contuor. Only in all-tweed or all-print. R.g. $«9.9S.. -----ITS All 3 pieces capture the enduring warmth and charm of Early American styling with authentic roll arms,^ fu( perky skirts. Each features the CloUd-soft camfort of Word-foam*,reversibje cushions, foam-filled pilow backs. STORE 0:30 JLM. to 9:00 P.M. H0UR& HoMhqr thniSoWlar^ 'I I PHONE 002-4940 Teloerapk at Eliialwth Uko Rd. C—6 THE PONTIAC PHESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1. 1««8 STORE ' S:30iLN. to 9KWP|L M0I» IMqr ttniSatoilay V K . . , ^ ......................■ Riymiiw-^ IS-lNOIltH ftIR CUSHION NYLON . \ 12«* AIR CUSHION fUBEUfS One low Ward price on bladcwall sizes 670-15J 7.50-14, 8.00-14, now only.. WHITEWALU ONLY $3 MORE - ' No jungle of tables to wade through, just one low Word price on thb Riverside . . a dependable tire designed for the budget-minded ^pper. It’s a full 4-ply nylon with good traction and mileage features for normal driring.condiih'ons? . *Plus exoM tax and trado-in tiro. RIVERSIDE 27-MONTH HYiOH ST-107 I* TeiM-iye« e.70-ts Mackwirit 7.W-U 0.40-lS 7.00-1S iT-107 YUBEUSS BLACKWALL Sizes 5.50-13, 6.40-15, 670-15, 7.10-15,'7.60-15,7.50-14, 8.00-14,8.50-14 WHITIWAUS ONLY $3 MORE Built to outperform new car tiresi Built with ruggedjpylon cord for 4-way protection against blo^outf. Designed with 5 rows of 7% deeper tread to grasp the pavement for all-weather traction. .'.'new potybutadiene compound longer mileage aind quiet ride. V *Plws,exdMt^x and trade-in fire. ----'v ' _■> 'r PHONE S82-4940 Tebgnph at EfiaMh Uke Rd. THE PONTIAC PRESS, vyEDNESPAY^ AfAY 1, 1»63 - C—T 2’’ Coast Guard approvedl Designed4o holdJiatid -above water. Kapok-fiMsd; vinyl inserts; FIBER GLASS BOAT WITH^ REGULAR M49^ NEW LAPSTAKE HULL • Sec King 15-ft. fiber glass runabout . Electric starting>-40»HP motor ~ r ^ ’ • Easy-to-handle, remote control gearshift ^ • 900-lb. capacity, leaf-spring trailer V , Wards leads the wayl New lapstrake hull design makes a stouter, more comfortable riding boat than sroOOth-sided hulls. Vinyl-coyered, deluxe upholstered seats match beige deck. Air chambers and styrofoam flotation assure greater safety. 20-in. Plexii)lars* windshield, complete steering rig and wheel, deluxe chromed fittings, and more. Come, ?ee! • ^ ' NO MONEY DOWN . *Flws FOB Factory ea the beat ealy. *30 PFF! CAMPER-SUiPS « RE6. sm*. "TMVSUR” -poniuR nm-fRAiiiR »39»‘ NO MONEY obtlVN *F.O.B. factory It's a breeze to pitch qnd take down! 15x7;d^' tent provides 105 sq. ft. of pole-freO living space for camping comfort. Light and airy with 3‘ screened windows and doorr-olt with zippered flaps. Waterproofed tent; sewn-in floor. 42-cu. ft. locked storage area. 3-Lb.DMRM SLEEPIMBM $1588 lleg.$2i:N CHARGE IT! J •.. 210.00 SEA KING S4IP OUTBOARD ‘‘Sonic-Quiet" silenc ing; speeds from 1 ’/z mph to 12 mph. Full gearshift; 6-gal. tank; waterproof ignition. STORE HOURS: 9:30 A.E to 9:00 P.M. Mowtoythm Saturday 12-FT. ALUMINUM AUTO-TOP BOAT Rag. $169'Sro King da-signad foir atobility. 1-pc. boHom; Foam flotation. PHOME 682-4940 , Telegraph at ERiabelh Lake Rd. -TX-S' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1963 y\A ONTGOAAERY WARD £t nAV CAIE W|D.,THURS.,FRI.,SAT. •f#; 1 .MAY 1, 2, 3 ond 4 FAIRWAY GIVES^U BIG VALUE! 30-CAL. ECONOMY OAS HOT WATER HEATER T Ward 2-TraclT -^luniiiftfiii Windaws JRi»i$ure-molded for txfrq dur^illtyrTaked.or Qtnd finish, won't chip or P««>- Whit* only 1.99 NO MONEY DOWM O Powerful, gas-fired 30,006-BTU burner e Safe, dependable, automatic controls . • Gloss-lined tank—keeps water clean, hot Nqw, end your “water-waiting blues” forever! The big pairway burner gives you . hot water that just keeps on coming! Fiber glass insulation keeps heat Jpss dovm...saves you money on fuel bills. Has ^ip and crack-resistant )vhite enamel fmish. FAIRWAY JIELUXE GAS WATER HEATER REG. S4.95 *69 NO MONEY DOWN Only a 30-gallon-tank, but the big 52,000-BTU burner heats 40 gallons per hour! Automatic controls, glass lined tank. Reg. 89.95,40-gal. mod. $79 WARDS SUDE-|>OOR CABINET Don't miss^this spacious, surface-mount cabinet with sliding mirror door. Has incandescent light. Charge It!. No Money Down e Heavy weatherstripping stops drofts^ ' e Inserts tiit-irl for inside cleaning e Custom-made sizes to fit your home No more putting'up storm windows and taking down screens every fall—fust lift and lower the gloss inserts and the job's donel Rust-proof aluminum requires little'upkeep —never needs painting. Fiberglos screen won't rust, shrink or dent. Owens-Corning. FOR BASEMENTS AU-AUmiMUM STORM-SCRitM UMT A eombihotion for summer ventilation, vnnter warmth. Extrvded frame—rust-free, carefree! Full wdather-seal; aluminum wire screens. In your choice of 10 sizes. |99 R*g, 2.69 4 DAYS ONLY. SHOP AT WARDS NOW AND JUST SAY *«CHARGE IT” THE PONTIAC PRESS; WEDNESDAY. JMAXlXJIOfial WARD’S FINE CHINA REDUCED AA ONTGOMERY WARD UO. 44.95 SfYLE HOUSC 57>PC ‘ WITE BOUCHIET’ a Petite Bouquef" Just Say Charge It aori"57-pc.,R*g.41;95 32.M 100-pC v R«g. 66.95 . i 0.U "AAoonglow" 57-p<^v R«g- 41.95 .. SS.M 100-pc.R«g.71.95.... 5S.M Simplktty57tx. R«g. 46.95...... 36.lt 100-pc. R«g. 71.95 .. . 51.88 swNAiURi mr* Mn-ne. M.95 »2 om WARDf - 41e 10 CUP PIRC m 12“. Completely immersible aluminum pan, ideal for an egg or q meal. _ Jlug-*Jn--iBoti»l^ signals when heat is M«.14.9S Chromed copper heats fast for fast brewing. Perics a potful in 12 HninuteSi .Uoclr-p handle. 600 watts. LONG WEAR! WON’T FUZk, SH|b, MAT, CRUSH IVEN IN THE HEAVIEST TRAFFIC 49 Here is a quality carpet for use In any room in your home. Durable and easy to dean yet smartly styled, this high-low K loop pile has an inter^ting textured effect. Clear colors have emer luster of nylon. Moth-proof, non-dllergehfcl Installation Available ' . 6 %■ tt'wklWwMfhs Lively accents to scatter ever bare floors or oyer nigs where wear is heaviest! Embossed scroll design in deep rayon pile. Lorexed back prevents skidding. Machine washable. See them now at WardsI 27x48" 6.88 36x60" 10.88 4x6", Reg. 17.95 .. 15.88 FIBERGLAS* SALE! 306 SBE AND COLON CHOKI8I Exdting buyl Wards draperies of wo^er-care Fiber-glas won't shrink or stretch; never needs ironing, in 6 decorator colors. All sizes on sole at WardsI — *0«Mi-CM«i»g ng. rjM. — fOxS4"pw 188 4 |We.s.M WARDS PRICES START LOW, STAY LOW. MONEY SAVERS OO EVEN LOWER! ' C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AA ONTGOMl RY WARD MMMriMTI 7“ *Ntedrno new wiring —replaces any ceiling fixture. 11 ^in. diameter; tfirome bottom. Hulb included. - CARTRIDGi-TYN 2!4-lb. dry chemical • •. for home, auto or marine use. Approved byUt^ICCondUSCG. 32<-3S< OVTUfg Heavy.duty, wHh 1" dots. Tight-gripptne eontoets mean leit power lets. Brown or Kory. 4 fOT ^ mrr' . |7*f . 3 ft- 1?^- "i'itD’ PRICE CUT 4.9P imi 6’ mu HOUSi POST-LANimN Wards own—specially _ _ ^ priced for Hardware Weekl 'M 00 141A"x9V4* aluminum Ian-tem; smartly styled with satin black finish and frosted ii.ee gloss panels. 7'steel post. VP. SAVE BOISTER Bose swivels fuflISO*. I Made of high-fwisile grey Iron; machined I vise screw. Proactive I enamel finisiv. RJ9IUR.BOX Galvanized tfeel wHh alu-Mimim-paMed finhhl Catch seals box rain-tight. Govt, approved. LW Hydraulic-closes screen doors smoothly, quietlyl - Pre-ad|uitedi lifetime lu-brkated. t99 ADIUSTABU lAdC POST-CAPAOTV TO 1S,000 US. fini Ei Words ow @R«9i 14.^ c < "S)R«S. 13. ...liiiiMm^aJ ©Reg. 1S.1 polished, 1 !01 Depedab © 21.95 M( design or © 19.95 Pu glass cen 3-way sw © 21.95 Pe ishr. Opal I UeUUUUT f.H Save money on costly . house repairs... ideal * for stoirways and under heavy applkmcesl Height adjusts from 4 d. 6 In. to full 7 ft. 9 Ih. Features welded doubledubB construe-flon for greater support strength. Complete with 3x6-inch plates and turning bar. HIAT 100/140W gun with trigger control for light gr heavy worfcl 2 tipt, soldering fool, wrench, solder and case. riAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY f, 1963 C-11 ^ SAVE «4 fo *9 STVU HOUSE UGHT nXIUllES EACH NO MOMT DOWN War* own brand name...low Hordwore Weetcjukeil ®log. lS.V5jioifriwalwr3.^^ 18* diameter ceramic gloss diffuser and polisiwd brass shade. @RO0. 1S.9S; Florentine stylet.I’indL-dlometerr COtl^ilu^ V _ mliim baN with antique gold finish. Diffusing cylbider. © Ro0« 1S.95; Early American design 3>l!ght puljdown with polished. 14-fctch diameter copper or brass shade. 3“^fo S®' OFF! WARDS TOP-QUAumr nxruRss EACH Depedabiiity, beauty and low price from WardsI Q 21.95 Modern 4-Light Pulldown: Striking etched design on frosted glass diffuser. 3-way switch, d) 19.95 Pulldown: 18” polished brass shade has white glass center . . . provides upward lighting I 3 lights; 3-way switch. (D 21.95 Pendant: Southwest styling, anti^e copper finish. Opal glass chimney; 3-way switch; ^-300-250W. POm-KRAPT; HEAT EOUD COPPBII COACH LAHTEIIN 100/140W gun with trigger control for light Qt heavy workl 2 tips, soldering tool, wrench, solder and case. EARLY-AMERKAN PULL-DOWN Very attracHvef wWi dof^ roof. pdidMd plate glass panels. 13* high, in white or antique black finish. Regularly 00.00. Solid pressed steel shade" finished in polished cbppef or brass. 12* dicim. Adjusts 26-61*. Reguiorly 39.9Q. Maple-finished^ Ponder; osa Pine; solid-brass trini^ Frosted. side-rnoitnt-lamps..24” diameter. Niow.. ..jAm r-Pwsiili cOriKNi steelt In jhm horn t/ld* fe ^ BleeH iloie h nwM W.9S MOTOR, W-HP^ For oasy-to-stort eqefp-mont. 1725 RPM; split-photo. Dtomond-borod sioovo booringt.. 14*88 V ’’wmmr A C—12 PONTIAP PRE^^S, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1968 AA ONTGOMERY WARD 17% TO ^4% Powr^raft tools WARMOWH-TOPS M OUAUTY, VALUl NO MONEY DOWN 0 7" ORCUIAR SAW, REG. 44.RS. Heavyfduly—icieal fpr rugged in* liniSlfEnr Ji^ ipm molor davelopi 1% HP. Blade cuh at 90*. 2‘^-deep at 45\. ^ASSORTED ROLTS, 9« Wards w!d« selection of hinges, bolts, hook-eyes, eti^ m aborted qvantities and sizes. Reg. 19c padlock. .9c • - 1-YEAR OUARANTiE - * . trM npAk pr nphtpmtiA H «W rOWS MAFT ppwtf tool 0 it foooA Aotodho Aoo to mo- ItrM or woHunwiAip wiAta ooo yoof *f Aoto of potAkom, (!) 3" BELT SANDER. Perfect for tough sanding jobs on large surfaces! Powerful_J/3- HP tnotor delivers 4 25 omps,------- runs on rollei* and sleeve bearings........ ......... $28 , © SABRE SAW, REG. 48.93. Coiq-plete with 6 blades and metal storage easel Heavy-duty saw features 3000-stroke-per-minute motor, boll and bronze bearings. • . ®'/a* DRILL, REG. 49.95. Reversing action lets you bock out of those tough jobs eosilyl Heavy-duty... 6.5-amp. motor develops^.HP;. boH and needle bearings. 27% REDUCTION! SAVE A BIG 27% 29” Contains 16-piece, Vi" drive socket set; 12-piece, Va" drive socket set; 6 open-end wrendies; 4-piece box-end wrench’set; 9-piece hex key set; loot box. meuuNTeue WARDS S-SHSif ALUSmi STORAOl UMTS 644 EACH •seeuMiT 7'.«e iach 7SMee«tt‘'«wh Heavy steel construction with block enamel finish. Shelves adjust at 1-inch intervals ior storoge^of oddsized and odd-shaped items .. . each shelf holds up to 300 lbs. Side ond bdek braces give added support. 72x36x12'unit.7M THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1963 C—I.) 5 TOOLS IN Knew IM»¥rar^tNrlaliopT M ONTGOMERY WARD A complete home v/mfkthop in o iing|^tool: • 8" table saw with 2 lA* depth cut • 9" disc sonder—'113-sq. in. sanding area • 16* vertical driir press with Jqcobs chuck • Unlimited-capadty horizontal drill press' 88 SALE: MAY 1-4 10 days to save at 'Wdirds lowor-thon-usuol pricosl Como in-foo of/ tho oxciting voluosl NO MONEY DOWN All-new Powr-Kraft.;, specially designed by Wards to give you the most versatility and quality for your money I It features vbr-iaUe-speed change Jever for instant speed conversion .. .1700 to 6400 rpra. Powr erf^ ops full V/2 HP. Adapts quickly and easily for accessory use. NOW! SAVE 34.12 10'' TRIrPOWER RAMAL SHOP Precisign-butit forocoirogyP Features 3,,^pindles for 3 Working speeds. Ball-bearing motor deve^s 2 HP| 149 88 rotates, lodes ^ cmy angl( [gle; motor tilts 90*. was $184 ORRITAL SANDER RY POWR-KRAFT 188 8' Sands wood, plastic, metal.. .removes paint and varnish! Rugged, 3450-rpm motor, on/ off switch, 3-wire plug. 14.9SmiNDIR Praciiion-buiU—doubt*-shielded ball bearings; two 6* wheels; guard*: adjust-oble rests..... 8.88 LAROS^APACmr YACWHS gUAMBR 3200 POWR-KRAFT180-AMP ARC WELDER ALL-STEEL TOOL t€HEST»4ARINEr *115 29** 42“ k Big H-HP motor atop drum makes fill use of 28-gallon capaetty; 6' hose, plostic floor noz-zel, blower outlet. MOFAm TORCH Kqr point Heavy-duty, pencil-point tips; soldering tTp; flam* ■preoder; lighter, tonic and metal case.... 5.97 Finger-tip control — dial heats icom 20 to 180 ampsi Welds 18-gauge to H* steel. Accessories induded. Ideal for storage of tools! 3-drawer chest: 26 X 14'/z X 12ys ia 3-drqwer roller cabinet: 20/2x16Hx5H-in. P Iro iA^ fb libp WARDS ... PUY PN CRSOIt, PfY^JMOMEY DOWN | 18% OFF! %-IN. SOCKET SET Beg. 1*788 $20.99 1/ 12 socket^, reversible ratchet; speedd'r handle; universal joint; 5" and 10* extensions; metal storage case. ’tj #• c—u -Ik. -■ fights^bHsleriiigl ACRYUC LAifX HOUSE PAINT __. e, tRlM&SHuhfll TRIM, SMilTTER RJUMT^ T\ Gal. Sparkling, hIgh*gloss enamel—dries to a hard, stain and chalk resistant finish. In red, green and white. i^; ■' • ACRYLIC ^OUSE PAlt*lT '^COVERAIl Ka r- :; ,.v: ^1--' golleN 'Wards Slyb House—gives long-last* Ing beauty plus^ blister protection. Dries In 30 minutes; leaves no lap morbi easy to apply (even when ap* plied on humid green foliage. ^^EEP MfmOYS WIBIS pjkfr, MMMom OlASiOROWTHl Top^uality blend of, lCi% nitrogen, 6% phosphorous, 4% pot-osh, fertilizers mid 2-4D weed idller. Puts a speedy epd to dandelions, plantain cmd broadieaf weed; feeds gross for rapid jgrofWlh.DMt,odor-free. Coven to 5i9(X> sq. ft GARKB iUUIK SHEEP MANURI n-GAUGI WM MIMNSH BUUn 1“ 2«9 Conditions and enrich* es soil, adds humus, inr troves texture. De* stroys weed seeds. Bottom b robed 3* from ground to permit free draft Sizes 26x 19Kx16V^ fci. .Coie-phitely galvanized. yWoNTGOAAERY WARD SALE: MAY M 4 days to sav# at Wards lower-^an-usual priiosi Came fn—soo all the exciting vaiuesi ^NMCH, 3^P ROTARY MOWER 59** Features new round deck with front ^ and rear baffles; side discharge; recoil starter; Powr-Kraft engine. GRASS nOER FOR WALKS, GARDENS 4“. Neat grass borders with little effortl Self-sharpening^rotary bkide; 2 rybber wheels for traction. c-n THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEONESDAy, MAY 1, p03 SAFErrDESIONEDf GARDEN MARK 20-INCH ROTARY-3-HP ENGINE IS" HAHD MOWER —HHO ciiiniie 33“ Adjusts to 3 positions from’/2 to 2V4". 5 ous-tempered steel blades and 1-piece roller for easy trimming control. G Rugged Powr-Kraft epgine by Briggs & Stratton G Easy-Spin impulse starter i Lo-Tone mufFler G Chrome^plated, loop-type handlebar Enjoy new cutting ease with an extra margin of safety! Cuts better because of the new round deck. ^ safer because of the front and rear baffles. Side discharge opens and closes effortlessly. 7-inch non-slip^ rubber-tired wheels. 58 00 Ne Mfney Dewa Rst^ 64.95 n aa» M»TMY—, MS moiiM 64 88 Highest quality features! Ppwr-Kraft en-Qine; sdfety-chute dis-chorge; wheel-height odjustment; 8* wheels. ARDIH SAFER THAN EVER! SAFETY CLUTCH GAUDIN MARK 20^', ROTARY The “extras" are standard equipment on this handsome mower! Safety-chute side discharger Circle-Jet deck with front and rear bafRess Powr-Krdfr engine. 24^ RRNsR MOWER-4-HR INGIIIE 52 RG MGNIY GGWN Safety blade dutch allows mower to run with the blade turned off and safety foot dutch automatically stops mower when released. Features all-gear transmission. 159 99 JS YOOR 4ia»l^|ANii:E jOf k. THE PONTIAC FRgS3i^ .WEDNESDAY, MAY, I, IMS C—19 IASY MUXIN* m WA«D» COlWOtT CHAISII Warm summer days, cool evenings... enjoy quiet moments in Wards 4-posltion summer choise. Folding aluminum frame wBh green and white poly webbing. Double tubular orms. SMilMhMioiMr..3A* Cowlytwidihgwdf•••• 4riiMiMbb,nA< riiiii«ii»i.i9.M AT* Umbrella Table Cover.,. .4.SS See .. . Ward’s complete line of chair recovers and reploce-menf- cushions and pqds. W VC' RUSTIC REDWOOD >fr.i lEntirely FOAM-nULED PAD r«u> _____, weather-resistant from quality redwood to. codinium-plated hardware. IB^ brooed 541. fable ond Mnchet are extra ■ slurdy,seatslx comfortably. 17" A lyMiiwy GocMkicM sirip# e m. —• - -*• - mrtrem QfIflniMi pNMIC OOK 90B9 pod filled wim 100% shredded polyfoom.HI-Imlre ahmAmm hdAtgi 7* wheels. 5-poiWoe bade. 19“ Peel cane dmir gives •oedi le a Polynesian padd Woven bosket •eat, blade wroe^ iron legs, plaslic oops. ■ \ '4 e~iM THBtFONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 1. 1968 46% OFF! KRAFT TOOLS WARD! OWN ION QUAUTT MUNO—AT MO CAVHia* lACH 7 77 @ SABRE SAW—REG. 14.95. Cuh holec, patterns and straight lines in wood, plastic... 2-faidi capacity. Precision bronze bearings, 3 blades. @ }Ar DRILL—REG. 9.88. Rugged 2.0-amp. , motor delivers high-torque 2000-rpm no-kxM speed. Double-reduction gear train; 3-wlre cord. 1] RECIPROCATING SANDER—REG. 11.95. Ideal for fine finishingl Motor delivers 14,000 strokes per minute; large, 14 sq. in. sanding areck ,1 SILENT SWfTCH Ic 64* Reg. 89c. for the nurMry, bedroom. Ivory switch hat sealed mercury '' for quiet operation. BIO ASSORTMENT! PAINTERS’ AIDS! WARDS HAND TOOU SAU-PRICIDi Choose 7-pc hole sayr set; hacksaw with blades; tack hammer; 7-pc. drill set; 3 damps; 7-pc screw-drfverset;8' tape;mitrebox; ^Oipenter's apron; 5 more. 44' MEDID SUmWS—ONE LOW PRKI 98c, 16-oz. spray enamel... 98c Nu-Purpose thinner, gal. 98c paint remover, quart. 98c, 9xTZ paper dr ^ ^ _ Jropcloth 89c calking gun, now .... [3/1.17 cartridges . . 3/6fc 66 61/a" or 7” BLADES ^ 2 F.r Combination-type — use for rip or crate cutting! M e d • of tpeOial Powr - Kraft Kreme-A-Loy. OR YOUR f THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 1. 1963 ion Long Range Against Nats onTtnirsday Scheffing Has Hurlers PlcHUMd for.^Yankfiet Next Week DETROIT (AP) - men he looked ahead at the Tiger adiedule aWle trying to arrange hia pitching rotation for the next Yankee Kries, nuuiager Bob Scheffing wanUjd a little cooperation trm the weatherman, “A nice rainout wouldn’t hurt m at all,” said Scheffing while discussing the Tigers’ long-range pitching plana last weekend. 'T want to get my pitchers set fm* the Yankees.” got hia cooperation McBride Whips Yankees Luck FaUs XA HfMer, Again weatherman yesterday Mantte^Roger Maris combinatiop - with'lhe Tigers' first postponement el the new season. Rain, cold. aM snow washed out the m el t in g wMi the Kansas aty Athletics, surprise holders of first place. *'TUs day off kOlpB IS an fte “It gives IS an extra day to rest ap and maybe that’s all we*ve needed to get goiag.” The postponement enablei Scheffing to have his three top starters ready for the Yankees’ . visit tn.^ Detroit next week. The Yanks are here for nl^t gamte Monday, ’Tuesday Wedilesday. Hank Aguirre, who was to pitch today a g a i n s t the Washington Senators, will start the first New York gaine. He’ll have four days rest. Jim Bunning and Don Mossi will have three days between turns„ PITCHERS NAMED Bunning is set to go Friday night against Baltimore and Tuesday against the Yankees. Moksi will work Saturday’s Baltimore game and then face the Yankees next Wednesday night. ‘‘Of course, Hrmay rah another game out and we’ll have to work out something different,” said Scheffing. - But Scheffing deflnitely wants Aguirre and Mossi to face the Yankees. Each holds a victory over New York this season and Scheffing feels left handers generally are more effective against the Yankees. Scheffing’s pitching p 1 a n s include another starting test for Frank Lary. The ex-Yankee killer will* pitch tomorrow against the Senators, Scheffing said, if the weather is suitable. Lary tested his shoulder in two relief innings last Saturday and retired all six batters he faced. The Tigers expected to have Bubba Phillips pit the injured list for today’? game. The return of Phillips to third base frees Frank Kostro for first-base duties while . Norm Cash is out with his ailing Scheffing plans ^ use Kostro against left handers and Whitey Herzog against right handers. Claude Osteen (0-1), a left hander, was to pitch today for Washington against Aguirre (3-l)„ Ity The Associated PreM Ken McBride keeps setting up a rendpivous with fame, but someone’s always breaking the date. The 27-year-ofd ace of the Los Angeles pitching staff fluted with a no-hitter again 'Tuesday night, but eventually needed ninth inning relief help before the Angels were able to subdue the New York Yankees and the reunited Mickey pitched back-to^ak shutoutu and M. Holding the Yankees hiUess for 6 1-S innings, McBride’s second no-hit hid of the season was broken up wldi one out in the seventh inning idien first baseman Joe Pepitone singled through the middle. To McBride, it kas just another broken appointment. The fist came last year in August after the 6-foot-l right-hander won 10 consecutive games, victory season with an ord. He wound up sidelined the last two'mondts with a cracked rib. . NA’HQNAL LEAGUE Meanwhile, Curt Sinunons won his fourth game without a loss, alldwing only four hits as St. Louis edged Milwaukee and took bvwlirst place m^the NalfonaT' League with its fourth straight victory and eighth in nine games. Only one other game was played in the AL, as Camilo Pascual scattered 11 hits and was backed by a 14-hit Minnesota attack that subdued Baltimore ft-1. Six games were pos^ned due to rain. The Yankees got to McBride for their first run in the eighth inning on Clete Boyer’s double and ’Tony Kubek’s single. When Mantle „ and_^Maris_=singl«l_cpening^:Hie nmth7UcBfld?~wras relieved 4>y Jack Spring. Pepitone singled home a run and, after Art Fowler took over for Spring, Elston How- to overconre-a- 17-poinfdefielt. ard singled home another! AMXaiCAN LEAOOK Wm liMt rct. B< CJtf .... U 7 - Then Fowler got out of the jam and preserved McBride’s victory. Boyer fouled out and pinch hitter Dale Long lined one to Albie Pearsonrwlip raced in quickly for the catch 8tod threw to second base to get Pepitone for a gameending doubleplay. TraSDAT’S BBSDLTB SKa."c,.v ws™— "■ D, pottpoMd. rti , .. pMtpOOtd, ...... ■ (Cbane* 1-1). dIkIU relMd rBell l-o> at (Pena 3-0), nlcht BOMon 1-0) (Krallek 1-1) Wuhington (Osteen 0-1) el Detroit (Aguirre 3-1) Baltimore (Rob«r,_ . _ ____ •-1) at (Hilcaco (Herbert 1-1 Horten 1-0). 1 tsrl-nMit THVMDAT’S OAMCS He* York at Loa Anfelei Cleveland at Kansaa Clip Boston at Minnesota Baltimore ' at Chlcaco. Blcht -------- -■ Detroit NAnONAL LEAOOB ---. prt, Bi Rtuburgh " MU*aukee -.. San PrancUco . Loe Angelee Chioaco PhUadelphla- SI .371 He* York 13 -ISO I 7 San Francleco at Phlladeli Hew York, pe^paacd. r ------ ■ Iphla. pottpon (Willey M ____________ I* Angelsi (Oryidale 2 deipbla (Lopei l-O i rt*aneIeeo (Plefoe 1-Y or-OlMLlAl . Milwaukee (BurdetU 3-1) at Ctnclnnatl (Jay 0-4). night THURSDAY'S OANES THE PAUMER MiTHOir HOW-TO CHIP VOWt WAY OUT OF HOUWi lha drift it • handy. Imp, lotting dtei. Molt H, Bwch 01 a 2- or 3-lion whon y«iu'i4 ppillrin 6 fool of fho gioon't for forlhor dbloncot. Illutiralion f2 points op ilio foot Ihot rttopo'i no wriit-twiding on Iho ^p*> bockfwinp. For moxiMum eom^, dioko down on llio • ooupi«( of indwi and tot th« club lofMldbatl.^ To (Tvoid ony pongcIOM ot» tonpt at lofting, swing'po that iho bottom of .tho citibhood biuthoi tho ground o fow inchm b^ond tho boll oftor impact, oi i I luttntion ^3 » themm. Thli promotoi tho downwoidr forward twinging ore that yoiA Want form^p, dff /4%mM seemed headed for a possible ^ n H-4 rfc- fourtbeomplete game, wastagged for a first inning homer by the Braves* Frank Bolling in the first inning, then had little difficulty until the eighth inning when pinch hitter Bob Uecker doubled. Billy Moran accounted for the first Los Angeles run with a homer off starter and loser Stan Williams. The Angels added another run in the fourth, then put It out of riaeh wltt a three-run Cranes Track Team Defeats Waterford Cranbrook rallied in the final four events yeaterdky to post a 50-50 track victory over Waterford. \. ........A..... The host Cranes scored 27 of the final 28 points in the meet to pull out their fifth dual meet win in six starts. Oahbrook swept the high jUmp^tookTir^l and^secbh^ ___________ rnlTe run anbum (CJ 4:43 — .lelay—Cranbrook k:37.S Mila Relay—Cranbrook 3:4<1 O^mh^OTt'Kr'runkeHn” gt '-•o doubleplay for Brldgea 1 . MS MO 012-3 ....... 3M IM fti-3 Pq-A—New York Tryouts for Rec Nine 2M. Lot Angalea 27-10. DP-Kubgk. Rich-ardm and Pelpitone; Toirea. Moran and L. Thomaa; Pearson and Moran. LOB- Hew Hork (, Lot Angelea Manager Julius Mayo has called a practice for the Talbott Lumber Company recreatkm baseball team for 5 p.m. Thurif -STm "**■ Bo»»r. HR IP E E EE BO 1 iW-, ! 1 ! i *--- ... 1 1 7 A a I jcial world record with .a leap of 16 feet 6% inches. ★ W ,A', The Northeast Louisiana State College vaulter also barely missed on three tries at 16-9 in a meet with Northwestern Louisiana. It was the third time in less than six weeks that Pennel had bettered the recognized, world record of >18-2V4 held by Pentti Nikula of Finland. year's top ten collegiate football dll be shown drnfie 1963 National Collegiate Athletic Association’s television schedule. fifth in which Leon Wagner’s two-|day on the Columbia and Josiyn run single was the key hit. Avenues north diamond. Sinunqns, lowering his earned | ^11 candidate* are requested to run average to 1.25 with his tryout at that timk •Spring r-V«c*d 2 men In 94n. t—Fpeed one mnn In -Pth U-VM«tlne. S(UpnIe,. ChnokTRIee. T—2:27. A—32.181. Sternberg, ‘of the University of I Washington, last-Saturday-broke out will be-heW-May-4748-i9-at Perihel’s unofficial world record of 16-4 by clearing 16-5 in the Penn relays. Has Top 1962 College I Is NCAA Lists Video Slate !K (4V-Atl df ■ lastjpittcd -against “Northwestern lOa Nov. 9.‘ The games will be carried by the Columbia Broadcasting System. Southern California, 1962 nation-' al champion, will face Oklahoma on Sept. 28, witb No. 2 Wisconsin Opening the schedule on Sept. 14 will be Florida at Georgia Tech, with Alabama at Miiuni closing it on Dee. 7. All games will be on Saturday except for the Thanksgiving Day Texas at TeXSi' A&M feature. Island Lake Selected The Michigan Audubon Society’s annual spring nature carap- Sept. 14, Florid* at Ocorgta- T«eh. — „ ---------------- . ^ ^ „ Sept 28. Okbdiam* *t Boplbam CtltfamiA; Oct. 8. Duk* at Maryland. 0(;t. 12. MInnetota at Northweitom. Oct. 19. Pittsburg at Wcat Virginia. P«tv due at Michigan. Ortgoo M Arlaaaa, Oct. 26. Notre Dam# at BtanfdM. r' Nov. 2. Army va. A1r Foroo at ChMinv Mlulatlw at Louisiana StateTlooOw _ tD> CaW^ia ak Waabtngtoo. Nm. I, Pann staM at OUaStato. M r. I, Penn State nt OUa State. NerlD. wcatern at Wleeoosln, Arknniaa at Rice. I. Navy at Duke, Notre Dame at ov. 23. Harvard at Yale', Demson M South Carolina. Wlscontln at Mtana- the Island Lake State Recreation Area, just east of Brighton on no*'a Tex*, at Tex** a*h Interstate-96. ! 'Dec': 7, Alabama at 1 ..•this calls for Budweisec where i there's life... there’s Bridtr- NNt'Or Ktto * ANHtUS»-W$Clt)NC.. STiLOUtS • NEWARK • LOS ANtfUSeTAMPk How con you ossure your impeccable oppeardnee this summer? You might start with silver grey — b shode so hohdsome it's tbik seo^on’s rpost favored. Then odd W fabric- that keeps its" good manners on even the sultriest doys : a lustrous and luxurious blend of imported rnohair and worsted. Mbke^ure the tailoring , impeccable-:ras; it is jn Eogle’s very smart two-button with stitehed lapels, slightly slonted flop pockets, .'.side vents, ond trim plain-front trousers. From .that point on, it's clear soiling straight dbrough surrimer. ■ 1: Y -. r. 0U« PONTIAC MALI STORE iS OPEN EVERY EVENINO TO 9 PJL 1>—« tUE POKTIAG PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY It, 1968 California $ Hopes High at Derby LOUISVILLE, Ky. (Al») ^ nrnkt to a rookie tndne^ fitHn aj ttonad radag family aad a weatb- Callfomla win bave iteiof Tuesday’s Derby WaL in the en Candy Spots can do, and Bon-Kentuc^ Deiby rep^'l 14 mile p*rty. The Arisona jour just adds a little icing to- strongest sentaUon in histoi^ Satunlay' John Jacobs, a a-year-okl rook- I mhist^ racing le, wffl send Ml iiiler 'Tati^ 1 his simple training f............. the cake. ;T s since Santa Anita,” Jdcobq said.l Jacobs, who has helped his fath-Hirsch Jacobs, train since 19M, thinks his colt wiU have to be rbckoned with. Jockey Willie Shoemaker came from .eight lengths of( the pace to take the lead one-eighth mile from the finish in the m^e trial. He won by three-quarters r length over Gray Pet On Mjr Hoiwr;~anotlier Callfurnia cult> finished third in a field of eight Deity eligibles. The other California colt expected to start in the Derby, Royal Tower, passed up the trial. Tenney said TMiday b^riie jdoesn't care how C^y Spots runs injthe Derby, just so he baa a lot left for the stretch run. ; this horse feels like running iwith the leaders, he can run with Ithem.” Tenney said. “If he wants' to take his Uim, that's up to him. Tlie only thing we care about is having a lot of horse left udien we hit the stretch.” TSmey,'whb"traIiSe0955 Ddf- U.S. MaV Hit ; Pan-Am Sndg SAO PAULO, Bridl (AP)-The| title, and Canada’s Doug Kyle^ U.S. raid on track and field gold medals could hit a real snag in the fourth Pan-Amm-ican Qames today with the Yanks fadng a battle in all four men’s finals and the wrapup'uf the decathlon. Althoughthe U.S.A. captured six of the eight men’s events in thme track sessions since Saturday, LaM Arortican (^ipoittton Is brisfling in the 200-meter sprint. 1059 runncrup. Vlltb the decathlon entering its final five events the discus, pole vault, 100-meter hurdles, Jav-< elin and 1,500 run—it appeared unlikely the half-way leader, Venezuela’s, Hector Thomas Martinez, could maintain his spritely pace of Tuesday. Beth Us. cciitendere. Hues Hodge of Roscoe, NT., J. D. 400-meter hurdles and l0.0«ltme-iMarto of Nw^. Okla., m ter run. while Canadians appearin“v«ng into their strong events. S SS nSatln the OOO-K But they ^ have trouWe with run and the payoff round of the versatile Doug Gairdner, the.Ca-decathlon nadlan champion, aecainion. Martin, consistently weU over 15 II MEDALS feet^ should score heavUy In the Meanwhile, the United States pole vauk, while Hodge was the continued Its monotonous harvest il 500-meter winner in |as( sum-of gold medals with 68 for allimer's National AAU decathlon, sports since the Games started The 400-meter hurdles finals April 20. Ishould produce a corking race be-« For the first time since Cuba’s tween Los Angeles’ Willie Atter- by winner Swaps, -believes the best way to train a horse is the simplest way. While most trainers have their Derby eligibles’ training schedules clocked almost down to the minute, Tenney never knows for sure when Candy Spots will work out. "If he feels like training a little bit,” Tenney said, “We train a tittle bit. If he doesn’t, we just wait for, another day when he does” Veteran horsemen on Derby row «P Pk*M»z BIG SPLASH - Jeff Fisbback (No. 222) 21 year old student at San Jose State College makes a big splash after clearing the harrier in the 3JIOO meter steeplechase of the Pan-Am games in Sao Paulo, Brazil, yesterday. Behind him is. Alberto Rios of Argentina. Fishback covered the course in 9 minutes, 7.9 seconds to win. - , Rafael Fortun Chacon was a double winner in the, opening Pan-AM meet at Buenos Aires in 1951, the US A. could suffer a gold -medal blankfay berry and Russ Rogers of Newark, N.J.. with Argentina’s slick Juan Dyrzka, who holds the South American record of 50.9 seconds. and 200-meter sprints. Cuba’s Enrique Figuerola . grabbed the 100 meter crown Sunday and Wednesday a pair of fleet Venezuelans — Arquimedes Her-^rera and Rafael Romero — and jlVinidad’s Clift Bertrand may NBA Picks Boss Today take care of Candy Spots when he returns fronulbe track after a NEW YORK (AP)—The Nation-i KeiAi^ has written out his res-at Churhill Downs look on to'as" al Basketball Association, basklngfipM^ “ tonishment when Tenney’s ^ooms in the glow of a 35 per crat reg-ular season gate increase, name the second president in its 17-year history today, in the final , Most trainers carefully sponge session of the annual meeting. I their colts down, brushing them. J. Walter Kennedy, 49-year-old, !ver| carefully. Tenney just turns mayor of Stamford, Conn., and 'a water hose on Candy Spots and former NBA wess chief, is in line lets it go at that. jfor the post. gang up on the U.S.’ lone 200-. I meter finalist, Lt. OUan Cassell !of Ft. Sam Houston, Tex. the aOO^meter run, also fancied an American forte. Canada’s Don Bertoia and Sig Ohlemann presumably to annouce Kennedy’s appointment as successor to the 73-year-old Maurice Podoloff, the only chief the pro league has had since its 1946 founding. opening raimAG’S NEWEST 600DYEAR TIRE DISTRIBUTOR ^ CITYTIRE 508 N. Peny Si., Pontiac Phone FE 8-0900 10 BIG DAYS FREE DOOR PRIZE Transistor Radio FREf PAIR OF GOODYEAR TIRES TO FIT BUY NOW ~ MY UTER - USE OUR BUDGET PUN . TERMS AS LOW AS SUS PER WEEK SERVICE SmULS $095 99‘ 77« FRONT END ALIGNMENT WHEEL BALANCE RRAKE ADJUSTMENT Us« Our Budget Plan OMunra ISD TIRES S Inly 2 88 KomoFinLisLEn m THESE TIRES Brand new 3-T Nylon TIRES *‘*HJFSYN • Oendy—r*8 grent ecewowiy Hre, the Nylon All-Woathor $ 8 U 13 S.70I1I 7.SOxM.e-70ltS 7.S0k14,C70i1S Tubo-Typo Black- Tubalaaa BlackwalL WhitawaNtobolaM. «aR. Phia lax anO Plua tax and your Plut tax and your your racappabla racappabia lira. racappaWa Wra. I OPENING TIRE SPECIALSHI! 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NEW TORE - Art B.Tinio. Dak. |J.rgi^Hxrkuu.^ Chl^o< ^CU Archie Moore Scores 298 Monroe Mopre, Sr., had an opportunity, Monday night to see another one of his bowling sons in a notable accomplishment. Archie Moorp in the Shdby Lanes Senior House League posted 11 look mighty tough for Ernie Dot- straight strikes before leaving AU the Yank pair of balding tor a 298. Pete Me Ardle, Ireland-bom New! His game and 661 series help^ Ywker,. aixL Jbhn Gutknecht.ithe last place house team take Chapel Hill, N.C., has to^beat to:three of four points on the final the. 10,000:ineter grind In Argen- league night. Archie also has the Una’s great Osvaldo Suarez, seek- circuit’s high series ftx- the sea-ing his third successive Pan-AM I son, a 695. REBUILT f^ENGINESa 3 LOW PRICES • EUSV TER! Tto■ MT■BIWtlftBIW HMiUMUIVIto' VhAIVbWIIjBRPID OUR SFEOAITY Eddie MUei. SextUe; Jer-' Tj oDuui. Pumxn: Hike McCM. HIxml: Dxre ErtcUon. Marquette: Bill Small, nit-: will: Renie Herding. Detroit Eastern -ulgb tchooT: Irx Hxrge. New Mexico. -■ CWCINNATT — Tom Tbxcker. Cinetn-vxll (terrltorlxl choice): second round choice traded to Los Angeles; Jimmy luyf. naanx: Een charnon. coiomao: ■Mack Herndon. Bradley: Jim McCormack. — Motor Exchonge — 401 S. Snioaw St. FE 3-743S ■ 8T. LOUIS - Jerry Ward. Beaton Col-9ege: Lcland Mitchell. Mississippi Stale Bill Krlston.. Valparaiso (trade from Boston). BOl Burwell. Ullnols: Waite Bellamy. riorida AAM: Tony Yales. Ctn- • SYRACUSE - Tom ..................... ■Herschel West, Oramblln: Jerry Green-' _ span. Maryland: Bay Flynn. Providence: Tony Cerkvenlk. Arlioiia State:' Vince, Brewer, Iowa Stale: BIU Brown, Howard Payne College, Tex. LOS ANGELES -- Roger Strickland. 1 Jacksodvine; Jim Ring.