T/»# W«offi«r V.l. WwllMr B«ma rarMMi Fair, Wanner THE PONTIAC PRES^ CO10| idrial Day Idition VOL. 121 No. ( PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1963 --68 PAGfiS PmUi, P»h rh»u HONOR WAR DEAD - Mrs. Leon Culbert, of 3831 Percy-King, Waterford Tovmship, and her young daughters Mary Jane, (left), IS, and Leonna Sue, 8, were among the hundreds visiting cemeteries in the Pontiac area to honor deceased servicemen. The Culberts visited the Perry Mount Park Cemetery, 878 N. Perry, and placed flowers on the ^ave of Leon Culbert on this Memorial Day. Parade Marks Memorial Day iiass Assault on Segregation May Hit North Picket-Line Violence Iron Workers to Meet in Philly Threatens to Spread Out PHILADELPHIA (/P) — Picket-line violence in the city of brotherly love, prompted by Negroes’ demand for the right to join labor unions, may Irav e spawned a mass assault on segregation b a r r i e r s all across the North. Denumstrations which started peaceably two weeks ago with a sit-in in the mayor’s office erupted into violence for the second time Wednesday. Tea persons were hurt as pickets, laborers and police dashed at the North Philadelphia site of a 38-million school project. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peoptt, prime mover in the local demonstrations. has charged labor unions with failing to hire non-white skilled workers. The unions have denied it. The memory of those that died defending their country was strengthened this morning. Attention was focused on their deeds today with a| Memorial Day Parade, one of the largest here in their' honor. A more solemn tribute was later paid to the area dead with After Wednesday’s outbreak during which massed police faced as many as 506 pickets, national officers of the NAACP wired support of local leaders, and promis^ an all-out effort to break down labor segregation harries in other cities. war graveside memorial ^rv-ice. ___Some 30 veteran, military, civic and fraternal - uhrts 'maf^^Tn /the parade doWh Sigh ing in review before city and parade officials at Huron. ' Special guest on the reviewing stand was honorary parade marshal John N. Johnson, a 78-year-old veteran of the Spanish-Amer-ican War. The mile-long parade took marchers and a cavalcade of automobiles north from Patterson along Saginaw and Oak- Marchers kept in step to the music of Pontiac Ontral and Northern High School bands and the combined bands of several area junior high schools. PARADE HALTED The parade halted at the Civil War Monument in front of the First Baptist Church while wreath was placed at the base of the statue. A three-gun salute was firdd in honor of the men of that war. Holiday Outings to Be Brightened Wj^h Sunshine Herbert HUI, national NAACP labor secretary, said in New York demonstrations will begin very sdon in suck cities as New York, Washington, Chiengo, Cleveland, Boston and St. Negi joine ft m ministers in Philadelphia school site were hurt but not seriously. Sunny skies with a high of 75 will brighten Memorial Day ouL During 4he inmrmng,,the^ min^ ings in the Pontiac area. Fair \ change is die forecast for tonight and tomorrow. Following a dip to a low of 56 tonight, the mercury is expected to reach alilgh oTTftomoirow. The outlook for Saturday is partly cloudy and mlid. Winds, westerly to northwester- will turn out, ly at five to 15 m.p.b. today, will become southwesterly at 16 to 18 m.p.h. tomorrow. The lowest temperature in isters spoke to the crowd over a loudspeaker and said that Sunday they will call from their pulpits for a demonstration Monday that will be the largest this city has ever seen or that ever has been staged north,pf the MAson Dixon Line. Holiday Cars Headed East on Orchard Lake Road Line Up for a Turn Onto Telegraph Despite Plea by Rusk Ecuador Still Holding 21 U S, Tuna Boats QUITO, Ecuador (UPD—Twenty-one American tuna boats remained in custody of the Ecuadorean navy as alleged poachers today despite a telephoned plea by Secretary of State Dean Rusk for their release. The boats, out of San Diego, Calif., were being herded to the Ecuadorean port of Salinas by two destroyers and some gunboats. Despite Rusk’s phone call to Foreign Minister Benjamin Peralta and a statement by Ecuador’s Ambassador Neftali Ponce Mirandi in ^n Francisco that there had been an agreement to free the boats, the Naval and Foreign Ministries issued a joint comauHdqna late Wednesday stating their “na-breakaMe resolution to maintain national sovereignty sacred above all other considerations’’ in the cate. The ministries said the 21 boats were operating illegally in Ecuador’s territorial waters. The boats White Star and Ranger were arrested by the Ecuadorean patrol boat Jamboli Saturday. DEmiOYERS The destroyers Presidente Alfaro and Velasco Ibarra were dispatched to bring in the other 19, which reportedly hampered the Jambeli In its efforts to conduct the White Star and Ranger to port. vmm A Naval Ministry spokesman 'said it had not beea accessary to use force to apprehend the alleged poachers.. U.S. Representative Lionel Van Decriin, D-Calif., said in Washington the tuna boat Hornet reported by ■ in navy They estimated 20,000 to 200,000 Phillip Savage, a local officer the first of tm artidles explaining the community college issue appearing on the June 10 school election ballot. Other issues and personalities to appear on, the panot fStn M Wisihied w The Pontiac Prfss before the election). of the NAACP, said picket lines By GARY THORNE Proposals to establish an Oak.- probably will be thrown bround land County community college- downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m.|all city projects, with state and was 47. At 10 a.m. the thermome-federal projects to follow if the ter read 57. matter isn’t settled soon. a two-year institution of higher education—have provoked numerous questions and conflicting opinions. residents question why there should be a local junior college at all. Still others are concerned with the costs. To get answers to the questions and erasp some of the confusion, ’The Pontiac Press quizzed Dr. William J, Emerson, county school superintendent, on the community college proposals. t,"county jdennilery"OT probably atidoi Q. Why does Oakland County need a community college? A. "Nearly 3,000 high school seniors and their parents ^were community colleges if they existed here. “Community ccdleges offer instruction programs for an Important segment of the population that hasn’t completed its education at the high school level and doesn't choose to, or could not, attend a four-year college.’’ Q. Who says we need a community college" A. “The Oakland County Citizens Advisory Council on Corn- questioned last year and indi-jf^unity (Colleges, the Six-County Icated that those seniors wouldj (Continued on Page 2, (Jol. 4) NLRB Official Calls for End fo 29-Day Sfrike Walkout's Cited os Violation of Contract With Building Firms DETROIT (^ — I r 0 n \ Workers Union officials today called for a meeting of some 1,700 members Sun: day after a National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) official ordered their 29-day strike ended by tomorrow, The walkout May 1 by members of Local 24 has halted work on buildings and bridges in 32 southeastern Michigan counties, including Oakland County. Henry Cooper, local busim»s manager, said the rank and file will reconsider a wage offer by employers. Workers last Saturday rejected the package increase of 45 cents an hour over a two-year period. ’Ihomas Ronmell, NLRB re-glMml directer, yesterday or- Rudt told i Whshington I confmnee yesterday he had telephoned Foreign Minister Benjamin Peralta Paez urging immedi- groiteds the two governments have agreed to seek a satisfactory solution to the problem of conflicting recognition of territorial waters. Roumell cited the union’s con- ' tract with firms represented by the Steel and Metal Erectors Association and the associated general contractors. -------j^j------------- Ecuador claims a 200-miie limit. The United States recognizes only a three-mile limit. U S. tuna boats in recent years have been purchasing licenses in order to buy bait in Eucadorean ports. With the development of net fishing methods the boats have not needed local bait and have balked at buying licenses. Nation Shows Gratitude to Those Lost in War After the parade disbanded on Sanderson, most of the units later regrouped at Perry Mount Park Cemetery for ceremonies there. Rev. Donald C. Andrews, pastor of the Church of Atonement, Waterford Township, gave the invocation and presented the Memorial Day address. Among those taking part were' Gold Star Mothers. World War I and II Veterans, Veterans of For-eign Wars, American Legion, Dis- By The Associated Press . ithe President’s mother, takes parti The President, after his wreath-to the White House With gratitude to her war dead,i«n ceremonies namiijg three laying at Arlington, flies by heli-j^"': office work and a little L-------------------^ relaxation on the holiday. namii)g and in loving memory of all bystreets in honor of fallen service-deceased loved ones, the nawjjfcen, includi^ her son, Joseph P. today marks another MemorpP^ennedy, Jr., who died in World Day—with its roots of observaticei war II. now dating back exactly 100 years. Mpter to Camp David lhepresi.| dential retreat in the CatoctmLg^y.,,ygg jj^pgjj hy Ggp. Maxwell Mountains of Maryland, for lunch,|D. Taylor, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who in a prepared speech reminded all Americans that “we are leaders in a tense world who must meet serious issues with a calm, sober sense of responsibility." Pointing out tbe tensions created by the Communists throughout the globe, Taylor paid tribute to the Americans lost South Viet Nam, calling them national heroes in every sense of the word.” t if the I Unioii (AFL4T0) te terminate the strike tomorrow. He said H This pact, he said, automatically renewed itself for a year because a required notice of intent to end the contract was not given. If the strike is not terminated by Friday, Ronmell said he’d issue a formal complaint and order a hearing. Cooper last week recommended that the union accept the wage agreement. He indicated the same recommendations will be put before members Sunday. Sue to Prevent Drain Closing A Circuit Court suit seeking to prevent Oakland County officials from reclosing a drain between Williams and Maceday lakes was filed yesterday by John E. McGrath, attorney for a group of Williams Lake residents. President Kennedy lays the presidential wreath on the Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington abled AmeTicah Veterans, Daugh- fVa.^ationaI Demetery. And ters, of Union Veterans of the Civil War, Blue Star Mothers and MOMS of America. The Navy Mothers cast a lone wreath on the cemetery pond in honor of those who served at sea. The Name Is 'Belice' TEGUCIGALPA. Honduras (AP) —Honduras asked the British government Wednesday tb stop call-; ing British Honduras by that name. Honduras said the correct name is “Bdlice.” In Today's Press Astrology ... Bridge Comics Editoriak Food SectioB Sports ...... Tbeaten T>4 .... D4 D4 A4 C-l-C-7 . D-1-D4 . C-14 TV and Radio Programs D-15 Wiltoa, Earl . . . ^ ^>-15 Women’s Pages . . C-l-C-U old soldiers, young soldiers and just plain citizens conduct ceremonies in most every city, town and hamlet. In addition to areath-laying rites are the parades, speeches and gnnfbw salutes. For millions ai Americans R also is a day of rest, and for other millions it means the start of a long weekend holiday. Most historians agree that Uie . holiday dates to April 1863, when several women at Columbus, ' Mto., scattered qring flowers on graves of Confederate and' Union soldiers. WOMEN WAR DEAD At Rindge, N.H., pound-breaking ceremonies are scheduled for a inemorial bell tower to honor all women war dead. In Albany, N.Y., Barry M. Startup, 12, a Spuhk-Ameri-can War veteran, leads the city’s parade. It is Startup’s thtail time te serve as grand At Fort Banks in Mass:, Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy, ♦ ★ * ’The suit charges a culvert be- "The conflict in Viet Nam typi-Jtween the two lakes was Ulegally ties 'dramatically the new chal- Plugged years ago by the county lenge we are facing in many parts of the underdeveloped world," Taylor said._______________ road commission. It has been a decade since the last of the nation’s nine major wars ended, but Ameri-,cans still die on battlefields, to be remembered on this Memorial Day. « Their names still come in, by ones and twos, to be added to the more than 602,000 who fell during the past 188 years at such places as I^xington and Taejon, at Gettysburg and Normandy, at the Battle of Lake Erie and on the Coral Sea. The United States isn’t an official belligerent in Viet Nam’s war. But in the last 2^ years 36 Americans have died by “hostile action.” TH?y were with South Viet Nam forces in engagements against the Communist Viet Cong guerrillas. The legal action stems from last Friday’s attempt bjr some 7$ Williams Lake residento to open the culvert between the two lakes. Williams Lake is two feet lower than Maceday Lake. They had dug a 50-foot trench about four feet deep and had just drilled through a cement plug when the arrival of police and county officials- halted the project. The court action seeks an injunction against the county’s interfering with the natural flow of water from Maceday to Williams Lake until the county establishes "adequate lake tevel control.” The biggest battlefield death toll for the United States was the approximate 291,000 kiUed in aetkm in World War II, This was approached by the CiTil War, where about 215,000 died in acUon-140,-000 of them Union soldiers, the others Confederates. The Local Newspapers Took Her at Her Word BRUNSWICK, Ga. OR - Honor pupil Judy Dusenbury iOi’t angry at the local papers for omitting her from a list of speakers at last night’s graduation exercises for Glyim Acaden^. Judy’s kiri)ject: “'nw freedom to o|i^ tnistakss.** -ctii ' . THE PONTIAC PRBSS. THtJRSDAV; I^IAY ao, 1968 In Jackson, Miss. NAACP to Up Activity JACKSON. Miss. (AP) - Inte-[Colored People told 600 chwing gratkmists planned to step up Negroes Wednesday night at a demonstrations in this Mississippi capital city today even though police promised to continue their policy of instant arrests. “WeYe not going anywhere but down onTapitol street," a Mississippi leader of die National Association for the Advancement of Pontiff’s Rest Is 'Excellent' rally. Mississippi does not observe Memorial Day. Stores will be today. Nineteen perscos wart lailed In four demonstrations Wednesday. n ARRESTS It brought to 27 the\umber of arrests since picketing and sit-in demonstrations started here Tuesday. Two white youths were hurt Wednesday ni^t when Negroes tossed bricks through the windshield of their car in a Negro section. But there was no violence during daytime demonstrations. . Statement on Health Indicates Optimism VATICAN CITY (ft - The Vaticaa today reported further improvement in the condition of Pope John XXHI and said his hemorrhages had ceased for the prdkent. VATIflAN CITY (AP)-Pj>phl John XXIII spent "an exceUent night with perfect rest," the Vatican announced today. His doctors reported "concrete improvemtat,” informed sources said. An oral statement by a Vatican spokesman underlined new optimism that the 81-year-old Roman Catholic ruler ndght rally from the critical hemorrhaging provoked by an abnormal internal stomach growth. MIGHT BE PAST The statement, indicating that the immediate crisis might be The previous day a mixed group which tried to desegregate a lunch counter was attacked. Throngs of white persons gathered on Capitol street—the main thorou^faK — when the first six pickets appeared Wednesday, few white youths stepped in front of the pickets and attempted to halt them. Otherwise there were no incidents. NEW CITY LAW Demonstrators arrested for picketing were charged wifli displaying a placard without a per-new city law. When their City Court trials began Wednesday afternoon, Jack Young, a Jackson Negro attorney, contended the new law was unconstitutional. City Court Judge James Spencer delayed the trials for one week and directed Young to file ' brief on his daim. ceive his doctor. Prof. Antonio Gasbarrini, in a farewell visit this morning.” ' Gasbarrini, who lives In Bologna, plans to leave Rome this afternoon, the statement added. He was sununoned here urgently Sunday aftm* the Pope suffered a critical setback. Despite Gasbarrini’s departure, the Pope remained under constant attention from his Roman medical staff. One of his doctors sbid Wednesday night that the Pope might be able to get out of bed in a week or 10 days if he continues showing — reported. ePTOOSM That statement indicated optimism. But it also pointed to the fact that the next week or 10 days might be crucial, with the threat of new hemorrtiaging still present. The report was ^ most optimistic since the Pope’s abnormal stomach growth sent him to bed 10 days ago and brought him close to death, timistic since the Pope’ sabnormal stomach growth sent him to bed 10 days ago and brought him close to death. rooms of five leading Charlotte, N.C., hotels and motels for the first time. Dr. John R. Cunningham, chairman of a biracial committee named by Mayor Stan Brookshire, said eight hoteb and motels are beghming a program bf openfaig their sle^g accom-modatioas to both races. ATHLETICS INTEGRA’TED Breaking with the tradition of the Southeastern Conference, the University of Kentucky announced it will integrate its athletic program. ’The 12-member group is segregated athletically by tradition, not rule. A compromise agreement ended an Alabama Senate filibuster over resolution endorsing Gov. George Wallace’s promised defiance of a court order to integrate the Univeriity of Alabama. Hie •Senate at Montgomery adopted an amendment appealing to citizens to prevent mob violence, sent the measure back to the House where it originated. Qasses in non-violent, sit-in techniques were held Wednesday at the Jadtson headquarters of the NAACP by the Congress of Ra-llcial Equality. Students were briefed on what to expect in demonstrations. More classes were planned today. ELSEWHERE Major racial developments elsewhere included: The Atlanta Chamber of Commerce asked all businesses in the city serving the general public to do so without regard to race. Mayor Ivan AUen said that AL lanta’s 12 swimming polls will open June 12 on a desegregated basis in compliafice with a federal court order. SANG ANND CHATED Four hundred Negro students sang and chanted demands for ending segregation in the Talla-hasee, Fla., business district while 500 white persons watched. It was the ninth protest in as many days. Police moved briefly when several white youths jeered the Negroes. Rules Are Suspended as Dog Visits Master PUEBLO, Colo. (JV- Ordinarily dogs and children are not al-Justtee* Department an- lowed to visit paUents at St. nounced it will appeal a ruling by a federal judge in Birmingham, Ala., that the department does not have the right to sue for desegra-tion of two Alabama school systems which receive federal funds have been suspended in the case of A1 J. Bernardin and his dog, Gallant. Mary-Corwin Hospital. But rules The seeing-eye dog is permitted gram. land after daily visiting hours. Negroes dhd whifo persons'Bernardin is being treated for a lunch^ together in public dining'broken neck disci The first net changes in the Oakland County vote on the new state oonstitution were reported They were in favor of the docament’s opponents ns the county’s 35,877-vote margin of "yes" votes was reduced by nine in the recount requested by the Democratic (forty. All but one of the changes came in Bloomfield Township, where attorney Hugo C. Edberg of Royal Oak, representing the State Board of Canvassers, ruled eight absentee ballots invalid. ASTRONAUT WINGS—L. Gordon Cooper’s wife Trudy pins on his new pilot-astronaut wings in a Pentagon ceremony yesterday. Gen. Curtis LeMay, Air Force chief of staff, gave Mrs. Cooper the honor of pinntog on the wings. __________________________________________________________ Does County Need Community College? Edberg overruled two-to-one votes by the three-member County Board of Canvassers in making his determination that marks on the backs of the ballots were voter distinguishing marks" that invalidate ballots under state law. (Continued From Page One) Metropolitan Community College Study Comniittee, the report of the Michigan Study on Higher Education, many local school boards, PTA and other groups.” Q. If there are students who want to go to college, why can’t they go to Oakland University? A. "Some cannot meet the entrance standards as required appropriately by Oakland Uni- technical and terminal courses of instructhm not necessarily offered by institutions of higher learning such as QU." Q. What advantages are there to attending a Community coUej^ rather than a four-year school? attending community college will work full-time nnd take technical courses part-time. A student can also live at home and save living expenses." Q. What kind of courses will be offered by the proposed junior college? A. “Two general types of courses will be offered. Ilese will be courses, such practfeaT A. “There are many such advantages and many of them I’ve already mentioned, such as the entrance requirements and the usually found in the freshman and sophomore years of college.” Q. Could this college ever become a four-year institution? A. "The statutes under which the election is being held prohibit this,” erminal courses not leading to the baccalaureate. “In addition, many stunts Communication Problem Romney, Board Still Feud on EMU LANSING (fl — Settlement of a full-blown controversy between Gov. George Romney and the State Board of Education appeared today to be a matter of simple, direct coihmunication. At issue in the dispute was a The Weather report by an investigating team of the North Central Association (NCA), a college and high school accrediting agency, criticizing ndministrative policies at Eastern Michigan University. The board was standing firm ir its position that Rottmey could not have a copy of the report unless he would promise to keep it confidential.” Romney, in a surprise move. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Sunny and warmer today, high 75. Fair with little temperature change tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight 50. High tomorrow 70. West to northwest winds at five to 15 m,p.h., becoming soutowesterly at 10 to 18 m.p;h. to- TtSgy In PnnUtr ^^fcowest temperature preceding S a At g am': Wind Velocity; g m.| Direction—North Dawntavn Temperati Weather—Cloudy, light t One Tear Age In Panllae Hlgheat temperature .............. ioaeat temperature .............. Mean temperature ................. Weatbef-Llghl ram. tunny. • Temperature Chart I. Raplda gg I S3 41 Dej Molnea 74 S2 43 Duluth 72 70 52 Port Worth M 64 45 Indianapolis 73 .. 65 43 Kantat City 52 63 » Orleana gl Some Areas Get Rain for Memorial Day By The Associated Press Wet weather dampened Memorial Day activities in scattered sections in the West and the eastern quarter of the nation today but ' in most other areas. Houghton Lanaing Marquette Muagegon " City 51 33 iKmaha”" 27 rpMlanll 67 46 Phoeqll 06 Atlanta gl 62 PUUburgb ' 75 65 40 8t U)uit 78 52 The Weather Bureau said fair 63 52 oeame°°‘“° 76 M {weather was indicated foT Aiost of -- - WMhington 76 61 {he Midwcst. the Middle Atlantic Coast states, the southern Plateau Buffalo NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered showers with a few thundershowers through the Plains and some showers for Florida are forecast for toni^t.' Partly cloudy skies are due in the Plains, Mississippi Valley and into the central Rockies wkh fair akies in the Far West except for some coastal cloudiness. It should remain miU or turn milder except for cooler temperatures from the Tennessee Val^ eastward to the Atlanta and ——1 to the Lsdtes. r : / region and most of the Pacific Coast except the extreme north. Showers were forecast in the Plains, the Rockies, the north and central Plateau region, parts of the Ohio Valley and along the Gulf announced he would be willing to do this if it were true that the NCA', in compiling the report for the state, had stipulated it should not be made public. DIDN’T KNOW He said he had no first-hand knowledge that the NCA had set such a condition. But ^krd President Chris Magnusson insisted he had so informed the governor phone conyersation three days ago. ‘Who’s he kidding?" asked Magnusson. Romney earlier had demanded formally that the board give him a copy of the NCA report, and an irate Mapusson retorted, that not only would the board not comply, but it “won’t even let him see the report." Commenting on this, Romney said: “I can conceive of circumstances in which a private agency would want its report to be confidential. If the NCA said should Bot be made I understanding." The board’s refusal to give him the report unless he agreed in advance to keep it private was termed “unbeUevable” by the governor. He said the board was making a direct diallenge to the governor’s constitutional authority to A. A new board of trustees being elected June 10 will ran the junior college." > Q. How many students can the community college accom?nfc date? A. "The Citizens Advisory Council suggests that the first two campuses be developed to accommodate a total of 3,000 students within a couple of years." (Tomorrow — How much wiH the community college cost? Who will pay the bills?) Coast. Showers also were in prospect in scattered sections along the coast of the Cforolinas, in Fh>r-' and in the Lower Great Lakes region. HEAVY RAIN Fairly heavy rain fell during the night in New England, with a shower belt extend along the Atlantic Coast from Maine to Florida. Showers also sprinkled areas in the Lower Great Lakes tbe central and southern Plains and In the Pndfic-Northwest. Tornadoes strudc the Lubbock area of West Texas Wednesday, destroying farm buildings and toppling power lines. One person was injured. request and receive “any Infor- mation’’ from an elected or appointed official. Magaasioa said later tbe head of the NCA team which investigated the YpsilantI school had stipulated that the report shoald be kept contiden- If the information was to be made public, Magnusson said, the NCA team would have made a J;., J I'; Magnusson has refused to divulge contents of the report because it contains “references to perstmalities," and to make it piAilic would “serve no ^useful purpose.” ■ ' ,1' Both Edberg and Montgomery pointed oui that the ruling could be ai^aled to the State Board of Canvassers. Most of the recount has been narked so far by challenges of absent-voter ballots and envelopes by opponents of the constitution. Such balloto have been marked as exhibits for possible appeals or court cases, but none had been invalidated before yesterday. The other vote change — one vote—was in Pleasant Ridge. (bounty election officials said (he recount was showing that the P in.4m.4in. • n <1 riraftinir. anH efection wos handled cleanly and dUcImUjrln mo. wfo. o« academic courses such as tiiose ^ ^..4 Sale for Friday and Sainrday Froth 'KING EDWARD' 6‘ CIGARS BOX OF SOt .$3.00 value. Impe- loss Reported in County Tatty Nine Votes Thui Far Dropped by New-Con BIRMINGHAM Robert A. Bogqn Jr. of DMroIt has been ...................of tbe Community House. Bogan. 35, is customer service officer and assistant vice president of Metropolitan Faderal Savings and Loan Association, Detroit. New constitation supporters objected, but State Elections Director Robert M. Montgomery told Edberg by telephone that he was the j^ge in the evidence of fraud, but that some errors were made. County-Clerk Register Daniel T. Murphy reported that the recount was completed in 131 of the 206 county precincts involved. ’The county has 340 precincts altogether. Two county Tecount teams will resume work Monday. ALBION UPl —Circuit Court Judge Alfonso iA. Magnotta, 50, prominent in Democratic party a heart attack yesterday while mowing the lawn at his home in Albion. Judge Magnotta was a former mayor of Albion and a member of the state House of Representatives from 1937-38. Birmingham Area News Pick Executive Director for, Community House He is the outgoing president of the Detroit Jnaior Board of The new director will succeed F. Ward Ouradnik July 1. Active in several area fund drives, Bogan is a member of the Economic Club of Detroit, Finw-dal Public Relations Association and the 1968 Detroit CHympic Committee among others. INTRODUCED Bogan will be introduced to 'stockholders" of the Community House at the annual meeting of the organization Monday night. A representative of the archh tectnral firm which has been chosen to design and snpervise constouction of a major addition to the Commanlty House will be the principal Speaker. Also on the agenda are a report >n the 1963 fund drive and election of five directors to the 17-member board. Reservations for the 6 p.m. dinner, open to all residents of Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Bloomfield Township, Beverly Hills and Franklin, can be made at the (immunity House, 380 S. Bates. third offense snspension for the rest of the semesto-. In Bloomfield Hills, first offenders ace suspended for 30 days < and second offenders for the rest of the scbopj-year, regardless of their age. Both policies prohibit possession or use of tobacco on school property. NO EFFECT Walter J. Piel, administrative assistant to tbe school superintendent, sakl the Bloomfield Hills action had no effect on the Bir-mintdiun decision. “It was under study by the secondary school principals for some time," he commented. The Birmingham Board of Education has adopted a uniform smoking policy for its secondary schools. Limits of the policy are less strict than for that passed by the Bloomfield Hills board a month ago. The Birmingham policy is unlike Bloomfield Hills’ in another important area—it was initiated by school principals rather than the students. A student offender under 16 years of age will be suspended For those over 18, the first offense will bring » flve^lay saspenshm, the second Mfenoe Traffic Deaths Below Usual for Holiday By The Associated Press ^ Traffic deaths in the nation today Beared to run below nor- " mal in the first hours of the 30- -hour Memorial Day holiday pe- ' riod. Fatalities in the highways av- . eraged about one per hour since « the count started at 6 p.m. (Pon- ; tiac time) Wednesday. The holiday period ends at midnight to- ~ night. - At 8 a.m. the death count was: 27 traffic, 1 boating, 0 Z drowning. Total 28. has estimated that between 90 • and 130 persons will be killed in ’’ traffic accidents during the holi- -day period. The council has " reported that highway fatalities -in the first four months this year ^ totaled 11,630, an average of near- * ly 100 a day. California, Illinois and New York each reported two traffic * deaths since the start of the holi- <■ day period. Indiana, Iowa, Kan- . $1.M NMs li Liyaway 'ty FATHER'S GAY REiINGTOH lame Electric Shaver IM.SO Voiiio. N«w supw po«v sji. Friday and Saturday At Simms SaleofRUGI Co4nparo tho soUctions, tho typos and tho colors . and you'll bo turo to got ‘om horo at Simms. Smoll doposit | beldocmy soloction4»fro iJrooloyowoy. SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT 3-Large Groups COnON RUGS Medium Size 1.0011.691.99 Large Size Extra heavy qualify rugs" in deep cut pile with rubberized or foam rubber backs. Solid color rugs ore fully washable too! Save holf or more ot these low, low | SCAHER RUQS-3 for Solids and twoods, non-tkid rubber bocks <|00 Medium TUFTEOJUfiSu- JNgsbablOi'nOniiikid^ bocks.’Vorioty of colon ... *|00 Large TUFTED RUGS Non-skid backs, vorioty of colors. Wothoblb .... 24 X 48-Inch CARPETS $3.95 voluot —otsortod corpoting in colon..... 149 4x 6-FOOT TUFTED RUGS Woshoblo, Hi-Lo, plush pilot, loops otc 2^6 3 X 5-FOOT CARPETS Values to $7.95. Assortod carpeting In colon... 3" Durable RAYON-VISCOSE Tweeds. Approximately 499 9x12 Ft.'.'^RUGS 1300 Jrregularsl of $22.95 f e H. Woe? THE PONTIAC PRKSS. THURSPAY.-MAY 30, 1963 A-'—8 Electrify or Else! DOORS OPEN At 1A.M. - Bt HtrtFerTht best BARQAINS 9j m.lo II JOp.m. Fridau Morning SIMMS OLOSIO TODAY For DECORATION OAT Amish Farmer^ Face Progress | Early Friday Morning ‘discounts’ For You Wide-Awako BARSAIN HUNTERS LANCASTER, Pa. (UPI) Pennaylvanla’s Amish farmers problem caused by The Amish, who traditionally have used portaible kerosene or gasoline mantle lamps to light their barns and milk houses, have been ordered to install electricity in their dairy faciliUes. If diey do not comply with the order of health authorities of lower lMerion Township, near Philadelphia, they face the possibility of losing an estimated |1.S million a year in milk sales. The Amish are a religious sect, many of whom shun modem conveniences as automobiles and electricity. ★ ★ ★ But recently, township authorities made an inspection tour of Amish dairy farms and passed the word ttiat it would strictly enforce one of its rules that spe- ■ Bring In All YOUR ■ ■ DECDRATON DAY ! cifies electric lighting on farms supplying milk to the township. MAIN BUYER Sealtest Dairy traditionally has bought milk from the Amish and is completely satisfied as to its quality. Sealtest even picks np milk on Saturday night and early ers shipping between 45,000 and U,O0O quarts of milk a day out of Leaman Place, Pa., are 1 volved. Lower Merlon Township Is in MOk Control District 1-A, and their regulations — admittedly “very strict”-^fectively sc to control muk supplies for other communities In the same violate Amish religions principles against doing work on Sunday. But when the townsl^ decided to enforce the electricUy regulation, Sealtest had no choice but to advise Amish su|:^liers to electrify their barns by March 1, 1)64, or find other markets for their milk. * * *. Approxipnately 200 Amish farni- Sealtest, for example, could not afford to ignore a township health ruling and thereby lose its customers in that township and probably fn the entire control district. Ilie Amish have nearly a year to decide whether or not they will adhere to their beliefs and sacrifice a substantial annual income. Almost 70 pCT cent of Georgia’s area is farm land. MOLDS In SIMMS FREE UYAWRY ’til FAYNER’S DAY ■ B-i-g SUPER SIZE ■ ■ Black and White: ■ LIFETIME-FADEPROOF I PRINYS K M From AUPcpuiarSUtnimt ■ - ONE S DAY ^miCE ■ _ 5 • Enlarge lu SUKR-SIZE S 5 • dated and DECALED Edgni g ■ • Dnarantnad Perfect Prints ■ ■ Ry ELECTRIC-EYE Pnoett ■ ■ • Cenpere at lie er Mere ■ T • • P*r ORLY 4m> teed Prints « 16 honics, mointeno do-it-yourielfer». ed. Save at Sinvi -■socket AND WRENCH SET ! I Handy %-inch square socket size for mechanics, maintenance men, g 'I appliance, radio and automotive service and do-it-yourselfers. 27-pieces g ! —all finely crofted and precision monufodured. Save at Simms. AMERICAN Made ‘GOODS’ ert SIMMS Good LOW PRICES j 1st Qualify SEAMLESS Ladies’ NTLOIIS ■ Hollywood ^TECHNICOLOR* < :C0LDR FILM: Eprocessinh: I .EsOQc i : ir Ov r ! Technicolor Kodochrome pre-poid | S mailers for 8mm movies—roll or | 5 magazine and 36mm, 20 exp. slides | 5 —mailed to your home fast. | I Mailed Direct 5 ToYourHome^ ■ Eastman KODAri I COLOR FILM ; PROCESSING g Regular tl.85 Value 5 I"IM MAGAZINE 110 I g, ROLL Prooosslug... I ^ ^ ■ Moiaitl-Exp. 019 I S SLIDE Procotsing .A j g Don't confuse genuine KODAK | g’ processing with other types — j g this b- the finest available. I ■ Pre-poid mailers allow faster I ■ return of film direct to your j ■ home. Stock op' ot lowest ■ prices. Rights to limit quonti- I -At Simms Smart seathless nylons with popular demi-toe feature. Choice of shades for spring and summer fashions. Fresh cellophane wrapped. Sizes to 11. New Spring and Summer Ladies’ Skirts Values to $5.00 American made —first quality skirls in wash wears, Dan Rivers, Twills etc. Selection of colors and prints to choose from. Sizes 8^0-12-14-18. Smart Wash 'n Wear Cottons k^^Girls’ Tee-Toppers Values to $2.29-I Now Bootneck soilor styles in I variety of stripes and solid r colors. Shrinkage control wash 'n wear in • sizes 3 to 12. ^ Ideal for Spring and Summer , Ladies’ and Miss Car Coats Values to $9.95- g f Smart styles in assorted colors. , [ Some ore water repellent ' treated, fully lined. Sizes 12 to M^H 16 only. Ladies and Misses Smart Full Length COATS Values to $13.95 — Now Only Only 2 styles remain— _ ' solid cobrs, patterns and M ' smart collar styles. Fully fl| lined, first quality. Sizes 12 to 18. M ZYi Hour Sale! Super-Discounts On Every Gounter-ln Every Department-On All 3 Floors • kvery Item Is 6uaranteed DNDER-PRICED • Plbn right now for a special trip to Simms Tomorrow morning — end you'll be revvorded with big savings on things you need and want. Here's an advertisement full of typical super-discounts that prove how big the discounts really ore. So be here to get your share.' Rights Reserved to Limit Quentities So Everybotty Shares In The Savingt e VALUES GALORE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT BUSTER VALUES! \ / A—4 TH^: PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1063 To Eye Bids on 5 Road Projects Bids on five road improvement . ^ projects estimated to cost |1M,-’ 000 wOl be opened by the Oak-. land County Road 6>mmission June 6. Two ot the projects affect county primary roads. They are one I mile of grading to prepare for I black topping next year on Farm; ington Rrad between 13-Mile and 14-Mile, and two miles of grading for 1964 black topping on Maybee' ■■ Road from Sashabaw to Dixie Highway in Independence Township. The Farmington Road project k esttanated at $50,Ml, the May-bee Road work at $1N,IM. The remaining three projects . coricero local roads with townships scheduled to pay half the cost. These iwojects and their estimated costs are: Shiawassee Street, .55 miles, Nine Mile to Farmington city limits in Farmington Township, grading, drainage and 28- foot blac^>,|28^. M^bee Road, .54 miles, Baldwin Road t^Grafton Street in Orion ToWnship, 20-foot black top, $10,000. Fairview Street, .6 mile. In-dianwpojLRoad to Lake Orion village TlrnHsTn Orion Township, recondition base and black top, $10,000. Oakland University Chancellor D. B. Varner will be a fehtured speaker at the annual itteeting of tte metropolitan area’s six coun ty boards of supervisors June 6. The meeting will be held at the Veterans Memorial Building in Defroit. To Head Office of Civil Service Set for Detroit Supervisors to Hear Varner OU Chancellor to Talk at Metro Area Meeting Man and Space U.S. Can Challenge Russ Records, but Likely Won't By ALVIN B. WEBB JR. CAPE CANAVERAL (UPft • Attending will be the super-vkers and other local officials from Oakland, Wayne, Macomb, Monroe, St. Clair and Washtenaw counties. At stake is whether America will reprieve the death sentence on its Project Mercnry man-in-space program for one more flight—a mission that, on the drafting boards, would be far more ambitious than the stunning a.|.orbit voyage of astronaut L. Gordon Cooper Jr, The ^’go-no-go” decision hinges on the outcome of a struggle at the opposite poles of NASA's uneasy Washington-Houston axis. Washington, the administrative ★ ★ * i center of the far-flung NASA em- And the usually free-.spending pire, wants to chop off Project National Aeronautics. and Space [Mercury now, save the estimated Varner is presently with an'Administration (NASA) is tryingi$10 jaillion it would cost for an-Oakland County study group inl^ decide whether to put anotherjbtheiMight and concentrate on the Cali Region of Colombia. *10 miljitifrinto-the present Mer-th% n^e advanced Project (Jt-He is expected to discuss the prggram dhe-n^n flights or mini, now 18 months down the The Uidtod Status has the wltere* withall to challenge Russia’s most spectacular manned space-flight records this year —but itj may pass up the opportunity. Instead, this nation apparently is ready to concede the Soviet Union an additional 18 months in propaganda value, and possibly new strides in research, in sending men out to conquer space en route to the moon. local group's findings, which win be embodied in a report td the federal government as a guide to U.S. foreign aid in the region. OTHERS TO SPEAK ^her scheduled, speakers include A. H. LeMasurier of the Ontario Depairtnient of Ecoriom-ics and Development and Frederick C. Matthaei Sr., chairman of the Detroit Olympics Commit- use the money in irtoving ahead pike, with two and three-man missions.' Houston, the top-working level LeMasurier is expected to talk on cooperation in the metropolitan area between local governments on both sides of the iip-mediate, international border. Matthaei will show films used recently in Michigan’s bid to bring the 19M Olympic games to the Detroit area, and will outline the committee's progress to date. Bernard F. Hillenbrand, executive director of the National Association of Counties, and M. . LANSING MV-NichoIas Bulan, former deputy director of thejJames Gleason, first vice presl-Ohio state personnel department,toCTt, will speak on national, re-has been named head of a new gional and county cooperation Detroit office of the State Civil anMmg the various branches 4)£ Service Commission. The new office will be opened Tuesday in the Cadillac Square Building. The commission, which presently has no branch offices, said it is opening a small Detroit office to improve recruiting in such hard-to-fill job classes as professional social workers, medical and psychiatric personnel, higher-level stenographic positions and certain technical classes. government. Gleason, who also is commissioner of Multnomah County, Oregon, is slated to become president of the National Association of Counties in July. contact with higher learning in-' stitutions in the Detroit area to recruit graduates for state service. Firemen Left at Blaze RICHMOND, Ind. (Jl — A pumper truck made two trips to the scene of the blaze — once to put! out the fire in an automobile and ! in the U.S. man-in-space program and the home of the astronauts, it fighting for another Mercury flight to gain more information and to bridge the gap between now and the first two-man Gemini flights, now set for October of 1914. FUGHT UNLIKELY The battle lines are drawn. Washington's stand is led by NASA administrator J a m e s E. Webb, who said flatly there will be no more Mercury flights “unless we find a gap in information”; and his associate administrator, Robert Seamans, who called such a flight “quite unlikely.” The astronauts of Houston, on the other hand, want another would better the present 64orbit endurance record set last August by Russian cosmonaut Adrian Nikolayev. Mercury officials said th e*lr capsule could keep a man in space for as long as four to six (lays. • An would provide the astronaut with as much oxygen and other “consumables” as possible and then turn him loose to stay up until he had to come down. such a mission last 48 orbits or better. NASA scienttsts >avor the latter plan because it would offer a golden opportunity to study man in space without being committed absolutely to the “stunt” of i ing a record. They find that the 18-month gap — the time b e t w e e n the Cooper flight and the first two-man Gemini mission -- an awesome one, particularly if the United States is to meet its current goal of landing a team of astronauts on the moon in 1968, only five years from now. And they know the Soviet Union, although inexplicably idle in manned spaceflights for more than nine months now, will hardily be standing still during the next 18 months. The defense department's Pentagon building covers about .34 acres of land. Handful of Pecans Saves Famous Tree cisco, tex. M4-The famous Burkett Pecan Tree, the original pecan from which came the Burkett nut variety, is safe from the progress of modern freeway expansion. The tree, located just north of U.S. 80 between Baird and Ckco, will be In a sheltered plot between the main freeway and a new frontage road. District highway engineer Jake Roberts knows a good pecan when he peels one. A handful of pecqns presented by ovmer Omar Burkett helped decide Jhe tree's fate. Only about five per cent of the total cork supply available in the U.S. is made into bottle stoppers. Mercury mission and;they Flresl- made a point of telling _ dent Kennedy so during ceremonies honoring Gordo Cooper. Kennedy quoted them as saying the flight would be worthwhile and “useful.'’ But Kennedy also made it emphatic that NASA would have the “final judgment”—and right now, the space agency's Washington head has the high cards. It isn't the matter of starting from scratch. The ingredients are at hand for a U. S. stab at Soviet supremacy in manned, space flight this year. It would take $10 million to mix the makings. The two bell-shaped Mercury capsules like the “Faith-?” that (^per rode for 34 hours in space already are in hangar “S” at Cape Canaveral, undergoing modifications for much longer flights. The astronaut is ready and more than willing. Alan B. Shepard Jr., who made America's first suborbltal (up-and-down) spaceflight two years ago and who later served as “back-up" Cooper, betrays his ambition to pilot another Mercury flight every time the subject is mentioned. TWO PROPOSALS Closed todoy (Momoriol Day) opon tomorrow 9:45 SHOP WAITE'S MONDAY THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS TILL 9 Park Froo All Day on Motorod Parking Lots New! Nine Sizes in Richly Textured, Weighted Corner cxcoscxu. Victoria Kogal ANTIQUE SATIN DRAPERIES PLANS FRUSTRATED - Joanne Bernard, 15, of Rumford, in P HP.inn„Pn.v in.t^PW Ynrk mpted to obtain $2,000 froi Fluid milk was included as a' U.S. army ration in 1933. attempted to obtaTh $2,000 from a bank. Her toy gun foiled to intimidate bank tellers, who summoned police. Joanne, who ran away from home during the weekend, wanted the money to finance a trip to Paris. i NASA already has spent $1 million just studying such a voyage. Scientists and technicians re-[moved from the administrative end of things find it incomprehensible that Mercury could get this [close and quit. Twfi prf>pftcal,|. [before those in charge of pursestrings: I • A Mercury flight specifically aimed at 72 orbits, which ametts Men! tfon’t Miss These Extraordinary Savings Now! A Real Scoop for Barnett's! 3 BIG DAYS! FRIDAY-SATURDAY and MONDAY SW by 45" $549 SW by 63".........6.49 SW by 90".........7.99 1 Vj by 45"..... 