-Tulsa (trade from Cincinnati): Mel Gibson. West Carolina: Lyle Barger. Houston: Layton Johns, Auburn: Larry Jones, Toledo: Warren SsJ-Weatmmsler College: Gordie Martin. rTTTmmTTTfTmTmTmTrmrirrmTnnaj Insured Heasurel : BOATING pleasure insured with our “broad coverage, dependable and low cost policy”... relax with full protection. Policies that offer all risk, physical damage protection to your boat, motor, trailer and miscellaneous boating equipment. Liability and medical 'eoverage may be in* IMLLEi agency Serving Oeklend Ceenty OmtM Teen FE 5-8172 Thif is a qupition we hear maijy timet every day, aitd the great majority of people who ask us are delighted with our answer. If you wont top allowance and the IdMrest finance rotes when you buy a new car you should CHECK AND COMPARE our deal before you buy! THE BIG VOLUME FORD DEALER GIVES THE BESJ 0|AL [l. 7'!i .t- THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEPyESDAY, MAY 1, m3 D—8 Kim ' Tournament acUvity continues to grab much of the bowling attention currently: but the Pontiac Traveling Claisic’i first winter slate ended in grand style Sunday at Wonderland Lanes. The rolkrff for the Frank Jen-ninj(a Trophy saw Huron Bowl taka the prized traveling award away from the first owner, West-side Lanes, with two straight 1 Il-U and 11-13 victories with the second one foiir ■ Jr., bad ta raBy In last three frames against Ban ta give the winners a He doaed out with five strikes neir iiandicap total of '3,213 was 26 pins ahead of the Patterns and Tools team from the Nite Owls circuit ......- ___________ The winners received individ-nal trophies and possession d the Werner Rotathig Trophy. Leading the Rockets’ attack was Warren Dick with 237M61. He hit If consecutive strikes in his 287 effort. The third-place CMC Q-edlt Union team’s M. S. Cherry had 239-21S-630, _ . I after trailing by 21 pins in theji.261. seventh to post the deciding match margin. Westside’s Stan Kurzman had knotted the score, 12-12, with a 247 game prior to the anchor match. ' Samardzija and Dick Childress were the big guns for Huron. The former had 11 points in the first match and Childress added eight to his first-match total of five to pace the sewnd contest. The Elks seventh, annual Mixed Doubles Tournament’s second weekend of competition saw the Saginaw pair Ann and E. J. Price ahead of Pontiac’s Ann WU-son-Leland Gutzke duo, l,30f to The third-through-sixth spots in the Standings are also occupied by Pdntiac’entries, presently. Waterford Townships’ Metro Club Spirit 62 will conclude Ht portion of the 14th annual Metropolitan Club of America Bowling Tournament this weekend at Huron Bowl. The first weekend leader in the Council Ups ^64 Minimums hr Olympics RIO DE JANEIRO. Brazil (API —Athletes' are going lo have to run faster, ' throw farther and jump higher to qualify for the 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo. The Council of the International Amateur Athletic Federations set tougher qaailifying standards Tuesday which included 15,feet, V/i inches for the pole vault' and 58 feet, 5 inches for the shot. Any nation may enter one ath-fcite in any event without having to meet apy standards. . i’. MO yordt. 1:4M, r>. 3:43.5: mile. 4:01.5. ri. 14.03: lU mllM, 30:30. ' run I York and Low Matot. T0B80ATW nORTS HOUSTON. Toi-fad Horrlnt. gSl“.r Tl“^----------------- ,________________________ NEW YORK moTd MtCtr. 131. Howl ponod to FrldsT. iWla. lorrlnt. M'A.Kdroir I. ( metort or 0 f GUIDING SPIRITS — Committee members from the Metropolitan Club Spirit 62 who are guiding the three-state bowling tournament now in progress at Huron Bowl are (L to R) Ernie Latimer, Clayton Soncrainte, Jim Schuster and Ken Squiers. Th^Jatter is holding the team trophy that will g« to the yvinning squad. The annual affair, making its first appearance in the Pontiac area, will conclude this weekend. 0 melora or 15 loot., 1 TOURNAMFNTW ;toree-stato tourney is-lhe“C«irer- TOURNAMENTS Firemen Team No. 1 with a The General Motors Truck and 3,18f handicap total None of the Coach Plant Bowling champion-Itownship fire fighters’five entries ship was determined Sunday at placed among the top ten teams. Lakeside Lanes with 13 teams ini Richard Watson, however, is the finals. The top squad in the upholding the local bowling honor five-man tournament was The | with fourth place currently in the Rockets of the CMC American singles division. He has 666 pins League. to his credit. Ohioan Tops at Hazel Park irf qfiNMMaew Peadoe JMRM FUanPt Dtt*. Simn Op—WtMayt<4;tl - Sat. M:M Traditionally its been the California. horses, or a California driver who’ve set the pace in early season racing at Hazel Raceway. But 28-year-old Joe Marsh Jr. .from Findlay, Ohio has become the leading driver at the current I meeting with a stable that for the 'most part was Jfained here in the middle west. Marsh now makes his home in Findlay and most Of his horses were trained through one of the toughest winters in midwest history. And yet he’s off to the fastest starts seen here flnce trurly Smart of Delaware, Ohio won everything in sight in 1953. Marsh started in harness racing m 1952 at Paihsville, Ohio with his father. Now he has public stable of almost 50 horses and can jx>int to two minute .drives behind Vicki s Jet, Butch' Harmony. The Happy Wanderer and black Flash. the way across the finish line 23 times in the first 114 nights of racing. In 53 start/he’s been in the money 13 other* trips with 8 seconds and 5 thirds. He figures to keep right on win-and his big, healthy, stable Bobo Olson Scored TKO HONOLULU (AP) - Foi middleweight boxing champion ifives him an edge over most of cg,-! (Bobo) Olson scored an 8-the other drivers on the grounds, round tecWnical knockojut q.ver Tonight he will drive The HappyjSonny Ray in a scheduled 10-Trip in the second. Cedar Crest round fight Tuesday nighf. Liner'in ,the third. Chocolate So-' Olsort, Honolulu born boxer who da in the fourth and Careless won bis middleweight title 10 Hanover in the fifth. [years agO’ and then , lost it. Racing at Hazel Park contin- weighed 178. Ray, of Chicago, ues through Saturday, June 8. weighed 174. :>.'3 M. 5M y.rdi: 3:oi r hurdle*. U second*, imp, 1.70 meief* or S GRAND OPENING IPECUL [cID l-Yr: Warranty—All Parti Na Manry Dana . AVM AN STEREO A TV SALES DUST CATCHER? Luggage is a dust catcher if it just nli IfiSaM Put it to the use intended ... travel! And when it comes to travel the Auto Club does practically everything for you except packwur bags. From start to finish an Auto Club planned trip is a traveling delight. We would like to help plan a trip for you t^y! Stop in at your nearest Auto Club offiefe. Join Auto Club Membsrs And Friends On An ALOHA JET.SEA TOUR OF HAWAII Twn 1 S-Day licnrtta Tawri Jun* |.2I, anS Sapl. 7-21, 1VA3 fnjoy lha lun of frovaling la our 50th ilola on itioio oap*'*hf plonnad Aulo Club louri. for inlormolion ond loldori wriloi loa -------------.AaaMciutivaTDut satis_______________ $895, Juni Tour-$940, Sept. Tour llncluding Round Trip Jot Raio, Dolroit-Dolrolll AUTOMOBILE CLUB PONTIAC DIVISION 76 WILLIAMS STREET Fof In/ormerion and FeMart Wri4: Tha PjBPliac Ftait. Sox 70 10-10..SUN. 12-7 ABTiiiurT 0 '■ REEL or ROTARY? SAVE EXTRA 10.00 NOW ON aTORQ! Ymt oM town mmsw is werth *20 • Aetnew»ndgotanMlni|N).00 IdMIms of ago or condition. mor of oxponso and aggravation wftK tiwt old lawn mower. • Clip tiva coupon and bring in wNh your old mowar. Tba Toro Saif-Prepanad WhirMnd 21. Tha TbaToreSportlawn21.Thasolf-powerad atandard of axcallanca In rotary mowart. Cost, rtol mowar for truly mancurad lawns, without trada-tn or special $10.(X) allowance. Cost, without trade-in or special $10.00 $149.95. allowance, $149.95. •Tara 21" SparHawa Hi Cut 5 IU4a Medal wltli-aut trfade-in allowanct si 54.95. l>-4 JCHE POKTJAC PRESS. AVgpyESDAY, MAY 1, 1068 Early Fishennen Scored in Slate Trout Waters By DpN VOOEL Ontdoor Editor, PmUm Preti Like the early bird is always supposed to get the worm,^^ early fisherman got the trout in Northern Michigan last weekend— a couple of hours before 4awn to sunrise. This was the story on the East Branch of the AuGres, Bifler AuSable apd Mauistee Rivers and other streams. Those anglers who fished the holes first during the above men-, tioned hours, sinking worms or nightcrawlers«to the bottom, caught* trout, and large fish. too. , | ' Fishermen foflowing the early birdk after „sunrise found the pickings pretty slim, even for "frying pan" size. Paul Steeie, 1750 Eason St.. refuted, this “get out earTf and j ^beat the crowd" success story by joining the bevy of-anglers on the Rifle and catching an 11-inch brown late in the afternoon. ‘ j Steel was flanked by a half a dozen other fishermen when its mistake. _ _________________________ TmUm rrm> Pk«U FIRST ENTRY — Daniel J. Curry, 11,' of Union Lake proudly displays the'4'^-pound northern pike he caught white fishing off a pier Sunday at Union Lake. The pike is the first, entry in The Pontiac Press’ annual Big Fish Derby. ~He May Fish More Ralph Steen of Bloomfield Hills, who has a cabin near the Rifle above ^Ikirk related an incident that happened last fall. "We were bird hunting near a campsite on the river,” he said. "Up. pulled a crew from the Conservation Department. "They stuck an electrode in the water next to a log at the campsite and a 27-inch brown rolle^ out from under it. "It just goes to" prove that there still is big fish in the Rifle." NO PLANTERS IN STREAMS Several fishermen came up frith the same excuse for not catching trout. It is a time-worn one that mak^ the dedicated trout ftehermen want to get away from them in i hurry. “How can We catch trout whed they (Conservation Department) haven’t planted any yet?” Fortunately, this type of angler isn’t, around when the real lr«vt fiihing sttrtrlile^Miy.---------- After Large Catch Daniel J. Curry normally goesidown to the pier at the commu-fishing only once or twice a year, nity beach in the Peninsula Park This may, change after whatlsuMivision.— happened- to the li-year-^ Un-1 They baited ^ with a piece of ion Lake boy Sunday. worm and Daniel quickly hooked a fish that was almost to big Daniel and a friend made their first fishing trip of the year- for him to handle.-It was northern pike and it wasn’t about to ers or artificial nymphs. An angler has a better chance for a big fishing off the bank at Wild- this pond than he does on a large river, fowl Bay on Saginaw Bay. He Orion Shooter Scores ANN ARBOR i/P — Detroit Ed-!al rifle association at Ann Arbor ison riflemen dominati^ the I9thjhigh school last weekend—taking annual Junior Sectional Indoor top individual and team honors, nfte championships of the nation-] Grand Rapids representatives: —---------------------------------multiple win- ners in the two-day match which 'ended late yeslfei:(foy. I Edison's No. T ^m fired 1518 to take-first place »d topple defending champion Ann Arbor] Edison’s William WoHTam fired 382 out of a possible 460 to take first, followed by James tl^a of Sandusky, Ohio, and John Olendrof of Plymouth, de-. fending boys’ champ and run- , ner-up in national competition last year. Charles Breiv of Grand Rapids South IjHigh School, won in the jROTC class; Neal Vanderwer- . WHITE try their lu WATER — Two trout fishermen dt in the white water and large the data on the East, Branch of j \ ‘ * rtniiM Prm riiau Big Creek in Luzerne. White water often means trout, but the wer^’t hungry when ^ thu picture «9S taken Sunday ^temoon. iven of Lake Orion won in the sub-teen class, and Susan James of Mison took the girls’ crown. Teams entered by the Grand Rapids rifle and pistol club took, first iq the non-scholhstic and] sub-teen divisions, j More thim 160 young shooters I froip . Michigan and Ohio- tooki ipart in the match. - j Hathaway’s Dacroa'-Gollan Shirt Eads jha Day as it Bagaa: latpeceahly Finicky Hathaway wantetd a drip-dry shirt that would stand up tojhe rriost Witfing weather. Their cohsidered.choice is this crisp-as-a-lettuce-ledf blend of Dacron* polyester and fine cotton—cool; smcxith, sophisticated. You'll find it . / *______________________ at HHS in white, with o reguldr short-point or button-down collar; size? 14 to 17; at 6.95. 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Chelco uj:oiL. i Choice 99**. 89** fRESH LAKE SMELTS 21 ib FROZEN VUUES Specially Selected U.S. No;.l MAINr An Exctiknt All Purpoiie PotatQ for Baking, Boiling or French Frying 25 69 t At Their Very Best 8-$i*e Green Wv e» 29* mSH PINEAPPLE CELERY HEARTS ORANGE JUICE Vocuum Sealed Gloss CRAPETRUIT JUICE Breokfost Gold Pock dew Poseol 2 or 3 HearH Pjre Florida Breakfast Gold Q». BANQUET FROZEN CREAM PIES READY TO SERVE NO BAKING NEEDED BSB Pia DAIRY VALUES FOOD CLUB Mazola Com Oil Marsarine SealtesI Sour Craam Bays English Muffins Datlart Shells WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHAU OP Two 16-01. 6 Packs DOUBLE COLA Oeuein' ewirH SBar 4. S.lmrt0iie7evpw^ggy CREAM CHEESE ... BAKERY VAtUES HAMBURGER AND HOT DOC BUNS frk$t tffecthpo tfcroiME SoforUop, Aloy 4. Mfa roMnrt tAo rlfhf to TI«Uf cwRtitiai. GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOL.D BELL. GIFT STAMRS *1" J ..iv ‘ - 1 D S THE PONTIAC PJIESS> WEDNESDAY. MAY 1, J9W New Foods on Store Shelves JANET ODELL PmIIw Plrm Fm< Editor We>e bid «Q lorto new fted Mol In tor^ampling recently equire spaghet^ to frown green bMiii with almonds Really, git epegbetd is souare. R tt igi to tbrib^ you can sbt4te four sidea. It’s guRwoed to hold more Could Be Eaten as Dessert Keep wblie raisins on hand in a jooyered |ar to the refrigerator to "dress up”^ dlOes. Special Rice 1 cup brown iloe 2 or 3 tablespoons butter or mirDvine H to % cup white raisins (rinsed in hot waterapd (frained) ^ to H cup slivered tOKge^ blanched almonds according to pa^ge directwos. Toss hot rke with butter, rai^ and almonds. Makes 6 servings. result ipes and be noihd^. Tbe of four years of eKperimentiag, tt to first radi^ dMnge in aince Mkfts) Plflb brought U back ti using aD kinds of idioctdate and several kinds of oooonuL Have yw seen the whole peetoi peittoee la a m pound tnwpareat %H to tbo frewa of year fa- vorite .storo? IbeyYo to bog, HMsh, cream, 1^ or ' a roast Other new frozen potato products are cottage fried potatoes and hashed brown potatoes. NEW GRAVIES Two new gravy mixes have ppea^ to recent weeks- Onion Gratry Mix and Mushroom Gravy Mix win give you a variety to gravies. Both are easily and (giickly prepared. to cento to coin (no stamps) with your name and address t(M Bako-’s Favorites, Box 1335, Kankakee. ID. TUi summer yoaVv gotog to’ beabletobuyanicodteamix that contains tea, lemon and sngar, Ihe addRioa of tap wa-ter and ice ciAes will give yon a cooling drink to a hnrry. At this writing we have not yet tried the two new ceoUa mixes that came this week. They’re Mint-Fudge Brownies and Butter-sCotch Squares. Both make bar and iMto ^ be used for other interesting dessert ideas. HOFFMAN'S Pastp caswroles come to yon ln « i^kage, ready to be pre- psred in the oven or on top of the raage. These are Noodles Ihe next time you diop, ke^ your eyes open for some or all I of these new products. And kesp I hxAing, tf you don’t find them 1 the first time. id Cheddar. Ut your family decide the favorite. Want a new cookbook devoted to chocolate and coconut redpes? It’s fUO of yummy sounding rec- Try lemon CFeese Sauce to Dress Up Broccoli Asparagus Can Fill Eggplant epare an unusual, eolorfui and ever-so-edible family treat. Deep green broccoli, packed with vitamina mid low in calories, teams up ddiciously with meat, fish, dieese or poultry. Nutritionally, it’s a budi^t b^ everyone wiB enjoy. But don't overcook it Both its green c^r and jpod flav^ can be damaged^^y cooking too toi«. Fw 6 servings, wlect a medium size bunch of fresh tnvccoU (IH to 2 poiBids). Qit a small piece pff the hot- ^ j tom nf each stalk. Split staft , 1 bunch fresh broccoli, cooked lengthwise from the bottom right up to the buds into two or more sections. Tie staBcs together and set upright in the bottoih of a double boiler, ssLjtoe a sto(± pot if cookiiig for a largrfomily. Add about 1-inch of boiling water. Cook uncovered during the first half, then cover. Cook aaly aatfl crtop-tender, aboot If to U mimtes. Remember, desT evereaek. is only Ug catoiies per Unless on a reduciiig diet, you' can afford to dress it with i tenqiting sauce. Brseeali ea Toast 3 tablespoons butter or margarine 2 tableapoons flour Icupmiik. 2 egg yolks, beaten — 2 tablespoons fresh lenxHi juick; >/i to H Clip grafod Cheddar M teaspoon salt 6 slices toast 6 alioes crisp bacon or , f anchovy fillets IbK batter or margarine in Mend in flour and IH cups cooked aqMragus.cuto, and tipe 1 medium eggplant, split lengthwise ^ 2 tablespoons dtoppecTonion 1 small clove garlic*, minced 1 cup dwpped celery 2 tableqxions butter 1 cup diced cooked ham 1^ cupf small bread cubes ^ bup^ated dieiaa to teaspoon pepper Salt Scof^ insicte from eggplant and cut in 1-inch pieces, reserving shells. Cook eggplant pieces in boiling water until tender. Drain. Saute onion, garlic and celery in butter until tender and transparent. Add to eggplant: then add stir in milk. Cook mixtnre until > asparagus, ham, 1 cup bread medium thickness. Mix egg cubes and cheese. Pepper and yolks with lemon Jtoce; add to sauce along with grated cheese, salt and pepper. Arrange t Fill eg^Iant shells lightly ai)d I fresh brocboU top with remaining bread cubes. Tbee^^ -eMtstoii-hroccnli.on toast;jayfa' wilhjtempfc^e^ lBake_in^i®_ de® 'Iminufes or untfl golden brown. IScrves 4., sauce. Ganudi with strip of crl^ tt bacon or anchovy fillets. Wher6 You Will Find Exactly the Gift for Mother ... Just Check the Store Directory Listed Below. These Downtown Stores Offer Top Selections at Reasonable Prices! DOWNTOWN SHOPPING ADVANTA6ES ITS EASY... rrs CONVENIENT in FREE PARKING... When You Shop Dovmtovfiii . .t.rM MMNM y«« vehM. Plenty of Free Parking Loti for Your Shopping Convenience TW* «• abovt 6000 peuldnfl *poc*. In 4fN.SofifNnvSt. FIIEOR.PAIIU JEWaERS OfW.HumiSi; MaW «f dMia cm now FRK for dwppwt. Son* Wmvor eoMinwo fo bo oporotod eom* niootlolly and in tboco Iota a Modoit chaia# it Modo for parking. DwmSoim Pe* and Shop Iim. It cHf con- F0NT1AC teOSASS JEWaERY CO. aSliSoginawSt, lOBIEnESHOP 161(, Saginaw Sh TNEPONTUO MESS 48W.Hwmto. lo yoor paibhg claim citock pay oO or port of CLOORAR DRUQ CO. 72 N. Saginaw SI. We ATS ktrpy teie it heeaate weexaityeutoetmeieemunm ... md timiu for J2IH. PERSY, PORTIU Tlw Utoto Fatoly NIH Eaioir Bdbbm and the meats A prices teol FamiFrethl OVEN-READY Ducks 29£ EXTRA LEU YoamHl SEM-RSNELESS^ PORK RMSY LEAR SORAI-CURED Slab Bacon Mole or half^ HcDOMLDS Carnival Brand TceCreain LIMIT with II TEHDER STEER PM QP( Roast lb. Gmln-Fdd, Tender SlMr Beef I STEAKS Round or Sirloin U9tb Hoftoaifi fintot--Tiily HAMBURGER delight 3to99* '.’K Tender-Meaty beef m A SHORT lUla ribHu^ HALF QAL. Fanir Fresh STUDIN6 RIB ROAST Bth, 6th, Tth Bibs PAH-READY Pryors I Sgati-Jaiey CAUFORNIA SUMKIST LEAR-sncY-nnK BREAKFAST LINK Oranges FANCY Detieious or Melntosh APPLES 3 lb. 4AC bacDD SAUSAGE BUY NOW! . Grain-Fad SnER BEEF This Week Only BUY THE E-Z WAY NO MONEY DOWN No Interest or Carrying Charge* It Quarter Tti HINDS (LimttltWiHiatMoofiftf) Cut, Prooetsed and Otlhrered FREE! PARK FREE IN REAR HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc. ■rroii (MWIUAM ' anaiL division of Oakland sacking QUALITY MEATS AND POaDUCE AT WHQIESALE PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST. WE RESCaVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES Opart 9te 6 Dal»y~9 to 9 Friday FE 2-noo V *• ‘ \ THE tONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1. 1963 More Efficient Methods Bj NmI Adana Machines Can Improve Reading Ability By LESLIE J. NASON, ED. D. “*Whwr a student readm joidarl high sdiool he is faced with much haa ever There are tnon| texts to read, Mitside reading, and more booul the student findsj , he wants to read. By the stude should have ■gained the skilli *ind knovdedge of DR. NASON wnrdii wh»..|. must precede a sp^-up in rea^ ing. Many are ready and anxious for the next move, and I often] get requests from this group, *‘Hbw can I speed iq> my read-j Ing?” Well, controlled . reading ma-j chines now offo* an opportunity uu to develop more efficient methods ly; of reading. ThesOj- machines contnd only the span the eye sees at one time, but the speed at wliich the eye moves from one group of words to anodier. IWy force the stadeat to dis-card kis eU, toefficieat habMs. He has to grasp aa idea, not separate words. Once he is shaken loose from old habits, he am develop his own speed and, without the machine, can vary Ue eye-span to catdi a word, a phrase, a dause, sometimes a whole sentence. WWW Lack of skill in'reading usually cannot be blamed on the reader’s brain. The brain can handle the material efficiently when bits of informa^on are sent to it p If the reader feeds to 1 word word ’ the to words a minute. The brain a then piece together these wi JACOBY ON BRIDGE 4KQJS toAaa ♦ Q» ____ «K9fS wmn BABT dktTd AUM towa srts ♦ AJII ♦1049 «A91 toKQTlei- „ ♦ Ktaa «Nom Opening kod-toJ six card suit, three spades for his partnery first or second roimd control of every suit and a hand that looks decidedly slammisb. Even though South has a void, a Bladcwood four no-trump seems in order. If North shows three aces. South can think about s^-en. H North sbowatwo aces South can afford a six ^id. Actually, IfjDrth„will show just one ace, but South can still bid six. If North’s one ace turns out to be clubs. South will be set but that ia unlikely and you don’t win The brain's task of assembling information is easier if it starts from ideas rather than single ' Reading compreiiension thus improva M well as readr ing q)e^. SMdune h^-dent make the transition to more efficient reading and gets started in a pattern he can develop the rest of his life. But the machine alone cannot produce -the kind of reading ntost needed by the student. PUTTING SKILL TO WORK Ihe student must practice to make this 'new skill automatic. Then he can turn his attention other operations necessary for good study-reading; First, he shouM have in mind what he expects to find out be-fore he re^- textbook see-( A glance at toe table of contents, chapter headings and summaries b a help in-deter- Ining thi« ) _____________ Next, he stud^ a/he rea^ -*lfe searches out the meaning while he reads. He sto{M at the end of each section to recite back what he has learned. Finally, he reviews to locate important detaib he may have missed while gathering the. overall ideas. . Machines can help studente gain skill in the medutnics 4reading. But 4he student himself must decide HOW he studies As JACOBY By OSWALD JACOBY There are many ways for. North and South to bid their cards, but when thb hand was played in a New Jersey duplicate no one reached the lay down slam hearts. In fact those pairs who I played hearts g rather than no-trump received ^ good scores for' -making^^r Ito one “ tricks in no-trump. Also, six spades makes as easily as six hearts, but no one even played spades. I can find nothing wrong with the opening heart bid, the jump response <»• two spades and the rebid'to three hearts. I also can’t find much wrong with North’s bid of four hearts. He has jumped to show 17 or 18 poinb and that b what he has. Furthermore, if Noth does decide on some further strong bid what shoidd it be? On the other band. It seems to me that South can find a bid above four hearts. He only has 12 ^strologicai; ' Anias (iiff /M to i r Um* and MOMKT 1 ‘“taSSot (Apr. » to Utr W': T»ki»i • chante today on bcUeto prtoelplM.' Your IntulUon bictily toned. Y«i «r< ' able to ^die. perceiTa. get at TRUST YOOMELPI Seeb ■ Ing and APPRECIATION. OEMINI (May 21 to June ID; frank. Ask for and roeclye facta. Atl to details .regarding securlto. Q borne, domeanc situation.- sTey Is riving at TRUTH, teava **— “ coating to otberst CANCER (lime 21 to July ID: to change, express ■ opUi*— —‘.■— gard for conaequencea ___________ lighted. Itoy U to aptcc actions actions with HUMOR. Don't taka or yourself...*— —-———' tEO (Julj_______—. ... _ Atlons about health, flnanees. ward loved ones jOa you would h-------- net toward you. II neeessary. accept taconraidmce In order to pto acroaa *^ROO (Aui 22 to Sept. 21): new Ideas, ^peelall^i libra <8ept. 23 to Oct ar: impor-toat that you have privacy. Necessaiw that you feel free to change your mind, to move about. Make domestic adjust- fkel need for grea don't overdo It. welcome. But don't -------------------- *SAOnTA^jfful“(Ndv — — pared for aui JtyV change I ORDERS. Be ready t ORDERS. 1._________________________- etafldence. You CAN Impreaa supetlory __________ce posttic CAPRICORN iDe. --------------------- Keep eye on "future." Take uverall flew. Concentrate on POTEflTlAL. Pine Iw writing, publishing, advertising. Also I good for -iteLPlNO younger persona iDVUtl CORl AQUARIUS (Jan. 11 to Feb. Be definite Make up your ailod: THEN take direct acOoo. .-Pine tor getting, Ouinces In order. Check budget with Sislaeaa and marlUl partner. »-Ik betoa clear the ali. „ PIBOTS rPeb. It to Mar. 2#i. .— la pattence, caution. Don't permit ol^rs ttalk you Into impuUl-- —— e print, po not coi dxtravagant actions. 1 j -OBMEBAL -ANDtpClfil Much Bkitv due wrllert, actors — men m nigh placer tafluentlal m, forming policy. (CepyrtgikI itai , THE PONTIACTPlBtESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 1968 ■ ■'■f' MARKEIL The foUowtaig are top pricep covering sales, of locally grown produca by growers and s^ by then ta wholesale package Quotations are furnished by Detroit Bureau of Markets, a noon Monday.. Producs Industriois Lead Morf Recoups in Active Trade NEW YORK tAPWlndustrials led the way to a continued stock market recovery early this afternoon in active trading. Steels, motors, chemicals, airlines, and nonferfous metals were ■ *•**! Gains of key stocks were tWily fractiohal. some streU^ing to The market was dp from the itart. The general a^ance was moderater witk soft spots scattered here and there. RAISED DIVIDENDS IS i point or so. The list was continuing-its re-*?j»;Wvery*of yesterday which fol-»£jJilowed two sessions of irregular ■ ^jdecline. ? The' rtsf iras aecempanied by the recent increase > g:in steel prices have led to higher M‘'prices in may related products and that new orders received by manufacturers in March rose to a Wall Street sentimeiH was fiu^ ther enlivened by some raised dividends, including those of Federal-Mogui-Bowef Bearings, which gained more than a point, and General- which added a fraction. ■ Chrysler, up more thap a point, resumed its pacemaking role among the auto stocks. Ford. Gen- eral Motors and American Motors leaned to the upside^ Prices adivanced in moderate trading on the American Stock Ezclii^. Syntex end tO'Okiep Copper gained about 2 *apiece. General Plywood and Araco Industries added about a point each Krattei' teu more than a point. Webb St Knapp was active but unchanged. Fraction^ gainers included Yale Express ‘A," Seebur Mohawk Airlines, Breeze Corp. and Atco Chemical. ____________ In conxMWte heading on the New York Stock Exchange most gains and losses were in small fractions. Says Air Force Vague on TFX Want Sfricf^r Laws at Stock Exchanges 'Couldn't Compart Estimates of Cost' WASfflNGTON (UPO ~ Comptroller General Joseph Campbell saijt today that Air Force < AP^atlaesk News Analyst NEW YORK-Stock and tradera-especially those on the over-the-counter market>-are under notice that the federal policing agency wants 'Stricter laws as well as self-reforms. Four weeks ago Wall Street figures were so vague “they could not be used as a basis for comparing" the Boeing Co. and General Dynamics Corp. proposals for the TFX warplane^ Poultry'and Eggs The New York Stock Bcchange He»vT tjrp* bnii 11; U|M ty rMftcri OTcr » Hm fry«ri 1-4 Ibt. whltM 1(-M; daekUi letter to Chairman John McClellan of the Senate Investr-gating subcommittee. McClellan's conlmittee iS investigating why the contract was awarded by Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara to General Dynamics despite Air Force and Navy recommendations that it be given to Boeing. polled the exchanges dealer associations have been doing In recent months. But it wants some laws giving It power to do more policing of its own tb nudm sure there are no offenders against these self-policing meas- ___e they ftpn^ only D tiins- It thinks the public still may not be getting all the information it needs to protect itself when it buys securities, whether on an ex- first part of the Securities a.nd Exchange Commission's special stock mprket DAWSON and heaved a^ sigh of Ty lief. It wasn’t as critical as many had feared. The study had been born of a series of scXndals and the market crash of last May and June. - over the counter where a larger volume of stocks are traded. But now the SEC tells Congress RECOMMENDATIONS And the SEC still has more icommendations under study which it win report to the Congress by June 1. Targets are some of the abuses which the SEC decried April 3, when it submitted the ^irst part of its report. Then It went out of its Wliy to say that bad as these One of the liws the SEC wants would “prohibit false and misleading corporate publicity.” It contends that in the big bull market of 1961 the public sevwal times was mulcted by false or misteading corpwate releases sent the press. The National Association of Securities Dealers, an industry group regulated by the govern-menlTpSKgrthe over-the^unter nurket. But the federal agency feels it should have greater power over the association. The SEC can suspend trading for 10 days in a stock listed on the exchanges if it feels this is in the public interest. It would like the Mme power in the care of securities sold over the counter by dealers trading amongst themselves to establish a nnarket for stock. NegoftafiomBtm^ DrrRorr. nsy i phcm PiUJ per doMD St Oetratt byTlrit rt-cetmi (tnelodiac ua.i 1 io-M; brovne rnd^T'TartV *i-medlum a4-34M; MnaU K; elMckf mercentile rxebusfe k...— .... j.. wbolctale buytai prt... , •core AA »TVi; ft A 57H; w o 00-4; w C U'.i; care M B S7*a. M C S7. .Alpha PC .. EiKt ttcady; wholeaale buyl^ prices .10 imebanKed: 70 per cent or better Grade . ,4 i^erad 3 M a 77*.; dimes »'•; ebackt J4H. AmAlrUn i CaiCAOO POULTBT : i^**Brk '•>" CHICAGO. May 1 (A^ — Uee poiUtry AmBdPar rlMs* rutrol 1*0 5?\» Jjtf IStQi’pr l.ifu ui WH jlVi iSi MHiFltntkt (0 It IHk UJi Its tbdain«kl.e« LaatCba.f* 1 •« W 10 00 >»7'1 KS Via Ft. 110 (h«a.>ai(b U* LaitCBi. ---------- U «S JT* 4 S fSefi'S*! s?. s’4-sl: Pblla El 1.11 17 US UH US 4 S PblURdI lb It 40 Mvi — S Sl^a?Tftb** J Pertinent parts of Campbell’s letter fwcame available as he testified In a closed session of that committee. McNamara wrote McClellan April 5 that “at the secretarial levels, the cost estimates pre-by the Air Force were considered so unreliable’-’ they could not be used as a basis for judging. r . . . 14 jiSit lifi* »i6v; -t 1 S3? I* 8s; « 3 36 3fiH * ' ' 34 30H 30W 30'i + —R— 44*i t0>'4 4 '.I McClellan later asked Camp- Military leaders have testified that the Boeing proposal appeared to offer more airplane for less money. McNamara concluded othei^se. Campbell reported to McClel-lan: . _...X j “We have brehThfbnmed by the J} secretary of defense and in turn 33 67 M>4 ' »>4 30'« J HX gx 64 12s 11»» . . . ‘7 4i’*4 Hi. 41 - jj|by the secretary of the Air Force i^av 13H 131% .1 ^ I that: 34 36>4 3SVt 36»i ' J u 2^‘ Force cost ......... "* * ' standards represented an Air Force estimate of what it would cost to build a hypothetical airplane; •2' The cost standards pre-'®33^ I3X ^ ; I pared forihe TFX program could -kljiSu By 3-»o 17 fti;. 43‘k - ^iflot be used as a basis for Qom- gX - 'll paring the Boeing Co. and the i “ 'r «]* S’* ^ '.|Genera! Dynamics Corp. propos- 34 SX 67% ; als since the cost standards did " “ T X|not attempt to deal with the in- ’ herent differences in the two de-lil signs: I "And (3) the cost standards were not jntended urifl f»nii|d not ‘ll S*i measure the differ- T * * * ' ‘jence in cost between the pro- grams^proposed by the two con- i'tractors offering airplanes with Hopes Steel Won't Strike » Inviting * NEW YORK W - Roger M. Blough says he hopes the steel industry will get through expected wage contract negotiations this summer w|thout a strike. Blough, board chairman of U.S. bell to'have .oTernS discussions with union lead- examine the figures. Apprehension over a possible strike prompted a flood of orders from big steel users and sent production spiraling upward without interruption in thelast 13 weeks. Asked by a newsman about prospects, Blough said Tuesday: “I always hope there will be a satisfactory solution to both sides without any work stoppage. Informal union-industry talks have been proceeding through a joint human relations research committee meeting in Pittsburgh. SERIOUS BARGAINING Blough made it clear he thinks they can blossom into serious bargaining with no* formal notice of a 1962 wage contract rMpening with the basic S^ industry. ilust before the news eoltfe^ ence, U.S. Steel disclosed that Jan-uary-March profits were the lowest for the first qusrter of any year since 1648. They amounted to 129,918,774, or 44 cents a share of common stock agaln|t^55,808,436 or share i in the comparable 1962 period. ____________ Tbfr yield^M A^eenta as short w covering “Big Steel’s" regular quarterly dividend despite a reduction of the payment to 50 cents from 75 cents a share last October. Of major steel concerns, only! BY ROGER E. SPEAR Qi “My wife and I are each 50 years of age and have been working for the last 25 years. Our savings total approximately $60,000 invested in other than stocks and bonds at 4‘i retirement in Florida and the purchase of a modest home for $10,000. With the balance, do you feel we could invest safely to produce an income of $3,000 annually to live on? We will not receive Social Security for 12 years.” E. j. P; A) Let me congratulate you on Ings o( Bethlehem Steel Co., the! 7^“ V"" "ihumum hvmj No, 2 producer, plummeted 50 per I needs, the funds available after Business Notes your purchase must produce 6 per (cent. Under todSy’s market conditions, it is impossible to earn (this on your money with a rea- degESR,Mjiif£^.ia.eitfaer...— _ _ John Berqi ________________________ as provided for in that agreement. Oakland University’s 1963 gradu- bonds or stocks. The industrialist said he feelsjating class, has accepted a sales I would suggest that if your recent price rises 6n certain products will have little effed on the bargaining outcome. “This price change alone isn’t going to do what is necessary to correct the problems of the steel industry." Blough said. “I thinki the union understands this.’’ United Steelworkers President! David J. McDonald said in Pitts-1 burgh no decision has been made bpfcaliy different ^grneefTng'bn whether to redpen contracts| design and development prdb- position with the health so permits that you work. Lincoln -Mercury a few years longer to build up Division of Fotd'more of a cushion «f safety. If M^otor Co. in this does not appeal to you, you Denver, Colo, j could draw modestly on your cap-^ Berquist, an ital each year, to cover the gap fJLj honor graduatofbetween income a n d living ex-hk**«maiorina in busi- penses until you both become eligible for Social Security. tittle Change Noted on Grain Exchange CHICAGO i API - The grain futures market showed little Senate Stops GOP Attempt to Cut Funds I ,ho»ed IHlte| wymNCTON lAPI-^ camlid«te. .nd I mlvi;,. n®*-" from WaynTTwandi' would hold Dre««r Indua Everett K. Garrison, vice president of the Pontiac State Bank, will attend the spring nieeting of Group Ten of the Michigan Bank- attempt to chop $200 millioi:i out of President Kennedy’s $450 million job-msklng accelerated public works program. The vote was 66 to 26. Sen, Everett M. Dirksen. R-Ill the GOP leader, protested in vain he board of trade after slight declines in soybeans were recov-ered. ,, Transactions were slow and mixed with commercial business 'described as very light all around. Qlleriiigs were a liltlF more jatjon. already approved bv' the liberal in May wheat after ad- House after a floor fight ^ril 10. vancos of about four cents over | ‘ jf jhis is the way to get the the past two days. country moving, we are' moving Dealers said demand also had!*" the wrong direcUon," Dirksen slackened somewhat, suggesting told the Senate, urgent short covering may have | FURTHER MOVES , been accomplished for the pres- said he foresaw further moves ahead to authorize addi- yne,,Oakland!* , and Macomb Counties, in Lansing! tries, nert Tuesday. j Universal Match, U.S Garriaon is in charge ^—tionalmllliohs for jbb^giving projects tinder pressure from local communities. Openlnt; as a P 0 h t i a c| Q) “I have oSraed Sunray Oil ' BERQUIST Press carrier, for 25 years and have a $3,000 and in 1955 received an award profit. I also om Universal for outstanding service to his pa-' Match, U.S. ^rax and Chemi- trons. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Hilding A. Berquist of 6090 Jonquil. cal. Dresser Corp.,. and Copeland Refrigerator. Jf ' I sold these latter issues I would have a $3,000 loss. Should all issues be sold so as to break eveii and then buy General Motors?" W. G.'A. AI Sunray is a-logical merger Borax fnr th. Chemical, and Copeland Re rangements for the.program. frigerator have proven disap- rijtr Tv,.ni, t n .; i |P®*"ti"8 actors rharketwise, and GMC Truck & Coach Division!^ gjjyjgg j truck sales, service and parts operation, in the West Coast area, it was announced today. The new facility will be equpped to provide fast and efficient service to truck operators, divisional general manager Cal^ vin J. Werner said. replacements and upgrade the quality of your holdings. Mr. Spear cannot answer all. lall personally but will answer all questions possible in his column. (Copyright 1963) Share," he said. ’OH I Southern Democrats joined with .BaMbc* ....j........... I 6.tN.ir;2.731 36 Dis Sr» Depoitu ttfMI hit ‘ ifioui'A Julf r I 76.173 615.066 01'DowCII WlltadrtuU fUcAl jrr 6 SMll 464 M6 30 Total dokt . ft07.ll7.ft3.4M64iduPonl . 14'4 - SiMKnfi! 1113 1 I»'. * ‘i NTC^nt »f . fj:* JNVChl SiT ■ 1 ,n!________ ..............» — 3.30* U 464* 60% NSttP« 1 36 4 36’, r-- . i’!Xl ! 10 64*’ i , 341% 4 % fifOTwieh 'u* ' !»’ 41% ! ^W-JONEt KOOK A4ABAOE* ^ - - --16 il ■. Ohio Cd 1,76 13 90% 4I>'4 60% .’ on:* oi: ,73 i7 34% 3i% 34'. • . lOlcOE ^4 14 1300 »* 06 66 'Oiir M6«h 1 101 30% SO . 13% .• Oprllk* iOb 3 10*; 16% 16% -QlliElev u»q 34 ‘w’ SutM*r m ^1 Si6>0M;EU GxWF»p 130 H 51% 39 F*f OAE I 46 31% 33'. -------- 60* J21 I3*% 16% r.60 ~ ik 64<^> 35', TO.’ —6? T. ^%-'.| • BtoUrti ir*iu Pd 3 13*, ’3-. l}', <4! Stk. (f p*». BToitbii 1» 36 .15% 34>. 33 - .iNffdaklc ‘ K* ■ I FacTAT 8“ ....... ilptl* FanAAIr Ml tie-39% »i. J6», • iFaramPltt 3 7 37% «% 5% , ■FarkeD 1 333 30*,. 30% 30% . ’ FaabCoal JO » 34% 34 —' _____t»l’'»* Chanif 6 iRht ye»r f Prv twlTfi. — fKtttnRtfd ewn' .Afo ----- -----------ir»0 dr paid alter ttoek jUJ dividend or •pill UU. k-Decl»red or «*kl Urn year, an aeculBUlallte Issue wit .j'"’ L®* idirldendi Hi arrtsra. p-Faid Uito Dear.-'divideiMl.ainmad. dciarrad' or no aetlott " i taken al l*»t dirldend' maetlno. , r-iDe-; dared or paid. In 1963 pliu ttock dlvi-Jdend. t Paid In il.oelt dutmo i*** eawnaled e**n —■— — — — «i dutrtbullon 4 ll^ their party colleagues from the i|»‘-North 6nd West to reject the * amendment, offered by Sens. Leverett Saltonstall, R-Mass.^ and Milton R. Young, R-N.D, It was the flrst major vote on a $1.4 billion supplemental appro-priaUon bill in which the |4M mflifon public works money -is included. News in BFief Susan Sutherland, 2303 Old Thrift .Shop open every Fri- Salem, Waterford Tjjwnship, bid police yesterday that her billfold (»ntaining miscellaneous papers pnd $5.75 in cash wag stoleii at Airway Lanes, 4825- Highland Road. . .... „„ American Stock Exch. 5"^ *64t»ld»nd or?fimrrt afwr drcimal arrjt^hU^ 1 w5f* ft.t tdi s ».f) H t lol.i m M.f 64 ' ‘.i 66 1 00.4 64.1 r-tk Dill.', . B*4» ^*0-l»afrd *M# _F_ FarkeD 1 e*.. — • .439 6-17 0.16 —-r-f- 'FeabCoal .76 6 34% 34 34>4 , ' .09 S-10 M>«tr Ca kd* 46 16% 39% 36 , 1Fannad 1 ioa 13 66% 40, ^ . > IBaCLAE - . . Pair at rat 10 0*, •% 6*. •, 1% Fann.fl .06* , U jf .06 - 90/ %17 #aoat**l 00 61 10**, 1*% «% ■ *4 FaFarW 136 if , 111* 13^. 33'. .16 0 Ti7 til r*dd Odhi I ' 7 ll'i.'jj'. li'a - iaiffcl*!- PlAM •?!*??. ' . 30 a 6110 6-llFarta. 160 . 3 IV. . *.!F* RB » 1}% 14'* 15% . '' -'i-'-,);-'. .-.'v' cld -Callad -dMftM. r-_________________ nd and tale* m lull dMribu- o. «r--Bx rlfhu. iw-W«hcmt war-oil ww-wWi watrant* wd—Whan dla- ir-r---krl-Wbaii Uawd. Sd-Kert 0*n Ofjfal 1»IW irORK. klair 1 (AFi-Am»rlc*il al II Pw 4,.. 30 Kalsar tndv [1i*^ >1 bankruptaf i Maad J...„ . 33% Mid-W B 43 Mohawk Altl 4*k I« Zlnt No^TTMlIk ■ tttfS Hip lj;.3 101 0 86 1 60.3 "ll.l IS^ ll fi II Bill aid 101.0 '66 1 0o!4 Mi St If 01;3 lOl l 661 60.3 iS.I DOW nmn x r.tt. AvaaAOto '36 IhdUI. 731 36 up set ,'10 RatU 164 36 UP 0 40 11000 UB6hMf' -,06 up 0*' ^5,60 day 10 to 3. St. Andrews Church, Hatchery Rd. —Adv. Rummage sale, St. Mary’s Episcopal Church, Joslyn ’ and Grwnshield Rds. Fri. May 3rd. 10 a m. to 8 p.m. Sat. May 4th. A $15 haartaB ^ove asraed -by lO. s m. to noon. Donald Vachon, 3725 Percy King,! “ -Adv. Waterford Township, was report- _ ,ed stolen yesterday, L Rummage Sale Friday ^ May 3, CAI Bidg. 5640 Williams Rummage Sale, Grace Ln-' Lake Rd. 9-1.. theran Church, South Genesee. — Adv. • Friday 9A, Saturday 9-12.>-Adv Rwaiiiage sals FrMayrhhy 2. 10-7, Sat.- A-ll. Presbyterian Church, Hurtn St. > —Adv^ Rummage Sale at Christ Temple Church. 539 Paddock iSt., May land 4, 94:30. d liazaar sale; May 8 And; 4 New Trojecl Cen- ' ter, Branch St. . —Ady. • /I ,li'. I il4 11'.',:.' ^:''')' Garage Rummage Sale, May 2. 3, 4. 10 to 5. Kirkwood Sub. 5566 Siiuers Lane, otfw. Quarton Rd. THE PONTIAC BREgS, WEDNESDAY, MAY T, 1063 ' Spring Cleaning Pontiac Press Clarified Ads WIN Bring You BIG RESULT With summer vacation coming to your home soon, you will probably be able to use some extra cash. Yourbest solution is to SELL that old set of Golf Clubs ... Shotgun ... Baby Crib . •. Piano ... Hunting Clothes .. • Toys, with a Pontiac Press Classified Ad Today! NOW-2JlJI^ FOR6DA^ CofIt Only Day dulFE 2-8181 The Pontiac Press 1- ■ 'X- - ClassifK^ '■jU—M THE PONTIAC PRESS. ^VEPNESPAY, MAV i> 1063 Navy Continues Thresher Probe Revolution Costs Dqrk Shadow i'-. Buenos Aires: Cynical, Disillusionecl (BDlfbR’S NOTE — Phil i ture one of the most highly de-' that neither, the military norlAnd yet in a ^nse, it is as mis>|give the Peronistas to 40 pfcr Newsom has just completed a Iveloped oh the conUnent. Democratic processes can pro-leading as a Hoflywopd set. - cent of the vote. .................................... ■ ................ * * * ♦ V . Aiitad it all js ample evidence TMttaltt *0*4 PORTSMOUTH. N.H. (DW-A naval court ol inquiry toctey continued its investigation of the I 2i.000 • mile assignment in ..■tinlUng^ot--tfar-sjilm.ajLiJial .te ‘Riresher with 120 men aboard.! the third of five dispatches) . tat a scheduled test dive of the! By PHIL NEWSOM • j* .ri ♦ni***'^ **■“ wiuw* aMu»{| bathvscaph Trieste was piwt- U*** Fareiga News Analyst D. Peron and whose end is not skyward and remain bare, unfin-iwith mqre than 00 per cent of the poneif because of unfavorable' BUENOS AIRES. Argentina - yet in sight. lea condittons. This is a citj-that may W SbsSto^?^^^ ' nullified the returns. But Argentina is in the throes,vide their salvation, ^.dutnui .which began I ly eight years ago with the over-1 = throw of the dictatorship of Juan Death Notices SSTiiw^no- irvlot wlU b« _ . , , . that all indeed is not well. There: allowed to run:for office Was in| This is one of the trajjedies of|g^ buildings which startjMafch 1982, and they wound upj lie Navy said the to a beautiful and sophisUcated The image of Peron sUll casts ..... «l?n iFSEBB MTviM •lU fc» h>ld . mniMr --Mw 1 •« 1;K p.B, M th« Run-loao FluMnl Hogi# wltti IJjWr WlllUm Lt1» offlelp^f, taler- ^ ment in Putt Mtlltark Cemt-lery. Mi'. Cbember* will Me In stele --- ‘ I 'the Huntoon PiaiTrel C0 tor HI feet, win be ; have foueht. nenlinn t» finHe nhvcu-nl eyni-wc.! Riismnc Airoc ■ Ivii I LIVE IN RUINS resckeduled as soon j have fought, P®»- I The waiting for • a victor has' ■tte blimp-shaped Tr i e s te» "^« •*** c>-nical whiaivthe Navy, hopes will be,®"^^ d^llusioned^ —able to-photo^ph the huH (Thresher, made a shallow As Argentina has struggled in a long, aarK snaauw across AF- , o KiiiMina Innsr Cin/^- f oigNJinus® aa«0 lai gehtina. It finds physical expresrl Buenos Aires, lying along the beduled for destruction but with “nf|j>W*ed revo, — ..:ii' i.—j ni-i- u— »« 1 scneouieu lor oesiTucuon oui wiui gbe has had fouf govern- ; for it. •foot dive yesterday near a dock . lat Boston ^bor. Its two^mani “ the capital of •crew desa^ the test . as “satisfactory:” The T^te, shipped hefTfrem^^,^^’ the weA Coast, will be used to, photograidi and inspect the Thresher if search vessels can* pinpoint the Watery grave of the | sub some. 220 miles east of Cape Cod. ! Sion in a bitterly anti-Peron miU-i broad river f^te has an endur- o,* job only half done. A doien *»rv which neither rules nor per- mg beauty. And ^ first (mpres-L^ ^ Sion « oL w^^^ nues, scarcelj; ^ stpne’i-throw others to rule. finds expression in two a leader bat given no oiie la re- I fom, left in a political varonm from which ttay now plot kb retnn either by bnlleb or the And, as Argentina’s economy stagnates, there* is among her 21 at play in gr^n parks. In the evening strollers, fill the shop-lined Florida Boulevard from cnrb to curb. In the sidewnik cnfes, couples sip ver- tina’s White House. There u the expression of deep cynicism from among the people. Prom the hotel doorman who mouth or strong Mack coffee, uses a rude Spanish expression to describe a revolution as only _ It is a picture of well-being and . I rich and her industrial struc- million people a growing doubt of a people at peace with Army or ments. Two w^ [[Septemb^ and early last month (April) two attempb by military factions to force the resignation of Provisional President Jose Maria Guido failed. Crises short of revolt are nimi-bere^by the dozen. Over each has<4Jren the shadow of Peronism. NtIUS. WMnn. — __________jl D«ni«r. rncT HulL Mri. Orrtmdt Sliirn. Lctand and Donald Owra^en: dear alotor of VUllam. Mart. Ar- red bT ST traDde trandehlldraa i __________f-randchlldron. WiMral lorrlci arm b* bald miar. Mar ..................■Hdar, ; cwlotMT. MTi. OToraatajn wUl no In (lala al ttaa C. F. Sberman FunfraVRoBO. KRUEOER, arranaemoiu are pendtat -at me Bparke-Orifnn Funeral Home. The famllv would app———-. rial contnbttttons —„ aTiffin Funeral Tfome, donated to MicULLODOH APRIL 8S, JM3. Ownership of stcidu is increas-: ing. One of every sbe AmeHcansj la-a ateddwlder today-comparedj with Ota in 16 in 19S2. Deoffis in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas Air Force. And from the house^e who puts off her shopping until noon “because by then the revolution may be over.” It comes also from the 15,000 “j^n BurtJlte. 714 N Main. Roebeeter: aae M; WrTived by one granddaushter. Funeral ar-rangementa are pending al Hun- RUDOLPH BENTFIELO FDBLIC OALU luibier 8 w "oJSr ien!f*-n*JbS Service for Rudolph Bentfleld, '••■UFT, Will ba aoid -* —----------' - ------- - - *. Ulna Mile . IDeblratt. That addreae iaV^J h?a^ctS*'P ™- tomorrow in Donelson-Johns 'With Boston Store Greene. .The co - owner, purchased a store in Milan in 19^. ROTicBOFBAL* White CTiwel Memorial Ceme-, d will lell at public auction I, “ . ' htgbeat bidder, a,, ISM Atr-ltery. rl Mobile Home %crlel No I am. on Mag 7. IM] at ..... Mr Bentfieid died yesterday morning after an illness of two F&AM wheresta h«l-served as Mrs. fTorence ifull of Mt. Mor- past master. He also belonged Pontiac CQmmandery and was JuwcBlIb Dlrteton. to the matter of the petition eon-eemtng Jetfreg MUee. minor. Cauie Ho. To 'jctele Mllee. tather ol child. ’ ..WoTker’e report hartng b Exchange Club, Mr. Rice was a member of Pontiac Lodge No. 21 to leave their country and move ville. Burial will follow in Orton-to the United States, ville Cemetery. I ★ w a Mrs. Grovesteen died yester-; And It comes from such a one day after a five-day ilin^.jas Carlos Marchionda, a house SrilWas a member of the (3ood- painter, rich Grange. past president of Retail Merchants'Association. Surviving are a son Preston of Pontiac; a' daughter Mrs. Ever-ette Fairchild of Silver ^ings, Md.; three .grandchildren; two great • grandchildren; and a sis- thU Oanrt •Uegtag t— .... WbcregibouU of th* fathwr of Mid mic child niw unknown and. Mid child 1 Ttalatod a law of tbo StaW and t^ 1. remain uder t f UUa C..... W tBe poopta " oT IK DHii* Ol Michigan, Tou are berabj ' notlfltd that the bearing on lald petition wlU be bold nt tha Court Rohm. Oakland. Coufatr Serrloc Centar. In the etty of .PoBtlae lb hM County, on fho tih day of May A.D. lSf3. pt I;]b o'cloek In the attarnoon, and you ara bareby oommandM to appMr pcraonally *V*W«aB^wpnieUoal tp naako aanonal '-.terrloe hareof. thialiinnmoBa And notice bb atrred by publleatton of a copy ■u waak meeioua to lald b------------' *- mndchikliwn- three of .TT. a* . . rAfir* MfMKnArH nf PhofiniY Arir r Cuitromm f\Wtrs esmA M*. i chUdren; and a sister. Miss Marguerite Evans of Ann Arbor. MISS TIOLA KRUEGER Miss Viola “Krueger of 112 Prall Street a former teacher in died moraing after a Mg IQness. She Tbla Board U datlroui of aoltaittag Mda eoyoHng the leaalng, tor tho oxr'-alTC OM of parking motor rohlcloa by gnoMl^^^irtBej^tK formor MIm _M --- tUM^ o public alley. I, First Floor I upon an open eompetlt be held to Room W-li........... the West Admlnlstratlre Wing .. OakUnd County Court Rouse. 120* H. Telegraph Rd.. PontUc. Michigan, com-menetng prompUy at 3:00 p.m . B.B.T., Tueiday. May 1< 1001 Coplas of the, propoaed laaaO bgrea-ment, Bidding Procedures, etc., will be <-----..... i-.w pro,p*ttl»e lessee upon request. The blgbeit bid submitted shall receiTed with tbo undersundtng that aueh bid ahpll T- —..................... r nlectlOB by 75, of 882 Sterling wiU be at I p.m. Friday in the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home Wiffi Sfifialiitt. in Ottawa Park Cemetery-..*^ Mr. Evans died yestenjay arter , mRS. LOUIS SOVEY an illness of several Weeks. He rw._v „ -e >0^: uSm .Ziy gr^aao^^urrt. _ imorning after a long illness. Lawson, all of Pontiac; f Ai®**.®*^** Surviving are three daughters, ris, Mrs. Gertrude Strine of Union Lgke and Mrs. Hazel Danger of Paw Paw; two sons, Leland of Owendale and Donald of Holly; five brothers; 27 grandchildren, 53 great-grandchildren a'nd 10; great-great grandchildren. Marchionda is 40, has a wife and smAll daughter. He has a dark, thin face and an expressive mouth. Miss Krueger was a graduate of Iowa State Teacher’s College, Northwestern University and ARTHUR S. LYON OAIOAND TOV^SHIP -- Ar-^ur S. Lyon, 81, of 5230 Orion (Road, died early today after a lengthy illness. His body is at the Pixley Funeral Home, Rochester. Surviving are his wife Lucille; two sons, George and William, bodi of Rochester; three daughters, Mrs. Eugene Becker of Roy- rence Mesnard of Phoenix, Ariz.; a son Edward Stanaback of Pontiac; a stepdaughter Mrs. Mable Fisher of Lake Orion; a stepson, Lawrence Sovey of Pontiac; five grandchUdren; a great-grandchild; and a brother. pmding^ Sylvania, Ohio, and Mrs. Leon Whyte of Detroit. Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. MRS. JAMES GROVESTEEN iMtely one million in^Argentinaj eiks. Lodge No. 810. Also in- whoei her are under-employ^ or stalled were James T. " ‘ unemployed. Like many others,] Marchionda works two jobs tot make ends meet. RENNIE PACK KEEQO HARBOR-Service for Rennie Pack, 60, of 1653 Beech-croft, will be tomorrow in Nel- son^, mio, with bunarfoDow: ing. Mr, Pack died Monday after a CONTIUCT JOB He is on a contract job, which means that he pays for his own lint. Singe he styted the job, “prl — gone up 200 pesos, or about 11.25. To Marchionda this is impon tant money; he is one of approxi- RICE, APRIL > INSTALLED - Kenneth W. Sprung, of 3558 Lorena, Water- stalled as exalted ruler of the Benevolent Protective Order of ETCren luoroiqyi r brother of Mri. Oewf* F.eld*: also survlred by. Uir*a , fTand-chlldreo and two graal-jwd- N. Hill 8t.; ao n; baloTjd’ wlft -------of Mrs. Lawrcnca dear step-molber of 1 Mable Pliber Sovey; •‘— ebUdre^ 10 survived by five frand-and onb ireat-grandchild. arrangements — — ek Road; 1 of Mil- Home where Mrs. Bovey In state Thursday. '______ TOTH, APRIL ». l»8i 8TE ' Charles. 231 Robin Creek age M; beloved • Bruce*(HiSwl'i ^HamltarMr^ gefi (Jean) Tlempsleal . Mrs. ^ Patf iBarbara) Denis. Mre Rdward iShIrley) Story. Mre. Dale iHeleni Selswedel end Steven Lawrence Toth; dear brother of Mrs, Rol—* Belnelger, MM. Olen Rogers ;«nd«hfldren. Funeral eervlee will be held Thursday. May 3 .at 3 p.m. at AUen's Puneral »me, Laka Orion with Ray. C. ftank uiua..nftlelatlng. Interment In White oSSellKm^al CemeUiT Mr. Toth will lie in etaU at the - ---- Puneral Home. Card of Thanks 1 MSM. mn W. Huron,.. have too seen WHITE AWp black toy fo» terrier, near Auburn, F^e ^ center 8M.» Angara, to "C^lei." ChUdren ^orrted. iOiTrTT«NIAtORE .»CHRA^ — Bttt BOi pBppBf. femtle, rM Ql U)lP»n 0W^Ast^Ol tost'; ORAYI8H BLACK rwui.j» 'L08T: BLACK AND o- montta old terrier and Beagle In iba vicinity of Cooley Imke, Tliw-ai^. Anawere to Mr. Cork. 363- -LOBT: PaIB . OP UOHT ORET JSSSeBT&SSgSu • jSbAisto.' "»i Ar»T r'*rwwtk VITP . Uae Oeteopatine Hoepnai. UL i-mea LOBT: BLACK COCKER PUP. Vicinity of Orchard Lake, wearing an orange collar. Anewari to name tOBT: 3«AlMMi» WiaMAlM^ female, uswere lo. name KOKO. 771 3066. Reward, r . Yumao i KEEOO. AUTO MECHANICS WITH TTOU. KEEOO SALES AND SERVICE. KEEOO. lor Chevy and 0)da terase. SUlary and commlaslon, KATl^BURX CHEW- SALES .560 8. Main WorthTUla aluminum STORM .DOOR W-• etaller, call between 7-6 p.m. FE t-4667 _■ AUTO USED CAR BALEBMAN. rISoo' AH|^|8ERVICE. BARBER WANTED, SOUCY BAR- ber Shop. 693 Joelyn.__. ifEiERtf tFXNDYMAR. MORE then wages, i--------------- ________I MASTER ONLT..*l Airport Barber ST ~ —— BRAKES ftallers. muss nave and have tools., Lou of work. Call BOVi -ID TO - M —FOR' DIB- trlbutlon of band bDIk.' For T B C Food Company, after ichool bouri SMurdays. Must bara par-- 673-0093 between m _____________________ DI-STKlCt MANAGER -A JJm .iBturtACi organMetlon hqs an openlnp to bmouB ----------"*• ... ra..”oi_____________ District preaently — “ ->remlom ------- ......1 repllet strictly e .. TOrtle giving--------- le Frew Bos 55. He and his family live with a friend, he also is among Hie million and a half for whom there is no low-cost hoasing. Marchionda dislikes the government and while he says he is anti-Peron, he says he would vote for the Peronistas now—. Maybe they stole but at least lieyTIrt’twTrve.^ Central Michigan University. UNION LAKE' - Service for;parents. lengthy illness while visiting his sada— He. nods toward the Casa Ro- Surviving are ttaee sisters, 5^. Lydia Curtis of St. Paul, and kCss Core E. and Miss Amy E. Krueger, both of Pontiac. Mrs. James (Nelliq) Grovesteen, 83, of 2481 Union Lake Road, will be 2 p.m. Friday at the C- F. Sherman Funeral Home, Orton- GEORGEA.RICE George A. Rice, co-owner of the former Boston Store on South Saginaw, died yesterday in Pon-I tiac General Hospita|. He had fCHSophWins in Speech Contest j "Now they are the only ones Surviving are his wife Ella; who can eat.” tiro daughters, Faye and Linda, '* both at home; four sons, Milton,| Marchionda personifies the Sanford and Richard, all at home problem faced by the men who and James of Ohio;, his parents;|are trying to build 9 staUe Demo-a brother, Ralph of Pontiac; a cratic government in Argentina, sister; and six grandchildren. peron gETO CREDIT RTMANA THniii ®™* millions like him are KfeE^HAIffiOrt - «?PrvirP H for ^man I. C. &mon A Tholl,,j„ j measure the harvest of --------juiUR vumb - •ubject to occeptunct been ill several weeks. , -jb **8pecUl CommitUej 0tudy UM of Use Dowstoim Court! — Stto*' AB provtdod by provUloni! ...—-------- Resolution; Had- : YOUR KINDNESS TaND SYljpA leading knight; Frank K. Bar- f cr..*.-f«niiy. nard, of 24201 W., Hampton, Oak Park, esteemed loyal knight; and Stanley R. Dudek, of 920 Argyle, esteemed lecturing knight. No Sanity Test Set for Sniper GET OUX'OF DEBT With ptyments ns BUDGET SERVICE 6 W. Huron______FE f-OWl osd WEIOBT SAFELY AND BbSSt----- OROUPS, CHURCHES ii!l^»feT Blrrhlngbum. Ml 6-____ Pay Off Your Bitls — without k lobn — Neither Side Asking Hearing Before Trial Although four psychiatrists agree that accused sniper Garry S. Ckio^in is mentally ill, no one is planning to request a sanity hearing for the 2^year•old South-field man. service 10 Oe ...2:3. ^ SpoclKl Commltuo, othorwlso et nich bid —* -----------— ■ bidding M Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Rice, 81, began bis business tbo boot tnWreot of »i,'d»em*p?oSJt“in'cafeer a$ foreman of the card-• — County of ook- ing room of Eaton Rapids Wool- OAELAND COUNTY jCn MiH. Durfog the. following 10 BOARD OP AUDITOR*: years he was a salesman with Ithe Krolik Wholesale Dry Goods Co.;in Detroit. In 1914 he came I, ,ie]'to Pontiac and purchased .the How Property Exchange Can Benefit You!. Property that no longer suits your needs SHOULD , be converted for reasons of tax deferrment, or .■C|uite often, os odditionol income. EXCHANGE of properties in most coses is more desirable than an outright sole. EXCHANGES q^e a speciolty in the Commercial Dept. ,qt ^ATEMAn REALTY. Yes . .. it's possible! BATEMAN REALTY CO., closely affiliated yviih members of tho International Trailers Club ond Inter-City Real Estate Referral Service can help you EXCHANGE you Commercial, Investment, Business Property. At Your Convenience, u Make An Appointment with BATE^MN REALTY COMPANY- Archie Giles’• COMMERCIAL MANAGER PONTIAC FE 8-9641 Tom-Bateman BROKER DETROIT WO 5-2823 Oakland County Prosecutor George F. -Taylor said his office will not ask for a sanity cqmmis-Peron gets the credit for the gjon to determine if Cfoodnim, of Tholl died Saturday after P®y 26145 W. Nine Mile Road, is men- „ , Jbri Robert E. Sullivan, 15, of ZlS rnrreRaqp marcnionaa nei^ves iree eiec- tooW ..m hi. otto Cell.: ‘ "" ‘" -•'"f' ?Totacl your Job ond Credit Home or Office Appointmente City Adjustment .‘Service - ---- FE 5-9381 get out of DEBT on A PLAN ■ MICHIGAN CREDfl COUNSELORS 703 Pontloe SUte Bonk Bldg. C. J. OODHARDT- F U K L Homo, Keego Horfaor. Ph. 6g^0200. COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS OB 3-7757 Friday in Donelson-Johns Fu- torical contest sponsored by the: MAWtol MMSk kowtoltol firkUwo ^ 1 National Ometery, San Diego. D. E. Pursley Donelson-Johns , funeral HOME would not object if. Goodruni’s attorney asked for one. Goodrum’s attorney, James testants in ^mg the top spe^- thre^ John/Prancisco and! Such ejections are scheduled er s awaN in the Optimist Club siG^orgg g jgughter, Jeani for *•«•»« 23, but Marchionda Zone Eight contest at the Pontiac IA gijgt home; two sisters, Mrs.! t*** mlWtory Eto Club. . iGeorge Gebrowskv of Keego Har-i he held. ■n^wn of Lewis &llivan, prin-^^^ Charles Vajva of! ^ . * A * I" ‘hat belief Marchionda mil compete against eight Pontiac. Russell of Keego not alone. There are estimates boys for toe state oratoncal,jjgj.^j. Lgu. fhgt g„y election now,i " . idiscontented Argentines would. The possibility of a sanity hear- State ConyerjtioiL'to be held May ....--------------------------- . _ . _j _ mg for (joodrum came up after two psychiatrists requested by' Lawson of Farmington, said he Vnorlnocic; has no plan to make such a re- jf OOmeeS OipJ^ qukst, but would not object if “ Taylor’s office filed one. HUNTOGN SPARKS-GRIFFIN ■ PUNE'RAL ROME "Thoughtful StrvlM" FE i SMI 17 in Miiskelbn. ' Runfier-up in last night’s com-' ipetition was John Slade. 14. ! ninth grader at Waterford Ket--itering High School. J Blame Poor Wiring for Fire in Home Defective wiring is blamed by’ the city fire marshal for a fire that caused an estimated $6,000 damage to the, one-story frame' home of George .McNellv at 9 LeHigh Tue.sday night. Fire Marshal Charle.s ,Mctz investigated yesterday No one was in. the house when the fire was discovered shortly after 11 p.m. Agree on Excavation of Indian Mounds GRAND RAPIDS Of - The University of Michigan and the ! Grand Rapids Museum Associar tion yesterday agreed t^ excavate Indian mounds that are in the path of expressway construe-; the prosecutor’s office to examine j Goodrum reported that the accused sniper was paranoic and; schizophrenic, thoiighL he was> right in what he did. ^d should, be committed as mentally ill. | Senior Assistant Prosecutor ' William E. Land requested the examinations a f t e r receiving , notice from Lawson' that he planned to plead insanity as ■ defense at Goodrum’s trial. r 5 p.m. Or tf n DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES. 739 Mroomlnev. FE S7605 PSYCKOLOOIBT. OB) DroiM)ut» method. _________ ____ _______ Phone 612-3258. 4516 Coio-Elleo-beth Like Rood. REWARD For INFORMATION CON-ceming cor which struck 1963 Mi-roof Oldi. ported In DonelMii-Joluu Funeroi' Rome lot. Wednen-day April 24. OR 3-0436.________ -BOX RFPIJES- Two psychiatrists who exam-' ined Goodjrum for Lawson also! said (loodrum was mentally ill. Al 10 a.m. Today thri* werp rr|illP6 at The Press office In the fnllowinit; I Itoxes: I 2. 14. 19, 45, 50. 54,'55, [ 56,'59 64, 65, 72. 77, 80. | 81,82,83,85.88, 87. | ' N^ECHAI^IC EkCfUent epportunlt* for expen-enced mor In OokJond County’i AlHsst sstsblllhsd aimf OldooM^e deolerahtp. LoteiXmod-em equipment OToUoble. Aik for Roy. Service Mgr . tor Interview or opply In person. T.AYLOR’S • MArtet 44501_______Willed Lake «iperteneed. - — money to right perion. FE. 4-06110 ’ DRrVBR-RALESIOiN TO CALL OW Barber sbopa. Experience helpful. Good opportunity. Phono Mr. Koti. EXPERIENCED COOK IN C L U b wort. State age. morltol •titut and refereneet lo Pontloe Pren Box 63______________u__ •A man wlUi o food deal of c kol opploiwe «o. We "WITT Coll FE 5-9243 Wedneiday >r Mr Pace ^7 p m EXPERIENCED ) R ^ P T^S M gardener. ELDERLY MAN FOR amoll ouraery OA 6-2035._. DIE MAKER FOR PROGRESSIVE dlea. y------------ '"•* d work. 185 Ellio- EXPERIENCED CAB DRIVERS. Steady and part time, day ond night ahlfta. H)1 Weat Huron. 3(XPERIENCED EAVESTROUDH 1*8 Gutter Co.. 4163 V who would be Interested to 52 weeks work every year, operating protected territory. 6115 plus expenseo to aUrt. OR 3*565 for Inlervlew. experienced tree trimmer. Neinyer Tree ExperU. EM 3-3395, WIIX .TRAIN ROUTE SALESMEN To mxnxge an ratabllshed hoipa service tn general merchandise, bualneaa. Good salary plus ihare' -tn company -proftls. Nd lay off. • Truck and tlock furnished and all expense! paid. Vacation wfth pay. Insurance Ond a good retirement plan. It you are married, enloy being with people and would like to have a secure-future for your family this can bq, an excellent lob for you. Call FE 4-2036, for —It. Jewel Tea Co. Blocd Donors URGENTLY NEEDED $5 Rh PostUve. 67 Rh Negativa DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE 16 SOUTH CABS FE 4-9947 i'LOOR INSPECTOR For small ilrcraR quality percl-alon parts. Must have tools. Paid holidays,- Ins. and vadatlofl. M C. MFO. CO lit Indlanwood Rd. Lake Orion AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER JOB V H FINE PROSPECTS FOR . handy man i-,--------— — taker tor high class apartment property. 160 per week plus extras and also extra for pick-up truck. Apply stating age and. ex-pertence Box 64. Ponttoc .Press. eTt CHEN HELP. PREFERABLY Apply *pled ‘fMper!”«76 *Kghlsuid Rd life insurance salesmen. ..........rTsVaTiUshM^ril^n^Wto Salary, col^ls^n. bmus.^pad ^ M.AINTENANCE MAN. I T KNOW Goodrum is in toe Oakland ! {County jail awaiting trial on. a' charge of attempted murder of Mrs. Gertrude Race, 40, with a sniper buUet’fired Jan. 30 froiti: TgII EVGrY-^OCly (xocxlnim’s car into the Race-home at<« 2800 Dixon, Novi. The shot narfuwly. missed Mrs. Race, who was in a bedroom. About it with a : } ■7 The digging was given toe approval of toe City Commission with the understanding that "relic, pottery, skeletons, orhaments” and other items found in the burial places will be ownqd by Grand Rapids citizens. i PaaUac Prcaa pkaia READY TO GO — TJncoln Wsb ^hpol students Fred Brauner, 18, (left) of 38 Matthews; Diane Turner. 14..of 113 E. Chicago; and Keith Deaton, 14, of 70 W. Princeton, pack for their ifour-day trip to Washington D.C.* Some 129 ninth graders atW nine teachefs left early this moijjing for the nation’s papitol b>r bus. ■ ' r -* CriKidrum surrendered to police «vo days a/ter 18-year-oId Doug-jlas Godfrey admitted toe fatal-'shooting of his 38-year-old mother, Mary GodfrVi.m Bloomfield Township, ^ i *'■ *" r . One of the p$]^iatri$ts reported that Goodnim said his pqr-' pose "was to achieve recognition; after the fashion of Douglas God-' frey in the neiyspapers.” Pontiac Press Reply toPTOtlac J^f«^og_6S manaoer"" for small fine food and beverage x>peratlon. Our employeet know of thia ad Apply In writing givmg complete Information. background, experience and dektred to box 59, The Pon- liElary dec Hat ^e«a MASTER BARBER. MAY 3IMUNE I 1360 Baldwin. Rocheatei Road.___________________ PAINTER FOR COLLISION SHOP, experienced' only. ^ Ponttac Body Service. 345 8 Blvd Eaat. P.ART-TIME JOB after 6 P M - .OuarameOd 550 per wk paid month ly. For Information call Mr Dale OR 3-0922 Wednesday nlgbaS-; p m Want A(d teVsisi ' rtenced preferred, f....... ....... Pta6F«"‘ Can M FE^4^1 I**”®"**'“'•''■''I'* •ROE SALESMAN JTuOt.KanSStal® •?'‘T;;^A'^'3L2«4» Eaaigate Shop-ptng Center, Rotevllle. PR 9.3546 S-^E BqY,_APpLY PEABODY 6 Mar.ket, 154 Hiqiter BlOd ' *“uny TnnH«uiai..A!n> fiio»t in wruum (ivtag • awratton. Cm It IMi ad. Apw acctjratb coiwmktul BOLIN TAX^WICE apwlaUaa In vniaotl Incoma raturna. Baaannabla raUa. . Pika (eamar Mill) FJ 4-llM 1 ROOUS - BATH BATHr”uf5jfnS. ne 4AM7 after « p.m. _ J Alto BATH, TOWN. CO»l- ^ l5ti No Moi.ar Down OOODELL. SwecthearJ;'flTJTnifj , mo. -iBciumt m compltto Informs- > Csll Mr. Moi- aged ladlaa. FB M371. /VUiviag «MI Trackhii 4-LAROE-llOOU-LOWnt FLAT " ,nanly decorated. Prt. antraaca i hatfa. m g. Pjddoci. r« 4-MM. 4 ROOMS WITH PfciVATi: BATH >«n. MS. a month. Call M. _ *k. FK 5-3278 or FI 5-23»7. UNIOK-LAKX VliXAOS mjM North o< Wsiton oat BsMwta. Dlorsh Bl^. Co. TAYLOR eoCtsfo. Includes I^IAYDEN I bedroomai 'Small .. LanalBs aaaa aM K. . MiM. awe w inti rapo^ ^ to tranaerlba ^JwSTaliS^^ WWmatlan le Ht^ian I d MOVTNO. LOW ^____________ UT CAREFUL MOVmO. LOW tfarST* Urt^rar. 1. BaeaUanl CSH^KiiSSTfiS.!^ &n"n >iS&oV” *"*^*"^^ VAN’SERVICE Paddbu—It Teara Siperlanca BOBMTTOMraiNS . OR 4-ltl arjUasToS^ttapTt ryrnpL »na to woiii~ow MAN OR WOMAN WITH CAR. ••iaWlelied Watkin* Routt. Auhinf Melghta am. Make 12-53 per *-— .f*^J** Narked I ___«TT<_________________ LAWN WORK. HATJUNO.-MOVna odd lotia ok 4-1533. FE l»74tl. AIX NEW. BEST west'SIOC LO-oatkin. First floor, atrtetlx j^rate. I or 3 ladles ooIt. Applp in Voor- hela Rd.. t a.m. to 5 p.m.___ BACHELOR. PRIVATE. O O I T S. aery iilee. N. and. FE 54376. CLEAN with atlMHed. tarata. > full’ baths. famUy. rt»m^ built-in and oren. double ftraplaee. i--- num patio IS by 2S. lot H by 210. .... NDER80W REALTY U A27SS HACEDAT LAln Real nloa 2 oomplataly ft------ . Mraaned-ln porch.' larte acapad lot. Located on caniu lake. Full price, 57.5S0 with 3-BfiDROOM TRI-LEVEL ' ^,995—$1,000'T>OWN • b-BXDROQM plua taaaa to' OI. School area, Oas baa... more to. WATERFORD Rl OR 3-1373. CRESOTNV'LAiB ‘ ^ --- —. inaUranea. Real Lbedroora buntalowi o— -------- a nice utility. garafO. Full prtca 50.500 . 5500 movea you to WA- TBRFORD REALTY. OR t-lTIl . L PONTIAC LAKS > Neat t-badroom lot cabta located J c, Family Room Oaraga Bept HAYDEN, I^ealtor Open 9 “til'o'p'm. __ CLARK: VBEDROOH BI-LEVXU .---- :y to bi tiers 1 XMEMETTC COUPLE TO OFER. I ato jatare. OaU Ott-lggO.________________- LtOHT RAUL 1 N O. BASEMENT eleantog and nibblah. PE S-glt lUBBIM AND LIORl' HOiONa. rsasonabla —■“— —...... ROOMS Square Lpke.jxa-i COLORED, " ...... _.d-Tuth “ ' duplicate. Nothin) JOHN C. MTLEB. BUILDER s Blthway. S ....ra you build. 1.---—... _. joujT^. Jto^down^ Pa^maoC WUl A. C.‘ Compton & Sons loot W. Ruron ' OR E74I4 E^s. OR 3-4SM OXBOW LAKE . Lako-froot lot, Meal buUdtof elU, Includaa both fruit and r*-*-traiMt Low ptica of only 5 TeMnto . , WILL BUILD ..... ADULTS ________ roM^ W OrehM Lake Ala. C COLORED J-PRANELIN I ESTABLISHED WATRINS TOUTRJ A-1 DECORATWO -PAWTIWO - ______ ________“Bass. yard. 3 rooms, private bath and Referencra reqt^eif.' FUI^IWEp BA^I^R ^ APim^ M9 MONTH uciuainc tax and Ina" Tramedtite D^pocaalini of Pontiac, ^maf^ew G.I. , Nothing Down JAMES A. TAtLOR, REAL estate-insurance 1732 Highland Rd. IMUi OR 4-0 Open Dally 5 to 5 Sunday i U Youf plaj or.ouri DON .\fcDONAI.n Licensed BuUder______OR 3-M37 i-famUy Income, aeparato beMia. each apartment baa t badroam. full basement, atoher-fed fumsea. 2 bloclu from Flaher Plant. St,. 3 Lots... ATTENTION WE RIIII.D ' .-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL PEATURINO: built-in • yanlty, cup-boarda galore, formica c——— lopa, oak floora, plaslrretf brick trim. 55.8M on .your .... .. . aw Hiedel. caimtttef Realty. FE location. lS‘a22’ 2-il79 or FE 4-3990 TRADE OR SELL U ACRKK f-ROOM MODERN BOMB. .A RENTAL HOUSES. At adst tt ■ Pontiac, west, paved rond. MS.- 000. win Bcca^ .-----------------* ' Cl tri >r equity Ci trade. [f you don't find It here eafl anr-way. we may 'have a buyar for youy home. utilities ncl. tlSO UlBblaod Rd. SALARY REQUIRE. soomi WAI^; UAL XSTATR SALRi , ga^. WjT^ 2 tuU tl- ------ ’ No CrcdN Cbacb Real Value 3 FOR BALE BT OWNER 4]- dU train rttt r.-CgyipfC. «d pre-p*rUM. ; S5L5FT$!?Si2i' S«Im Htb, «—»- t.A ORIFFI8 bROTHKRS Commercial — Residential PalnllBg and ^eoratlng. OR !*• SO'allO It . __^ liras TooB,>MroTsrfr Bio-rooms, oU turpaoc, city wa-tar and lewtr. Built In tost. A raal buy. This won't last. • Call Bon O-NttI NOW OR I-St FH-7153_________________________ WANTED MAN MASON THOMP8ON-DECORAT0K lmerler.Extarltir. FE 4A3M. inrriNO and pi ApartiiMRtt--URf«riiit^ 38 l-ROOM ijl&ICIX] ____ win train ,_____________ _____ maatf naeasaary raqulramanta. Kaat Haating and Cooling Co., eanvattlng, or' axparlanca noca Washing. 672-2572. ; Ttkvisloii.|iwiio Strvict l4 Alber.ta Apartments — N. Paddock_________FE 2-2095 4 diodM UPPER. BABY WEL-----^ Inquire at 25 N. Anderson K. .carpeted living___________. — . ■nils home Is Immaculate .-•Z throughout,. tlLSOO. Low 'down payment. See It' today. WATSm-TORD REALTY, OR 3-1273. 3-BEDROOM BRICK. BASEklilit, «artge. near 3 aebooto. 51S.r“ ,J,. .-w. ...------ NEW HOMES NORTH OF PONTIAC Paved Straata — Oaa Heat 3-Bedrooni .Ranch Kettering School. One Block.. From Pontlae Mall—5S00 down wlU. buy thia S room bungalow with ll4 ear atuclied garage. ' Cyramlc tUa bath. Oil. heat. DON'T WAITI Easy In.t___ WEST COLUMBIA ^bedroom el -Mcrd rer-Total I ilnga call FE Multlple-trt r yard. Klddiea play ........ ........ home for equity. OR 3-2955.__________ HlRRINOTpN Rtmi. 3-BFDROOM Ranch Home. PENSACOLA youngater. 3 ■ bedroom, gas best, and water' heater, carpeted living room. ' ‘ ' 5500 down, 57S lyionth. MARY SUE out where the robblna ----- ' il bas - ■ danild -hundreds ANNETT . 59.750. 5300 <1 WANTED: 2 XXPXRlkNCBO REAL Xalato Satwinoa with Heenao.^I Mr. Pataraoa at B. Delos “ted” NlchoUa Real Eatato. FE S.1201. 