9.99 1 VaW by 45"......9.99 1 VaW by 63" ... 11.99 IVaW by 90".^. . 14.99 DW by 63"........14.99 DW by 90".......18.99 TW by 90"........28.99 • Oyst«r • Gold • Plus 11 Colors on Special Order Fit your windows with thess richly textured antique satin (66% rayon, 34% dcetoie) draperies, Styled to hang tn gracefut folds end weiginert In Tilt corners. Lab tested and approved, guaranteed not to (ode fOr two full years. White, oyster or gold to go with any color furnishings or walls, or choose from 11 special order colors (two weeks delivery). LOOK AT THIS TERRIFIC VALUE! ALL BRAiSD NEW DACRON and WOOL SUMMER SUITS Tailored by "Dunhr00k"—Sold Exclusively at Barnett's. They hold the crease and stay fresh looking all day long— usually sold at $50 €tnd $55. On^il£ Tomorrow at It’s Dunbrooke’s Special for $ National Brands Week! Dacron and wool, tho fabric that truly holds .its shop# so well, in good looking patterns that you'll liko immonsoly. Ploy it snnart — ■got yours now-bo sot for oil sum- Buy Your Curtains and Drapery Hardware at Waite's-Draperies ... Fourth Floor His Favorite Collar! His Favorite Fabric! MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS For MO Mpdified*spreod, snop fob or button down collar styles in pirtio batiste, oxford cloth, satin stripe or skip dent summer cottons. Most ore wash ond wear. Neck sizes. 14’/a to f7. RFVFMBER-YOV CAS P.4RK FREE DOW STOW \ POSTIAC IS 4SY METERED LOT! Open Friday and Monday Nif^hts Uil 9 p,m. From Our Collection . . . Gingham Check HIS 'N HER SPORT SHIRTS IB amett s Here's a neat way to show your offectipn... wash and wear con]bed cotton, his and her shirts ittred, blue or loden gingham checks. ' His sizes S-M-L-XU hers 30-36. 150 North Saginaw Street-Downtown Pontiac Men's Wear... Str—t Floor FE 4‘2S11 -i:' THE F'ONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY im. A—4 GM Workers Get Pay Hike Cost of Living Index Adds 1 Cent on Hour Folk Music Leading Gainer in the Entertainment Industry Some 23,000 hourly rated workers at the three General Motors plants here are among a million auto workers who will get a cent-an-hour wage increase next week because of a rise in the cost of living. The upward revision of the wage scale becomes effective at General Motors June 1. Similar increases are scheduM at the other major automobuie manufacturers. The increase results from terms in each company’s contract with the UAW, calling for a one-cent hourly indfease if the cost of \ living rises over a three-month \ period- A hike in the cost of living of «.2 for the Jan. IS-AprU IS period was made public in the AprQ consumer price index released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics today. The April index was 130.3, meaning that it costs $130.30 now to buy what $100 would buy in 1947 - 49. THOMAS Besides the hourly rated workers, salaried employes will receive an equivalent increase in their quarterly cost of living checks. The next review of the company’s ' cost-of-living allowance, GM said, will be fOr the April 15 — July 15 quarter and wijl be based on the July consumer price index. AEC Chief Confers With Russ President MOSCOW in - Glenn Seaborg, chairman of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, conferred yesterday with President Leonid Brezhnev. The Soviet news agency Tass said the chairman of the Soviet Atomic Energy Committee, Andronik Petrosyants, participated in the discussion. By BOB THOMAS^ AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD-The fastest growing segment of the entertainment Industry is something that has heen around since pre-Revolutionary days—folk music. Folk records sell in the millions. Folk festivals are popping up all over the country. Folk musicians have move^ out of the coffee houses and. intO| the bigtime. Every college! campus has its crews of guitar^ and banjo-thumping folksters, eternally hopeful of being tomorrow’s Kingston ’Trio or Peter, Paul and Mary. A high priest of the folk movement is Edwin Pearl, and from him I learned more about the whys and wherefores. He operates the local Ash Grove which has spawned Bud and Travis, the Limelighters and many other top acts. It is, says Pearl the only night club in the country that regularly presents pure folk music. By pure he means that the music is the real McCoy, with no help from Tin Pan Alley, and the instruments are never, never amplified. (Nothing seems to appall a true folk lover like an electric guitar.) Pearl has scoured the hills of North Carolina, Kentucky and other origins of le folk pure for authentic musicians, importing some to Los Angeles virtually barefoot. Pearl admitted that the Kingston Trio was the prime force in selling folk«1tnusic to the masses, though like all purists he disep-proves of their commercial style. ‘T give them credit for helping the movement along,” he conceded. ‘They certainly have a lot of fun performing, and that's one quality that folk music should have.” The reason for the upsurge 0 folk? Pearl offered this theory: ‘‘The appreciation of ethnic origins usually skips two or three gener- ations. I believe we’re going .native music of the areas they through a reaction to the trend came from. But after a fewdec-that started after the first World Ldes of city life, there is an urge War—the movement to the cities, to return to the simple, unsophis-“People who left the farms and ticated elements of life in a less hills had no great interest in the'compUcated era.” Restaurant Burglary Gets Pair Probation Two Pontiac men Tuesday were placed on three-year probation each for their nii^ttime burglary May 1 of the Baldwin Rubber Restaurant, 377 E. South Blvd. John Povey, 4S, 213 Pack-dale. and Harold A. Cohiwell. 4$, of Stratford Arms Apartments, were also ordered by Circuit Judge Arthur E. Mowe to Pay $100 probation costs. Cornwell, in addition, was ordered to make restitution of $236. The two pleaded guilty May 13 to breaking and entelring the restaurant and taking beer and other items. Sentence Man for Iron Theft Swartzlo pay $250 probatk» coata within 90 days. Swartz was convicted of the larceny charge May 9 1^ a jury. He was accused of taking the irw plate from Producto Co^., 10100 Capital, last Aug. 2. Ernest Swartz. 40, of 17385 Westover, Southfield, was sentenced 'Tuesday to’ four years’ probation for larceny of some 2 tons of iron plate valued at $320 . . , ji. • from an Oak Park manufacturing A million tons of adhesives areLj^^ used in the United States annual-1 Oakland County Circuit Judge living in England, returned to ly. lArthur E. Moore also ordered I prepare Tristan for reaettletnent. Tristan die Cunha Island in the South Atlantic suffered a volcanic eruption in October IMl. Early in 1963 an advance party of 50 exiled islanders, who have been SHO^ MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS Till 9 PARK FREE ALL DAY ON CITY METERED PARKING LOTS OPEK A WAITE'S CCC ACCOUNT AND CHARGE IT Groups! Coordinatos! Separate Items! Famous Brands! SUMMER SPORTSWEAR SALE Reg. 3.99 to 12.99 Here's the woy to fill out your summer wardrobe ot very nice savingsl You'll probably find just the items you wont in Waite's ... at one-third'off savingsl Tarpoon cottons, Dacron polyester and cotton blends, linens, burlops ond cotton knits in many dyed to motch and separate itemsl Chmrg» thmm ot WoiteUt Wonderful, Wrinkle-Resistant Arnel Jersey . Third Floor WEEK-END SURPRISE! Here's the dress of the hour, ony hour of the day. It's of that wonderful, vylnkle-resistont ~;.:ArnetlTl«eiire.Ierte eless, scoop 7 neckline. Sizes \2 to 20 In white or blue. ' ALL OF OUR BETTER SUMMER HANDBAGS CUT ONE-THIRD! ALL OF OUR BETTER SUMMER JEWELRY CUT ONE-HALF! 'ARTEMIS Embroidered Flowers Gaily Define These Cool. Sweet Sleep-Motes BETTER SUMMER HANDBAGS Right ot the storf of the seosonl Lovely strows, vinyls, patents, morsh-mollow plastics and others on sole ... oil completely lined. Colors include nofurol, bone, block and white. Save nowl JTaite’s Fa$hion Acc*$$orie$ ,.. Street Floor 10” SUAAMER JEWELRY '/2 OFF Matching necklaces, earrings,,bracelets ond pins at prices that ore split right down the mrddlel You'll wont lots, so use o Waite's charge! The Next Best Thing to ... NO SHOES ALAI That's how you'll feel about our new Italian casuols. Going barefoot is a bit much these days, so we suggest a pair of sandals os the next best thing. Shown ore just three from our collection of cool straws and leathers ... I're sure to find just the pair 4or you. Dainty loce ruftlei ond spirol-,, ing embroidered flowers sweet-touch o sleep shift and a sleep * coot of Mogicole, a Docron polyester, nylon and cotton blended botiste. Cool and carefree they ne^ no iroptng, moke vironderful gifts. Polol pink, sky blue or clover yellow, sizes S-M-L. Wear % l\' j^ormfit "CONFIDANT" ... with straps or without Shape-making Ban-Lon nylon loce, sheer comfort Spandex elosfic. Lift and sfoy-put cup design, subtly pre-shdped. Low bock. Snow white or siren block, sizes 32A-38C White or otter . leather with both •traps adjustable 5.99 5” is'* Shoot Street Floor Exprri CorMirrti Will Fit Too.... Fed Floor FommdoHomt T." THE PONTIAC PRESS THU1ISDAY, MAY », IM ymgaauu) m W. FniMkAW ■•crttary »a4 Adr*rUiin« Plnetoi Local AdTcrtlaiat Memorial Day Symbol of Man’s Ultimate Fate turits, the iiulltiite*s concciit Is . that *‘EnKineen are made and not bom.” (In keeping tvith our policy oj running, guest editorials from time to time, our Memorial Day message has been written by Lt. Cmdr. USNR, Donald E. Adams, Oakland County Probate Court Judge.) ★ ★ ★ Death is an essential part of human existence, the unavoidable fate of every person: It is not the fact of death itself, but the timing and the circumstances surrounding death that often attract our attention. ★ ★ ★ Military activity throughout' history has focused on this The Press heartily salutes the distinguished sphool on its contribution to the-scientific advancement of the age and the development oi a fine bo(iy of talented and ambitious Americans. 2 Main Problems in JFK's Future In ^h ven-tures shingly the best sped-mens of the Na-K tion — the strong, intelligent, the' youthful — JUDGE ADAMS met an untimely end. In 1963 our nation has a classic example in the sudden disappearance of the submarine Thresher with a loss of every man . aboard. ★ ★ ★ Death, while, unavoidable, seems also so final, and the ceasing of the individual’s activity can lead to the end of causes, of projects, even of nations. So our country has of recent years set aside Memorial Day as a holiday. ★ ★ ★ The first part of the day the flag flies at half mast, that we may remember our comrades who made the supreme sacrifice that our nation might live. Then the flag is raised to full staff that^ may look to the great future By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - President Kennedy, 46 yesterday, has two main personal problema ahead; how to get re-elected in 1964 and. if he is, what to do with the rest of his life when that second term ends in 1969. Re would be 51 then. But those personal problems may look rather sedate compared with the presidential dilemmas in front of him if he stays in the White House another 5 years, 7 months and 21 days. On the personal side-. Since he’s not a lav^yer, appointment to th.e Su- MARLOW preme Court wouldn’t be considered. He could run for Congress again—he has been a membff of both houses-w even try for the governorship of Massachusetts. But being an ex-president isn’t an infallible guarantee of political success afterward. ★ ★ ★ Voice of the Peoplet Tew Mothers Would Want ‘Happy* o6 First Lady* I do not want the First Lady of our country to be a woman who wouM give up her children rathw than deprive herself the pleasure of becotphig Gov. Rockefeller’s wife. She surely can’t expect people who feel a moral respoMibllity to their own children to condone her actkmi. She can t g^e up her children, four weeks later marry her lover and expect decent people to give their Uesshig. ^ ^ Unless Rodcefeller comes to his senses and tries to make amends for so much tragedy, he does not deserve the honor of being a cmulidate for the Fluency. • Mother of Four Wonderful and Loving Children ^Socialism Slowly Taking Over U.S.’ Hopes Detroit Isn’t GOP Conclave Site “The American people will Nary a tear wiU be shed at this neverlknowingly vote for social- address if Detroit is not cm^n ism, but under the guise of lib- to be the Republican ^ve^on eraUsm, they adopt TVA, Social city in 1964, as is now indicated. Security, federal aid to educaUon, As far as I’m concero^, there public housing and compulsory are too many Republicans in health insurance. They will adopt Michigan already. God forbid we every fragment pf the socialist invite them all! platform, until one day America ^ Taps Throughout The Land Blame Backers on Debt Bill See Trouble for JFK Tax Program will be socialist without knowing how it came about.” This is the prediction of Norman Thonus, six - time candidate for president on the Socialist Party ticket. Even before Mr. Thomas’ awesome prediction for the fate of Amwica, Lord Chesterfield warned those who faced the problem of creeping socialism: Mrs. Frank D. Kurkowski 69 E. Strathmore ‘Goldwater Club Not County’s First’ Congratulations to the Oakland County prosecutor for his announcement to form a “G o I d-wateir for President” club. Indications point to the success as support for Sen. Goldwater be- "Let us consider that arbitrary comes more evident, power has seldom or never been ^^e dispute the statement, how-introduced into any country at ^ver, that this will be the first By JACK BELL Secretary of the Treasury Doug- rates. He will come back to Con- once. It must be tatroduced by «Goldwater for President” club WASHINGTON (API—His Sen- los Dillon already had predict^ gress in August to ask for a new slow degrees, and, as It were, ate suDoorters’ erratic perform- the debt would exceed the cur- increase in the limit to about step by step, lest t^ people incrcM. Ihe nallonaL debt limit Re^Mcam M points toward trouble for Presi- watching Dillon, who desei^ Chairman Harry F. Byrd, D-Va., ... tViAir ronira Ia inin thd» KAnnMlv * * — “ Andrew Johnson, Impeached by the I SK«nedy,tai program. ' SniTSuSn*’'" Thc Ahnansc House ^ hairline rescue late ’Tuesday Cab*"®t> squirm. sistent criUc of the Kennedy ------- ---- - ^ r.i • /I llallUJic rescue ia«c aucouoy but acquitted by the Sen^ while he was ^ administra- President, later got elect^ to the Senate, TTiat was in 1874. He died the following year p^gg^g gf (he House-approved after serving less than five months. measure come Before that he had tried for the Senate ^ ^^^24 Sen-(1869) and for the House (1872) and lost both | times. lowing a 46-38 ] 17 YEARS defeat of a Re- John Quincy Adams, after one White House pubUcan anwnd- term, served in the house almost 17 years m en t which straight. During that time he sought the would have governorship of Massachusetts and couldn’t slowed final ac-fppkg it, tion. Kennedy, like other ex-presidents, could The bill wasi toavel or write-his . memoire ori .like Her- then sent to the sistent critic of the Kennedy The GOP members also had in spending program, supported the By United Press International mind that they might be able to Williams amendment. But just ... , Mav SO the make the 1309-billion limit stick everybody concerned thought that , beyond the Aug. 31 date and thus Kerr, who kept in daily touch with crimp administration spending. Dillon, would have detected the l<>]^ loaay is Memorial uay. Dillon has forecast an increase GOP objectives and rallied enough approaching full in the debt to $310 billion by the support within the committee to end of August at current spending kill off the Williams proposal. Bob Considine Says: Pius XII Was Refused The morning stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. 'Ihe evening star is Mars. On this day in history: In 1431, Joan of Arc, the maid stake m Rouen, France, at the mirrored in in Oakland County. The Oakland County Conservative Club was formed in September 1962, and three months ago formally endorsed the “Draft Goldwater” movement. We have set up clubs in 14 communities and have collected approximately 1,868 sign-natures on petitions. We have been so busy that we have not bad time for press conferences. We do find one area of conflict We have no intention of being flexible. We have ho intention of supporting a liberal Republican, a moderate Republican, a me too” Republican or a reluct- fought and died that we might live and work in a free land. GMI Contributes Much to Nation’s Industries Though little known to most citi-Ecns, the General Motors Institute is regarded as a superior school of higher learning. ★ ★ ★ In 1926, GM took over a Flint evening trade school and began the development of a co-operative engineering program that is unmatched by any similar Institution in the Country. Flnrollees, who must be sponsored by a division of the corporation. are accepted at the rate of 500 yearly out of the 4,000 applicants. W ★ ★ The curriculum of the four-year course, followed by one year in the field, rotates a well-balanced six-week program of academic study and social and athletic activities with a like period of related work in the plant of the sponsoring divisibn. This plan ideally fuses the theoretical and the practical phases of sound education. _____________-db .imTiortflnt work ernment under special assignment fromliBr Eiesiueni n successors in the White House. ★ ★ ★ Kennedy seems sure — since he has spent his adult life in. politics—to have his hand in Democratic politics for a while, anyway after stepping out as head of the party. .He won’t have to worry about making money; he has money. After leaving office, he could expect to live to 68 if he followed the average life-span of the presidents no longer Uving,____________ PRESIDENTIAL On the presidential side—. He hasn’t had it bad as president. He has had some breathless days but they didn’t pile up on him. In fact, they were spaced Houser When-signed by will lift the present $305-bllllon ceiling to $307 billion and to a record $309 billion in July and August. TTie TYMsiay, the debt to hit $305.2 bilUon yesterday, was relieved by a last-minute rally of 46 Etemocrats who killed the Republican amendment. Tbe amendment was supported by 28 Repoblicans and 19 conservative Democrats. This rescue demonstrated to most of those concerned the ad- Simple Fmnri NEW YORK — Just before to inform the world a successor death came to 82-year-old Pope has been chosen. able to the late Sen. Robert S. ^_____^ _________________ , ministration’s inability to find a apart ^ugh to let him relax a bit between legislative ball carrier compar-crisis, like these: The disastrous Cuban invasion, the brief scuffle with the steel industry over the price increase, the showdown with Soviet Premier Khrushchev over missiles in Cuba, the racial disorders in Birmingham and Oxford, Miss. There was th^minJ buAot and continu-Ing Vietnamese' war and the jumpy, jerky, ^ deadly but cold war with communism which tax-cutting program th he inherited but hasn’t solved any more than President Eisenhower did. , He himself probably can’t begin to predict how he’ll solve the problem with Castro in Cuba. Worse than that, in the next five years he can’t even guess what he’ll get involved in overseas or at home. he be buried in XXIH’s requests arie granted a simple box or when the time comes, though tomb somewhere Pius XII’s were not, and Pius L in the vicinity of spoke in a much more authori-' t h e traditional tarian voice than the earthy. Tomb of Peter, jolly, far-seeing man who suc-No fanfare, h e ceeded him — perhaps to Pius’s eternal astonishment. 'that the Brooklyn Bridge was about to ..collapse resulted outbreak of panic and 12 persons were trampled to death. BrimrA TtopTW” Force made its first “thousand bomber” raid on a German target as some 1,100 planes attacked Cologne. In 1962, Soviet Premier H. Uoyd George, Secretary Oakland County Conservative Club ™^Sl£p5amiri"Slaf Must Be Blushing’ What with dogs, fire hoses and children thrown in jail, the star that represents Alabama in our said. The Curia, a small group of „ J crusty old Cardi- CONSIDINE nals, mostly Italian, who had risen to the top posts in the Roman Catholic CTiurch by the same seniority process that places Southern Democrats in charge of most congressional committees, later Khrushchev proposed a trade bloc flag must really be blushing, embracing the whole world._________________________D. Morvay In Washington: Wheat Vote Causes Hassling By PE’TER EDSON Department of agriculture ex- WASHINGTON (NEA) - Polit- perts admit that as a result of Kerr, DOkla.-a failure that could icai ‘iin7liretlolis of'the farm vote rejecting stricter me requiem sung oyer ueaa *i._ /.nnirnis onvemmerit wheat nro- MAKE OR BREAK Racial, trouble in the United States, getting quieter some places, is growing more intense and violent in others. How he goes about getting equality for Negroes in the South may make or break his chances for re-election. fall. OUTFLANKED BY GOP In a series of political maneu-verings, administration backers found themselves outflanked on the debt limit bill by Republicans, whom they outnumber 11-6 on the Senate Finance Committee. Plus was as impressive a rite as this or any other century has witnessWt—-.•i'' A great marble and gold slab was soon inserted into the wall 6f the BasUica of St. Peter high above the striking Altar of the Chair. referendum rejecting the Kenne- controls, government wheat pro-dy administration 1964 wheat pro- gram costs may be reduced on It anticipates early sainthood, a process which the unexpected The result wasi that some of brilliance and popularity of John Kennedy’s embarrassed lieutenants had to backtrack publicly to obtain final congressional action on the measure. ’The administration’s troubles XXIII may delay indefinitely. The death of Pius XII was marred historically by a venal optometrist he trusted as his phy- started when Sen. ^h n J. \^- pr. Riccardo Galeazzi- If he asserts strenuous leadership to the iiam8, R-Del.. offered in the Fj-1 rights—which he hasn t done naggn rvirnmifio^ nt^ nmondmont gram may not be Clarified much before next year’s presidential aiid congressional elections. Of perhaps even! more importance, the, wheat] vote muddies the] whole farm. lation picture, EDSON greatly impairing needed new cotton and dairy programs. Republican leaders hail defeat of the administration wheat pro- the 1964 crop. But if the prospect of lower wheat prices causes farmers to put more 19M wheat under government loan — and If the removal of strict controls of planting causes a 25 to 30 per cent increase in planting for 1965 — the government wheat program costs may rise by $2 bilUon to $3 billion a year. And it will take longer to get production back under control. If the situation should develop in this way, the Republicans are erendum does not mean that there is no wheat program at all, for 1964. Congress last year adopted permanent -wheai legislation with minimum 50 per cent of parity price supports for farm^ efs who comply with limited production controls. This point is said to be not well understood generally. Furthermore, there will be another referenduin on wheat marketing quotas and acreage allotments prior to June 13, 1964, to govern 1965 wheat crop planting. This offers a chance to correct any faults which develop before election .day. While the 1963 referendum re-suU is hailed as a great vic- Stndents earn $2,500 to $3,000 per year fw their work in the plants, thus covering tuition and living expenses while at the institute. They are guaranteed jobs with the corporation on completion of their training. ★ ★ ★ Indication of the seriousness of outlook (Ml the. part of the student body is that the dropout rate is half the average two out of three prevailing at most universities. To date, 7,000 engineers have received bachelor of science degrees and Welled the ranks of the Nation’s engineers, scientists and technicians. Many of the names are synonymous with the top-ranking industrialists, of the U. 8. ^ ★ it it On the precept that science has pregraoMd ■ore in the last 50 years thaaite the previmw 50 cin- against him and split his party while at the same time Negroes flocked to him. ★ ★ ★ If Negroes feel he. is just rocking along, doing much less than he could, it prqtty surely will be reflected in the Negroes’ presidential election vote. Red China may become his worst menace overseas before 1969 because by then it may have nuclear weapons. Once it gets them, it seems certain to become aggressive. Its comparative quietness now is the quietness of weakness. June 30,1964. The House previously approved an extention only to Aug. 31, 1963. gram as a re^diaUon of‘all proposing a pro^am that will field or civu nghts-wmen ne nasni aone nance «n ^ farm control poUcies advocated u,, American Farm to extend the $mbillion limit to _ —ui----------J -..lu -uii- ,1.- ------ .. ij^gy attending his patient, the ville L. Freeman. They call for ““ Kennedy budget. doctor was busy snapping candid camera shots of the dying man — shots so ghoulish (Barrett MeGurn tells us in his excellent book “A Reporter Looks at tbe Vatican”) that the racy Italian picture magazine which bought them would not print several of them. . There was a snafu, too, over whether the smoke rising from a Williams argued that no harm would be done by the loiter extension. But the Democratic members didn’t get the word from the White House or Treasury that the prime objective of the Republican amendment was to force the bill back to the House. «... ________..w~. - _ . „. , , Only two Democrats, Sens. Al- hastily rigged chimney reaching But anyone who thinks the Red CTiinese bert Gore of Tennessee, who often ^ Chapel indi- on’t try to grab all Asia, onre they have opposes the administration, ^ ^ated that a new pope had been the muscle, is in a dream world. George A. Smathers of Florida, selected or not Before 1909 Khrushchev may be gone, who usually goes along With fen- * Khrushchev can be treacherous, as he nedy, voted '“no" when the Fi- showed with the Cuban missiles. But in nance Committee put the Williams many ways he has been restrained and sensi- amendment on the bill by an 11-2 cdunt, Tl^ House had passed the measure by a 213-204 margin after the administration pulled out ail the stops. Republicans hoped for a re- his resignation, even though the President expresses confidence in Freeman and gives him credit for working to increase United States farm income to the highest levels since 1953. At the same time, Republican farm belt congressmen are rushing in with new wheat legislation they Want pasied this year to raise support prices well above the levels of $1.25 a bushel, which will be ia effect under existing law. ) business hie. Kennedy has been able to with him, after a fashion. Khrushchev’s successor may be fierce and altogether different. All of tfa^ matters passed before the eyes of the simple man who broke the deadlock on the 12th ballot a John XXllI. Seh. Karl Mundt, R-SJ).,- is introducing a bill to continue the Republican farm leaders under Rep. Charles B. Hoeven of Iowa nevertheless hope to sell a new wheat program to the GOP leadership and make it party policy. ’The pitch seems to be to blame toe Democrats if a new wheat bill is not passed. Department of Agriculture of-ficals concede that if new wheat legislation can be passed before the end of August it will be in time to control 1964 winter wheat crop planting. If only Republicans vote for it, however, it is abnost sure to be defeated be- Barean 1 paigned heavily against Freeman’s program, it is notable that no one in this dispute advocates a completely free market with all government controls, price support and con-sorvation payments removed. Desirable as such a development might be from the viewpoint of government economy, it is conceded that a completely free -agriculture, suddenly imposed, would produce only chaos. The drop in wheat prices after the referendum result became known is considered indicative. 1963 wheat program, which would cause of the 3-to-2 Democratic mean a government support price majority in the House and the 2- of $2 a bushel. GOP Reps. Albert H. (^ie of Minnesota, Bob to-1 Democratic majority in the Senate. Verbal Orchids to— G. A. Hood of North Branch; 9£od birthday. He promptly bounced Galeazzi- Dole of- Kansas, Don Short of Lisi out of the Vatican and laid North Dakota, and others are down two firm-sounding laws; He . sponsoring new wheat legislation versa! of that decision. Failing was not to be photographed dur- which would rrtuce the support ______„_______ that, they knew the Houseproba- ing his last ^ays, and some more price to between 65 and 90 per passed this session. This is based bly wouldn’t act on an amended responsible method than smidee cent of parity, which would be on the fact that defeat of the pro- bill until next week. of this color ot that must be used $1.62 to $2JS a buSbeL , , posed controls in toe wheat ref- Democratic congressional leaders are all insisting that there will be no new wheat legislation mailed to OaUai^. Oeneiee ' LWlng- ii "iKi : THE rONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1963 ' A~7 Park Faction Hopeful of Early Visit GLEN ARBOR, Mich. (iB-The Citizen’s Council of Glen Arbor wants “an early visit” by a Senate subcommittee to the proposed Sleeping Bear Dunes national lakeshore area. Ove Jensen, president of the council which represents some 1,600 area property holders opposed to the park, said “further delay in resolving the issue will only prolong the hardship now being endur^ by many residents of the area ” Jensen said the council agrees with a recent suggestion by the park bill sponsor, Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mkh., that a visit by the public lands subcommittee “would best serve the pubik interest.” Hart had suggested May or June for a subcommittee visit. Sen. Alan Bible, subcommittee chairman, indicated July or August as his choice. Jensen said the council invite Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall as tong ago as March, 1962. The council president' said July 1, 1961, cutoff date for new construction, as provided in the original bill and subsequent measures by Hart, has “seriously hampered” the area’s economy. Large Firms Gain Owners Since Crash NEW YORK - The seven companies with the most stockholders irioreased their rosters of shareholders in the year since the market crash, the New York Stock Exchange reports. ’The Exchange called this a clue to public interest in the market. General Motors Corp. scored the largest numerical gdin— nearly 200,009-and became the second company to reach the one-million mark. The exchange said a large part of^ GM’s rise no doubt was due to Du Pont Co. distribufioh of ^ Tfs^GWhoiaings. The number of stockholders of the top seven companies (early 1963 total first and early lOfi?. sfPoiMh. , _____ American Telephone and Telegraph Co., 2,203.000 and 2.049,-000; General Motors, 1,041,000 and 842,000; Jersey Standard, 721,000 and 715,000; General Electric, 515,000 and 442,000; General Telephone Co., ^7 ^00 and 283 -000; U, S. Steel Corp., 324,000 and; 280,000; and Ford Motor Co. 301,-000 and 234,000. Marriage licenses btra A. Sorj*. Clawson. k Park, and Bar- McDonald. Parmln(ton, and! Carlle V. Springar. Farmington. Michael O. Comae, 9S Raeburn, and Laura J. Pearce. 119 State. ' ________J. Hill. Southfield, and Florence L. Hunter. Detroit. I Cecil O. Thompoon. 911 Melroae. —■* Sally L. Irelan. Ortonvllle lK)ii?y R. Sexton, Farmington an Cerolvn A. Schuon, 30990 Runnymede Palmer '' i.n Clawson and _________.-. Ortonvil j Caudill, OrtonvilIe Kenneth A. Mclntvi Artie J. Legan, remda.,r James R- Sprague, 9990 Crescent Jciy A ^atSon, 787 MonUcello Rollin L. Black Jr., 100 Baldwin Sharon M. Pickering. Rochester . j Thueman O. Lamphere, 1940 Jpslyn and Claralee J. Vollralh, 493 Beverly Thomas P. Fontaine, BlrmlMham a Judith A. Orant. Bloomfield Hills Clayton H. Both, 4491 Parnell ____I.... W#at1VtAll*nH I.Bnftinfl’ Evt f llulholUnd. Lanslnf M. Pollock, Birmlngnmm and - Royal Oak } W. Walton M, roiiwa, «»ginlngha _______ I. VanBaal. Royal Oafc Jo^ar.l‘E= H» R-S^hl.. ■ David B Dooley, Birmingham and °Oar? L. oVappl^'“clawsoo and Bettle ® Roiert R^^'J»“: Royal Qak and Carole X Sandelman. 2362 Meg:y.,Blrmlng'l,am Edward P. James, Rocheal trlela J. Hamed, Utica Alfred L. Storm. C C Woodham, 11 Niagara cnee F. Beaman, aawi E. Blese. Clawspn «t E. Blade. 339 *81ad?*5»”Founh and Mar-‘1S?beMi{*Lak. and Le- aUf. Birmingnam^ Brandenburg. Ciawaon it WcCamy, Btrmtnfham and R. wood. Birmingham ^ - -----, Madison Heights Is* OaHIcnn H^lffhtS s W Davis, Msdlson Height, inces E. Rssnlc. Madison Helghti •s'w. Denomme prayton Plalni n r.annfik. Trov nee O. Rostron, Oxiora ana fhrysial Lake Orion ie T. Bradford, tuther L. Barnes, 369 Midway r W. Banford. 1W9 Collier R. Powers, H" iV"»5S?^rWrap^ riena M»*“L Union Lake t B. Wlldauer. Troy and ^tue, TW 1 t! Wterson. 4 A. Bainm<9B bara M. Hunt. I Birrami highland H. Seaboii. Haial Park * C° ElJSols. 79 Ardmore n A. Lovejoy. Union Lake 5, Wilson, c'arkston and Shir-‘T Rochester i^Hferri^'^MOo'^Elmy and Ruth! k ’plu^Valled Lake and! Hackett. Walled Lake ^ , ^^“i’er 9450*51.?**“ Hone. SeWller para, lu* »uu 0«WM«. W® If FRiiunr-siiiuRiunr r EVERY DEPT. CRAMMED WITH VALUES FOR EVERY THRIFTY-MINDED SHOPPER Girls'^mmer print dresses Big selection of men's 2.50 short sleeve dress shirts Special Purchase! Better summer fashions at savings Men's $1 Federal ribbed fee-shirts 74‘ 100% combad cotton too-ihirtsl ChMt pockot, novalty trim. -White, coton, Fabulous finds in girls' cot-fon dresses — priw to stock up now for all summer long! Sleeveless styles, daintily trimmed, in wide, sweeping skirt fashions. Scoop up several in sizes 7 to 12. Hurry! 'CHARGE IT' One of our ^nest groups of men's shirts, mode of quorify cotton broadcloth. Three sfyTes-^ favorite button down, snap tab or semi spread collar. Breezeway cotton in white. Vented sleeves, collar stays. Sizes 14 to 17 in group. Imports in group 'CHARGE IT A very special Value for now-into-summer wear. Our entirei stock of 8.99 sumrher fdsTiim misses'. Jr.'s, and women's sizes in the group. a. White Arnel* triacetate, multi-dot. 10 to 18. b. Jacketed sheath of block cotton pique. 10-18. *Reg. T.M. Celanest Corp, Boys' 79c combed cotton Icmt shtrti 57‘ Save 22e on each shirti Crew neck, pocket. White or blue, green or maize. Sizes 6 to 16. Infants' crawlers, toddlers' sunsuits Lawn swing has sturdy canvas top Kodak electric eye $1 pr. if perfect, 8mm movie camera seomfree nylons Ladies' washable roll sleeve shirts — 39 99^ ^9* 99c— Infants' crawlers, snap crotch. Roomy 37" seat twingi on life solid colors. Boys' or girls' print long Iwshings. Steel fringed Con- or solid sunsuits. 1-3, 9-24 mo. , vat canopy. Seats 4 in comfort. Perie swine J* ** Electric eye sets lens to any light condition, indoors or out—outo-maticollyl Easy load. Buy 'em by the boxi Bore-leg sheer in mesh or plain knit, 3 pr., 1.15. 8'A-11, coordinated. Here's o buy I Cool 100% cotton shirtTin on assortment of collar stylet. Sol'idt, prints. 30-38. SALE FISHING OUTFITS 4.44 YOUR CHOICE Venue catting rosl/rMi Level wind reel, adjust drog control. Glass fiber rod with aluminum handle, cork grip. Hawk spin rod and reel Reel hot full boil automatic line pick-up. 2-pc. gloss fiber rod, cork handle and reel Zebce red and reel set *202 push button reel complete with line. Glass fiber Breneon rod and real ■« Push button reel with ontl-backloth and line. 2-pc. glass fiber red with cork grip. Savel Elastic w 0 i St, 17‘ legs. S-M-l. Sola! 24x36-incfi Reg. i.29 rugt Mylti - stripes, 99 finished edges. 24x72" reeiwf 24x144" runner 2.69 line minnow bucket, now Only Floating type, ^ 44 easy latch. mm Special! Rag. 8.99 10-in. deluxe trike Adjust handle bars, white. W 99 Reg. 34.99 oll-eteel 6-pley gym eat 6 feature set, lafel 29’ Sole! Little girls poplin shorts, siow Boxer bock, belted, 3-6x. 57* OfEH EVERY NIGHT Monday through Saturday - A TO 9 FEDERAL DEPT. STORES /'■ . r, IM DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS TAE jPOKTlAis PteSS, THimSDAY, MAY 80, 1908 I OUT OF THE BLUE — A landing wheel froni an Alleghany : Airlines plane lies on a Chester, Pa., street after falling from the plane bound fmr Philadelphia from Pittsburgh. It was dir* ected to Atlantic City where the plane set down on a bed of foam I which had been sprayed on the runway. Forty-one were aboard. U.S. Increases Dependent Pay ' WASHINGTON (API - About 45.000 children and S0,q00 dependent parents of dead veterarewill DETROIT (AP) - State coUege get about a 10 per cent uidfease j • .. , St government ^^nts under a admmistrators new law. i^ave agreed to give Gov. George The Veterans Administration Romney’s Citizens Committee on Educators to Aid Study of Colleges annonnced the increased pay-m e n t s will antomaticaDy become effective and be Inclnded in the checks maiied to bene-licariet aboni AifTL H^her Education a helping hand in evaluating the college situation in the^tate. . Members of the Michigan Coun-Underthenewlaw.achildnowjp., Presidents receiving |70 a month will re*, . . , . ^ . ... , ceive fn. agreed to furnish institutional ♦ * * ireports to the committee at their Tym children receiving checksjregular meeting at Wayne State amounting to 1100 a month, will | University, receive $110. Three children willj Also meeting at Wayne was the fMi*. »!43 . month inoMad ^onnca lor Public the current $130. U there am more Hum lhreei««'“' children, each additional child i Tbe studies are to coAer en-will receive $28 a month, ratherj roHment, faculty salaries and i Sion sta^ards. Dependent parents living to-' gether With an annual income of less than $1,000 will receive $5S| a month, an increase of $5. I Both groups agreed to work| with the Couricil of Michigan Col-| lege Prraidents, which includes I the heads of 32 colleges, and jun-| i«""cdle^, in pieparing aimite ' information on all institutions. Autoiite Gives Dividend TOLEDO (AP)—Electric Autoiite Co. yesterday declared a 60-cent quarterly dividend payable June 21 to shareholders of record June 7. A similar dividend was paid in this year’s first quarter! and in the second 1962 quarter, j Dr. Robert Van Pelt, president! of the Michigan College of Mining; and Technology, was elected| president of the state presidents' i oiunciT. - ^ Warren Huff, a Michigan State University trustee, was elected Ichairman of the coordinating! Icouncil. I .................... KEEPS PRICES DOWN SALE! Men! 3.99 washable casual with cushion arcK^jns^ CHARM IT! Cool 'n comty coiuol-. . . cushioned orch and insole ... rubber sole, bone or block, sizes to 12. SALE! Women! 2.99 fabric shoes in smart colors, washoble 166 CHARM IT! OrtN IVHIV NJBHT Ti 9 DOWNTOWN AND >-in with spring rubber sola . . . wosh 'am in mochinel Sizes 5-10. Gat aavard colors. SAVINGS TOO GOOD TO MISS HO raOHE NSEIt ON mSTI END SUES i misses crisp ; i SUMMER BLOUSES [ |33 r farorioe stfleo. 8oUd colon. ! ■otEMi'reneaMtr-rOn.tl.M { ; «W SJriMSVITS I2.f7 • misses’ cotton SLACKS Favorite Summer twlcd alacki la a variew of colorful wadiabie oot- 1 ; mi»9€^9 Meial* S DAYTIME dr€99€9 ! Maar . atvled waihable ooitooa. 12 to 20. liVt to 22Vt ia the xroup. *2 fashion oorrirngs REDUCED! Beaded atrles ia prettT colora. Alao aoam bead necklaces. ShM ia<% ftdfrt Tm 29c Capri PAJAMAS REDUCED! Cool, comfortable oottoea in pink and blue prim. ‘2 easy-care BRiEFS 3 p. ’I REDUCED! Cotton or ravoo briefa. Bead or rubber elaotic lex itrlea. White onir. REDUCED I SoUed end dam- women’s SHOES oar own Corlits brand REDUCEDI Leatb. pumpa and comfo.. ahoet. Hixb- and mid-beela. Black oolr for ar-ertN^ 1 i«4 • FRIDIT MLYI botpHiaal clainico kaifahu far yaol • FROM OUR OWR STOCKS... bl( vahm at llttto Rricat! • OCDS a ERRS) Irokoa ibia oalM, aaoNd lalteHtatl • StOOlWS, MRtlUURS ■. laportiolleat we • MRRT OTHER HuriMM Savh«l Hal RCrarlM SHRimtry caftOM fabrict REDUCED! lixht, alir 29* cattaa kamaopHB fabric 59- w- men's T-SHIRTS. SHORTS 49s SECONDS! TcTnc weuiag cotton knit T-SHIkTS in wdiite. Very sli^t miaknitc. SECONDS! Rugsed cotton broadcloth SIWRTS in boxer or GtipMi* styles. White and multi-color fancies. Miswesves won’t affect wear. 3 for 1.45 sollod assortod IImus RlDtXXDI Soiled i^le- 39c,. clothe, beth meta. Were _ much hixher priced. I.T7 warm cotton BLANKETS 2" REDUaDI Lixht. washable, COST warm . . . for’‘Summer aleepinx. 70*90-loch. Woven stripe with acetate bindinx. * little girls’ ^ ‘SPRING COATS ‘ * * , LMiwfixhrW«di^Coat ♦ pletelr lined. fuU leaxthXW » anrlea ia wool Ucods. NL ♦ VarietT of colora in little / W » xirla’ sizes. ♦ * « kM/ woei U*mi COATS. .SI) * ^ thlf Sammer DRBSSa.. S2 4. IMt gkl^ DRESSES..S2 * IM0 ghu surr.......S4 * gklf spring SUITS..SI * chawar eartalos, dropas ! children's ! j SHOES 2” j REDUCEDI Durable |99 plastics. Pastel colora. * «Mb M pr. kalrieam-typa spraods SECONDS! Twin i ; SECONDS and SAMPLES! From ' ^ nadooiUlT j^wa makert. Leather , J' uppers, Icatticr of “composition 1 * solca. Black, brown, other colors. | full in antique white. ★ H tong 9lemv€ drc99 9hlrt9 2 fw 3^ IRREGULARS! Cotton in anep-ub, button-down, rexular collar atviea. White, pasteli. Mitweavci. SHEETS, CASES REDUCED! Cotton percales, mas-Itna in full and twin aiaet. Assorted cases. Slixhtly soiled. Hurrr in. short steere SPORT SHIRTS SECONDS! Regular collar style in long wearing cotton. . Short sleeve for cool Summer comfort. Auorted multi- color patterns. Slight miswesves won’t affect the wear. sport shirts^ ^ ^^Intn’s kmfflihrrts |3« SECONDS! Mttlri-color patttma. Eaar-«ara cotton. Rexular collar «T-lea. Slixht mliwesTsa. SECONDS! Ruxxed cot- $9^9 too knit. Collared atrlea in solid colors. Mi.knita | won't afftet the wear. CRIB SHEETS SECONDS! Fitted to CQc " 9o •tav in pUce. V^iie cotton. Very alixht gauze DIAPERS SECtXfDSI Soft, abam-bant cotton xauaa. P^-cd cdxta. Whita. ‘2 12-ft. long foam-back Runners 4" REDUCED! Lonx enough for ittir carpet. Cushioned for comfort. Rayon pile ie easy-to-clean. jumbo snack sets I6x21-ih. iox ttoraxe Av aorted pattemi. Metal. pole lamps ¥ Dinette chairs REDUCED! Chromc-finithed tubular steel frmne. Vinvl covered padded scat and back. 4« nut Mvltn rtat towbida (Ovtringt 1J9. 2.79 plw ie« /eiaral fee SECONDSI Two- anJ’duan^fax atviea widi handy tipptra. Slight man will not affect looks or wear. lined traverse DRAPERIES wanttd uhiti!^intulati wbilt you decorate! REDUCED! Keep hot sun out with these cotton lined, $ | washable rayon-acetate draperies. Deep pinch pleat tops, wide tide and bottom hems. Easy-to-use white. 30x84”. ^ ovol eoffom runntrt REDUCEDI Big 26x60-inch aizc is lo yenatila At-•oricd colors, panernt. short end FABRICS Maderna tailat tissua 12 rolls 97c REDUCEDI Diacoodnued brand. Paach. blue, green, yellow, pink and wUia. Two-ply paper. Hawltt's bobWa boM 3 lbs. 29e fta» tt% rtO. Tm REDUCED I Luxurwaa powder with floral fraxraaca. Refrtdiing for Summer batht. REDUCED! Fiber-xlaF* xlaii wash and hang! 40z30-inchcs. oisorftd ^foporlas 3-vard piecce for draperies, cowers “m£hpli». #9* 10 S3 PILLOWS: REDUCEDI Knife. ^ ahape. Assortad colors, fabric coven, filliogs ffe ODD DRAPERY PANELS. Many tolora, sizes fabrics. $1 to S3 yALASCES; attoritd colon..Jg CHAIR PADS; REDUCED! Wipe clean vinyl plastic back and seat. Set....1.99 clear plastic dross bogs 69‘ SECONDS! Bags art.S4-ln. long. Ovcrltpoinx Bap domra. Storm 2 to 4 xaiaMMn 2“ seconds! big 22x44-in(h bath towels TUde cotton tarty... wonderfully absorbent. Hnrd-to-find misweaves mean substantial tnyinp! Pastel and dark colon 37- rli ..■'ll THE P0NTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, ;»fAY 30, 1963 WASHINGTON (AP)-Presklent Kennedy may ask Congress for a law barring racial segregation in restaurants and stores selling goods which have crossed state lines—in effect, virtually every restaurant and store in the nation. SURPRISE — Dewey Fox, 65, thought it was just another deUvery to a picnic in a Glendale. Calif., park. But M people wen on hand to hold a party in his honor, thanking the milk truck driver for his years of service to the neighbor- ---------------■ .......................... ^1.50 hood. In appreciation, his customers handed Fox an check. He retir^ today. Eye Antibias Law for Stores and provide federal financial and technical he^> for school Integra* ch a proposal, informed sources say, is under considers-by the President and his brother, Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy. No d^ision has been reached, however, on what form Kennedy’s civil rights proposals will take, the Justice Department said. Kennedy and his advisers are believed to be weighing the rights legislation against the chances that a hard battle to get it through Congress might cost the administration the support of Southern congressmen on Jhe other major legislative programs. ’LEGAL OUn^ The President said in a news confermce last week that dvil rights proposals are being considered to give Negros ”a legal outlet for a desire for a remedy" against abuses of their constitutional ri^ta. ★ ★ ★ The Justice Department said then that its planning for such proposals has been narrowed to the fields of education and public accommodatlona-the latter of adiich would be covered by a law dealing with restaurants and stares in interstate commerce. and John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky. have introduced bills aimed at speeding school integration and burring discrimination in places of public accommodation. The government would have precedent in relating civil rights Isolation to interstate commerce. The Supreme Court has upheld an Interstate Commerce Commission order against racial segregation in bus terminals and buses which cross state lines. Sens. Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn., One would authorize the attorney general to initiate suits in the name of the government on behalf of individuals denied admission to a public school because of race or color. The other bill would bar discrimination in businesses operating under a state or local license —such as hotels, restaurants and stores. Urged to Support Kennedy on Rights GESfEVA (AP)-Judges, lawyers and law professors, from 90 nations have appealed to American lawyers to back President Kennedy in efforts to “ri^t the deep wrongs" inflicted on Negroes. The International Commission of Jurists, an independent body, issued the plea Tuesday and praised the President, the Supreme Court and Americans in public and private pc^tiwis for "working to remove these blots (segregation) upon their land.” So far this session, Kennedy’s civil rights recommendations to Congress have been limited to measures to extend the life of the Civil Rights Commission, buttress the protection of voting rights, 'Negro to Win Equality in '63' PARIS (UPI) - Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, D-N.Y., p-edicted yesterday that U.S. Negroes would win equal rights this year because the white man — including Secretary of State Dean Rusk — is “afraid." PRINCETON, Ind. (UPI) -John Yeast, 77, went fishing fw his rod and reel. He lost it while fishing in Gibson (Conservation Lake this week. He dragged the lake and found the equipment, a 10 - pound catfish still hooked to it; “The white man discovered in Birmingham Oat his naked power is no longer of any vahte,” the Negro congressman said. “Now he is afraid of his "Mr. Rusk made an excellent statement yesterday, (Tuesday) that America is running the race with one leg in a cast, because he’s a semi-religious man. He’s afraid of judgment also. We will see this year tremendous changes take place.” "Besides,” he added, year4s an election year.” “next ence of American correspondents to discuss racial relations after arriving in Paris en route to Geneva to be a member of the U.S. delegation to the International Labor Organization (ILO) con-WCnerJuheX~~' Angler Finds Equipment With Catfish Attached "nrCWNF.D - Johneane Teeter, 19, Dearborn sophomore at Henry Ford Community College, . was named Miss Detroit this week. She will edmpete in the state pre-liminary for the Miss America New President Takes Office at Food Convention DETROIT (UPI) - Dr. C. Olin Ball, chairman of the Department! of Food Science at Rutgers State University, yesterday took over as the new president of the Institute of Food Technologists, I meeting at Cobo Hall. He had been named president - elect last year, sncceed-ing Dr. John M. Jackson of Barrington, HI. Charles T. Townsend, associate director of research at the Berkeley, Calif., laboratory of the Na-j tiqnsd Cannes Association, was named president - elect. He will assume the presidency, succeeding Ball, at the insti-tue’s next annual meeting to be held in Washington, D.C., in May 1964. pageanT 200 BONUS TOP VALUE STAMPS ADJUSTMENT expires July 5tb DAN S STANDARD Penny's This little card does the trick jSScIwfgrft dfpBhn«y> Bodc^Agoin! ^avelcraft mode exclusively for Penney's by SAMSONITE Lodies' Waokonder ond Man's Componion You can’t buy it anywhere else! Sleek, molded style that’s extra-s^ng and yet it’s lightweight. Interiors match the outside colors: ladies’ in blue or ivory; men’s in charcoal. 16“ Ho Lodies’ Pullman and Men's 2-Suiter. Every piece has semi-recessed locks with spots for your initials! Every piece has a sturdy magnesium frame... dent and scuff-resistant. Ladies’ jn blue or ivory; men’s in charcoal. *Plut 10% Fed. tax 26 88’ Alta . . . Women't Beoufry Cose/ blue ond jvory .. 14.88 PENNEY’S—MIRACLE MILE 9:30 AJN. te 9dM PJVL Penney’s ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY end-of-month ciean-up: Starts Fridoy 9:30 A.M." 66 WOMEN’S SWEATERS REDUCED Group includes nylons, orlons, mohair/wools, slipovers, cardigans, broken sizes. Hurry for this. »|33 90 WOMEN’S SLEEVELESS BLOUSES Choice of collar style, wash 'n' wear cotton. Sizes 32-38. 5|50 90 MEN’S WHITE DRESS SHIRTS Wash 'n' wear. 65% Dacron, 35% cotton. Broken sizes. Short point collar. For 3 "10 120 MEN’S SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS Your choice of 2 smart styles. Button down collor or short point collar. Wash 'n' weor treated. Broken sizes. 500 Tit. ASSORTED GOnON FARRICS Choose from embossed, textured, cottons, woven fobrics. 36"/ 45" wide. 3'“’I FOK WOMEN 15 MISSES PARTY DRESSES «|| m Just repriced, favorite pastel colors. Sheer and ^ 1 flocked nylons. Misses, Junior sizes ........ ^ 20 WOMEN'S SHORT COATS, JACKCTS Groyp includes laminates, wool/mohair and corduroy, Out they go at one low price................ ^ 12 WOMEN'S RAINCOATS REDUCED $A Smart colorful prints. Fully lined. Broken sizes. U 90 WOMEN'S SLEEVELESS BLOUSES ^ca ■ Choice of collar styles. Waih 'n‘ wear cotton. White, pastel colors. Sizes 32-38.................. 50 WOMEN'S COnON DRESSES $A Prints or plaids In 100% cottoo. Misses and half sizes. A 21 WOMEN'S HOUSE DRESSES «,| Prints in 100% cotton. Broken sizes. Hurry for this ^1 one........................................ ’ 30 PR. WOMEN'S WALKING SHOES _________________ $<| Real buy on this item. Broken sizes ... .... I 46 WOMEN'S IMS, SHORT LINE $<| IrKludes elas.tic, cottons. Real Buy Broken sizes. I 11 WOMEN'S WOOL SKIRTS $0 Real bargain on solid wool skirts. Broken sizes. ^ , FOR GIRLS' - INFANTS 15 GIRLS' GOWN AND DUSTER SET oaoR Fussy nylon tricot. Pastel pink or blue. Sizes lO-^V 6 GIRLS' POPLIN RAINCOATS ' r*-------- ^ Navy- blue with gold trim in water repellent cotton, . Sizes 8-16........... .......... .......... ^ 6 CRIBEHE AND MAHRESS COMBINATIONS tarn Portable crib with mattress, pad, natural finish hard- IA ■ wood. Real buy.............................. 14 INFANT BOYS' 2-PC DRESS-UP SET $088 ~-“-Ghoiee-’Of’“Brown or Geld. Sizes 0»^------rrrTTTT-.-r-r:— 12 INFANT GIRLS' 3-PC. DIAPER SETS and DRESSES $488 Some slightly counter soiled. Broken sizes.. I 4 INFANTS CAK SEATS Polyurethane foam padded seat and back. Sit and A stand model. .................................. 6 INFANTS FOLDING STROLLERS $1088 Chrome plated tubular steel frame. Swivel front ’^1# rubber tires. 3-position back........• • • •. FOR BOYS ~ 37 NTS' FUT HATS $122 Olive, green, and dark grey................. I II PR. BOYS'SCHOOL SHOES «a Choose from brown or black. Just reduced, hurry for # this. Sizes 10-2V^C......................... 20 BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS $122 Assorted prints in Ipng sleeve styles. Broken sizes. .. I FOR MEN M MDrS lANAON SHUTS uas Summer colors. Pullover model. Short sleeve, sizes # s-m-l. ................................... ■■ 40 MEN'S SWEAT SHIRTS $1 Fashion collar style. Short sleeve. Sizes S-M-L. I 130 PR. MEN'S LUXURY SOX --q Just reduced. Choice of 100% nylon or 100% mbr- f # Cerized cottons. Sizes IOV2-I2.........I. ... 29 PR. MEN'S WOOL PUID SLACKS *£88 Smartly tapered for that tontinental look. Small sizes, fl rich-looking plaids.................9....... 15 PR. MEN'S RAYON DRESS SLACKS Handsome plaids. Tapered continental look Sires 33- A 34-36 waist.............. .............. =— FGR^E HOME 10 0VEI5IZE ROOM SIZE RU6S S«OBI Custom cut from broadloom carpets. 12x17, - ^-t«rT^Trr7f;TTr.:................... 120 YDS. PRINTED COHOHS J vj $1 Croup Includes, percales and broadcloths. All A »OI. | 36" wide............................... ISO YDS. DRAPERY FABRICS $133 100% cotton. Scotchgard finish. 48" wide.. I 56 FANCY PORSALANA FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS $144 Choice of colors...Atfractive — White vase.. ■ 25 4r JUMBO CLOSET SUIT BAGS $422 Choice of pink or blue...................... I 5 PIASTK COVERED SOFAS f J A|U| Elastic backed upholstery and foam cushions. Whitt or blue............ ........................a 13 BAMBOO DRAPES. 72 x 54 ^ $4 o Natural colors, 2" cotton heading tape. .... ■ 120 YDS. HOME DECORATIVE PRINTS y. AAe Full bolts. 36" wide.............. ' 00 120 WOMEN’S BEHER DRESSES New group of 1 ond 2-pc. styles. Casual and dressy types. Some hove 2nd mark-down. Junior, Misses', Half sizes. <3-q.s5 ---------sr 6 INFANTS’ FOLDING STROLLERS Chrome plated tubular steel frame. Swivel position bock. $1288 14 OVERSIZE ROOM SIZE RUGS 12x15, 12x20. All wool, all nylon, wool/ nylon blend. Finished edges. '88 48 MATTRESS PAD and COVER COMRINATIONS Double box stitching. ''Locked" in filling, won't shift. SAVE! REMNANTS Drastically reduced. All types of fabrics. Assorted lengths. So many uses. Big sewing savings. PEHNEY’S-MIRACLE MILE OPEN MONDAY I tkra SATURDAY 19:30 AJL te 9 P.M. Tsa'tww'iwwnwi*- BETTER SUMMER DRESSES $ 5 WORTH TWICE THE PRICE Choote from Amelu, Docrons, no-iron cottoni, wash 'n' wear cottons, Bamborgs, prints, juniort, misses, half & GEORGE'S a-yo THB PQOTYAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MAY afU-lg63 Fast Horse Brings Fine QUITMAN, Ga. »-Po-lice reported that they clodted a horseman at S5 milea an hour before arresting him and duu-ging him with speeding and I reckless riding. The officers said they arrested Joseph Coggins under a «0-year-old ordinance after residents reported ttiat he was racing I around on a horse and endangering life and property. Coggins forfeited $17 bond. Kennedy Will Receive | Protestant Group Honor i REBEL HUNT-Brandishing a knife and backed up by armed troopers, a South Vietnamese government soldier discovers and captures a Viet Cong rebel. This action, typical of the way the war in Southeast Asia is being fought, took place in the Plain of Reeds, about eight miles from the Cambodian border. Kennedy will be the first non-| Protestant to receive the distin-| His Idea's Worth $9,495 guished service award of thCj 5^ FRANCISCO (API — Wil-i The former Shelbyville, Tenn., Protestant Council of the City of l WilUams 47 a mechanic ^«nn boy was given $9,495 for de- ................................ The coimcilj^OTnced that the,biggest idea bonus in the com-l^^j^,, in the past had to be 1963 award will be ^ewnted to] history for a contribution y,rown away. award recognizes service to the United almost $100,000 during its Five earlier suggesUons netted cause of human rights and demo-lfirst year of application, a com- Williams $1,375 from the com-cratic freedoms. Ipany spokesman said Tuesday, ^pany. He joined UAL in 1948. Trial Soon to Start in Woman's Death GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) -- The week, for Weets, who is charged with murder in the gnn-slay-iag Easter Sunday of his wife Alice, 40. John P. Steketee, Weess’ court-appointed attorney, ^ad an .original plea of guilty changed murder trial of confessed wife- after a psychiatric examlnaUon slayer Robert Weess. 41, yill begin June 24 before Kent County Circuit Judge Stuart Hoffius. A plea of innocent by reason flrouGO always brings you much greater viewing and listening pleasure Versatile, more dependablo TV that's every ounce of the*^ defendant. of insanity was entered last 'is sane. However, two psychiatrists for the prosecution contend Weess 300 State Jobs McCarthy ships work about nine months of the year moving Chrysler, Chevrolet. Ford autos and other makes on an .occasional Halves Auto Shipping Costs to Albany, N. Y. DETROIT (»— An Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) ruling that halved the cost of. shipping-cars by rail from Detroit to Albany, N.Y., may cost as many as 300 Michigan jobs, a steamship line official said yesterday. The ICC order, which took effect last week, sets the rail charge at $31. It costs $21 to ship a car by water to Buffalo and another |42 to ship it by truck to Albany. To the rail charge must be added a $6 loading charge and |13 to move the cars to a distributor in Albany. The Chrysler Corp., which ships about S5 per cent of the 5O,0M autos that go through the port 0 Detroit annually, has BoUfled the T. J. McCarthy Steamship Co- that it will start sending its cars by rail next Chrysler said it was using the rail route which gives it “a continuous year-around "shipping operation.’' It wHl effect the livelihood of too crew members of the McCarthy fleet and nearly 200 longshoremen, drivers and others who handle the cars, said T. J. Mc-C^thy Jr., board chairman. The four especially adapted “Without Chrysler,” the firm said, “If we have Chevrolet, Ford and maybe another Gen-owl Motors line at tha opening of the IIM teasoa, we could mu two boats — one a day — to Buffalo.*’ Albany is the distributing center for Michigan-made cars going into New England and many other eastern points. 'The Crushed Comes Home VICTOBVILLE, Calif. fAP) cr&her” is I ‘The crbsher” Is homo-all flvsT and a half feet of him. “The crusher" is a boa constrictor belonging to Mike Howard, 14, who says his pet is harmless and has “a real nice personality." “I guess he came home because he was hungry," Mike explained. He reported his pet missing six days ago. The hungry wapderer dined eagerly on plump mice. The census figures show that there are 105 to 106 males born every year compared with 100 females. FOR OMDUSTION or FATHER’S RAY Givo Hw Gift that will b« romomborod invite you to thep ut ond mo tho many item* wo itoek. Comporo ear prkoi. Um our Layaway or Easy Payment Plan. CUR THIS AO ... WORTH $1.N on any purehasa ovar $lf.M EDWARD’S* 6 Horih Saginaw You Can Count on Us... Quality Costs No More at Sears Heating Sale Save Now on All Kinds of Heating MONEY DOWN.. rNo Payments ’til October 1st , on Sears Modernizing Credit Plan The Ideal second sal—lets you enjoy finer viewing all around the hous^! Highly reliable full-transformer chassis, automatic picture and sound stabilizers, optical fflfer, but-frbhf^^^^s^^^^ venient front controls—are just a few of its extra-value Magnavox features. Model 1-MV130. now only $14990 The Wostmora 19 your choice of color* See and Hear this amazing Stereo High Fidelity VALUE today! 7990 3 UTTIEI Compare this fabulout Vslua before you buy any other portable stereo phonograph! The exdusiv* Micromatic Record Player banishes record and stylus wear—^ diamond stylus is guaranteed 10 years—your records can last allfe-time! Two speakers, the second stereo Channel Is in the removably lid—sets up In seconds. Only one compact piece of “fine luggage" to carry. The Aspen, 1-SC230, in several beautiful colors. Senes Basement Gas Furnaces Choose your furnace right now for big savings. Get quality features like these: Life-Clad coated heat exchanger for long life; Quiet gas flame H^ts in two stages, no roar; Air condition capacity blower moves more air; Comfort Sentry signals if filter clogs. See Sears for your fur- 105,000 BTU Model 109 $329 Oil Basement Furnaces Sear* Beet 84,000 BTU $2^00 Sean Heating Sale Price Prices Reduced on 25 Furnaces and 25 Gas or Oil Boilers Regular *199.00 Finest HOMART 4-Seetion Gas Boilers Save $30 now on cast iron boilers. Use in gravity, forced hot water or steam heat. Wet base design permits use over combustible floor. Fully insulated jackets for top efficiency. Install yourself, or ask Sears to arrange it for you as an extra. Cali Sears tomorrow for action. 25-Year Guarantee 109 Regular $189 Oil Boilers 4-Sccliaw^ige. $1 Save S30 now. JlfRcF Plumbing A Heating Dept., Perry St. Basement Come in and prove it to yourself... Magnavox Portables are truly the finest, and your best buy on 1^ basis of comparisonl Now You Can Buy ‘ Your Furnace, Boiler or Heating System? FREE PARKING IN FRONT OF STORE CLAYTON'S Free Estimate Sears will measure your borne and recommend proper beating. Pre-Season Prices Sears best models as well as low installation prices. FURNITURE PHONE FE 5-4171 Ask for the Heating Department Park FREE Downtown In Any City Metered Lot! Shop Until 9 P.M. Tomorrow, Sat. and Monday. Mail This Coupon to Sears W« are interested in new Heating. 3065 ORCHARD UKE —682-1100 9 fo 6 P. AA. Doily — Mondoy ond Fridoy Yil 9 P. M. '^SfUififaction giaranteed or jrotg money bade” SEARS |N. I I City........Slete... ^Phone................ DOWNTOWN PONTIAC PHONE FE 5:4171 '■ i/ r- J' ./r- THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1963 \ A-^11 he can, to sell his produce—all of tt-and should not be answerable by law tor disposing of his own IHDperty, produce or goods in any way.” Garage Bond luue Is Rejected in Fraser been rejected by Frajer voters for the second tiw since April 1. FRASER (AP) V - An 197,500 Pearl Harbor naval base leased by the U.S. in 1SS7. The nooney wmdd have been used to match fMeral funds. Vot-. . . . ^ , jers rejected thA proposal 917 to bond issue for construcUon of a 4,7^ compared L the April 1 re-municl|)al service garage has]j«ctionby l,084-^otesto931. School System Merger Turned Down by Voters five - township district with a n^w Cbnsolidated school havil been turned down by voters. SUTTONS BAY (AP) - Three porposals which would ha merged three northern Leelanau County school systems into one Buttons Bay rejected the merger 315 to 226; Northport, 206 to 141.aiMlLeland330tol03. WHALE OF A CORPSE-A 50-foot finback whale which same ashore on the Bre^ter, Mass., beach, was found dead after hi^ tide. It was considered a menace to health and towed out to sea. The whale Is believed to be one of two finbadts that have been playing off shore In Cape Cod Bay for the last two weeks. It weighed between 30 and 50 terns. Liz Returning to Hollywood HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Elizabeth Taylor will return to Hollywood in the fall to make her first California ntovie since 1960, a producer says. Martin Ransohoff announced Tuesday night that Miss Taylor signed with him “after months of negotiations” to star in a love story called “The Sandpiper.” Ransohoff said William Wyler will direct the movie. Exterior scenes Will be filmed along the Big Sur coast near Monterey. Left State for Australia Yank Still Anti-Farm Control ADELAIDE, AustraUa (AP) -Stanley Yankus, who brought his family here from Michigan because he opposed U. S. farm controls, says he still dislikes any form of government control over farmers. Yankus, now a traveling salesman for a farm machinery firm, was commenting on the recent defeat of a referendum in the United States that rejected pi^ posals for increased government control of wheat acreage. Yankus emigrated to Australia four years ago, saying he was fed up wMi restriettons «n die amount of wheat he could plant on his chicken farm at Dowagiac, Mich. “What I really object to, however, is the fact that this question was voted on in a referendum,” he said. Nobody should be given the right to vote for controls on someone else’s property. “Every farmer should have the right to produce as much as Men...right now when j YOU SAVE 25% off comparable suits! our entire stock o« dacron* ft rayon TROPIpAL SUIT! Robert Hall sma^h-priced to comparable value 36.95 Yes, every luxurious jtropical suit of Dacron polyester and rayon in our entire stock a yours at amazing start-of-the-season savings! Wide cMice of patterns and colors in regulars, shorts and longs. Huw in for this great value eventi Ootren Wrtilef, r^. o» Oofent 'Tlier^ never e charge for alferetfent of Reberf HaH USI OUll CONVINIiNT LAYAWAY FUN . ^. NO iXTRA CHAMI • Ye« K / A/rKPnditloned for year Shopping comfort. IN PONTIAC—200 North Soginew St. In CLARKST0N-WATIRF0R9 on Dixie Hwy. Just Nj of Waterford Hill HIRE'S WHY YOU SAVE AT ROBERT HAIL • We tell for coih ontyl . There ore no credit charged We hove no credit leteetl Sturdy 2x4*inch Welded Fencing Reg. 27? 24® ft. Cherce It 48-ln. high fence In 100-ft. roll*. Non-rlimbable. Gilvanixed for niilTemUinck Save. Chain Link Fencing For Beauty and Protection 34® Protect your children, property arid pets with ragged chain link fence. Quality 2-inch mesh is woven and finished to provide greatest resistance to weather. Galvanized after weaving. Shop tomorrow ’til 9 p.m. Fencing Dept., Perry St. Ba$ement T , CTJADC DOWNT(>Y7N PONTIAC >n gqaranteed or tout money hade" ^ PHONE FE 5-4171 ; i ' ' ( ■ >: .kzlL, THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 80, 10Q8 Cktnson's Tolerable for First Negro Student aEMSON. S.C. (AP)-Negro Hamy B. Cktntt's presence on the all-white Clemson College campus is no bed of roses. But it is stiderable and he likes it. The students treat him, if not cordially, at least with indifference and without scon. He feels be receives fair treatment from his professors. That, in a nutshell, is the 20-yearoM architectural student’s' reaction to four months on the campus as the first Negro since! Reconstruction days to matriculate at a South Carolina white] school on any level. j Gantt was admitted to Clemson under a court order last January.] His social life is limited to dances for people of his own race |off campus, but Gantt feels he is accomplishing his goal. I . “I am confident I will receive a good education at Gemson," he [explained, “and, as I have stated ‘previously, that is my primary purpose." I As the end of his first semester drew near, Gantt reviewed his admission to the school; “My acceptance at Clemson came in a much more peaceful manner than I had anticipated, although I never really hMl visions of another Ole Miss.” He’^s doii^ well academically, but said “it would be presumptuous for me to conunent on my pades until the final examinations are over, but I can say I am pleased with my first semester’s said, “The students I have come in contact with have always conducted themselves well and I have had no trouble of any khid." Gantt lives in a single room on About the other students, Gantt Isolates African Retreat CAPE TOWN, South Africa (UPl) — Premier Hendrik Vero-werd’s seaside retreat at Betty’s Bay, 40 miles from here, has been declared a controlled area and all Africans must have special permission to enter, live or work in the area in the future. Because of uniform drainage Kansas has no natural lakes. the first floor ol the smallest dormitory at Gemson. It is expected he will renuun there for the remainder of his stay at Clemson. CLOSi^ST COOTACT The hall supervisor, Dennis Crocker, a senior from Pacolet, has probably been in closer contact with Gantt than anyone else. “Harvey has conduct^ himself in such a manner that even the most conservative of stddents have to grudgingly admit he has guts and good sense," Crocker Iowa State, and hopes to make up some lost wt^k. Officials confirmed that an undisclosed number of State Law Enforcement Department agents and highway patrolmen have been on duty at the college during the HARVEY GANTT “He seem to be well aware of I the position he is in, and avoids ! anything to embarrass his fellow I students, the school, or himself. “Here in the hall he has kept to i himself, not in an aloof manner, ’ but waiting for the other person to make any friendly overtures, to which he respond well. He studies long and hard." Gantt has enrolled for both I summer sessions at Clemson-. He transferred to Clemson in the middle of his sophomore year from New Output Units Cut One AMC Shift KENOSHA, Wis. (UPI) -American Motors Corp. has announced it will eliminate the third shift at its main plant here, and| transfer third-shift workers to the first and second shifts. D. H. Monson, works manager, said completion of new production facilities has enabled AMC to drop the third shift with no decrease in production of the number of workers. About 300 employes will be affected when the changeover takes place June 3. The Ring That Means So Much No othor dismofid rinf off«n M much. STYLE—VALUE—GUAL-ITy includinf gunrantoad perfect center diam^. A. CLARK $575.00 B. TIMRANE $450 C. ROSS $250.00 : $200.00 mvanient Terms! ■MICHIGANS LARGEST JEWELm' M NORTH SAGINAW STREET I Pontiac Stats Bonk Bldg, in Downtown Pontine HUINKS — Tte ground 400 feet below and new 60-floor twin Marina ToWeri I 8 provide background for Betty Fox as she performs on an 18-inch platform extended 12 feet from the roof of a Chicago hotel. The “sky dancer’s" rope skip was to promote a local race track. Repts Red Moon Failure i^IfiNGTWl W — The Ras-^past year are probably mtwtded ■eToLinffltary'lhan^ was the beginning of their “assault on the moon," a scientist suggests in a report for the Air Force. Dr. J. F. Krieger said Russia’s Sputnik 33, launched last Jan. 4, “bad an early ahd ignominious Krieger ictd “this umBccets-fol attempt to effect a transfer from an earth orbit to a lunar trajectory is probably the be-ginning of the long awaited and much publicized Soviet assanlt on the moon." The Rand Corp. scientist in a report on Soviet astronautics from 1957 through 1962, said the Soviets “are continuing to find that the road to interplanetary space is beset with difficulties.” He said that Russian cosmos satellites launched during the Medical Bills 2.5 Times Higher for Older Persons WASHINGTON (AP) - Medical care cost the average person over 65 years of age 2Mi times as much as a person under 65 in 1961, the Welfare Department has re-| ported. j A study prepared by the Social Security Administration shows the average cost for medical care was $315 a year for persons ovei^ 65, $128 for those younger. Dr. Donald P. Kent, director of the office of. aging, said about 20 ' per cent of all expenditures made for personal health services in this country in 1961 went for the care of the 9 per cent of the population aged 65 and over. Ybi/'ye Never Owned a Uphter_ Pair of Golf Shoes Than These HuSh PkappICS' breathin' brushed pigskin by Wolverine $12^5 Also Women's at $11.95 k$L.134Xinces per shoe for utmost comfort and flexibility. The smart Wedge soles and regulation spikes insure a firm stance. And, because these shoes are Hell-Cat tanned, they resist dirt and soil and are water resistant. They always dry soft-as-new and a brisk brushii^ restores the leather. Pick jfour favorite color in sizes" and widths to. fit most everybody. ncTmoney 11 ifliitTn , A A.. J ■ ■■ ... a.,. *• ** M ONTGOAAERY WARD SAVE 21.95 ON 9.4' FREEZER PACE-SAViR TRU-COLI ITf IN SMAU PIACESI ‘158 WIN A1963 CONTINENTAL in Words ''Mystery Model” refrigerator sweepstakes ^HUNDREDS OP PRIJgiil RK«. 17f .fS NQ MONiY DOWN Words compact monny-sover slips into a small rtook or comer, yet stores a big 329 lbs. Certified O’* freezer temperature keeps freshness and flavor sealed in till food is ready for use. Wide refrigerated shelves, top-to-bottom storage door. Only 25' wjde! Save noWl ,) Nothing to buy—givo a try! 30-INCH ELECTRIC RANGE FEAST-SIZE 24^ OVEN PIUS STORAGE DRAWER 158 NO MONKY DOWNI The most‘advanced electric cooking now yours at a low Word price! Infinite heat settings for most efficient cooking; giant 23* oven. Surface units lift up, over! door removes for easy cleaning. Bright chrome backguard holds controls, has handy outlet for appliances. ALL ELECTRICAL PARTS SERVICED FREE BY DETROIT EDISON TWO FOR ONE! BUY AIRLINE PORTABU TV, on STAND AT NO EXTRA COSTI »139 3-IN-l CONSOLE Special swivel stond bonus with purchase of 19'* Airline television! Words slim 37-lb. portable gives you high quality TV viewing with excellent reception and tone. Handsome styling, front controls, telescoping cintenna. AIRLINE $TEREO WITH FM/AM RADIO Exciting sound from 6 stereo speakers. Excellent radio reception, 4-speed ooto-motic changer and diamond needle. Mahogany finish. Cherry, walnut, odd $10. SAVE OVER *50 199 14.4 CU. FT. TRU-COLD REFRIGERATOR Refrigerator on top, 172-lb. true freezer below . . . wide shelves, 2 porcelain crispers. Freezer has o swing-out bos- <249 ket!' Rtf. $299.95 HOU|1S:9:30 A.I4. to 9:00 P.M. STORE Monday thru Saturday ' L 'll Phone 682-4940 TeiGgroph ofr Eliiobofh Loko Road .|i' I- 1 THK PONTIAC PKKSS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1063 A—l» Ideals of Religion^at War Wifh Realities of Racial Issues By GEORGE W. CORNELL Auociated Press Religion Writer DESS MOINES, Iowa — American churches are wrestling today with two disturbing paradoxes—Jnvolving race relationships and the public schools. In both cases, to an extent, ideals are at war with realities. The problems, which got some sharp attention here last week, . are, in short: 1. The fact that the churches offlcially oppose racial discrimination, yet admittedly are involved in it. 2. The fact that they believe religion applies to all i^res of life, yet it often causes trouble if affir^ in public schools. What are thc^eolutions? setting a way through these high-voltage fields, the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. has espoused some stiff remedies. On Uie racial matter,' it has undertaken to tighten its rules against inequities, and has empowered a mobile, action team to to Work “to close the gap between profession of intent and: performance of duty." Regarding the schools, even though reiterating that God reigns over all sectors of life, the Cht^ declared that religion has no place in the classroom, or in any other governmental arena. Prayers and Bible reading "as devotional acts" should be excluded, ^ denomination asserts. The policy, adopted at the Church’s legislative general assembly iHiich cloeed here this wett, seemis certain to stir reverberations in church circles for months to come. THORNY ANGLES It treads bluntly through some of the thorniest tangles concerning relationships between church and state, including the kbool prayer and Bible reading questions now before the U.S. Supreme Court. Its combustible nature was reflected in the assembly here. The policy doubtlessly faces further appraisals, although the assembly voiced earnest hopes that all Christian forces would labor more unitedly to strengthen the moral fabric of the nation and its people. tive, said recent developments have provided “increasing opportunities for better understand-, ing," between the two branches of Christianity. Despite differing church views of the problem, the United Presbyterians expressed hope for increasingly closer relations and teamwork among all Christians, including Protestants and Roman Catholics. The Rev. Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, the Church’s chief execu- There has been a real improvement,” he said. “In this atmosphere, we want to do as much as we can to further it, and we hope for more ahead in the way of cooperation." One prospect, he noted, is joint Catholic-Protestant action on racial problems. The Presbyterian assembly set' up an extraordinary $500,000-a-year purse, solely to finance special operations on the racial front —by a new national commission of Negro and white experts. Their assignment: To dig out ind clear away situations of racial discrimination, in the church and out, and to join with other. churdi groups in doing lo, with the aim of translating past pronouncements into performance. The surface Lake Erie is about eight feet lower than that of Lake Huron. YOU WILL LIKE OUR BUSINESS METHODS IMPERIAU-CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH—VALIANT sales BIRMINGHAM service • CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH • 912 S. Woodward Phono Ml 7-1211 ■PAY NODMOW DOWN ore AT WARD5Z1 M ONTGOMERY WARD SAVE OVER $13 7-pc. summer set AN INVITATION TO REIAXATIONI EASY-CARt STRnCH CHAIR COVER Washable, no-iron knit fits most styles. Features oyerlocking seams, safety stitching. 21.98^ofa cover, 13*99; daveno, sectional covers also sale priced. STORE 9:30 AJM. to 9KX) PJM. HOURS Monday thru Snturdiy X. ' ' ' * ‘T'. H --A-dta » k . * ujmaumaTmmmm* PONTIAC MAIL Vinyl/asbestos for easy-clean floors. Use anywhere. Selected colors. 9x9^ Other colors.. .IV/it 20x60'non-ddd,feom rubber backed runner. Easy-to-clban rayon tweed pile; 4 eoksrs. 24 X 70",....2*AA PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. ■ J:-. 4-'.' A-U M ONTGOAAERY WARD fcmat-AcitoiiwIwI' Reg. 79c 10-Lb. Bag Briquets 57‘ Famous Kingsford brand! Select Highland hardwood—the favor- ite of outdoor chefs. I 20-lb. bag .1.29 10-YIAR OUARANTIE Yw • MW hMPtar 4tf«cKv« aoUrlalt ar S yaan Vm tat a aaw kaaiar al 50% af canaal piicaHaal0%f8rao«li wataaeag yaar If teak GUARANTEED PAIRWAY 3A,000-BTU WATIR NIATIR...GLASS-UNED TANK »44 Take-With End those "water-waiting blues" with this Fairway 30-gallon gas heater. Delivers up to 25.2 gallons of hot water per hour. Fiber glass In- ? sulated storage tank holds heat longer—saves [ fuel. Same-day installation. 174' NO MONEY DOWN Reg. $206.00. Our finest fully automatic softener at sale price — Plus push button by -pass valve and pair of 2-ft. flexible copper connectors — easy to install. FOR SAFETY! SAVE OVER 50% ON PLASTIC PIPE Install Yaur Omi Sprinkler System —: « <|{ '/i” Plastic Pipe..... A %” Plastic Pipe.... 1” Plastic Pipe.... 1'/a”Plastic Pipe.. $)799 Quality Safety FEATURES r/s” Plastic Pipe_________... 100 Foot Coils SPIN-PROOF IVA* RUNGS —patented Alflo Joints... often tmitated, never duplicated. An exiusive 3-part industriai.type construction permanently locks ladder rungs into tide rails, providing twist-proof, spin-proof safety performance. SAFETY LOCKS are all aluminum and Jumbo-sized. Spring-loaded design assures safe, sure locking action at any height. HEAVY DUTY RIGID PLASTIC END CAPS rlv-eted to side rails prevent marring, scratching of surfaces. WEU ■TtIUl-COIIIHETBI m Ric. ni.H Factory assembled—ready to world Fairway V^-hp dependable system Is quiet, almost vibration-free. With 13-gallon galvanized tank, |et, pump and all necessary controls. 525-GPH.^ 30 Cal. Gas Water Heater. 15 year guarantee. Reg. $77.95 . >66 40 Gal. Water Heater. Reg. $89.95.*79 NOW-SAVE ’32» DUAL-TANK TYPE ! % ^ \ WATER SOFTENER t«8 Model 3601 Space Saver Pump Vs H.P. Reg. $72.50 . ... .»59“ WARD CHINA LAVATORY p88 Ward's vitreous china in easy to clean and keep clean. Rig 19x17" . size. Anti-splash rim. Lest Trim FULL WIDTH SIDE RAILS of heat treated, extruded aluminum channel for extra strength, rigidity; with interlocked flange free-sliding action. LADDER SLIP-RESISTANT SAFETY FEET... heavy-duty ribbed rubber treads riveted to aluminum free-swinging, self-locking, safety shoes. Built-in shoe bracket can't band or break off. TWIST-PROOFI... patented Alflo* process hydro-locked Joints In rigid extruded aluminum side rails mean lifetime strength, safety. Twist-proof safety at any height. Aluminum extension ladder Charge It- No Money Down! 20' Size.......................19““ 24' Size.................... 21“ Ward’s Lo-Lustre Super House Paint House Paint 099 Wgol. h# gal. Reg. 5“ Gal. Reg. 7“ Gal. STORE HOURS •r : .f.'it Monday thru Saturday 9:i30A.M.to9KK>P.M. PontiacMall - /■ '{’-j ■ PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at EHzdbeth Lake Road A—15* • fumunviPASHioNi • fumunviwiiii •fUnRUTIYIRTI One* you tiy on o boouHM Carol Bront swimsuit, you’ll wont to wear no olB^r—one of the very best buys for your money because: Superlotlve conslrucllon: Nylem mesh or laminated Pelkm* bras, tummy control panels. Superlative fabrics: Lastisx*, Helarica*nylon, Orion* acrylic^ cotton knits. Lycra* Spemdex. Superlative workmanship: Made to Wards standards. . Misses sizes 32 to46. REGISTER NOWI Adult Charm Workshop Starts June 5th Compltto Adult Course... $5 year. Cqm cottons ki stripes, checks, plaids and prints— pastels, dark hues—sunboeb, many other styles, oil great ycriues. @ Sheer co^ed stripe, embroidered trim. (D Darkch^ 1 KBPpmttr in .rQanlQR WpTe* OossM LimHod Save 25% when you buy two pabs of sups ^ get twice m mudi fon for your noneyl Sturdy cotton dude ki many ool^ non*sldd jMber soles. Women's 5 to 9... glrV 12 ^ 3... diOdren’s 5 to 12... boy^ 6 to 3. Look neot on the |ob in Wards long-wearing lightweight work outfit. Vat-dyed, color-fast. Mercerized for extra strength. Sanforized.* Cho^nowl Pants, reg. 2.98.2.55 Motdiing cotton twffl cap, reg.98c***79c •Atas.eiM. 1» RT SHIRT SPECIAL! shpri sleeve c<|ltons in great summer patterns Find handsonte plaids, great-IooUng stripes ond favorite solids in Words big special purchase of men’s sport shirts... stock up on your summer, supply now, at this low price. Favorite styles include popdar button-downs expertly tailored with tapered bodies for better fit, long stay-in tails for comfort 'n neot oppearancei dassic spread collar models wHh permanent stays in a casual coat front model... even smart new zip-up pullovers ore here •.. ond in all the vranted cdors, tool All Sanforized* and machine washable. Hurry in nowl •Mox. Shrink. 1% SPEOAU ROVr SPORT 8HRTS 99« ky-oool short sleeve Ihirts of 100% cotton. Choose woven ploids or washfost ivy prints. 25% OFF! MiirS ZIP-FROlir 6ALEY AND LORD PIAID TRUNKS 299 »R.9t BOYS’ REO. 248 SADDU PANTS ]99 Here's o mongy^oving Word vafuel Smart coNen boxer s^ Irunis wMi unique budde ond zipper front, side vents. Ml supporter. PloMs ifi rich colors. S-AA-l-XL Strongest 1395-ox. to o blend of coltoii fortified with 420Hny-Ion. Savel Sizes 5*15. STORE HOURS 'l/l 9:30AM.Io9KX>PJ«. Mondojf fhni Salurdcy Pontiac Mall Phone 682-4940 Talagraph at Eliiabalh Lok* RocmI A—1« THg PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY mms Patent A Toothpick? That's Nothingf I. but merely to determine By HAm FERGUSON WASHINGTON (UPI)-A law-He story at the U Patent Office is about the roan who. walked in, put a sliver of wood on the desk and said he wanted a patent on die toothpick. He didn't get it because of a special provision in the patent laws. Yon cannot obtain a patent on something that has been pabikiy described in a newspaper, a magazine or a book. The toothpick has been described so many times that a patent never has been issued orrir'riv on the wall, and never^w.11 te. ^ ^ ^ - , plastk shield which is placed some varation on the twthpick,; I r\fltAnt Jirwi thprp . ’ . . . 1 the grapefruit to allow a whether it is novel or new. WWW A fanner who obtained a patent on a pair of spectacles for a near-sighted rooster got the saim courteous consideration as. Alexander Graham Bell did when he invented the telephone. WWW But over the years strange things have been patented; fly swatter pistol. When you pull the trigger, a long spring in the barrel uncoils and hits the A labor saving device for chil. was a flash and a land axpla-dren in cold climates called “a sion and then forgot abont R. snowball machine." The child one hundred years later, He^ packs a tube with snow, presses thond Schwartz In Freiburg, Ger-a plunger, removes the cap of many, put. the same ingredients. you can get a patent, and there is .one on the market now. It is described as a "tooth ' space cleanser and gum mas-sager." Yon dampen the piece mod, ttkk it between your teeth and massage the gums. WWW Patent office officials long ago ceased to be surprised at the things people invent. It is not the person to use a saloon. When the }nice flies up, K hits the shkld instead of going into your eye. A woman’s hat that blows soap bubbles. A tube runs from the hat to a bulb which the lady holds in her hand. She can win friends and influence per^le at any time merely by pressing the function of the office to pass on jbulb and a large soap bubble will the economic potential of an in-'float out of her hat. Diamond Primer a Real Sparkler the tube and a snowball pops.^Dut. WWW A spoon made out of pastry. When a child is through using the spoon, he eatsLit. NEVER GET RICH There , is no record that the inventors of any of the foregoing ever got rich. But on the odier hand, sometimes a man who Invents soine-thfaig highly practical for which there %ould seem to be a tremendous* market never gets rkh eithdr. In 1849 Walter Hunt invented the safety pin and got a patent on it Nobody liappened to want safety pins. Seventeen years later. Hunt's patent expired and he still was a pon- man, but then safety pins were In the public domain, they were mass produced find began to sell. Hunt became convinced apparently—and with some Justification—that Americans were crazy and did not want practical things. So he invented a pair of shoes to walk up walls, but found, that the demand for his invention was j limited to a narrow circle of I vaudeville and circus performers. into an iron tube and placed small stone on top. w w When fire was applied, t^ere was an explosion and thei stone shot up into the air. Sdiwartz had tight Security Closed About New Weapon WASHINGTON (UPI) - If an American inventor coq;^ up with a new weapon or an improvmnent upon an old one, a ti^t security control immediately is thrown around his invention. WWW The U.S. Patent Office has a small group of experts who are ‘‘Q cleared.” That is the highest security clearance in the federal government. These men confer with the inventor and with experts hi the Defense Department. Four years later* Howe returned to the United States and found that people were pirating A drawing and a description of] his invention al| over the coun- the invention are locked in a safe in the' patent office, but no public announcement is made. accident but failed to realize its potential. In 1242, an English Friar named Roger Bacon idly mixed saltpeter, sulphur and charcoal and epplied fire to it. He noted, in his diary that there History is filled with persons NEW YORK fUPI)-If you’rel as a one carat stone which is who have invent somethm^ by thinking of buying or even eye-' otherwise equal in ail respects, ing a diamond, here are some. So far as can be determined, important things to know; the diamond ring has been the ac-Be guided by what the Jew-|cepted and preferred engagi elry Industry Council calls the ment token since the 15th'cen-“4-C's”—color, clarity, cut and lury, when it apparently began carat. | to be the custom with royalty. Color in a diamond is a delicate thing. A faint shade or h»e can make a world of difference. The finest commercial diamonds resemble a crystal clear drip of water with a faint bluish tinge. The bluer the tint the more valuable the diamond. Clarity refers to a diamond’s freedom from imperfections such as spots of cuton, internal cracks or tiny bubbles. NOTHING PERFECT : N( and a diamond is a (voduct of nature. However, the smaller the flaws in a diamond and the fewer there are, the greater the value. diamond and the process by whkh it is changed from the rough to the faceted stone. Until the stone is cut its value is but a potential. The full measure of beauty is attained only by the proper cutting upon which hinges the diamond’s fire and brilliance. WWW CaraJ is the acceptable standard of weight for diamonds. The carat is divided into 100 points. Thus, when a girl says her diamond is one quarter carat she means 25 points. Keep in mind that there are more small diamonds in nature than large ones. As with everything else, rarity creates value among diamonds. Thus a two carat diamond may cost three times as much When the time comes to lift security, the inventory may feel he has been insufficiently rewarded because he cannot exploit his invention to the public. The drawing and descripUpn are brought out of the patent office safe and the inventor goes Invented a gun, the battle field supremacy of the armored knight and baron had ended and Roger Bacon was long dead. POOR JUDGES An inventor frequently is a poor judge of the potential of what he has made. Joseph F. Gli^en of: De Kalb, 111., apparently Wl no great hopes when he received patent No. 157,124 in 1874 for something he described as “an improvement in wire fences." What he had ievented was barbed wire and the ranchers on the plains bought 'It as fast as it couM be produced. EUas Howe, who was working in a machine shop in Cambridge, Mass., like the inventor of the safety pin. was a victim of public indifference. - w w w He Invented the sewing machine. People werh so unimpressed that Howe did not bo{^ to patent it in the United States, but sailed for England in search of a backer. A corset nuurafactiirer bought the English patent from him and hired him .to rndnufactore the machines. try. He entered upon one of the longest series of litigation in this nation and won every suit he filed. Howe died a millionaire , but his unhappy.experience had done something to him. To the very day be died he kept building small, queer machines. Nobody, including Howe, couU ONE MORE FOR DINNER-The pets of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hathaway of Portland, Oregon, have learhed to acc^t Pigeon Hathaway at the “dinner table." If Pigeon thinks a cat is getting out of line, she gives it a peck on the head. Old Echo I Just Keeps Orbiting WASHD(PTON (AP) - Old Sdw I; wrinkled and shrunken, is still looping the earth after having'covered more than 878 m|U^mileL<> .The faallSon • type satellite, Iganched S3 months ai{o» can be seen as it gUdei acivsi dw sky at Bight although it ix now half the 10-story height it was, the Natkmai AeronanOcs ind Space Administration reported yesterday. Surprisingly it is still being used for the passive relay of . messages by 6)llins Radio Co. between Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Richardson, Tex. The firm said voice communications by way of Echo I are “exceptionally clean." When it was launched Aug. 12, 1960, the satiate was expected to remain in orbit a year or sd. Now the experts won’t estimate when it may come down. $1-Million Contract GoestoChifsIer WASHINGTON (fl - The Army has awarded a $1,375,380 contract to Chrysler Corp. of Detroit for 486 power wagons, it was announced yesterdays The w^ is to be done at Chrysler’s Dodge assembly plant at Warren, Mich. The announcement was made through the offices of Sens. Pat McNamara and Philip A. Hart of Michigan. JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED -HIGHEST PRICES PAID- WePickVp FE 2-0200 Theft Suspect Fools Guards CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Guards, finding discarded prison i clothes in a courthouse restroom,] learned too late that the “woman ” j who calmly walked past them was their male prisoner — a pro-Com- i munist held in the half-million-' dollar theft of French art. ^.^.^’IhefUMdsiWailfid outsit Winston Bermudez Machado, 26-year-old university student, went to a restroom Tuesday. Police said an accomplice apparently ] had hidden women's clothing and makeup there. He had been brought to court for questioning. Safety Man Stopped by His Own Precaution EFHNGHAM, lU. (AP) - Robert Dirks, commissioner of health and safety in Effingham, had a| four-way stop sign installed at the intersection of U.S. Highway 40' and Willow Avenue last week asi a safety measure. A motorist ran through it Tues-' day. His car struck Dirks' auto, causing $100 damage. Dirks was not hurt. | Oonoecticat, in U41.«nacted a] law prohibiting bowling. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1963 / A—IT HOLIDAY SPECIALS FROM HHS FRIDAY and SATURDAY ORLY: a special pup of specially-priced apparel to start your summer in great style Batik prints, plaids, checks and muted ploids; in browns, chars, and olives. All-cotton and Dacron-cotton blends; in beltless end ivy , styles. Junior sues 6-12 in regular and slim ... 