7 MAN INTERESTED IN PUTURE -Vyeartold raltable roofing ai ‘ oompanj. Wa operate 35 fa L 2-1557, after S. brick, recreation room. 430 X 'torvdlmt Indiana an. _____ ... __________ rfoc beaneb ipanagerahlp. Apply pefaon Sberrtff-Ooalln Rooffaig yd^iy^Oo.. M B. Caaa Lake BALBSliXN NEEDkb AT ONCE. Trained Sarvtoe Men, I______ pricoa. Free Tube Teat^. Montgomery Ward Pontiac 1 4-ROOM AND BATH^ U P I* E R. Adulto. FE 5-8815 after 4. ROOMS AND BATH, PARTLY Heat Pike _ 5-775S. IDEAL ,.Ht______ ____ couple,/ good garden i $69 MONTH targe rooma, garage. Breei soma brick f 6-ROOU MODL.. south side Sacrifice f. lie. FB P«I74 after 0 all day. Sunday ar" Xuludlhs laxea and Utsuranea \ INCLUDINO ALSO 4-ndroom - F----------- le kite for ’______ near Ortonville. attached double replace Oil firi t! BEB TH18I I plus McConnell School A rma,. 3 batha.i flaaaed front porch i3-rm. apt. Snd floor I or uae aa 4-bodrm. family horns. Basemant, oH heat 3-rar garage, paved at. Widow aaya aell. MUtTIPLE LI8TINO SERVICE IRWIN West .of City Furnished' 3-bedrm. homa. Basement, gas hOat. 2-cajr garage. Tayes 4134. A good noma at 410.500, $2,000 dh. ^ St NttaursM, StNOo&w'tidfo wlah to ' trow I *” [.**^oalra . .. ----iy’iT'jrou aa directed. Phone 314-_ tor an appointment. 8^ UAL jkSTAn. msURANCR FIRR H ~Tior bairar: Tf __ _ ____ Worm CWklrM to Board 28 t OWNER 1-BEDROOM HOME, See Model Dally U to S NORTH SUBURBAN A RELIABLE UCENSl day or week. FE Sd34l BY OWNER. OI S-SEDROOM BRICK ranch, full baacnaent. Aear garage. - Humphries Wootad HofsofcoM Goods 29 . axpeneea. plua 4 -------- _R S-USS. Bkwh 1 Corp., Waterford. UW9 «» . w, .tl.OS to atari. MuM have tranaportatta. AiMaraon AUCTION SALK EVERT 8ATUR-day at Mm Bird Atictloo, Wall bur tumltura, toola and appbaneaa. OR 3AS47 or MElroao 7-Slilsr LET D8 BUT IT OR SELL IT FOR •"lU. OXFORD COMSTONOT' Riot Houses, Fomlthtd mirs. 3-^roo^R|^ch[* .2 BEDROOMS. BASEMENT. OAS RMHESTBR^^ 2 • BEDROOM. HOME WITH ACREAGE Modem bom# near OarlM FE 2-9236 [f ne anawer call FB 3-8032 S3 N. Telegraph Road Metnber Multiple Hating Berrlca turtni oak floora, plutered walla, 2-car garage and close to school bus to Madison and em High. LAKE FRONT I^vely^^^d^wm .home pllal' 510 900. Terpia. OL ldS41. 11.050 [ BRICK. Jlakalir EVELYN EDWARDS' “VOCAtlOMAL CpUNBXUNO SERVICB-' -Tdcphoiui-F-£4.^ -aat Huron_____Suite 4 aol?Ii*FH V^* * TOP DOLLAR PAIR FOR FURNI- ture,__ieoUan^ loala. eler^^ ^tollegM. hardwood Ooora. $14,580. down. Near OrtonvUlo — asoot 2-bedroom home wUh I Acreo a pond. 28.900. 51.000 down. -Cr PANGUS, Realtor • ORTONVILLB 422 sail St. ________WA T-2115 HIITER ., ________fU^ Home featuraa alu-carpeted llvtno room no'rth^I*' bungalow ^pn Hmra' featurea' 20 toot Ilvtog room! fun baaemenl WBh gas heat and altualed or) par-- ‘ achoola and oua. Cute . Only 57.400 < TION, S009 btola Hwy. NEVfHeMES Full Basements DUCK LAKE. 4 bedrooma.. bath, r.99S. low down payment. “ Uabt sitter, sis is BABY SITTER. LIVE. IN. DOCTOR'S home, Bloomfield Httla. salary, room and board, bouaework, I baby. ' ratcrencea raqulrad. Apply 444-5033 Preston Walker Smith EXECUTTVE PERSONNEL COUNSELINO SERVICE 1505 Woiodwanl ^winflald JH"- *‘s?DliyTO^'^s' 339758?°*’“'’^ LEAVINO TO. EUROPE. SELLiNO ■ ^oma-^RicK--^RRaceT^ aide, oil hrat. 175 month. Aniivtt Inc.- Realtori. 28 C. Huron 8t. FV * -ter $15 down buys new home, with or without Basepiant. Model at fomer of Kinney and Corwin, 1 Mock east of Oakland. S blocki north Of Montcalm. 32 584 MONTH. c6loRED ONLY AL- D OlBLS. 1 lEstroctioiis-Sdiools , LEARN HEAVY EQUIPMENT, weeka. on Ooaera. Drua. Lli etc. Free placement, “Key." ( Rd..^_DetrelL-2L._m BEDROOM ROUSE. ON 'OR ' wound lake near Wategford High School. Long leaae or option, axe, -refer^ea. Handy, and claan—TRY USI HE g-3701 or FE S-7940. - COLORED 0 money dowit, no irtoalnf COP Ice 3 r bedroom honw, *5T p DOWN AVON TOWNSHIP, and bath, living rc knotty pine, alunl acreena, neat ana cli B. C Ktlter, Realty Rd FE 2-0179 or I FE S9S74._______ ] 9-room hoifil' on Judaon sr. 3 OR 4 UOROOM HOME WITH { garaie auttable for work' ahop . -4Mri,*gf-^^*gS«r as Is. Inquire K. O. HEMPSTEAD, REALTOR. 365 W. Huron. EE CURB WAITRESS. FRbsT TOP ■ OrtYO-ln. Ills w. Huron.___ CURB WA1TU8SE8 A A W DRIVE Work Worittd Molt Pontlao Praia Box 47. L. S daya, 2 children. ANY KIND LAWN AND OARDEN. ahrub. rota-tllllnx. hand dlsstoi. hauling. FE 2-220. BOY 15 STRONG REALTHT WANTS sto a|t. n la toPoirtl Ttof^eaa^x'o BARBER' SIAsS^. PART OB JTOLL PUFER CLEAN UPPER APART-ment on toe North or West Bids - with 2 bedrooma, bath, living room. kitchen, utility room and garage. . No children. Call before 3 p.m. _or after ro p.m. FE 2^15S. __ RENT OR LEASE. 4-BEDROOM In city of —' ------------ FEJ4065. m West Yale Pontiac New 3-4 bedroom home. RENT OPTION $86.50 MONTH paved atfeet,^ basement, modfj open dauy-Suh. MICHAELS REALTY 201',SOUTH EDITH ’ jleavtog for Mexico. 3 it cell l^MIstely. 54.300 ” 5 GREEN ACRES WAtorford Township, well la fwe**h’ome?'*pIarrtered r-"- - ~ needed'Immedtktely. 43ood wages. Paid Taeatkto. Eael'a Orlvt-In. ____I OR 3-i—--- CEMENT WORK^LL KINDS. ,JEj aonable, OR 3-IS35. MU in braytim» Stnrico . ’ BUILDER nerds lota to Pontiac. Immediate offer, no commission, Mr, pavls. 626-9973.- Re^ Value Realty. LOVELY ROOM FOB A OENTLE- MODERJ4 R0051 FOR GENTLE- tnsn. West side. FE 2-0913.___ | NICE SLEEPING ROOM NEAR General Hospllai. FE 2-^7. NORTH PONTIAC : $69 Down NEW S-BXDROOM ROME i$55 '.Month COLORED 3-BEDROOM. FUU, BASEMENT STjStERS AND REGULATORS REGULATORS, $3.95 303 Auburn FE 5-1914 Building Modernization Payments Like Rent Additions. Hous: s. Concrete Floori Excluding taxoi and Insuranca “Everyone qualifies: Widows, dl ------- --------------J wltoha credl ROOM FOB GENTLEMAN RK3RT prowam." downtown. 41 Pina 8t. FE 2h839. ROOMS FOB RENT. U PER BED. 300 Mechanic._____________^ jJLia SLEEPING ROOM. ISS CBAMBiR- cas heat lain. *PE 5-0437. - Permanent hot water j Furniture flntthed cabintU HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! Frea j PRICHB FROM 59.330 TO 310.000 and SUPPLY CO. 0571 HtShland Rd. RrVATE BATK and entranco. S3 Poplar, ofl Bald- DF.LUXE . OFFICE SP.\CE 1 West Hrroh, air conditioned. ,.c. FE 2-0219 - FE 2-2119 STORE OR OFFICE WITH EXTRA sales. 6089 Htghlend, OR M7S0. Rent Business Property 47-A hEAUraiTL COLONUL BUILDING r month toklud- ALL KINDS CEMENT WORK, REA- BRICK RANCHER — M you're ing. for s .3-bedroom brick r_ home with altached gerigc and . large lot Ip the. suburbs, -toon “ miss this one aa It Is a honi cornea con^ete with Itg I fireplace. well-lb-w«U " . LiC'KhSED________. . tractor. All .other types cement work FE 5-3349.______________ FATK), Driveways ANb oarage ooly 51$,'T». II — No money dowq o Dressmaking, lulloring : ALTERATIONS ALL 'TYPES. KNIT ------------- -- _________________________™( located b_ . 0. c a * parting Or^rd. tween Pontiac and Roeheator. tbert ilSV. S'*; **®**^*** • oanieled living room, fenced ' ‘and mootlily, paymtnla of a«mnv' av eto iinmsoiiu dreueea. leather coats. OR 3 ______ yard, an nqI 546 Sent iwaaeaaloc wattKess Wanted for eve- ^Nmo WORK lUMEOUmYJ^- ev Hlitowa GARDEN FLOWmO MA 3-1225. OARDEN PLOWINO AND C Ing. Reaaonahla. ON 3-1203 t ROOMS J vate ba“-baby wt , a 525-da FOB RENT SroSi OARAGE FOR REN^ FOR 1 Frushou;k,,ReaUy aaiaaoTO uat M.I 3»jo ElliabeVi Laka Bd. I'BEWARD 3-bedrooaB homa In good i----- lion. Uvtog room. largo bltchen. 2 bedrooma sad bsfe on ona noor, 1 (ledroom up; eateroent. gas beat, Ittoear garaca. Prlood at 5U.I50 FBiL S5W dowp. CHIPPEWA 6 per week with . gaaeopable. OR 3-31 OARBEN PLOWINO BY^l -----1. anywherj, FE M811. AND BATH, ADULTS ___ - , sScitonle St. OR 3-35SS. • J ROOMS WITH FBIVaTE BATH and entrance On but Una. Col-ored.'401S. Jeaale,. 335-5355, ' 3 LAROE., ROOMS. UPPER. ALL private. Near dovmtown. FE 4-1131. I'^iis. Lo^Kjumras^^- 3r7so3 j fiomc With ■ Everything 4g|^2--w ^age. teved^dThr^*- t-BEDROOM. LARbE LOT. NO basement, rfeaqnable down pay-I ment. montfalj paymente 545,_]Bilt| yard' and a house with 9 bednomt. *" *** Itb***'/** ^ gjhool area, *x-f ' ---- — Johp K. Iwin" * Sou-Realtor 313 w. Huron St. - Stoeo isis -Itoone: Ft^M445 — Ero. FE 4-343S Templeton FENCE COMP-VNY Fraa Eitlmatca — PHA Terms _______OK 3 -1131 ____ I. SNYDER. FUXIR LAYDja Hi-^i Service ADAM’S TV . : -.0 Baldwin_________ 338-1444 d . UWN. WORK Ara DAY AND EVENINO V wma •■iitnarsB.'nn —— ——. x. Bailey Xlectronlea, (q* SEP R S-4( Heating SerWee rebuilt and OUARANTEMb Ri 119 9A tin nbiil TV mnd RmdtA Tret Trimming Servkt ACE TREE b STUMP REMOVAJb -1 MARION OR KENTUCKY SOD laid. Seeding or redressing lawns. Free estimates. Br Landscaping. FE 3-0141. FE BROKEN CONCRETX AND PAVINQ hrlckt for retaining walla, patloa • or bar-b-que pita. OAKLAND: FUIL * PAINT, 45 Thomas St., FE 5-8159. Cicpcral Tree Service*: Any tine job. _______R 34^ EXPERT tree tHTtiUma'' SEEDING. SODDINO: BACK HOE Ing, buUdoylng. Free esttmatta. EM . 3-2415_______- , • MERION BLUE'sod. PICK UP O Crooks. UL 2.4643. TrucHng SPEED'S PLACE 1214 N. RRBY. Mowers sharpened, used blkei. POWER: HAND-OR-BLADE. SHARP* m: UOHT TRUCKWQ^^D B UOHT AND HEAVY TRUCKlWo. ened. Wtlmonl’s-Hdw.. 1173 Baldwin I Licensed Bunders SOIL. PEAT. BLACK Di4t, WE HAUL DIRT. ORAVEL. 1 SOIL FILL DniT. AND RUBBI CALL PONTIAC TOWINO. 2-3016 OR FK 24)116. T.XLBOTT LUMBER Clast Installad In dbort dows Cornpim* bulldmg ti lff35 Oaklanlf'A't. : Trucks to Rerit Painting PENNY PAINTING AND DRCORAT-Ing Company. Experienced. Speclal-Ixtng In exterior painting. Oeneral home repalrt. Fret estlmater 6-0603.___________________ ' (k-Ton plckupa Itk-Ton StSfera TRUCKS - TRACTORS • ■ AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Tratlero Politiac Farm and • Industrial Tractor Co. 02 8. WOODWARD Piano Tuning AAA PIANO TUNINQ Open D»ily Ipcluding Suoday WIEOANDB Upholsteriiigi Pins^ring Service k-i PLASTERINO AND REPAIRS. Reasonable. Pat Lee, FE ^7M2T 3-2641. ^IBH____________ FE 3-2S92 no rtoglrua i6I5ti THOMAS UPHoTLS------ 4499 W WALTON BLVD.' FL 5-8888 ' Rental Equipment Wallpa^r Steamer Wnnted HeusefcoM a-d^j I BARqAn4_HOU«rPA^M«'li$ 1 — ehrpet4d-illshwxab-! iAedr^m ho'Smc. OR FLTOB.I Kolfe 'H. .Smith, Realtor jm^hsat Call alter ? p*. Opt.^244 8, TELEORAPH, 7 WEST. SUBURBAN .Next to Isaac Ctafy School — 2-bedroom, tiled bath, vaey - • - - ' kttchoik. tel baaement. - auU___ , heah large lot. blacktop atraetsr ■ aewar and r *— - - ---- tot qnito aali . K. L. Templeton. Realtor 2925 Orobard Lak^ Road------- D~l* THE PONTIAC PRESS, WBJjX^SDAY. MAY 1. 1903 V STOUTS . Best Buys , p«tlO JVt-(mcM. p»*M drtvt. frpcvrt l»p» >r«?0 lor ctUMrni Prtwil lo •tU or t)>JW »1U> ronvcnlrni » BEDROOMS—North nWr-IrKrolloh lor thl« fln« l»nill> hoimr E»sU>-eonrrrtrd to Income tl oecef>Mrv Bwement with lu^ore fitr» lorttor) on 2nd Ddor. Only M.4i0 lor qtikk. »»1«„ .. . j. SdtNwNM .. Bioomfirkl Twp. A reol eoarmloBt taeaUoo SIMM wbdtTMkm on a«ar______ - Vcrr'Mntbta (-r«am,M1ok dOLF MAN^_______ Hv IHck Ttirm**- UlMilo MMAaet. _________ ______ /tSDom Mrf dinliit room vttb llro-Vooe. I (pootoui bodrowpq plut voll dulgnod kliciMB. pli eiM woIU. cormmlc Ue Mth. heat, ocroorwd potto, boormenl ttnliliod Pith Wonderful reerootlon room ood Toto-jor mrtup*??’___________ „ ____________ Top. kchoote $i.(M doom, ^own Rrrwer Real I'.state occomrhodote e truck, plus shorp '3 - -oH. Itvlpf - YOU'LL FALL IN LOVE i' htlw ranch oilh II edort. on corporl, Lorce condition. ■ — decorated heat. *54 eq ri i. oiocu irom. grtde Khool On o t(.oere corner lot. fII.3M lull price ollli monlhlr poymrnU ol $7*1? Incl. e'prlvlleqes' Only 110*5* wnli ItKtRlNOTpN hills ■■ Only J", THTSWONT, ■ LAST'.' »*E ? n DIHO_ -mm t I13%00 NORTH SUBURBAN S - Bedrofcm ■ rn Cilllornlo de-y decorated, »ell- , LAKF.FROXT Scenic penlneul* ’- 550-loot lt„„ »fust " •>*4f. S-rooitv homq 3 to be oppreciitbc .TRai^^ is^IKRRmC " ■ Hu'rJ WATKINS HILUr — Doctor. Lowrer^ Merchunu. Chel«. A epllt lev-'!. -Coneen- reoilon tpocc Small ■ plicate on your lot or i r lurther ' Inlorma- -VA' TERMS. ................ 1 Tiro-bed room bunialow. Llvlne a --------------- -----------men* ( Whlttemore St. GILl-S RKAl.TY CO. LoettMl oe%r St. Mleh««I» « Baidatn ecbooU. lt>tn$ room X lA reception room 10 x large kitchen and ae|}araie i hi* room lull bwnmt^wlth i larage. priced at only S -----aat-Tjsa’isiif’ioinsy'!- MttTIPteE UfiTWO aiaiVlCE I T^Pfi I NORTHERN HIGH A ‘ ‘-"pffW- ijiri;.'; LGAYLORD' ^ Road Many t Recreation room in paae-S2.*00. plu* closiiu cocts jsrill trade. iWEST SIDE I riF oBtriK . « TwoJtedtooni-bungalow Carpeted • ^ "•* Kitchen. Dn-I a payed road^ All lar^ finishod attic Vull baxemenl. Oil:' HA heal Aluminum xldlftf. FBA, II TERMS. CalUodat, I rf-aliuk Tir .vM4/1 *41 JOU.YN COR MANSFIELD , ---N EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS multiple LISTING SERVICE EXTRA SHARP TWO ROOM HOME. )uxl i Pontiac with privileges Oner "Lake . Hjs Tr*-" '— DAILY ■VETFR.AXS SPRIXr. SPFCLAI;.S WWD AND KOREAN VETS , ----------: OVERT 3358 Fox Blvd. ee-bedroom buntalow. Llvlnr dlnln* area. Kitchen. IVa batlu ty room.'otl HA heal. Lar$e e. Call FE 4-523* of FE 2-?273 Nlcholie-Harter Co 531b W- Hjitdc SL - his good farm t^y. Mt 2-2121. Lawrence W. Gavlord Flint, SPUT-LEVEL BRICK Featurei 4 // BUD" REALTOR » . _ ■Speclalliing In ■ MX RA> I H.AKG.MX Sb^room — a AXtHliK milt- 'Si garage, 'aluminum stormx and ecreens. 4 alumtiltim aarninga Aod poagthle 3rd bedroom lace. 2 car garage? How bout a nice lake across the 0 one win blind to o orran^.' WliuH trade Why i 9062 .Ashdown - Lartt.3 bedroon with Bill b**^ ---•. large fenced lot. lun price moatbly paj^nls. Cooley Lake Rd. Orer i 2403 Archdale Move In urn ibarp S’ n wlUi attached garage. large IM It lot and Union Lake llsnmg and iwimming. Nothing down on this. Or tasT bank terms 18.52 Big Trail Veterans tike sdrantage af this Lsrge biick.2 or 4 bedroom brnne wUh nstural nreplsce. 2 ear ga- Locklin Strett located on Llizabeth l^kefronf Beautllul setUsf among ^de trera. Jhli mos^au lerx more Itrtng pleasure. Pea-' turet extra large Itytng room, - dining area orerlooklng the lake, lull basement, automatic eiceUeiW COLORFD GI I g2M tpores you Into thla 5-rootn - gal— *■-- ALREADY APPRAISED BY THW V A. at only M.OOO He certainly made himself, one of the family -right in by barking at Pop!" 1 $1,500 Down. PE 6- QUAIwJTY BUILT YOUR LOT OR OURS « -JAGlv-RR-ESTDxX CUSTOM BlilLOEH OR Wtll HILLTOP HOME Lovely new m^ro 2 - •>« home. Carpeted llrlng Streamlined kitchen with ( 1? desir^. Dorutliy .Snyder I.avendcr 7001 Highland Road iMSOl [lies West, ot Telegrapb-Huron $9,500 ......... ..... birch cup- $290 DOWN $.bedroMn h«ne on North Sldt. REAGAN SELL OR TRADE - U.X baths. Fenced I. Carpeting. Oak ilered walls. Jtcir garagt.^ -r——grounds—Ol_______ gSl.tOQ. Make a date today! Xorth Side Coiy 2-bedroom bungalow with ----rate dmtng room, carpet-1 lull basement, new gss' ice. auto, gas ^bet water.' • garage. Total price $7,*50, i. call now! redtlon. You need no money — let iia solre your real ei-Ute problems. "Today’s Top Trades" "Bud" Xicholie. Realtor ’ **F*E^-T^1*^ j\Vatkin.s*Pontiac Estate: After 6 P.\I., FE 4-8773 Ssth*.*rea'^l»lng room, natu ----f----r----=—;—r-----------1 llreplace. - ----- roiitiac Lakefront | ' Cory - --- ...........- - ■ ' " COLONIAL HILLS SUB.' SANDERS PLACE. 2394 ■ Top Value Brick TrI-leVel. only 122.900. 3 bedroom*. 2 br»*“ I place. bulIMns, attached rage Bloomfield SchoolsT ' , KENDRY DRIVE. 321 j First ollerlng brick ranch. 3 bed- I M*l"pixrtltimel basement. C&ssed ! 2*-loat lerrace Stately shade i trees Bloomfield Schools. Only I and jour children bedromv Mot summer to-en) 5aa noa- «'» P*R CENT MORTGAGE I mg dtlwn to veis *9116 UT—a-is I 7.room biick ranch In excellent' eoodllion. oak floorx, gas best. 2 tts Viv’arll • attached g a r a g e Anchor' OOJ Altdril I . feneed. Oakland Lake prirHeges. $3500 DOWN TO EJtlST IN t "ubs'S 1-D.ML.\i) C. RI5DOX _____ iM_W. Maple___________Ml 6^700 u; , ■ , , , laBEDROOM ^-BSE -THIS -8PA- iFvlvan Lakefront I Clous home today Large wall- 1; ““..B laa heal, ultramodern hardwood 3 bedrooms. 1 2 kitchen i5T0’ i ; kitchen. $ ir garage pli d.at *4MW at Nice 3 bedroom ranch full bss 1, lamlly kitchen. 14 tv t ■ only IM.M* Notamg dopa , 11 ol ^x $! MORTGAGE J L DAILY CO UNION LAKE MICHIGAN FM 3-7114 BATEMAN .KFFGO HARBOR I 9-bedrou«n rv>«b. Roir.aa I •nd di , 2-cur garagf e&« he»l l‘» hi kfver $1.M0 DOWN ON UA MTCE Open Daily 5-7:30 Budget Tri-Level WATKIXS LAKFFkO.XJ Sn.-igalow. Uving ti I Sbedfoom brick rancher 2 baths. .\S.'"'^ )C I.\T l‘. BI\()KLKS 20 living room,'natural llreplace, igg Franklin Blvd. FE S-96M H a.T.T.:'?nr“r!iil^.tr5; ''xo^IoxFrTxAvx room, ^way llreplace, 'attached. TrI-level .ni ranch starter homes-on c garage landscaped lot — oilerrdl your lot. Model open 10-*. I at 123.500 — Terms or trade. L,.f , ■G. FLATTLEY. BLDR. i-m josiyn • commerce road Is>»»ly__3 - bedroom bungalow, I iCTJBgl *■“ pre-llnUhed 'csbineu Fngldaire range and oven, paneled- Ismlly rm, brick and aluminum. Ter-rlllc t*lue St *11.»75 on vour lot. ! Your tree and clear lot could I _____, . _____ _________ ______ Eves. EM plaatered walls. ItiU basement.! ROCHESTER AREA *.** P*"** 3 BEDROOM BUNOALpW .PART street. Only $*.*50 — Terms or, ---------■ ---- i-ii-m, tx,.« trade " ' . __________________i Near the Mall r WILL TRADE FOR 3-BED-' Sharp 2 • bedroom ---------- „ HL^ON C-s" ■----------------- ROOM HOUSE IN HL^f WhltUes, 'oppoelte t ■ Smith-Wideman r tarage Will trade K^AMPSEN CUSTOM BUILT HOME-S YOUR LOT OR OURS Ross Homes, liic. FE 4-0591 1071 « MLS FE 4-09211 OR 9-S544 KENT' ntasvcrea garage, s oeorms. ‘2'b baths beautllul n'*. natural llreplace ' big '21-i”' P rLARK.srON c‘,k;W.hon.e Tip 3 oedroottir iir'n - \VF WILL BUILD' ON TEN acres of good land a lovely 5-bedroom ranch style home with sttached two-car garage'or a 2-bedroom split level aim eitsched tworty. $$7 EBET TELBORAPH NEAR •quare LUw Rd. $4.00* eq. ft. jra^**10B*l_iop^, $**.*«. ri Inimecliately Avitilable 4*k*0 brtek front. 1 entrance daor main hl$bway frontaie. blacktc parking area, tell leaaq rmt. 8bo ""“n^lAGSTKOM REAL BaTATK Commercial Building strategically lyated on M» ac^ avMlabIt < Investor wui snap hi $l*i«##-Jt*u couldn'l be... „ place the Vli^~aL.ttiii price. By appl. only., J. T. WARDEN Solo or ExciHingo I - BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. LOT 7$xl6Q. unmedtata pMsetslon. may ten on land contradl. CaH-WH 4-3255. ________■ PROBLEM WITH A BUSLXESS OR REAL ESTATE? ChW FE 4-1579 LEW Hli.E-MAX. S.E.C. Realtor-Exchanger ____1011 W. Huron St- Ponttae Business Opportnnitlos 59 WAXT TO BUY A’ BOWLING ALLEY? CONTACT PARTRIDGE MW W. Huron i‘FE 4-55*1 Orchwd Lake Ave. OaU FJL3-^. ROCHESTER PARTY STORE Kowalski sausage, baked goods, beer and wine. High profit store. booU sbow sales ol ««.«M Ip 1*62 and business Is Increasing. Fully egulpj^. Easy terms. Call Ryan beauty" SALON. WELL ESTAB- ----- Excellent _____ mtngham. Reasonable — .. party. Pontiac Press Box tsfonsl- .Drive-In for Lease Franchise Richardson root beer stand for summer. Prefer experienced. 1^1,. W. Montcalm. PE hAIH _ HAS 2 CHOICE LOCA--I for lease. Good potendsl. paid ting and financial assistance. — FE 4-t5H. _ QrOCERY SDM. GOOD LOCATION n^gbt dot 1427, after 5:30 p^ST”' ' MILK POUTE FOR 8Ai LOT 401120 FEET ON EAST HOP-FE 4-5353 _________________________ I selection c subdivision. Private b^h^canal Howa-..JtUo famous Lake St. HU Year-round vacation cottages a reilrempht-homes. Ten and llfte year mortgages available. Write phone lor complete detatls. Carte Inc. 8t. Helen. Mich. Phone 1 9-44M *Open_seveil days------■- -NEAR LAKEIL yerrilmg^ Blacktop it 3-1295. SELL OR TRADE — 4-bedroom modem ranch style home only 6 years' old. All large romns o^y block | ELIZABETH LAKE E8TATE8. LAKE V privileges^*!,000, 155 8. Roslyn. . " EAST OP CLARK8t6n-3 ACRES $1,450 Watts Realty. NA 7-2950 195* M-U gl Bald Eagle Lake from iown. Basement. Marble sills. Fu|l tUyd bi dining room. , wall-to-wa Ing Perfect condition a al only $15,900 WUI ti SCENIC BUILDLXG SITES 1 payment. Ask 8-2618. WATER FRONT lerred and mi Priced_ reduced -rlct tar garajge -----„________ ....-condition^. INTERCOM ErsTXM. Two batha fireplaces. Lovely lot and be'sl of neighborhoods. Indltnwood Ulan-WILL TRADE. LIST WITH US — ' and Trade. 24 year Open 8:30 a m. to 9 L. 11. BROWN, Realtor PhoM FE 4-3^ or Income Property' Mssibillty., at $17,000 cash tc nortjage Ideal ^ lor man who chance. K. O Hempstead,' Real- Lake PropeHy [ UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE $665 D e Hwy ' Office 625-2615 . __ Dvenjngs by appointment 21 ACRES AT* CORNER "0P"BALD-wln and Morgan Rds . land gently rolling and partly wooded Will divide readily Into several suburban eslate sites. $850 per acre on ea» Leslie R. 'I'rn)p, Realtpr 75 W Huron Si,___________FE 5-*l6I 17* FOOT 2-ACRE OAKLAND LAKE-$10.00*, $250 down. Balance payments. 674-058$, _______,, BEAUTIFUL I-ACHE LOT OVER- kilcher -Ivlleges dutiful rw homes just.,10 minuvei ii rWh BACRlFlto PRICED 1.500 with Juk}$’2T«r ■ 1*14. CALL TODAY GRAND OPENING PONTIAC- Tmi^ a . Big ^si with wonderlul view.' *4.300. Tern C. I’.'^NGU.^’, ReaittiT QRTONVILLE Wanted!! LaU Q th* CBFTif PoMlai BPO^ITE BLDO. CO. HMIILL VILLAGE, paved streets. Many sites ........ 'Eif^ellenl ^ter"Md'd/*ln^ -flpponuility KnOcErniT age 110x160. Low as «r aw rnm* in «nA <» nnr nfl.rln., LADD’S, INC. (Perry M24) OR 3-1231 after 7:30 Open Sun. 12 ' " SEE FOR YOURSELF CHERQKJiE HILLS! * You'll like this growing coin-mufiTlT df better homes afid secluded country location. 0 Scott-Lake Rd. — ti klall. Tal to Scott-_ 3 blocks to -CARL W. bird, Realtor 503 Community National Bank Bldg. FE *-4211 Eves. FE 5rl392 Bloomfield Highlands WOODWARD. SO LAKE AREA Over too large, wooded^ rolling lot RORABAUGH jw’ard al Square Lake R Ult Form* $6. DAIRY FARM. S-BEDROOM MOD- acre. A Sanders, OA 8-2Q13 House and 10 Acres plus ' Yale''a^stanijEY ' u-O.DUWN S84.50 MONTH ground Thn bright cheeriul.bedrooms. 515.950 EQurnr 18 CASH •; 3,akefront ^ Pontlsc Lake and approx l-vr_ : -old 3-beariin. large llvin$ /m 1 with besutiful stone fireplace Duo-pane . w I n d.o w *. _bulli -in ! range and oven apd other eyttse. i Wonderful lakefront living si * Price you can ellord with almoM Immediate possession ENJOY THE SUMMER Only 516J50 with 51,700 doan plus coat*. j TRADE TOURS City Bargafti S-rabm-wUh garage tr, wond condlUoo Healed glassed n daily » LS^EAl MICHAELS ^EALTYi Y.\KKERONT , eii’ • FOR THE YOUNG AT HEART Modem bl-leyel with kllchen, din- riARKBTON 5be- , Trade-In j'lan ' TRADE : tllE IMTEMA.S’ U AY- M5- n OlBe* $-* '\MLJI. aunda > m g. Taia$(ra^ , r-, (.repikcf Olassed :n porch Alu.m!-! ri'iir boat, Owxl sand betch High’, tteiiic lot* Buy now at r 950 ' , ' Eloyel ,Keiit Inc . BRICK 4-l;i'!l)KfiO.M'' WalarfoBL paved-street, i minUU !h4.' rm nice xitchA WU-hL ..... caMneU. loU or AcioseUriX^ Opod gai storma and acreeiu. 2'w- -oaMon ai arage , Large lot. fenced. ia$ia 2 t . ard. Built 5) 1955 A* real "» •* * •Wr *“**V*“r FHA lenm^ j-IRI LEVEL DRAYtON PI-MNS cominerala] ion-1 mg An exceptionally nice 2-bed I room home lor your family plua t a home for beauty shop or other ^se Lake. 2 maater stse rooms apd priuate paneled etudy. This r* 'a new'home featuring over wIS- Thu ] . .. Pric^^jj *“ ^^**?^ * I “7Kml«e wndy b««h. On^^ - ome work’ .Price MMueed lor anfek «oh to 822.000-with term*. .* . C A WEBSTER. REALIOR A $-3^5 MY 222*1 VAN DRIVERS NEEDED. EARN ' more aa m owner - operator driving for $lbrth American Van Unea. America’i fasteat growing company. Comnlite'training sellln* Land Contracts top prices raid tor .tonfl-jynWqicW, TOrtgoisa W ■otloa esU any Uroo. U.SS!. -cTki^ i&wndeiior’'I®wn.blp. FE 4-Wsf'Clark SoffititoSc*”** Wgwtgfl Cgwtwcft-IWtgg. 60-A $8 AN IMIilDIATE SA;,E *8 FOR VOUR Land Contracts 'o you deal. Warren WAITING !ac'lS*'F?r'a^ler 117. WARDeH REA ABILITY To get cash for your land contract or equity. Small mortgagex available. Don't lose that hoine. Call Ted McCuIlodgh. 6S$-1$$0. Arro Rc-altf. 5143 Cass-ElUabeth Lake Rd. CAS” KJP" LAND CONIRACTS -H. J, ViT' We!t 4540 Dixie Hwy. 61 teagiJe finance CO. 202 S’. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ' ROjyi|iO - LOANS *25 TO 5500 , AUTOS UVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODS SE J 'Friendly genrlee' LOANS $25 TO $500 BAXTER-L1VINO8T0NB Ml Pontiac Stale Bank Building ' -EE 4-I5,IS-9. "WHEN-YOU NEED $25 to $500 --We will be glad to halp $oiL_ STATE EINANCT: CO. 50* Ponttae State Bank Bldg. EE 4-1574 1500 on Your -SIGNA' PAST. CONVENIENt (Licensed Money Lender) . Auto or Other Security -24 Months to^epip Home & Auto Loan Co. FE 5-SI21 23 and 50. Save- a late model tractor or a reasonable down payment. We will assist In flnanclM. For further details call Personnel Department. 742-645Hor write North -Ameriean Van Lines. Department 187. Fort PARTY STORE LOCA'HON __________ -package liquor license, fixtures and eqaipmwu.'Excellent Water^ . ford Township corner, in 4Tahe highway. Reii^nable lease bn MT-arlce : jt gTooo. R4iALT01M’ARTRIDGE irtrWgeW Associates. Inc. 1^ W. Huron FE 4-35S1 Trailer Park—Grocery Well located 32 unit park - __ sharp grocery, lop condition. A real money rrraker and easy too. gain priced at ^.000 IncI. J. T. WARDEN 'l.WI'HLN West of Flint, good gross, easy family operation: 2 bedroom living quarters, large - walk-ln. seats 46 B|iy this for only $33.7*0 on term* Includes good real estate., aState \\ i. tor ere kre 38 acres plus a private t plus a fine Class II health he wai Lbe wonderiul noi ly erooe-dopn. BATEMAN ; C(>mpa|iy 277 S. Telesraph Rd. Open *-» Sun 14 For personal attentlan callrihe) COMMERCIAL DEPARTklENT Pool FF g-9641. Pet- WO 5-2S23 ^COUNTRY STORE Located In small town tn the Thumb Area Doing a food bust-neaa. Has up to date fixtures and equipment. TwoAtory brtek buUdtng wItH 5 rooms and bath plus 3 room apartment. $2731*0 Terms. CLARENCE G> RIDGEWAY FE 5-7081 Broker 29* I|, Walton HOW MUCH the Do|«y Hi the Wlndov? $7.. Imt^e thlg pft complete with tnventofy. Ideal ..'MICHIGAN Business Sales, liic. LOANS E. LAWRENCE FE *-0421 Signature AUTO or FURNITURE Up to 24 months to repay PHONE FE 2-9206 ■OAKEAND LOAN COM i'ANY 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg^_ ByeKNEiL FINANCE COMPANY WHERK YOU CAN TIORROW I’P-TO $500 OFFICES IN Pontiac — Drayton Plains — Utica __W»l]ed Lake - Birmingham. Mortgage Leant 62 sflursE quabkma. tiAu comai, $.*hip tq. erlfea tabki .l ---- TUBE 4 •*■}* 'd"’*b£°^al L — Axminlatar.. kyiDB. ’ Pads^kS.W,_____ IS^ra^DPRmT ■ri* INCH TV f* OTBXtUI Wl(5Il 115. Pesra AppUan***, ■$* iTiNCH 'nr. »j'5. i ' btnatloB. $4$ 9$. Tvmw w»Ma*uf*. WALTON TV, FE *-*eS». Opao *-S, 515 B. Walton yMrnar of _Joalym_________________' apar"tment befrioerato*. ble. 2 chairs, mspit dresser. Caa V etUebe- iTUTOMAflC' Zae? sewing batibn holes and all fancy ■ Only *4.40 per monlh of tti.ww „ balance due. Cepttol Sewing Cen tera FE 5-9407. ■______________ A B E'A U T1 F U L HNOill A^ matlc In colsole cablnfl, alT In featufea. for blind homa. butb>m holes, designs etc. Just W WJ* Kr mo. Or fun bMance nf.|M» ichlgen Neechl — Elna F» *4Bl ABOUT ANYTHINO YOU _WANf FOB THE HOME CAN BE FOUND AT L A S SALES. A little out of the lei- *- — “•—‘ ance* o. USED. Visit our trade dept, far real bargatns. ' ^ We "buy, eeU or trade. Come but and look . around. 2. acree of free parking. Phone FE 5-*241. .JT._ a a wi erne I B. of I M». PL 2-33*0. g Heights a 3 ROOMS FURNITURE " BRAND NEW Wm RANGE, REFBIOERATOR $3I9-$I5 MONTH BAROAIN HOUSE 1*3 N. CA(» BUY - SELL -TAPE -FE 24S42 WYMAN’S mARGAlN^TORE Apt. slse gas stove - . *1* Re.buUt waeber Used refrigerator. . 36" Electric range Ueed 2-pc. living n Twin else bM, coll $f mattress IS W Pike E-Z Ternii FE < tU BUYS . SOFA BEDS Choice of stylrs and colon chest amL bookcase bed gray or walnut MANY OTHERJBUY8 ^ BEDR(X)M OUTFITTINO.CO. 63 DUle - Drayton Plahu OR 34734 CLEARANCE I , BUNK BEDS iWROUOIt.T IRON) complete with springs and maL DROPLEAF DUNCAN PH'YFE 1 piwiNfi IT kfORTGACE ON ONE ACRE UP. With ISO-lool rontage No appraisal fee B C Charles. Equitable Farm Lokn Berrtce 1717 8. Telegraph. ' FE 48521.___________ CASH. Loans to $2500 borne ulties. to rep I) ofly roontlly paymei... Family Acceptance Corp. 317 NAttoilel Bldg,---WWTfurbn - Telephone FE g-4023 BEPORF, YOU BORROW l!)P TO $2,500 ^ home' any -^^ace In Oakland Voss 6 Buckner A Mortgage Pr. blem? We make mortgage loans to meet your requirements. Any property, any amount. Prompt, dependable service. Remodeling and — structlon loans. Cash and soltdate debts. Chaff Mortgage and Realty *63-0790 Swop* ___________________M 2^1957 FORDS FOR #ICKUP OR SWAP BICYCLE AND ELECtRIC motors, for water pump. EM 3-439S. SWAP 1955 CHEVY V*"eNOINE"f6r 5 FORMALS. WORN, (WCE. SIZ IB. cheap cal slier 5. I E 4-!^ DRESSES, SKIRTS AND COATS. 1 14 and 30‘k. $1 to $5. 335-053*. WEDDINO DOWN ApO- HOOl ____ length -----------,________ length formal!, Slse 10. Reaaonahlf. Fg mie26 __________^^ WHITE FTOOR LENGTH FORMAL Salt HaaMliald Goods 6S AN'nQUE (GONE WITH THE W4nd) lamp. U _______________________ 1 APARTMEIfT QAS'RANOE. *^5 00 - guaranteed refrigerator*. *9*. i In elec, range. *69. Chrome dinette -sets SIS. 3 pc i bMrooms $4».( 3 pc sectional* *15. soft bed *1*. rebuilt Maytag wadhers *3* 95. portable TV $5* *5. chlfferobe »1», metal wardrobe $7. 5 pc. mapje llvtng room suite, (niceI 189: .Odd chests, dressers, chlflrrobes, bMs, spriiws. bunk bMs. lamps radios. (Unettei and ruga. Everything In tiaM furniture at bargain prices ALSO brand new I^RNmiRE OF ALL KINDS Factory secowl* About (q price. .E-Z Terma. - BUT-8ELL-TR^E - BARGAIN HOUSE 1*3 tf. cate at Lalagrtle PE 24SC iblet—formica top: col sie: alum, spring cushion ______OL 1-1962.________ • DOUBLE MAPLE BED COMPLETE. *20. double mahogany . bM complete $25 ^-32T DOUBLE BED _______ _ . TEARS J)LD. very good condition. 334-5$S3. ' DUNCAN PHYPK DININO TABLE. 6 chairs, good condition, $30, 673- F^SCH PROVINCIAL BEDROOM suite—twin headboards. 2 dressers'. 7 mirrors, night stand, off white. painted. $3*0: MA 87309. —FREE HOME DELIVERY-WHOLESALE MEATS AND GROCERIES All nationally advertIsM brands. Savings up to 40 — —‘ “---------- sugar, coffee, floi flour, .butler, ^ke mix, cereal, soup, vegetables._____ fruit Julce*_Kl**ne*r-T*r"raiSr' :—^ YES! UP TO 40 PER CENT For free catalog and Information showing how you can buy at these -.... ^*7-1577, 9-5 8 STOVE F'.ECTRIC STOVE *J S20. washer $25. eiec. urycr 17-ir IV $25 Refrigerator $25. FE V2766 y. Harris._________ _________ anB . FRENCH PROVINCIAL Malr. $75. FE^9W^ AU'TOMATIC WASHING MA--cnme.:»kemewi 'ca^ MA *4088., ' OE AUTOidATtC WASHER AND dryer. S150 OR 3-1573 HIDE A BED. CHEAP. IRONER AND II CUBIC FOOT Jr^aer^OB 3-2202 alteM._______ . KIRBY SWEEPER. LATE MODEL With full set of attachmenls. Includes power polisher, buffer, sprayer, etc. A-1 condition with 10 year guarantee. Take over payments of 46.75 monthly on S63 40 balance. Call FE 3-7623 , LADY KENMORE AUTOMATtC washer and dryer comblnbtloif, excellent condition 674-014*. lovely SINOER 8EWINO MA-chlne Zlg Zaggqr for designs, etc. r $30 cash balance. Universal Co MOVliyO ,-MUST SELL COUCH IponSr. lamps, elect, stove, refrigerator. dining room suite, break- deak. 102. Palmer I SPECIAL $20 A MONTH BUYS 2 ROOMS OF FURNITURE —ConalsU of: 2,plece, Dr'----- —' es. 1 cocktaU table m 7-^lece bedmm sul^ ^ ■ Innert-prlng mallrest and bo* spring "to match wipi 2 vanity lamps. 5-plece dinette *et, 4 chrome chain, fort.ij-a top table.) 1 bookcase, i 1x12 rug Included' till for $399. WYMAN FURNITURE GO. - ' |7 E HURON FE 4 4ANT Ko Money Down ‘ FE S-9MS ^ATER itatATMt. WefALLON HHfUVM ll-INCH * •S«r»pll.lfe nt-iwo- : Dtwniinf toiioto *\lon t»Mo nad oodmI*. Take .... pnyiMntn n.M weok. Kew Oiiaran-J * R Auto Supply, ns N 8TAIX BROWBR8 COMPLRTE with foiicrti and curtalna SSS.SS value. t34.S0. Lavatortea completa with faucets. S14 «S. toilets. Sit.«S. Michigan Fluorescent. MJ Or- M-ihleH ADMIRAL. NEW PICTORE tube, good —*“ *'“■— 8BMaS.________________ ’ BOY 8T0NE TV. STAlSfjEte STEEL SINKS WITH rim. $2^5: Delta single lever fau- celver^everytt|hg^or complete n SYLVAN STEREO - TV RCA E SUMP PUMPS. SOLD. RENTED B DAYS AND EVE- Salt MiKtHaattat 67 COOL PACK AUTOMOBILE AIR eondltlowar. excellent eondltl - tioe. Call FE 4-i703 after 3:30._ 1 - OAS HOT AIR FURNACE. 60.000 B.T.D.. l»i-U ....... 1-Dmkm Ir conditioner May be’ euitabre'for heating 1 JACOBSON AND COPPER HEEL and 1 heavy duly rotary ------ mower. QL 2-lOH. 6 Room sf*xcE heater. 2so dAL- BATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL AND gas furnaces Hot water steaur boUe' Automatic w l . . heater Hardware. elecL eupolles. rrocli and pipe and fittings Lowe _ _____ 0. CALL FRl "O-Msil. after 5._______ RIDINO AIOWER8-TRACTORS EVANS EQUIPMENT 0507 Dixie hwt.. 016-nn _ BEEF AND PORK -quarters. Opdyke Mkt. FE 5-7041. ^mpletk stqck of pipe and 1. Montcalm. FE O^m. dlUon. $75.00. MI A6700. Blender-Van Salon. S vibrator t vibrator tables, 1 roller massag-mr, BiiH other Items. Reasonably ^IcI^sMe. ^ 4-1504 .76 bAo FERTILIZER ^YKEHA® IWO^pdyke Paneling Specials V Pro flnteh.>M birfb tel ^ JJ 50 */V' Pre finished walnut 2nd tel 17^ W Pre fin.shed , meple-teS- STas Drayton Plywood' - 1e Nwy OR MM FOLEY FILING MACHINE. RE- ■Ideal Uwn mower, petlng tools, lAfoo. , - chain. 11-foot light ohaln. ear-U luggage carrier with good caova garden tractor^ with Plow an cultivator. 11 Chamberlain St. „ae Liquid Floor Hart. Simple Inexpensive Appl^tlon mice Build- ”—'J" GLASS TUB ENCLOSURES. «5; hood fans, 129.95, B-grade toilets. •18.95. O. A. Thompion. 7W5 M-W. West, _________^________ PLYSCORD — E-2-2543 i.w''»i'*an?“.ed™5: l A H. SALES. MA 5-1501 or MA 5-2537. PLAYER PIANO. GOOD CONDITION BDICmE CABliHETS LARGE »" mlrrnr. allghUy minted 15.15. laree MleetUmR i«ahigTAt« «i»h BAroiFTCB ^00 KEY ^gLA^TO WED ISB CLASCAL obifAR aae. beautiful Imtnimem, 1- :. baby Items FE 4-5395. dltloo Chajidler Beating, OR 5-5152. USED DESKS (E^CUTTVE.-ROIX . »iSot";WV.^^aIra,_t^ewW low portable King, TOmlture. lATER AND SUMP____________________ .rebuUt and serfleed. Used refrte-eratora. 173-0122. MIdweat PlumS- .70 ft. slipseal. sewer pipe ump tile 2 holes. .ump tile 2 holee. 59.90 BLAYLOCK COAL A SUPPLY CO. 51 Orchard-Lake Ave. FE 3-7101 USED 1-TON FRIOIDAIRE TWIN IHIRLPOOL AUTOMATIC WA8H-er. iBiue Streak tabular hSr dryer. Abbott play pen. crib and mattress. Peterson baby stroller. “ ■ ■ refrigerator, I7-lnch SINGER SEWING style ilg-xegger. ------- ------ fancy designi. monograms, button hbles and other oper~"— out extra attachments ---------- monthly payments, or caih ^ce qf-$37,10 kJlchlgen Necchl-Elna. FE A4S21. 3UO ZAO EQUIPPED SINGER COl —style sewing machine wtl 1. for buttonholes, blind hemi decorative designs. Just 131.1 cash price, or will handle i monthly. Capitol Serag Cei FE 5-9407. l ALBOTT LySlBER 1025jmkla^_Av^______ PE 4-4595 WAKEFIELD DINING TABLE S50. ' natural wood step tables. lamps to match $20. Drum table 55. Set at Bpauldl^ Golf Cluba with bag WHITE ENAMEL STEEL CABINET Hflmi Tooh-ModiiMry 61 ton PUNCH PRESS WITH tort itroke. haa^ phase mntor. >00 May be seen at WO W. Huron ol, from 5 to 5. LARGE SOUTH BEND TDC 4% 71 BALDWIN SPINET ORGAN, SOlS. ORINNELLS. PONTIAC MALL. 682-0422. . ORG.AN SPEQAL-S Ester organ TIZZY By Kate Osann MAHOGANY SPINET PIANO AND rrauwood SOS. tm MTTS. attar B Plano. 5ISS0. Bbony. ORIN- NELLS. PONTTAC MALL, 4880422. Used organs CONN CAPBICE THOMAS ORGAN . with buUt-ln Hl-Ft. THOMAS 5UNUET Was <995 WURUTZER 4I0S walnut Brtth • given' borrowed it from Ginny. It!s the one I gave her for her ' —*■ birthday!” Pafkhurst Trailer Sales FIMBST IN MOBILE LIVINO -Featuring New Mq ‘ * Venhire — Buddy Quality Mobile Homes ‘ Located half wey between Orion and oxford on 1454 MY 24lir JACOBSOT TRAILER sXlEB loatf->Accttiorit» 97 Wanted Cart-Tnkkt TERRIFIC DISCOUNT AT TONY’S MARINE I On new and used boats and nm ,1 lora 27 years repair etperlenci Evlnrude momra. neva Aerocraft. 