199 Student waist sizes 26-32 DuPont's Registered T.M. for It's polyester fiber OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN EVERY EVENING TO 9 P.M. ■ ■ i,. ■- ..f'j ■■ -I f A—18 THE 1*0;^TIAC PKKSS, THURSDAY. MAV 30, im jiMumoa THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1063 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, B~1 First Success in 1930 No Countdowns on First Rockets ROSWELL, N.M. (UPI) - Hie Intricate countdown in launching modem missiles was uidieard of on New Year’s Eve of 1990 when Dr. Robert H. Goddard fired a missile in his first succeu. It west up less than half • mile but helped earn for the scientist recognitioB as the father of modem rocketry. Charles W. Mansur, now an aerospace engineer for the U.s! Army at White Sands Missile Range, NM., was an assistant to Goddard. “There was no such thing as a countdown in those days," Mansur said. “When we were ready to fire, we wired!’ Dnring firings, ttere^ observation point about SO feet' from the lannching tower where they really got a “clooe” look at the launching behind a cellar dougout, Mansur Mid. Their 00-foot launching tower was put up seven miles away at Eden VaUey. REAL ENTHUSIASM We were really enthusiastic and the fact that we bad to start from scratch even to helping buiki our own machine shop did not dampen our spirits a bit,” Mansur said in an interview in his modern laboratory at White Sands. For two years, Goddard and four assistants developed, and perfected rodcets at R o s w e 11. They worked in a shop 35 by 50 feet located about four miles north of the city. But the publicity aroused thei attention of Col. Charles E. Lindberg, uho became interested in Goddard’s Work. Mansur first met Gdddard, who died in 1945, at Worcester, Clark University gave Goddard sabattical leave and loaned machine tools and other equipment to his research. In the early 1920s Mansur attended a grammar school there, across the street from Clark Uni-versityi'Whei^'^dard was head ^ the Sciences Departn^t. While in high school, I^Olsw woriced as a laboratory assisted at the univorsity under Goddard. And in 1929 Mansur went to work full-time for Goddard, whose work in experimental rocketry dated back to the be-gtauing of the century. “We tried to launch rockets in Massachusetts but the public protested,’' Mansur recall. .more experiments in New Mexico. ’This time three of die wig-inal crew returned to Roswell. Lindberg, a national hero for his solo flight over the Atlantic Ocean, helped obtafu money fw Goddard’s work from the Daniel and Florence Guggenheim at Annapolis, Md., to Goddard^iut)^ thej^ rockets may dwot and his men. djwn aircraft.” Goddard selected Roswell as the ideal location for intensified continuation of his w o r k because of Af^ Goddard’s death, Mansur “Some can reach altitudes of continued his irork in helpmg the,fjyg miles,” he said. “Wiy when CurtM - Wright Corp. set up a j,ad our first successful firing missile program. jgjQ gt Roswell, it He worked for that firm for Iwent up less than half a mile.” The experiments at Roswell lasted about two years. At the depth of the depression, funds out and Goddard returned to in Worcester, able to Builders Try Many Methods hr Luring New Customers By United Press International A sign in a Dallas apartmeni renting office advertises a one-bedroom “celebrity suite” with piped-in champagne at $4S0 a month. About 900 miles away, in St. Petersburg, Fla., real estate salesmen knock on apartmoit doors with statistics “proving” you can buy a house cheaper than you can rent. Both situations are typical of how builderf are adapHng dieir methods to the interests of their and grachmsness” to appeal primarily to wealthy couples who want luxury and cxcinsive-ness and are willing to pay for it. On Chicago’s northern fringe at Wilmette there are the Kenilworth Apartments built by the Edward Gray Corporation for 'Limited, selMt clientele of substance” and primarily for couples with grown families who want to shed the cares of largej and luxurious homes and can pay up to $675 a month rent. By contrast there is the St. Petersburg hoisi!« project ie- room house with a fully equipped kitchen sells for $200 to $300 down and payments of about $78 month. The demands of the consumer and the builder’s ability to anticipate them have been a major factor in upgrading America’s living habits, according to construction experts from coast to coast. The building business is one of the world’s biggest guessing one builder said. “About the only thing certain that the standard of living provided in new apartments and nei houses-will continue te-ge up.” In 1940, the U.S. Army uked Goddard’s help in research on methods of getting heavHy loaded aircraft airborne. Two years later, the U.S. Navy seven years before coming to White Sands as a laboratory mechanic in the Propulsion. Branch. Mansur, reflecting on the progress of rocketry during his career, said “it is unbelievable that the Federal. Aviation Agneoy has ’TOKYO (UPI) - An American artist in Tokyo says the battleship USS Missouri, on which Japan surrendered in World War [I, should be anchored permanently in Tokyo Bay to remind Japanese of the folly of military adventures. Remember the Missouri” is the catch phrase coined by artist Walt Keane, whose pictures of mournful, big-eyed slum children him an international reputation. me seci biulding business,” said a Kansas City builder, “is to determine what type of family is your best prospect and then anticipate what will inducq him to sign a contract.” LOOKS LIKE FUN — Tliese children in the Battersea area of London improvised a bobsled run using some tin roofing for a* slide and a collection of wire baskets for support. The .sled part^ of what once was a baby carriage. Wants Big Mo Set in Tokyo To Serve as Reminder of World War Disaster Tlie 44-year-old artist recently was in Tokyo to tnpervise publication of a portfolio of his paintings. Keane tells Japanese friends the battleship should be anchored right on the spot where the surrender took place. “As in the joke about the guy who tries to kiss every girl he meets, I get a lot of cool stares," Keane concluded. “But you’d be surprised at the numb^ of affirmative nods.” The Missouri now is berthed in Bremerton, Wash., with the UJS. mothball fleet Suggestions have been made for its enshrinement at San Francis-St. Louis, Brooklyn, New York and Pearl Harbor. Keane said most of his support for the idea comes from younger Japanese, who think the oHer generation needs a permanent reminder of the disaster to which Japanese militarists led the coun- try- “It already has cost me a few friends,” Keane said. “But I still think it is a good idea for ail concerned.” Keane’s suggestion so fair has drawn no comment from Japanese government circles. However, a high rankinjg Japanese police official express position in practical terms; 'It would be a terrible ache,” the cop said. “Think of all the men we’d have to tie up guarding the ship from rightists and veterans groups.” WAGON’S NEW USE - The litUe red wagon has long been a child’s favorite, but these Topeka, Kan., workmen have found a new use for it. They use it as a lift, helping to raise supplies to those perched high on a steep church roof. Free 318 Facing Drunkenness I Charges in LA i hundred and eighteen prisoners, ail charged with drunkenness, were released en masse from Lincoln Heights jail Tuesday. A recent California Supreme Court ruling invalidated arrests for drunkenness under city ordi- nances. dismiss them all in the in-terest,,of justice,”;said mimicipal Judge Robert Fehwrman. But to those with king-sized thirsts, there was no justice; Lightning Blasts Man Into Telephone Cables GRENOLBE, France (UPD-Forty - two - year - old Angelo Frangiamone, driving his motor scooter during a storm, was hit frjrnghtfiiiigTBa.knocked into teleptone cables 10 feet above the ground. Police cut him down a short time later. He was hospitalized with shock. Safety Lecturer Fined READING, England (UPI) -Traffic policeman George O’Dell, who doubles as a lecturer in road safety, was fined $14 for careless driving iq his police car. FIRST HEUPORT Thomas A. McCarville, builder of the luxurious new Four Seasons Apartments in Dallas, has installed the first apartment house heliport among other luxuries to catCT to yqung executives. Leo F. Corrigan of Dallas created phish Terrace House “set in nine acres of dipity Romney Tabs Saturday Navy Air Reserve Day LANSING m - <3ov. George Romney has proclaimed Saturday as Naval Air Reserve Day in Michigan. The governor asked recognition of the some 3,000 officers and men of the Michigan Naval Air Reserve who stand ready to firotect the state and the country in the event of any emergency. Rheumatism is comparatively rare in warm climates. Paris Subway a Symbol for Suicide? PARIS (^t — Some 60 persons each year throw themselves onto the tracks of the Paris metro (subway) to commit suicide. Out of this average of 60 tries per year, about 20 persons succeed. Three attempts in one week recently led a Paris newspaper to inquire of some psychiatrists why one would seek such a means of dying. SAVES YOU More on gifts for brides y MARQUISE, PEAR SHAPE, EMERALD CUT ^ DIAMONDS In 14K GOLD One psychiatrist suggested the metro is taken as a symbol of absolute death. The metro is a powerful machine ... to the will of which one is submitted. It can seem like death the most absolute, an excess of death.” Metro officials were quick to add, however, that normal use of the metro is quite safe. Except for suicides, there has not been one fatal accident since 1928. Perfectly timed for the June bride, perfectly priced to fit ony budgetl Toke your pick of Rose Jewelers fancy shope diamonds —oil exquisitely set in rich 14-karat gold. BUDOn TERMSI TAKE UP TO It MONTHS TO PAYI cm Fw ShM« ............. cm Pe» siwpa EaMme......Slllil t^cmPwsbmMiibe.............$21UI cm PMf UMpe Eawm#.......$9l2il % cm tofiM SeKabe.........$1i1JS /t Cmitirpsa Selitaire.... .$21179 MEart EaNrM Cal Sattairt..$11191 •/$ Cwai EaMraM Cat EaseaMa..$19199 •4 cm EawraM Cel SaMaks...$19199 ond grads! Trad* *n’ Sava on Finn Watchoi by BULOVA Lady’s 17-jewel Bulova in dainty case.. .24.75 Man’s 17-jewel shock-resistant Bulova.. 24.75 Lady's 17-jewel Bulova, exponsion bond. .35.75 Man's self-winding 17-jewel Bulova. .39.475 Lady’s 2-diamond Bulova fashion watch..; .49.95 Man’s 23-jewel selfwinding Bulova . .49.95 10K GOLD BIRTHSTONE RINGS Your 10“ H25 Onfr $7.SO m Week Birthstone, initial and fraternal ~ emblems in the group. ACCUTRON by BULOVA 99.9977% ACCURATB Keeps time by constant vibrations of an electronically activated tuning folk ... Never needs winding, even on your wrist. Buy now! SUNBEAM 555 ELECTRK SHAVER WITH 3 BLADES 77 3 r»ol bladit clotwr, fcMtar. Hot on-off •witch, trimmor. Only $100 eMoMli 18 MK GOLD CHARMS IN A CHOICE SELEaiON AbLm ^ao As KODAK INSTAMATIC 100 CAMERA OUTFIT SPEIDEL BIG BOY OR BEST GIRL IDENTS SUNBEAM CORDLESS SHAVEMASnR SHAVER 13 77 He Mewey Dawn Exquisite and dainty chdrms of gleaming 14 karat gold. Starfor odd to her bracelet and savel Loads instantly, automatically. Just drop in a Kodapak film cartridge—camera is loaded. Handsome and heavy for the boys, dainty and feminine for the girls. Perfect gift for steodies. JUST THE THOUGHT TIRES GI-GI - Just the thought of meeting her public Is enough to poop and frazzle a gal. Gi-Gi’s had it, even a3 she weighs in at Cleveland, (^io, zoo. The pound, 8-month-oId orphaned orangutan had been cared for in private home following death of her mother a week after the baby qie’s birth at the zoo. T«*il>Ag«ral If you^r# b»tw«QB 15 and 21, you can opon your own crodit account at Roso JowolorsI USE YOUm OUDITI PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENHR . Op«n Monday through Scrtwrdoy until 9 P.M. / THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 80. 1W8 Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: Trace Elements Are at Work in Your Body Wiwt an llttb boyi madt of? Hm fjjjHtw one* redehpod a I of thill w^hw to brandstadt do with the ao> Mackinaw Re-Enacfing Its Massacre icAoaNAw errv (upd ThqrYe re-enactii^ a musacre at Mackinaw Oty this weekend. ■ ★ ♦ R’s part of the Lacrosie-Ft. MiddBinaddnac bicentennial cel-ebrathm and other northern cities, indoding Oidnygin and Harbor Spiings-Petoskey are also taking part He massacre, nstag actors in aathcatk costames, will be a | bloadless re-eBactmeat of the i massacre *'at Ft Michiliinack-inac which took place »• years ago daring the Pontiac wars. He celebration continues for four days, from today through Sunday, June 2. Other events include canoe races, tomahawk and knifethrowing contests, archery demonstrations and modem lacrosse games. called trace elements ~ thooei But without this minute amount, bits of mineral, present in sudi ikj would be in^wnible for the small amounts that, untO recent bc^y to maiiitoiMi « ncsinal me-years, we didn’t even know they were a port of our bodies. Only with the discovery of deli- pwrani consunieni oi me oioou n,,* „i____________ Iron pcHtant constitudit of the bh)od As a result, a form of anemia would develop. VITAMIN BU Vitamin B12 was recognised as a substance the lack of whidi would cause pernicious anemia. the body of such elements as iodine, copper and zinc revealed. Tie average adalt body coa- of aa aaace of iodiae, most of which is concentrated ia the thyrohL Without cq>per, the bone marrow cannot use the iron that is present to manufacture the hemoglobin needed in the blood to carry oxygen to the tissues. Such discoveries have helped year docar to sort eat dltlcr-eat Mads el aaemia and to treat each Uad with greater as- that control the indispensible chemical reactions oi the body. ★ ★ ★ Zinc, for example Is an essential part of an enzyme ' mits the red blood cells to carry carbon dkffJde, a product of cellular fatigue, tb the luhp. This and other chemical reactions in the body that involve carbon dioxide depend on the >Be Of the enzymes M diges-Job found hi the intestines. Manganese is found in one of the enzymes necessary for the kidneys to form urea from ammonia, and thus enables the body to eliminate a waste product whi(±, if allowed to accumulate, it 18 aiso present in other important enzymes. FLUORINE PRESENT ! Although fluorine is not tial in the body’s metabolism, it is present in varying minute amounts in Uw natural water of most regions. I Whea the concentration Is too low, dental decay, especially hi Sees Highest Year of School Borrowing LANSING (UPD State Superintendent of Public Instruction Lynn M. Bartlett estimates that Michigan schools will borrow more than $114 million through their bonding programs in the fiscal year ending June 30. ★ ★ ★ BshMa^ 1 months of the fisciffyear have borrowed $109,971,000 and if foe total does go above $114 END OF ROYAL VISIT ~ Princess Grace of Monaco and her two children. Princess Caroline, 6, and Prince Albert, 5, board a plane at New York’s Idlewild ' Airport after a five-week visit in the United States. They Will spend a few days in Paris before returning to Monaco. 2 East German Guards Flee to West Berlin BERLIN (UPI) - Two East German bonier guards, in full unifonn and armed, fled forougbjiqerida. West Berlin yesterday. Defeat Bill on Divorce TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) -The Senate has defeated a bill that would have made incurable insanity a grounds for divorce in West Berlin police said other Blast German sentries did not see highest in state history. Hie record was set in 1959-60 when bond issues totaled $140 million. Vacation Trips toLure20 Pet. More in 1963 NEW YORK (AP) - Vacation Wps will hire 20 per rent nwre ^ ^ Americans this, thw last ^ year, a survey indicated today. ^ ^ quUt evredng or two reading the rule book. The executive director of the United States Golf Association is a leading authority on the Thou Shalt Nots of the game. A poll by Goodyear The & Rubber Co. shows that amemg foe survey group—a cross section in the 49 continehtal states—90 per cent plan a vacation trip this year. Last year 75 per cent of the group went vacationing. Travel by aatomobUe will be 7i per cent greater, the average trip wiOl be 1,1M miles and foe average expeaditire per party wlDbe$U4. Peak weeks for travel will be those of July 14 and Aug. 1 Sightseeing wfll occupy 44 per cent of foe vacationers, swimming and boating 24 per cent, fishing 21 per cent and camping 10 per cent. The survey indicated Colorado ball, Dey says, is the most popular destination GUESSING GAME *”i "MmI .wekend wHen dra> ____, . ^ ‘ new half at the point they think Go^yw ^ed over 1,000 peo-a lost ball came to rest,” he pie ^ut their vacation plans and said. “They take a stroke penalty rece^ed responses frtm over 50 from that point. This is aU wrong. jin the first place, if foe ball is ilost, how can they know where [it landed? If they knew vrtiere I foe ball was, it wouldn’t be lost.” I The proper procedure is to re- nrvjvwnnn /ad\ _________________ to the spot from which the ^YWWD (AP) -Jerry kat ball was hit, play the new Lewis and his wife Patti are ex- ball from there and take a one-pecting foeir sixth child in Jan- stroke penalty. In other words, the player-should lose a stroke nie rules of the ancient pastime evolved over the centuries, so you can’t exactly say Dey wrote the book. But he certainly helped edit Jt. “It’s fascinating reading," the man who would make foe book a best seller insists, “and every golfer’s enjoyment of foe game can be eahanced by a knowledge M foe subject” The most frequently shattered rule is the (me concerning a lost per cent. Jerry Lewises Await 6th Child in January “Naturally, we are expecting a girl,” said Lewis, “but we’ll buy a blue layette too.” The Lewises have five sons. GrsiDlaad is very largdy buried beneath more than •00,000 aqaiK fttUss of ice. Antarctica Hos AAost of World's Glaciers CHICAGO nP»-Antarctica has the largest proportioa of the wurM’s glaciers, nearly 4H mil- also grounded his club” (except U.,. . I.___J . . . . . -. and distance. ★ Another frequent infraction of the weekend golfer is not taking a penalty when the ban moves after it has been addressed. A has addressed the baU he has taken his stance by placing his feet on the ground in position for and preparatory to making a stroke in a hazard, where he is not al-fowed to ground bis chib). If a ban in ^y moves after the player has addressed tt, be “shaU ' Gets Top Mason Post . .. ^ When they do, they will have _ _______________ DETROIT (AP) — Newton S.'helped your doctor to a better un- the escape of IBe mehTlgeOTBam "cTeefeT derSii^ and foe and 23. las grand master of Michigan’s forces that help and hinder its ---------------- [Grand Lodge of Free and Ac-normal workings. About 60 U.S. cities levy a tax cepted Masons at a convention (Written for on tobacco products. here. ' Newspaper Enterprise Assn.] Most Weekend Golfers Guilty Lost Ball Rule Often Broken Joseph C. Deyideemed to have caused r anlf^r WAitt/l mnva ovwl mKall ifwtiiv* a v move and shaU incur a penalty move. Just suppose a dog were 1** “This led to that interesting sttnation in foe Phoenix Open, where Arnold Palmer stepped away from his ball after addressing it,” Dey pointed out. “A bee lit on foe ball and, according to witnesses, caused it to move. I rrto! gONTiAc press, Thursday, may 8o, iq63 i Fia.,»TqS0N. mart OPEN DAILY 10-10 - SUN. 12-7 Summer Fun at Low Bargain Prices ! r ^ 'ft ' i ' H Jumbo Size! 8-ft.x20" Deep! STEEL WALL WADING POOL «• ■if.., i 23"x37" Inflatable Toy VINYL RAFT K-mart Summerama Price For the beach or backyard svrimming pool! THangnlar shaped with 2 inflatable ring'sides, tiiqd inset bottom. Many colors! J ' ‘J"V*vw V 1^1 26" lnflatab!e Viny! lt*s safe, strong and easy to set np in a place where mother can keep an eye on the children’s splash parties. The translneent vinyl liner has a safety edge which locks over the heavy page corropted steel walk Baked enamel finish with side wall drain. BEACH BALI K-mart Summerama Price Big 8*panel beach ball in red, white and blue colors. Perfect for the beach or backyard. Charp it and save now! 9-Ft. Sturdy, Durable Steel GYM SET FOR SUMMER FUN! Charge It 9-ft. headbar with candy stripe snpports, attached slide with platform .and ladder. Set inclades air» glide with 2 steel bucket seats, 2 swinp with at« tached trapese bar and rinp and a laWn swing. Choice of red, peen, white or yellow. Save now, charge it! “ice,“at BARBECUE-PICNIC SUPPLIES DELUXE BRAZIER WITH WARMING OVEN HOOD-MOTOR -SPIT 24 INCH GRILLS, With Push Button Switch 20" 2-SPEED K-mart Summerama Price '' i Breeie box fan with steel 3-blade propellers, white enameled grill, blue enamel case. 1/15 H.P. motor. Save now! Grill PORTABLE BARBECUE Q99 Just in time fw sum* mer fun. Wim foil hood, three • position grid. In red or blue colors. Charge it and Plated Folding Lep Shelf for food and utentiU Accessories... BARBECUE SET,5-PC. 2’* Set coBsIsU of a knife, fork, brush, tongs and turner. Makes barbecuing easier.. fatter! You can save at K-mart! 5'x32" Gay Turquoise POLY BOAT K-mart Summerama Price 699 Catamaran twriin-hall desiped boat that’s sturdy! Pmrfect for the beach and backyard fun. Sail is not included. Save now! 11 AAAHRESSES K-mart Summerama Price 5-tubed beach mattresses with pillows. Each mattress has an embossed desip in metallic blue and peen colors. W/valve. I Scuff-Resistant, 3-Piece LUGGAGE SET 1053 Keuart JSummerama Price Classic design set that's durable, yet easy to clean. Vinyl pieces, fully lined. Beauty c^se, overnite and pullman. Chiircoal, white, blue. Big 25G Count EMBOSSED NAPKIHS 27' 13%" X 13” white or rainbow color napkins. Stock np now for those summer, picnics and barbecues. S^ve now! Freshly Baked 10" LAYER CAKES Chocolate, camel nnt, Bananna walnnt pins several other varieties to choose from — each free samples Friday and Saturday . 5-POSITION CHAISE SALE Btg9-0z. Sue 100-C0UIIT COLD CUPS 97* Perfect for backyard barbecues and snmmer picnics. Stock up now at K-mait... low discount prices. Chfrge it! Summerama Sale! 100-CUUNT r'PUTES 77* For picnics and barb^ cues .. eliminates tedi- wards. Stock up now at K-mart’s low prices. With 4 Handles 22” VINYL SWIM BINS 68* Kids will love this for the beach or wading pool. Nantieal design in red with a w^e screen pattern. C^^rge 'Weather-proof alnmlnmn chair and chaise IVC* greea and white polypropylene webbing Each piece ^Ida for easy storage. Bioth pieces have 1” aluminum tubing. NOW 6 GREAT K-mart QUALITY DISCOUNT STORES TO SERVE YOU B~4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THUHSDAY^ MAY SO, 1968 Monastic Orders of Greece Mark Millenium Atop Mt. Athos MT. ATHOS, Greece (AP)-lUiieaiweyearlnthelO-ceotary Malory of the nigfed Mt. Athos Peninsula and its who want nothing of worldly life. The OrOodox monasteries are are markingr>—-------- thtir l,W0thlMCK6WiUNDl birthday and hoping that their community — de- here next nxMmth for religious services and othor observances of the anniversary. The visitors will find that 10 centuries have dunged little on the Macedonian Peninsula, a six-mile-wide strip of land ^ttlng 90 miles into the Aegean Sea. It remains laigely a c«n-munity of monks living in scattered monasteries or as hermits in isolated caves and huts. populatiOD — all men. will gather Footpaths wind through forests, linking the monasteries and the ■ 's few villages. There isn’t an automobile around. Visitors from the outside aoust get passes fnun Greek and have them qipioved on Mt Athos by the monks’ own govwn-ment conslsUng of an elected represented from each monastery. . WOMEN EXCLUDED Women are never permitted. Even female domestic animals— ns, mares—are barred. The only exception was Queen Helen of Serbia in the 13th century. The monks admitted her because she had be«i one of their greatest benefactors. Legend says she enteM a Mt Athos cfaurd) to pray and k voice foom an icon said; "Bego is no place for a woman.’ The peninsula has been limits to females since 919—about a half century after monks started retiring to Mt Athos. The real birth of Athonite mon-asticism was in 963, when Emperor Nicephorus Phocas of Byzantium issued a golden null, or charter, to St. Athanassius the Aihonite for -the establidiment of the monastery of Megisti Lavra. Eleven are oenobitic (common life). Everything must be shared. Food is eaten in a refectory, Meat is never alkmed. For Mental Hospital Use Quesfion Raised on Tranquilizer Value NEW YORK fflPD - A quesUon is raised concerning the possibil-:ty of errors in anwaising the ;>art tranquilizing drugs have lad in reducing t)Mk4>opulation of Amo'ican mental hospitals. Almost all appraisals givf>^them the nuijor share of the cr^t. The question-raising was spon-".ored by the American Psychi-itric Anociation. It published an ippraisal of the experiences of a ypical British mental hospital :u)d one not unlike its American counterpart. This English appraiser came Kinsions quite different from American ones. Like the American appraisers, Dr. A. A. Robin dealt mainly with dironic or “long-stay” patients. had proved their potency beyond any questioning. NO BETTER Nevertheless, his appraisal shows “their current administration in one hospital, which, however, there is no reason to believe is therapeutically atypical in the administration and doMge of these drugs, does not produce better results in terms of discharge and so forth, than those methods of treatment against which they are compared.” These treatment methods he described as “mainly nursing care and occupation in the long-stay group.” His appraisal was based upon hospital statistics of readmis-skms, discharges and treatments for a six-year period. pared to comment at once on thislof types of mental diseases as contradicting English appraisal, well as of statistica. But in due The whole matter is hi^ly course there will be American technical, involving complexities [comment. It was the tint of the 10 ma}ok-stan. Todey about to art left, and Serbian. Russian and Bulgarian. all but two came here in csarift Since the growth ot days. The two excepflons The Others are idiorhythmlc (NTivate rhythm. Property can be 1^. Monks cook their food' separately in their cells. Meat is! allowed except on fast days, which amount to two-thirds of the year oq Mt. Athos. MAIN INCOME Chestnut tree provide the tnastcries’ main income. There Russian exiies who lived outo^ I the Soviet Union before coming Seventeen (d the 10 monasteriei are Gredk. The other three are cerUinty that the cmnmunity of nism, there have been few novices from Red nations. The Greek Mt. Athos go on. ♦ ★ w The millenium celebration this nist inftttration - has been hesi-ran to admit there Is still a feeling of government ~ feving Cemmu- yMu- is part of foe effwt to tell the world of Mt. Athos; to make sure that time never runs out for the fenfaisula. is hardly a better source of timber in rocky Greece. Wine, olives and hazlenuts also are money earners for foe monks. At foe turn of the century, about 10,000 monks were on Mt. Athos. Today there are hardly 2,000, about a third hermits. Many are too old to work. Eadi year brings about 25 novices—scarcely enou^ to keep up the depleted ranks. Once half the monks were Rus- 12 HOURS OlY FRIDAY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Every Appliance Specially Priced for Month^End Clearance NO MONEY DOMN Free D^very and Service THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP Open Mon. and Fri. Hil 9 only FRIDAY SATURDAY The British patients selected Tor transquilizing treatment were those who already had the best orospects for getting discharged from foe hospital. He reminded that a statistical study of another British mental hospitaT had conned that “the impact of pharmaco-therapy (drag treatment) proved to be very small.” “Nevertheless,” he went on, ‘tranquilized long-stay patients when compared with nontranquU-ized patients do not have a better pros^ of discharge and may inde^ to some extent have a lesser iwospect. He also reminded of American hospitai statistical study which found the “increased chance of discharge for all cases” which came about with the «Mes|wead use of tranquilizing drugs could be attributed to “staff optimism.” chance of readmisBiim of discharged long stay patients. Ward behavior, apart from some aspects of ‘disturbance,’ is little influenced by trad- possibly associated with foe introduction of new symp- THE PONTIAC PRESS. THITRSDAY, MAY 80, 1963 Work Together} Study Apart at Adult School WAfcLINGFORD, Pa. (AP) Tucked away in the green and fertile folds of southeastern Pennsylvania is a school for adults of all ages, where a doctor of. osophy may wash windows to help pay the bUIs, and the chief qurt is defined as argument about “everything we can lay our tongues to.” This school has no fomuil entrance requirements; it gives neither examinations nor credits; it confers no degrees. It has lectures, seminars and classes but the emphasis is upon individual study. This school, or center for study and comtemplatlon, to use a preferred name, is called Pqndie Hill. It is run by the Society of Friends, and its stu^nts, who need not be stu^nt Quakers, ^me from Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia, New Zealand and Canada as well as from American cities and towns. Among them areiHindus, Buddhists. Jews, members of ’ Protestant denominations, and l,^P£C//U % J PfPOPr European Catholics, here by special dispensation. ‘SLOW PACE’ Director Dan Wilson supplied the text for the dunking at Pendle HIU: "Above everything else, we try to slow down the pace, to cut down on the outside pressures, at the same time increasing the inner pressures, the kind that help us to become better and wiser beings. We are a community in which all strive, day in and day out, to find out how we can know one another better, how we can truly live together as human beings.” A vital part of the Pendle Hill plan is its share-the-work policy. "Sharing in the day-to-day chores is a very real part of ducation here,” Wilson said. 'Each regular student spends 10 to 12 hours a day at wdrk, doing IN-actically everything from washr ing pots and pans and cleaning tte windows to v^etable gardening and mowing the lawns. Everybody must help to take care of the rooms and help with the dishes, too. "This is a very healthful situation. Maybe it’s as close to equality as you can get, for doing the dishes is a great leveier.” Winifred Rawlins, a poet and one of the teaching staff, says some of her best ideas, creative^, came while she was scrubbing down stairs or otheiwise engaged in physical tasks. “There are two reasons for the work-sharing,” Wilson said, “one of tbttn, of course, is the ecoiiomy of it. We don’t have many regular, full-time empioyes, so the work our students do is certainly a big factor in keeping operating exdown. The other is the aim of achieving a well-rounded community life.” Residents enrolling for a full year of 31 weeks pay dightly more than $1,000 for lodging, meals and tuition. Special rates are given far families. Non residents pay a $15 tuition fee per term for each course, meeting once a week, and $25 per term for each course meeting twice a week. An overnight visitors pay what is called sojourner’s fees, totaling $5.75 and including three meals. A private study-bedroom is provided for each resident student in dormitory buildings. A small number of ailments is available for families. Most meals are taken by the students together in the dinihg-room of the main house. Pendle Hill came into being 33 years ago.. Its name was inspired by a quotation from George Fox, the Briton aho founded the Society of Friends. It was modeled to some extent after Britain’s famed Woodbrooke School at Birmingham, but, Wilson said, has’ been kept ditti^tive enough to count it among the world’s most unusual schools. 22 STUDENTS At the moment Pendle Hill has 22 students. It has had as many as 45. A total of 35 is considered ideal. For each of the three terms of the school year, Pendle Hill has a faculty of five residents plus teachers brought in from colleges and universities in the Philadelphia region. Subjects over a wide range, apart from languages, embracing Bible study, courses in comparative religion, philosophy, political economy, labor education, social problems, psychology, creative writing in both prose and poetry, arts and crafts. Arnold Toynbee, the famed British historian, has lectured Pendle Hill. So has novelist Al-dous Huxley. U Nu, prime minister of Burma, came to medi- tate and wanted to linger indefinitely. Elizabeth Gray Vining, author and one-time tutor of Japan’s crown prince, teaches a I writing. Shows Will Start Music Fountain in Grand Haven GRAND HAVEN (fl - The 20-minute shows tonight start the first full season for Grand Haven’s lighted musical fountain, a civic project billed as the largest of its type in the world. Formal dedication is scheduled in August. The fountain, 250 feet long by 150 feet wide, is located on Dewey Hill across the Grand River from the foot of this city’s main street. Mayor William Creason was chairman of the project which started two years ago and was carried to completion with volunteer labor Discount Sale! Cosmetics, Health PsriaatbiBadI Rlahman's ' OaeianB mol FRIDAY MAY 31 THROUGH WEDNESDAY JUNE 5 Sola Prkal FOR HAIR and BATH! LUSTRE CREME SHAMPOO, 6-OZ...............67( CASHMERE BOUQUET TALCUM, 10-OL...........S8(‘ QAIROL HAIR COLORING, 2-OZ...............Vr PLASTK BERH SHOWER CAP...................2U SUBLETS BATH OIL ttPSULES,IB’S...........7«* TUB-O-BUBBU BATH, 2!i LB.................74<* HANDEES BUBBLE BATH, 20 M CHEST.,.......... 74«* BATHFRESH BUBBLE BATH, 42-OZ.......... --47f “dOWNTOWK^I^ TEL-HURON I ROCHiSTEH fONTlAC I CENTER i flAZA JERGEN’S HAND LOTION, 12.S-0Z......... .......87(* KLEENEX 400’S, WHITE, PASTELS....... .........2« KOTEX 12’S, REGULAR, SUPER....................33« LANDER STKK DEODORANT, 2-OZ................. .23t* NOXZEMA SKIN CREAM, 10-OZ....................^97t* NAIL ENAMH REMOVER. 2'/4 OZ...................14«* LISTERINE, 14-OZ.............. ..............59* KOTTIES HANKIE-PACK................. 2 PACKS W ___________ * plur Pea, DRAYTON 1 MIRACLE MILE 1 PONTIAC PLAINS 1 , SHOPPING CENTER | MALL In wrinkle-resistant, shapeholding handsomeness. Expertly | tailored in Richman's o quality workrooms. Sold direct to you in Richman's own stores. Selections are great I Compare this Richman value at prices $15 to $20 higher than Richman's low price! Richmasi Shop without cash— "CHARCe IT" AT HRiSOPS —Pay only once a month! BROTHERS MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Opan Doily 9:30 ^L.M. to 9 P.M. Charge it now... take up to 6 months to pay! iJ: --rTitE rONTIAC TRESS. THURSDAY> MAY 80. 1963 Anniversary Savings Through the for one-sfop family shopping and saving! ^ GUM F" DROPS 151. Hair Spray 67' ^p^T^Cannon Batn 1 TEL-HURON _ CENTER Cigarettes Regular........*2" ® Discount King Size and Filter .^2^’ Prices smA slice fesfe WITH A BRIGHT FUTURE! Women’s Children’: TENNIS SNOES You've Never Owned a Lighter Pair of Goif Shoes Than These Hush Pkippies* Perfect for Almost Anything' bruthin' brushed pigskin by Wolverine for the beach, around the house, or in the yard Large Assortment Plastic Flowers WIRE. Trash Burner 17 CHARCOAL BBIQUETS .T.T.eV Children's Colors Widths: Narrow, Medium, Wide Colors: 2-Tone Gray, Houn' Dawg Also Available In Women's Sizes from '11 95 Women's IN WNITE ONLY Values to 2.99 OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9 SECURin CHARGE ACCOUNT SERVICE T«l-Huron Shopping Cantor FE 4-0259 ’’Oakland County’s Largest Shoe Store” NOUDAY SAVINGS GALORE AT CAMERA MART!! ENJOY A BACKYARD BARBECUE SAVE OVER $7.00 Only $go5 Fresh Ground the Quality Wrigley Wa^ Hamburger CADET* II OUTFIT Smart ntw 20 piece Cadet n camera outfit in fitted luggage-type carrying case. Camera takas 12 picturaa per roll, color or black-and-whita. No double axposuret... Flash unit off In a second... Camara, flash, and film un- In 3-lb. PNG. OR MORE 39 d 1b ilSOACHOieE^ Slide Sorters On Sal* Save Almost ANSCO FILM 29*^ 4-TRACK STEREO.^,, TAPES Liberal Trade-Ins E-Z Crodit Tormt Free Instruction! Wo Havo a Com plot# Rental Dopt. RIB STEAKS 79 T-Inch Cut (t 1b No Money Down-90 Days Same as Cash Tol-HURON SHOPPING center BE SMART, SHCP AT PONTIAC’S CAMERA AAART 55 S. Tolograph FE 4-9567 Oiorg* It—NaMoMy Dawn—90 Dwys Soma As CmK WEST VIRGINIA SEMI-BONELESS HAMS 59 Glendale Mich. Grade 1 Picnic Style Skinless FRANKS In 2-lb. PKG. OR MORE 33 1b US. INSPECTED—T TENDER, PLUMP FRYERS 25 Whole d 1b WHOLE or HALF , ’ ' ; ■' ,•- / ■ ‘J ■ ’i -'i I ■ '3 . I'ilU THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 30, 1963 "POOPDECK will be a special (Fri., May 31st-Sat, June 1st' FREE GIFTS FOR THE KIDS PLUS TREMENDOUS SAVINGS FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY Whole Month of June ! Plenty Special Price! DACRON-WOOL TROPICAL SUITS For Father’s Day Sewing Choose from our tvide selection of WASH W WEAR fabrics to make a gift for Dad, TARPOON 45 inches wide 100% Mercerized Combed Cotton ^1.98 TEL-HURON ChILD^ENs K 9th Anniversary mum Checks and Plaids..... KAYAK 45 INCHES WIDE MercCrieed Combed Cotton- $179 Solid Colors ■ yd- Fine Cotton Denim 36 inches wide Solid Colors 98?d. 12.99 BOYS' AllWeather Zip-Out Coats $088 SAILTONE 38 inches wide tAH Cotton- $p9 Dan River Checks 36 inches wide 79^d. Wash ’n Wear Solids HI-HO Seersucker 40'to 44 inches wide 36 inches wide, 100% cotton Little or No Iron Wash ’N Wear No Iron 1 to 10 yard lengths 29V Stripes and Prints 63 V SEW’n SAVE TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Security Charge ALL GIRLS'-BOYS' SPRING COATS Vi OFF Open Ev.ery Night 'til 9 TEL-HURON » r/-i . *' Use Your Security Chart* C 1.99 GIRLS' JAAAAICA SETS anniversary sale! summer fresh sun or shower coots 3.98 BOYS' Billy Tile Kid Casual Pants $297 Sizes 6 to 12 4.99 to 6.99 GIRLS' SPRING I JACKETS $2^7 and $477 1.99 Toddlers' PLAYWEAR 3, ennis Dresses-2 Pc. Sets^ ^ 4 27 1 Royon/cotfon blends in solid and novelty fabrics. Summer colors; sizes 8-16. shop every night monday through Saturday to Q_p.m. WINKELMANB TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENHR MEN’S and LADIES’ PLAIN TOPCOATS and OVERCOATS Cleaned and Pressed And Returned In "1 1 O Plastic Mothproof Bag. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 8b, 1968 U.S. Road Toll Record 11,630 CHICAGO m - tccl-dentt dalmed a record 11,00 Uvea tai flie nation during the &st four noonths of 1963, the National Safety Coaodl reports. Tim total was 4 per cent over the 11,160 deaths in the same period of last year and 1 per cent more than the previous record of 11,516 for the period recorded in 1166. April also posted a record 1,171, up i per cent from the previeas kl^ of 1,020 set in April, no. Des|dte the increase in deaths, the rate for the four-month period was unchanged from a year ago at 4.7 fatalities per 100 million vehicle miles traveled. The council explained the amount of travel increased S per cent over last year. Philadeli^a remained in first place among cities of more than one million pc^Milation with the lowest death rate. Chicago feU from third to fourth, exchanging places with Detroit. Los Angeles was second and New York City fifth. Services Have 'Plan' for Saving WASHINGTON (UPI) - TTie military has come up with a new way to save money. It is called “buying only what we need." Assistant Defense Secretary Thomas D. Morris pictured it a pretty radical program. He told Congress in testimony published this week is should cut costs by $1.3 billion a year. Take screwdrivers. Hereafter Army, Navy and Air Force mechanics will have to make do with 235 dilferent kinds, ihapes and modek. They formerly needed 526. It is the same way with more than 1 million other common-use items bou^ -for the sqtffltej ply Agency. SAVING “Brow^wd orireri7ear1^^ _r •. be iLdling 1,468,000 items, Mor-ris said, and a year after that it diould be saving $102 million per year. Also die military is going to quit “goldplating’’ these items. That tends to run prices way up, Morris said. ’There was the case of the clip an engineer specified for holding electronic tubes in place on a mksile. Poland Mixes Good, Bad Conditions (EDITOR’S NOTE — UPTs chief European diplomatic eorreepondent ft on a tour of the Eatt European Commu-niit sotsUtte countries. In the following dispatch he describes life in Poland’s Copt‘S ted of Warsaw.) ByK.C. THALER WARSAW gra|4iy of what has happened to him in the last few months. Hiey are stuffed with half-used match packets, old business cards, old sweepstake tickets, photos Of his children, photos of his friends’ children, photos of strangers’ children, invitations to weddings that already have ended in divorce, a summons to jury duty for a case long ago settled, ticket stubs for air trips taken weeks ago, last season’s suburban Helicopters Due Troops in Viet Nam WASHINGTON OB - The Army soon will start replacing with new turbine-powered helicopters the worn 10-year-old ‘‘Flying Banana” choppers it has been using to haul Swth Vietnamese troops into battle against Communist guerrillas. The changeover, slated to begin In July,, is expwted :live opeTatiOn, asTvrall as fewer helicopter mishaps and losses due to engine failures. When the United States began Its big effort to support the anti-gnerrilla drive of the South Vietnamese about U months ago. It had to send In iHiat was avallabie. Since then, the 1953-vintage H21 choppers have flown thousands of miles on missions against the Communist guerrillas, and U.S. Army mechanics have been hard put to keep them going. ' For one thing, the Flying Ba-. nanas’ gasoline engines have labored and often broken down in the heat and humidity of South Viet Nam. - The turbine motors of the new . UHL Iroquois are not affected by such climatic conditions, authorities Said. Also, their engines are less • complicated, making them easier] to maintain. Their cruising speed is about 104 miles an hour. ‘ Rainfall in the central sections of Brazil averages more than 300 inches a year. In some parts of the country the annual rainfall reaches as much as 400 inches. t STORE HOURS: • Mon. and Fri. 9:30-9:00 ■ Wookdays 9:30-5:30 , ^ V. R.Chrutetuem,Mgr. 162 N. Saginaw St. >Q|i!steniQut» ,4.-1 I V, REFRIGERATORS and FREEZERS TOP imuio ii-eu. Ft. REFRIOEMTOR $599 mug $4991 SALE IN PONTIAC MAU STORE Hur* Qiw discounts that guorontoo to moko opplionco prico history in Pontiac! ... Ovor $2,000,000 in top brands havo TELEVISION PORTABLES and CONSOLES —ll boon movod from our warohouso to our storos. Many itoms now in cratos. Floor sanr»plos ropos and domos pricod accordingly. Pricos F.O.B. storo. Hundrods moro not advortisod. Hurryl NO MONEY DOWN $299.95 GIBSON 14 cu. ft. 2-dr. com-plotoly frost-froo in ro- $1||4 frigorotor-frootor | Dw 199.95 HOTPOINT 10W cu. ft. upright *142 $259.43 HOTPOINT 12 cu. ft. 2-dr. itfrigoroter-frooxor. Super $104 Doluxo lof $199.95 NORGE IS cu. ft. Chest frooxor - gg Smash Prico I DO $249.95 ADMIRAL 16 cu. $1 fiJ ft. chest frooxor IwD $192.95 WESTINGHOUSE 10 cu. H. . upright 1144 ffwxpr.,.. W.I5TINTOlOOSE'‘TTTSr™W."' 2-door rafrigoraW-frooxor $100 2 crispors-dbluxo ffoturas | $34^.95 WESTINGHOUSE 14 cu. ft. 2 - dr. rafrigorator with $4C4' Giant frooxor on bottom .. f AIR CONDITIONERS • FANS • DEHUMIDIFIERS *115 rmiwn yMw'i imk9*I. $299.93 FEDOERS 1-h«r9* power oir conditieiior—clock control 8,000 BTU'S. 80 oorly.... 1 DO $199.95 PHILCO 1-H.P. 7000 BTU oir-conditionor. Thi9 will go ^ ^ $199.95 WELBILT cotomont window oir conditionori, 1 -herto power — thormottol .... *136 $99.95 RCA WHIRLPOOL dohumidi-fior with built-in humidi- $C4 9tot - Doluxo..... 0& $89.95 GIBSON dohumidifiori with built-in humidiitot — $RQ largo capacity........... OD $299.95 WELBILT 2-hor«o power oir conditioner — doluxo - $1*14 cool your whole homo---- I IW 20" window font...... GAS and ELECTRIC RANGES DETROIT JEWEL 38" GAS RANQE RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-OVEN 48” ELECTRIC *09 *199 ADMIRAL 18” ELECTRIC RANQE *124 MAGIC CHEF 30" got ranges Very Doluxo — Giont oven ^ 92 $219.95 ADMIRAL 30" oloctric - fully ipor-dupor $^20 $119.95 HARDWICK opt. siio got range. Doluxo $77 4-bumor............ if $199.95 HOTPOINT 30" oloctric *153 GENERAL ELECTRIC Connittor. 1-H.P. Voc. cloonor. »27" *8" HOOVER Polithor. Doluxo medol “47" ‘8" GENERAL'ELECTRIC doluxo up- S”:W mixorwith 2 bewit.... SUNBEAM oloctric fiy-pon. Largo (ixo. With cover and $1188 centrolc................. II O.E. top dohixo model heir dryer: Suitcato itylo. Top $1488 footurot............. Is WESTINOHOUSE ro«tor,_1J-qf capacity. Co ' ploto mool.. WESTINOHOUSE top doluxo hair dryer. Sort (ollor. All d^uxo footurot. Suitcato $ ^ 088 FAMOUS BRAND STEREO *141 *101 4-Spodd VM outfc Doluxo ooddceniolo With FM-AM radior' molic changor. 4- comb.Multi^1 ox 4-Spood automatic Spoakon. Hand ready. 4 • Speed ttoroe. Multiplex SA9.9S ADMIRAL pertabla ttoroe - automatic 4 - tpood m A m changer - 2-tpoakort W Few loft-Hunyl...... S349.9S GENERAL ELECTRIC AlU-FM ■ FM ttaroo *221 *86 $299.95 UlEFUNKEN ttoroe wi AM-FM theit wave radio - 4-tpaakon m '*191 $149.95 Foreign Import Sleioo CembinaHon with AM-FM radio-A-tpoek- *79 $169.95 GENERAL ELECTRIC 16" lightweight portable TV's — hondlo-ontonno, 22 lbs... *| ZD $199.95 PHILCO 23-TV Low-boyt, Doluxo cool chassis............ I tiU *383 $249.93 GENERAL ELECTRIC 23" TV low-boys. Wood WASHERS • DRYERS • DISHWASHERS •83 $249.95 WESTINGHOUSE heavy duty automatic washer. Multi - speed. $11^ Suds-wator savor door_ IVW $169.95 HOTPOINT portable dishwasher. Rolls around on $T49.95 RCA WHIRLPOOL automatic Dryer - 2dund chkken. Just give this coupoN to the cashier and yout chicken will only cost you47c. • Travel Service Flower Shop Vanity Fair i Ted's, Pontiac Mall i • Finance Service~ -discount COUPON-. CLIP THE COUPONS • Water Softener Service Fresh, Smoked and Roasted v POLISH KIELBASA 69 lb. • Community Room for Groups B**N* S9c FRI. and SAT. • ONLY ... AT THESE 1 SPECIAL PRICES! ' With this coupon you will receive 1 jar of our own Sam & Walter Homemade Horseradish FRIi with a purchase of Klelbasa.; i\|pi "H^l^tiacf M^,' flopping CiPAteir Spm ^Walter Sausage , Store 11 • iliii «■ “ Elizabeth La -DISCOUNT COUPON- Drip-Dry WASHABLE COHON SPREADS Reg. 12.98 $799 Full or Twin Size Matching 36" Tiers, Reg. 3.98......2.99 Matching Valance, Reg. 1.98.........99c In lilac, sandalwood, pink, turquoise and gold. Arden's Draperies 1 _____________i____________I- -DISCOUNT COUPON- Ladies' Mesh NYLON HOSIERY 2p-76‘= 2 for 96c Terrific savings for every woman. Stock up now on these two beautiful shades ... Sun-tone and Mistone. Sizes 9, 9ya and 10. S. S. Kresge -DISCOUNT COURON- Perutz BLACK and WHITE 620/120 FILM 4for$l Reg. 33c Shop Ward's complete photographic shop for all of your camera needs. Remember... at Wards you can say "Charge It". Montgomery Ward ^DISCO^T COUPON- 10*>Pound Bag CHARCOAL I 98c Value BRidUETS 49< : ,1 Selected hardwoods blended with hickory. 7 * Firm, quick-starting briquets ore best fw I oil outdoor cooking. Limit,; 2 bags ; | coupcm. Cunningham's 1 I u -.-DISCOUNT COUPON- Men's Slip-On or Oxford NYLON MESH . CASUAL SHOES $388 Reg. 4.99 \ I I -I* ,w ».7j i Cool, breezy nylon mesh . . . completely^ | woshobte. Cushioned insole for extra . fort. Beige or black . . . sizes 6Vs to. 12. * Becker's Shoes BRING IN THE COUPONS^ -.e e e 8™"^^ ^ 'which Kennedy, Macmillan and f"<* Macmillan would be willing * * * their disarmament experts have,^ ^ve the scientific meeting in “The birds are so swift, soWrked out constitutes the latest M^w or anywhere else agree-graceful to watch in flight, thatlof a series of efforts to break thej*"!* *" Khrushchev. But U.S. of-hunting with falcons is a thrill," deadlock in test ban negotiations f*®***® v"** "® *"®* he said. (Which have been bogged down at Khrushchev would agr^ to have Geneva since earlier this year, i**’® ^eeting at all.- They doubt (the Soviets are interested in re-iviving active test ban negotiations' “In fact, a near miss of a Geneva since earlier this year. game bird with a falcon can bel^----------- as spectacular as success. GUN HWVTER Coven - was .a longtime gun hunter but was lured to falconry, by its history, which dates back to Kubla Khan, and by the ease and lack of challenge with which game is killed with firearms. “If the average gun hunter took home as little game (as a falconer), he probably would give up hunting,” Cover said. He said although the percentage of kill is low, the swirl, dive desert atmosphere yesterday, and: play of nature against na- The test, only IM degrees un-tureJs “very exciting ” der the maximum the plane * * * I was designed to withstand, “It: is just as important to! charred the heat resistant black Rocket Plane Gets Heat Test at the mioment. EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. tJF> — An X15 rocket plane tested its steel alloy skin to an News in Brief A 65-gallon gasoline tank, valued at $88, was reported stolen yesterday from a fenced area Osmun between Hovey and O’Riley. The thieves cut a hole in the fence to cart off the tank, owned by Chris Nelson & Son, of Royal Oak. The relationship between medicine and the law will be discussed at the June meeting next Rusk said one reason for this Wednesday at the Kingsley Inn coidd be that the Soviete were,of the Oakland County Medical planning a new round of tests in their nuclear weapons development program. Another consideration in Moscow, he indicated, might be the re-examination of the split between the Soviet Union and Red (Tiina believed to be going on there. Society. Dr. Donald N. Sweeney Jr., of Detroit, and attorney Frederick G. Buesser Jr., also of Detroit, will lead the discussion. Scaffolding valued was $168.50 from Pontiac Mill Works. 2005 Pontiac Road, Pontiac Township, estimated 1,100 degrees Fahren-I cUjnnina Maanate Dies laccording to sheriff’s deputies. [. heit as it scorched above the rr » » LAUSANNE. Switzerland (AP) William Zatocil, 49, of 7371 Or- —Stavros Livanos, one of Greece’s three big shipping magnates, died Tuesday after suffering a heart attack Monday. hunt with falcdhs 'as when" j%u| B=mm— -----—• Puroow of the test was to de-' ™® Niarchos. and AristoW-enas-hunt with guns,” he said. j^rmiS^ how fast the plane heats; ®‘®> ® Livanos ranked as La*'® Farmington Township, yesterday was found guilty of driving under the influence of liquor and fined $90 plus Gerald Eichman, 4426 Cass ^ jldilllllC IIUW Idoi UlC UlCllIC lICClIiOl , 11 I ' “When the dog points game, ' conditions similar toi^n® on the smaH Greek Elizabeth. Waterford Township, mIIUCI t^llUUlUIIS Mlillldl iU # re xU m. I ' U you release the falcon from yourijj^gg it survive later this‘s*®nd of Chios off the Turkish wrist and he is trained to fly Lear when it plunges back into!®®nst. at one time lived in the 200 to 300 feet above you. I the atmosphere from record alti- United States and in London. FLUSH BIRDS hides of 350,000 to 400,000 feet. ---------------------- “When the falcon is in goodi w w -* position, you flush the birds and Space agency pilot Joseph A. the fafcon swoops.” ! Walker subjected the X15 to the Woman Dies in Crash MILAN (JWMrs. Pearl Betts, Cover said falconry is an inexpensive sport, but requires great patience and much work. searing temperatures for eight hs, was killed yesterday when seconds yesterday as he traveled jthe car she was driving turned 3,750 mjles per hour at an esti- over on a street near her home mated 90.000 feet. !here. told police yesterday that a wrist watch valued at $40 was stolen from his locker at High School. WASHINGTON (AP)-A senior member of the House Agriculture Coniidittee will try to keep alive the law that lets farmers import Mexican field hanjls for Jobs for which American workers are unavailable. The House, in a surprise move, voted Wednesday to end the 12-year-old bracero program. ’The action came on a 174-158 roll call vote. Rep. E. C. Gathings, D-Ark. chairman of an agriculture subcommittee which reconunended passage of the legislation, said he doesn’t think the nation is ready to deny farmers “the right to have some labor.” BERLIN (AP) - The United States is protesting that a Soviet jet fighter shadowed a U.S. air transport plane over East Gct-many en route to West Berlin. A U.S. spokesman said the Soviet fighter violated corridor rules by maneuvering within 200 feet of the C97 four-engine plane shortly after it entered the lane Wednesday. The Soviet craft dogged the transport until it prepared to land at Tempelhof Airport. The spokesman said aiToral protest would be lodged with the Soviet member of the four-power Berlin Air Safety Center. OTTAWA (AP)—Canada’s new liberal government has presented Parliament with a budget providing for a record outlay for welfare measures. The $6,545,504,515 spending program for 1963-64 calls for high-stolen yestei^y er outlays for hospital insurance . welfare measures, the cost of carrying the public debt. Tries to Save U.S. Law on BrOceros American officials said today good progress is being made toward settlement of 50-year-old border dispute with Mexico. Despite the progress, however, these sources said there was Vio pro^ipect of negotiating a mutually sati^actory solution to the squabble before President Kennedy travels to the vicinity of the disputed territory next Wednesday. Neither, they said, was there any chance of a meeting at that time between Kennedy and President Adolfo Lopez Mateos of Mexico, even though the American chief executive will be just a river BLAMES ABSENTEEISM Gathings said U,S. farmers need bracero labor to plant and harvest their fruits and vegetables, sugar beets and cotton. He blamed absenteeism for rejection of the two-year extension. All told, 102 members failed to vote. Fifty of them were paired for and against the bill. The Kennedy administration had recommended the bracero law be extended for only one year. The two-year extension turned down after more than two hours of heated debate, which reached its peak when Rep. John E. Fogarty, I>R.I., charged “if there was ever a slave labor piece of I^islation adopted by the (Congress, this is it.” Fogarty and other opponents of the Mexican labor program charged it is immoral and depresses the wages of domestic farm laborers. nRM OPPOSITION Religious groups and labor unions had lined up in firm opposition to extension of the labor-importing measure. Advocates of the extension argued the Mexicans are called civil service wages and technical]!" *" Amer- and vocational training. ‘®"" laborers will not do. The program also boosts the de-l'*’’®y ®*assisifed it as “stoop la-fense budget by more than $38 **"*'• ’ million to $1,628,833,538. /^q^^Wo/fon CouiaVe t/se Wife Like This Open for summer, enrollments 9 to 9, guitar, accordion, banjo, piano. Music Center, FE 4-4700. Adv. Today in Washinngton Nike Zeus Scores 5th Success WASHINGTON (AP) news from Washington: ON TARGET: The Army’s Nike Zeus antimissile has scored its fifth success, this time intercepting a Titan I intercontinental bal- ; Ustic missile. Saint Andrews Thrift Shop, Hatchery Rd. Drayton, open Fridays 10-3. Selection of formals. —Adv. ITER, N.Y. 13 - Stan DuBurck has a fish story to tell and a 14-pound muskie mounted in his den to prove it. After two fruitless days’ fishing in the St. Lawrence area, he decided to use a special, scientifically designed lure. Still no luck. Rummage sale Saturday June 1, 128 W. Pike. Adv. Rummage Sale, David Belisle, Auxiliary, 4102 VFW, Friday, May 31, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.. Sat., June 1, 8 a m. to noon. V.F:W. Hall, 4680 Walton. -Adv. In the A contrasting variety of prod- partment, musical instruments, ucts and services will be featured, business machines and photo-Bradermansaid. They will include graphic equipment. About 170 a service station, a maintenance American firms will display their]and Monday 10-6. 1457 Joslyn at and repair shop, a seed cleaner, i products and technology. Walton. —Adv. supermarket meat packing de- Rummage Friday, Saturday FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) Frankfort was the only capital of a nonseceding state to be :aptured by the Confederates during the Civil War. The capture by Kirby Smith Sept. 3. 1862, marked the high point of the Southern effort to Kentucky. The Confederates lost the city one month later. “Hmmmph!” said h i s wife Lucile, “this lure is much too ver to give it dash and sparkie.” She rummaged through her pocket and found a plastic rain-hat with a silvery luster. Fashioning the strap into a bow, she affixed it to the lure. “Try that, she said. The lure is now mdiiflled along with the fish. Capture of Frankfort Unique in Civil War U.S., Mexico Gaining in Border Dispute Talks WASHINGTON (AP) - Topi Juarez, Mexico-Just across ^ river from El Paso — on June 5« However, Mexican officials said Wednesday night that this was not true; that Lopes Mateos will be in Jalisco Province at the time. The capital of the province is Guadalajara, some 750 miles from El Paso. bank away from Mexican soil. The source of the border trouble is 450-acre area which the United States claimed as part of Paso, Tex., when the Rio Grande, ^e traditional border between the-neighboring countries, abruptly changed course early in this century. STIRS SPECULATION A White House announcement Tuesday that Kennedy would The disputed territory, little known outside Mexico and parts of southwestern United States, is called El Chamizal. Until the Rio Grande changed course, El Chamizal indisputably was part of Mexico. FAT OVERWEIGHT our irag Ml • SMtor'i »r»-ru( eallc4 ODUNEX. iflZ hi !■ 7 *r T0«r money back. No •IrenMot eierelor, loxollTro, monsf* or lokiny ol n-«oUo. ★ ★ A But this, according to men who stood on opposite sides of the issue, does not mean the farmer wants the government out of agriculture. Carl Shnmway, chairman of die State Agricnitnral Stabiliza-tioa and Coaservatkfii service, said, after reflectfaig' bn tte vote, “The farmers were confused over the vriwle issue. They voted ‘no’ because they weren’t sure. “They do a lot of criticizing of these controls hut I think most of them realize it’s an impossibility to survive with the ment out of agriculture,” said Shumway, who operates a 279-acre farm near Tekonsha in Od-houn (bounty. SO MUCH Shumway claimed, “We couldn’t run on a supply and demand basis because of our ability to supply so much of any commodity.” .* . Agreeing with Shnmway was Clarence Prentice, the secretary-manager of ^ Michigan Farm Bureau, which lead the fight against adoptlen of the U.S. Department of Agriculture plan. “The entire objective of the ex-oxise was to indicate the Farm Bureau members felt there is a better way to accomplish the objective of .fair and reasonable prices to farmers. I think it indicated farmers are fed up with the attempt to have supply-management control,” Prentice said. ★ ★ ★ But despite the feeling against s u p p 1 y - management control. Farm Bureau and the American Farm Bureau Fe^^eration have never indicated that a coutyletely free market is either possible or practical. “But there is a method of doing it that would allow the farmer to voluntarily make his choice. The farmers should be vohmtarity allowed to take their land out of production.” Such a plan, knom as the land retiremait progrm, was introduced to CaagreA this week as ★ ★ ★ . WASHINGTON (fl-The Kennedy administration will ask Coni^ss in the near future for funds to administer the 1964-crop version of its feed grain pro-^rity for the corporation to Man to Reach Moon Before Animal—Glenn TOKYO (UPI) - Marine Lt. Col. John H. Glenn Jr. predicted today that tlje first U.S. spaceship to reach the moon will carry men rather than experimental animals or automatic nuudiinery. America’s first man in orbit told the foreign correspondents’ club that the flights made so far by U.S. spacemen proved that man can operate safely without excessive automatic protection. To Ask Funds for Grain Program gram. Its success or failure in obtaining these funds could greatly affect the program. The bill signed by President Kennedy last week extending the feed grain program for two more years required that the Agriculture Department get from Congress funds needed to administer the program. There was no such requirement under the 1961, 1962 and 1963 programs. Administrative expenses were advanced by the department’s Commodity Credit Corporation just as that agency advanced funds for payments to farmers who idled a port of their feed grain land to help reduce su^- The new program deleted au- supply expense funds under an amendment offered by Rep. Robert H. Michel, R-IU., who said he wanted to close the “back door to tile treasury.” Michel said administrative expenses for the 1961-63 programs totaled $101 million and that the proper committees of. Congress had not been given an opportunity to pass on the (xists. ★ ★ ★ It Is significant t)iat an opponent of the feed grain program is chairman of the Senate Appropriations subcommittee on agriculture — Sen. Spessard L. Holland. D-FIa. He told (Congress last week that Active at Africa Summit he regarded the feed grain program as defective and dangerous. He said he hoped a more moderate and acceptable i»x-gram will be provided by (3on-ress. The feed grain propam requires much administrative work. Planting bases must be determined for each farm. In additioB, It is necessary to get agreements from farmers regarding their degree of partioipatioa. if any, in the program. Then acreages of planted grains must be checked to determine compliance. ★ ♦ ★ Should (Congress start working on alternative grain programs, Holland, as head of the Senate money committee, might well be able to prevent appropriation of funds for the preient feed grain program. Selassie's Efforts Stir Memories By PHIL NEWSOM Twenty-elgnt years ago Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia pleaded in vain for League of Nations action to regain his any real African unity is years awa^^tig^Mti^^timistic-asr Yet the fact that agreement as reached on any charter at all represented a signal tri- Ben Bella brought the confer ence-lo its.^t Jia tiie j«lfc|4^pc8te Mid to be united^anticoIbniaF ism. He said he had 1(1,000 volun- They were Nkrumah, long an of_ a strong central gates they “musTlM^’’now^ perish,” and Sir Abubakar Ta-fawa Balewa, prime minister of ism, notably in Portuguese Mo-For meeting in Africa. Hall zambique, Angola and Guinea, were such personally ambitious leaders*as Resident Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic, Premier Ahmed Ben [Bella of Algeria and Pfesident Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana. I Italian invader, served inad-Ivertently as the Icatalyst which ■ended any hope I for the league as, |a world force. Last week ini lAddis Ababa the'MHJTANT NEUTRALS And brought together were NEl^M emj^ror served militantly, neutral African as a caWyst of another sort ,^^^8 as the (^sablanca group ^ and the more moderate and more that ^ds 0 state or their rep-, ^o-^^tern Monrovia group, resentatives from 30 independentr “ African nations met in Addis Deeply involved witii his ef-Ababa’s new Africa Hall to draft' forts to bring Syria and Iraq a charter of African unity. . into the U.A.R. and with sne-* -k * cess still in doubt, Nasser con- Speeches of the various leaders tented himself mainly with the themselves made it obvious that' role of observer. Tlie two first had collided in 1960 when Sir Abubakar coldly informed Nkrumah that Nigeri-u ♦Hot if ans had not given up one form of ^ Wly u> ran they would have to “die a little or, if necessarily, entirely.” But he also advocated the go-slow policy espoused by Haile Selassie. TTie conference also brought together two antagonists of long standing. to another. INDEPENDENCE FITS As leader of one of the richest and most populous states in Africa, Sir Abubakar can afford to be independent. Nkrumah is an ambitions ^----------------------- man whose ambitions extend |of making the charter work. considerably beyond tiny Ghana. Snspiclons of his mo- Alricaif' the conference. But Nkrumah did not quit the And in the end, the African leaders adopted a charter much like that of the Organization of American States. It has a secretariat, a budget committee and the mechanics to develop unified activity in the fields of politics, education, defense and communication. The results werq a personal victory for Haile Selassie. They also left up to him the hard job T0Pi% AND 36 >0 46 MIRACLE MILE FASHIONS FOR GRADUATES Whathar You Ara Graduating From Junior High, High School or Collaga - You Will Find All ^ ^ Your Clothing Naadt Hara HANDSOME SUITS SUMMER OR YEAR ROUND WEIGHTS TROM^ Comfortable SPORT COATS IRICS fEIQHTS $|g95 TERRIFIC VARIETY OF FABRICS AND PATTERNS SUMMER AND YEAR ROUND WEIGHTS FROM OPEN A 90-DAY CHARGE ACCOUNT NO CARRYING CHARGES MEN’S WEAR MIRACLE MILE SROmNO CENTER STORE HOURS 9:30 Until 9:00 P.M. Man Requests Court to Jail His Daughter THETFORD, England (UPI) -Pensioner George Hitchcock, 73, asked, the court to send hts daughter Winnie, 39, to jail because she refused to leave his Judge Carey Evans ordered her to jail for six weeks but sus-'ppdgd jsentencemcoiKUUon she [ leave her father’s home. NY Flights Delayed NEW YORK (UPI) - Fog delayed at least 70 flights in and out of Idlewild and La Guardia airports yesterday. The delays were expected to continue throughout the day. part of a Farm BuredO^backed feed grain and wheat program. Prentice, and other Farm Bureau leaders, are hopeful the Congress will adopt either this proposal or another bill that would provide crop controls less restrictive than would have been in effect if the referendum passed last week. Prentice said, “With the kind of vote we had. I’m tore all who are in position to pass oa legislatioii wfll take into consideration the farmer. “The vote indicated the farmers feel there is a free enterprise method of getting the job done without the complete c IIIOiOO Screen •. * •., $18.00 8*24.lte.. 9* 3-Llte . . lOM-Lite... ON ORDER- . . .. UliOiO Screen 10.00 .. .. 172.65 Screen......... 16.00 >... 224.70 2Screens........... 27.20 2x4 8 Ft. Long, Precision Trimmed . .f 99“ DRY LCDGEPOU PIKE STUDS Construction and Better-25% Std., 10/15% Utility 2x4.Ft.lnng...................^ 94»» WESTERH PINE SHEATHING .......$87.00 Kiln Driod - Full 28/S2» Thiok 1x6 No. 4 Surfaced 4 Sides.................... ... 1x12 No. 4 Surfaced 4 Sides............ 1x8 Shiplap No. 3 1x6 No. 3 Centermatch ........................... 08JO PLYWOOD SHEATHING (CERTIFIED GRADE MARKED) * Shwet 5/16'*-4'x8* CD.........$2.40 100 Pieces or More.... 2.24 3/8«-CD.............. 2.72 80 Pieces or more .. 2.56 7/2 - 4'x8‘ CD 5-ply ........... 3.36 ' 60 Pieces or more .. 3,20 5/8" - 4'x8* CD 5-ply .. 3.84 50 Pieces or more... 3,68 5/8 — 4*x8* CD Plugged 1 side.4.08 50 Pieces or more... 3,92 ALPHALT SHINGLES 219lb.Tiif-Tabs Sfibs 235 lb. Tuf-Tabs £69 All Colors.. ......... U 180 lb. Saf*T-Loks 790 .WhHo and Mint Frost... I 235 b. St.Moiw TIO Whito end Mint Frost.... I YOUR COMPLETE BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER REYNOLDS SOFFIT SYSTEM Perforated Soffit Coil — 12"-50-Ft.Cbil.................. .$19.20 24"-50-Ft.Coil.................. -30.00 48" - 50-Ft. Coil................. 64.66 ^Straight Fascia and fnezo Runner .y^Tq:FnMgnir::rrr:^ 8"-10-Ft. Length.................... 2.85 10" - 10-Ft. Lengths.....: ......... 3.05 Comer Trim Angle 1 %"xl %"x20"... per pc. .55 Channel Runners ........10-Ft. Length 1.44 MAGIG-UTE GARAGE SIDING Dry White Spruce, Kiln Dried i ooo bd ft. 1x6 Pattern 106 —. _ No.2and Better.................$122.50 H 9x7 %"x8 Doily Vaiden.................. 125.00 %"x8 Dolly Vorden 7 Cleorand A Grad#................ 175.00 lOX/ PNEHIX GARAGE DDDRS RANCHER Fiberglass Aluminum Frame $ 85« 142’® 9x7 16x7 5-Section Roll-up with Lites, Glazed $ 131 BO WRGU6IITIRGN mURSliefli RAILING • Only 3 basic part* rModod • Adjusfabla for any type Indallotien I y /**”**“•-** • Eoiy-^Mlow imtallatiaw All part* ara finMiod In ruit mittant, non-blood block primo. No ipociol tool* roguitod to crooto o profouional lob. 4‘ Adjustable Railino Section 30" Hi^... 6'Adjustable Railino Section 30" High....li. DJI 36" Fie4)rilled Newell Pest..............Ie« Fitting............... .V..........Sit of Four Newell Pest Flange....-................. le. JW‘ Lamb's Tongue............................ll. Combination Railing Ind and Column Scmll... It. 1.11 Flat Celumn-8' High. 9M" Wide......... Iiu I4I Comer Ceiumn-6' High. 9H"k9H" Wide.... . la. 1IJI HeartOmoment........ ....................la. .ID ................la. .70 CASH AND CARRY PRICES / REVERE WATER HEATERS Glass-Lined Featuring... • 10-Year Guarantee • Fiberglas insulation - • Baked Enamel Finish • AAagneslum Anode Rod • 100% Safety Shut-Off Controls .Gas Ifartnral or LP Bsftl. Gas 30GaL....................*48“ 40 Gal..:................*57“ ITfefrro^Atfo AyiUabte ~— KITCHEN ^ SINKS^^ Less Trim Cast iron Single Bowl...........$16.75 Double Bowl............- 21.25 Porcelain Steel Single Bowl........... 6.95 Double Bowl............ 9.95 Stainless Steel Single Bowl w/built-in Rim... 21.95 Double Bowl w/built-in Rim... 27.95 IMOEMIUID TDWNHDUSE Gvm, Ceok-To|i Conbiatfion Built-in L>eauty at less than the I built-in cost. Slides into space normally occupied by 24" or 30" labir MODERN MAD UNDERCOUNTER ^ DISHWASHERS ■ij Tk:sr24"»i55” ....*17G“ 24-»139” Copportone or ^4 I9Q70 Brushed Chrome Front........ I Ov 30" Gas 30"..,.,. GARBAGE DISPOSALS ,*24“ Whisper-Quiet, One Year Warranty FINANCING ASSISTANCE AVAILABLE ‘ INDEPENDENT TRUCKING SERVICE ON HIGHWAY M-53 l!4 MILES SOUTH OF ROMEO OPEN 7:30 to 5:30 Monday thru Saturday PHONE LUMBER, BUILDING SUPPLIES 752-3501 -r—f- PLUMBING, HEATING _ EUCTRICAl 752-3504 \ B—16 Tins rONtTAC PRKSS. THURSDAY.l^rAY 30, 1063 ONE mm NEW ERA '&mQu!pUuu:f 0&. 17-19 S. Saginaw St. We Have Moved to Our New Location Celebrating a Quarter Century of Progress Be Inspired Srouse through our home-loverM paradige bursting with glorious new creations and decorating ideas! Be rewarded hr selecting your new furniture from the *'HONOB ROIL'* of America's quality manufacturers. 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS ‘ PROVINCIAL • COLONIAL • TRADITIONAL • MODERN ... All by America's Leading Manufacturers Open Fri. and Mon. TILL 9 P.M. Ror Your Convenience KROEHLER 2^PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE ^iKt from beautiful 100% nylon covert. All fhete tbitet have reveitible zip-off covert. All cuthiont are foam-filled for solid comfort. Your choke of beautiful celort |l> fit any decor. $199 Value. BUDGET TERMS 17-19 South Saginaw St. Divi.ion of Thomoi Jowolry Co\ l|»e. lAtcaled in the Former J.(C. Penney Qo. Bldg IN DOWNTOWN PONTIMt :V> THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1963 C—1 Bake Meat Loaf in Ring fJll With Vegetables 2 eggs, slightly beaten Combine ground beef, pork sausage, carrots, LOAF IN A RING - A unique way of serving an old favorite! Our meat loaf mixture has been baked in a ring mold. This savory combination of ground beef, sausage and" grated carrot along with special seasonings is unmolded on a large round platter. The center of the ring is filled with parsleyed potatoes. There's always a spot in any brnnemaker’s recipe repertoire for a really good ibeat loaf. Here’s an Ea^ Meat Loaf recipe that combines ground beef witld sausage and presents you with a perfcict mingling of flavors. While q)»dung (rf meat loaves it might be well to point out that there are lAany cuto meat that may be used for ground meat. Iiiere is often a tendency, when buying ground beef, to ask for “ground round.’’ Actually, it is hardly fat enough to make a tender, flavorful loaf without the addition of extra gound fat. Then too, round steak is often in demand fOr Swiss steaks and other braised dishes and it less ecmomicai for ground beef. Other cuts which might be used for a meat loaf include the chuck, fresh brisket, shank or plate. These contain more fat and they are cuts which are in less demand. YouH likely save from 10 to 25 cents per pound. Even though these meats are front the less-tender parts cf the animal they are just as flavorful and nutritious as the moke demanded cuts. They’ve been made tmider by grinding and for that reason they can be cooked by the dry heat method of roasting. However, as in all meats^ the roasting temperature for meat loaves most be low to moderate to provide the best possible dish. Easy Meat Loaf IVi pounds ground beef Vt pound fresh pork sausage Vt cup grated carrots beaten eggs. Mix thoroughly in a 9K5-inch loaf pan or 1-quart ring mold. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) 1% hours. S servings. 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce V4 cup chopped onion, if desired Cheese and Corn Flakes Stacked for Luncheon Make'Vncake sandwiches for lunch. Using a mix, prepare batter for 8 pancakes. Pour batter onto a hot lightly-greased griddle. Sprinkle each with a tablespoon of drained whole kernel com before turning. After turning, place 1 slice of process American cheese on each pancake. Stack two pancakes sandwich style and top with barbecued hamburger sauce. Serves 4. For a French way with eggs, poach them in red wine. Nice for lunch. Is Luscious Eating Cut a W-lnch thick slice of beef arm, blade or round steak into 3x4-lnch pieces. Sprinkle top sides with salt and thyme. Roll up each piece and fasten with skewer. Brown slowly in heated fat. a ★ ★ Prepare a smooth paste using tablespoons each flour and prepared mustards. Stir 1 cup catsup into paste, and then add % cup chopped onion, 2 toblespoons Worcestershire sauce, 1 teaspoon salt, y» teaspoon each ground cloves and black pepper and cup juice from canned peaches or crab appl.es, bread-and-butter pickles or sweet pickles. Stir to Mend and pour over browned beef rolls. WWW Cover pan tightly and cook slowly On top of range, or in 300 degree oven. Allow about hours for cooking. Yields 4 to ' servings. Don'f Serve J{js\ From Jar Relishes are a “must’’ at backyard cookou^ — and ripe olives fill the bill to perfection, w ★ ★ To givA them a rich-looking gloss, drain the olives well, dry paper towels and roll in a few drops of salad oil; season the oil with a little garlic powder, if desired. Q>at the olives with instant minced onion or chopped parsley for extra-added flavor goodness. w ★ ★ Pitted ripe olives m^ be stuffed with whole almonds or threaded oi) carrot and celery Sticks. For Pancakes Ever add drained crushed pineapple to pancake batter? Good with butter and maple syrup for Sunday’s extra-special brunch. Sauce for Meat Loaf To pep up a chicken or turkey loaf (nice with ham loaf for a change, too) try serving it with a sauce made by adding 1 table- spoon brown sugar, 2 tablespoons dapdrs, and 1 teaspoon lemon juice to 1 can (8-ounce) of tomato sauce. Simmer fifteen minutes and pour over each siice of loaf as served. I Add to Soup Water cress in the refrigerator? (3k>p enough to make half a cup and add to a couple of cans of chicken and rise soup. EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK WHY PAY MORE? SAVE at Thrifty’s! 1:00 Mennen Baby Magic... 62’’ 2.35 VO-5 Hair Spray_____1.59 1.00 Rinse Away Rinse____6V 69 Dr. West’s Toothbrush.. 37’’ 1.49 Life Hair Spray... 1.09 1.00 VO-5 Shampoo________58*= 1.59 Tampax 40’s.. . . 97’’ 49 Rubbing Alcohol pt... .2V NESTLE’S Hair Spray SUPER ANAHIST K»g. 98r I—FRIDAY, SATURDAY and SUNDAY—i I ON AU FWCHASES OF *5“ OK MORE 1 39‘ 39' 5~ Hollywood or Velvet ICE CREAM__________ Fresh . . . Crisp POTATO CHIPS Refreshing COCA COLA. . Half Gollon Full Mb. Bag Regular Size Bottle REMUS Quart Jar Dozen for • • KRAFT’S Salad Dressing MIRACLE WHIP HAMILTON—Grade ‘A’ LARGE EGGS. . Red Ripe WATERMELON. TO I HresITrL^ H^BURGER or CHUCK STEAlf Large Size 39 33 89 .'“iTlO' TREESWEET—Frozen LEMONADE. . ROMEO APPLE SAUCE Delicious Luncheon Meat O AC Armour’s Treet Con Bok.d ,b. mac Zion Fig Bors. . pkg. Yellow Loboj^ ^Qc Hawaiian Punch con Bird. Ey. ^10-or. OO* Frozen Cut Com w pkg.. Hot Dog or Hamburger Buns Mel-O-CrusTVuh^^^ Jr PitR' BONELESS PORK ROAST 29i 1 PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS J FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS »/UkWfPJIC aOHD BUMMTS I~ 4M L PKE ST. I NDADIIMin. I I OWN SUNDAY ».»« g 7 Ok « W..II [ fiwiwiulwni m ill Ilk Ptopla’s-Foed.Town Bonus Stamp Coupon Efl free GOLD BELL III iJKJ StBBips With Purchase ill of Any m BCEF STEW 113 Uinit 1 Coupon. Expimi Junn 2,1P63 ill? r-dUiwiWiwiwiwnmnsnwiwtwiwiwiwiwiwiwiuiWDj^) CsSt People't-Food Town tonus Stamp Coupon {sr / plj-------------- (5l (si C A FREE GOLD BELL II) CH FREE GOLD BELL Staaips With Purchase lJU Stamps With Purchase of Any ?i| of 10 Lbi. or Moro of BEEF ROAST II] fil POTATOES Umil I Coupon. Iiqiins Juno 2,1p63 CiWMM'»wunuMninialnu«Mww;wu)u;unijuiMW> r*wiWiipi Poopyt^Bdod Town Bonut Stamp Coupon jsr 02814977 THE PONTIAC PRtiSS. THURSDAY. MAY 80, 106a Individual Alaskas Are Based on Brownies “Bemuddled?” Thea be calm! Finding a dea-aert to steal show at your next party is easy with this neat mix trick. 5 minutes, or until lightly browned, in hot oven (4M d^ grees). Makes 12 servid^s. ones, are ttto newest leak tai Brewiles.^ Smoother fat, choeo> late-rkh brownies that have been topped with a generous slice or scoop of vnOIa or mint lee cream, with light«e-e«iond meringno and bake. After a. few minotes baking tlaoe, take from the oven n wonderful treasure of good eating. This excellent dessert that yields approximately 12 servings, can be put together anytime, wrapped and placed in the freezer, then baked when needed. ★ ★ ★ The making of this dessert is 1-2-S easy. 1. Pr^e and bake brownie mix; cool; cut in individual servings and place on aluminum foil- Beat 3 egg whites until ; Add 6 tablespoons sugar gradually. Beat until stiff and glossy. Cheese Spread Is Topping for Fish Cheese topping for fish fillets is easy to make with two ingre-dirats. Stir together 1 (Sounce) jar of sharp process American cheese spr^ and one-third cup of sweet pickle reUsh, well-drained. Stir over low heat until cheese melts. Pour over 1 pound of fillet of sole arranged in a greased shallow baking dish. Bake 25 minutes in preheated 375-degree oven. Serve on toast points or noodles 4. BROWNIES ALASKA-^amily or guests will like this surprise dessert. Brownie squares are topped with ke cream, covered with meringue and browned h) a hot ovoi. ,. Changh the character of this treat by changing the ice cream. Ham-Rice Skillet Dish a Quickie You wouldn’t have to turn a pretty little egg timer many times to count the minutes required to prepare Ham Medley. 'The combination starting with uncocriced rice is ready for eating dBSut 30 minutes after you decide to serve it! The combination is a savory blend of flavors. Cubed ham is cooked along with rice and seasonings, so that as the rice kernels sw^ to tenderness, they ab-SOTb the medley of flavors. Once the rice is tender, tomatoes, mustard and green pq>per are stirred in fm- good color as well as additional flavor. Accompany Ham Medley with well chilled greens tossed with fluted cucumber slices and crisp radish slices all dress^ with your favorite salad topping. Ham Medley can be prepared using regular white rice, parboiled or brown rice. Parboiled rice, yon know, has been parboiled before milling by special steam pressm-e process. The treatment aids in the retention of much of the natnral vitamins and minerab. Brown rice b the vdiole, unpolished grain of rice with ooiy the outer, inedible fibrous bull renooved. HAM MEDLEY 3 cups cubed cooked ham, % 2 cups water 2 beef or chicken bouillon cubes 1 teaqwoo salt V4 teaspoon pepper 2 medium oniims, thinly sliced 1 cup uncooked rice 1 can (1 pound, 4 oz.) tomatoes 1 tablespoon prepared mustard 1 large green pepper, cut into julienne strips . ’ Place ham in a large skillet. Add water, bouillon cubes, seasonings, and onions. Sprinkle rice over top. Heat to boiling, stir well, town' heat, cover, and simmer for IS minutes or untU rice b tendor. Stir in tomatoes, mustard, and green pepper. Heat throu^, about 5 minutes. Makes 6 servings. 2. Make meringue. 3. Place ice cream on top of brownies, cover with meringue and bake. That’s all ... but remember to have everything in readiness to serve thb scmmpUons dessert because it commands toe prompt attentba of yonr gnesb. Make Brownies according to directions on Brownie Mb package. CooL Cut into twelve pieces. I^ce pieces on dampened board which has been covered heavy brown paper or on baking sheet covered with 2 toidmessa of aluminum foil. Top each piece with a slice of hard brick ice Cover with Meringue (recipe below) being certain it completely covers the ice cream and comes down to paper. Bake 4 to Hollow Raw Carrots Fill With Cream Cheese Scrape small carrob (not more than 1-inch in dbmeter) and cut into halves lengthwise. Hollow out centers and chop centers very fine. Combine chopped carrots with a mixture of cream cheese and mayonnaise. Season to taste with celery salt and Worcestershire sauce. Fill carrob with mixture, and chill. If desired, cut carrob into 1-inch lengths for easier “hol-lowiag." Glazed Topping Enhances Cake A deli^tful use for wheie bran cereal b as an ingredieot in H(»ey-Top Date Cake. Thb date-nut 1^ cake b a tasty choice fb a picnip dessvt It has no stidqr frosting, but features a satisfying hooey and mwage glaze to provide flavor accenU Hsaey-TBpDate(htoe 44 ciq> sifted flour 1 teaspoon baking powder M teaspoon salt V4 cup chopped nutmeab Vt cup fi^ cut, pitted dates 3 tablespoons milk Vi cup soft butter or marganne 44 cup sugar 3 eggs, sqaarated W teaspoon vanilla flavoring 44 aq> all-l»an cereal 44 teaspoon ctnnstarch 3 tablespoons orange juice 144 tablespoons honey ★ ★ ★ Soft together flour, baking powder and salt; combine with nutmeab and dates. Blend butter and sugar. Add egg yolks, vanilla and bran; beat well. Add sifted dry ingredienb alternately with milk, mbing well after each addition. JBeat egg whites natil stifl bat not toy. Fold into batter. Spread in greased and lightly floared txt-iach baking pan. Bake In moderate oven (3N degrees) abont 41 minntes. Combine cornstarch, orange juice and honey. Pour over warm cake. Let stand until cool. Yield: 9 servings. SPRING SALAD - Apfletizing cubes of deviled ham, with boned chicken and grapes are the ingredienb to make a qring salad ^e luxe. Cubes of Deviled Ham Cut Into Spring Salad Salad days are here again. The family will welconw big, meat type salads packed with protein, vibmins and minerab galore. Such as thb one: Serve a “medley” of deviled ham, cubed, from the refrigerator, boned chicken and luscious white grapes for a very specbl spring luncheon sabd. ★ ★ ★ (Chopped celery and walnub add just the right “crunch." The taste of deviled ham, cut cubes (after it’s boon'diilled) gives thb salad novelty. Line the bowl with a bed of CFbp romaine lettuce before adding the ingredienb. Savory Sslad Medley 1 444-ounce can deviled ham 1 GKHince can boned chicken 44 cup chopped celery 44 cup chopped walnuts 44 cup French dressing 44 cup halved white grapes French Romaine mayonnabe Ptece deviled ham in freezer compartment for 2 hours before serving. Cut chicken into chunks and mix with celery, nub and French dressing. Just before serving on romaine, remove ham from freezer; cut into cubes and add to salad with grapes. Garnish with small bunches of whole grapes. Makes 5 servings. Combine 2 tablespoons sharp FrwKh dressing vrtth 44 cup may- HOFFMAN'S This Week’s SPECIALS Limits Do*en with $3 or More Purchaee HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES Open 9 to 6 Daily 9 to 9 Friday FE 2-1100 THE PQNIIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30. 1963 C-— Boiled Ham KilLOGG'S A CORN FLAKES 24 KHLOOO’S A RICE KRISPIES 37 khiogo’s i SPECIAL K ..1^1 26 SUGAR STARS ^Si: 25 NIAKPAST OP CHAMPIONS WHEATIES. . . 41 28 TASTY OAT CIRIAl A fgmm CHEERIOS .. .^^^27 KIO0IIS PAVORITE ^ ^ KORN KIX. .. X 28 POSTS POST TOASTIES 41^ 34 SUGAR CRISP 4°o> 36 f n e WHY PAY Sqvg On Soaps more? 10c OPP lAOn—31B. 6^Z. GIANT RINS0...59 7c rrP LABEL—UB. 4«Z. f LARGE SURF. . 24 34B. SHO-:. PKO. worn# GIANT CHEER .. .73 34B. IWOZ. PKG. GIANT TIDE__________73 AU PURPOSE—1.Pt. 12-Oc. Sic* w/Ammonia AJAX CLEANER. .59 KING SIZE—S.LB. 3>i.OZ. PI^G. B «||| OXYDOL ..... . KINO SIZE—44B. 1-OZ. PKO. B BREEZE..._____________H’ fc OPP UBEl—3.LI. 7Z. PKO. M Mt GIANT FAB ... 64 1.PINT 6-OZ. SIZE H*Ar IVORY LIQUID . .58 -’SUPER.RIGirr QUALITY—One Price os Advertised PORK LOINS ^27* ^37 “SUPER.RIGHT” CENTER CUT Porkdraps'^ 79° LEGS BREASTS ?**.«*? ei-r PARTS *^53 '^55 Barbecue Sauce r. 39e Aristocrat Saltines JANE PARKER—SAVE 16c CRESTMONT SHERBET OR MARVEL BRAND ICECREAM ^-49 Save On Cleaners, Polishes, Waxes Save On Paper Products SOAP PILLED S.O.S. PADS ..o7?i37 COMET........... JOHNSON'S FLOOR POLISH GLO-COAT ... CLEANSER AJAX ...... 1-QT. 1AOZ. CAN 14B. 5.0Z. CAN 14' 1J9 21' FOR WALLS AND WOODWORK A OT # SPIC&SPAN ..4^26 KLEAR 89* SUPERIOR PAPER PLATES '^^^79 ALUMINUM FOIL ALCOA............29 DIXIE A mmrn COLD CUPS . . .^^ 25 WAX PAPER CUT-RITE..........4t23 FACIAL TISSUE A B # sconiES ....."4.“ 21 7c OPP UBEL TISSUE m B # CHARMIN...4-26 Savo, On Bar Soaps more? Other Typical Everyday Low Prices CAMAY DIAL . DOVE. IVORY LUX PRAISE ZEST W 20* 17* 15* 14* CRACKERS AT NEW LOW PRICES—UB. PKO. 20* 14* Premium or Krispy 26* CRACKERS AT NEW LOW PRICES RHz or Hi-Ho . .. 36* CUPP’S—CHOPPED, 71i.OZ., 13c Baby Foods ..3r^25* OILUrTTE SUPER Blue Blades .. 69* JU|drlnj«B^ *, . . ,l2g, 69* HEAD B SHOULDERS—15c OPP UBEL Shampoo...............69* Crest .... 'ra" 69* Buy U S.Savings JBoilds REGULARLY MAVIS OR YUKON CLUB CANNED NO COUPON NEEDED! : ■ 1' BEVERAGES ORANGE or CHERRY V- 12-oz. m BottloB 3 Vi. 29c ^ POPSICLES V . , / i.. 12.39c RISDON'S Ask where you WORK LEMONADE The Kiddies Love 'Em! Ask where you BANK MOTT’S BRAND APPLE SAUCE”.^^18* DEL MONTE FRUIT A B « COCKTAIL %£S^31* COMSTOCK SUCK) AB« PIE APPLES ^21 SUCH) AND HAlVn YEUOW CUNO PEACHES monte can HALVIS—I.Ll. li-OZ. CAM THANK YOU BRAND 19' THANK YOU BRAND a ^ - KIEFER PEARS 27 CHUNKS OR TIDBITS DOLE A B « PINEAPPLE "^^21 DOU CRUSHED PINEAPPLE DOLE CRUSHED PINEAPPLE DOLE FRUIT COCKTAIL DOLE SLICED PINEAPPLE 1-LB. 4-OZ. CAN DEL MONTE PINUPPLE- a GRAPEFRUIT Dnni,25 ’♦'9K. CAM INSTANT om^m# TANG ..... JS\59 SUNSWEET A PRUNE Joic* 39 APPLE c'lf 25 i4ar 4k Bk# GRAPE»ri>i< sf^29 1-PT. 4k4kf GRAPE 33 DEL MONTE yjQj^ m 0RAIIGEJ»i» 'iS^ 44 GRAPE OMNk A . WELCHADE . ^ 28 PINEAPPLE 27* TMf eCCAT AUANTiC t CACItiC TtA teofAMT, IMC. All prkM in this od affnctiv* thrw Sot., Jwn* 1st in all Eaattrn Mkhiyon AAP Supar Morkett ill/'. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 80, 1968 Outdoor Meal Prepared in Kitchen HEARTY SANDWICH—First a thick slice of tasty rye bread is spread wiO) cheese and deviled ham. Then shredded lettuce and finally aspara^s spears topped with a smooth, but tangy sauce built it up. Fine for evening refreshments or a luncheon. New Open Faced Sdndwich Blends Medley of Flavors Surprise! Your family has dinner in the back yard as usual — but you bring them a meal-in-a^illet instead of their waiting fw the coals to bum low for charcoal-flavOTed steaks, frankfurters, o# chicken 11*y wlil love miniature meat loaves whose flavorful drippings have blended with frozen com as they steamed in the covered skillet or chicken braised with frozen mixed vegetables and cream. You prepar^ these meat-and-vegetabie combinations with plug-in small appliance or in a heavy skillet over low heat in the kitchen. It’s a welcome change to eliminate (at least once in awhile) the pesswork of outdoor cooking while having the fun of food-in-the-fresh-air. Frozen Corn Salisbiiry Steak SkUlet 2 packages frozen cut corn 14 pounds ground beef 14 teaspoons salt 4 teaspoon pepper > 4 cup minced onion >4 teaspoon oregano 2 teaspoons frozen chopped parsley 4 teaspoon sweet basil 4 cup milk 1 tablespoon vegetable oil, butter, or margarine 4 cup water 1 16-oz.) can tomato paste 4 cup chopped green pepper Remove frozen cut corn from Mae flenr, salt, and pepper aaid imixed vegetables and qirUde roil okkkea pi^ in it Meu- |with 1 teaspoon salt Cover and while, heat fat in heavy skUlet ^ Serves Brown chicken on aH sidea. Then add 1 cop coffee creani, the siked onioas, and the pars- ley. Cover and cook at simmering temperature for 20 minutes. Add With the skillet meala it is good to use frozen muffins or the frozen muffin batter that is ready-to-bake. Prepare one pan of frozen biscuits and one pan cif firozen muffins to give everyone a dioice.' Color Matters Not to Fowl Just as there are regkxial traditional preferences for white eggs or brown ones, so do choices vary in seiecting fresh feeding methods as well as processing to accommmodste consumer desire. Regsrdless of the colw, you can be sure it’s a fresh bird by ite bH^t, sparkling appearance, and that it has passed federal Inspection for wholesomeness and purity. golden yellow bird, sonae a U^ter yellow, and others a creamy white broiler or fryer. Skin color is regulated by Surprise your family! Garnish tomato bouillon with a slice of fresh orange. Interesting and delicious combination! Frwnch Toast Sandwich Nearly everyone likes French toast for breakfast. Vary this favorite by sandwiching slices of enriched white bread with marmalade or jam. Dip the sweet sandwidies in egg and milk apd fry as usual. Dust French toasted sandwiches with confectioners’ sugar for serving. Swiss steak braised in prune is a gourmet dish indeed. 5W1 ljulce Parties are fun most any month of the year. So select a date and invite your friends! Of course, you’ll want to serve refreshments with a party touch and Party Hamwic^ are just the diing. niese perky sandwiches are hearty, but elegant, too. — And they don't require lots of kitchen preparation time. The base husky slices of rye bread. The tip-top surprise, tender green spears of canned asparagus and a zippy dressing. Serve them with steaming cups of Tomato Bouillon and then wait for the Ohs! and Ahs! PARTY HAMWICHES Sandwicli: Two 3-oz. pkg. cream cheese, softened , for Relish Full of Avocado Two 44-oz. cans deviled ham ; storage and let at 6 diagonally - sliced pieces ryej temperature while pre- bread Shredded lettuce One IPoz. can green asparagus - spears, chilled and drained, or fresh asparagus. V« cup Italian - style dressing ^ cup mayonnaise or salad dressing 2 tablespoons prepared mustard 1 teaspoon prepared horseradish For sandwiches, blend cream paring remaining ingredients. Mix ground beef, salt, pepper, onion, oregano, parsley, basil, and milk. Shape into eight foot- Heat fat in skillet and brown ^ the meat cakes in it on all sides. { Mix water and tomato paste and| pour over meat. When it comes to a boil, add corn (uncooked)! and chopped green pepper. Cover cheese with deviled ham. Spread and cook*slowly 10 to 15 minutes. Transfer to warm platter or serve from skillet. Serves eight. Braised Chicken with Vegetables 2 packages frozen mixed vegetables 1 frying chicken (about 2 pounds) 4 cup flour 1 teaspoon salt 4 teaspoon pepper while preparing chicken. Com-4 cup shortening 1 cup coffee cream 4 cup frozen sliced or chopped onions 2 tablespoons frozen chopped -.-.rrrpafsley------------ ■ gdnerously on bread; top with shredded lettuce. Arrange 3 to 4 canned asparagus spears lengthwise atop each sandwich. For dressing, combine all ingredients thoroughly. Drizzle over s a n d w i c hes, allowing about 3 tablespoons per sandwich. Garnish with pkkie relish or small hearts cot from Celery for Relish SSTJ Tonuto Bouillon Dissolve 3 beef bouillon cubes ;in 3 cups boiling water. Stir in c., « j 1 I .. f ♦k-i* cups tomato juice, 1 teaspoon Stuffed celery is one Remove frozen mixed vegetables from freezer and allow to stand at room temperature I Expert Gives Advice on Barbecue Foods petizers, salads, sandwiches, | main dishes and even desserts. Sununer varieties of the fruit begin arriving in markets the end of May. Some of the avocados have dark, pebbled skins while, others are green-skinned. The fruit inside is the same the year- round — light green-yellow and ! The Memorial Day week-end' Salad may be a crisp green one j marks the official opening of the ^ that includes lettuce. Here you| m MODERII SmiNG BIIDtET PRICED! THIS BEAUTIFUL MODERN ENSEMBLE FEATURES STURDY CONSTRUaiON WITH A MARR AND SCRATCH RESISTANT ’’PLASTICIZED’* FINISH. SPARKLING BRIGHT BRASS HARDWARE — DRAWERS GUARANTEED NOT TO STICK — AND A BEAUTI-FUL HIGH GLOSS AMERICAN WALNUT FINISH. ^(TPCf. eoMPtere^ -1- • DOUBLE DRESSER • CHEST • BOOKCASE BED • TILTING MIRROR INNERSPRING MATTRESS ond BOX SPRING TWO VANITY LAMPS TWO PILLOWS NO MONEY DOWN $8 MONTHLY opm TTIT NO MONEY MON.. THURS., —FK TUBS., WED. TILL 6 47-55 SOUTH SAGINAW .ST. PARK FRKF, BEHIND Ol It STORK TO PAY delicious! Avecado-Stnffed Celery 1 California avocado 2 tabkspoonz kihon juice 1 teaspoon seasoned salt Dash cayenne pepper 2 tablespoons chopped pimiento celery Cut avocado lengthwise I barbecue season! Meat, salad, land easy dessert are the makings bf a successful barbecue, suggests the Consumer Marketing In-jformation Agent, Mrs. Josephine Lawyer. If beef steak is yom- meat into ichoice, remember that quality halves; remove seed and skin. Mash or force fruit through skvc. Blend In all remaining ingredients except celery. Cut cel-ery into short lengths; fill with avocado mixture. Makes about \ cup filling. and thickness are important for tender eating satisfaction. Select U.S. Choice or comparable quality and have steak cut at least one inch thick. Mix Spuds and Spinach in New Vegetable Dish have at least five lettuce choices.] ‘‘Iceberg,” sometimes called head lettuce, is by far the most important commercially. “Butter-head” is the type which gives us Boston and Bibb lettuce. Butter-head lettuce is known for its tender, buttery leaves. Cos,” or Romaine-type let- tuce has a loose head of stiff, broad, upright kaves. It is crisp, rather coarse, and pleasantly sweet. “Leaf,” or bunch- If the crowd is large, a thick ^ ■ lettuce,’Is nonheading. sirloin IS one of the better Stem lettuce, often called “cel- choices. Sirloin yields morel meat in relation to bone than has an enlarged stem and other steaks and It is easy to!"