101 Ntw and UsmI Care ] ■ mm- le Trallar Court, Trailer No. 7 Bargains so Uaad. I and 10____ and Bpao-O-Wldaa Wa taava purebaaed an entire al I GLENN'S ,w_ FWTER 8AY’_, C'mon In and sec our exclusive Skl-BIrd and MFO boaU. New Sea-Ray Inboard - outboard. John-- “ ------- * yr. waiM|y. PINTER'S lo boinOa from anoltatr jj jLor WALT M \-|j.AKE & s: Jt nNew .\iithc Low Low Low' Ellsworth Used Aato-Tnick Pom 102 1957 PONTIAC ENGINE WITH TRI- Down Payments WALT MAZUREK'S ' & SEA .MARINA .\iithorize(I -Dealer OHRIS CRAFT SPORT BOAS OX D1SIU.AY !„ ' . IR akuet boat, iikbip {New and Uud Trucks 17' Custo.ii Ski Boat 155 h p. IDEAL FOB permanent t UVINO OR LAKE COTTAOE8 ------ few of the modeli llsled.l , PONTIAC CHIEF --- DETROITER WHlLEY ___ __________________ ALMA ■TAB ^ NATIONAL LIBERtE CHAMPION Lintw. FE 4-9557. STEWART Evlnrude 1--pletely encloi offer. MArki ’^“^'harD^to“>tod' You can"a;ve"plenty on-theae. ' ' i ' ®*daW80n’? &u5s‘ SALE STARTS NOW! tipMoo i^* - s-sm Open 5 to 5 dally Sundaya 15 to I SLEI^. CUAN.. I^ST IWFOOT Bob Hutchinson •LEEK. euilom-...^. . Dearborn Imirceptor engine.' Mahogany hull. All customer-*----- It ^rly Craft 155 E tegMy Jiul Sheet Music Headquarters WIE(.AXl) MUSK CO. 449 Elliabeth Lake Roed (Oppoelte PonUac Mall) FE 2-4924 Pets-Huntiiig Dogs PLAYER PIANO mola M note, practically new, L WHh aoma nrib. MORRIS MUSIC 54 S. Tdegrapb Rd. FE %S547 3 CRIHUAilUA PUPS , PE 5-1559. ___ kMens. 5-WEEK-OLD ___________ pure bred. 115. 350-9717. l-f POODLE OROOMINO. tl. ALSO Untlng. fAaoi^ 0 nnd U tneh studs, OR 84575 and OR 5-0518. AKC DACHSHUND PUPPDW. 5 •-VEAR-OLD bEIRITED BAY mare. Call Ann. 858-1881 altar Mobile Honie; 4301 Dixie Hlghany OR 31202 Drxytbn PIxIns qpen_5^--------- .. . 13 FOOT RUN ABOUT 35 II.P. EVIXRUDE ELECTRIC START TRUCK SPECIALS ' -—TANDEMS— 1900 FORD 154 WB. 32.000 Ibt. 1951 CHEVY 15- •* —■- 1987 INTERNATIONAL 11 Remke. new motor -PANELS— 1981 CORVAN ...... 1959 CHEVY 'V Ion 1911 RENAULT Sharp -30 others In alock , list BUICK EUDCTEA CO|rfEE11-mandalay “* *'—• lond ear. Matnl ludlng Urea ai tlon7’MA’4-lSM“' ‘ 1981 BUICX 5-DOOR BARpiOP. aU- LLOYD'S oln — Mercury — Ccenet etero - EnglUh Ford 233 S Saginaw FE 2-9131 1959 CADILLAC. 4-DOOR. 4-WlMDOW sedan. Power brakes, staertng. windows. Excellent condition. Schrne-der Service. Perry and Piddoek 19S0 CADILLAC HA^PTOP ' > I9)if Falcon station wagon .8 Dodge ,7Xhevloa —1955 to 1841-loo other good buy*. $35 up le finance arrange. —1 Dixie Hv 1940 CHEVY, 81 ITTCK. 5 3270 1 .Joslyt i3 ft- runabout « EVENINO AND SATURDAY RIDING LUSSONS ALL AFALOOTA HORSES Children, Adults DKTROITER 19M 41X10 CLEAN 2 I bedroom, biillt-tn ktiehen. with Norge—— *“ *’*“ “ _________________ Evlnrude Lark electric st 12-voIt battery, controls, er. Price 1490 k. bright I rt engine. > ■JOItX McAULIFFE FORD . 79SJ 1W!1 CHEVY BEL AIR 1958 Ford 1956 Bulcjt, "iPDYKE MOI "r Bd ____________ VAIR 4 - DOOR transmission. r» whitewalls. Only 81-,-. . PATTERSON CHEV- f^ra wired HOLIDAY _PARK. CASS LAU^DOCiMOE L---- Picnic. 1953 CHEVY PICKUP. 5175 CALL 1955 FORD PICKUP, I FT. BOX WE NKKD^YOOT^TRAILKRI BUYERS WAITlNStl Reasonable. Free » wahuloue f“- -— dally 1( vour trailer for you! WB BUY-WK SELL-WE TRADE Hdllv Travel Coacb Co mo Holly Rd . Holly_ME 4-n7t OXFORD TRAILER SALES _________ Chemplon'- ... Yellow Stone’e and Oem'i _______re. tarma. and priced to your SnIIsfactlon. ^ 60 Units on Display JC. E. Loe_________ 197 B. Johnson 1S55 OifC 15-FOOT STAKE TRUCki - 1 condition. 602-5161 BOAT TRAILER AND MOTOR FOR TERRA MARINA HOUSE BOATS CA'B»O^N'8*BOAIB si^Ie WE TRADE Marvel Motors HALF-TON 8—FOOT STYLE Dyke motor sales _ „ I960 Opdyke Bd. FE 5 66 >961 COftVAIR roleT*'co. ia«6 *8“'woodward AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735: . THIS WEEK SPEOAL ----1. OmyL t sharp. Our selling $1795 BILL SPENCE ALLOY STERLING TRAILERS Camp Trailers—Sporting Ooods ItARfNE PAINT—ACCEtoORIES CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES PONTOON BOATS iumlnum — Ftberglas — steel — Priced from 5499 upi- Catioet - ELECTRIC MACHINES. Add. ■ STANDING AT STUD ..___ stallion. excellent 1 lines, Mount Marcy, -- xiNornoNEp nverlan'ce. --3TER CO FE 5-9S01 BUILT AND Priced from 82 50 PON'FiAO caI-^reoisT^ 237 B. Seglnaw________________ SURPLUS OFFICE FURNITURE, files, steel chslrs. safe Reasonably priced for quick eale. FE 4-1504. tYPEWtllTERS FROM 839.95 Adding Machines from $75.00 -tOfflce Mech. ~ al Printing Tborought blood 11____.________________ --- ... , „ Jay, by Balladirr. la « Blen- mente call .rnond Meat Paekeri, Inc^ 4978 > ' M-59. H mile east of tbe PonUac Airport. Friendly people serving you with respect. Open 7 days. 8 Ttl I 90 dan Is cash. For pay-call OR 4-1440. , Let----,- Used Trucks GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS FE 5-9405 ,._.Y I TON PICK—. It condition'. FE 8-90te. CHEVROTET STATION WAG-OB. RADIO. HEATER. AUTO TRANSMISSION ECONOMtl.^-GTNE wnTTB SIDEWALt mis. 824 75 PER MO. 8495 TOTAL SALE PRICE. Call CredU Mgr., Mr. Parks St MI 4-7500. Han#^Tnr-W. Ford. ' 1959 CHEVY V8 BEL-AIR 5-DOOE . beater, etlrk shift. A nice -ar. priced right. 50?LES AUTO 8ALE^ MUST SKLL - CHEAP e set of Corvette 360 hejuM i I. 6 two barrels for 28T or “ ■ ■ -f Esllb>and Jack Cochran. Lakt Orion. It early 'Ford or Olds speclsl i Dum wheels. 5140 One 'll Cadillac ■________moior iSi i ^ Carver camher boats Mirro Alum, fisherman ^2 Aqua-ut cahoee iwft-aft canoei AUCTION SALE. SATURDAY IfKJHT ' — Blue Bird AucUon. 16053 Dixie Rwy. or 6 ml N. of M 15. on ole FIO FARMALL TRACTOR 2 GOODYEAR TTBES AND TUBES. 700x15 too. FE 5-0371 •* ORIOINAL EQUIPMENT TAKEOFFS Mon. and Fr|. nlghti til I Sunday 1 to 5. Dally I to 8 Completa parts and strvloa -s sharp. Onlv 11.795. Eaay terms. JEROME - FEROU80N. Rochester Ford Peeler. OL 1-9711. fRuEHAUF. -I.MODEL ' cios^ “s'emlitVsller— atr bfaket —* “ ■ *nd FRAZER- kotOTlLLKRS^ —d Servtoa, L. W. Avli _ kf Rd FE 4-4380. DAVID BRADLETf EVERT SATURDAY EVERY SUNDAY S^otUng APACHE CAMP TRAILERS AND pickup camper. $325 and up. Far the best buy give Camper’s Para-- try. Michigan's larges" lalere. Our Pontlr- -•— 531-5897. Other loea- HAND GUNS. SHOTGCNf new and uaed. r Burr-Shell. .975 fi AUCTIONS, 7:30 PM. WEDNE8-deyx. Wtll-O-Way Couatry Mart, 513 W Long LUe Rd. MI 7-3460. SATURDAY, MAY 4- 1:30 PM. STEWAR'T bkendel farm R. PERKINS.___________________ AlicTTON SALE 3 MILES NORM Centerline el the comer of APACHE CAMP TRAILERS-A FEW new 1962 modelk left at Mg (fls-counts Also a limited stock of 1983 experimental models. All 5 new |9n models on display. Complete r 77 tractor with 2 bottom 16 h plow, hydraulic lift. Oliver I r com plefcer. Bhwk Hawk 2 r corn planter. Ferguson 2 row tivator New Idea 32 foot hay stock of parts and aoceasories fi current and' non curren" *—“ IraHera^^O^n daUy ? _• Id sprayer. AC forage blower Deere 7 ft. mot Moline 2 wheel ________ _______ . Hammermlll rake. 2 cement silos and rnany other r car 294 Oakland ; Auctioneer. 1 owr^ organ with chimes 11,535 now .11 chord organs *A off. 1195 IMPORTED ENGLISH SAd5lE . -It ael. sell oV trade fof good j --- FE 2-4708. Ralph J. Bur- ! PUBLIC GallRghcr Music Co. 15 E. Huron!______ JE 4-05^ - WHITE 5 - SWITCH ACCORDION and gold. 120 bass *’ etand FE 2-3806 LOVE seat! diamond DINNM ring, .laitos winter. fuenia lorroal. slae 15 FE 5-4160. kOWER SHARPENING TIME. PICK nSw PLAl'ITC~80iL PIPE f6h your cabin. Lightweight, easy to biitall. durable A toilet with eodebaDcock 52100 Montcalm »JP-ply. 156 W Montcalni. FE 5-4712. NEW DI.SMOfiD ENGAGEMENT d wedding rings. FE 2-0154. PLAYl-K PIANO rerondiUoned electric lor. wim stool, delivered. 5330. MOKRl.^ MUSIC Telegraph Rd EE 2-0587 *---from Tel-Huroo grinnell:s new torrid HEp oil FTONACE - 280.006 BTU. In original will sell for less thin eoat FE 4-1504. ________________________ . GOING OUT ' BUSINESS ■ Sale Now Goiqg On Ruvio Tile -102 S. Saginaw 5t- Caramic ,tUe. reg. 79e 39e aq. ^ , «4i2 heavy VINT^ , ROf. *17.75 Unoleum wall covering 38" 10c ft. LATEX PAINT COLORS . ISO gaL .vnm. TILE Hoavy C’xl"xlV’ ............te aa. Plaatlo Ula . .i............le m- Trims ..................... 50 aa. Carpet samples ............19e ea. Sl.49 Vinyl NOW TSo sq. yd. / 102 S. Saginaxv St. OkN AMENT AL IRON JPORCB aWp Step Ttalling corners.' and - posts., room divideri. AVIS CABINETS. 1570 Opdyke FE 4-4380 PLYWOOD QE ALL KINDS ' Plywood Diit, V* FE 5-S4W I'AIR OE ARMLESS LoSkoE s?S:«r;5x’irifd.sr‘^is*fis •a. 5 apbolfWrod tide chairs r e» Kodak It MM camera, flash^at- ,(i\\ RV ORGAN WITH I.FSLlj’: S.PEAKFR ' $9i.S ■ . LARGE 2 MAXU.AL . WUREITZER GHUR(T1 ORG.YX AND OUTSIDE SPEAKER $<<95- 1 BLOND, 1 EBONY S-6 HAMMOND ORGAN RETAIL 11,035 $69.h . ■ ' AL'S COMPLETE LANDSCAPJNO. OWING TO n.L HEALTH AND UN-able to continue farming..! will sell at Public AucUon on the premises located at f4900 Place Road, comer BLACK DIRT, TOP SOIL. . FILL. sand and grarel. t)R 3-7034. , BLACK DIRT AND GRAVEL hauled, reasonable. MA 5-1329. BROKEN-UP SIDEWALKS OEUV- BULLDOTWO AND BLACK DIRT, ••"d and fill MAX COOK CRUSHED STONE, YARD MAN-ufactured road gfavel 81. Pea grevfl $1 yard lO-A stone 52. Top aol' II FU< dirt 50c. Delivery extra. Amenc n Stone Produts. 6333 Sash-tbaw Rd . MA 5-5181 HORSE MANURE, 7m BLACK DIRT. TOP peat. Gravel, sind __. gredlng Reasonable. OR . QUANTI-KMJMiSil AND flU. 1 DRIVEWAY GRAVEL LOADED OR delivered FE 4-5jS3. FE 2 1468. GOOD HICH^ MEL'S Trucking A-l top spit, blick dirt, fill dirt, -" and grlvel. FE 2-7774. 2 ml. North of NeW Haven: South of Romeo,. on Sat B 1983. Sale atarta at 12:00 sharp. 4-4 year Holsteiir I "ife!^: te stake ti..... ........... -. only IKOOO miles Allla Ghalmc D-J7 tractor, nearly new "poW aleerln^ frMtor boost. Allis actor Allis . Oh«!- A ■ T( 14 In^Vow.^hyA W 4^ .____ . bottom lift Allis Chalnt plow, hyd lift. Cock-ShuU Belled combme. 10 fr McC< ..Deertng.^TSO. hay baler.wl 'tor McConqlck-beerlng 13 dii , BITTGET TERMS GOODYEAR SERVICB STORE 30 8. Caas______EE 5-6123^ lo'*l?5y 'tirei. Boat rffer win Considered. Contact ^ftocheate^ ' 1^1-1821. ___________ VOLKSWAGEN. .1! LOOMIS BOATS - YOUR DUNPHY -------------------------1 oiaasmaster. Waterbtrd, and John- . ---------- ha^nv''riTae alckle ' TRUCK TIRES .. eon Dealer. Shdreltne tralleri. Open AutO IftSUrORCa in™ nloi cuiu«^ plr. Nykm lit. $48 H exch.! 7 dxye a wbek. 14016 Fenton W .l'*"*" «n»»rBin.w in riSST ^SJ’aSd em^r "0 Money Down. 8 mp. to pay. Fenton. --------- ------- ' riding lawn rt-------------------- attachments. Weighted wheels a chains, ms FE H337 GARDEN tRACTOR. __________ ______CULTI- ...... 2361 Newberry Rd.. ott . CllntonvUle Bd. _________ 6aRDEN ROTO TILLER. SNOW plow allschment, very good condition Briggs 81 Stratton. 185. OB Fenton. MA 9-2225. I AT- . New Idea Mower. OA' I. NA 7-3202 or OA USED TRACTORS All sixes end mak- a KING BROS. FE 4-0714 FE 4-11 PonUac Rd at Opdyke SEE US FII TRACTORS MOWERS tIlLERS E\ ANS EOUU’MENT Travti Trailtrt AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Incs 1952. Ouaran’—'■ ee them and get Ion at Warner Trill -V. Huron (plan U, Wally Byam’a exciting caravana). Tor life Ss^l. 5098 SALES and: RENTALS Wright Campers, Wolverina tmek campers^ B*CHOWLANb ' 5245 Dixie HWy — “ Century Custom Built TraveL Trailers Self contained. 17. 19. 23 xfld 25 ft. Organised caravans. Rlao see the lO.NT'AV RKNTALS TOM 8TACHLER I for” S5J.E BY-OWNER. 1*56 26 FT h drill on robber, all steel box HOMEMADE Wheel-type disc, less old hydraulic lift Deerlng. 5 foot tract fool spring drag F Prop Virgil W. Clay C A U P El |l6o OR Pioiiti-Trec»-Shrubs ■ STREAMLINE TITAVEL TRAILER 81.AI ;S£e‘«\y.“'M';s.iKff*fo’;-; . I FREE demenatrallon — A-l TREES. SPRUCE, PINE. F • Yews., Ilugho—Shade. I,rees1 1 dig — bring tools and burlap 1 ...„ HOLLY TRAVEL COACH. Inc. 15210 Holly Rd.. HoUy ME 4-6771. Open Dally ---------------— WQXN : \ 2 manual organ WITH OUTSIDE STEREOPHONIC SPEAKER CHERRY PROVLNCLAL , 2 Manual Gulbrari.son Organ . ' . FORMERLY it.606 $1,100 Estey Mission^ Mahogarty ssion^- a 17 0&ln.e "$169 V a MANV OTHERS TO CHOOSE EROM LOW, EASY TERMS GRINNELII’S 27 s. Saginaw I 4fANT ‘to sell your ' R*EIX8'i^feimSC^5?ALL. 'gS2-»m. IfARodANY CONSOLE PMjlO. Shtcelleot coqdiUon. r* *S0|0. -Ai t coQdiUao. ■ A' LOADING. DELIVERING FIlL !' ,“i‘, wT"; DIRT DAILY. CORNER BAUy WIN-HIIDBON ! 6o£»b. ’Maie’e"'iht "eM 1*6373! 10-25C i UlXic iRGBEENS I $15. Leas than gmvel.Y>'r6ceaae<5 stone■ Ffi~'8..T8r. of""pom'iV*W0 1)1x1 SAND. ORAVKL. PEAT*- BLACK U.B. 10) MA 5-1922 ■■ . .. . GLADIOLI and DAHLIA BULflS* J'M.LSVVnRTH AUTQ liii.l TK’AII'.ER ^.YI.I'.S ■^Olxie Hw, ..... Mir. EM 3-225( dltlon Best otlfr. 1 FOOT day! CRUISER, ‘--xvy duly T'"““ M&M OR 3-6262 MOTOR SAI.E' More Money FOR SHARP LATE MODELS p.m Monday thru Friday, Ellxabeth L»ke Bd \'OLKS\\‘AGENS /6l Deluxe spnroof wagon TRAX Ei: TRAILERS Avaltir -The new light weight, tell 1, ............... -............ ?m®Tachi -«:rsE#f BWBdREEN-iAL stone Bin Male’s Pit. EM S6373. 1 SAND GRAVEL, FJLL. CEMEN?. ! truckl^ Pontiac £k. Bldrs. Sup- , spreSier if^‘.^6WA*^: ^^er^SwJaiS. w, a^”^ INBOARD joU”VsTATK'^L’\H " •>‘’_8J6L 0, Pobtiac 8970YSxie Hay (Old '‘[nei’-'Ll „ OT.jugT N'^.^^NTfA’c'bRIVEIN ''°^*®fe°«847 " “me^e rbuiT - Johnson and 2 U -gallon tanks , qr OR 4490*_________FE 4"0647. gla bottle:. 8.1 - Ickup Truck ’Tires 870-15. 0 ply. Traction U Blemishet 522.50. exo RECAPPINO ONE DAY SERVICE on Requeet |Lone 8U 825 20/900 20/10,00-20 ” "Call FE 2-9251 uie icaai. xuu c aak for Dick Curran I fore you buy a Firestone Store , Week Huron. Some 1962 boat: --------------------•----------I come t"‘ •nd "• 931 dealing CUSTOM BOSr COVER AND CAN-1 FE 4-4277 or FE 4- 12 ft I 0 Inaurance. at ratea U Auto Servlet CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THKI ■“ Cylinderi rebored. Zuck Me-; .... _ e Shop. SI Bood, Phone PE: -Trigtm br'LONB ornn. . " “ Qiff Dreyer’s ty20^ TO 40% ■kV Por (Jrivere with GOOD reeotdf. __ ,— Uade - buvara watt-; BRLMMETT AGENCY Ingll Your MERCURY MOTOR uir,.,, un. FE 44B98 dealer SKIT-BOAT OF THE, proUae SUte Bwk^^ Gun and Sports Center ALL STA’K MOPED MOTOR BIKE. opRM^CTlfg^Yg BANK FINANC^ excellenl condition. MOTORS 1950 RARLEY DAVIDSON. I 383!^52, 7496 Har'dlsty. PnlonT Bicycles MERCURY M 34 YEAPS EXPERIENCE IN SELL-, power, excel \^g ^quality ^ new »nd^ used : OR 4-0027 — ao E Lawrence 8t.___________ 97 star Craft boati and. Oator trailers - Everything for the boat. OWEN’S MARINE SUPPLIES 396 Orchard Lake ‘ --------- Boats—AccMSories 10-9WT SAILFISH , . ............... ----- ' w'ir®i Mil i MARINE INSURANCE, FE 3 , *100_^and up^ I-I«l>lll'^| 88. Hansen Sgency. FE 3-7053. 8PRINO SALES SPREE! NOW — Ing on ht Loomis Boats, 14016 Fenton Rd, MA 9-7225. F ' ^ ............ ercury ele » 3-5597 RUCHANAN’S 13’ alum boatsx-4115, 15’ Flberglas —8595. 16' Flbergla»j:5875. New IS’ 12 FOOT flat BOTTOM PLYWOOD; riaMhe boat With oars Excellent 17 canoea^l89...FE_4- I STOP—LOOK—.SAVL I Pabuloua Hydrodyne Combeerde AUTO INSURANCE FOR ANYONE DON NTCHOLIE , 53V9 W. HURON STREET FE 5-8183 CANCELED? REFUSED? YOUNG DRIVER Local Sendee—Terms FOB INFOHMA’nON CALL FE 4-3535 FRANK A. ANDERSONj AOJENCY ' — 4-5535 FOOT DUNPHY BOAT. 35 LarBon-Duo^hetelcPeathereraU EVINRUDE MOTORS and TRAIl-BRS *■-’— Float* FafElgB Cart 105 19H FIAT. 1300 SEDAN. $4*5. R R R 14-FOOT WOLVERnjE^BOA’T.^^R-00 t 14 FOOT FIBEROLAS SKI BOAT, Sylva.. Alum. 1-— Grumman. Old Town Canoea - ’ le Dealer" 1960 TRIUMPH TR-5. CONVERTT- “Your Evlnrude---- Harrington Hoat Work: 10*9 s. TeIe|TY>> 7W- . 4 FOOT CROSBY.’ FIBERGLM yi|__*.j r«ra_Tr«f»a Spqrteman. pm ___________ALWAYS 1959 JAGUAR 3-3 SEDAN. 11.750. Pontiac Sport Car, Inc. " FE 5-1511 9 VW. LOW MnaiAOB. FULLY . Eic. condition ■ Free towing OR : fo3t aristocraft. “merI MANSFU^LD .'\uto Sale.s 1076 Baldwin Ave. 335-5900 ire you buyliig a new or equipped. $900 552-1600 JT7MK 1»7 JAGUAR, BEST : FE 50S71.____________ —-----11959 MORRIS MINOR. GOOD CON- dltton, low thUeage. OL 2-2656 Renault 14 FOOT WOLVERINE BOAT 4160 Elmhurst Rd. *FE 2-1822 is-FOOT- ’fibeRglas holiday.I 2 4Q, U P.- Mercury motor, 1982. ,, •21,1., aa-K nn l.7n« — ----- -------^—_ : ALWAYS BUYING AND PAYING ' 5IORE-FOB GOOD CLEAN trailer 9825 OR 3-7052 oTpEI ;ent^r de. "Autborlxed Dealer” OLIVER BUICK and JEEP cukbtons ahd traller i 15FOOT FIBEROLAS Bl Inrude 60 H.P raoM fully equipped,. UL 2-7 cRAP'r inb6ard f FOR BERNIE AT— . MURMLNGHAM CHRYSLEH-PLYMOUTH INC >2 S. Wotylward_Ml 7-2514 rOI.KSWAOF.N. 51JSC OR 4-1154. TRIUMPH TR5 $1 mechanically Tirei i-_ --- and spare baa never been used The full Price la only *1.7*5 and BIRMlN^SJl^YfSjMfw*^ OUTH. 911 B. WOODWARD. iis^ORVAIR' SPIDER, 2- DOOR onlv 6000 miles. *2,495. Real abarv 18 000 mile guarantee. PATTERSON CHEVROLET 00. 1060 t. 1961 CORVAIR 700 4-Door Sedan Stiiidard b •p.^ vhlt«w $1188 1962 Ghevy Bel Air ' * ".oor. "“o"/ .V« $1995 BILL SPENCE Rambler-Jeep sen Dixie Hwy. at MIS CLARESTON “* * 1980 CHEVROLET BEL ASR WA-gon. 0. stick shift. Ready to go. Only *1 295. Easy terma. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINO- HAM MI 4-2735..___________ I960 CHEVROLET. 6 CYUNDKR. nice car. Only *1.195. Easy Unoa. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. • 8 WOODWARD AVE- BIBMIHO- tXRVf KTT l_9rW ^ HASKINS Compact Car SALE"^ 1960 FALCON 2-door with ra tlful solid rod finish. 1961 TEMPEST 4-door, radiq ahovo average 'co^Un, solid fawn ftnlah 1*61 RAMBLER Wagon, aotematls HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds 'Four Croaeeoada brKavfw" U S. 10 ar" MA 5-5071 Uvostock 83 Due first of June. 1*294 HoUy Rd BLADE MimXiXniE POODLES. taeriflee ter 960 EM .1-2904. ■, I :^in Bl IDLE FE^ *'•’ BLACK MINIATUHE ----------- male pup. yegHtered Ml 4-75g. BOXER PUPPIES , :■ -■ FB 6-85iq / ;, . ' dachshunds ’toT .roil ter- ; RIFX. CUTE Kl'lTENS, Huna Pel Shop , FE 0-3112 DACHSHUND PUPPIEB. AK4« J~ollrt <"e73-M31 1MB DoSOTO 4-D06r HARDTOP.' VI cyl. online, ilondord iroAstnlsillon. real gharp ear. PiiU. Uqulda^ price *m cradn no problem tN» buidlt and arrante' all flnAnolni. nmversal Auto.. 13B 8. Saginaw. PE t-4871 - . 1m7 DbDOE ADOOR WAOON, Only IBM. Easy ler BON CHEVRotET WOODWARD AVE HAM ill 4-37M WILSON -PONTIAC/, CADILLAC PORD 4-pOOR UanMnUsicB. full price’ alOHN McAUUFFE FORD ^ |M OaAnd Avo. “ PE Midi THIS WEEK A ____ ______: SPHCIAl. RECEDED Sljt i*) IMl Fords, all 4 cjUnder with atlck ahtru These are freight cars and ajie all like new. fpll price only bps each and no money down needed LUCKY AUTO SALE& Por.Uac E Discount Lot," 113 8. Saginaw FE 4 3314_______________ Ntw ml VtU Cm V Keego PoiUjac Sales ___________ CONVBkTn^ tup pow«r. radio, healer. Opod aar "V ............... IMt JET PIRR OLDBt TURBOtU- per charger. 4 speed, posltraetioo , beayy duly ehileh and--------------— WC RAVE m STOCE 7 COMPACTS .Ealtons—Valiant liillilian—Comet and „ Rambler. American _ PRICED TO SELL! BEATTIE MARMADUKB IMCm FORD DEALER Blnco 1I9B" □HE HWY IN WATERFORD AT THE 8TOPLIOHT OR 3-1291 IIM PLYMOUTO 4rmr iSSoMItW Olid Uttd Cm 106 . »«• PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE “‘J?* *•» powti. Alum. Vboeu. All a «i.r.nr A cosaortea U K1347. $2.>95 BILL SPENCE Rambler-leep «6T3 Dixie Hwy. at MIS CLARJKSTON _____ UA ______ late ism WHITE THUNDERBim w.h„---------------ateen^ NEW rAmBLER CUBTOM 4-DOOR p^o only . ipd I block. MM R A R Oaklond Aeo., FE 4-353a. IMI OODOE S-PASSENCER 8TA- IIM FORD AOOOR C Wl drtre 1430 MY 3^1» MB FORD station WAOON I poaaenwer. power hrakee, steeru ond w&idowa. radio, heater, will woUa. excellent mechanical com oSi i*|7M“ nni* RACE S USED CARS jP4B Dixie Hwy________g7«.Jeo, ISM FORD COUNTRY BED------- . lake ovov paymaBU.-,NA 7-3341. ■-. isw^BiRE^oSraRfiiLE'WrrH rmdlo. beaUr, automaUc trana^ ^alon, powtr steerlnf ItfueS. DO«»r mnArvww FORD ...etehlff rinyl .fabric. There la faginy In ttfliL______- -- —tStN fi^guaranteed tn wrlUnt ror a htU year. Priced ar only I1.3M ond easy tenne wUl be ar JSJM“c^??«SrPL”Y’5: OUTH. S13 B. WOODWARO. MI - GOING ■ OUT : • FOR BUSINESS SALE NOW GOING ON! SUBURBAN OLDS- |M_1_ USED CARS GOODWILL I’SED CARS 1S5S CHEVY IMPALA Adoor’iedan, H^upt Pontiac Opm Monday. Tueeday an ^nmndajr ubUI 9 p4n UA. IS « Issb ford a-Dc_„ - -Moeo lrom> fVom a JOBS McADUFF* FORD 1963 ^LCON DELUXE CLUB WAO-on-box, pet, owner. FE 3A5M. J>» LARk STATION'WAOON. BA- r *-J'f’TE side! 1957 Ford' d-Door. All block nniib. SURmiHiJfoRS L71 a, 8o«lnow_J|T B-4B3I FORD laa IXOAN, 1S» BUICE. C. E. Loo 117 8. Johnson 1953 FORD convertible" MODI-rw. Must aeU. Maks offer M7- Marvel,Motors Oakland Ary. FE 1^079 7 FORD STATTON WAOON., AD->matlc tranamlaalon, radio, heat-T. Priced for quick sale at full qul^tlon price 1197 Credit no roblem. We haode and arrange I lanclng. Unlreraal Auto ,150 toaw. FE M171. B FORD HARDTOP I Pljmwth. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER Ntw and Uttd Cm »r bardlop .B IM ^^asoQ ..... I 4N n^BgORTATTOH Ntw wd Uttd Cyrt 166 WBfoar’ Fwwor itoerlBB. aTTeyllndlr. aulomatlo . Mow DouWo BaiM Cosy larmi. JBROim GOING OUT FOR BUSINESS- SALE SUBURBAN OLDS USED Cars MB 8 Woedwort____Ml 4A4IS BURDE MOTOR SALES, INC. OAKLAND COaNTT-S TTEWEBT IMPERIAL CRRYSLER PLYMOUTH VALIANT DEALKB UBIN. MolnOLl-------- Ntw Old UwdCini u-u. loN 8. WOOD-BIRMIHOHAM. MI TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS IBU Chary club eoupa......B3TB 19M Chary eodan ,......... ■ .1331 ISBB Cbery 4-door sedan :..{fl5 IHI Chary club coupe .....WM 1947 Chary 3-door .........$485 NO MONEY DO.WNI^ Paterson CKcvrolet r ; MO 8. Woodward Art-. MI 4-3731 BIRMINOHAM ^ IMI "BONHEVILUr 4-DOOR hardtop equipped with Hydramatic -. transmlaakw. Power iteerfng and .brakea, radio, beater and ItkeniowlJJg Comet FOl^DS JIIS ;h .carpettna. We InrIte y M*7.^redlt i)p rersal Auto., 130 8. 8agaiaw. FE ' 4-apeed tranamiaaionT ra -A407L ■---- . .__________i LOW mileage. Charooal_________ IMS PLYMOUTH. CUSTOM BPOHTj AUburbah. VI. radio, hegler. pow-! >r ctferinf nod brnke». sutomsUc' Roch^stor jFord Dealer OL 1*1711. whliewaUs. ESTATE STORAGE lSS3 TEMPEST LeMANS CONVERTI-COMPANY AUTHORIZED ' FULL, ble White body, red lop FE 4-51M LlQUnJATlON SALE PRICE $397 ' after 5 e - ^ Low weekly parment of 34.00. Call ----*- IMl PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON- 1958 Pontiac Hardtop :$$99 Full Price ...■"-■$2495.. : ■■ 34 Month* iQW> Guaranteed Warranty No Cash Needed! '■) ACTION AUTO LLOYD'S Lincoln - Mercury — Comet -----• — EngUih’ Ford 333. 8. Saginaw FE 2-9131 ism PLYMOUTH MXX)R RADIO Bice. I7M Mr. Station FE 5-4101 1959 PONTIAC CATALINA. 3-DOOR auto , radio and beater. tl.OM. R ^ R Motors. 734 Oakland Are., F <4-3531_______^____________________ 19M. PONNEVHXX SPORT .COUPX. ■ A-1, condliton. with power. Ifuat RAMBLERS ______________________I We have 40 car* In »tock lot 19M PLYMOUTO. 8-DGOR WAO-I month of May plua aomo low i .................- TTac- hOe demon*tratora £i“ ; ROSE RAMBLER SUMR MARKET ETOPIRE AUTO BALES_IgM 34,55 U”*"" ’'*** gM, MB.7113 r- ____■ ___ iM« PONTIAC BONNEVILLE LLOYD'S Lincoln — Mercury — Comet Meteor — Zhigusb Ford 333 S. Saginaw . FE* 2-9131 door hardtop, autwnatlc tranai alon. radio, heater. wUteWalU, p $1995 34 Months »«kral. iUek. :^_nui^X!_ <»UNIRY skDAN -------------- I R I BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER PLYM-_ I OUTH. 913 ’p. WOODWARD, MI 19M Mercury Monterey. clean, custom, white. 2-do6r. VI. radio, beater, atandard tranamla-alon. power brakea. whllrwall Urea, seat belU. -excellent condltlco. pvt. ---------- MY 3-4113. ~TrOOTr~HA®TOP . .TEL H^e you been denied the pnyilege of buying a car Jiewa Aa "ttvious . BiderTp^ raeaversaip, etc. if you wtnt, jto get te-estab-. lii|tiade call or see Mi'. . lUjr at the Lk|uidction Lpt, 185 C^lond at ^tt-dertoa. FE 5-9232. - , iniB 19M Ftitl Falcoa. . — ------ _ _ perfect condition and our aeillng price le only 55M with no money -down LUCKY AUTO BALES. . Pontiac f DMcniiBKl------------ Saginaw FELglA IIOLf’ ^ . • IBI B. ---- ace Ml 6-riB __________ im OLDS CONVERTlbLE. OAM-agerf. drivable OR L7I34 4 OLOBMOBILB 4-DOOR SEDAN 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 : Hardtop White, power at________ and brake a. Low mileage. FE 195A bed BONNEVILLE CONVER-•^le 11650. FE 4-1356. PONTIAC GOOD TRAHBPOR- ET CO. BfRM brown. Only 51,4! PArnsHsoH CHE 9 8. WOODWARD MlNOHAkl Ml 4-3735 OUVER BUICK 1960 OLDS ■■*• Convertible 1962 BUICK Skylark Convertible SKn 19M QLD8 •IB - COnrertlble 51495 1K2 BUICK Inricta „ IMl BUICK Electra 115 ' . IMS CORTiUR 'YST' Idoor . 1|M BUICK LaOnbra Raiyltop «14N ISM CHKTT Btecayiin ......... Wl BUICK Bpaclal 4^oor‘ 1959 FORD Custom S-door I 717 ISM CHKTT .ImPBin Hardtqp tlW IMl RENAULT a-door . OLIVER BUICK- NOW.GOING OX! • 35 select value rated 1 owner B mlnghaih. Bloomfield trade - It Priced to beat all Competition. SUBURBAN OLDS formance at a huge aayloga lyw lull piice la only BTS-_____ term*. wUi be’arranged to fit your bvxraet. BIRMINOHAM CHRY8LKR PLYMOUTH. 913 8. WOODWARO. Ml 7-3314. 1U;Y YOUR NEW HOUGHtSn & SON 533 N Main R Rocheeter. OL l-tTIt GOING OUT FOR BUSINESS SALE NOW GOING ON! mingham, Bloo^eli' Priced to beat All co SUBURBAN OLDS WE RAVE IN STOCK 7G©MPAePS- Falcons—Valiant Hillman—Comet and . Rambler American' PRICED TO SELL! BEATTIE Tour FaRD DEALER Sloce IMO'* ON DIXIE IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 ROOT'S Spring Specials: RUSS lOHNSON Pontiac-Rambler -special- 1961 PONTIAC - $2395 Pontiac Retail Store 65 Mt. Clemens St. IM3 pbNTUC CATALmA YDOOR hardtop, auto, power atMiing and brakea. radio.' whitewalls, exe. con- dltlon. Call 646-3563. _________ 1S62 PONTIAC CA^^AUNA 4 - DOOR PONTIAC C Iramafic. power brakes 1963 BONNEVmLE. 4-DOOR. HARO-power ^ iteerlng^imd brakes, I actual miles, .below dealers 1957 LINCOLN 4-DOOR HARDTOP baa radio and beater and' automatic transmission. In excellent full price on this Jet Kmo AUTO SALES. 115 8. 6 HASiONS CHEV -OLDS CARNIVAL -'OF BARGAINS -All Colors and Models to Choose From--Fabulous Money Saving Deals-' -On The Spot Financing--IMMEDIATE DELIVERY--^^^^^^-^^ •. Several Demonstrators . SAVE -SAVE - SAVE 1963 OLDS DEMO $3895 1963 CHEVY DEMO $3095 NEW 1963 OLDS $2295' NEW 1965 CHEVY' : n 1 Ddbr with aU I $1897 HASKINS CHEV-OLDS 6751 DIMt: HWY. AT M-lS-CLARKStON —YOUR CROSSROADS TO SAVINGS— MA 5-5071 * MA 5-5071 • '62 Corvair Monza 4-gpeed. rmAln. h»a like new. $1895 «uue o«»ier» I owuvr. mm new, on $1995 Bill Root Chevrolet 3251 Grand Rimer OR 4MM FAR.MINGTON i961 BONNEVILLE WAOON.- FULL power Just like i low-mileage ca a new one In every way our low price of only tl.fSS. Ing arranged on new-car _____ BIRMINOHAM CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH. -912 S. WOODWARD. HI KING AUTO SALES LIQUIDATION LOT DELIVERS WHEN OTHERS CANNOT E\E.N IF Yon .Are'New in Michigan EVEN IF You liafi a Repossession EVEN IF You Have No Credit EVEK' if You Have Been Bankrupt $.5 Do'vm DEI-IVERY AT ONCE NO HKD TAPE NO BIDE NOTES NO SALARY NOTES _ NO CREDIT NEEDED NO CO-8IONERS NEEDED BECAUSE TODAY'S BARGAINS 4-Door, nice. Paymenta 15.54 Mr Hardtop, ibarp, Paymenta 14 46. 1957 Ftinl 3-Door BUT Sedan, ntle. PaymeMa $1.11 - 19M Lineoln Hardtop $1$7 ; 3-Door, clean. VorBionU H U j i*«ia-WJtK-TV Clww>«l4..WWi.TV Chuiwiy-Wm-TV awnt>«IO-(^KtW»TV ChowiwISO-WTUS TONIGHT l:^M2)Nkws (4) Deputy (7) Movie: “the Invisible Men.” (In Progress). (9) (Dapt. Jolly and Popeye (W) American Economy C;29 (2) Editorial, Sports •:2S (2) (4) (7) Weather 1:31 (2) Highway Patrol (4) (7) News, Sports (9) Yogi Pear (56) French Through TV 1:49 (7) Good News of tbejiy 6:45 (4) (7) ^ws 7:69 (2) Story of a Correqwnd* ent (4) Best of Groucho (7) Rebel (9) You Asked for It (56) Searchlight 7:36 (2) CBS Reports (4) (Color) Virginian (7) Wagon Train (9> Movie: “The Unholy Wife.’’ (1957). Rod Steiger,i Diana Dors. . • „ i . (56) American Business System 8:00 (56 i Showcase i 8:39 (2) Dobie GUlis I (7) Going My Way i (56) Title Hunt -------- 9:06 (2) Beverly HillbiUies (4) (Color) Perry Como 9:36 (2) Dick Van Dyke (7) Our Man Higgins (9) Parade 10:66 (2) Steel Hour (4) Eleventh Hour ____ (7> Naked City -.......... (9) News 10:15 (9) Weather, Telescope UAW 10:30 (91 Ted Lindsay 10:45 (9) Ontario Provincial Affairs TV fWorm as Lawyer CBS REPORTS,. 7:90 p. m. (f) Pulitter prize-winning columnist Walter. Uppnuum offers frank views of events, forces and personalities shading destinies of nation ^and world. BEVERLY HILUILLIES, 9 p. m. (2) Jed acts as own lawyer wbm family’s Udten to court over traffic accident. PERRY COMO. 9 p.m. (4) Guests include Mickey Rooney, Connie Stevens and iUIan Sherman of "My Son,, the Folk Singer’’ fame on color show. '■ STEEL HOUR, 16 p. m, (2) Dan Duryea as mao'who helps boy'With problem parents. f NAKED CITY, M) p. m. (7) Simple, ordinary man wiP nesses beating, is ordered by hoodlums to leave town, but he’s in Jove and wants t<) stay. At Musical Murder Song Lover Moans By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UP9 - Double ^ jeopardy Js unconstitutional,' but one form of it has been I flourishing lately. Let me give you an example, i As 1 was : driving home from work the , other evening, I tumad-on-my car radio just | in time to hear ESCORTS DUCHESS — President Kennedy and Grand Duchess Charlotte of Luxembourg sit together in an open car on the White House grounds ye^erday after a welconiing ceremony for the European ruler. the disc jockey in charge would actor is Georg# A identity the culprit. He djd j of the program “Route 66.” A He Said the recording had j record-plugging tour brought been committed by' a fellow ‘ him to Washington recently, froth the television program | and I took the occasion to ex- ■popanza " ’ | amine this peculiar cultural , w * I manifestation at close range. INoW I lead a rather sheltered and that program had i isbmehow'Hescaped my notice. 1] assumed from its title that it was some sort of giveaway ! Bat when 1 get heme, I ing a shambles . out oT j U Get By,’’ one of my j favbrite tunes. Curiosity overcame niy dlgl- | switching impulse, and I held on to the bitter end to see if I had leaped to the wrong concintion. My teen-i(|er, who ieei aH, and tells all where television^ is concerned, told me that “Bonanza" Js a western. la cashing In on wfaatpver it it that prompto a television fan to bay an actor’s vocal albnm, Mahaiia bad to overcome a r Generally speaking, jmly art' actor whoM voice is uhsuilM by musical training can expect to produce a hit record. 19:36 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) piny Your Hunch------ (56) French Lesson 19:45 (7) News 16:56 (56) (Jemum Lesson 11:66 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jack Lanne 11:16 (7) News, Sports, Weather 11:15 (2) Editorial, Sports, Weather (4) Weather, Sports 11:36 (2i Steve Allen—Variety J4) (Ck)lor)Tonight-Carson (7). Movie: “All Baba and the Forty ’Dileves." (1943) Nearly Ran Out of Fuel, SaysTlier (9) Movie: “A Touch of the 11:95 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:26 (56) For Doctors Only 11:31 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (7) Seven Keys 11:50 (56) Memo to Teachers THURSDAY AFTERNOON Federal Aid to Public Schools V I^rthermore, she said the chap I had heard undermining ‘Til Cict By" plays the part of a "ranch owner. That astonished me.^ Judging from his voice, I would have guessed that he played the part of a stampede. I To make matters worse, Ma-haris was earning his living as a singer before he took up acting. This could have been : fatal to his career. Fortunately, he developed a throat condition that forced him to stop singing. His rroaky voice was ideally suit- mean by double jeopardy. If you miss ’em on television, they will get you with, a record album. acting, however, so he turned to the theater. All sorts of wanderers of Newton Minow's wasteland. are. WASHINGTON (API— Demo- be futile to ask Congress now toimake federal funds available to cratic leaders of the House Educa-provide aid for public elementary the states for public-school con-tion Committee have given up all land high schools. 'struction and teachers’ salaries, hope this year for legislation pro- They still hope, however, tojmarks the third straight year Ken-, cutting records these days, viding general federal aid to keep most of the rest of Presidentmedy has been unable to get a Ben Casey sings and Dr. -' schools. They are dropping It from Kennedy’s comprehensive educa-ivotejn the House on what he has Kildare sings, to mention a 12:61 (2) lave or Life the administration’s education bill. |tion bill in once piece, despitejcalled the hMrt of hu education! couple. Their albums : have , * * * {pressure from committee Repub-,program. j helped'popularize laryngitis. (7) Ernie Ford c:hairman Adam Clayton Pow- licans to concentrate on a single! Religious and racial controvers- Another singing felevision 12:25 (2) News Lji and other ranking sectfon—aid to colleges. lies plus wide.spread opposition to 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow iDemog-ats have decided it wouldi Abandonment of the proposal to the concept of federal aid to edu-' (4)’Diith or Consequences --------- cation have-built up^ aJormldable. makes B^ing both an actor and a nonsinger, he could have become a big recording star. But unfortunately, his. voice came back. Mahdris hasn't done badly, considering his handicap, and I-wish him well — provided that he lays off of “I’ll Get By." , (9) Movie: “Above Us the Waves." (1955) ^THURSDA Y MORNING 6:00 (4) Continental Classroom: Atomic Age Physics . 6:15 (2) MeditaUons 6:26 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:30 (2) College of the Air. -----W Pather Knows Best 12:40 ( 56) Spanish Lessons 12:45 (2) Guiding Light T2ia (4T News 1:00 (2) Star Performance ' HONOLULU (AP)-Betty MiH-' It to the Girls er. 37. who made history Tuesday! (7) General Hospital by flying her small plane from; *** Movie: “Navy Wife.”! u...,.:: .«i/i (1956). Joan Bennett, Gary! Merrill. i :16 (56) French Lesson * * * ' J 1:36 (2) As the World Turns “I should have had three hours| (4) Best of Groucho left, but I wasn’t worri^," said) ^7^ Qj,| (56) World History 1:55 having it considered separately.strings’’ gave My friend Timmy Everett {Tuesday 16 medal holders left ting out some 4,000 picnic tables and a final decision has not been_; . _ „„ Lw-o.-k iTr.ivnp<>r makers 9:15 (9),Nursery School Time 9:36 (2) To TeU the Tnith (9) Sing Ringsround (56) Elfish VI 9:45 (9) Friendly Giant 9:55 (2) Editorial l():06 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When (9) Romper Room Travis Airi Force Base in North-'along Michigan’s highways, ern CaUfornia for Washington All the tables, which were aboard an Air Force plane. Jack- cleaned and Stpiifd over the win-1 and his wife had been invited lef. wiU be ready for use by^Jday'^ „ take the same flight. , ^5. I ^ w * - They will be placed in 26 free- A Travis'spokesman said. Ijow- way safely rest areas, 100 road- _________ jever. Jackson declined the Travis side parks and 2,400 individual (h (Color) George Rterrot flight, but would go to Washing- table site§^ along the side of the (7) Movie: “Horror ton by commercial carrier. road. Man Charged With Murder monogramnik' hubcaps (to be us6d as ashtrays) . ./. Ex-bqjer Jake LaMotU., noping toipeddle his bio to Hollywoodr wbukHirsatis---|lifed with Vince Edwards in the lead. ! REMEMBERED QUOTE: "About the time we think we can make ends meet, somebody moves the ends.” Herbert Hoover. EARL’S PEARLS: Any parent can teJi you - all you hgve to do *1o make a child hungry is take him to an expensive restaurant, j Broadway dialogue, via Irving J. Bottner: “How’d your wife •learn tp drive? ” . . . “Accidentally. ” nial’s earl, brother. , (Copyright. 1963) Island. Koran. (9) Larry and Jerry (56) What’s New? (1941). Dick I -To(day's RaeJio Programs— (JW(760) WXYZd 270) CKlW. Sports Les »;»-WXTZ Gordon. Woil sr»J. Kmplioslb. Robtris CKLW. Jo« Van WJbK Ntas Atarv WXVZ. B Mobtao THI R»»«T N0BM.>0 « «*-Wja. Voict M Aflt. ' WAJ. N»««. Rooms . WXVZ. WoU. Nsoa WJBK. Marc Asarr WCAR. Jisvi. BhrndM WPi'N RfRC. Aril. Waaloo • 3C-WJB. Choral . CKLW. Boh Walno WXTZ. i^ttaa '■K-mmz. t *«:M-WJIl. WoVi i:ij-wjn.. ,. Us: Al.a« WoHd Ton CtLds ( t’.aa-WJE. Uhiic Hall WJBE. Hr»a. As«r» WXVZ. vrpoM. Dale Tina 7:C»-WJR. Rawi.'My»le WWJ. Ht»a. BohsrU WXTZ. Wolf. Ht*i -CK» W H»*i, toot DOtU sjBK. Nava. Atarr I WHOM. Hawa. I 7;*0-WWJ. RoOrrta. Oaraflola • WAii. Nr*A CKl kV »»aa. OcTld WJBK. nas-A ATofT WCAR Nsas. Bhrrtdaa • iCO-WJH-Nes« B .Oiifst wtVJ Nsvs. RAOarU. -WXTZ, Wolf. >••••_ WWB. Af-ri ia:«S-WWJ. not Along laraO-WJR. Ifsws. Music WWJ. Nfvb. Nfighbor WPON. Ols»n. PCH Workshop -------------- WPON. Nrvs- Johnson wi|FI. NeWs. Burdick t:J*-,WXTZ Wmtrr. News Nras MUSIC nCA« BhriidsB WXVZ Brfakiast l:aa-WJR. Ncwa. WHFL If***’ WeLtOd, lt;M-Wjll. Neva. Oodfref WWJ: News. Nelchbor WXVZ. Paul WMMr , CKLW. JOC f« ^ WJBK Hcwa. BMO i wr»R. Nrvs. B Mtltrn WPON. Nows. Jerry plsto wnn. liaas. MeLsad II-JO-WWJ. jihnnhaals. NdaOlMr *XV> WtO WXV> Wtnlar Nawa yminanav orTBRNnoN lt:ao-WJK. Hava. Parm WWJ. Neaa. Uartsns Clart WXNZ. BeOi_____ CKLW. Bud OaTlcc WJBK. Neva. La# r- 3" 4 5 6 7 4 r- W 11 12 14 15 15 17 Is 9 r it 24 25 28 29 \ M 5T r 42 43 44 47 48 49 SO b1 b2 S3 54 56 5> ATTENTION TV AMD APPLIANCE REPAIR COMMNIES You can make mora tarvicc caNt in a cmallar arna and cuf your coaf par call wSHi oar provaw a* Alms box 25 Divn 'port ) aa Malicious , • OUrDlng 27 Kind ol rtllvay 28 Us capital is 3* Master iFr.i , 40 Bsltpfter' 41 I.esthrr piece 42 Pettv quarrel 43 Principal ,44 Coafish 2« Hairless . ' 11 Gaseeus hydrocarbon \VC4H, Neats. id of llouar 33 Posall ty 50 Farm aolmal SfPON. Nears. Johnson 4:30-WXVZ. BeOaattaa. Ill Bowers 21 Mire BOWN Small flaps ! Iroquolan Indian ’ a PraelaBS Fatala GRAND RAPIDS Authori-i"’ ^ / ties today held Robert Weess, 41,' f . f I L*ll Fine Daughter of Churchill he admitted yesterday to shooting. ■ X his wife, Alice. 4o, and dumping , LONDON’ (UPD —Sarah Chur-lstaggerinig around, shouting and her body in the Grand River, chill. 46-year-old actress daughter waving her prtps^ He said she Weess told Kent County sber- jof Sir Winston Churchill, was was very- drunk, iff's men he shot his wife five lfii«d $5.60, yesterday‘'for being; times with a pistol on Easter drunkeft fnd disorderly Sunday during an outing at a Wearing a fawn raincoat andj county park, detective James. i pink headscarf. Miss Churchill . Iliaeshutter said. pleaded guilty and said. ' I am (rcne Dietz, 15, discovered the ''®r.v sorry..’ body Monday near a bridge at A poUceitian told the court he M21. Mrs. Weess was the mother; saw Miss Churchill in the .middle of five children toy a previous Uf Buckingham Palace Road marriage. ' , ---- ------ • ; Weess shot his wife during, a! quarrel and put the body in the; . . - ... i i • trunk of his car. Hiaeshiitter said.' MnyO fnr WnriH rflir Weess told authorities he killed ' ITUIIU I Oil his wife after she threatened toi leave him. Kent County Prosecutor James K. Miller issued a warrant char^ . ling Weess with first-degree mUr-j DETROIT ‘.fl — Mayor Jerome 'der yesterday. .Cavanagh yesterday vetoed a __________^'Common Council resolution which ^ , ^L* f supported'a move by a group of ' Corn/Tl/© citizens to promote a world’s fair in Detroit in 1972. Gavanagh said, he felt that push-; ing for the . world's fair now . ^"v^uld be harmful to our present . efforts in obtaining the 1968 Olym- Nixed by Gavanagh ' —Call tor DatallKT- RRESSER'S CROSS-INDEX TR 4-0570 in Cambodia Vt;ia-Wjn. Bud Ount l wxfz 4 “T”- l:8#-:WJR. Newt Art tlnklfh WcW Sh»rKfaB . l*r‘ ' - • II WPON. Ntwt. — Kewi. MtrmiB —- mxVZ Wmir- ------- ja.SI*nta» tBgck jrwlir topa I. C' Hi WWJ. .1___________ WXkZ ScBiitlao CKlvv. Bpurii. Dartri r. ai wIBa/ iftr tabim !ipa»« / TOKYO .A?^ Pr«toent Liu well as “the Democratic Shao-chi of Communist Cluna It- p^puj^jean national conVen- rived in Phnom Penh, CaftoWdia; today an<1 wa's cheere<| by “several, hundred thousand * people." Radio Peking announced UNUMmO SOFT WA1B$ HUSTHIEE *3 PER MONTH LINDSAY SOFT WATtR COj DiTWon of A4id*‘Ma4Njito, ta*. The -hurricaries ttial strike the Liu, his wife, and a large party eastern arid soatheriv United I of diin^ officials were met atjstates! originate as^ a^rute to the Phnom Fenh airport by the Cam- easterrt Atlantic nea’i' the Cape bodian chief of state. Prince Nor- Verde Islands qr in the (^uribbemti odom^ihanouk. Sea near the JJ'e?t Indies. SONOTONE House of . CORNELL . FE Mm T-fh-r-' ) .SidiL. THE PONTIAC press, WlSDNESDAY, MAY 1, im UN Soys North ViolotM ArmisHco JPoct Finally Wins a Nomination ^ . JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP) - PANMUNJpM, Kotm (VWl-lon 26th attempt, Barney Cobb V» United Nationi <3ommand election. The 56- aocuaed North Korea yesterday yearH)W commercial art dealer of Tkdating the armistice egree-lwon the DemocraUc nomination to ment by continuing to introduce I the City Council Tuesday. .He illegal s^apons into the demili: has no Republican opposition, tarized aone. r ♦ ♦ .* { After running unsuccessfully for Ihe charge was made at ttw various city and county offices for 2S6th meeting of the armisti(«\ years, Cobb based His winning ■ '■ i’campaign onaplea that voters^'ing the k^'iner president’s name. give hlna a dymoe to show sthat he car^ do. ;^ Teddy's Pistol A^iuin' OYSTER BAY. N Y. (B-The six-shooto* used by CoL Theodore Roosevelt when he charged up American War has been stolen from the memorial museum bear-the^m Medicine Men Orgomize Union' in South Rhodesia SALISBURY, Southern Rhodesia (UPl) — Southern Rhodesian medicine men announced yesterday they had formed a Central i African Chirembas (medicii^t men) Association. WWW They said one of the group’a|< basic principles will be to set up six-month apprenticeships for. aspiring medicine men. Syria Orders Trials for Formef Leaders DAMASCUS, Syria fAPl-’Por-mer Prebiden Naaem El Kudsi, three ex-premiers and U other ao-celled “enemies of die people" be tried by a special court on charges rtoglng from extrava-gance to dimptbg ^ unit of Syria and Egypt. Syria’s revolutionary council or- the trials Tuesday night. Several charges cany the death penalty. Syria today began flying a new rod, white and black flag, emblem of the projected United Arab Republic of Egypt, Iraq and Syria. One of the longest nonstop po- iiciil talks in hittnry tha j ^hour-5-mirtute talk of Ger^ O’Donnell in Hull Yorkshire, England, in 1959. Titan Missile Explodes During Launch V. . VANDlENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP)-^ nun 1 In-tercontinenUl ballistic missile exploded today during an attempted launch at this coasUl installation, the Air Force reported, w w ★ A spokesman said no one was fijuTBcl^ ind Ihwt silo lift facility appeared slight. The explosion occurred at afiprpx-imately. 2:15 a.m. The Air Force Indicated that no further deUlls would be made public pending an investigation. . Departs From Greece ATHENS, Greece W ^ Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, chairman of \I S .)ninr f!hlpf« frf ?^t«ff. left for the French Riviera and Washington tpday after a two-, day visit to Greece / . \^-. i. Tff Wwfhwr THE PONTIAg PJIE VOL. 121 NO. 71 PONtlAC. MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1968 -60 PAGES mnndnSSJirBJTaSSR For 3 Months Extend Free Parking LAST MEETTING - Charles F. Wagg (left), director of the Michigan Department of Mental Health, closes the door on the last meeting of the Michigan Mental Health Commission. Com- mission members fromleft, after Wagg, Ricb-ard F. VanderVeen, Andrew W. L. Brown and Kenneth R. Magee held their final meeting yesterday at Pontiac State Hospital. Mental Health Unit Marks End of an Era Maridng the end of an era, the,soon to retire as director of the Michigan Mentai Health Commission met for the last time yesterday at Pontiac State Hospital. The cemmisshm, w h i c h reviewed appropriations by the State Legislature for state mental hospitals, would be abolished when Gov. Romeny signs a new bill revamping the administration of state hos-pttaii.^ According to (Carles F. Wagg, Michigan Department of Mental the commission was es-tabiished in 1921 and held its first meeting at Pontiac State Hospital. The commission will be replaced by a l^member advisory council with a director anointed by the governor. Under the new iaw, the director must be a qualified pyschiatrist Dems Ignore Push Recount LANSlhlG lUPD - M i c h i g a Democrats went ahead today on plans to challenge with a recount the adoption of the state’s new constitution. ' Their action came despite warnings the effort will prove futile and costly both in .dollars and prestige for the state Democratic party. The State Board of Canvassers officially certified yesterday the April 1 vote that gave the constitution a 7,829-vote margin of victory. The action gave the Democrats exactly 48 hours to file their recount petitions with the secretary of state’s office. By JIM DYGERT Oakland County is ready to be the first to take advantage of a new state law authorizing counties to set up their own mental health care programs. But it may.be a year or two before the county can act under the new legislation, even though Gov. George Qpmnqr has signed the bill into law. ^ut even before the papers Sen. Farrell E. Roberts, R-Oak-land County, estimated a year and a half would be needed for were filed Auditor Gen. Billie S. Famum, who made the survey on which the party decided to challenge the election, warned “the chances dlireversing the results are not feasible. Famum, who has gone over the election results precinct-by-precinct, said, “There has never been a recount in the state where the vote has been overturned.' - In Today's Press Air Future Future of Pontiac as airline city isn’t known— PAGE A-14. Minuteman Missile director denies weapon hits snags — PAGE B4. Sweepstakes New Hampshire expects 84-million yearly dividend * PAGE A-19. Area News ...........A-4 Astrology............D-9 Bridge ..............D-9 Comics . ............D-9 Editorials ........ ,A-I Food Section ........D4 Markets ......... .D-19 Obituaries .........D-Ui Sports..........D-1—D-4 Theaters . . .......A-18 TV^Radio Programs D-17 Wilson, Earl...... . D-17 Women’s Pages B-t—b4 ,,.1m I - v- A * * * The new advisory council will 'study and make recommendations to the governor and director for the immediate and long-range needs of mentally - ill children and adults." The council will also suggest practical programs to meet these County Ready But New Program Headed by Richard F. VanderVeen, chairman, the commission reviewed recent appnqiriations by the State Le^lature and dis- Wagg reported legislative ap- to Need More Time proval of planning money for the im)posed M-bed childreria Mental Health to work out detailed procedures and guidelines for the new approach to mental health care.- Wagg said the five-member commission is even older than the Department of Mental Health, which was established MOSCOW — Fide Castro got another fleeting glimpse today of the types of Soviet rockets Premier Khrushchev pulled out of Cuba last year at President Kennedy’s insistence. The Cuban prime minister appeared with Khrushchev in the place of honor atop the Lenin mausoleum at the annual May Day parade in Red Square. appeared to enjoy the rjL_re!riewjMid_ jbiIbm’ Pontiac State HospiUl. The legisiatnre okayed 8U,-000 for preliminary pbuu on the new facility. The mental health director said construction has been authorized at the Hawthorn Center, North-ville; Lafayette Clinic, Detroit; Plymouth State Home and Tt-ain-ing School, and Ypsilanti State Hospital. for the state mental health department. Dr. Peter Martin, special adviser to the governor on mental h e Michigan "Department" of| health, reported that air^ United States with ay>lHTof ag-1 eight candidates were heing Castro Glances at Rockets K Itad Removed Cuban .Chief Appears in Place of Honor at May Day Parade parade, which U.S. Ambassador Foy D. Kohler boycotted because of Castro’s presence. Kohler watched the celebration on a television set in his residence. Castro conversed animatedly with Khrushchev as the Soviets roiled out a 10-mlnute review of their military hardware. Among the weapons that sped past the reviewing stand were M to 700-mile range rockets to those withdrawn from Cuba aflUDg the rockets shown. The Cuban leader reportedly was deeply offended by Khrush-ehev’s failure to notify him In ad. vance of the decision to withdraw the rockets under American pres- Castre, dressed in white shirt, tie 4 ffrst time shice he arrived la the Soviet Union last weekend, was the center of attraction in Khrushchev enthusiastically led him the length of the reviewing stand to let the crowds catch The commissiOT discus^ the „ ^ revolutionary lead- appomtment of the new director Castro listened quitely as the Soviet defense minister. Marshal Rodion Y. Malinovsky, charged “reactionary circles” of the gression and provocations against Cuba Over 60,000 Made in April New Record Set by Pontiac During the second shift at Pontiac Motor Division yesterday, production for a month tqiped the 80,000 mark for the first time in the divishm’s history. The GM executive attributed part of the record showing to “outstanding support we have received from the home folks.” “This was the first time thaKwe have reached or surpassed that figure in one month’s time,’’ Pontiac general manager E. M. Estes told the Pontiac Kiwanis Club. The total number of cars produced during April was 11,210, or units higher than the previously established record set in March 1I5S. Estes compared this figure with the 735 cars built in 1908, the first year the Oakland was introduced. It also matches the number of Pontiacs built in the entire year of 1926, he added. Better than 36 per cent of all new car sales in the metropolitan Pontiac area were Pontiacs and Tempests, according to latest registration figures. “That’s better than one out of every three cars sold," Estes pointed out. He said surveys indicated no other General Motors home town had greater loyalty to its automobiles.'*'' “If you can sell them at home, you will be able to do so across the countiy,’’ he said. “And you’ve certainly helped us do well here." Court Will Rule onBlueltiiett Wayne County T«ts Rate Hike Question raETROrr le—The question of whether Michigan Medical Serv-ice (Blue Shield) can hike its rates without the approval of the FROM OUR NEWS WIRES WASHINGTON — Gov. George Romney said today he invited Gov. Nelson A Rockefeller of New York and Sen. Barry Goldwater, R*Ariz., to visit Michigaa He said he would like to have the people of Michi-......... .......era fanrolviiig UJ5. Marines. The wife of a Marine sergeant was mauled and arrested by a Haitian guard and a noise bomb was set off at the home of another Marine sergeant. In Wadiington, Rep. Annisted fieldin. D-Ala., said he had a report that an estimated 300,800 Haitians may be in Cuba. He said Fidel Castro could use them to iiwade their homeland if he Selden, chairman of a House subcommittee on inter-American afbirs, described the rqwrt in a radio interview. MUSfOEGON (UPI^-lhe kegoQ County Circuit Court Jury trying to decide tbe fate of Her-Barmore today starM Its Tsen Swtan Cbib involvii« 300-3N students will be initiated here the first defendant ever to eon* dnet bis own defense In a MleU- charged wHh the July $, im slaying of Evanston. OL. boy scent Peter Gorham near camp Birmingham Area News High School Pool, Patio Set for Teen Swim Club BIRMINGHAM - A Summer dents will open Sundqr at aM pjn. recqitlao. The Seahofan High School pool and adjacent patio will be m* served for teen dub mend>ero from 14 pjiL Monday Friday durii« the sunime * * e The patio wffl be furnished as a kxrage area, complete with benches, eliairs, taUes mid a rsp-ordplayer. A* gbt refreshmsnte lito be set of the event are Williim Lyman, 5308 Hickory Bend/i|nnii«h*in, and Or. and Mrs. L Jinme Fink, 4«30 Qnarton. Bloomfield HUs. carding to Donald Martte,ree* Bade in 1187,-a jury convicted Barmore oi second-degree nanvj der ato (Mating for Membership in the dub Is lim- days. Tlie State Supreme Court ^ Aulrhir.!^ mmiu* >-_______'tied to junior and senior hip) Binning. dprejudi^erobyMuakegoni^ DIsIrfct. Any boy or Instructors are Mary Jans Bigler, Kathleen Birch, Robeit Bron-er, Betty Conn. Svea nine, Albert Mullen, Jack Ramsey and Dorotiiy SiddaH County Circutt Judge Beers. girl who has compieted seventh grade by June 15 can (piaUfy. FIDELITY AND FIDEL Cuba’s Prime Minister Fidel Castro was down on one knee, but he wasn’t proposing anything more than a snapshot during his visit to the country home of Nikita Khrushchev. Open to proposals, however, was ar FhaMkx in the first case by his court-appointed attcHTiey John Boesch-enstein, conducted his own Jayne Mansfidd, who divorced hOsband Mickey Hargitay in Juarez, Mexico. With her is friend Nelscm Sardelli, who accompanied her to Mexico and back. this time with the knowledge The program win be held from June 17 to Aug. 10. Registration blanks were dis-' in the schools today. Ford Trucks Coming Back DETROIT (»—FV)rd Motor Co. said today it will return truck as- Extend Free Parking Three More Months (Continued From Page One) More Space for Car Parking gleaned from prison libraries during his many jail terms. 'only SUMMATION Boeschenstein, who advised Barmore throu^ the second trial, made only part of the closing summation for his onfy official role. (Continued From Page One) depending on who submits tbe highest bid. wmbly to fw ^ *^ they wouldn’t commit themselvesi the pr^lem is here and we tin« since 1967 as part of a v”- plans, if any, for can’t dodge It Tonight, today, expansion downtown. j the central business dtoict is ,FREE PARKING BID ★ w w bleeding. | -rhe DPBA is expected to sub- ■Taylor was referring to unoffl-j ‘'in my opinion there’s no mu a bid that could once again Tbe company said it will convert an old station wagon plant Deadline for returning them is Presiding Judge John Vander Wal, a Kent County circuit judge hearing the case, charged the jury yesterday nwrning before it started deliberating at 11 am. ne Jnry finally decided to retire for evening at 0:51 May 31. Martin said that becanse of the maxtannm limitation, registration wfll be hnndled on a first come, first sem basis. The ckib is betaig sponsored by the recreation board in cooperation with kKal PTA’s and the Birmingham Youth Fitness (Council. I morning nt 0 a.m. »irs. George Hilfinger of Beverly Hills, recently retired i«^-dent of the Birmingham League of Women Voters, will speak at a Friday meeting at the Congregational Church of Birmingham. Mrs. Hilfiager’s. topic wfll be Vander Wal gave the jury only “Tbe Citizen’s Role in Govern- hriMt __ milltv n# MmiiH' born and Wixom will be expanded as will plants at Norfolk. Va., and Kansas Qty, Mo. Beginning next month the Wix- 'Thunderbirds are assembled, will be enlarged by 78,000 square feet. The Dearborn plant will get an expansion plans being con- moral laxity whatsoever in trying result in free parking for shop-;?«* - guilty of s^nd --------- bv templated by Sears Roebuck and to do something for the good and per,, tjh! question is whether anyl‘*«f®« ^ manslaughter poiio^g her talk to the sup- pand tbe plant by 120,008 square operator of paid parking lots will'. . | per ckib of the church, she wiU Store. I n it * submit a higher bid. I * * * ,conduct a question - and-answer Under terms of the free park- j Commissioner Winford E. Bot- w ★ ★ | Barmore will be returned to session on the new constitution, ing agreement, the city will pay tom agreed on grounds that "we The lease would be for six *ven if be is acquitted ofi Reservations for the 6:45 p.m. AA «____lA- ________• M____I Oa Waai\ OKa KitoiviAaa _ <■ I fllA miirH^r f*hlir0^. laliMnAw WMAAflnra Ka TnttHA dsals wM bn hosts to teefr foaiH flies SMd frfeteb at the asssei-atisn'aboadfHrtan.lllAGlIp- Tereaee M. Bird Service far Tnwnce M. Bird, 33, of 5800 Snowshoe Circle, Bloomfield Townriiip, wifl be 4 pm. tomorrow at Bell Chapel of tiie WilUam R. Hamilton Co. Grema-Uon'will follow in White Chapel Memorial Oematorhun, Troy. Mr. Bird died yesterday. He was an employe of RdOy Bird Associates of Detroit. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Reilly Bfrd, with whom he made his home; a sister, Sheila H., at tome; and a tooth-Michael D., of Ann Arbor. County Ready to Implement Mental Bill (Continued From Page One) per cent of the cost of the local program under the new law. County Probate Judge Dmulld E. Adams has said the new ap-wouM .permit qukto and UKXC effective treatment. pato ^ plut by 120,M square owners of Waite’s Department welfare of all our people.’’ feet. The plant has been used ^ r as a warehouse since 1050. Car assembly plants at Dear- iiroa^from tts^'ge^^^ fond jare tiying to keep the business months. ........“ithe murder charge. jdinner meeting are to be ______ „„„ and the DPBA wfll pay $5,000 people downtown and increase ^ He was also convicted of a by Thursday at the church office, ^ jto going through the into the parking lot fund for the our downtown tax base so som^ St tC!. in 1960 and is also 388 N. Woodward. bate court art up three-mo^ period, jday can rtoure taxes to^ aU [wanted in New York State for a ttJeTrL^th S is Commissioner Dick JM. Kirby 1 Construction work for the serv- bery charge. iBloomfield Art Association stu- said that three months ago he joe center utili^^^^ scheduled^- Only the most serious cases can get mental health help at the presient time, Adams said. additional 41,000 square feet in a'were originally sold to financt the didn’t think free parking was to begin within 30 days. ^ continuing program which began tote. j an aid to shoppers. | Once completed. It will improve Prt|Uw Victim's Route ■ - ' Tve talked to many people utilities to existing county build- • 0"0W YICTim 5 ISOUT6 ‘"Tliwr’aiHt Twyiy favnr-ings at-toe" center-aMd—enabh Freeing of the Slaves Marked on New Stamp WASHINGTON (UPD - President Kennedy today unveiled the design of a special stamp marking the 100th anniversary of President Lincoln’s order freeing the At a ceremony in his office, Kennedy said the Emancipation Proclamation commemorative stamp which will go on millions of letters "will torve as a reminder of extraordinary action in the past and unfinished business in the future.’’ nual installments through 1970. 'it, so I’m convinced it must be further development, including a Mayor Robert A. Landry urged worthwhile,’’ he said. proposed Children’s Village for continued support of the free it * * | county court wards, parking program on grounds that Commissioner Milton R. Henry j The bulk of the contracts — for "we must do something to bolster agreed that continuing the pro- tion — went to Eames & Brown, downtown businessmen during gram "might result in a small inc., Pontiac plumbers, for $394,-this period of transition in the increase in our tax burden, but 500, urban renewal program and peri- if we lost our tax base downtown, _ we’d lose a whole tot of taxes.’’! ™ •*’’**' coMWthm con-. fr*ef w*» awarded to George Harmon based his objretion | ^ (Mien, Inc., of Bloomfield Township for $68,443. The Weather Fnll UJS. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Snnny today warmer hi high 56. Fair and not so cold tonight low 30. Ilinrs-Any fair and wanner high 65. Winds north to northwest 10 to 80 miles per hour today becoming light and variable and •oatheily 5 to 15 miles Thursday. meter road construction. “I may be wrong, but 1 feel Rail Riders Get Offer to Take Bus NORTH BERGEN, N.J. (AP)-A tone commuter is considering accepting a novel offer made by railroad to its on the use of general funds, raised through local taxes, to retire bonds. The federal government has “Wp told the neoDle no monev to pay half the costs un- We told the people no money Accelerated Public Works Act. would come from taxation purposes to retire bonds. We said it would come from parking meter revenues. “I’m for free parking innprfti- -cipal. I’m against this method whereby we appropriate money we have no right appropriating without asking the taxpayers to vote on it.” City Attorney William A. Ewart’s opinion was that the Deputy Warden Picked atJackson Marchers Face Arrest CHATTANOOGA tfl -Ten white and Negro men, who say they are determined to finish a hike throuidi the South begun by a postman who was shot to death last week, left today for Jaduon, Miss. The self-styled freedom mardi-ers face almost certain arrest in Alabama. About 100 persons gathered near the Greyhound Bus station to hear Lovol Berkley, a woman min i 81 e r fw* (^ttanooga’s Fourth Avenue^ Church of deliver an improptu, hidewalk sermon in favor of the mardi. Then, carrying a placard proclaiming, “Eqi^ Rights for AO (Mississippi or Bast),” the LANSING W-The, appointment of Merwin Kircher, 56, as deputy warden of the State Prison of Southern Michigan at ward the Georgia line. Jackson was announced today by| gach marcher is a member of i*^®^ ^ American country-He based his opinion on a Corrections Director Gus Harri-j ^ Racial - ......... - . - The Alabama safety director, TVw nffap ma moHA ktf Tnrina based hiS Opiiiiuii uii a — • The “freedom marchers” said they are intent upon walking to Jackson, Miss., to givet heir integration views to Gov. Ross Ba^ That was Moore’s when he was killed. An Ala-banu grocer, Floyd L. Simpson, has been chanM with the Tbe walkers plan to set out from the bus station here from which Moore began his illfated trric. Tbty ca^ a orial to Mxore, a white mai “We want to hold America’s attention for awhile yet,” they said in a formal statemenL “We thust reiterate this man’s single, yet profound purpose — to express the ideal of human brotherhood by a peaceful walk WM viloetty I Umd Uraperxtiirt' Maidnum wants to drop the com- ^ S muter service as a. losing propo-i^“"*- I Ob* Ttmr A(* la PmHIbc Kl|b*«t temparalur* ........ 'lAWtrt Ump«ratu^* ............. .nu»i as a. wautg rata V a.,51 sitloii and con^frate on the line’s|' BItfeMt bb4 L«w**t Teatperatar*! r In 1M2 A1 Lingo, demonstrators will be arrested and charged with disturbing the peace in his state. Oakland County’s proposed 1964 budget includes $300,000 for emergency mental health care. This money pays for tenqxirary hospitalization at St. Clair Hospital in Deteoit of dangerow mental cases and persons committed to state hospitals but not yet admitted because of overcrowding. HoweytT, tUk program is hi-adeqnate becanse it only pre- of mental illness, Jndge Adams Dr. Peter Martin, Gov. Romney’s special adviser on mental health, toid the Michigan Mental Health Commission yesterday in Pontiac that the state will take an active part in stimulating communities to devek^ mental health centers. Dr. Martin said the state^ton 'aid, consult and guide” the establishment of locM centers and maintain high standards through itscontrolof state matching hinds. Fired Police Chief Gets Public Hearing on Case Tkl* Dal* la »i Y*art freight operations. * * * I I Maidman actually is giving his: 40 30 .1 J52()OdhJlyconMnuters _thischolce-| M 111 lM3i U 13 Fort Worth SKS: J» S ^ toke $1,000 cash to stop riding or 0 g 5o'j4“accej# r^u«^ Itr^me c. 4« 21 New York*"* M 43 of One train a day instead of three AJb^OU«t,«. T4 M J4 » |«Si«^ u 61 8»u*l1uw c. *0 S and Butler—a 36-mile run. Chicace 44 M 8. rranclaco 60 53, ClncInnaU 36 r 8. 8. Marie - Dehnke'sWife Is^Terrorized tered toe rorrectiore s^ “ ied^ « fru^ d^Tv^ a ^le officer at Port Huron ^^^er of the National Ass^ Itoher will reotece Charles “f Advancement of Col- .cross Alii^,” said Richard ^ nation following the recent escape WORE PLACARD | College, a Negro of four inmates described as des- Moore was wearing a placard.’*^^' . perate from the Southern Michl- which, proclaimed that Negroes Haley, a Negro, said "we intend ngan |Hl9on. His retignatton is ef-jand vrhite persons shotdd te al-jto present. If anything, fective June 2. I towed to eat togethtf anywhere. I picture of peace.” BENTON HARBOR (A - A public hearing for former Benton Township Police Chief Joseph Sieber, who was fired test Sep-^ . n. tember, has been scheduled for Sieber had been charged with racial discrimination and insubordination in allegedly failing to hire a Negro policeman on orders perfect from the former Citizens Party Township Board. ; 16-11 mile Detroit --------------- --------------- . A Bloomfield Township police- S; I?! Out of 40 passengers on the 5:04 man has been on duty around Celebrate LciW Dav USA Is g p.m. train Tuesday only W. C. the clock at Chief Norman Dehn-| / * * * ” “ Shroder of Maywood, a drug and ke’s home since Mrs. Dehnke was chemical firm executive, said he tQrrorized by an intruder early’ was considering Maidman’s cash'yesterday morning. j offer. “I tyould take the offer because I’m retiring,” he said. Mrs. Phyllis Dehnke, 35, was scratched on the neck with a , knife during a brief scuffle with There were no takers among the a masked man. 39 other commuters. The $1,000 isn’t enough for the inconvenience caused by traffic and winter weather if we go by bus,” said H. J. Boer of Wycoff. NATIONAL WEA' I predicted In the northern I of tbe northert) Plaihs. It will r hi the oaotril third of the nation; cboler in the Kansas Copies Berlins Wall ---- j By United Press InteraattMial mounted machine gun was tie said she awoke about 4. ^ 150-foot-toog frail parked near the wall. 1. to find the num standing|j„ ^ Wichita’s (Kan.) Guards halted motorists driv- over her. Her husband was on an emergency call at the time, and their five children were sleeping. OK Purchase of Boah . .. . „ _ . . .. According to Mrs. Dehnke, tbe MUSKEGON lift — The Muske-intrude^- threatened to kill hef gon County Financt Committee and raid he woUld "come back has approved thepurchase of |to finish the job.” She described four patrol boats and has alto- him as a young Negro, about 6 -Rate is forecast for the northern cated $10,000 in operating costs feet tall with a medium build. toi' a water-safety program. The w ★ ★ (MPogram is aimed at curbing the The Dehnkes live at m Crest-'nell Air Farce Base donnad “ag-reckless use of motorboats On view Dehnkr'has been township igressor uniforms” to patrol the county lakes and waterways. 'chief of police since 19ji7. |wall. An ^nKirOd car with;a main street today symbolized the sharp contrast between Law Day U.S.A. observances and the Communists’ May Day celebrations in Moscow. Tbe ugly, ctederUeck wall, which has three strands ef barbed wire straag across the top, was built as a modd ef the Berlin wall Personnel from nearby McCoit- Guards halted motorists driving through "Checkpoint Oiarlie” to give thm Law Day literature. OURREDSQUARE In Oncinnati, Ohio, famed Fountain Square ires converted into a Red Square for the nation’s sixth annual salute to free- rhauM dating 150 passengov in sound- P‘y Cairo and Aswan on KWay round trips. of Broadway musicals daring- Here Is a typical day In Jana, July or August: at daybreak, a blaaket of fog maatlos the reddential areas lying dose to tte eeeaa. lie fog gets higher dewatowa and beidns te break 19 oemoi*^ over the East Bay. The unwary visitor mi^t figure to wear a heavy suit or dress. But he wiii be fooled. Because about mid-moming, die fog win the diva, begin to break up and by noon, downtown San Francisco wUl be a| ideasant a or so. Even so, a breeze wiU warn of what’s to come.| 1st boom, the United Arab Re-Tbe productions are usually poblic has ordered two river-staged arena style, however, and boato that will include aO eona-‘ I means the performers mustj forte for the tourist who wants ter and exit via long aisle to bask in the sun on a 4M-nps. I mile, $186 round trip upriver 'You discover muscles you to die land of the phanMhs. nw» knew you had,’’ declares | For the athletic type, there wffl 4W- ji... ^ swimming pool, a tennis I court, ping pong tables, a solari- ---------- ... . . 1 A scientist believes that if the' mg hjrkish bath and sauna. aUm Ha** AfbH hb m tmrn hflim H will afruiii mAntl* th« ritv with___________________^ au^ a^^ ' . G(dden Gate and in a few hours it wiil again mantle the city with its gray blanket. ' The weatbenaaa has a tednleal exptaaadon for the fog. In brief, it is formed by the cool ahr rising from the ocean. The Golden Gate is one of the few points along the Northern CaUforaia coastal range where H can pour inland. And that is why San Ftemciseogi^ so mach of it. removed, vegetation of the tem- elbow bending, there wiU be perate or even subtropical zone nighdy shows in air conditioned would invade the area and sur-|ni^t clubs featuring belly danc-vive. He believes that the tem-|ers and Western-type acts, perature differences of the polar! However, if you want to get area and the equator are largely ,away from it all, you can spend due to the presence of the ice,'the night in your air-condiUoned Suppose a San n^iscan wants some sun? He can go less not the difference in solar radia- cabin watching TV or listening than IS miles north, «ast or south and he’ll find^aU he wants. Once.tion. 