® head. Here the stem 1^“ the carve into serving size pieces. b®st part and it is usually peeled and eaten raw or sometimes Rib steaks are barbecue choke. These cost less than tenderloin, T-bone and club steaks, and are cut from the rib section. cooked. ‘TEAR OR CUT Whether to cut or tear lettuce Idepends on how soon you intend RioHa cIoqItc mil frnm ^® ^crvc it. If it Is to bc uscd im-Do try this combination! It’s],’the shoulder method will do. EH P-I, ..4 P.,..«, :s.l,l Torn* edge, ,h.. les, 1 package (10 ounces.) chopped ,, - frozen spinach-.......... jlPTe. booking tirne. Boiling water |BIG CHOICE Salt i Barbecue meats are almost un- 1 pound potatoes j limited. Pork ribs,, fresh 3 tablespoons butter or marga-|smoked ham, steak, and a bone-rine less roll of loin or shoulder are Freshly ground pepper to taste,excellent choices. Inexpensive Cook the spinach according to|l»'"‘» breast makes tasty riblets package directions using the'‘~* "a tened shoulder ® roast. Steaks cut from the lamb leg are barbecue favoriks for those who like lamb and lots of' ■bruising. atnount of boiling water and salt called for; drain. Pare potatoes and halve or ter and add 4 teaspoon salt; boil Fiddly, covered, nntil tender — 81 ts M mhintes. Drain potatoes; shake in saucepan over kw heat to dry; mash. Beat in butter, drained spinach, more salt if needed and pepper. Reheat over boiling water. Makn 4 to 6 servings.- A half-teaspoon of dry mustard and an eightfa-teaspoon of paprika are good seasonhigs to add to a four-egg cheese aouiffle. ■ Perhaps chicken is the barbe-cne choke of your family? Then look for birds that give the right size eating pieces when cut into halves or quarters. These range from about 14 to 24 pounds in size. No witchery is needed to cook at a grill. Experienced cooks know thah heat from coals, flames, is the right heat for per- You'll find a wide variety of lettuce salad companions. Celery, green onions, radishes, cu- now in good supply. ,For mild onion flavor and color variation, try red onion rings . . . along with your favorite oil and vinegar dressing. , That easy dessert may be ice cream, and the supply is abun-j dant at this time. Frozen berries, will make a colorful topping. Dessert could be a platter of fruit cut into bite size pieces. Although the selection is not large at this .season, you might include watermelon, bananas, canned peaches^ canned or fresh pineapple, fresh strawberries and a mound of instant sugar. Remember to have the skewers and marshn;iallows close by. Ka-| feci-reaults. Many have learned bqbs of bananas, peaches and that Michigan’s hardwood]pineapple might be the choice of. briquettes are a fine choice for groups, but children associate long lasting, even cooking tern- their marshmallows with barbe-' peratures. » jcues they remember. , | mm SUGAR SWEET SPARE Rl^ Lean Meaty 29 (t lb MELONS -...mmmmmimmm... HOT DOGS 3*79‘ Grade 1 Skinless Assorted LUNCH MEATS to tb • CALIFORNIA............... HEAD LEHUCE... • FRESH CRISP PASCAL CELERY.. • RED RIPE TOMATOES. 19° ■ • FRESH ’di.lO-pS’ ........... 2AM • rK»n v.cLLW-rAi^ _ 25‘ CARROTS_______________2 <"19' ■ ^ • FRESH ->■19° rePFERSorCOKES... CARTALOUPES. . 25° [ , OPEN ALL DAY t MEMORIAL DAY Grade 1 CHUNK BOLCXSNA .»» The Piece 29 lb. Grade 1 POLISH SAUSAGE Froth Hearty 39 lb. Grade 1 RING BOLOGNA 35.1 fRYERS Farm Fresh Graded URGE Froih Dreited ER6s39i Fresh, Lean GROUND BEEF 2 lb. 79“ SISTERS’ SUPER MKT. 608 W. HURON ST.^ Near Webster Schcx>l , Pric0. C.hnnfn>i Subject to Market Conditioiti >1 M ’|4 > -rr THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1963 C-# Texan Starts Movement for Romney Bid DALLAS, Tex. (J) — A former New York resident, now living in Dallas, has started a citizens movement here to support Michigan Gov. George Romney for the 19 64 Republican presidential nomination. ★ ★ * The head of the Dallas group, G. A. Zimmerman, 38, said his group has informed both the national and state GOP headquarters about tile movenvent. He said similar dubs are planned for Detroit, New York, Chicago, WasUngtra and Los Angeles. Advertisements have appeared in those cities and Zimmerman said the group has circulated about 1,000 windshield stickers in the cities. He said his group has not spoken with Romney. ★ ★ Romney represents the greater number of Americans who lean to the middle of the road, common-sense approach, rather than to the extreme right or left, Zimmerman said. Eight Escape Injury in Grand Rapids Fire GRAND RAPIDS m - Eight persons in two families escaped injury early yesterday when fire of undetermined origin caused an estimated $20,000 damage at a West>5ide Grand Rapids bakery. Fireman William Harti^ was treated at St. Mary’s Hospital for a cut finger in the only injury reported at the blaze. Flames were discovered by Harry Sadinski, an occupant of one of the two apartments above and their two children, alerted a family of four in the other apartment and all fled to safety. $3’Million Plan to Extend Gas Service in State MOUNT PLEASANT (fl -$3,282,000 program to extend natural gas service to Harrison in Gas Co. The company said natural gas by the next heating season. The project includes reactivation of the North Hamilton gas field as a storage facility plus constryction of 16 miles of transmission lines. John V. Rodenbeck, manager of the utility firm's Mount Pleasant area, said the program also calls for construction of some 8 miles of distribution mains within Harrison. Births The following is a list of recent Pontipc area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk's Office (by name of father): Rowland L. Bcnnftt, US 8. Edgewortb Frederic B. Jotinton. MU HUIcreit James F. McKenns. 3514 Mark Orr LeRoy W. CoUrell, 70S N. Dorchester Stephen N. Be,wick. 3060 W 13 Ml-Rlchord J. Brinkley. 1403 Ferris Leonard A. Wilcox Jr., 1513 N. Connecticut Msdisen HeKhts Rsymond K. Allen, 37073 Pslmer Frederick J. Werner, 20034 Tessmer Court Donald M. Cojne, 39103 Shirley SAVE 50‘”&SiSP DINNERI^RE 775 EXTRA VALUE WITH COUPONS IN THIS AD AND YOUR MAILED COUPON BOOKLET. SEE DETAILS BELOW CHOICE TINOERAY 4TH & 5TH RIBS 1ST 5 RIBS 1ST 3 RIBS FLB. FLB. Fib. Rir $TIAK WA^oiotCi » o 79& COMPLETELY CLEANED WHOLE Fresh HYGRADE'S SMOKED HALF FRYERS HAM HALF^^^^^ HALF Hh lewu.. so IXTRA STAMPS WITH COUPON AND PURCHASI OP ONI OR MOM CUT-UP PRYHS m 1 PKOS. PRYtt PARTS. TASTY FLAVQRPUL WHOLE . . . l. 43*. ECKRICH SMORBAS PAK .... u 79* > CENTER CUT RIB ^LB. GORDON'S ROLL PORK SAUSAOE HYGRADE'S BRII PARK WHMIBS. KROGE^LL white large eggs A "9R* DOZEN SAVE 7‘ ON 2-KROGER Perk & Beans. SAVE 9*-REFRESHING-PlUS deposit CHEF'S DEIIGHT-IMITATION PASTEURIZED PROCESS XheeseSpread..2 49* SAVE 6‘-MORTON'S CHOCOLATE. LEMON, COCOANUT OR NEAPOLITAN Cream Pies............. ..ch 39* SAVE TWICE 7« OFF Label plus b* coupon inside GOOD ON NEXT PURCHASE ^ WHITE OR COLORED CHARMIN TISSUE I2">u79^ SAVE 16<-KROGER APPLESAUCE.... 3’^.'89' SAVE 8<-BORDEN'S BUTTERMILK...........‘^’19’ CLAPP'S STRAINED BABT FOOD 8' SAVE 40-- BRUCE FLOOR WAX . .^I9‘ SAVE ICy-KROGER FROZEN LEMONADE...........61:^. 59* ^ wite coepon TowAtps W E 5D TW PEICEASE OF ONE ™ 4-Plta HACE SiniNC SWISS CHALET DINNERWARE PIUS 3SO EXTIA TOP VALUE STAARPS with SHi week eevpens freon yew moEed beeUel 1m turn m tmh naaps wM ^ aa maa m mm tmm wte, pwicliM««(SweMBMHet$1.4« 4 loeoolMM of Mbt. m mtm Kmmm ewrckeo* ef eey bef Cbeecael m ana np vaia naans t emdieioofeiiya •f KMewBweaar ! M urn o'Zn ST5MK | 35 UTkA v'iSt, STAMK | 58 UTRA S7AMK | I YYITM ms COUPON AND PUtCHASi ■ y^iTH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASI Z '••^M THIS COUPON AND | I OP BBE OR MORE CUT*UP I of la-oz. iottu kioger I $S PURCHASI I ■ BwvncmwTWiAMUc ■ BaDurnc canri ■ ■ ; CUT-U FRTERSorTWOPRCS. FRTBR PARTS I renpw ealM it Kre(cr ta reatlM u •t Krwier la kioaa thm I I* CawBM talM at Braier ta Paatlie lad F.aatera Miehltxa thra Sat.. Jaae L UU. LlaiH Oae Oaa|taa per. faailly. VALUABLE COUPON |4 I so IXTtA yiSti STAMPS | 3S UTtA yZ, STAMK I 50 llTtA A 5TAMK ! • U«TU TMiC rnima mim-naS5 . wWm THIS COUPON AND PUKHASt ■ WITH THIS COUPON AND PUKHASI ■ I ' OP IV.4A. PKO. PATTY-PAK FROZEN I DINNER BEEF STEAKS | IWiVh this COUPON AND PURCHASI | WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASI < _ OP 1-lt. PKC. ■ OP TWO US. PKOS. COUNTRY CIUI I I ECKRICH SMOKEES I All MEAT WIENERS WITH THIS COUPON-KROGER SPECIAL LABEL Vac Pac COFFEE 2^39 SAVE 18* e 1, ■ WITH ms tOUPON-BORDEN'S SHERBET OR ls.°S!rlCE CREAM FIRST HALF GALLON 5V' SECOND Vt GAL. 29 SAVE 30* SAVE 16*—FRESH 1-LB. BOX BORDEN'S OR PHILADELPHIA CREAM CHEESE 8-OZ. PKG. NEW! SUN CK)LD JSUCEO LARGE 20-OZ. LOAF KRAFT AAAERICAN OR PIMENTO VELVEETAiE^III^ 2-LB. LOAF CANT^UPES O’"! STRAWj^llsl FULL QUART •HI GOLDEN RIPE MOMAS TOMloESl lo: ‘ " ^^LB. . tan rSatariiy, Jaaa 1. ; ■ ; • ■ ■ i - * ' ■ ^ 1 ' .4 1 . '*.1 c-« Sugar-Free Gelatin Mold Is Colorful THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MAY 80, 1963 Ghr« • jfrimy lift to yoiir has been rodeoed with the cal-I br toctadtoa rhubvb and orto^ae iweeteoer, Sucaryl. This "“modem method of sweetening provides delicious sweetness with-out maskiiig the natural flavor of the fruits. RHUBARB^STRAWBERRY DESSERT JEILY UwCalsrte 2 envelopes (or tablespoons) unflavored gelatin % cup cold water 6 cups rtiubarb, cut in 1-inch 2 ctqM water 4 tablespoons Sucaryl solution Few drops red food coloring 1 cup Socaryl-sweetened lemon cuiMbiated beverage 2 cups strawberries, sliced Soften gelatin in cold water. Combine rbabarb and the 2 sUawbtorlaa on your shopping list diis msoHu Tbaae hisdm fruits are heneimbu more aad more a year-round cre^ but Qiey’re at their very bant during M)qf and June. Although in ttiemsdves low in calories (1 cup strawberries, 51 calories; 1 cup diced raw hu-barb, U calories), both I noroially require quite a bit of sugar tar sweetening. And calorie-wise oo(da know this can mean ^loto of extra, unwanted calories: XOne cop of cooked rfau-barb with sugar added has a calorie count ol M calories!) In the {deaairably tweet recipe for Rhubarb-Strawberry Dessert Jelly, shown here, all of the sugar Stir In food coloring and lemon carbonated beverage; chill until mixture begins to thk±en. Fold in strawberrim and pour faito a li^Uy oiled 1-quart ring mold; chill until set. ^ ★ ★ ♦ To serve, unmold and fUl centor with additional berries, if desired. Makes 8 servings. Each serving contains 36 calwies; 3 grams protein; trace of fat; 6.5 grams carbohydrate. TWO FRUIT JELLY—Tako heart, all you dieters and others who must restrict sugar intake. This yummy dessert is delicious and low in calories, because it’s made with Sucaryl. caps water; cover and cook natil tender; straia, savtog oaly the liquid. Add to to Rich Cookies Are ideal hr Tea Parties Save these extremely rich and delicious cookies to serve extraspecial guests! Melting Moments 4 cup cornstarch % cup confectioners' sugar 2 teaspoons grated lemon rind 1 cup sifted flour 1 cup butter, softened 1 cup packaged fine grated coe-nut Sift together cornstarch, confectioners’ sugar and flour. Add lemon rind. Biend butter into the dry ingredients until a soft dough is formed. If dough is too soft to handle, cover and chill about for about 1 hour. Shape into small balls to 1-inch in diameter. Roll in coconut and place on an ungreased baking sheet about m inches apart. Flatten cookies with lightly floured fork. Smelt Will Be Extra Good When Grilled •The smelt ii the ‘beccaflco’ of the world of waters; same dimin-stature, same buquet, same suptflativeness." These are the words of the fanoous French eip-cure-efad, BriUat-Savarin. He’s referring, of course, to those succulent little trout-like fish found so abundantly in the North Atlantic and Great Lakes. Just as 'Beccaficos" (Italian for small birds nedded for food) are so highly prised for good eating, so smelt are considered by gourmets as one of the finest fish in the sea. The meat of smelt is oily, making them ideal for outdoor grilling, and very sweet. Their average sise is seven or ei^t inches, making ten or eleven fidi to a- pound. The Natioftal Fidieries Institute advises us that smelt are available both fresh and frozen and are at the height of their season Just about now. CHARCOALED SMELT Have smelt drawn, leaving heads and tails intact. (Frozen smelt is already dressed). Sprbkle with salt and pen»er and squeeze the Juice of a lemon or Vs cap bottled lemon juice over all. Place on greased hinged wire rack. Arrange slices of lemon and encumber on and around fish to give flavor during cooking. Place or hold over hot embers hi i n u t e 8, turning once. Serve hot. Bake in a siow (300 degrees) oven 20 to 25 minutes, or until lightly browned. Don’t worry if butter oozes out when cookies are first in the oven; it will be reabsorbed by the end of the baking. Makes 3 to S’i dozen. Pan Gravy for Lamb When you pan-fry thin lamb chops, remove them from the skillet as soon as they’re cooked and keep them warm. Add a little bouillon to the drippings in the pan and make a “natural”!, gravy to serve with the chops. Excess fat in the skillet should, of course, be poured off before preparing the gravy. MORE MERCHANDISE IS ON THE WAY FROM THE FACTORY) WE MUST CLEAR OUR WAREHOUSE. SOME QUANTITIES AREtilMITED SO THESE BARGAINS WONT BE REPEATED. DEADLINE SAT. 6:00 P.M. HURRYI fAV£ ON NEW WESTiNGHOUSE APPLIANCES PRODUCTS LISTED ARE EITHER WESTINGHOUSE, GE. OR RCA VICTOR. AT THESE LOW PRICES WE CANT ADVERTISE BRANDS ♦128“ lIPPOiriABLETY ♦118“ AM-FM RADIOS WITH APO LOCK ♦38“ CHEST FREEZERS ♦198“ fioLDtovnniLBi. CONSOLE STEREO PHONO win AM-FN ♦139“ WALNUT PIMM WE WILL NOT WAREHOUSE SALE OOINQ ON AT OUR STORE nuMY-snwMT PAYMENTS^ WESTINGHOUSE 13 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR • ZERO DEGREE FREEZER • FROST FREE REF. • D«lui« throughout *228«* SALK PRICE GOOD ONLY TNROUQH SAT. HURRY! WESTINGHOUSE FAMILY SIZE FREEZER • EVERY SHELF IS FAST FREEZE -•HOLDSOVUtdOaLBS. OF FROZEN FOOD •188“ HURRY! QETYOUR ORDER IN BEFORE THE SATURDAY DEADLINE WESTINGHOUSE ll-IN. ELEGTRIC RANGE COMPLITSV^ITH • AUTO. OVEN TIMER 0 FULL WIDTH STORAGf • LIFT OFF OVEN DOOR DON'T MISS OUT MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS ALL SALE FRiCES □ OASRANOIt □ IIOROOM PURN. □ LIYINfl ROOM FURN. p TELEVISION □ STtRBO □ AUTO. WASHERS □ WATER HEATERS O DRYERS □ SMAUAmiANOES □ VACUUM CLEANERS □ WRINOIR WASHERS □ DISHWASHERS □ AIR OONOmONERS . □ETC. li^CHECK YOUR NEEDS AND RUY NOW WHILE SAYINDS ARE BIO! MANY U nadvertised specials FREE Immediate Delivery Bwdigot Terms SAAtontbs toFoy FRAYE 589 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 4-0526 PARK PREI AT OUR DOOR •SIRLOIN ROUND lemon Rice Puddhg Crowned Willi Peaks of Meringue ^ right up there next to apple |He and chocolate cakea aa an aU-time favorite dewert. So it’s good newi that lemon meringue has been adapted to an easy (ud-ding recipe. This light, luscious pudding is the perfect flnale for a light meal, because it is chodt full of basic foods high in the “good for you” category, such as mflk, eggs and rice. It can be varied by the addiUon of raisins or nutmeats tp LEMON PUDDINO-Pleaae Dad and aU the family wito this the fining, new version of favorite lemon meringue. It’s ncreamy As for the airy meringue. It meringue-h^ped lemon rice pudding idea aa a brunch des- has a touch of lemon, as does the sert, or a dessert to give sustenance to the menu. pudding — Just a teaapoonM of -------------------------------------------- ■' ■ ' ■■■^juice enough to give a hint of Saucy Dried Beef Served on Cornbread Cheese and beef sauce on corn-bread is an easy - to-make lunch entree. F*repare cornbread from a mix. While it bakes, combine in a saucepan 2 tablespoons of melted butter, l(S^unce)' package of chi(^ beef, cup of ahredded of tomato sauce. Heat and stir, until c h e e s e melts and sauce reaches serving temperature. Serves 6. Stuffed Celery Eveer use a mixture of cream cheese, tuna and mayonnaise as a stuffing for celery stalks? Add a seasoning of onion to the tuna mixture if you like. C!ut the Cheddar cheese, % cup of sweet Atuffed celery into finger-site pickle relish and 1 (O^xince) can the flavor. Pile the meringue on the rice custard, spreading it carefully out to the edge of the casserole, so it wwi’t away while in the oven. Bake It for Just 8-10 minutes, or until Uie meringue is browned. 'Lemon Meringne Podding Vh cups milk Vi cup uncooked rice Vi teaspoon salt 3 egg yolks, slightly beaten 2 tablespoons lemon Juice M teaspoon grated lemon rind cup sugar 3 egg whites 1 teaspoon lemon Juice* 6 tableqioons sugar In n UHoepnn combine milk, rice and eelt; bring to beO, stir-ring occnsionally.. Cover and coSt ever low beat until rice la tender (abwt II mtantee). In a bowl combine egg rolks, 2 tablespoons lemon Juice, bemon rind and 4b cup sugar. Pour ■mall amount of hot rice mixture into egg mixture; return all to pan. Place' over direct heat to cook egg (about 2 minutes); stir (xmstantly. Pour Into casserole. In a bowl combine egg whites and 1 teaspoon lemon Juice; beat until frothy. Continue beating and gradually add 6 tablespotms sugar until stiff peaks are formed. Pile meringue over rice, spreading to the edge of the casaerole. B^ 8-10 minutes at 400 w until lightly browned. Cool before serving. Makes 64 servings. For Tastier Slaw Add extra Masoning when you are using mayonnaise to drass slaw. Finely grated onion, dry mustard, sugar and lemon Juice do the trick. wore proud STEAKS NDNE HIGHER! '7 Club Steaks 69 ‘ 7-RIB CUT~Sliced Free HAMBURGER Lean 0(|!-Meaty Wwfb PORK ROAST SHANK PORTION PAN-REDI UVA FRYERS Z7£ ★ BEEF LIVER Mild Curw ★ SUCED BACON MARKETS Quali^ Meat Since 1931 78 North Saginaw DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Op«n Friday Evanlngo *til 9 P.M; This Ad Its Effect Both Stores ; Friday and Snturddy 4348 Dixie Highway DRAYTON PUINS Open Thurt. thru Sat. 9 A.M. f 9 9.M. Opwn Sundays 9 A.M. to 6 P.M; BIG VALU DOUBLE ^ STAMPS Cooked, Ready to Serve West Virginia HAMS It Rath's Ready to Serve luncheon Meat 3-Lb. Can Hamburger Single Pound 37c < cinsuMP i Serve Big Yahe Select Beef Steaks Round, Rib or Kouno, KID or « Sirloin Steaks 69ib T-Bone or Club Steaks 79 Porterhouse or Cube Steaks 89ib Chuck Steaks 49ib Swiss Steaks 59! Michigan Grade 1 SKINIESS^ANKS |C 3U.99 Ruby Red Hawaiian PUNCH Cliff Char CHARCOAl Food Club ___ m TOMATO JUICEm4 ^89 Open Pit . m BAR-B-Q SAUCE @ -49 Peter Pan—Free Coloring Book With Each Jar ■■ PEANUT BUHERm ”"^59 EVERY DAY LOW PRICES! CrisCO or Spry SHORTENINC 3 "69 Gold Medal FLOUR Kraft Salad Dressing MIRACLE WHIP FACIAL TISSUE Personal Size IVORY SOAP m Sealtest ?¥« ^ Rocket Bars | Cheese Spread ¥ Yc: Dozen ii SAVE 20c - NO COUPON NEEDED 2-Lb. Loaf effective throygh Men., fwne 3. W» nsyrv0 ■ ^ \ ; tfce r/ffcf fe limit i seenfifiei. GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS Iir-V'-:: 0.:j I '«',L ■±. . ■ !*■'* Mv' ' c-« THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, |968 Area Residents Enjoy Varied Holiday Activities Brtde-Elect Is Honored Jeanette Christine Enfield, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William N. Enfield of Bow Lane was honored at a miscellaneous shower recently. Gobostesses for the event were BIrs. Ernest G. Brocher, matron of honor and bridesmaid Mrs. Robert Lumbard. Miss Enfield was also honored at a shower given by co-workers of the medical records department of Pontiac Gaieral Hospital. PonUac Press, it is time to come to for a ^ing quesUon-naire. * ^ ^ This should be returned to the Women’s Department at least one week BEFORE the w^. '‘'piatojlbvSitbl'ite MbmUy JMdliM wB appMr with the Story on Tuesday, If space permits. _______ Out-of-state weddings and pictures wffl be accq>ted within a week after the ceremony. ★ * ♦ . We will be unable to give deUiled descriptions if the story arrives more than three days after a local w^ing. Please call The Pontiac Press Women’s Department if you have any questions. Residetas of Sylvan Shores usually gather for a cooperative picnic on Memorial Day. Roy Linn, Sylvan Shores Drive, carries the laden picnic basket. Five-year-old twins, Scott and Sandy, are impatient and want to look inside. In the background, Mrs. Linn buttons Steven's shirt. Everyone all ready? It may look like the start of a camping trip for the Donald E. Nagel family of Woodhiv, but it isn’t. The Nagels are moving Friday to Battle Creek, so mom and the girls are packing die camp trailer. Malissa, 2, and Heidi, 7, hand her articles to be stowed away. Not Rude to Leave the Visitor VFW Group Seats Officers By The Emily Post Institute Q: A relative of my husband has recently come here from Ireland. He lives alone in a funiislMd room no|^ far City of Pontiac Post No. 1370, Veterans of Foreign Wars and Ladies Auxiliary, held a joint installation of officers recently in the VFW Hall. Mrs. Virgil Vandecar was installed as president. Others are Mrs. Matthew Jones, sen- anyone here, he comes to our house several nights a week to watch television. My husband works nights and I have to stay home with younger son; so I Mrs. Daniel T. Murphy Jr., West Iroquois, always takes the children to the cemetery on Memorial Day while their father makes speeches elsewhere. She bought geraniums early and heeled them in her back yard until today. Helping are (from left) Gwen, 9, Kevin, 7, and Lori, 4. never knows when home. Some nights I am very tired and would like to go to bed early. Is there anything I can do without hurting his feelings? McDaniel, junior vice president; Mrs. Chauncey Birdsall, chaplain and patriotic instructor, Mrs. William Vandecar, secretary; Mrs. George E. Pappas, trustee; Mrs. Donald M(»re, trea^erj^ and Lila Harriiipm^, conducfieas. Mrs. William Vandecar was installing officer. Smokers Don't Have Right to Pollute Everybody's Air A; tf he were an occasional visitor, you couldn’t do anything. But to one who comes in constantly and who is also a relative, you are certainly free to tell him that you are very tired and that you are going to leave him, but that he is welcome to stay and see the end of the program. Also, it would not be rude to remind him to turn off the television set and lights when he goes. Q: When serving dishes are put down on the table and passed around, how can the guest of honor be served first? By ABIGAIL VANBUREN DEAR ABBY; In a recent column I noticed, the rather vitriolic letter from DOUG concerning his dislike of tobacco smoke. What amazed me was your approval of a ^ ~ ^ device that bothersome, stay away from people who enjoy smoking. BILL DEAR BILL: You rattled the wrong cage. A beehive hair-do harms no one. One can step back a foot or two from another who has eaten garlic. And when extremely rude, but it is no more rude than those who would choke me with their smoke. ED R. F. DftAR ABBY: It’s only a hunch, but observing the recent tirade you launched A; The guest of honor is served first only when a butler or waitress is presenting the dishes. Otherwise, the dishes that are nearest to her would be passed to her first, but the dishes on the other side would be passed to her in turn. It would be conspicuously'" urn is being damaged, you can ask the lady to remove her shoes. BUT, the air belongs to everyone. And no one has the right to pollute it. ^’s peavey to cram a couple of dozen buds down the throats of garlic eatm? And if you don’t like the beehive hair-do, simply bust file wearer over foe bead wifo a hickory ax-handle. If you are annoyed because your linoleum is being pitted 1^ ladies’ steel heels, taice a scythe and slash -off their feet at the ankles. Many people become physically ill from snioke but, sadly enough, the smoker is usually so enslaved by the habit that he neither asks nor cares whether he is offending the next person. bucks you were recently told to give up cigarettes and are dying for a smoke. AL DEAR AL: Send the ten bucks to the Cancer Society, Sport. I have never smoked and never will. table hand dishes around thO table twice: once without helping themselves, and then again to do so. For a personal, unpublished answer to your letter, Mrrite to ABBY, in care of The Pontiac Press. Heaven knows we all have to put up with a lot of things we don’t especially like, but , why not try to tolerate it witli grace? If smoke is DEAR ABBY: In the ab-sence of a “retaliator” for non-smokers, I’ll tell you how I defend ipysf^lf against the smoke thoughtless smokers send my way. I. pick up -a menu or newspaper and fan it back at them. Don’t put off writing le^. Send one dollar to Abby for her booklet, “How To Write Letters For AH Occasions.’’ Q: I have recently taken a job as doorman at an apartment house. I wear a uniform which includes a cap. If a lady speaks to me do I tip my hat as I normally would do, Or does this rule of courtesy not apply when in uniform? A: A doorman does not tip his hat, but brings Ms first two fingers to the bdm and then droi9 them whenever a iady — or gentleman — addresses him. Tell of Son's Birth If there is none handy-I simply BLOW it back to them. My wife tells me it is Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lam-phere (Linda Ryden) of Stout innounce the birth of a son, Richard Walter, May 10. ’The 'Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered hi this column. 19 ,95 Siren suit, designed with one thought: to look sleek and lovely. Stretch >iylon for shapeliness with a molded bra that coaxes careful curves. 10-18. jnst wear a smile andajantzen Pullover Beach Shirt sleeveless all cotton poplin with convertible gotham collar, side vented tabbed button front patch pockets lAMCSHOflEOASS^I Broad and fine stripes create an interesting effect on this omnibus Dacrtfn and Cotton woven sundress. Meticulously tailored with full skirt, buttoned front, coat dress. 10 to 20 198 ir Pink Blue Maize I, >' y;-K. • r, 1 THE PQ^TiAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, y C—0 Mr. and Mrs. William J. Mansfield of Gage will be honored by thair children at a 50th anniversary dinner party Saturday at the Elks Temple and a Sun-day reception from 2 to 5 p.m. at the Amvets Hall. They have lived in Pontiac some 40 years and were married in London, England. The Mansfields have 9 children, 33 grandchildren and 2 great-grandchildren. Candy for Survivol Kit CHICAGO (»-An armed forces nutritionist says candy is a good emergency food for a survival kit. It won’t be a professional, perfectly balancnl survival ration such as the government has prepared for the armed forces, said H., B. Cosier, chief of the Cereal and General Products Branch, Armed Forces and Container Institute. But it can play a very important role in helping to keep people alive. Cosier said the “Food Packet, Abandon Ship,” which is in Navy life boats, is composed entirely of confections. It includes starch jelly bars which are similar to gum drops, compressed mint hard candies and sugar coated gum. Cosier advises those using confections for an emergency survival kit to hide them lest they tend to eat the candy before the survival situation might arise. Clean Rusty Faucet Vinegar will help remove rust from leaky faucets. DR. A. LYLE CAMPBELL A. Lyle Campbell, son of the Abram Campbells, Emerson, received the degree of doctor of surgical chiropody at the 49th annual commencement of the Illinois College of Podiatry Saturday in Chicago. He is also recipient of the Carl G. Bergmann award for proficiency in orthopedics and previously attended Wayne State University. Planning Your Holiday? Here's What to Expect By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK - Bound to occur during the long Memorial Day weekend: One of the children giving barefoot heavoi its first summertime test will step on a bee. Mom trybig to get into last year’s battling suit for the firit time this year will announce that the suit has shrunk. Pop brimming with chivalry will suggest that maybe mom’s expanded. ’The head of the house will decide it’s time for some home-made ice cream like he used to have when be was a boy. Whmi he finally locates a hand-crank freezer, he will forget that the ice surrounding the inner section needs layers of salt to start action and then wonder why the cus-tardy mixture doesn’t thick- Someone will start a conversation about the good old days of the hammock and the quiet afternoons of lolling in one. Someone also will locate one at a hardware store and then find there are no trees in the new subdivision lot on which to hang it. '' One of the children will smash a finger in the car door or else get it bruised when the drivo* operating the master control on one of those automatic windows pushes the wrong button and up goes the wrong window. CHARCOAL COMPLAINTS ’The first cookout for company in the back yard will produce numerous complaints about the faulty charcoal as reason for overdone or underdone meat. At least three guests won’t notice the chef’s excuses because the hostess mixes a hefty cocktail. The tightest pair of ber- mudas at the back yard barbecue will belong to tbe woman udio weight-watches by taking seconds on the french fries. Someone will remember that the U.S. flag should be flown cm ttiis patriotic holiday (an event most states obsmre) and the household finds it doesn’t own one. ’The first of the summer’s May weekend motor trips will produce at least one case of child wittLcar sickness quickly cured about the time the child spots a sign saying, “Turn right, next light, foot-long hot dogs IS cents." DAD’S WISH On the motor trip, dad driving and trying to tune in the baseball double-header above the conversation will sigh silently, “I wish I were home with television.” bringing up the matter time too late to turn back but sufficiently early to have everyone worry until home again. A sensible bolidayer will stay home, sit on the front porch, terrace, or patio, and think, “Glad I’m not on Uie road. Thank you, Mr. Kennedy, for bringing back the rocking chafr.” Lilting Counts With Males The insides of the raincoat count most for fall—with men who want to be fashion bright. \ Pile linings in solid and split colors are joined by wool plaids. Many of the lightweight linings are laminated. Eye for Weather When buying lawn furniture, stop to consider how well the structural materials will hold up against inclement weather. Make Doll Dishes \ Children’s doll dishes can 1^ made by enameling metal lidr^m food containers. Ankle-Length Shift Ideal for lazy aftemooM at the pool or patio: ankMt^ shifts and easy skirts fat cot* While he’s thinking of the peace before the television screen, lie will turn on to a highway exit that proves to be tbe wrong one and the wife will remark something to the effect that, “well, I told you about half a ihile ago . . . ” ’The motorist ahead at the toll gate will be in the “exact change” express line, toss coin, miss, and hold up a chain of cars while she (it’s never he) gets out of the car and retrieves (he money. The head j of the house will announce that it’s early start, say around 7 a.m., for the drive to visit relatives and finally gets behind the wheel around 10:30 a.m., after the missus has fed the kids breakfast, packed, and poured four cups of coffee into the quote early riser unquote. Approximately one hour after the family is en route to its holiday destination, the woman of the house will ask, “Did I lock the back door?”, and receive cool silence for frWay 'n Saturday dieep dark eyelet dresses for every summer situation Keep cool dresses for summer, our breezy, beautiful cotton eyelets now at this one too good to pass-up price! Sheath, full-skirts, tunics, A-lines, jacketed styles and two-piece dresses all in summer-dark brown or black, o. Two-piece eyelet; in 10-18. b. Satin belted sheath; 12-20. summer cool Living bras by Playtex Perfect comfort for a hot summer's day—a coq^ light ^refree bra that flatters you like no other. A Living® bra with cotton lined nylon lace cups set In sheer 'n airy stretchever® elastic that wears 'n wears and is machine-washable too. In white; sizes 32-38 BC Bandeou $3.95. Longline style with 2-inch waistband $7.95. Take advantage of the Playtex special $1 offer! Ask yopr Winkelman's saleslady for detojis. shop every night mondoy through Saturday to 9 p m. WINKEIjMAN’S TEL-HURON SHOPPIjNG ciNTER I .. . ' ■ , ' ■ J V 1 • •/I H •' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1963 up AvmOmhU Mrs. Bob Spencer C. R. HASiQLL STUDIO i I MT. CLEMENS ST. . EE 44>5SS A CAREER FOR ME ? ? ? Yes! An Excitinjr Glamorous Career in One of AMERICA’S FINEST PROFESSIONS BEAUTY CULTURE by LOPEZ of DETROIT Imitated—NEVER Duplicated STERIING BEAUR' SCHOOl 6734)222 Music Guild Has Recital Ibe final redtal of this season was given Tuesday overling by the Pontiac Music Guild at the Morris Music Store on Telegraph. New ofHctfs were elected at the business meeting following, the recital. Incoming president is Charles A, Wilson. Other of-ficen include Wendell Ecker, vice i^ident; Amy Hogle, recording secretary; Mrs. Carl Clifford, corresponding secretary and Ehla Sutter, treasurer. Serving refreshments were Mrs. Gaude Kimler, Mrs. Lester Smith and Mrs. Clifford. A June picnic will be held at the Kennett home of Mrs. Walter Sdunitz. By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE Dear Mrs. Lawrence: There is someBiing radically wrong with my 4-year-old nephew. He never looks you in the face. He hardly qieaks at all. When he does talk, he doesn’t pet words together. Bet what to kOUag my sister to tte way he treats her. He shows ao affoc-tioa at aH A slim sheath of a dress with couture ~ inspired French-cuffed sleeves is fashioned from summer's favorite sheer—voUe. The standaway roll collar is accented with a white tie at the neck and white pearl buttons. By Laurence Gross. About $40. Available locally. No More Squeaks For squeaky drawers, rub a little petroleum jelly on the inside edges of the drawer. Shampoo and* Set $1.00 Permanents $5.00 and up Thurs., Fri., Sat. Bessie's Beauty Shop 684.0525 Milford, Mich. in US PUN YOUR PARTY! The Beautiful CORAL REEF ROOM at Airway Lanes — nt-nn (Selected Second*) in Finest DECORATOR FABRICS CALICO CORNERS Child's Hostility Is Case for Psychiatrist their general indifference to peo-|de—can be dangmously misread a specific coldness toward their patents. He has wild temper tantrums if he doesn’t get what he wants. Yesterday my sister tearfully said that his apparent hatred of her is her punishment for wanting him so soon after her marriage. . . . ANSWER: Your description of your nephew suggests that he may be what psychiatrists call an “autistic” chiM. Such a child is indifferent to people, to adults, other children and to himself as a person. He may not recognize his own name. He will accept a spoon we hand him as though it had magically materialized within his range of viston and bad no comiection with our hand and He does respond to things, however. He will fly into a rage if a ball rolls out of his reach or a door doesn’t open to his pull. BORN THIS WAY The best available medical opinion is that the autistic child is bom with these diaracteris-tics. So, if your little nephew is one. his indifference to his mother has no relation to her feelings about him before he was born. Perhaps you could show her this column. If the can release herself from her sense of responsibility for hto behavior, she may also be released from the obligation to endure it helplessly as punishment of her and seek a psychiatric examination for him. If her local hospital does not include a department of psychiatry, she can write to the Na-tional Association for Retarded Giildren, 386 Park Avenue South, New York, N.Y. With proper training, it is not uncommon for autistic children to improve and acquire the abil-ity^Iive comparatively porinal but their distinguishing trait—] This so discwages thelriter to doing, as wtaltoHon for fathers and mothers that they do some notquestkmtheunaffoctionatebe-they tave committed against havior but acc^t It, as your sis-'their children. ranllM Vr»M Pontiac Central High Schools class of 1953 will hold a buffet dinner and dance June 8 at Airway Lanes. Planning music are (from left) Mrs. John Christoff of Levee, general chairman; Mrs. Richard Hoehner of Irwin; and Mrs. Russell Bennett of Seeden. Tickets for the 7 p.m. event are still available and information may be obtained from Mrs. Christoff. News of MSU Campus By SUE DORMAN Last Saturday, the 16th annual running of the Junior 500 was held. West Circle Drive is used as the course for the carts with team mates aboard and pushing from behind. Sixty-seven entries, the largest field yet, competed in the pla^sicjroringtime activi- streets to cheer their favorite teams on. Thirteen new members were tapped into the MSU Blue Key, men’s junior honorary, during ceremonies at the Junior 500 Saturday in front of the women’s intramural building. Dan Bitoy of Bloomfield. Hills was among the new t YammeFolkiShop L»w»tLetei „ ,.... -i „ .5 bur, men’s honorary, which tapped him earlier this month. Burton Belant was among stars in the presentation of the musical comedy “Of Thee I Sing,” acting the role of a southern politician. A graduate student in dramatics, he resides on Ottawa. Gary Wright of Nichols has been elected honorary presi- Keep cool In % ham freshman, will head the spring Lantern presentation this~ week. Lantern Night ' Sing honors 50 outstanding senior Women. Serenaders will visit sororities and dormitories where the selected wotneji reside. A lantern iS left for each one. President John A. Hannah will then announce the names of the honored in front of his home and his wife will present each woman with white carnations. a4eeii. SUMMER FUN A. Mandrin Ovurblous*..................3.98 B. Slim Linud Capri Pants..............5.98 C. Gay Strip* Shirt.................. 3.98 p. Knoa Cappar Pants, fully linod .... 5.98 (NotndwradHwa) Scoop Nock Horisontal ttripo shirt.....2.98 Jamaica Shorts......................... 5.98 Navy, Whito, Pink, Bluo with compiimtntary stripos. Sizss 8 to 16. 48 N.^glnow — Down)own THE PONTtAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1963 C—11 Wax Ice Troys Wax the outside^ of an ice cube tray when the tray is entirely dry. TUshe^keq> it from sticking. WOMEN'S FABRIC CASUALS By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN Women have long depended a new hat to perk up a blue day or to provide a change of pace from a humdrum sdiedule of dally living. Why not give the man in your life a liU by helping him choose a lightweight straw hat either for business or for fun? ★ ★ ★ In order to help you help him, I went to The American Insti- S^OES MiRJkCLE nni SHOPPING CENTER Open 9:30 «.m. fro 9 p.m. Check Appearance Help Man Select New Hat sxico is three times largerllarge as the Uniteci States. Thel Congress on June 28, 1902, gave concession in Ow Isthmus of than Texas, four times larger 1150 population was estimated at| President Theodore Roosevelt| Panama and dig a waterway than Spain-and one-fonrth as'2S million. rrwiuciu AII6UUU1V iwuwwcu roiMUMi •iiu um • wmtmwmj broad powers to buy the French!linking the Atlantic to the PadOc. tute of Men’s and Boy’s Wear for information. Ihese experts told me that differeat hat blocks and shapes caa do much to infhieace a man’s appearance. They add height to those who are'short, compensate for prominent fea-tares and properly frame the very full face. Men will like this year’s hats. Ihe youtitful image played a significant role in styling this sea-o’s straws. Polly's Pointers Tip Peps Up Chit Chat By POLLY CRAMER DEAR POLLY—Do you like to read in bed before dropping off to sleep? If you . are expecting a house guest, buy two idenUcal paperback novels, one for the visitor and one for yourself. Breakfast conversation will never lag as you discuss the unfolding of plot and characters.—C. H. ★ ★ . DEAR POLLY—When you buy paint several days or weeks before using,- do not put it on a shelf in the garage or basement. Leave it in the trank of your car and about once a week invert the cans. The normal shaking and vibration of the car will keep the paint stirred up and you will be surprised at how little stirring will be required when you are ready to use it.—L. M. V. ★ ★ ★ DEAR POLLY-My tip is for your little girls. When their paper dolls start to bend and droop, at weak points, take a toothpick and fasten with gummed cellophane tape to the neck, knees and so on and they will stand up strai^t again. -Mrs. A. R. * DEAR POLLY-I have a good use for the raglan sleeves from a plastic raincoat that is no longer good enough to wear. I take the sleeves oat at ^e doable shonlder make a loop by folding over the pointed top and sewing The narrower brims and the celorfnl bands udll top off the male wardrobe widi a flair. We know from observation that the shape of a hat caa make a tre-meadoas difference in die way I man looks. Here are the rules the American Institute of Men’s and Boys' Wear gave me: w ' ★ ★ The short slender man will want to add to his height when hatted. He should wear a hat with a well tapered crown, with not too much brim snap. Otherwise he may look overpowered by the lat. The tall slender man shoaid wear a hat with a low tapered crown. A contrasting band should be used to break ap the vertica] lines. A moderate crown with the brim snapped full width is just right for the short plump man. This will make his face appear! slimmer. For the big fellow, a full crown and a brim which is not too narrow is indicated. WWW Here’s a bit of interesting in-fmmation. According to one of the leading makers of men’s hair pieces, the high quality hair used in the hair pieces is obtained from people who keep their hair covered when outdoors. This protects it from dust, grime and overexposure to the sun. The expert said that when hair is expos^ to these elements it quickly weathers and fades. WWW The everyday business hat provides needed protection on the way to work. For leisure hours, choose a hat from the great variety of “fun-straws” for a round of golf, a day at the beach or a few sunny hours in the garden. In other words . . . head for a hat! V f AT SIBLEY'S MIRACLE MILE Weightless skimmer . . . capacious carryall! Sandler-styled of the breeziest straw ... bold-buckled and strapped to keep you from wafting away. Get the set! Skimmer $8.95. Bag $5.99 plus federal tax I Surprise! There’s a hat, too! $2.99 I usi ywr And a middling-high heel pump! $12.95 I SECURITY JCHARGI Micliigaii'f Largest rioisheim Dealer Miracle Mile Shoppinf Centei SMrth Tabiraph ■« Sqoora lain Meed shoes n M7oe open dary io ajr. to 9 pja. c-w THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. HAY 3 • Mirad* Mite Japping Ctnltr Bright ntw look in out peiithod eofton print shift, sippsrs at tho bock. Saucy sloshoo ond bows ot sidos. S*M>L Whito.background with blua, pink ororongo prints. Murrbw Sees Women's Role NEW YORK (UPI) - U.S. Information Agency Director Edward ,R. Marrow said women cannot be ignored as a force in world affairs. He said that any nation which does belittle such a role for females “doies so at its own loss.” Speaking to the League of Women Voters of New York City at their annual convention, recently, Murrow said the USIA will institute a gram this year under which women will be trained in the United States as consultants to women’s organizations in their native lands. Says Vows in Detroit Carol Ann Kruz became the bride of Thomas David Deaton at St. Ladislaus Catholic Church in Detroit. Softly gathered is the puffed sleeve- bodice and skirt in Anne Fogarty*s camise dress, in contrasting shades of greeri voile. This fine summer f(d>ric of Dac-ron polyester and cotton is double-layered to mask its transparency. About $35. Available locally. i The daughter of Mrs. Lottie Kruz of Detroit wore a white satin floor length gown. Her bouffant veil of silk illusion was held by a cluster of seed pearls. Bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Deaton of Northfield. The couple will reside in Detroit. PONTIAC MALL MAIL ORDERS (white fabric only), odd 35e postage. Sorry, no C.O.D. excels in custom tinting...free! Same Old Dress Once upon a time, the dress called the sun dress. Now, it’s known in the fashion industry as the patio dress. Menbere Poms Hunts — In Tomato Sauce Pork & Beans 10* No. 300 Cm flalionat> W^Ud PU Center Blade Cat 10-Ox. Fkgs. MARGARINE Complete Your Picnic Menu With So Fresh—Crispy, POTATO CHIPS Top Treat — 4 Delicious Flavors ICE CREAM rrr Top Off Your Picnic With Heme Brond Fresh FROZEN LEMONADE C^ani ^Ind ^iner. •. ^redLer jf^rodude! SWEET CORN c ^rchord Fresh-Frosen, Sliced STRAWBERRIES........................4 Top Treot — Assorted Flavors BEVERAGES..........................2^2 Top Taste—Smooth Spreodlug 2!i^2S Complete Yeur Picnic Meuu With Se Fresh—Crispy, Tasty ..........’-49* Top Treat — 4 Delicious Flavors 49* Top Off Yeur Picnic With Heme Brond Fresh ^ 10* Con U.S. No.1 Florida Tender, Tasty 1 FEii With this coupon r.r. 129 EXTRA rr-STAMPS i WM Hm m'cImm *4 2— i 24-Oi. Spitlat I TOP TREAT BEVERAGES ! a»Sw Tlili Cmvm «t HiM—1 FmS SttfM 1 Cmtpm fistTM Sal., Jmm Id. PEEI WITH THIS COUPON r r. | PRII WitH THIS COUPON r.r. | FREE WITH THIS COUPON r.P. | mu w|THT^ COUPON!