'to the built-in radio. away from the fog belt, the temperatures in the suburbs ordinarily,-------------------------------------------------------------------- hit the 70s or the 80s. I Plaimiiig your first trip abroad this year? You can have fewer headaches and lots more fun if you make the right kind of ivep-arations and take a few practical precautions. Seasoned travelers say the first thing to remember is that you will be a stranger in a strange latxl. Make sure you are not an “Ugly American,’’ be doubly polite and courteous as you are at home even if your feet do hurt. some of the more common or everyday phrases. Here are some other tips and suggestions: Plan well in advance where yop will go and what you want to see and do. Get passports and visas if necessary and the required inoculations as early as possible. Learn something about the customs, cultures and currencies of tile countries to be visited. Yonr public library should hqve good guide and reference books. Buy a pocket English-Whatever language dictionary and practice Get a currency converter from the travel agency or your bank— particularly if you are going to England. The English have seven coins — ranging from Ae half-penny (prononneed haypny and eqnal to one-haU cent U.8.) to the half-crown (commonly referred to as 2 and I for 2 shffltagsl pence and worth 35 cents UJS.). Convert the bulk of your funds into travelers checks. Carry some small bills for tips, cab fares, etc., when your supply of the local currency runs out. METRIC MEASURE corded on the Centigrade (C.) scale rather than Fahrenheit (F). Don’t put your woolies on if the weatherman reports the temperature is 30 degrees — at horn it would be a baJ^ 86. Don’t be shocked if the clerk in Paris or Rome hands over a size 48 dress when you know you are a size 14. Sizes in women’s and men’s wear also differ between the United States, Britain and on the continciit. Remember Europeans use the metric systems of weights and Food and other articles nsn-ally are sold by the kilogram (2Jt pounds) and distances measured by Ae Kilometer (abont % of a mile). Temperatures are generally re- dieckup. If you wear glasses, take an extra pair along. Try the native dishes — bat don’t overeat. Make sure the water is potable. Drink bottled water if available, or beer, wine or bottled Bring a camera and a sv.. . of film. You’ll want to have a visual record of the places you visit and the things you see. (An innovation is the use of portabk tape recorders to capture the TVavel light. If you are traveling by plane, it can save overweight charges for the purchases you want to take home. Take along a supply of year favorite brand of cigmttes — especially if yon prefer filter-Ups. Abar of soap and several packets of tissues will come in handy, particularly if you plan to stay at smaller hotels and inns. Also asmallsewipgkit Have a medical and dental In the state capital at Sacramento, 90 miles away, a typical r di^ will find the mercury in the high 90s. JUNK CARS ' JO.) Notify the police, if you live in a small town, or your neighbors, if you reside in the city, Aat you will be away. Make ctftain doors and windows are securely locked. And last, but not least, make sure that you didn’t leave the water running in the tub w the gas burning under Ae coffee pot. L WANTED USteMTOMUrs NRSttf FE 2-02(X) ■MlroNTUcsourl NEW/ REDUCE EAT and LOSE 8P TO 6 LBS. 8 WEEK CAFSULESI EASIEt TO TAKE AND MOK EFFEC-TIVE THAN THE FOWDERED AND LIQUIO FOOD SUFRBMENT, AND COSTS LESS M-aUOMG CAFSUIES SUITED TO YOU VIOUAUY BY Lie EHYSIOAIi MO. NO GASTRITIS OR IRREGULARITY WITH RCDIC-WAY CAPl DONT DIET-JUST lATI AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE, YOU CAN tOSC 5. SO OR TOO LBS. AND KEEP ITOm KDIC-WilY 336-8206 Americans eat an average of 11 pounds of frozen vegetiddes per year. GENERAL ELECTRiq (starting Motht's Day, May tha 12th) a touch of bar •ngar ^al Electric De Lu«Ito [ ...Geoeril Electric Can Opener ) straps to waist, her | removes lids quickly, safely, walk around or work. Large | cleanly; magnet holds lid. Mounts bouffant bonnet; storage case. I on wall or oTaccesstwy legs. Sho can make rug soil disappear wiA the Aa dm doei^ guide thii Electric SlickiFKiufel Sices ronsti, dmese, bread; cold cuts and cakM mthout shredding or crumbling. Free foric offer available at partici* pating dealen only —limited quantities available. MORE IMAGIC-MAKINQ WORK-SAVERS ... SEE YOUR DEALER FOR HIS LOI^VrICE^ Irons all fabrka perfectly- ^ even wash and wear. Handy fabric guide. Leu than SI 5.00 gi,lMkca,itewtwithfzaethw „JroL FuUy imir--"-'-Leta than $26.00. ToaipEnglUi muffins, open mnd-wiches ail kinds of bread. Leas than $14.00. ..Madtirai \Orl t coffaa W nil IJr Perfect _______ every time! Mekea 3lo9aipt;fceepa Bin. Leaa then S10.00(plustaz). GENERAL A ELECTRIC Penney’s ALWAYS pmar quality This fittle card does the trick BOY'S SNEAKER SPORT SNEAKER TAPERED SNEAKER Ronih *n tomblera... can really take it! All have air cooled dnek oppen, all are Sani* tii^I In blue. d«e3D 11 to3B 299 White and a ehoioe of colon in canvas, fash-ion-bine jean denim, round toe, eorreet bel* aneeareh. 099 SfeIC ^ UKifeSA New in lime, ehlno all favorite colora. Aieh dIktelO 299 Count on Penne/s for real value and comforf in canvas shdes! AIR CCX>LED OXFORDS GET CORRECT BALANCE ARCHI BOYS* HIGH CUT SNEAKS FEATURE BALANCE ARCHI Rugged low ent oxfords feature all the extras a boy needs ... at Penney’s low price! All have molded suction enp onteoles and are Sanitised for hygienic freshness, too! Inwhite! For gym class, after school play . . . Pen-ney’a air-cooled docks are engineered for his active feet! Molded suction cup outeolea makes ’em raredooted! Sanitiied ftnish keeps ’em hygienically freshi Black, white! Sims 2Vkto6 10to2 399 Siaot2HtoA 10to2 399 PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9t30A.M.toli0SR.M. ■la rr SBVJ mu mu tHE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1^998 New Hoiipshire Sweepstakes to Earn $4 Million Yearly Bjr GORDON A. GLOVER CONCORD, N. H. «^-For belr ter or for worse, New Hampdiire is tiie only state in the Union today with a legal sweepstakes. Not since 1S94, when the Louisiana lottery went out of business, has there been a state-sanctioned lottery in the nation. In a dramatic appearance before the Republican-dominated legislature. Democratic Gov. John W. King said Tuesday he signed the sweepstakes into law ' ‘ time when our people are carrying a cross of taxation unequaled in American history.” win be aDocated to communities for the support of dieir schools. King’s action in signing the bill was deemed certain to result in intensified drives in other states ek to bolster their revenue from race track betting or some other form of gambling. Thi sweepstakes bill brought ad- verse comments from seva-allfront in the practice of fiscal ir-i Praise for King came from Protestant ciergymen in New Eng-responsiUUty.” Danocratic U.S. Sen. Tom Mcln- land. The general secretary of the tyre, N.H., who expressed confi- The Rev. Hartley T. Grandid,{MasMchu8etts Council (tf Church: dence the sweepstakes will be ad-executive director of the New fes, the Rev. Dr. Fprrest L. Knapp, ministered “in a clean and honest Hampshire Council of Churches,!called the measure “destructive nianner." termed the sweepstakes “a poor action—we must struggle harder In Massachusetts, Francis E. way for a state to finance its iHisi-jthan ever to mainaln high stand-IKelly, former lieutenant governor ness. It puts New Hampshire in ards in public life and policy.’^ [and attorney general, said Mas- sachusetts would have a lottery voter sentiment was followed. For more than a decade Kelly has advocated a lottery in Massacfau- » a “legitimate fiscal experiment” that has the backing of a majority of Nevf Hampshire dU- Gov. John H. Reed of Maine, a Republican, said he did not favor a sweeps for his state. Gov. Ki^ called the sweep- King said his legislative counsel—Joseph A. Millet-had conferred with Justice Department lawyers and was satisfied that a iwoperly regulated sweepstakes would be legal. The New Hampshire sweeps will actually be a combination lottery and horse race. The tickets drawn will be assigned by chance to the horses in a particular race. The winning horses determine the winning tickets. In that rerhark, the governor touched on what was probably the greatest impetus for passage of the sweepstakes bill. New Hampshire is one of the few states that derives no tax revenues from broad-based levies such as sales or income taxes. Fully 70 per cent of New Hampshire's yearly tax revenues of $26 million are collected via the so-called _„taxes” on liquor, t o b a c c o and horse racing. The biggest part of the tax burden is bom by property owners on the local level. The governor and other backers of the sweep-stakes expect a harvest of $4 million annually from two sweep-stakes races a year at Rockingham Park, the state’s only flat racing track. All of the money Metro Gets Lines From Willow Run DETROIT (AP) - Three major airlines operating out of Willow Run Airport reportedly have signed contracts to move to Detroit Metropolitan Airport. It was expected that three other Willow Run lines, known as “local-service carriers,” would also announce moves shortly. James M. Davey, airport manager and managing director of the Wayne County Road Commission, whidi operates Metro, said "y^ertaT"^ 'Wtrfi coming in “but we feel it would be improper to designate which ones until we have a complete package.” Spencer Leroy, a United as unofficial spokesman for the lines still at Willow Run, said it was hb onderstandiag that Eastern, United and TWA had signed and that the contracts were on their way. The three local service carriers mentioned were North Central, Lake Central and Mohawk. Construction b expected to begin'et Metro in July on a 130-million expansion program that will phyvide for all the airlines’ needs. .The expansion b expected to be completed in March 1965. Commons Approves Rail Cutback Move LONDON iAP)-The Brittah House of Comons has approved the Conservative government’s program for drastic overhaul of the nationalized railway system to put it on a paying basis. The plan will close 2,300 stations and withdraw passenger service from 3,000 miles of track. The National Union of Railway-men has called a three-day rail strike May 14 to protest the plan. Arab President Departs for 6-Day Algeria Visit ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (AP) -President Gamal Abdel N^ser sailed from Alexandria yesterday on the special yacht H^iya (Liberty) for a sb-day state vbit to Algeria. He was invited by Premier Ahmed Ben Bella. Nasser is scheduled to arrive in Algiers Saturday. Tmse Nerves Block Bowels Your coloB hw uanct that omtrol Nanlarity. WtMBiDuantenaeor nerv-out, wKinal boml inpiilMi may ba Mocked—and yon bmme oonatl- many doctora. RewltT Colok^ud Win A Share of 956,000 !50,UUQ M STAM^- h Foos FAirs ne STAMP BONUS CONTEST! NOW’S THE TIME — Wodneaday. May lit to Saturday, May I Ith — to fill out and deposit your Mystery Bonus Coupon No. 8 at any of tho 63 food r^r Mar* kots. 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Food Fair LARGE EGGS ss: 33' ilt;*^na <^upoi1 ■■aaaaBBBeaafea PEAS sic Family Siia CREST Teeth Fatta ^ ir. n Tub* 59' aaaBaaBBaai 50 EXTRA S&H Stomps with thil coupon and parckaia ef 3-LB. PACK HAMBURG 50 EXTRA /L: S&H II Stompi [ S 50 EXTRA S&H Stamps with thIl caupen and purchaia of. Jl-Oi. Battle ^ MATEY LIQUID • ’ a 'i Thru Sat. May C 32 Ox. Con AEROWAX r A EXTRA 1)U STAMPS With ^5 Purthoic ,ir'More Miracle Mile Shoppiag Ceater Telogroph ot Squort Loko Rood J V /. I, THE PONTIAC PRESS, tVEDNE SPAY, MAY 1, 1963 Concurs With Other Congressmen Dirksen Fears World War III Forming in Midwest Powder Keg WASHINGTON (AP) — Senatejpouible Arab aggrenion against tion to drift too long, because drift j . is aiways dangerous,” he added. Repubiican Leader Everett M Dirksen of Iltinois today called the Middle East situation plosive and dangerous” and said it holds the threat of a third world Dirksen thus added his voice to bipartisan expressions of fear of Israel. ”If we expect to maintain peace and to prevent a war erupttog in the Middle East, as is always a threat. We are going to have to monitor the situation very carefully,” Dirksen said in an interview. ‘You cannot permit the situa- Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., who spearheaded a flood of Senate speeches Tuesday demanding U.S. intervention, predicted there will be increased pressure “for a change in our policy of drift.” Javits propos^, among other things, that the United States aL tempt to get Britain, France, and other Western nations to join it in a collective defense agreement with Israel. He warned that “time is running out on peace in the Middle East.” stir up the Arabs because of threat to Israel’s security will bef- &n. John 0. Pastore, D-R.I.,mto Egjift to establish the United Israel’s conunitment to the West. ir“* ® «« Amk Rttnnkii/> ae a “inn n»p M»n* LOADED PISTOL Humphrey declared that the in- met in fuH measure by U.S. assistance.’' His speech set off bipartisan appeals for this and other U.S. action, including a call by Sen. Hu- creased build-up of arms in the Middle East is “a loaded pistol pointed at the heart of all hunuui-ity” and represents “a lighted fuw which could ignite nuclear Bill Outlaws Slot Machines warned that an armed clash between Israel and Arab ^tes “would involve us” and might set off a world war. Sen. Ernest Gnienlng, D-Alas-ka, protested pouring U.S. money Arab Republic as a “100 per cent police state” when Israel is a toyal ally. Sen. Paul H. Douglas, D-IU., said one of Nasser’s avowed purposes is to “drive Israel into the sea.” 6 POINT SHOE REPAIR SPECIALI Music Men Have Effect on Marketers LONDON (AP)—A music com-pani( official says canned music has a marked effect on shoppers. “For example,” explained Michael Bleeck, “if a store is empty or near empty, we have light, soothing music to encourage the housewife to linger. “But, if-the store is crowded and the manager wants the shoppers to start moving, he can switch on a rousing march, or a fast-stepping Dixieland tune.” Bleeck’s firm furnishes recorded music to hundreds of stores and supermarkets in Britain. The music man made his comments after a woman in Manchester complained sexy songs in supermarkets lull housewives into buying what they really don’t want. Kenneth Broderick, a supermarket chef, brushed aside the remarks, saying: “Her suggestion is don’t see how anyone bert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, assistant Democratic leader, for an embargo on arms shipments to the Middle East and stronger UJ4. peace-keeping operations. The speeches were arranged in informal consultation to give emphasis to pressure on the administration. Humphrey proposed an embargo on arms shipments to the area coupled with a regional arms control agreement, a larger U.N. peac^eeping force, and the assignment of U.N. observers throughout the Middle East. Sen. aifford P. Case, R-N.J., pictured U.S. policy as one M j “wishful waiting” in the hope the 9 problem would go away. Javits and other speakers accused the Soviet Union of pouring guns, tanks, planes and ships into Egypt to re-equip President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s armies The United States, Case de-and of using every opportunity to clared, should make clear “the I eliminated. ANNAPOLIS, Md. UB-Gov. J. Millard Tawes signed a bill yesterday to outlaw slot machines in Maryland. The bill provides for elimination of the gambling devices during the next five years. The slot' machines had beem legal in four counties of southern ’Maryland. His signature ended a bitter battle over the slot machines. Tawes had promised during his campaign for re-election last -fall that he would try to get the slots comfoitabi* tboatl . . I«t H« givt new lifa to yaur a • Oak laathar half M • Rubbar haali • Naw lacat * Was ahina $3.29 HaH Seles..$1.79 Heel Ufta.....49c k Rubber Heels...79c ^Leetber Pieces —49c NEISNER’S 42 N. Saginaw LEARNS TO FLY — Patrick Hemingway, 34, son of late author Ernest Hemingway, is shown at controls of a light plane in Berkeley, Calif., yesterday. Seated with pilot Dick Hill, Hemingway is learning to fly in order to more easily count big-game herds in remote areas. He is a student sexy over tins of baked beans or pre-packed bacon. “Yes, we do use music in all out stores, but it’s not sexy. It’: Just light, pleasant background music.” Missile Flies Over Houses Reappointed to Post With Trial Board PRECISION WATCH REPAIR Tem’WWlt ' ATOHtANOR At NLj$ogMMW PE 8-3593 WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, N.M. (AP)-The Air Force air-to-surface Hound Dog missile was fired over populated areas for the first time 'Tuesday to test its overland, low level flii[ht capability. T. Warren Fowler, a veteran member of the I^ontiac Police Trial Board, was reappointed to new five-year term by the City Commission last night. Fowler was nominated for re- wra^iiiiaaJauaebed by ft app^^ seven - man BS2 jet" ISmber; near T5el Hio, Tex. It traveled 350 miles west and impacted at this desert missile center in southern New Mex- board by'City Comnii8sioner''Mil- ’ ton R. Henry. He is currently serving as sec-rstAry of the boBrd. Glamorous New Foshion CRYSTAL PLEATiD ACETATE JERSEY DRESS ,2.99 Fits SO perfoctly and flatters all figures because it drapes so beautifully. Resists wrinkles, and can be snipped to desired length and will not ravel. Hand washable. Dress up with your favorite jewelry or accessories. Block, beige, light blue, mint green, coral, or white. Sizes 8 to 18. GO FIRST TO NEISNER’S-SATISFACTION GUARANTEED il... / s-us. ALL PURPOSE fiRASS SEED Guaronfeod 4e Grew 119 Cunningham's DRUG STORES 7^£4... S3e NHIIIA eauu DEODOMST IvDrydmy uw... 79o LiOTs i Dudnrff SlNunp88 63! idx OF 12^ KOTEX 'I99‘J UT MTnnn wnaraLunETH BRIMMS PUSTMJNR [For Outdo^ Uvlngl 'SSiSaiWfo FUT« 1“ a” ; Indopr or Ovftfoor I PATIO TABLE I WOBTVfVO "TWOTV wHh brass legs 2 FOOT lY 5 FOOT . ALL METAL PORTAMJ ' i DtUOUIT I pnoEOi 1.49 F0UM8 TUU BISIOOfT 7 PHIBEO 5.98 .wJs, eempeeHy for osey , cerryfng and stwaga,. 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IDfi.J 5 Prepare for Country Auction I Members of the Village • WiMhan’s Club have been ran-J sadcing thehr attics for con- • tributioitt to the Country Auction and Flea Market Saturday at Bloomfield Hills High School; ^ A preview of the auction and the Flea Market sale begin at 10, a m. with the auction starting at 11:00 a.m. Lunch and other refresh- ments will be available throughout the sale. Proceeds of the sale will further the purpose of the club: to provide educational, cultural and philanthropic programs for the community. SPECIAL EVENTS During' the past year, 28 classes and special events in the fields of religion, art, music, current history, theater, language, antiques, travel and flower arrangement have been sponsored. Camp Oakland, the Birmingham Community House and other organizations have also been aided- Mrs. Dale 0. Miller Jr. and Mrs H. N. Wieting, co-chairmen, are being assisted by Mrs. Robert Chissus, Mrs. James Hubbard Jr. and Mrs. William T. Collins Jr. 01/ Arts Council Will Present 7 Programs in 1963-64 Series ITEMS FOR SALE Among the itefitT for sale will be a Haviland tea set, an antique Tnlaid checkerboard table. Venetian glass and an 1876 commemorative ■ plate. Handmade articles will be featured in one booth while another will display creative arts. The sale is open to the public. Discuss Education More fun! There .w/V/zig amt pricing articles for the flea Market to he held in conjunction uith the Village If Oman's Country Cluh Auction Saturday. In the front left corner is Mrs. Argyle f. Camphell, Birm- ingham. Behind her (from left) are Mrs. James Meagher. In ion Ijtke: Mrs. Miller Hanson and Mrs. Paul McConkie. both of Birmingham and cochairmen. in Europe r Flowers, Foliage, Nuptial Tradition "Education Today in Europe" was the sul^ct of a discussion by Mrs. ‘Rene By M.VDELEINE DOEREN Flowers and foliage have played a.part in the wedding ceremony since earliest time.s when the bride carried several stalks of wheat to ex- press her desire for . a prosperous marriage. A crojvn of orange blossoms was a Saracen custom introduced by returning Crusaders. In Elizabethan England. a kissing knot .of croton leaves and ro.s?mary was hung over the happy couple. ,.Chii.ve« and.garlic.,.ill Uic '■^^Ide's- bouquet; fbltewmg- a -''^old Swedish custom, kept the dwarfs from bothering her on her wedding-dav. “-Manr«n dre.sses look best with nosegays or semicascades. Simplicity is the keynote for this year’s bouquets, expressed in white miniature roses, or combined with large roses, softened with Stepha-n 01 i s. Geranium blossoms and Boston yellow daisies or marguerites are replacing Shasta toSies- ' Certain shades of pink in cftnveniion. bridesmaid's dresses turn T- b-' Wagoner peach-color under artificial was chairman for the evening - - .assisted by D ~ ' - Rothchild, lecturer in the de-p a r t m e n t of modern languages at Oakland University Monday evening. The event was a meeting in the library of Pontiac Central High School of members of Xi C h a p t e r of Delta Kappa Gamma, international honor society for women teachers. At a business meeting which followed final plans for the state convention at Kellogg Center in East Lansing May 23 and 24 were made. Xi chapter is acting as a Oakland University community arts council will present seven programs in its" 1963-64 series, according to Dr. Lowell Eklund and Mrs. Edmund L. Windeler, council chairmen. Four of these will be evening events at the Pontiac Northern High -School auditorium with the other three scheduled for Sunday afternoons on the university campus. . Pianist Ruth Slenczynska will perform opening night, October 5. A native Californian and the daughter of a music teacher. Miss Slenczynska was a child prodigy, giving her first recital at the age of four. FOLK SINGER Arrangements are being made to have a foik singer for a Sunday in November. The council’s recent sarvey of members showed this to be one of the most popular attractions. The Pontiac Symphony and Oakland University Chorus will present the Christmas portions of “The Messiah” December 22 on the University campus. MRS. WINDELER paign director with Mrs. Norman Cheal and Mrs. Russell Grinnell cochairmen of the talent committee. Philip Wargelin is housing chairman; Robert Harris, staging; Mrs. William Furlong, ushers; and Mrs. Ralph Nor-vell is in charge of artists’ arrangements. Others working are Mrs. William Freyermuth, Mrs. Donald Austin. Mrs. Robert The Vienna Boys Choir is slated for January 20 at Pontiac Northern. Under the direction of P'ather Josef Schmitt, -some 20 boys of the too member group will be touring this country next year, a part of their education and training. Classic guitarist Andres Segovia will appear February 15 at Pontiac Northern auditorium. V- The third on-campus event will feature Robert Facko Holan, Thomas Boothby Jr., ingham. Mrs. Ralph Curtis and Mrs. J. L. Walters. Serving on the ’council’s board of directors are Ralph Norvell and Mrs. Addison Oakley of Pontiac; Mrs. Howard Wilson and John Quitmeyer of Rochester: Mrs. Thomas Spragle, Russell Grinnell, Mrs. Fred Fee-kart and Margaret Ann Beattie of Waterford and Mrs. Thomas Hart and Mrs. Charles Himelhoch of Birm- Symphony Season Ends on High Note By RALPH P. HUMMEL Sometimes, music steals into the heart like an unfelt affair today, are festooned with viges and in some places in Europe, an. ear-^of corn is placeid in the wedding bouquet. Today’s bride consults her flori.st as soon as she selects gowns for herself and the attendants. She leaves samples of the dress material, if available, and gives him an ' idea of the style of gown and its length. These details, as well as her height, weight and build, affect the flower arrangements. He will ask the hour this in his plans, thereby not upsetting the color theme. Traditional bouquets are smarter than any attempt at novelty, such as mounting flowers on fans or tucking them in baskets or small parasols. TRAILING IVY Fewer flowers are needed for Bible oi; prayer book arrangements. Trailing ivy is preferred to ribbon streamers, cascading roses or Ste-phanotis. Haynes. Joyce Sweet and Florence Gullstrand. , and Dit_DayidDiCliifiM H pianists m ah afternoon pro- suddenly blossoms into the ^ gram March 10. Both men beauty of human sadness and are on the university’s staff, glpry and fakes the soul by DiChiera as an assistant pro- surprise, musicology ly audible last night in Pontiac Northern High School’s large auditorium. It was a superlative end to exciting music well per-formqd. lessor ol musicology dhd Facko as a music lecturer. The mament o^iumph condi la.st night. Retired Teachers to Elect Officers of the ceremony, whqther foi idoOTs,ir for- f ynne Befufr of East Irmjuois holds a prayer-hook arrangement of cymhidium orchids and slephanolis. one of three most popular hridal hoiufuels. At left, uhile miniature, roses, nhite carnations imd lily of the valley are styled in colonial tradition. Spring alstro-meria ami ivy coin prise the cascade hoiKpiet. mal or informal, indol garden or at poolside. LILIES FAVORED Amazon or eucharis lilies arc favored this year for the tall, stately, bride who wears satin or heavy material. Flowers of lighter visual weight, preferably all white, complement dainty gowns of organza, lace, eyelet nr dotted Swiss.' Waltz-length Pur.se corsages of orchids for mothers of the bridal cqu-ple are more desirable than wrist or shoulder bouquets which may clash with jewelry or dress details. Election of officers will be held at the May 9 meeting of Pontiac and Vicinity Retired Teacher^ Club. The cooperative'dinner meeting will be held at the First Federal Savings of Oakland Building at 6 p.m. CONCERT BAND The University of Michigan’ concert bhnd. will conclude the series in April with a program^ at Pontiac Northern. Dr. Eklund and Mrs. W'in-deler were named cochairmen at the council’s April meeting. Mrs John Quitmeyer was elected secretary with Robert McGarry continuing as treasurer. Mrs. James Moon is cam- With Antonio Vivaldi’s\. “Gloria,” the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra reached the pinnacle of artistic achieve-.mentr-NeveFr in at least the last two seasons, has the orchestra played so purely, so much in unison and with such emotional impact. If ever an orchestra and conductor can musically transmit the message that we are worth listening to,” then these words were clear- which belonged to Txnductor Felix Resnick and his play- ' ers was enhanced by the presence of the Oakland University Chocus. Like the orchestra, the chorus, under Dr. Walter Collins, has come a long way and shows a prom-' ising future. Orchestra and chorus together were able to develop their maximum potential in the last two sections of the “Gloria” — in "Quoniam tu solus sanctus” and “Cum Sancto Spiritu in Gloria Dei Patris.” PojtiucPanhellenicrfoOfferPkijr SOLO PERFORMERS ‘Steady’ Refuses to ^arry Floral decor for. the church has a new look! Gone are aisle runners, except for uncarpeted churches, pew bows, window bouquets, garlands of smilax and roping of greens at altar rail. The richness, ol^chancel paneling is no longer concealed by masses of palms and ferns and needs but simple accents of one of two large bouquets and candelabra. Pontiac City Panhellenic will sponsor a play for children May 11 at 130 p.m. at Pontiac Northern High School. "King of the Golden River, ” Ruskin’s fairy tale, has been adapted and set to music by Celia Merrill Turner. Mem- By ABIGAIL VAN BUIIEN DEAR ABBY. I have been going steady with a man for 10 years. He gave me a ring”' ding ring, so you can’t blame ■ him for trying for another 10. If it’s your hou.se, tell him to move. If it's Pa’s choppers grinning at you from the top of the bureau while Pa is elsewhere. rhls house—it’s your move. Give him his ring back and tell him you don’t want tq go “steady” any more.*— so 1 can’t go with anyone else without his knowmg it. • A man called me one night • and my steady got mad'and stayed mad for five days. Then he said, “Let’s get married." I made all the arrangements and he backed out again. I am 49 and he is 59. How can I get him to marry me or ggt out of the picture? ■ AU. UPSET DEAR ALL; For the past 10 years your “steady” apparently has had all th|e com-. forts of jtom^withoul a wed- "•DEAR ABBY: 1 hate to sound like some of those idiotic women who write and complain about their husbands, but I .have a problem with mine. He has had false teeth for over 10 year's and nothing irritqtes me more than seeing . Pa’s teeth grinning at me from the top of his bureau while he is outside raking the leaves. Maybe I shouldn’t let this bother me but 1 sure wish he’d keep his teeth in his mouth, where they belong. I am 72 and Pa is 74. " MA ■ DEAH MA: Unless : Pa“ Ls willing Hu go back to his dentist- and cooi^erate in, the matter , of adjustments, you had better |ct ujsed to seeing DEAR ABBY: It has been very warm here all week, .so I sent my daughter to school in walking shorts She attends ' public school and is in the fourth grade. The shorts were not tight, too short or objectionable in any way. The principal sent her home. When I called up to find out why, he said they could not allow girls to wear "shorts” to .school as it ' would create a ’disciphne” problem. Exactly what does this mean? ANNOYED DEAR ANNOYED: it means that if one girl wears shorts to school the othqr girls would follow. And the shorts would probably become shorter and ■ tighter until they’d be wour-ing short shorts’)pnd possibly bikini bathing sqits. I * | I don’t bjame the^j^incipal. ■ While most bridegrooms prefer the conservative white carnation boutonniere, he may wear, instead, a small white quet. ■ The bridal bouquets in the acoompanying picture were designed by Mrs. Dorothy W. Brooks of Pearce Floral Co. Honeymoon in Mexico Honeymooning in Mexico City are Erminio Trevino and his bride, the former Elvira Torres who were wed in St. Michael’s Church. Parentsj of the couple are Mr. and^ Mrs. Adelfa Torres of Garner and Gregorio Trevino, Port Arthur, Tex. The bridegroom is the nephew of Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Maldo-nato of Oakland. Honor atteiMlanls at the retent cercinony were Mr.,and Mrs. Ifianciscp Cort^iuva pnd Estela Maldonado,. The couple yill bve in Roc'hesterv bers of the Will-O-Way Apprentice Theatre are the actors. Proceeds from the perform- -ance will go .to Panhellenic’s scholarship fund. This year’s award is held by Frances Hoopingarner, e 1 e m e n tary , education sophomore at Eastern Michigan University. Tickets, which are 75 cents, will be on sale Friday and Saturday at the J. C. Penney Store, Miracle Mile. They may also be obtained from any Panhellenic member and will be on sale at the door the day of the per-' formance. JoAnn Van Tassel is ticket chairman, assisted by Mrs. Robinson B r o n o e I, Mrs. Wayne Pyke, Lynne Benter, Mrs. William Belaney and Mrs. Wayhe McCandte.ss. soprano Paula Robinson added her voice to good effect to those of two outside soloists. soprano Mary Louise Lindquist and contralto Rosemary Murcb: — Miss Robinson’s voice, which is clear with an almost brittle tone, produced a fascinating effect in combination with Miss ' Lindquist’s fuller tones in their duet, "Laudamus Te” Miss March’s contralto voice floated like a melancholy butterfly out of an introduction rendered by harpsichord and cello in "Domine Deus, Agnus.Dei.” How much beauty there can be in a single human voice! Garden Group to Hear Talk on Forsyfhias The orchestra excelled in two tour-de-force pieces, , .Saint-Saens’ Overture to “La Princessfe Jaune” and Dvorak’s “Slavonic Dance in C Major.” Til e motto became. “Watch the Birdie,” in the following fine-feathered pieces, “On Hearing the First Cuckob in Spring” by Delius and excerpts from the “Fire Bird Suite” by Stravinsky. Rehearsals for "King of the (iohlen River**’^ep ,these young actors at If'ill-l^-Way Apprentice Theater ■4iius ). In the performaiicl^ .schmiiled for May JI at Ihmtiac \orlhern High .SchopI w II he Kris Kreeg<\r, Orchard Lake; Ken ipriier. If'est J.ong- l.ake; ai^d ' Dona lit Mjrchhfrgeri ] I ' .'i; Brookside Branch. Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association, has chosen ‘ The Forsythia Teahouse” as the theme for a luncheon Thursday in the Village Woman’s Club. Bloomfield Hills. Jonathan M. Ball of Birmingham. guest speaker, will be introduced by Mrs. Adolph Magniis,: horticultural chairman. Some 35 members and guests will attend tlie affair arranged by , Mrs. Oiarles Galloway’ and Mrs. Tbomas llarriR. The more difficult Stravinsky work is typical of the ’ kind of pieces which Resnick schedules because the orchestra can almost play them. . Resnick held the four movements together as bookends hold together a small library; but between fhe end pieces the pages were flying. , Last night, as throughout the season. Conductor Res-Miick and the Pontiac Symphony earned themselves through hard, work — the laurels of , true musicians. THE BONTIAC press, WEDNESDAY. >IA^' 1. 19(13 \ JXeumode TWICE-A-YEAR 82 N. Sagittaw St. Professional PERMANENTS Styled as YOU Like It! HAIRCUTTINO — TINTS Reverend to Address Church Unit The Rev. Edgar H. S. C3iaa(Uer, executive vice president of the Church Fed-ifcration of Greater Chicago, wili spbUc to the Episcopal Churchwomen of Christ Church Cratihrook on the subject “Refugees” at the May 7 luncheon meeting at the church in Bloomfield Hills. Mr. Chandler was director of refugee service for the World Council of Churches in in Geneva from 1950 to 1960. He has written extensively on immigration and r^ugee migration. He has been decorated by the governments of England, Greece, Germany and the Netherlands. At present, he is serving part time as a religious adviser to the United States Information Agency. By JEANMARIE ELKINS Spring house cleaning aiqjeals to me about as much as my little brothff’s wet washcloth in the bathtub dees. But since my editor assigned me to write a story to help women with their spring cleWng, I reluctantly began to learn about it. Betrothal Is Told IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON 219 Auburn Ave. FE 4-2878 The Harold C. Boughners of Whittemore announce the engagement of their daughter Patricia Susan to M. Dougias Robertson, son of the Walter Robertsons of Lake Orion. A June wedding is planned. Mil s SAMandHrALTER S Soutoga EDITH 8TEN60N. Owner Miami Bake Shoppe S THE PONTIACAAAU. “ IHHUUUIWUUBM Expert Gives Tips -4' . Organize for Spring Cleaning Can you remember the date the porch was last painted? What kinds of paint and how many coats were used? Who was the painter and how gaions did it take? Informa tion like this kept on a clip board would come in handy next time yon decide to If you want something done right, go to an expert, I’ve been tohL So off I went to see Clarice Jefh-ies, executive housekeeper at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital and a member of the National Executive Housekeepers Association, Inc. She is in charge of housekeeping for the hospital and adjacent nursing home and has some 65 people working with her. For Miss Jeffries and her staff, cleaning is a daily job. Keeping a hospital clean is a monumental task if you stop to realize that not only does the room have to APPEAR clean, but Jt mu.st be sanitary. ' Miss Jeffries stated that the fastest, quickest and most efficient way to get a job done is to give i to someope who dislikes doing it. He will be sure to find the best way to get it done in the least amount of time. (Now I know why the editor assigned this story to me). A clip board is of invaluable use for checking on cleaning and repairing schedules. This is true not only in hospital cleaning but also for home cleaning and repairs. Daily, weekly, monthly and yearly schedules kept on a clip zation. Don’t just start cleaning Without some plan. Organize! SUIT YOUR NEEDS Organize to suit your own particular needs. Here are a few suggestions. One way of organizing wouid be » have one sheet on the clip board for each room. Another method would be to .have one sheet for each' article, such as rugs, and then list the rooms they are in and when they were Iasi cleaned. Cleaning can be made much easier if all unused articles are stored in an out-of-the-way place. The Norman L. Cheals of North Lake Drive have eight in their family. Mr. Cheal has a conveniently built storage wal in the basement. In it are draw ers for storing blankets and shelves for hat boxes and shoes. board would halp organize house-keqiing duties for the average homemaker and assure that nothing would be forgotten. No two people wil clean exact- With six children aged 5-16^ plus two adults, the out-of-season clothing can cause quite a storage Garalso go intproblem.no- etms problem. Garments also go in the basement. Don't let things accumulate. //ELE\ MAY DICK ALL Mrs. Doris D id, at I of Ramona Terrace announces the engagemeiti of her daughter, Helen May Dick-all, to Gary D. Cummings, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rex E. Cummings of Fiddle. FOR “SHEAR” GENIUS--IT’S CUSTOM TAILORING t«HM’ eoHM fn toon to con put our tiMar* to work. Sm tho torgott toloclian ot tuHingi in Michigan for thm doMng — Custom Toilorad—e( Courtol UANOOirN ^ COMPLETE TAfCORING UNIFORMS TUXEDO RENTALS CUSTOM TAILORS 908 W. Huron PE 2-2300 Color Television miADQlJARTERS Complde Stock of Badio BaHeriet I TAPE RECORDERS..............