^ ; 26 EXTRA rr stamps! 26 EXTU rr stamps 25 EXTRA rr STAMPSiSO EXTM rr stamps! LIGHTER FLUID ! KITCHEN BOUQUr | KLUSKI EGG NOODLES 1 VIENNA SAUSAGE 1 Assorted Flavors KOOL AID 6^ 25* FMI WITH THU COUTOM |26 EXTRA STAMPS j WMi rii« purchDM •# ; 3-Lbi. «r Mara oF 1 APPLES : Raaaaar Tkh Chm" at NaHonal FaaS Siam. I Caaaaa tiiaint Sat., ittM Id. PRII WITH THIS COUPON P F- 50 Extra "i!;:,*' Slaops With tha Purchna at Any Baa of Wolch'i Prath Pack ^ CHOCOLATES BaCacm .This Crayu NallMd FaaS Slaraa. Caa»aa Bidraa Sat.. Jaaa lit. FREE WITH THIS COUPON P-P- | 50 Extra "m* Sianpt With tha’Parchasa of Any S)m t Boa of 1 Betty Crockor Purity Oots 1 ■aSraai TUa.Caayaa at Natlaaal FaaG } ttaraa. Caapaa Eaplraa Bat.. Jaaa lit. | Porni Chomp UGHHR FLUID ^ 39* ■iiJ! " C— " THE PONTIAC PhESS. THURSDAY, MAY 80> 1068 Climate Mild Salt Mines Visited WASHINGTON ~ Salt mines, oontrary to the popular sSying, are rather frieasant places to go back to. Some even attract visi-tors. Later, Hie Chinese chaucled aea aater through ditches to evaporating pends. People living around the Dead Sea did the same. Evaporating natural brine from oceans, and underground poob rrauins the most widely ukd method of obtaining salt. WWW About 300 B. C.. brine welb mild equable flie year around. Humidity is knr. Massive salt pillars suppmt the high ceilings of spacious rooms carved out in the course of mining. Salt crystab sparkle and flash in the li^t. CouBtless thousands of visitors have toured the vast mine at Wieliclfca, Poland, which has beea worked for 1,IN years, the Nathnal Geographic Society says. A spectacular underground fireworks disfday dimaxed 19th-century tours. DETROIT (UPI) — The move-Salt mining has not always able steering/vlieel b the fastest-been an attractive occupation, growing ezfra in the automotive ■nie first salt miners probably indus^, according to Ward’s Au-were prehistoric men who td^tive Reporb. scraped to'iny encrustations near It's Moveable! It Steers! It's Popular were tapped in China’s Szechwan Province. Boring with primitive iron drilb was difficult, and it took 40 years of tedious hand b-bor to sink Uie necessary shafts. Some of the ancient welb are JO product^ salt In England, a similar underground river of salt has been taxied for centuries with no sign of its exhaustion. GOT BAD NAME Salt mining got its bad name jring the Middle Ages when underground rock-salt deposib were exploited. The medieval miners, some of whom were convkb, by flat on their backs in narrow tun-neb, chipping out salt with a pick. salt springs or seashore popb. Five thousand years ago, Chinese boiled seaweed to get HURON At 1:15-3:15-5:15 7:15 and 9:15 JOHANN STRAUSS' "THE GREAT WALTZ’ Louise Reiner. Ferond Grovot ADULTS 1.b0 CHILDREN Ho staUstical agency said that through April of the current inod-el year General Motors Ctap.’s Tiit-away steering wheel and F• There is little reason to believe that the 13- to (S^nillion ex-pcndilure would^result in enough ess td maKe ^ the so-called mass “untap market” is mostly a myth. Other airlines argued that a sizable chunk of the M per cent of the population which does not fly is simply afraid. They favored an industry campaign aimed at such Americana, and asserted that the airlines are not aggressive enough about the comparative safety of air travel. campaign worthwhile. Significantly, United and American are two of the carriers j who firaly believe thiT^unds oT sugar Sugar Sells Across Border LAREDO, Tex. (AP)-The price for a five-pWid sack of sugar has dimbed as high as (1.05 in Laredo. In Nuevo Laredo, across the Rio Grande in Mexico, it sold for a cents. As a result, numerous shoppers personal use. U.S. customs collector Charles Kazen doesn’t anticipate a major boom, however. You can’t bring in more than 100 pfTrip: Unbeatable Combination . . . Downtown Shopping & Free Parking Ws easy and convenient when you make DOWNTOWN your one stop shopping spot. All your vacation and household needs with the widest variety and selection possible. Y.V Mn IM Ut. wid.it I.-'betian in Ih. ihoit.it timo. FM0N.nUU dlWeLgM aaw.Hwwisi. JEWELERY CO. 25 N. Sa«iiKiwSt. TNENNTUO MESS 4SW. Huron St. Downtown V_ PrfcM aWactfva tfcrnwfb Safsrday, inn# I. Ufa nt$m the right fa limH gaaaflHas. SAVE lOe on KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP ^ 39 VALUABLE miCLEY coupon Miracle Whip S;3W w PORK BEANS 4”»S9* JKAMU1L Sava 16c 2:^59* Naw Vina Ripa Cantaioupe it 3 <^1 WaterineloBi SEALTEST • Wepaiclas • Pwdgaicles • Laddin VALUABLE WRICLEY COUPOH SEALTEST • eoesici.i( 0 ruonticLas • LADDli aAis E«f twoon CwM«n .K»trM Jdn. 1. mmm I Limit On. Cowimii r«r Swilly. J GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MAY 80. 1963 Commies rung LONDON (AI^) — The C9omiaB-||ig|)ti]r eeakd. hebtoc 0» r«le- dtMen to be repatriated to Coni' niats are relentlessly closing the ^ flow. nwmrt North Korea, escape hitches through which faO inose than Hkl« iKha- « indicated by the mon over 10 maiion refugees havelgees from Red Chma * Western half of the divided city.jof the number killed or tajurri'iK^- ware refugees, diqdaced persons and refugees from commoniam poiBwd hi. From 1950 to 1902 a total of 216,062 came from Csechoslovakia, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Romania and Bulgaria. Over 96,000 stayed, 900 remained in camps run. by Austria and the United Nations. Others emigrated to Weston VIETNAM There is no wall along die banks of the peaceful little Ben Hai River, but Viet Nam’s huge refugee migration is over. Between 1964 and 1965 an'esti-mated one million persons left North Viet Nam to settle in the non-Communist south. NoWabouui wr^W^a w^^ *0 escape. About 50| West Berlin wras the biggest es-,|j„n lost th.tr 11,» lr>-h«p. h.tcMor__^t Dnring the summer tourist season dozens of East Europeans de feet in Vienna and ask for asy- Loudspeakers on the southern banks of the Ben Hai River blare propaganda daily across the border stream. A few come south. Some also swim north—mostly agents pursued by audacities. The rate of refugees arriving in South Viet Nam, crippled by its war agginst Communist guerrillas, is less than 100 A year. CHINA Almost four million people hgve left mainland China since 1949 and DXMre than haff took refuge in the British colimy of Hrag by the. island’s population of 13.6 million; say they will open their doors to refugees only if foreign countries agree to accept tbeho. There is no steady flow of refugees from Conununist China to Feumoea. Most of the 146,000 miitiilsfid refugees came to Nationalist China via llorii! Kong or The Hong Koi^ Mlicy of big bade refugees ^m Red China touched off widespread criticism abroad but audiorities, trouUed By Mhy 10.163,411 Cuban^ had r^ttfed at foe refugee center in Miami and 59,341 had been resettled in ofoer areas of the United States. Estimates of Cuban refugees bi the United States range from 250,000 to 386,- , CUBA Within the Communist camp only Cuba allows refugees to leave partly in return for U.S. food and medical shipments. About 25 exiles arrive eadi week by small boat. Special ships and planes brbig in forger numbers. The U.S. Healfo Education and Welfare Department gives refugees up to $100 a month for families and $60 for individuals. odds to reach West Berlin. ing to flee to West Berlin since til Aug 13. 1961 when Commu-it it it the wall was built. Some were nists built the wall. Today an av^ In the five months following thejshot. Others drdVned while trying of 60 re^gees a viw abortive 1956 uprising, 170.000 to swim canals or lakes. A few freedom, eitter _by_ ■ — died jumping off buildings, Communist military power, however, is not the onfy reason for foe dwindling rate of refugees. The slump in desertion from Hungarians poured bito Vienna, once a haven for fleebig East ^ remans. Now two or three Ifoh-garians a month make it across the 20O4nile border with Austria, the wall in Berlin or by slipping across the border between East and West Germany. Although precise figures afe kept secret the average is remarkable. Ten thousand men moa$ly in winter when frozeniRed China, for example, also 26-mile lonif wall and rtrminA nffAP* nmtprHnn nffainst afiggs ffx)m increased food pHToduc-j^ — ... . . .... ground offers protection against land mmes. KSlthe 70-mile^ong-border, aided by tion on the Chinese mainland andlj^j 200 nUlhoTiLs. During the Korean War two million North Koreans risked their keep over-populated Hong Kong furopp lives under gunfire from bothjfrom starving. EASTERN EUROPE sides, racing across heavily Others have preferred to live | Austria caught the brunt of the mbied battlefields to S 0 u tji under communism. Since 1959,79,-|exodus from Eastern Europe. Be-Korea. Today the boundiy is 1281 Koreans living in Japan have ween 1945 and 1962> two million Red Chinese Soldiers Get Mao's Doctrines to Study HONG KONG (UPIl - The dissemination of the writings of Mao Tse-hing among the Chinese population is more than ever a priority party objective and nowhere is this considered more important than in foe armed forces. From foe top to foe bottom. Red China’s 22.5 - million • man army is based on foe foundation of Mao’s interpreUthm of Marxism-Lenhiism. This Marxist interpretation, rooted in the guerrilla struggles of the 1930s, stressed the necessity of intimate linking of the armed forces with Chbia’s massive peasantry in what the Communists call a “people’s liberation army” Newly conscripted recruits into ■the army are being given a thorough education in the written works of Mao before they undertake anything else. According to China Youth News, foe daily newspaper of foe central committee of foe Young Communist League, foe study of Mao’s writings by new recruits was instituted by “party conunit-tees at various levels and the party branches of companies.’’ Senior military officers apparently have not had a say in determining foe p r i 0 r i t y of courses through which foe re-ernits are put. This would appear to be a main ’point of pi^ible fr«ition;between press articles is that the first requirement of the good soldier is to have “good political thinking.” And in China today, this means thinking foe way Mao thinks. ’ GUIDING UGHT Mao is to be regarded as a “guiding light, a lighthouse illuminating their (the young soL diers) revoluti^ary advance.” Moreover, foe conscripts are told that “when you come across a new word, consult foe dictionary; when yon come across problems, consult the selected works of Mao Tse-tung.” The emphasis on Mao’s written word is so intense that soldiers who can read are dmected to Shop The SAVOM Way, Where You’ll Find... ^wer Meat Priees EVERYDAY! mm Almost evoiy week, market conditions make special buys possible and we pats these savings on to you. But, every cut of meat in our cases, fresh or smoked ... every kind of poultry we carry... is priced to save you money, every day, every week! U.S. Govt. Graded Steer Beef Boneless Cube Steaks diib or T-Bone Steaks . 7 7^ Cherry Red Hamburger . . 38 Special, Lean Sliced Bacon 39 Lb. lb. Oe Clapps Qe 9 Jar Brand 0 S a a 49° roi. to* 1 Lb. ■ a Bag I IV 44° 12-Oz. Cc 1 a ■ Can s B 0 Linda Laa Pkg. Rag.21o ofS 19° Form Maid — Real Dutch Chocolate Milk 19” Quart Carton del monte Pineapple-Grapefruit i swwftfl i^Bi With The Coupon Below and S3.0 lllllapleJneaf\ If Right RuMived to DAIRY E. HOWARD ST.-FE 4-2647 T— TT $ Dixie Highway in Drayton Plaint At Williams Lake Road and Walton Blvd. Daily 9-9, Sat. 8-9—Sunday 9-6, Pontiac Mall Shopping Contor On Telegraph In Waterford Township Daily 9-9, Sot. 8-9-Sunday 9-6 Glonwood Plaza In Pontiac South Gienwood at Perty Daily 9-10 Sat. 8-10, Sunday 9-6 V,.. It . I 'i'i THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1963 C-17 f-Junlor Editors Quix on- [_ ISLANDS QUESTION: How do islands rise out of the sea and animals come to live (m them? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: Many isiands are created by volcanoes which through successive underwater eruptions (1, 2, 3) malr* « broad base under the surface and finally break through (4) creating an island where there has been none before (5). Soil is created on the island by omion so that plant seeds brought by, birds or other means take growth, and these would help to make still more soil. In this way many of the South Sea Islands (I) were formed. The insects on such islands were probably blown there by the wind and the few wild animals may have arrived by floating masses of vegetation. In many cases isiands of this kind have later submerged; then coral begins to grow in a ring around the summit and continues until the ring appears above water, forming the circular kind of ialand called an atoll. It Is thought ttat the blaads of the Southwest Pacific (Melanesia) represent the remnants of an ancient contlaent nhich has sunk below water. ' Life of a South Sea island is easy-going; coconuts provide good food and a delicious drink and there are many shell fish and real fish to be caught with little effort. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: The coconut is obviously too heavy a seed to be blown through the air, so how does this valuable tree make its way from island to Island? Make a guess. Give up? The fruit floats and wavei toss them onto land, where the plants quickly root and grow. Catholic Priest on Probation for Homicide A Roman Catholic priest from Toledo Monday was placed on two. years’ probation for negligent homicide and ordeeedUa. stitution for persons with alcoholic problems. End of Term-Pope^ Sfedson White House Breathes Easier By MERRIMAN SMITH Un White Hoase Reporter WASHINGTON ~ Backstairs at the White House; President Kennedy’s staff can breathe a bit easier now Qiat the high school and college graduation season is moving into high tide and most of the term papers are either written or near coiiQ>Ietion. ★ ★ w lEach spring the White House is delugd by hundreds of requests for material which students want to use in preparing year-end themes and other scholastic compositions. The sheer weight of aum-bers makes It impossible for the most part to'comply with diese reqeests. ★ ★ ★ ’The staff still remembers a classic received last year from a junior hi^ school boy: “Please send me all you have about presidents.” UNREALITY Unfortunately, requests from the charge May 14, was sentenced by Circuit Judge Arthur E Moore, was given the sentence by Oakland County Circuit Judge Arthur E. Moore in a case steqt-ming from the auto accident death last Sept, of 20-year-old Thomas Edwards of Royal Oak. Rev. Hayes pleaded guilty May 9 to the negligent homicide charge. He was critically injured In the two-car collision at a Fern-dale intersection. ★ ★ ★ Judge Moore specified tha Rev. Hayes undergo treatment for alcoholism at Guest House, Lake Orion. Water stored behind the Hoover dam would fill four-fifths of Lake floor, Mrs. Marks slipped jErie. ”■ " ' ■ EARN MORE ON SAVINGS SAVINGS IN BY THE lOTH OF THE MONTH EARN FROM THE 1ST AT fi Advanced Payment - - > n / Shares Certificates A1A Current Rate # iC / w IF held TO MATURITY AVAILABLE IN UNITS OF $80 PER SHARE E*tabli«Afd ia 1990 — Never mined paying a dividend. Over 72 yean el sound niaaaoefflenl — roar ossaranee ol eecurily. Aatelt near over 80 million dollars. CAPITOL SAVINGS A LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 We«t Huron FE 4.0561 Downtown Detroit Office: Woihington Blvd. Bldg. Comer State Street WO 2-1078 Home Office; Laming Member Home Loan Bonk System some graduate students show about as much appreciation of reality as the junior hit^ Bchool boy’s entreaty. it / it ir Graduate itadents working on master’s degrees often send mandien of the White Homo staff ki« and involved qnertlsaaalres which to answer wonM require at least a fan day or two of intensive effort hy Press Secretary Pierre Salinger or Theodore C. Sorensen, special counsel to the PresUeat. In fact, answering these long documents in any detail would mean that Salinger and Sorensen could do little else in the A White House reporter recently received an eight-page questiQnnaire from a man working on his doctorate. Many of the questions were so lopsided politically that the repo^ felt the aspinuit doctor of philosophy was more of a cansist .pamphleteer than a scholar. Whereupon he threw tte qnesthNmaire awny and forgot it About three weeks later, the journalist received a long-distance telephone call. It was the scholar demanding immediate return of his completed questionnaire. LENGIIIY CHORE The reporter tried to be civil about the matter and explained he simply did not have time to undertake such a lengthy chore. Tlie scholar was indignant. “Well, you take the time,” he said, “or I’ll come to Washington and stay after you until you do. Stationed at the White House, your opinions are valuable for historic research and you should not be allowed to withhold them.” ★ ★ ★ The conversation at this point became a bit blunt. To date, the insistent scholar has not showed up at the White House press room. Pair Is Sentenced for Troy Burglary Two 21-year-old men were given idoitical two- to 15-year prison terms Tuesday tor their nighttime burglary March 8 of ’Troy Qeaners, 2945 Rochester Road, Ttoy. Soitenced were Paul P. Ked-row, 27 Custer, Clawson, and Gary R. Piccalo, 2830 Miner, Troy. The sentence was handed down by Circuit Judge William J. Beer. w w ★ Kedrow and Piccalo pleaded guilty May 14 to breaking and entering the cleaners and taking a cash register containing $40. Balance $154.1 Million 1128 5 miiiion^and out- go was $46.1 million. The t-“- LANSING (JH— Income Into the S^te Treasury during the past ury balance at the end of the week was $154.1 million. MSU Prof Appointed Nigeria School Chief EAST LANSING (B-The U.S. Agency for International Development has announced the appointment of Dr. Glenn Johnson, Michigan State University agricultural-economics professor, as vice chancellor at the University of Nigeria. Johnson has beep directing a team of MSU educators at the Nigerian school. GOING OUT OF BUSINESS UBBAM DEVELOPMEMT CAUSES TfflS BCHON CITT or PONTIBC UCENSE #656 FAST COMING TO AN END WONT BE LONG NOW! Wan Liaaltam 54" wlda .........19c ft. 6-9-12' Wide Vinyl Floor Cov-oring, Rogalar $1.49. Now..........75c Sq. Yd. InMd Tilo 9"x9" ... 5c so. Ploitic Tilo........1c to. Mia REDUOD AGAIN........15c Sq. Ft. (4'X 8'Shoot........$4.75) ODD-LOTS Tile ?..... 2c Robber Base. .3c it. Paint. .5qts.fer$l MicaTepf. .49cea. BUY-LO TILE unclaimed UNOLEUM 102 S. SAGINAW aid TILE DEcoRnTion onv *-D.L. COUPON I - A ..A" A" Gets Fine, Probation tor Rape Conviction Albert R. Cecil, 39, Tuesday was sentenced to three years’ probation and $150 probation costs I for statutory rape of a 15-year-■ old Pontiac girl. I land, Cecil gave his address as 360 Auburn Ave. when he was arrested for the April 2 offense. Plays It Cautiously and Breaks Her Leg OAKLAND, Calif. 13- Mrs. Henry Marks is a cautious soul. When she and her husband went on a skiing weekend with a group of friends she decided not to risk breaking a leg by getting on skis. So she stayed behind in t h e cabin and filled the dishwasher to clean up the breakfast dishes. ^ soap sudsed over onto the and broke her ankle. 131.457 PHsaivnom 1 Betty E. Collins, wiH ciTt I WITH mt _ A WOHOEH FOH* BUT HAIR CONDITIONING SPECIALS! HAIR SPRAY CREAM RINSE E6GSHAMP0( 4011110100 FLO^r Seeds, I,. URGE i [assortment/ JnoM r ^ ‘ !your e: I.D.L. SPECIAL L LOW PRICE H BOTH $139 FOR ^1 byai jUVe handy <'4 a 4 The Creamiest Lipstick Ever.... LipcolorPlus by Lanolin Plus 20 Dizzliif Cilirs IF ^ CliBosB FriM. I.D.L. LOW PRICE STOP SMOKMG «ll! A piMWint. nrrMhtnf w*r itiD biMk Hitoklitc habit Gnat gaatir madteatad g breakthrough jjl; SINUS car, i SUFFtRERS|SJ Bflmt !*• ih* ""‘7.^ ^lah *'*• LYDIA GREY TOILET TISSUE .lQy.y88^ colf-lite-big quart can starter Caapfiri,/ wScoOnT PAPER PUTB. , PLASTIC tabucioth iMfRiiBfir ^ — lit! 84”i72” sIzb I 'mazyme All Mraiti fir a •■I! ' IEMUR SIZE TCONUHr ( Colour Toiir old Nhoes «Kh nnv lien'valour voii (‘hooNe! Lady Brooke'' > Shoe Cosmetic'** IS faohiaa nhailn! • Wea't crack! Ea»ilraDpli«d! • Laittnianlhi! , Uianie cokura aa often a. you wuh! I Complele Lady Brooke” Shoe Co,. I piolic” Shoe Colour Kit Conlain,: I 1 bollle rtrh of colour, *160 [ rlcanrr and wml Addiliontl boulca of rolonr ll.OOea. Additional ritaner and wax .49 ea. Now ooo Corn-Fit EARPLUGS Tripli Flaiiis I Sill lari ciaiplatly agaiast aaita ar vatar 89t,. MORE VALUE, SERVia & QUALITY EVERYDAY OF THE WEEK! THERE’S AN I.D.L. DRUGSTORE NEAR YOU! FURTNEY BART'S SCHLia DRAYTON ARIS GALLAGHER PARSONS DRUG PHARAAACY DRUG DRUG PHARAAACY AA-59 DRUG DRUG 1 •I4J0UYN ■ 1M1 BALDWIN 660 AUBURN ROAD 44M DM. thty., 3526 Sashabaw 1W Nlthland Rd., Ml AaBoni M. G*r. OrNks 1 nutmc, MICH. MNTIAC PONTIAC, MICIL Drqrto. Haint, Mhli. Drayton Piaini, Mich. ’ P».tim,Mleh. Roohaitar, Midk C—18 THE PONTIAC PRBSS, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 196g / ■- SAVE 20/k .447 The best times among the entries in each event: High hurdles — Charlie Hum-1 phrey (PCH), 14.5; Low hurdles —Das Campbell (Hazel Park), 19.2; lOO-Orville Mullins, (Kettering), 9.9; 220 — Mullins and Kish (Ferndale), 22.1; 440-Ford (Kimball), 50.2. - . 3M mb ihinoton 15 33 .313 It WEDhESDAV'S RESULTC laai City S. Baltlmora 4, 11 Inninfi ntyht lesola 10. Washington 1, night Angeles 4. Detroit 2. NATIONAL LEAGUE Wan Last Pel. Beklad ___ FTsncl.'co Los Angeles St. Louis .... Chicago Pittsburgh Cincinnati Philadelphia Milwaukee Houston New York New York (Boston 0-11 at Boston (0 son 4.4) Detroit 3^ (jr B^lng 2-3) Minnesota 880 — Pat Godfrey (Walled Lake), 1:58; mile—Dennis Hunt (Farmington), 4:27.7; mile re- (Cbenty 4-1 (Paseual 0-4). mom Cleveland (McDowell 2-4 . .. jt^ Chicago tpiiarro 3-2 a^ Peters I FRIDAY'S GAMES Baltimore at Lbs Angeles, night Washington at Kansas City, night Detroit at Minnesota, night Boston at Chicago, night New York at Clereland, night San Fri________ .. _________... .. St. Louts 3. Houston 2, 10 Innings, night Los Angeles. 3 MUwaukea * Only games seheduled TODAY'S GAMES Chicago (Jackson 0-3 and Buhl I "cw York (Jackson 4.4 and PUIadelphla (Mahaffey 3-3 and O 3-3) at PlUsburgh (CardweU 1-0 ■ OIbbon 2-2). $ Houston (Farrell 4-31 derki 1.4) (Drysdala 04) St. Louis Sa- (Spahn ... San Francisco (O'Dell 7-4) at (Nuxhall 4-2). night FRIDAY'S GAMES iPIttsburgh. at New York, nl^ Chicago at Philadelphia, night 32 I 7 0 TMala out (or Egan In Wert In 0th; c-Fh H R ER BB SO 32-3 0 4 4 3 1 1.3 0 0 0 0 0 spar. T-'2:12. A-U.53 Redskins Pay High Price for Paf Richter MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Pat-Richter, Wisconsin’s most honored all-around athlete in more than three decades, has put baseball and basketball behind him for a career in professional football. All-America end signed a one year contract Wednesday with the Washington Redskins of the National Football League and was set to report early in August. Contract terms were not disclosed, but Washington coach Bill McPeak had been reported ready to go as high as $40,000 in a combined salary-bonus offer. To sign t^ 6-foot-5W, 229-pound Wisconsin star, the Redskfiis had to outbid the Denver Broncos id the rival American Football League and at least five major league baseball teams. Richter was the Redskin’s No. 1 choice in the NFL draft, and Mo-Peak said he was “extremely Ipleased to get him on the dotted Ilii I; ./ 1 l>-2 THK rON T1 AC FRI^^S THURSDAY. MAY 80, 1968 mith MUCH ADO - . 0^0 ^ w ju Let’s look this over.. .test ior winct... jwactice swing .. .'‘Well.wlMct do you ttok?’' P. 1 COUT-TO-COMT I Mnal Mnric* of thoMiadt of othor JBtaa Canolty agonto coait’tO'Coaat. Don’t taka cbancoa wMi I foor poraoaal Inanraaca program. Drop Into oor oAco and taka adTantaga of oar P.8. H. W. ffllinENlOCUER Mrs. Midge Cova won a sudden death playoff on the first hole at Morey’s yesterday to take weekly honors in the Women’s Metropolitan Golf Association. Mrs. Cova Wins Feats Fashion Young Dream MWGA Piqyoff on First Hole She defeated Mrs. Charles Zahn after they had posted 86s at the end of 18 holes. Mrs. Cova, who took a 10 on the lotig part five first hole during regulation play, the playoff with a bogey. Mrs. Cova fired one birdie, six pars and needed 31 putts. Walled Lake High School golf coach Leo Folsom just smiles when someone jestingly accuses him of going all the way to Germany to recruit his players. When Walled Lake won The Pontiac Press Invitational Golf Tournament Monday for the ^nd timn In four years, Folsom proceeded to introduce the members of his team to the dinner guests at Pontiac Country Club. “We had to go to Germany to get this monber of oi^: team,” said Folsom in introducing Veit PageL Pagel is attending Walled Lake as a foreign exchange Tarnished Sports Heroes Concern One-Time Great NEW YORK (NEA) - Great Bergen, N.J., was as big a head- sports heroes glisten like shiny idols to the less gifted. From their feats are fashioned young dreams. When the images become tarnished and the dreams troubled, it is a matter of grave ccocem to a lifile old man who once was the biggest name in sports. 500 today will be followed quickly by another feverish race — workers tackling debris and turf damage before the $55,000 l^seedway Festival Golf Tourney Friday. As soon as an expected 250,000 race fans straggle from the Indi- IgnNmds keepers must restore John J. Hayes cannot understand an era which produces such things as football players are susp^ed for betting, coadies accused of coDuskm, basketball players convicted for fixing games and a great aUilete who died from a self-inflicted overdose of drugs. In 1908, Johnny Hayes, now a 77-year-old resident d North line grabber » Gordon Cooper. He won the naaratlxm in Uw Olympic Games in London when Dorando Pieiri of Italy, niio finished ahead, was help^ across the line after he odlapsed and was disqualified. “Derande BOthlag wrong,** Hayes recalled la hb home Jnst across the “and the people who helped him were well-intentioned, I’m sore. Bnt what happened was wrong and he was disqaaliHed. That’s the way U was then — do wrong, ud yon pnld for H. “Remember what happened to Jim Thorpe. After he had won Olympics of 1912 in Stoddiolm somebody found out he had once played semi-pro baseball for eating money. He was stripped of all his honors. Again; swift and sure punishment. “In the Black Sox baseball scandal. Buck Weaver didn’t take any part of the fixes. He merely failed to report knowledge -nunciatiem woqld be Vy-it. But the V has the F enunciation in Gemum so very often he b called Fy-et. Thb gets Pagel, sho(A up even! more. “It’S| “Fight’’, in correct iwonuncia-^ tion,** he notes, “you know justj like you Americans yell, fight, fight, fight.’’ In H a n a ver," Gennany, h i s dad b part owner of a golf course and VeK has been playing golf since he was nine. “I have been pbying the smaB-er Britidi ball,’’ he says, “and thb b the first time I have ever used the American ball.’’ How do you compare the two,’’ he was asked. I score better with the small 1. I carry an average of 75 in Germany. Here it has lieen around 78,” he pointed out. Veit felt that hooks and slices are more prevalent with the American ball and the British ball allows a straighter line. alone and you may have troidde proving it. Kent Pory of Drayton Plains went out himself Sunday to Davb-burg to pby a round of golf. At Hie 5th hob, he eanght up with a threeseme aai tb^ agreed to let him tag along and make It a fr I certainly enjoyed playing in thb country and with the Ama-ican ball,” he added, *' ,’m going to try thb ball on some and lives golf. He hopes in a few years he will make the grade on Germany’s tournament trail. For him we offer a cheer, Veit, Veit, Veit.” SHORT PUTTS Get air ace whUe ptayfog g^lerhate shbb. At the 7th hole. Perry decided on a 6-iron for the 147 yard por-3 hole and it dropped into the cup for an aCe. A1 Shanard, James Spatts and Jim Bullock were the trio of happy witnesses on the tee. Perry had enough witnesses however, there woe three more golfers on the green who called for foursome to tee off. He finbhed with a 4449-83 for the first round, but offered a sigh of relief that hb tale of hb first hole in one can be substantiated and not taken as just another big fish story.” FOREST LAKE TOURNEY Forest Lake Country Qub win join the Ust of clubs staging iih vitational toumamenb. Blatae Eynon, co-chaimuni of the Forest Lake toomament committee has aiurannced that July 11-14 are the dates set for Invitational. , The tournament wlU aHow members to invite guesb as partners and it wiU be played in flighb with 1$ teams in each of five flighb. Many of the club toumamenb are pbyed under various systems. The type of pby for the Forest lake will be the alternate In thb case, both pbyers of a team drive on each hole and each wUl play the second shot with hb partner’s baU and then the choice will be made of one baU with play continuing on al- Reihebold, who has coached basketball here for two years, b The four-day event closes next returning to his native South Monday, climaxing a hectic golf- Bend, Ind., and a job as Taft ing stretch by the touring pros. High School basebaU coach and Thev also had to toil the usual counselor. , i Monday rest day this week in a Adams, a native of Jackson, 36-hole finale of the rain-delayed, wiU become head footbaU coach! Memphis Open and they pby 36 at Sturgb High School | {holes of U.S. Open quaU^gj No successors liave beeni iTuesday. . I named, school offkbb said. ' WE SERVICE! DODGE-DODGE TRUCK CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH VALIANT Factory Trained Mechanics DODGE 211 SOUTH SAGINAW - FE 8-4541 Hart Schaffner & Marx tropicals Cruise through summer cool and crisp Next to an ocean cruise, the most com: fortable way to keep cool is to i^end -^Uie summer itr^ light, light tropical -suit from our Hart Schaffner & Marx coUectioa The fabrics are cool-weight wonders: finespun worsteds and wiltless miracle blends—all tailored by HS&M in crisp, natural lines. Put out to see these HS&M coolers today. from *7640 "CHEVY-LAND’S” BLASTIN6 PRICES AND YCU’RE WITHIN RAN6E! ^Mriririrtrtrirlririrtr^^ NOVA SUPER SPORT CONVERTIBLI PERT PERFORMANCE.. .THRIFTY TO BOOTI Trade Travel time!! SAVINGS ON ALL MOPnSI SAGINAW at LAWRENCE Open iKlonday and Friday Nighb Until 9 PM. BIRMINGHAM-272 W. MAPLE 6peo Thursday and Friday Nighb Until 9..PM. WE PAY YOUR PARKING THE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC • disvr^ • Chevy ![• Corvoir • Corvette »2-DOOR SEDANS • 4-DOOR SEDANS •SPORT COUPES*SPORT SEDANS •SPEOAL SUPER SPORH •WAGONS •CONVERTIBLES •JOBMASTER TRUCKS WRus TODAY... WE'RE DEALING UISjK MATHEWS-HARGREAVES AficAbon’t Larget ChmvroUt DeaUr 631 OAKUU4D FE 5-4161 BOATNEN AHOY!.. NOW HEAR THIS! Whathar you paddia your own conoa or tkippar a cabin cruisar, it's qlwoyt a happy landing with tha naw PIER-KIT tha "Do-lt-Yoursalff dock asoambly that's easy to ii stall... stoiws owoy in tha wintar. YOU CAN NOW BUY OUR LARGE SIZEB RAFT COMPLETELY BUILT-UP 5/4x8” CLEAR FIR DECK ROARDS aNCOL DIPPED 7F-in» $71150 Styrofoam Buoyancy 9-ft. DockSaction, 5/4" x 6" claar tir dack boaids, com- Plata with 1 sat 4-ft. lags---only $22.N K.D. Built Up....$2MI SPECIAL DOCK BOARDS CLEAR VERTICAL BRAIN FIR 5/4«x4“-3 Ft. . . . 5/4"x6“-3Ft. . . . 5/4"x8"-3 Ft. . . , 5/4«x4"-4 Ft. . . . 5/4"x6"-4 Ft. . 5/4"x8“-4 Ft____ 25c Ea. 38c Ea. 55c Ea. 34c Ea. 50c Ea. 75c Ea. ZINCOL DIPPED S1YR0F0RM BILLETS 7"x20"x9‘ tapBaits 491 Lbs. 10«x20“x9* SappartsIMWs. *17*5 Pleasure Vamithet NEW LDW PRICE • 6x10 Ft. Roft All Lumber. 2 Pieces Styrofoam. 5/4" X 8" clear fir deck bMrds. Zincol dipped. Ready for Assembly Including nails and bolts. Do-tt-Yourtalf At Ttiis Low Price.. *64 95 HAGGERTY”- SUPPLY CU. I 194T HAQQCRn HIGHWAY WALLED UKEMA445S1 SrrWiEN W. AAAPLI RD. oad PONTIAC TRAIL HOURS 1 Ul. to I FJL.UT. 1 A.M. to S PJL ft.iU'. ■ i THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1963 vD-8 PmSBURGH (AP) - Pltto-irgh’i Roberto Ctemeite has been fined |2S0 and banded a five-day suspension for jostling an umpire, unwillingly Joining one of major leai^ baseball’s roost select groups. , RECORD STEAL-Luis Aparicio steals second well ehead of the throw against Kansas City last night for his 15th theft of die season. This is a Baltimore base stealing record. The Athletics won, 5-4, in 11 innings. Travel 'Balk' Called Against Bo Belinsky LOS ANGELES (AP)-The Los Angeles Angels are accusing one of their own pitchers of balking. Naturally, it would have to be Bo Belinsky, the predicament-prone playboy who has resisted the allurement of the travel posters and decided that Ibwaii is his idea of no place to go. Having hinted to others that the movies were anxious to exploit his talents, Belinsky told Hwey he’d like to be plac^ on the voluntarily retired list. BOSS BALKED ’That was when Haney balked. If Belinsky went on the retired list, he couldn’t play baseball The Angels, inspecting their pitchers’ records the otherlon was fined and suspended Wednesday for actions in Tuesday’s night game against Philade^ihia cited by league Pres-idoit Warren Giles as “f serious reported ... in several years.” Clemente thus joins a host of well-known players, managers and coaches fined and suspended. ’Ihe list includes Babe Ruth, Ted Williams, Leo Durocher, Charlie Dressen, Don Drysdale, Yogi Berra, Mickey Mantle, Whitey Ford, Billy Martin and Gene Conley. DDUBLE ’TROUBLE Clemente was penalized for twice bumping Umpire Bill Jack-owski. after he was called out on the tail end of a doublqvlay in a close play at first base. He was ejected for the jostling, and' later explained: “Every year I lose 15-26 points on close plays at first base. I seldom argue unless I feel the umpire is wrohg. I have good record in league office but this is year for umpiring I have; ever seen. TTiere are only two or three good umpires in league.” limited to five days “because of the assurance given me by Mr. Joe Brown, Pirates general manager, that the club would not pay the fine and would not Giles said the suspension was you directly or Indirectly. said “whether Clemente bumped the umpire inten- Electrical Stonn Hampers Air Race HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP) -Competitors in the 1,420-mfle Women’s International Air Race battled rain and electricid storms Wednesday but none tfropped out in daytime sky cruises that started at Detroit and suspended overnight at Chattanooga, Cincinnati, Albany, Ga., and Hollywood. Florida headquarters reported that Bernice Steadman of Flint, Mich., one of several who landed at Chattanooga, was in first place under the race’s handicap system. Donna Blake of Detroit reached Hollywood but her position in the standings was figuned about 20th. Audrey Lehr, of Xenia, ^o, got into Albany, Ga. two mihutes before the sunset deadline inqvosed on all the contestants for each day’s flying. The race is expected to end ’Thursday. It began at Welland, Ont. were levied against Drysdale, for throwing pitches at Cincinnati ballplayers two years ago; against Williams, for spitting pt tionally or not I do not know.” However, he added, “we have rules and we have to abide by them.’ Punitive measures have beeh against some of five game’s top names for similar actions and for even more flagrant violations. 15,660 FINE Ruth was tagged with the heaviest fine in baseball history—$5,000 —by New York Yankees Manager Miller Huggins in 1925 for “insubordination. The heaviest suspeiftion was dealt Durocher, banned for the entire 1947 season by Commissioner A.B. (Happy) Chandler for “conduct detrimental to baseball.’' Other fines and suspensions Siebern Not for Sale fans during a Boston Red Sox game in 1958, and against Conley last year, for leaving the Red Sox without permission. Cassius Silenced by TV Commentator LONDON (UPD - Like any fast-talking circua barker Cassius Gay appreciates an audience. Yesterday, heavyweight contender Gay, boxing’s gift to the world of poetry ana oratory, stormed out of a London television studio when, an interviewer told him “you talk too much.” KANSAS CITY (AP)-Pat Friday, general manager for the Kansas .City Athletics, sa|d Wednesday night “we’re not in the process of swapping Norm Siebern. We’d have to get a terrific deal before we would let him go.” Clay, who bilb himself as the “Louisville Lip,” boasted to TV interviewer David Coleman that he once had former heavyweight champion Ingemar Johansson ‘out on his feet” during a sparring session. Cassius, who has received rough treatment by British boxing writers since his arrival here to prepare for a fight with British heavyweight Henry Cooper, apparently irritated Coleman vrith his answers. rule against posteeaaon barnstorming in 1921. ’The $12,000 represented the combined World Series shares of the three players, about $4,600 each. The biggest multiple fining came in 1956 when six members of the Yankees—Mantle, Berra, Ford, Martin, Hank Bauer and Johnny Kucks-drew a combined fine of $5,500 for engaging in q night club melee. ’The Ingest fine ever levied w^ the $12,000 Yankee players Ruth, Bob Meusel and Bill Piercy were fined by then commbsioner, Judge K. M. Landis, for breaking the Netters Play in Tulsa TULSA, OkU. (AP)-Some of the nation’s top-rated tenrus players will compete here today as the ai*ual ’Tulsa ’Tennb Gub Invitational tournament gets under way. They include Ham Richardson of Dallas, and Chuck McKinley of Louis. iaP^HARIIIM^IIR LOW, LOW PRICES KEEGO WALLS BULMAN HDWE. # 3 HARDWARE HARDWARE 3320 Aebern 6545 Cemmerce 3545 ERzabeth Aebeni Heiglits lead lake Rood UL ^2020 EM 3-2442 FE 54H1 But if he repenb, he doesn’t j have to wait 60 days to play. “If Bo decides to go to Hawaii,” Haney said. “I can send another wire and have him reinstated right away. “There’s no question in my mind,” Haney said, “that he can pitch big league ball if he’ll give at least one-third of his thought to playing ball . . . really and HERE’S YOUR CHANCE TO SAVE ON TIRES.. Saturday Only SPECIAL PRICES on ALL-WEATHER'42' tecf the value we have in thb man. I think thb boy can pitch. ■“’ITiere is no animosity .between us. I like the guy. I just think, he’s not getting the benefit of his own abilities by his activities off the field. CASH SAVING Haney said he. Manager BiH Rigney and pitching coach Marv Grissom agr^ it would be “best for Bo to go out and find himself and get hb control back.’ The Angeles, meanwhile, without Belinsky, have won two of three. Charley Dees, who came up from Hawaii when Bo was ordered down, broke a sixth-inning tie with a three-run double Wednesday night as the Angeb defeated Detroit 4-2. ie lUimUfTU Written Road NO MONEY DOWN 13 IflUrv 1 n Hazard Guarantee FREE MOUNTING! TUBE-TYPE BLACKWALLSl TUBE-TYPE WHITEWALLS! 6.70x15 plus tax and 4or 2 tires off yourc 2for’25 Stay Sparkling White! BIG BUYS! 3-T NYLON with TUFSYN! SPREE « Hie PONmCRETML sins FRIDAY and SATURDAY on NEW 1963 PONTUCS or TEMPESTS EVERYTHING GOES! Tha “G” Sign hat boon given by Henry Klin*, Salts Manager for Pontioc Retail Store, on 1501963 Pontiacs and Tempests to be sold by the end of this month. M Models Available for Immediate Delivery BUY NOWl SAVE NOW! There Must Be a Reason: OthMvToHc Dmots, but PonticN NEW SIRVia HOURS to BETTER SERVE OUR CUfTOAAERS AAondoy thru Friday 6 A.AA. 'til 1>30 A.M.-Scrturday 7i30 A.M. *tR 12 PM, The Pontiac Retail Store Wants Your Business! The Pontiac Rriail Store ;65 Mt» Clemens St, DOWNTOWN PONTIAC FB S.7951 TT b-4 THiS PONTIAC PRESS> THURSDAY. MAY 80, 1963 Prep All-Americans Wooed by Coaches NEW YORK - (NEA) - The big list of most wanted young men is not issued by tbe K.B.I. It is the roster of Scholastic Magaxines’ All-American High School Basketball Squad. Every college coach wants the » round ball experts o» this yov'a list and they are being hustled like a guy in a celluloid collar at the race track. Some already have been committed after being rushed-by SO w more Beats of higher education. Others, more coy, are still being wooed and given red carpet treatment. ne tt •seatan, two Jimiors and oae sophomore range, in hei^t from S-U to 7 feet and a quarter inch. Tbe space race b still on, with overall altitude Jumping from M 4/5 from lie's €-3 3/4. The biggest and best looking from Middletown, Ohio, High to be All-American at Ohio State. SHOT BLOCKER Described as a Bill Russell type, Alcindor b called a fantastic shot blocker, jumper and deft pivot man. Double and triple-teamed, Alcindor averaged 19-1 points and 15 rebounds in leadfeg his team to a 27-0 record in a tough leaguer — according to students of the Nkk Pino, of St Michaels High in Santa Fe, N.M., b the second highest alp on the list, standing a flat 7 feet. He set a state single game nurk of 00 poinb on hb way to compiling a 33-jxdnt Pat ROey, a comparative 0-4 midget from Liatoa High In Schenectady, N. Y., accepted the bid of Adolph Rupp to go to Kentucky, after carefully consideriug M offers. David Latin of Worthington High School in Houston made sport IS Lewis Alcmdor of.u,. ,n i,j_ Power Memorial, New York City’s Catholic school champions. Alcindor, 7 feet and a quarter-indi tall, b just 15H years old — and still growing. He Is the second sopixanore to make the magazines’ All-American. The first was Jerry Lucas, who came It b reported that all 6-7 of him has been pledged to the University of Wichita. Chamftionship RENKEli Brnb .t<4» $136 Sm Hm ALUNIW HICH-FLOTATION FIBIR6LAS CLIPPER BOATS IS ft from $795 SCHWINN BIKES 29.95 CYCLI Not all the youngsters from 27 states and the Dbtrict of Columbb were being pursued by coaches before they made thb year’s roster. The magazines’ compilers sift fine pbyers out of the woodwork at high schoob so tiny or obscure even the college coaches don’t know about them. Eddb Miles, who made the 1959 team from Jones High School in North Uttle Rock, Ark., wound up an All-American at Seattb University. The 1963 squad Ibb Henry WatkSb, from Pearl High School, Nashville. The rush fto him that started when his name popped up on the Scholastic team died Ijabomin’. He was committed to join two high school jdBymates, Vic Rouse and Leslb Hunt^, at Loyola of Chicago, the NCAA champions. > When the college coaches ‘^f thb, the gnariiiim^ of stripping the gears on a 10-ton truck. JewUS.KOYIlLTIRES ;o V eNmNCEMEO TO Kf BF VOUatBAag IN THE TfiyNK Compare These! ■EIREUS •.00 K 14 Size WIDE WHITEWALLS Now Ib Your Chance Plus Tax asB RMappabls Tire 2 4I’42« WHEEL BAUNCE Wts. Included too! wheels for 399 Garden Tools Only 7S KING TIRE CENTER L. FE 3-7068 31 W. MMriealin SPECIAL AWARD - Virla Landon of Pontiac received a special award last night for her accomplishments in roller skating competition, including being the only Michigan amateur holding a gold medal for both figures and dance. Skater Is Honored for 10-Year Record Retiring competitive amateur roller skater Virb Landon was presented with a special award by Burt Anselmy at the R611-‘Spinning WheeU” program last night. An inscribed desk pen set was presented in recognition of Mbs Landon’s roller skating accom-plishmenb. In 10 yean of skating she won or pbced In 25 evenb. She is the only amateur skater in Michigan to hold a gold medal in both figures and dance. A gold medal b the higl^st proficiency award an amateur skater can receive. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence D. Landon, 2938 Voor-heb, Virla will be a sophomore at Western Michigan Univenity this fall. OCEANPORT,.N.J. (AP)-Mon-louth Park opens a 56-day race meeting Friday. It ends Aug. 3. Mays' Hitting Sets New Low Imagine! Willb Mays with the good field, no hit” tag. Wondrous Willb b s through what b undoubtedly the roughest slump of hb career at bat. But the San Francisco Gi-anb’ brilliant center fielder still shows the old-time spaikte on defense. After a third straight hitless game Wednesday night that dropped his average to J43, Mays made a clutch contribution with spectacular catch in the bottom of the ninth inning at Cincinnati. He crashed into the wall in center, holding-on' for a oneJianded grab of pinch hitter Ken Walter’s long drive that helped i»-eserve the Gianb’ 5-4 decbiwi over tbe Reds. Slugging sensation Ed Baitey rapped a three-run homer and Billy Pierce did a tight bit of relief pitching in the Gianb’ victory, which boosted their National League lead to m games over the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers’ game with the Braves at Milwaukee was called because of heavy fog in tbe top of the seventh inning with the score tied 34 and will have to be replayed as part of a doubleheader July 21. WINNING HOMER In the only other NL game. Bill White’s homer with one out in the last of the 10th gave the St.iiOub Cardinals a 3-2 victory over Houston. Bailey, who b batting .329 and has 29 runs batted in on 28 hib, powered the Gbnb into a 5-1 lead when he poled hb lOth hcrniev^with two on in the sixth inning. The Reds picked up a second run against Juan Marichale in the seventh, then the right-hander was replaced by Pierce after Marty Keough’s two-run homer with one out'in the eighth. Pierce saved Marichal's seventh victory in 10 decisions, holding the Reds hitless the rest of the way - California has gone big-league -in major-league baseball, football, hasetball—and now, as the nuniber one shotgun sbte. Calf' has some of the great . ing in America, recently took over from Minnesob as the greatest duck-hun^ sbte. with the aid of Mays’ catch. It was s game filled with rhubarbs. Loser Bob Purkey wu ejected in the fourth liininf for srguing about a pitch, ^uck Hiller was thrown out for heckling from the Gbnb’ bench, and Manager’A1 Daiic of San Francisco got into a heated dispute with the umpires over a call. UNDER PROTEST As a tipper. Manager Fred Hutdiinson of the Reds announced he was pbying the game under protest because Maridial had thrown more than the regubtion five warmup pitches b the fourth. White’s homer nailed down the Cards’ sixth victory b their last seven games, breaking a tb created aben the Colb scored a run b the ei^ith on doubles by Brodc Davb and A1 Spangler. Howie Goss had a homer for Houston, hb third b two games and eighth d the year. The winner was Bobby Shanb and the loser was Don McMahon, both b relief. CLIPPINGS GALORE - Mrs. David deVanma, swimmer Donna, sbter Jo Anne and brother Kurt, give approval to a well-filled orderly scrapbook recording Donna’s feats. 