$29.9iU|> | TELEVISION anti RADIO SALES and SERVICE 1157 W. Huron Mich. TESA No. 1156 FE 2-6967 ly the same way. There are many ways of getting a particular cleaning job done. Miss Jeffries suggests! in teaching children cleaning habits not to concentrate on making them d it a particular way. Which is more important—the way you clean or how clean things are when you’ve finished' One main feature of any spring New young shapes by QualiCraftl Feminine America’s on the move, she goes like '63. She’s young, alive, alert, knows how to high gear a shift as well as shift to high gear.. Here QualiCraft lays the groundwork fo^ the new, young you. Basic ingredients: the fast-beat half-high heel, the square-cut sporty stack, the demure strip-strap fl^t, the little pearl butt(>n look. Added dash, soft aa QQ white leather uppers topped off by a young and modest price for fine fashion. t: f THE PONTIAC PK3BSS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 199S MARKETS tamm idM d tea«f pwm pradDoi kgr rwm ^ then li wholMak packife Mi. QuotittDM m fmUhed by tte DetnltBM>KltaMi,aiif NEW YORK - Steels in I stodi mntet evbr lodij. TnUi^ daysler, however, showed burst of strength, risi a point General lio> tors and Foi^ added fractions. Pouhry and ««lv«ri dncMIiW VM.): sssffVSTsraSss at prlM «ui I M N»i!mtroi i n k.>imhXMr i«nca«.irimtM u V «!iZT. r|SChrt 1^1 CRICAOKl. AsrU W 1AP)-Uvb SMd- A try: WholtMit buylnc yrtan qnrbb^i: A roMUn n>b-MH: IHJH M WMto A Sock Irym It-UM. «J? Jr?.. 1( UV« MH M'« + 1 WH lOVb lO'b * -------j.... .SS-8C_................ g UH 1IV« IIS 4 H Ptteiat .. I M‘'< n'« 3tV, 4 H Pit Sltel U J4H J3H WH V ViiPoUrold ______________ g iMb IKS SiS 4 « P^aa l.gg It mi WV. g gglb ggbil gg . . PoraOU 1.^ •* "• U m« gpa nib a- « M St% S4Vb MV. g « ggib nvb - H n giH ggv, gg > vblncA i.nt Hits Car Firms on Overtime Roo’thor Says Industry Mutt Base DETROrr (UPI) - The United Auto Worlters Union President Walter P. Reuther said yesterday the auto industry was “morally bound” to ease the problem of “excessive overtime” at its plants. “Excessive overtime b morally and economtoally indefensible when millions of American workers are out of .iobs,” Reuther said. The BSbn fecMi. he added, that “management b ntorally sbBged to tit down aad work sat the overtime praMem.” Be said the fasoe of overtime wosH be a deflaite pavt of the ISM ante negotiattoBs. “Some overtime can’t I* avoided, we know that. But we also know that some men shouldn’t be overworiced while othens can’l get jobs.” be added. REPRESENTS 12SAN The remarks came prior to Reuther’s address to some SSO members of the UAW*! nathinal Ford Council. The coimdl, for its annual meeting, repi'e-sents 125,000 workers/St 56 Fol d plants around the country. •g S !T‘7tKC£Sb .SS n 11% SgH WH . RepubAv 1 p Rcpob W a The union leader said be would + % I seek equitable benefib for Ford, 4 v.|c!hrysler and General Motors iSblM Ib. |g J lJg-»» » ASJSSi " U-lg; 1. a Ulg a 10^.Ik. Mmi ASmcR l.M U.10; a gad a gOMN lb ggwt igJg-.ABiBug l.Ma “(Sirgi lag. ila^. »»1»# ll-at; y^jjSV&Vgg ■ad cbolM Ig-ag; afflty aad lUadard aa- Ua 10* Ut faaep uSraiamhtarJ^M aua^.baj s ^ ja Si: jig-uiSf li? ag »% SSl + at Smu?.aM» ?i 5* a 8%7j!gr?K it Ig 41% 41% 41% 4 % Ottlyoa .lOf V .? a S% ^'j82Sy".5^^* NS |S% 04% la * % OnSn^ggb gas *-«^u%-%ssfa!Ur isjssvs gg it% 5% ♦ Jb luchrou*^ u"ag"'‘a«^rv‘SS2?'S?.‘ tl gg% gg% gg% ♦ % RoyOu 1% 8 a g% gii: % 8 a a............ , .., .., .... % I workers in the commg contract IS 34% 3t% 14% 4 1 44% 44% 44% 4 V, g 3S% 15% MV. + %1 „ „ . g 2^ 2.. t ifl He the nnhm _ . %,aUod.cad lb 8 a a7);‘'s&a^4i ai 44% 44% 44% 4 % SanCftm SR aa 17V. JT 17 4 % Schealty 1 - - 41% gl%4 % !«l>. .1 140a 1 M% as ■ M% 4 %| received by workers at Aamri-» 41% 4s'% 4M^ 7 ^ eu Motors Corp. where a pnf-a a% 1%-%! u.riiaring pact was sigBed M the INI negotiations. i S% M% Ir, - ?S|i The Ford council ends its two-a S% a t % day meeting today. At the Want Stricter Laws RySAMDAinON at Stock E)C MjgmN Nihly M a Rtei^- es NEW YORK-Btock Mdiai«M and traders aaparially Ihoai sa undtr notice that tha fadanl poUdng wants Stricter laws as wen as !• ■ dolBg hi reesol moHis. Rut It waMi eome Mws ghriiif it power to do more p^dNf el tie own to UNCO tn agaiiwt dMM aslf4fottdi« Four weeks ago WaU Street looked over the first part of the Securities and Exchange Com-mbskm’s stock maricet and heaved a si^ of relief. It wasn’t as critical as many feared. The study had been born of a series of the market crash of last May and June. But now the SEC teHs Congrcm a anaD part M the aaeorlly Inww Owt ql Am laws tha ABC WMb thinks the phUie atm OMy hot be gettiiil aO d» taformaUaw it -b to protect HaeK whso it ISOCUIWM, wl If stoda are RBCOMMENDA'ilOMS And the SEC atm has more whidi it wm report to the Coo-greas by June 1. Thrgeb are some of the abuses which tha SEC decried April S, when it aubmitted Aie flrit part of its report Tlien U went out of ito way to say that bad aa thoM In tha Uf hOB MM the pahHe aavml I mnktad by fabs or sent the preat The National Aaaodattai ef Securltbs Deaters, an tadadiy particolariy. fronp rerilaled by tbs fsvwto ‘ Bwnt, poUma fltt ovar-1l»ooonter feds It Bhoold have greater power The SEC can auspead tradliig for 10 days in a stodc Ibtod on tiie MPtiMigRt tf It feds Alb b in the public interest It would like the same power in the case of securtUea aold over Aw oomtor by deakrt Iradhif amoogit Aieiii-selves to estaMisb a marhat for a stodc. Negotiations Due Hopes Steel Won't Strike AP By ROGER LANE NEW YORK (AP)-Roger M lough says he hopes the steel industry will get Airoagb expected wage contract negotiations thb summer without a strike. Bbugh, board chairman of U.S. iSteel Corp., said be eiqieda ‘ acri-ous discuaafons” wHh uniim lead-a's to begin thb month. Jg 11% U% 13% f ___ _ — 8% iSTA ^ » K S iSl ^ iga 7r« B lIBwvWN* wemrnwi# . . _TT. .TT- I NtomiTo 5:;b"!kV* .. uSlT^ SlSJhAl? .41 }2» ^ *r.a« STM 51^ ISs’ll i ^ itaady: packaga fholea Bortaa l.Ma ^ sions, resolutions were introduced without any a *i% *4% H%7 % ^ issues that might beofim- * M% i>%_ port In the 1964 auto talks were ^ 8 * iu i '^ thrashed out among the dele- **' !I!^ gates. ly^utions-Was.. t-t^«oln- a^nd^^i S5Saw*1g % % IX* ‘* ‘7 .7 representoUves —.... .. international prior to the % ;next auto talks. The resolution said such meet- b *Sv, *i%%‘‘jing with local leaders were need- 14 M 47% 47% 31 14% S4% 14% 17 M 47% M 4 H% 4M MV, 11 11% ir% 11% 3 33% 33% 33% •Jed "to counterattack' rage of false propaganda.” ‘bar- alaualit I: eon to L— -i-• slMchter avci 4.< Slocks of Local Merest ricurca afur dadmal aoWa a»a tlghOii eves Twe cocrtbr vvwFiSfcM., rteorta al^kedmil potata ata algfc^ Vb* SoUoadag.anidAttoM^fe?®*^^ s « r »"gs8 ^ 4 44V. MV. N% — % •1 US 1S% u% - % f M I Kii ^ ig.? S g» S: i» ---1 Pk> jSthnWAr l.W a S4 b - V4>MantfCh 1.M 11 M ~ ^ ^ISUilDrt l.M I _41% M iio; ^ ^ ^ 8 85 4 % S»i>" at m 13 13 - %r”" * " aa 47%. 44% 47% — %: 4% 4% 4> ISV, ^ % Business Notes 17% 13 have been proceeding throoi^ a Jdnt human relations researdi committee meetiag in Pittsburgh. SERIOUS BARGAINING Bbugh made it dear he thidcs Aiey can blossom into aerkxis bar-gal^ with no formal notice of a 1911 wage contract reopening as provided for in that agreement. 'The industrialist said he feeb recent price rises on certain sted products wm have little effect oo the bargaining outcome. “Thb price diange alone isn’t going to do what b necessary to correct the problems of the steel industry,’ ’Bough said. “I ‘ the union understands thb.” United Steelworkers President David J. McDonald said In Pittsburgh no decision has been made on whether to reopen contracts with the basic steel taidustry. Just before the news oonfer-enee, UK. Sted dbcloeed that Jan-uary-Mardi profits were Aie low-.. est for fee first quarter of any j^\pprehension over stride prompted a flood of orders from big steel users and sent pro-duclfam spbralta^ upward witbout iiiterruptlim tai Aie feat IS weeks. Aski^ by a newsman abo proapei^b, Blough said Thesday: “I afrvays hope Aiere will be a satbfacboiy aoliitioa to both sides Informal union-faidustry talks Orders Under Rush Output NEW YORK (iU—Steel mflb have . turned dowv some June orders because the buying rush b overwhelming. Iron Age said today. The trade publication said that Joy Mfg I ”” John Ber^ist, a member of'since the steel price increase, « 11% aiv. am - % Oakland University’s 1963 gradu-jorders have jump^ suIwtanUally 44 M% 5% 40.’ : class, has accepted a sales as buyers hedged against a poi- KaUorAl .M KtyiOo ,4M "■—leaM If ____7L 1.4S KerrMoO 5 11 34% ]4V« M% M 14% II 14% 17 74% 74% 71% 1 7*% 75% 76% asfe.?s jk iM 1 , u Thlokol 1 111 , C'Tldtwal Oil . Vk|TI>ak RB3 40 , % Tram W Air .’’iTi^dlron t Cent 44 15% 15% 15% . 11 76V, ai% M% - II 14% M 44 I 11% 14% 1»% - 43 14% MS 14% 4 4 14% 18% 26<'. 10 31% 31V. 31V, II 14V. 14 56 tttil amt Ootr_. ■A Ccncolnet .H 14.4 COnHud l.M 4.7 CtnSW 1.14 “m h&T^tlODal 5 4 Co. ■ ^ • 8'J » 4 ChamS T^nuaoUacBt^^ai «Po XJa# 14 M.4 g}” J* * ^ Ssr5?tL«««" Ale .. . M ••:.8‘ S-*Sl.?rV I ChrlaCR .411 BU AakHlChryelor 1 ... 4.13 £n Ch^elor wl ...11.47 11.04 err Fin l.M k^RjTe-SE^.’tJ l!:«:§Sr% *i- . 67% 57Vj Mki n i?5 M t 15 44% 44V. 44V. * % ? as. li i 41% S% - V.------ ,1^ «% «?:.%iL.^iAjt ‘J 85 85 85^5;i2SSoe^-r 4 ^ 4o5 4^ Uo|?L?*I.A d J?5 85i5tefMr J 85 85 ■" I 30% —u— Ondervd 8 14 1] 14 n carbid l.M M 110% lloVk llp% % On Elec wl 4 l^.S v % - Carbid I M M 110% 114% 110% _ v. On Elec 1.51 4 55% 15% 55% ------ 1 31% 78 — 38V, .1 aoi r.% 85 85 7. 8% 85 8%:: 51 47% 47% 47Vi - < 37 47% 17 47% + ^ 4 17% 17% 17% . .. r 11% 11% 11% 54 ^ 33% — 1 iJ ia85 85 • J,,. Commoavoaltli M Treasury Position WASHI140TCW (AF>—The ai^.^Poal- •'“'Xra.-. _ ........... I 4.110,447,174.17 ®73y**l . I 47,M4,Ma,841.M Wl^rawala fUcal 1' * TaUl drt)t ........•$*0a.4«.417.471.M -- 0^(1 mmU ...... oo- • l#,t77,3M,f81.lt,C?row w ***" "" 84, IfM 27»2«>L ,1" IHif-1 ............» MM.ota.7ai.a4'c™e^M^ • SeiMMlU meal year . ^ „ WlSaWume-yr.JJgSg^ ^»elado« 4aw.m.4at.li debt bM eub- S‘S5 4 47% 8 «% 8 85 854 44 ^ 5i5 ~ - ", S5 85 . I 85 85 85- 31 44% M . 44 : 5 8 85 r*5 85 4 V. M n% am 85 8 gw gw 41% J 85 85 f«5 . 1? SS5 85 85: 5 J 7*^ S5 7*^ II 71% «% 11% —D— Un Pac 1.10a II 3t% 14% 31% « UnA Un .SOb U 41 14% 40 4 Unit Alrc 3 I 44% M% 44% . Unit Cp .]4t 34 5% 4% 4% - Un Fruit .loa 14 31% M% MVa -UOa. Cp l.M 47 34 35% 35% 4 Unit MAM la » U 17% 14 4 US Bora .Ma 4 27% 17 17V. - US Pibt l.Ma t 44% 44% 44V. - US Oyp 3.40a 30 43% 11% 43% 4 : Induct 10 ioH 10% 14% 4 ~ ■ 4 54% 54% 54% 4 ■ 47% 44% 47% 4 . -%**M 5% 4' }*5 li.W >4% position with the,sible steel strike. Lincoln -Mercury Divbion of Fold Motor Co. Denver, Colo. Berquist, honor graduate majoring in busi- tkm, began bb Ibusiness ca as a Pontiac Press carrier, us Plywd 3 US Rub 3.30 Us Smelt It US Stbel ! M 43 % and in 195S received an award %'for outstanding service to hb patrons. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Hihling A. Berquist of 6090 Jonquil. Martin M f MayDSt 3 30 McDooAlr lb Maa<^ 1^.70 11% 31% - -laadCp ijs Merck l.SSa MerrCli. lit SCJ5S?*.m Mo Kan T» SI tS^ SSH 93^4/ I 13% 11% 13% , f 13% 11% + J 11% Iii« Ii% iU K5 r 7 na JJ5 2515 14 SS% 14% M% 7 13V. 13 II J U' 5^5 P.-5 u 11% n 31% 4 % t I07 14 M% H% 4 < f 44Vt 41% ll-b . . NalOype lb If Lead .7»t N Mel 1.M NEUBI 111 NYCbnt .Me KYChl flacM foriolt ; 85- 140 35% 35% 35% 15 41% 47% “ ... . 43 55Te 58% la^^-M—30% Everett K. Garrison, vice president of the Pontiac State Bank, will attend the spring meeting of Group Ten of the Michigan Bankers AssociatioA, comprised of bankers from Wayne, Oakland and Macomb Counties, in Lansing next Tuesday. Garrison b in charge of rangements for the program. if ' 4 13% 4 Vj 33% - % *t5 Zenith R la 17 58 47% ir% 4 r an tdanttfied in the BMb Sc VM. VHR I. piilR S s! || 5*: !1 aJ 85 85 85 : 5 ,}»^ iSw t7i51'5 *15 84% *48% \ i^ilollowlM InAnplM. 47% 47Vi-^ % RSt^’i'M . 1 14% 14% M% 4 % .*V-:A°n»a> .r . « IU: . '^8* s*; i 11 au% Ml in'* - 5 --lable to itoek d^ 140. eettaated - ^ S5=ir& " Ttaik 1M44 iM 44 44 44 — % OtlcCelT l.M B!i!K8 aSS£,a —p— J!W S V , J, ,8 85.S5 S5 + 5 8 85 S 85:5 steel users apparently vinced that price increas reopening of the sted labor contract inevitable, according to Iron Age, and business men are of the opinioa that the United Steelworkers Union wm be a lot ttxt^ier to bargain with. Tor an intents and purposes,’ said Iron Age, “cold-rolled shbet, gahraniaed plate; and soone coated products are virtuaUy sold out for the second quarter. Now there to an unexpected turn for the better in sted labor,| July looks like another big monfii in sted production." Sheet milb are reported operating at 100 per cent of capacity with orders coming in at a rate that would exceed capacity. CMC Truck & Coach Division ^ will build a new factory brSnch in Los Angeles to expand its truck sales, service and parts operation in the West Coast it was announced today. The new facility vriU be equpped to provide fast and efficient service to truck operators, divbional general manager Calvin J. Werner said. Grain PricM |5 4 34% 34 ■ aP* . i7 S% S »v4,: Kitlp* '^1 13* 54?? 14?? SM!A-“ >•« j® ^ paid 40 far uuijw,, paid aRar •loekl^J{r i-Deeland or paid _________adatlTe luiie to arraara. I4-Pald tbla yaar. u„ mlttad. dafarrad or no aatloDl**cm toll dlrMaad maettaf. r-Da- Ha, . --------paid la ma plua atock divl- July dand. 1—Paid in a 10 e k durtnf 1M3 sant. . "*■—aalaa. aa ■■'^Ualdand orjDaa. a.11% May . . 1.44% July . : i:S5 Si?: : Chrysler Announces Sale of 'New* Simoas rffiTROrr Ul — Chrysler Corp. lid yesterday the new rear-engined Simea model 1000 which it has just begun to import wm carry a port-of-entry price of UK*. The car went on sab yesterday in Detroit and wm be available in Ohio and along the East Coast within a few days, Chryder said. nocR AVI CMVBtd by Ika A Month Toar t MIA 1M4 IMJ M4.7 IM.I 1414---- . an.4 1144 1174 HI* —7 ir- — — IIM Bl(h .......ail.T iM.4 1444 m*> IIM Um ......... aai 1114 1544 Ml 1141 ^ ....... I7TJ 1174 1444 iMJ American Stock Exdi. niarat aftor « r I lAPl- Act. oy aocurttlat They amounted to $29,918,774, or 44 cento a share of common stock against |SKN,4M or 91 cento a share in the comparkUe 1962 period. Thb yield fen 6 cenb a diare regular (quarterly mvidend despite a redoefion of Aie payment to 50 cento from 7S cents a share last October. Of major steel concerns, oidy National Sted Corp. Reported a gain in first-quarter profits. Earn-ii«B of Bethkbem Steel Go., the No. 3 producer, phimmetod SO per Little Cliange Noted on Grain Exchange CHICAGO (AP) - The grata futures market showed T in early dealings today on be of trade after sli^t de-rftoiM in soybeans were reoov- iwtwH with commercial business described as very light aU were a I vkmees of aboat four ceals ever the'just two days. Desders said demand also had dadtewed somewhat, suggesting urgent short covering may have been ncomplbhed Tor the pres- BY ROGER E. fRPEAR Q) ‘*Mjr «Ak and I are each M years af age and have beoi worklag for the hst 26 years. Onr savlap total approxi-mptely 98M9I fevastod la efeer tkaa stocks and beads at per eeat We are coasideriBg retireaNBt la FlerHa aad tha . WMb tba balaaca, da aaaaany to Uva aaTWa wmid receive Sedal Seearily hr It years.” B. J. P. A) Ld me congratulate you on your farsightedness and Airlft. To meet your mtaimun living needs, the funds availaUe after your purchase must produce 6per cent Under today’s market conditions, it b Inqionible to earn thb on your money with a res-'^NnahMAigAersriall{ylr%^ bonds or stocks. I would suggest that if your health so permits that you work a few years longer to build iv more of a cushion of safety. If thb does not appeal to you, you could draw modestly on your capital each year to cover the gap between income and living expenses until you both become di-gibk for Social Security. Q) 'T have owned Suaray OU for 25 years aad have a IMN profit I alts ewa Uahre^ Match, UK. Bam and Chead-cal. Dresser Cmp,, and Cepe-laiid Refrigerator. U I tdd these latter bsaea 1 woaH have a IMN bes. ShouM an bsaes he soH ea as to hreak eves aad Atea bay General Mstors?” W.G.A. A) Staway b a logied merger mdidate, and I advise retention. I also would hdd Dresser Industries. Universd Match, U.S. Borax and Chemied, and Copebnd Refrigerator have proven disappointing actors marketwbe, and I advbe ade. I fed that Standard Oil of New Jersey and Consolidated Foods would be good quality of your bddiiigs. Mr. I^iear cannot answer aB man personaUy but win answer an questions possttile in hb col- (Cspyright 1961) News in Brief I yesterdajr that her t Thrift 8hap apeu evory FH-duy 10 to 3. St. Andrews Church. ---- Rd. and $5.79 in cash was ttolea Airway Lanas, 4 Road. AMS ___________ Donald Vachon, tJHf Percy Ktag, Waterford Township, was report- St Mwy*s Joslyn and Greemhidd Rds. FH. May 3rd. It am. to I p.m. Sat. M^ 4th. glove ewned hy !• aJU- to noon. de. Grace Le-theran Church, Soutfr Geneaee. Friday K Saturday R-Jl-Adv. I Friiara Ifey t, 10-7, Sat f-11. Prasi>.ytarian Church, Huron St. —Adv. Rummage Sale at Christ 1 pie Church, 539 Paddock St., May and 4. »4:30. -Adv. ODO Raanaags Sab Friday May 3. CAT Bldg. 5640 Williams LaktRd.9-L May 3 and. 4 New Project Center, Bnnch 8t. Geraie Rummaas A*!*. Mav 3. 3, 4,10 to S. Kirkwoad SublssN Sutters Lane, oft W. <)partoa Rd. /■ I'i I THE POXTIAC PHflSS, WEDNESDAY. MAY^ 1, 1963, IK-IT —Tcxiay's Television Programs- PiofR|flis fwniithcd by Jiflwl in this oolwnn wn Mib|ncf to cbonQ# vrtrimiit nCtlcn m-vf ekmm^7~writ-vt ciiwii»-ciaw.Tv Oiiiwisn-wnw TONIGffr l:M (1) N«ws (4) Deputy (7) Movie; “tlie Men.** (In (t) Cept. JoDy'^and Pi^Cfye (Si) American Eooooniy i:M (2) Editorial. Sport* •:» (2) (4) (7) Weather i:» (2) Oibway Patrol (4) (7) Nem, Sport* (i) Yogi Pear (SI) FVencb Ihrangh TV 1:41 (7) Ciood New* of the Day •:tf (4) (7) New* 7:W (2) Story of a Corrapond- (4) Best of Groucho (7) Rebel (») You Aaked for It (56) Searchllaht 7:» (2) CBS Reports (4) (Color) Virginian (7) Wagon Trtdn (9) Movie: ‘jZhe Unholy Wife.” (1957). fSd Stc Diana Dors. (56) American Business 8:99 (56) Showcase 1:39 (2) Dobie Gillis (7) Going My Way (56) ntle Hunt 9:99 (2) Beverly Hillbilliee (4) (Ckdcn*) Perry Ctoino 9:39 (2) Dick Van Dyke (7)OurMa (9) Parade 19:99 (2) Steel Hour (4) Eleventh Hour (7) Naked City (9) News 19:15 (9) Weather. Telescope UAW 19:39 (9) Ted Lindsay 19:45 (9) Ontario Provincial Affairs 11:99 (2) (4) (7) 11:19 (7) News, Sports. Weather 11:15 (2) Editorial. Sports, Weather (4) Weather, Sports 11:39 (2) Steve Allen-Variety (4) ((}olor)Tonight—Carson (7) Movie: “Ali Baba and the Forty Hiieves.’* (1943). (9) Movie; “Above Us the Waves.” (1955) THURSDAY MORNING 6:99 (4) Continental Classroom: Atomic Age Physics 6:15 (2) MeditaUons 6:39 (2) College of the Air (4) (Color) continental Classroom): American Government 7:99 (2) News.. 44)Tbd^ (7) Funews 7:95 (2) Fun Parade 7:39 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo (56) Arithmetic for Teach- TV Features Hillbilly as Lawyer CBS HBPORfS. 7:39 p.ni. (2) Pnlitaer prize-winning oriumnist Walter Uppmam offers frank views,of events, forods and personalities shaping destinies of natioa and world. BEVERLY HlUJnJJES. I p. m. (2) Jed acts as own wyer when family's taken to court over traffic accident. PERRY COMO, 9 p.m. (4) . Quests inciude Mickey Rooney, (Onnie Stevens and Allan Sherman of “My Son, the Fblk Singer” fame on color show. STEEL HOUR, 10 p. m. (2) Dan Duryea a helps boy with problem parents. NAKED CITY, 10 p. m. (7) Simple, ordinary man witnesses beating, is onh^ by hoodlums to leave town, but he’s in love and wants to st^. 19»39 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (0>lor) Pby Your Hunch (56) French Lesson 11:45 (7) News 19:59 (56) German Lesson 11:99 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jad) La Lanne (9) Movie: “A Touch of the Sun.” (1956, English). U:9I (56) Spanish Lesson 11:29 (56) For Doctors Only U:3I (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (7) Seven Keys U:59 (56) Memo to teachers Nearly Ran Out of Fuel, Says Flier HONOLULU (AP)-Betty MiU-er, 37, who made history Tuesday by flying her small plane from Cialifornia to Hawaii alone, said she had only one hours’ fuel left when she landed. should have had three hours left, but I wasn’t worried,” said the Santa Monica, Calif., housewife. Looking fresh, Mrs. Miller 12:99 (2) Love or Life (4) (Cbkr) First Invresskm (7) Ernie Ford 12:25 (2) News 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Trtith or (Consequences (7) Father Knows Best 12:49 (56) Spanish Lessons 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News 1:99 (2) Star Performance (4) Leave It to the Girls (7) General Hospital (9) Movie: “Navy Wife.” (1956). Joan Bennett, Gary MerriU. 1:19 (56) French Lesson 1:39 (2) As the World ’Tum) (4) Best of Groucho (7) Girl Talk (56) World History 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth 8:39 (7) Big Show (56) British Calendar 8:45 (45) Spanish Lesson 8:59 (9) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:99 (2) December Bride (4) Living (7) Movie: “I’U Be Yours.' (1947). Deanna Durbin. (9) (Che Helene ) Sing Ring! (56) English VI 9:45 (9) Friendly Giant 9:55 (2) Editorial 10:99 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When (9) Romper Room (56) Our Scientific World 10:25 (4) News twln^ngine Tfper Api^ yelled to welcomers: “How’s the ground feel?” 17 HOURS Her 2,400-mile flight from Oakland Airport to Honolulu International Airport fook 17 hours minutes. The Hawaii trip was the first leg of her planned solo flight to Brisbane, Australia, a 7,i00-mile ocean-spanning trip that will include stops aLCantoo Island and Fiji. She is flying a reverse course taken by Amelia Earhart in 1987 when she and her navigator Fred Noonan disappeared without trace while attempting to fly the Pacific. Mrs. Miller was handed a telegram from the Redwood (City, CaliL, chapter of the 99 Club, a club founded by Miss Earhart. It read: “May skies always be bfaieior courage like yours,” “I would Just love to have a drink,” the aviatrix said. She complained that someone in Oakland goofed before her departure and filled her thermos bottle with boiling water. Mrs. Miller said she will rest in Honolulu for “a day or two” before continuing to (Canton Island. She had been expected to continue! THURSDAY AFTERNOON At Musical Murder Song Lover Moans ESCORTS DUCHESS — President Kennedy and Grand Duchess (Charlotte of Luxembourg sit together in an open car on the White House grounds yesterday after a welcoining ceremony for the European ruler. By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (DPT - Double jeopardy is unconstitutional, but one form of it has been flourishing late-ly. Let me give you an example. As I was driving home from work the other evening, I turned on my car radio jurt in tioM to hear someone making a shambles out of “I’ll Get By,” one of my favorite tunes. Curiosity overcame my dialswitching impulse, and I held on to the bitter end to see if WEST Federal Aid to Public Schools Abandoned for 1963 by Dems WASHINGTON (AP) - Demo-lbe futile to ask Congress now to cratic leaders of the House Educa- provide aid for public elementary tion (Conimittee have given up all hope this year for kf^tion providing general federal aid to schools. They are dropping it from the administration’s education bill. Chairman Adam (Clayton Pow- and high sdraols. They still hope, however, keep most of the rest of President Kennedy’s comprehensive education bill in once |)iece, despite pressure from committee Republicans to concentrate on a single ell, D-N.Y., and other ranking section-aid to colleges. Democrats have decided it would { Abandonment of the proposal to UNSING (APi-Howard B. Gaylor, a Roscommon insurance yesterday was appointed S^ J(^E’Calif. (AP) J*)*! probate judge of Roscommon father M a f^r Ma^ capUin and Medal of Honor winner said Tuesday night his son would not attend a White House reception for living Medal of Honor holders. (7) bay in Court (56) Mathematics for You 2:25 (4) (7) News 2:39 (2) Divorce Court (4) Doctors if) Jttt Wynam (56) World in Focus 3:09 (4) Loretta Young (7) (iueen for a Day 3:15 (9) News 3:39 (2) Millionaire (4) (Color) You Don’t Say! (7) Who Do You Trust (9) Scarlett Hill 4:99 (2) Secret Storm (4) klatch Ganae (7) American Bandstand (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:39 (2) Edge of Night (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Discovery ’63 (9) Mickey Mouse Club 4:45 (56) French Lesson Gitmo Marine Woni Attend Hero Confab make federal funds available to the states for public-school construction and teachers’ salaries marks the third straight year Kennedy has been unable to get vote in the House on what he has called the heart of his education program. Religious and racial controversies plus widespread opposition to the concept of federal aid to education have built up a formidable Romney Appoints Probate Judge opposition that makes the House leadership reluctant to risk a floor fight. was involved in a Ciuantanamo naval base incident in which an alleged Cuban spy was shot to A reporter for the San Jose Drohate iudve in San Jose and found Jackson’s parents baby-sitting for the Marine hero’s five children. We’re over here taking care of the kids. We don’t know why he didn’t go and we don’t know when he’ll be back. We’ll be staying until we hear something.” The elder Arthur Jackson said. In all, 239 Medal of Honor winners had accepted invitations for Gaylor, 33, succeeds James Rutledge who has resigned. He will assume the duties of the 85,909 a year judicial post NovembCT 1964 deciion. In making the appointment, the governor noted that no Roscommon County attorney was willing accept the appointment the disc jockey in charge would identify the culm-it. He did. He said the recording had been committed by a fellow from the television program “Bonanza.'' Now I lead a rather sheltered life and that program had somehow escap^ my notice. I assumed from its title that it was some sort of giveaway. But when I got home, I learned I had leaped to the wrong condign. My teenage daughter, who sees all, knows all and tells all where television is concerned, told me that “Bonanza” is a western. actor is Ckorge Manaris. late of the program “Route 66.” A record-plugging tour brought him to Washington recently, and I took the occasion to examine this peculiar cultural manifestation at close range. In cashing fat on whatever it is that prompts a televishm fan to. bay an actor's vocal album, Maharis had to overcome a rather severe handicap. He once took sinciiig Geno-ally speaking, only an actor wh<^ voice is unsullied by musical training can expect to produce a hit record. Furthermore, she said the chap .1 had heard undermining “I’ll Get By” plays the part of a ranch owner. That astonished me. Judging from his voice, I would have guessed that he played the part of a stampede. Anyway, this is what I mead by double jeopardy. If you miss ’em on television, they will get you with a rec- All sorts of wanderers of Newton Minow’s wasteland are cutting records these days. Ben Casey sings and Dr. Kildare sings, to mention a couple. ’Their albums have helped popularize laryngitis. Another singing television To make matters worse, Maharis was earning his living as a singer before be tO(dc up acting. This could have been fatal to his career. Fortunately, he developed a throat condition that forced him to stop singing^; HIi croaky voice was ideally suft-ed to the “method scbool” of acting, however, so he turned to the theater. Being both an actor and a nonsinger, he could have become a big recording star. But unfortunately, his voice came back. Maharis hasn’t done badly, considering his handicap, and I wish him well.— intivid^ that he lays off of “I’ll Get By.” The decision to dump the general school aid provisions was reached ’Tuesday at a meeting of Powell and his subcommittee chairmen. ’The committee leaders voted to >try for an omnibus bill containing seven sections, most of which expand or continue existing programs. SECTIONS ’They include; A one-year exten skm of aid to school districts crpwd^ t^ause of federal Vanderbilt Battle Over-Glqriq Host to Gloria Sr. By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — One of the great news stories of 1935 was the courtroom battle for custody of “little Gloria Vanderbilt.” then who sided against her mother, Gloria Sr., one of the first members of “the International Set.” Some |4 million was involved .. . Gloria Jr. lost ... and for years they were hostile. Eventually Gloria Jr. announced “My mother must go to work” ... But family struggles end happily, sometimes . . Last week “little Gloria,” now 38, gave a large party at her Grade Square town house for education, grants for education of handicapped children, expansion of aid to public libraries, grants to improve the quality of teaching, strengthening of federal-state- mother’s twin sisfoF, Thelma FarneS8. 'Glotia Sr. ' groped fw the celebrities’ hands. But the end wasn’t entirely happy. Everybody understood that Gloria Jr.’s marriage to director Sidney Lumet . ability of combining smaller ,k)c^ educatioM^ js^Tinis. and speculated^ab<>ut ibe Wyatt (hooper, her latest escort... and the next book in the saga. search programs, and expansion of student-loan and other provi-' „ „ „ counUes into probate court dis-|sions of the national defense edu-l Bnshy-halred comedian Marty Allen, who has his hair teased tricts as permitted ^in the new cation act. I eomic effect, was at a theater with his wife Frenchy, when constitution, ” said the governor. | ♦ * ♦ I a man sitting behind tapped him on the shoulder and said, -------------------I A program to aid construcUom “Madam, would you please remove your hat?” of college academic facilities, i _ ^ £c* iiL'auciiuu luciiiues,! HBTB S a Sign Ot spring: j which Republicans say should get MIDNIGHT EARL . . . State s Roadside iQDieSgg g _ the White House reception. Earlier I way Department has started put-1 decision haTnot^beeJ®*™**^* Strings” gave boy friend Timmy Everett TimcHov 1ft inft linir niit some 4 000 oicn c tables uecision nas not Deen____________, . ._______ ' ____^ . Tuesday 16 medal holders left | ting out some 4,000 picnic tables ” ■ ■ “ ~ in North-'along Michigan’s highways. | cacncu 5:99 (2) Sea Hunt (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Horror Island.” (1941). Dick Foran. . (9) Larry and Jerry (56) What’s New? 5:39 (2) Whirlybirds (56) Big Picture the flight after ‘refueling in Hon-| 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends olulu. I 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall Travis Air Force Base ern California for Washington; Ail the tables, which were aboard an Air Force plane. Jack-j cleaned and stored over the win-son and his wife had been invited ter, will be ready for use by May take the same flight. 115. it -k It ! They .will be placed in 26 free- XTVavis safety rest areas, 101) road- ever, Jackson declined the Travisiside parks and 2,400 individual! flight, but would go to Washing-'table sites along the side of the' ton by commercial carrier. iroad" j Man Charged With Murder monogrammed hubcaps (to be used as ashtrays) . . . Ex-boxer ! Jake LaMotta, hoping to peddle his bio to Hollywood, would be satis-jfied with Vince Edwards in the lead. I REMEMBERED QUOTE; “About the time we think we can ■ make ends meet, somebody moves the ends.” Herbert Hoover, j EARL’S PEARLS: Any parent can tell you — all you have to do jto mak&a child hungry is take him to an expensive restaurant. ] Broadway dialogue, via Irving J. Bottner: “Ifow’d your irifo iearn to drive?” . . . “Accidentally.” . . .That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, 1963) I -Today's Radio Programs— WJ9(760) WXTtd 770) CKIW(900) WWJ(950) WCAIRI130) WPOWQ 4A0) WJSK(1500) WHfl-fM(94.7) •;«»-WJB. Htw» WWJ. WXTZ. Ntm CKLW :<*vt WJBK. Rolwrt B. Ut WCAR. Bmear*n» WPutf “ -______I WXYZ. Ad OrcMr CKI w, B na?lM WPON, Horn O’NcO a 7:W-WJR. N««i. apart* WWJ. PIMM OpinioB ----- _ wxtz. __________ CKI W V I««to WJBK. BtObOT WCAR. Carandar -'T:4A-WXTZ. La* Alaa l;*»-WJR. world IPoifht I:1A-WJR, Brmlai Cooeart l:l»-WWJ, SpalUnf Baa i|:U-WJR. Topia tor TMay l*:Sa-WWJ. World *1ltoi / WXTZ. Lea, Alan W U:4A-WWJ. 8ln( Atoi|f litaa-wjR Raw* WWJ. Newt. Uutla CKLW. Joe OcoUl* WCAR, Nawa Spofta llsW-WJR, Untie WWJ. Untie WCAR. Carender i:«0-WJWf(------- WW^ Ntwa. Robina wxtk. WoH. New* Mar* Araif •:W-WJR. Untie RaU WJBB, Mewa, Araiw WXTX, raw*, well laO-WJR, Maw*. Una) WWi. Hewn Reberta WXTk. WaM, Haw* CXI.W. Nawa. TabT G WAVZ. Nawa, Wolf CKLW. Nawa, ttorie WJBK, Nawa. Aaary WCAR. NawK Bbartdaw W-WJR. Nawa, B. Ooaal iwj. r— rxTk.1 "WJBK, Nawt A*»r» WJBK. Newt Aaerr WCAR. Newt. Uarirn S:*a-WJR. Nawa. Unrray WXV2. Newt, 1 f:lA-WXTZ. Oardan. Wolf WWJ. Bmphasla. Roberto CKLW. Jo* Vaa WJBK. Meat Arory WCAR. New* ^ WWJ. Newt. Ni NeMber PCH Workthop UiW-WJR. Nawa. oodfrar WWJ. Nawt. Malfhbor WXTZ. Panl Wtalar CKLW. Jo* Van WWJ. New*. Uartont WXTZ. Wlotar N*w* vjBK, Newt. C. BUd ' WPON. Nawa. Jerry Oltaa WBPI. N^. Bnr^ l:M-WJR, Oarry uoor* |:**-WJK, Newt, Sboweat* WJBK. Newt. Lea WHPl. Nawt. Burdick CKLW. Bad Darlat WJBK, Newt. La* WPON. Nawa. J-------- Untie Ran WXTZ SabaUtaB. Newt CKLW. Newt. Dartoa WJBK. Nawa. La* «tob-WJR. Nawa. Untie Ball T“ r" 3 4 r" 6 r r- V TT TT JT ir ifi 1 ir if” i rm 55" ZD fT 1 24 a zm n ■ sr r IT 33 sr U sr Ur p Zm H" 1 40 I ■Fi zz 42 z 44 It 46 48 ?r 50 ST S" sr sr —i sr sr I ; GRAND RAPIDS (41-Authorities today held Robert Weess, 41, of Grand Rapids, on a first-degree murder charge They said I he admitted yesterday to shooting his wife, Alice, 40. and dumping !her body in the Grand River. Weess told Kent Couhty sher-I iff's men he shot his wife five times with a pistol on Easter I Sunday daring an outing at a county pork, detective James Hiaeshutter said. Fine Daughter of Churchill LONDON (UPI) - Sarah Churchill. 48-year-old actress daughter of Sir Winston Churehill, was fined $5.60 yesterday for being drunken and disorderly. staggering around, shouting and waving her arms. He said she was very drunk. Wearing a fawn raincoat and pink headscarf. Miss Churchill pleaded guilty and said, “I ami Gene Dietz, 15, discovered the!''®*")’ body Monday near a bridge at M21. Mrs. Weess was the mother of five children by a previous marriage. Weess shot his wife during a quarrel and put the body in the trunk of his car, Hiaeshutter said. Weess told authorities he killed his wife after she threatened to leave him. Kent County Prosecutor James K. Miller issued a warrant charg-ling Weess with first-degree murder yesterday. A policeman told the court he saw Miss Churchill in the middle of Buckingham Palace Road 1 BcTcragc tngredlebt • MuicaUI, for IniUDce la Scbool lubjact 13 Froitor 14 Bewildered 15 Bridle part nickname 11 land maaeure 53 Trleet* wine 34 Almi box 3* Maater iPr.i 35 Dawn (poet.) 40 Saltpeter 35 Mallciout ' 41 Leather piece burning 43 Petty quarrel 37 Kind of railway 43 Principal Move for World Fair Nixed by Cavanagh ATTENTION TV AND APPLIANCE REPAIR COMPANIES You can make mom aarvic* cal* in a tmallcr area and ent yonr coat par call willi nnr provan r Dofaila— BRESSER'S CROSS-INDEX TR 4-0570 thunder 5* Shed tcare 57 Kind ■ I />'. DETROIT UPI — Mayor Jerome Cavanagh yesterday vetoed a (kunmon (kmncil resolution which j ^ • fjSupported a move by a group of ^omm/© L.n/©r P"''®*® eft^ens to promote a j world’s fair in Detroit in 1972. : • ^ L J * Cavanagh said he felt that push-i ! in ^O/T)000/0 ling for, the world’s fair now j (“would be harmful to our present ! TOKYO (AP) - President Liu Shao^hi of Communist China ar-iP‘“ “ Democratic rived in Sn^m P^iS today and was cheered by “sev-‘“®"* “ 1 UNLIMITED SOFT WATER RUST-FREE ^3 PER MONTH LINDSAY SOFT WATtR CO. Onision e( Nikh. HwaNns, bic. FIS-Mto eral hundred thousand people,” 1 Radio Peking announced. The hurricanes that strike the Liu, his wife, and a large party .eastern and southern United of X^iinese officials were met atjstates originate as a rule in the Phnoni Penh airport by the Cam-|easftrn Atlantic near the Cape bodian chief of state, PrinM Nor-IVerde Islands or in the Caribbean odoml Sihanouk.^ 'Sea near the West Indies. I SONOTONE House of Hearing 29 E. CORNELL