1964 Olympics Big Goal Donna Swims for More Records SANTA CLARA, Calif. <11 - A pert blonde teen-ager who rewrote Japan’s swimming record bode b 1962 may revamp world standards in 1963 because she’s workbg out four times as mudi. The queen-of-swimming candidate b Donna Elizabeth deVar-ona, a 16-year-old American who is so devoted to her sport that the family moved ib residence near-40 miles last fall so she could be near her favorite coach. Dcmna — or Lb, as her family and friends call her — already has held three world’s records, ird bd- still claimbg the 440-yeard 1 vidual medley mark along with six American standard^. Now she’s aiming for 4he 1964 Olympics at Tokyo. But she won’t reveal her stopwatch goab and bn’t even sure b what evenb she’ll compete. MAY QUIT ‘Til keep on until 1964,” she says. ‘‘After that, I’ll probibly quit.” Doana’f typfcal day b aigalf-Icantly different from last year, when she wsrked oat only about one boor a day four days a week. “I’m up at 6:45, grab soim breakfast and rush to the pool for an hour before 8:15. Then I go to school until 3, get back to the pool to loosen up and work out from 4 until 6 or 6:30." Then it’s home to fbbh schoolwork. bblished a new insurance office I wanted to move down here ever since I met George Habes," she says, referring to the successful coach of the Sanb Clara Swim Club and 1960 U. S. en’s Olympic team. ‘ ^‘Finally daddy and I and the rest of the family decided to do it.” So thedeVaronas left their home b Lafayette last August and father Dave deVarona es- Crowd Stays for Fireworks b nei^borbg San Jose. Domia swims 2H ts 3 miles and spends three sr more hsart b the pool sb days a week. “I sbim everytlibg from Ml’s down to 50’s," she explains. “Notbbf different from before •>jiut lob more.” Dozens of trophies, plaques and awards, plus 10 pounds of med-ab, decorate be suburban deVarona home and teatify to Donna’s success. Many of the Qie-mentos are from her age-group tour of Japan b 1961 and her Japanese tour wib the U.8. National team b 1962. Donna has gained far more from swimming than victory awards. Fog Stops Braves-Dodgers Game MILWAUKEE (AP)—As veteran air travelers, be Los Angeles Dodgers and be Milwaukee Braves should have known better. It’s wise to come equipped wib radar when encounterbg soupy weaber. The JPdgers and Braves started The brgest crowd of be season in Milwaukee — 29,166 — was bolstered by 17,198 fans who paid 39 cehb each brough a chain grocery promotion. They sat out be fog and stayed for be fireworks. PLUArSfm anch called' time wib two out b fireworks were b progress;- DISCOUNTS ON ALL PLUMBING SUPPLIES WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLDI WHY PAY MORE? . . . SAVE AT SAVE! FREE STANDING CLOSET HOT WATER HEATER . O-GAL. GLASS LINED, 5,4 A95 0-YEAR WARRANTY.... SI f • t y ib», \fiul ever SO salient s*' hear. 40-sal. gat, SO-gal. gat, 52-sal. alac. FREE STANDING TOnET 18“ COMPLETE WITH FITTINGB 3-Fe. Catt Iren Celered bath sets A- Ncrtr Beftrt Tnk, Barartt Trap H)9«» SINKS ond LAVS Vaahy lavs..........$195 17x19 diim lav.....$9.95 2 Part Staiabss StssI $24.95 2 Part Cast Irsa...$25.95 2 Part SistI, Irret- • • • $195 SOIL PIPE a” SMI r LMfW . r* Ml Pip# S’ L#M«Ii $4.10 $3.58 FIBERGLAS LAUNDRY TRAYS 1*19” EXTRA SPECIAL 7*3r INSTALL IT YOURSELF—WE RENT YOU TOOLS Safe"** 172 S. Sagliaw ri i-isit n s-iioo Open Momdar - SaUuday 9 to 5:30 — Ftidaj $ lo tM > FREE PARKING ON WESSEN STREET SIpE b a 3-3 tie of blbd man’s bluff Wednesday night as a bick fog closed b On County Stadium. The Milbg was about 200 feet when tlw umpires mveffifliy decided to protect the outfielders the Los Angeles sevenb. After a 52-minute deby, tbe game called and all marks entered be record book. draw wib be second-place Dodgers. In be Milwaukee fourth, be umpires decided to see for bem-selves. They went to be outfield after asking Braves coach Dixie Walker 'to hit a couple of fly balls. Walker, aJormer National gamTBreworks barMy could be seen. Showers of co1(m7u1, according to be contract, sparks appeared as distant satellites. f)cca-iBiar fesoandinf ii booms guaranteed be fact the The fog swept bto tbe area at game time. The Braves promptly dented bey had imported it from London b an atteijipt to earn a $.0. ROGERS HOUDAY SPECIALS Wilson GOLFSET $77.25 5 Iroi ■f I 2 Woe and “fouled off” his first attempt. ‘That shows the way things have been going for us,” said Eddie Mabews. “Even our hit-ng instriQctbr can’t hit be ball.^ The umpirM agreed to continue be game ,wiQT be Dodgers in front 34 on a second bnbg run and Frank Howard’s 10b homer wib a mate aboard b be bird, of 18 scoreless bnings and tied be score b be sixb after Hank Aaron led off wib a double on a line drive which left fielder Tommy Davis lost in be mist. MORE STUDY Wib a runner on second and one out b be Dodger sevenb, Mabews, a veteran bird base-man moved to left field, had to make a circus catch of a fly ball Value An4 fer lACK-YARD FU^^^ Badminton Sati Wiffla Boll Sotf. ;.. 1.W Horiofhoo Sots Croquot Sots Tothof Boll Sots 6.95 Tokrdw Sots Tombtorolll Sots Archory Sots , 4.95 Peur-Squoro Bolt.. ..... 3.25 Splncost Outfit S.88 Swim Mosk. iPORTIHG^GOODB 24 {.Lawrence PONHAC PI2-23M by Ron Fairly. The umpires ben be played through—with or wib-out knives. Milwaukee Manager Bobby Bra-gan handled the fungo duties instead of Walker. One of Bragan’s hits was drilled to left field. As be umpires gazed toward the sky, be ball hit one on the foot. It was a grounder. fere convbc^ be fog couldn’t my swimming has added to everything,” she explains. “I’ve been to places I’d never go otherwise and met people I’d never have met. I don’t bbk I'm missbg out on a bing. “It doesn’t seem like swim-mbg takes that much time — I simply have to be more organized than when I’m not swimming. Just swimming under . George is one of the greatest bbgs there is, though 1 can’t “ " ‘ him NamedJoMeoA DU Committee PASADENA, Calif. W-Ducks Unlimited, waterfowl conservation organization, has elected Carsten E. Tiedman, Grosse Pointe Farms, as chairman of be executive committee. The board of trustees appropi-ated 1600,000 for the development of “duck factories” b be prairie provinces of Canada, where more ban 65 pifr cent a total of $8,750,000 to rebuild or restore 630 “duck factories” in Canada. U.S. law (uehibits the use of duck stamp funds for this purpose outside the territorial borders of be United States. Watch for Big Expansion News.. Soon }«S at THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1963 PhiicoTowiiHoase TV with Remote Control $23900 New Town House. Compact styling and perform-ance ;. . Cool Chassis. Diracta Wireless Remote Control. DAY SALE FRIDAY SATURDAY MONDAY FREE! ALUMINUM CHAISE J12.95 Volue S WITH EVERY PURCHASE of M50** or more ■ 23" Overall Diog. Danish Modem <249 00 23-Inch Master Craft Console TV $10.00 Down Master craft cabinet in genuine walnut veneers and solids... also available in antique white or gold Frmtch Provincial, maple Early American, tgany. Cool Chassis oonstriictionberaTvniai r~— L' *219" l$10.00 Down PHILCO 23-Inch Console TV Awakens with mode, amnds alam for heavy sleepeis and allowa an extra “40 Winka” if de-aired. Automatic Frequency Control for drift-free FM. 6 tubee fat exceptional reception. SUde-rule tuning diaL Choice of blue and white or beige and white. 23" Overall Diag. hogahy. Cwl Cha^ o lengthens TV life and improves performance. Set-It-and-Forget-It tuning automatically locks each dhannel into l^t line tuning poeiti^ after one setting. Windowlite diannri indiaitor. PHILCO-Bendix Quick 'n' Quiet Clothes e Full 12-lb. capacity e Two Cycles e Prevents tangling— dries fastsr e Automatic Dewrinkling e Front-mounted Metal UntTrap Mi New for 1963 PHILCO REFRIGERATOR 8.6 CU. ft. MET sou »155“ Full-width top frMzer stores 92 lbs. of fronn food. Shelf-lined storage door. White titinium porcelain ints-i rior. New “Form-Fit" styling gives the' “built in" look without the built-in cost. $5.00 Down-$2.50 a Wk- Enjoy a double measure of stereo listening pleasure thru FM stoeo radio broadcasts as wril li stereo b raTYouf no need to consult guides. Choice of cabinet styles in genuine hardwoods... Traditional mahogany Cshown), Danish Modem ^Inut, or Italian Pro-vindai light mahogany. PHILCO Briefcase 19" Portable TV mr Briefcase design... only 12Vi" thick. Convenient carrying handle. Telescopic pivotenna. “Wraparound” HiilcCi""p6werhouse diassis." -19* overall diagonal measu^ehL ^ PHILCO-Bendix 12-lb. capacity Automatic Washer *188" o 4 cyciM, 2 spesdsi • Automatic Filter DiepenMr • Unds^ tow Agitator—the most acti)p agitation aver put in an agitator Stereo Portable RHILCO 1427. 2-Speaker portable stereo photiogreph with Multl-MIx Record Changer, 2 sapphire needles, two^tone linen finish portable cabinet COLOR TV GET OUR DEAU AIR CONDITIONERS PRICED TO MOVE! PHILCO 8.6 Cu. Ft. Chest Freezer $17995 • Storea 300 poonda frozen foods _ e New “l%iii8ulated“ wan deaign allowa more atoram room in more compact caunek • Safe^ counterbalanced lid • New flush-fit cabinet styling LARRY STOWEU I ' Aw't Star. Memogw Your Dollars Buy More At FIRESTONE! where your dollar buys MORE miles 146 W. Huron 333-7917 140 N. Saginaw FE 4-9979 OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY til9PJA. TUES..WED, TH0R&,SAT. till6 ..'kZ JOE ZELASKO Stor. Mcmagar --'■1 Vvjrt D—e THE gONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1968 SPEED Is IrapertaBt. Keep bent Jost into wave ahead. following sea propeller and rudder with it. If Running before a sea offers ** happen, you a greater challenge than meet-!?*''® !®®‘ temporarily, the ing it head-on. It is a splendid Pover grip on the ___ <• WaiAP on/l tr/vis M«n i-ialp A# Gold Cupper Newest Flare in Power Boating D high speed pow- nounoad. Newast flara in _ . •r4)oatiiig ooiiid be an unoinial and rare draft called Ihe Gold It is unusual bdcauae its power consists of two engines, one for tremendous q>eed and the other for slow mooring, and also because its three-point Gdd Cup type hull seats four persons in plush comfort even when it is rooster-tailing at more than 150 miles an hour. It is rare because there is only one such creation in ex- I. Guesses have been made, iq> as high as $50,000 but like half that would be among the educated ee- TV’s Route M used the boat a “prep” in ene of Us spring programs, probabfy at the bh stigattea of Guy Lombardo who admittedly is “bagi^ about the boat aad would like to drive tt in this summer’s Gold Cup race July 7 at Detrott. Lmnbudo vrill. Right now the boat belongs to Bemie Little, of One glib visionary, purposely out of line, remarked: ‘it is a prestige boat and it ought to have a prestige price-if I were marketing it. I’d put a $150,000 tag on her, a thousand dollars for every one of the 150 m.pJi. she’s rated to go. Hie Gold Cupper, completed in the spring ef IN!, b the cea-ceptfea ef a Oetroiler *whe kaews the high price ef speed ,en water and a lot of the hydrodynamics aad aerodynamics as- ont too much lisUof etther sliik-bg or flying. He b Robert B. Evans of Grosse Pointe, Mich., whose holdings include a precision machinery company in Chicago, a power and tool firm in Detroit, a big hotel in Palm Beach and the ^aadadier Marine Industries, of whidi he b dudrman of the board and Prank Lester (Lee) Staudacher b president. Sbudacher at the moment b still in Alpena General Hoqiital recovering from injuries he re-deved May 16 when the Jet-powered Miss Stars and Stripes II struck a log, lost her rudder and piled up In a woods near the shore of Hubbard Lake. Sbudacher managed to get our of the cockpit before Stars and Stripes shed the shore but bon^ in Arro Nine Nicked, but Amoves Info 1st Tampa, Fb., who has announced Arro Realty yielded a run-in that he b entering it in the big race at Detroit and that Guy will drive it. test of seamanship. In a following sea, your boat must be kept from yawing, which happens when the stem b not kept straight on course but is thrown from side to side. water, and you run the rbk of broaching or turning broadside to the waves in the trough. MabUbtog the right speed b most important. Your boat must be kcj^ Just bto the wave ahead, b the trough far enough Slowing down to let the sea get ahead of you ordinarily will k^ your boat from yawing to the broaching ^int. Detroit was the first to exploit The Gokf Cupper. That was last summer when it was titled “The Commissioners Boat for the Spirit of Detroit Trophy Race, the Commissioner being Lee Sdioenith who also b chairman fact, three of them —but it had plenty to lean back upon and today shares the top spot b the city Class A softball league with Harvey’s Colonial House. Hie realtors whipped Dave’s Boys, 9-3. Another American League contest saw Elks 810 wb ib first by toppbg Martin Associates. Two unofficial games ended b victories for Local 653, 3-2 ner. When he came in on a passed ban, Jacobs had all the runs he needed. He permitted only two hib and had fbe defensive support from shorbtop A1 Smith. Jacobs fanned three and walked three. McConner yielded seven hib and walked four, but also fanned nbe batters. Both teams are 1-2. UK AmericM Power Bool Aeeo-K^^'' The name Gold Cupper had not'. Bob Vent’s home run lead- Sometimes a long line floated . . - - from the stem will not only check ^ of the one astern to keep 'the boat’s speed, but it will help it from breakbg over her tran- keep her on a straight course. FASTEST Care should be taken that the Ibe does not foul the prop. been tacked on her when Detroit became the first expbitive adopt- If you get too far bto the wave ahead, your boat may mount it and rush down the slope bto the trough. The stem may go out of the water at the crest, takbg the Michigan Now Third in Fishing Licenses ta fishing license sales, placed third ta the nation for 1962, far hehbd Califomb which has held a ffav grip on the No. 1 spot in recent years, according to flgnres Just released by Some 1,115,135 licenses and i b this state last year for $2,712.5N. CaUfor^ aml»s pdT N,m.- 471 hfk total of 3,4K,742 li-nses^ Const'S $2,494,791. stamps. Mbnesota I with 1,3N3N li-stamps at a cost of From 1948 through 1N2, Mkhigin topped all states b total sales. Sfaice then, it has wavered between second and fourth place. Ib number of in-dlvidiial fishing license holders totaled 987,627 last year. JET BOATS RUNUOUTS-CBinSEXS Safa . . . Dapendobla | MKHI6AN TURBOCRAFr Sales Running at an ill-timed speed wbch causes the propeller to dig b deep at one pobt, then race as it comes out the water, not only offers the possbility of getting bto difficulties but also imposes considerable strab on your motor. Light-Heavy Champ Sees Fast Ending It has been c^ed “The Fastest it in Us Pleasure Boat b Oie World.” Not to Uib day has a cost figure been disclosed. What Tampa’s Little paid has never been An- Detroit Track Site of Crash Jet Powered Dragster Hits Retaining Wall DETROIT (AF) - The jet-pow-erhd Jiaiflgteftt , Exiwess crashed tbngs go as anticipated, world light-heavyweight champion Harold Johnson will pobt for richer goals once he gets by challenger Willie Pastrano here Satitfday night. The 34ryear-old titreholder from Philadelphb is a 9-2 favorite to retab his crown b the 15-round nationally-televised bout in the Las Vegas Convention Centw. don’t think we’ll have any Dragway Wednesday night during a high spebd run in preparation for an assault on the world’s land speed record. Driver Chuck Hatcher of Call-fomb Aivas noLbJured and track and bced it to tfis'fence for a triple. Roger Nosek follow^ wib a officials said damage appeared limited to the car’s body and front axle. Track spokesmen said Uie crash occurred as Hatcher completed his bird rim of be evenbg. He trouble. Johnson will take him out ^released the car’s drag chute b in the early rounds.’’ That was an attempt to slow for a stop, but be word from Pat Olivieri, be the chute came off and be car champion’s manager who does|stmck be wall at be end of be practically all the talking for PA-mile track. Johnson. “We have bree or four big money offers but naturally we won’t make any decisions until after this fight,” Olivieri said. TWO CONTRIVERS He mentioned no names but reportedly Mauro Mina, the No. 1 contender and South American champion, is due to watch the A track official said car owrier Walter Arfons, of Akron, Ohio, indicated he expected to keep a (Late in August at be BonneviUe Sait Flats in Utah in a bid to break be current record of 392.2 miles per hour set by John Cobb of Engbnd. The car won’t be repaired b time for a scheduled run at Bqnne- fight in person. And be European vHfe next month, officials said. CAUfUTABS $49S-$1795 HoosAboAts ... $2995 ap CARSONS 29080 Ttl. at 9 Mila IL 7-1611 champion, Italy’s Giulio Rinaldi, is anxious for a title chance in Rome in be fail. The 28-year-old Pastrano, from Maimi, Fla., is through wib his hard training but Johnson plans at least one final tough tuneup Friday. “Our guy looks great. He’s whipped better fighters ban Johnson,” said trainer Lou Gross. “We The car was timed at 192.30; 169.17; and 199.54 miles per hour in its bree runs Wednesday night. Firing over a dog wib a pistol or lightly-loaded gun while he’s eating may help condition him to a gun in be field. ing off be second inning was the first run scored off Arro bis season in three games, but be winners scored bree times in the following inning on the booming bats of the Hayward boys to put be game out of D-Bbys’ roach. Bud Hayward doubled, Don (^ckenbush sbgled. Bill Hayward doubled, and brother A1 tripled before anyone could be three-bagger in be left field cor^ his arms, legs and a abouldar ware broken. Let had Just dun-pletod a test run through oae kilometer trap and had attained a speed (tf more than 2N miles Ian hour when the accident hap- Staudacher- Is the builder of the [Gold Cupper. He Is the same man who has built most of the Gold Cup boats since World War II in an expanded plant near the Staudacher home at Kawkaidin, 'Mich. Only a second inning walk to Jim Gaylock spoiled Darrel Herron’s bid for a perfect game against Plant No^ 2 Local 653 in a practice session last night ati Norbside. His Berry Door team-' mates pounded out 14 hits for 14{ runs. Burly Mondy and Bob Fraser' teamed to outduel Charles Gist in a practicre game between Local and Motorcar Transport. Lloyd Frazier had a homer for be winners. retired in the third inning. Arro added four more runs in be fourb wib be aid of another double by Bill H., and singles by Quackenbush and A1 Hayward. It was a good pitching duel in be “A” game at Beandette Park. Martin scored an unearned ran in be first and Elks tied be score on dinck Graves’ triple and Sid Gregory’s single in be bird. Perc McConner for Martin and R. D. Jacobs for be winners then matched goose eggs until one Drag Races Tonight at Detroit Dragway THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL THURS.; FRI., SAT. HIGH TREAD TAKE OFFS 2 F«r l/j JOO All prices plus tax and smooth tire off your car. Tires mounted free. AE'rO DISCOVNT 680 Mr. Clomont $♦., Cor. EoW BM., Pontiac Opaa 9:30 AM. ta 9 PM. Doily - them FE 4497S U.S. ROYAL TIRES Engintertd to ktop your tparo in tht trunk . The racing side-by-side of two 8,000 h.p., 200 mph Jet propelled “monsters” built by Walt Arfons of Akron, Ohio, highlights be! Memorial night racing shows at I Detroit Dragway, Sibley at Dix. The racing of two of bese flame | trailing jets on wheels has neveFj of bese Jets bree tiniM each evening is the feature of be full dragster, competition and stock car meets. Stuart Tries New Glasses for Batting BOSTON (AP)—First baseman Dick Stuart of the Red Sox, who once slugged 66 home runs in one season in be minors, says he’ll try out a pair of eye glasses in batting practice today before be Boston-New York Yankee game at Fenway Park. Havbg his troubles at be plate bis spring though he hascradced eight home runs and driven in 29 runs, Stuart obtained the spectacles Wednesday night. He h^d planned to don them for batting practice, but rain washed out bob be practice and be game. This is my idea, not the club’s,” said be former Pittsburgh slugger, acquired last winter from the Pirates. “My vision a little blurred when I use the left eye only. But my eyes really don’t give me trouble. It’s just an idea.” On Saturday night, June 1, Jim i Marsh, a frequent top eliminator I at be Sibley Road Track, faces! ‘Mad Greek” Chris Karamesines from Chicago, Illinois. Karamesmes, who has been making records for himself around be country, drives one of be “prettiest” aluminum bodibd, [ long nosed dragsters in. the sport. ‘Chizler” runs on a mixture of nitro methane fuel that is highly explosive. Deep Outlaalc Bright After Breakup Survey The Conservation Department looks for a sizeable fawn crop! and another good season for' Michigan deer hunters next fall. judging from be way things appear at sprmg breakup time. Its optimism, ^alified to some extent until spring and summer! surverys are completed, is tied in with be fact bat whitetailsl generally came through the win-j ter in better sha^ ban expected ^ physically and numerically. Camping Days Are Here! THE "ELDORADO" 2-ROOM FAMILY TENf Completely seWed-in floor, 2-woy zipper door, nylon screenino with storm flaps, aluminum poles, steel stakes. 5^4” sidewall, 7' center. THE “ELDORADO” COMES IN 2 SIZES. W'xl3'2" . .. w 9'4"xl 7'6".. .’106" 1 OTHER COTTAGE TENTS ON SALE ... "Look-Out" 9'4"xl 1 '8", intid* zippers.. $74.50 "Parktide" 9'4"xl 1 '4", outside flaps .. $74.50 "Landmark" 9'4"x14', inside flaps ... $115.00 BUDGET TERMS! NO DOWN PAYMENT! WE RENT TENTS * JOE’S SURHUS ABNT NAVY 19 N. Saginaw In Downtown Pontiac Shop Mon., Thurs. and Fri. Till 9! FE 2-0922 r 111 North Perry YOUR CONVENIENT B.F. GOODRICH STORE ^ FE 2-0121 have no weight trouble. Pastrano! was 172^i after Wednesday’s workout.’" ~B0ATIII6S~ ONE PORT OF CALL See UmFot Your FamMy Boating, Fishing A Skiing Fun ATTENTION PLEASE Hot Pre-Summer SPECIAL! COMPLETE FICEROUS BOATING OUTFIT INCLUDING Windshieid, Steering, Lights, Hardware, Fire Extinguisher, 4 Life Jackets, Anchor and Rope. ,0ai|lMr|BiilH 14'wiMifniit and rear upholstered $QQE •aala. Haw Merenry 29 N.P. outboard......... ol90 *1395 seals, 61 H^.eloe. deuble bolloei.|.r'warranly Ap^obmIoL ir oki Nat, liko sow, 71 H.P. %4eQR otaoMs Ivtarado, as saw, tae. trsUar... I D«f9 irifAfl 1265S. WCX)DWARD iVfl/lfil AT ADAMS RO. I0A7 emu JO 6-4727 - Ml 7-0133 IS BRAKES RELINED ALL 4 WHEELS iBcloding Labor ONE HOUR SERVICE ALL FORDS • CHEV. AND PLYMOUTH. OTHER U.S. CARS $12.95 GUARANTEED 1 YEAR OR 20,000 MILES lASY TERMS • NO CASH NEEDED SPRINaS" N.W—U, Daily S 0. m. te 9 g. m. • Sat. • o. m. to 6 y NEW SAFETY STRENGTH QUALITY Now in an economy NYLON tire —with rubber that’s truck-tira tough! ' B. F. GOODRICH COMMANDER 220 bum with SUPBR-SYM* •New rugged rubber . . same type used in the toughest B.F.Goodrich truck tiresi Nylon cord strength! ALL New, AND ONLY i(r (6.70-lS black type-plus lax an< lira oft your car) lias low pricad. WhHawaOs tMOMy higttar. Na MIONEV OOWN with your oM tire GOLD CREST 973 ORCHARD UKE RD. (nr. Telesroph) FE 3-9426 SERVICE SPECIALS 88< DELCO SHOCK AB60RIERS 2 for S1688 AUownt e »««k rteel Wkicl BcArlafS e ACJatl Brakes Cemplete $9.11 MEN’S suns Your Choice 19 88 Big shipment rushed express. All new pat-: terns. All colors. 36 to 46 in regulars and longs-and ehorts. , THE PONTIAC press, THURSDAY, MAY 3Q, 1963 X>~T No matter how hard you try, nothing equals the effectiveness of a tried and true Pontiac Press Want Ad when it comes to ^sults. Readership of these little fellows guarantees the desire satisfaction, so typical of f’ontiac Press Want Ads. Just remember, if it's to be sold, rented or bought. Want Ads are the thing to use. They are so prgctical. v__________ Call Today and Let One of Our Friendly Ad-Visors Help You Word and Place Your Want Ad. FE 2-tltl Now 2 Line$-I Days 7D THE PONTIAC PRESS -Vv i/ - -• THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1068 Solons Admit Words Before Speaking BEN CASBT By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI)-Mem-bers of Coi«re9s do not say what Oey have said until they say that’s what they said. /niis is one of the things that set monbers of Cmigress apart from us ordinary mortals^, When you andlwaftare-mark into the thin, translucent air, it is, for good or bad. gone forever, never to be retrieved. As Omar Khayyam, the poet, put it: “Nor all your piety nor wit shall lure it back to cancel half a line, nor all your tears wash out a word of it.” Obviously, Omar Khayyam, the poet, never met Omar Burleson, the congressman. WEST In the transcript of debates and certain other congressional proceedings, Burleson and his colleagues can indeed cancel half a line. Yea, half a line and more. being widely quoted on the island laaihilf NeHher piety aor wK Is ■eeded to lare back a tran-■cript, and, so loag as they stay within the mlm governing sack practice, they can waah oat words as they see fit, wlthoiit shedding a single one Jnmped to the conehsisn that what wm said at the hearing actnaOy was said. In reality, as ^inall pointed out, the committi^ members were only speaking tentatively and perhaps not at all. Hie ability of congressmen to confound Khayyam was pointed up last wedc in a press release put out by Chairman Wayne N. Aspinall, D-Colo., of the House Interim- Committee. TRANSCRIPTS SLIP Aspinall was exasperated by the fact that some unedited transcripts of a hearing on legislation relating to Puerto Rico had been reproduced and were “I want to nmke it clear for thebenefitofthe people ot Puerto Rico that any quotations taken from these transcripts are not official and are subj^ to revision,” the chairman declared. sons who were unaware that a congressman’s remarks can be suspended in limbo, either to be lltar freed or to perish there. CeacrossBMa may, el eeuree, have valid greoads ier eipangiag or etherwtoe editiag their remarks before they are committed to posterity. I suspect, however, that in most cases they are in the same boat with another poet whose name I have forbotten but who By Neal Adama THE BERRYS By 2arl Grubert “How can I know what I think until I hear what I say?” Newspapermen who regularly cover the House and Senate are accustomod to having quotations shot oat hrom onder tiiem. It is re- Close Popular Lake Even During Holiday JACOBY ON BRIDGE AJI7IS4S eKlSS W 104 ¥ 5 OJ3 eKioti *K2 *AQJ104 *A VAKQJSIS ♦ QS «85S Eut and West volnenble Pan Paaa Opening 4¥ missing kings for his \ Khayyam lo the contrary, entire segments of debate that were clearly audible in the press galleries have been left unsaid in the official record. SUSPENDED IN UMBO It could be that the instance cited by Aspinall involved per- PAW PAW (AP) - Even If weather permits, there’ll be no swimming at popular Maple Lake here over the Memorial Day weekend. ’The Village Coimcil has closed tiie lake to swimming for one week after learning that the water has become dangerously polluted by sewage after a State Highway Department project fractured a line from the diqi^ plant. t DONt MEAN MDUteE A^l ----------•'TWyGOTYj. DRIFT HARLO By Dr. 1. M. Levitt. Tom Cooke and Phil Evap« opening bid and in that ( Bobby could make the hand by meahs of that rare play called the criss-cross squeese. So he ruffed high and ran out all his trumps discarding down to the blank ace of diamonds in dummy. East had to go down to three cards slso. That meant he couldn’t guqrd both his kings and all Bobby had to do was to decide which king was unguarded. Then be played the ^ijwc^iriate ace and crossed back with the other ace to make the last trick with the right queen. OUR ANCESTORS By OSWALD JACOBY What would you do with the South hand after East opens with one club? Bobby Wolff of San Antonio decided to jump right to four hearts. This was an all-purpose bid. If his partner had anything, Bobby expected to have a play for four hearts. If his part-didn’t Bobby could not be hurt O—The bidding hu baea: BmI SMth Wert NmO S¥ P*H Pur S* Put 3 N.T. PRM 4 * You, South, hold: *4 ¥KJ|3 ♦AQSS *KUt What do you doT A—Prm. Tea have m bettar pUee to go. TODArS QUMTION You do pen and Wert doubles. What do you do now? By Quincy ALI-ET OOP By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner JACOBY -and would have game. Actually East and West can^ -m^ake four ~spad^, hut It" b doubtful If they ’ would get there in any event. East cashed three club tricks and continued the suit. Most players would discard a diamond and hope that East would hold the ten of hearts. Most of you readers won’t see any other play for the contract, but Bobby did. He felt certain that East would hold both “They may call them ships here, Marco, but back home they’d to just a tot of Junk!” _ ^ BOARDING HOUSE -- / -ijQQK,AAlKe/.XH£RE‘S A MASME(?y \NEr CAN mOE OUT IN AND 6ET AVlEErl^'S LOOSING ON THE CUFF/ MOOPLE A^ANOR, EM ? A1A30R rtOOPLE, PROPRIETOR.'-^ LIKE ANT BSS" TMAT'D BE EA^V TO SEAT.' VIELL 6ET A LINE ON AND IF ^'6 A SUCKER FOR A BRICK IN A 6RO>NN ■DERBY, WMEN WE GET THRU WITN HIM HE'LL 60 ' BACK TO A teething RiNO.' * ^ ^ * a Astrological If —I [ * Forecast * B7. sydnev omarr F»r FrM«T "Tk. wiM MU cMlrol. kit 4ri«lu . . . Atiroinr a»teu tk. > — ARIES iM»r. il to Apr. I»: Com- polnt. Um dtr Prerloun Ungl«s kble to r"‘ ------- « Uitlnt perlo uk questloni. Bl RE- prokijMiAlyie. wk questTo TAURU8 (^r. N to May SO): Good day to daal with tha public. Oo placei, aea paopl*. XapcelaUy food tor Mlllng. Boelal ooeaalOD toalfht floda you spar-kilos. Bajoy yonrielfl But remamber . . . tbara IB tomorrow. antan nuj ai to Juna «); word* .. nay amaiiata from iMuth ol '-‘enl Ba wUIlog to Irani. ------. -—■„ily to I “ MORTY MEEKLE By Dick Cavalll IfwE MA30R PUT THE 616N OP - child. OUT OUR WAY PermH ioteUaetual curloall Tonight Baa for aoclaUalng. Vibrate „ July *1.. Dortant that you eommunlcata tbouabti Ideal Bkcbaosa oplnlani with (umi ■ * loSpany. Tala Mma to relag U Im- Jl^Aiad "'"ixo tuS tod.l5nd.n*. Mfcord. Dtter-you REALLY t atatttf armbola. Bara "faith" In your-eyda^aaup.^Dowprei^aly eJo-rd **** lirt?* •barm Is "iiSfr"ii.a*"ierp?r^ Wluit you bear may ba dlitorltoo of ■ uSu bta fatth in frlandt. lorad onaa. S^lwto coJSdaa problem, tr.....- mtaPBcr that tram. sAonTARius to CWk a^ma arlOi marital, hualnraa uartnar. Raceot barrleri can b- -Bated wHh patience. underatauL . Sorha^ed ^ faUaa pride, day can •m Sit It temporary. Balaa with Makt futura plana, ipcludi— SSStoTtraTal. ParOclpa^ to < ■aq^awob to rSJ-«»: C r dataUa. View profaet • cm tetbaned. -Ton proved you vou beooma 'aought af. .nranga creative Unli to ar bti^. Maauf don't ba UrS fW^ALITY pre^eu. IP PRTOAir !S*TOOR WiRTHDAY . you sra tlUad with Barvona energy Use It to ebaanat aoerslaa. You love OERERAL Ain)£l«Cin: Recant pua-. Me «B toUnwUatml tcaoa la ctorlBed. 4. By Erpie Bushmiller 1 unless you I ■ puss-budget I 1 i*M THROUGH I 1 VitH V-9 Valuable Treasures Record^ Microfilm Brings Scholaslic Bonanza lege. NEW YORK (UPI) — A space Baker Library at Dartmouth Col-age application of photography' called microfilm is making it possible for libraries everywhere to acquire literary and historical treasures formerly available only to a few fortunate scholars and historians. Some of the world’s greatest coUectkms of human wisdom sudi as those in the Vatican Library, the Library of Congress, the British Museum and the Ambrosian Library in Milan have been microfilmed and placed in libraries in the United States and throughout the world. Aa indication of the insight Into Revolutionary War and post-Revolutknary history prov^ by diese microfilms is the diary of John Quincy Adams, whkdi ez-tends over 70 years and for M years without a single day’i la the United States, the Adams Papers, phenomenal family ardiive of early American history, recently were made available to scholars through microfilm. According to a study by a microfilm subsidiary of a large camera company, the Adams Papers, in 608 reels, amounting to more than five miles of film, already have been placed in 40 or more institutions, including the Docummts chronicling the first two and a half centuries of the Catholic Church in the United States on microfilm have biten acquired by the University of Notre Dame and will be housed in its new 13-story library. Notre Dame also announced it has obtained permiuioa to microfilm the entire manuscript collection of the famed Ambrosian Library in Milan. This project, whidi will cost $500,000 and require several years to complete, will make availabh for the flrst time more tto 30,000 classical, medieval ai^ Renaissance manuscripts. STATH or MICHIGAN—In .... bate Court for tlM Countjr of Oakland, Juvenile DIvlfloB. In the matter of the petition concerning Arthur Alan and Beverly Ann Walnlo Walne a/k/a Martin, mlaare. —No. IM«. To Arthur B. Walnlo or Walno, father Petition having been > preaant where- in the name of the people of the 'eS't'J fled that tto"Clearing on eaid 'Mtrtion wlU be held At the Court Houee, Oakland County Service Center, in ~“~ of Pontiac, In aald County, oh day of June, A.D. IMS, at nine o In the forenoon, and you are h commanded to appear personally at hearing. It being impractical to make pel “kervlee hereof, this summons and i shall be served by publication of a —V week previous to said hearing In . ----------------- -------------j printed d notice The Pontiac Press, a newspaper p ------ - - -------- Norman R. Barnard, Judge of said Court. In th City of PontTac. la said County, thi SSth day of May. A.D. IMS. ISeall NORMAN R. BARNARD (A trus copy) Judge of Probate DELPHA A. BOTJOINB Deputy Probate Reglstt. Juvenile Division May 30. ISdS RALEIGH, N. C. (JV-Poor management and lack of mechaniza-|tion are the major weaknesses that put Russian agriculture TELEVISION. ELECTRONICS FUND, INC. Watliog. Ltrchen & Co. JACKS, MAY 30. IM3. PRKD C.. S«T4 Oakslde, Commerce Twp.; age 10: beloved husband of Marlon Jacks. Funeral service will Saturday, June 1 at 1 CLUB WAITRESS. COUNTER AND grill girls. U or over. Nest. Super-chief. Telegraph near Dixie. manuacr^, many of them on mimUhig papyrus. Many top Ifliraries mw make available a mierMOmhig service af thehr own coUectiMS. For example, at a cast M less than two ceato a page, the Uwary of Coagreu will micndOm any book or doewneat hi Its 35- In the Vatican Library, four modern ihicrofilmers are constantly at work recreating on microfilm the library’s vast storehouse of rare books and manuscripts. This new photography department, now being expanded, is an i(CJ“\h^ui'“KUniver-XtioB of thissity’s recent monumental work of microfilming the Vatican Library’s pricesless treasure of 5,000 incunabula (books printed before 1500 A.D.) and 100,000 Red Farms Are Called Inefficient ABIUNE, Tex. (JB-lbe Abilene Grotto of the National Speleological Society, wito six membws and two ’‘acomni era,” is the most exclusive ^xirts organisation in town. Once a month the spehmk-ers, or cnve explorers, toad np A new kind of publishing venture has been made post ifarQU^ a combination of microfilm and a special photographic ■per, according to Rekordak. This can iwoduce from microfilm in three minutes a 200 page facsimilfrfrint copy of a rare book at a total cost of $6.70. More than 4,000 U. S, and foreign newqiapers are on microfilm today. Harvard University’s library has perhaps the most extensive collection of foreign newspapers onmicrofilminthis country. 8TATB OP UICRIOAN—In thg Pro-bAt* Court t«r tlw County of Oakland. JnvanllA — In the Ing WlUi nlit. To WlUlam Lliter, Sr, father of aald T of tht petition c Spelunkers an Exclusive Sports Club flashlights, candles, cable ladders and pitons and head eat to investigate a cove. Helped by explorers from Dallas and Austin, they have done much of the primary work on the Caverns of Sonora, discovered in 1955. Now they are working on the Natural bridge caves near New Braunfels discovered three years Slogan of the Abilene Grotto is: “Take nothinr but pictures, leave nothing but footprints.” Jap Plane Lands Safely After Circling for Hour a IRD THROUOR —K------------- PowoU DlipooM Borvleo win (tnrt the euniiner-. •ebodulo of I pleknpe per week. New euetnnert plenic' cgll MA A-gni for thU Mryleo. Mnry • AVON CALLINO"-POR SERVICE In your homo. PE 4-tWA. y OOSraL bbARTET SINO. raATUR- • Ind. Avoodnlo Bti^lst Cborch. 7:M Bnt. Eve. BTkLiAa . RIDGE OBSEAtATOXt opening for icMon. Boeerhon MAco (Utleat will be buUt oo moon geo eUr duetori nnd nlulei MOO 1 Set out op debt on a plan MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS m PoDtlac SUle Bonk Bldg: Pay Off Your Bills - wRhont A lonn - IhtymoDto hi---------- Proinet your City Adjustment Service T14 W. Huron______PE UMI GET OUT OF DEBT with pAymenu no low tf llAJe. BUDGET SERVICE COATS ftTNERAL BOMB DRATTOW PLAINS OR 5-77W obottto of the tathor o: 0 preiont where- ---- child has ________ BtAte end that oald Jurlo- TOKYO (AP) - A Japan Airlines plane carrying 84 passengers and 7 crew members circled International Airport more than an hour today with a malfunction in its landing gear signal system. The fault finally was corrected and a safe landing was made. Itie plane was coming in from Sapporo in northern Japan. d County. AuJ eirculotod______________ Wltneof, the Ronoroble Normon ^omord, Judge of eotd Court, In tr City of Pontloe, In oAld County, thi 34th dey of Moy. A.D. 1»U. , 'BoaII NORMAN R. BARNARD ru# copy) Judge of Probel DELPHA A. BOUGINE Deputy Probote Reglotc. JUTonllo Divleloo STATE OP MICRIOAN—In the Pro-bote Court for the County of Ooklnnd, Juvenile Division. In the matter of the petltleo cooeem-log Donlel Roe. minor. Ceuee Mo. 17139 To Joeepb Ru, father of eeld minor child. Pctltloo having bun fllrd ' ----- elleglng that the preecnt whrrr. ebouts of the father of eeld minor child are unknown end eeld child has leted e lew of the flute end that________ child ehould be pieced under the Jurisdiction of this Court. In the name of th# people of the Bleu of Hlchlgen, you ere hereby notified that the hearing on eeld petition will be held et the Court 1------- land County Borvlce CenUr, wlR» made to Russia and Easteni Europe as part of a U.S.-Soviet exchange program, saw one 21,-251-acre collective. ' Kishinev that required 3,816 farmworkers. end circulated In lald County At another farm in Georgia, 630 workers were needed to cultivate 3,125 acres, or one worker for each five acres. Dr. Keller described. much of the Russian tillage as “primitive.” Workers cut hay with scythes. Some crawler tractors ace used, along with many oxen and horses. NOTICE OP INTENTION TO CON-■truct—Rocap, Curb Repairs, Culvert Re-—storm Drain Replacement end ----Blinel Modernisation, on Orchard Lake Avenue. You ere hereby notified that st _ regular muting of the Commlulon of ----------Pontlec, Michigan, held May ■ “ wee declared Tf our farms were no more efficient than SoViet collectives,’ says Dr. Keller, “20 to 25 million American industrial workers would have to quit their jobs and return to the farm to {Hoduce ' for our population.” May 30, 1063 D. E. Pursley JMp Wai^ Mala hardware itore Write glvlu age. eicperleau and ealan expocted to Box IL 7^ Pontiac Pnu.____________ J ADDtlnidc hi necesBBTyr’&r. a dlit^Uva i .ventage. Phone PE Milt. MANAGER WANTED POR MDMA- hire golf. 3344)9M._______ MAN TO BERViCB CIOARBTTB mecUnce. r--------' MAN OVER 39 POR DRY CLEAN-mg route. Apply Mam CltBoora, 44A0 Eluabolh Leiko Rd._______________ OWNER-OPERATORS WITH LATE model trectore. capable of legally puUIng forty-foot trailers for 7 state freight operation. Alee full etui units for Ibo same operation. Cell Detroit VI 3-3000 between 9 end II d 1 ei PONTIAC AREA Xeetem bunufecturer wUl h a t e opening for 1 married mao, hlgb tchool grad 31 to 41. Muit have good work twcord end be deelrious of bettering aelf. AIN per wk. guarantee and exteneive training. Cor and talephoDe neocaeary. OR 3-JA7A. PART TIME maintenance OR HANDY MAN. VERY LIGHT WORE. PENSIONER PREFERRED. REPLY TO PONTIAC PRESS BOX 30. PORTER. FOR JEWELRY STORE. Say KARJEtOBKI PLEASE CALL PL 3-4030 m regard to work. RETIRED MAN POR CARETAKER, ap^ment bldt.. main floor Itva in. CaU between 7 and f —ROUTE MAN Death Notices BLANTON. MAT 30. 1M3, LOIS P., _______ X memorial service _t Donelson-Johns Punerel Home thte evening et " ~ ' wUl be _________________ ■ s Donelson- newspeper printed Rottorable Norman R. NORMAN R. BARNARD DELPHA*"** BOUGINE** Deputy Probate Reglste M City of I I, IMJ, by ........................ 1 bo tht Intention of the City Commit on to construct bituminous concrete recap, curb rcpalri, culvert repelre. storm drain replacement end traffic nel modernleetlon on Orchard Lake . lM-3111 from Telegraph Road to the w ________JO Clinton River__ a of Orchard Lake Avenue ------- --------10.00. and that the plea, profile and estimate laid Improvement le on file for public Inspection. It Is turther Intended to eonelnict i Improvement In accordance with plan, profile and eetlmata, nnd I the cut thereof shell be defrayed . •pumi aueument according to frontnge and that all of the lots and parcels of land fronting upon either side of Orch-Lake Avenue from Telegraph Read be east Bide of the Clinton River on tide of Orchard Lake Aveque ! west side of the Clinton River ^ .. ,.Jth side of Qychsrd Lake Ave-lie which shall constitute the specie: isessment district to defray 933.77S.4l r the estimated cost end expenses lereof end that 91.309:39 of the —• isted cost end expenses thereof ____ f paid from the Cepiul Improvement Fund, end 149.309.17 to be paid from State Highway Funds. Notlu Is hereby given that the Com-■ the City of Pontlec. Michigan. ml.sslon 01 win m n the e by pertlei li ited May 31, 1 OLOA BARKELET City Clerk May 30, 1063 NOTICE or BPICUL ABBEBSMENT— Two-Inch Aepheltic Concrete Resurface ■ Curb ^placement on Mo,'— ... Mabel Oreenough. Charlu ... Beuft. Merle J. Rteberds, Joseph J. Cox, Horetlo O. Richardson, Solomon Now-''" M, R. D. Robinson, William Oar-1, Charlei McLaughlin, Howard Cate Ethel Lois Martin, . ________ ________T; HIbler. Upcott. Oabriei J. Raptport, Thomas Berbl-noff. Paul B. Kents. Mr. Brefford, Roderick and Betty Teylof, FrM Rotsel, Charles J. Barrett, H. O. Woolcock, Pierre Bhayer. John Sousanis. Mr. Mar- Arthur Dahl. Fredsrtck ZIem, Jouph Bhaw, H. O. Richardson, Victor Schramm, Wm. Donald Orlffln. Dale ~ Carney, Theodore R. Cowdrey, F. fiwArr/Vrf entom-atyhi fan Hun ut uaueeuttomui pricuti I LEWIS FURNITURE nlone offers a pleto line of dlsTIrtCtlVi' office furniture Keieer, C. M. Belly, Rose Moneetn.______________ Jenke, Jemee Aldrich, Arnold J. Sweet, Bylrtn and Howard Marsh, Paul Jonei ~ IrrlM OUlles, Ouardien Savings ‘ coordinated in design, color, end function. LEWIS FURNITURE can create exactly the office you went using standard units, at standard prices, with no sacrifice in quality by Stecicese. Coma in — and see for yourself! ng OUL... __________ ________ -, Cnoren Manuklan. Thomas ,.. --->y, Gladys Oraft, Andrew Oulaesik Jr., Ralph D. Wlgent. Mr. Bneed. Wllir C. Dickinson, F. L. Bterk, Carl W. Doi elson, Oocar W. Schmidt. Troy Putrell. Omdwin A. Bresee, Ruth Hutton, Stuart Deris, AneU F. Pinkston and to ell pereone Inurested, Uke notice: That the roll of the Sp^el Assessment .. mad# by the City Aeeeeeor for purpose of defraying that pert -* the -cost which the Commission deck should bo paid end borne by specie! i eeeement for the eonetructlon of two-mch aeplialtle eonereta. resurfeelnc and —replacement -------------------- ____ ________ Mohawks Road from Huron Street to Spokane Delre now on tUo In my office for public I spcctmn. Notleo le alee hereby glyen that the Chamber in said aty,. an the lUh : Jie A.O. 1993 at I o'clock p.m review bald aseeesment. et which -t RURMIXURE liAeixswu.AioiCHMO i»«i *»« 9IS-»ft^ POHtlAC _ .____ opportunity will be given ersona Interested to be heard. W O. 7139 Dated May }f. 1903 OLOA BARKELET key SO, FRIERSON. MAY 23, 1963. ELLA. 4929 Memes St., Flint; age W: deer mother of MeginoUe Duell and Norvellee Thomas. Funeral service will be held Friday. M» 31. st 10 e.m. et the William F. Devis Funeral Home with Rev. Robert W. Hoover officiating. Interment In Oek Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Frierson will he In etete et the William F. Derle Funeral -.™ Mrs. Csmell Jones; ------- uncle of Mrs. Doris Samples. Mrs. Doris Jackson end Boyd Jones. Funeral errengrments ere pending at the Rulfun Funcrsl Heme. Cairo. Illinois, where Mr. Jones dence Baptist Church v William F. toavls Funeral Home, KAUBI8CH. MAY 20. 1903. WIL-Hem o.. 3ltt Oregory Roedf ate 14: beloved eon of Mr Henry Keublsch; deer brother of Delene end Henry A. Keublsch. Pbinerel service will be Seturdey. June 1 at 0:49 e m. at 8t. Mi-ebaert Church. Interment In Mt. Hope Cemetery. Wllimm *»> ■'* pimerei Home. Vmcent d ....,j Mt. Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Klnner will lie Ih state et the \ Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home. MEOEE. mat 27, 1003. ttOY& O^ isilpl. 43 S. Holcomb. Clerketon: age 73: beloved husband of Jeen MCgee: dear brother of Robert L Megee. Mr. Megee wlll he In state at the Lewis E. Wint Fur.er-sl Home. Clerkston. until 11 a m. Friday el which “— *•* Donelson-Johns -----FOTmal '• .HUNTCX)N SPARKS-GRIFFIN Voorhees-Siple Cimtofy Loto Ocneva. mmols. E 3-0734. Confidential. ____ FEMALE COLUE PDF, vicinity of 1—-“-' Children’s ■ I. HWh sciM ISC. Phone O ■TATION ATTENDANT. EXPERI-enced preferred. Apply Yount’s M^ethon Borvtoe, WiUlems Lake end Airport Rd. TEACHERS qualify now for eununer emplay-nient, full and part time, calf between 9 and 1 (H. l-OW. Hr. YODNO MEN 19 TO 30 POr' FULL time reeteurent work. BlfTt. Tele-graph end Maple Rd-__________________ BABTSirnNO AND UOHT H008E-keeptng. Cell OR 3-9676._ keeping.______________ BABYSITTER WEEK DAYS.------------ Mutt have own treneportstlon. t39 per week. ref. required. OR BOOKKEEPER AND COLLfctriwT ‘e good. Bee Tony Hl^war --------------- DUlo Hli^way, Economy Motor BOB’8 REgTADRANT E X P E RI-onced wtltrese. 31 or older, apply ------- —7 Jqelyn. Mf Vleuflei F OFFICE NURSE OR ABBtSTANT phyelelan, typewritten reply personal dele, expertenee, ref-- ----------------- ------1 Ropiy te PART TIME WAmtEBI, BAR work. Phono FE 6-1763. POSITION OPEN FOR PART T II tbep. Sat. a '^ Tt&wi^ e PENSION LADIES We art accepting eMlIcetlone tor full- or part-time employment etert-mg date Juno lOlh for laterriew apiMmtmont. Call EmidoymtBl SHORT ORD^R COOK WAITRESSES EXPERIENCED WArTREBuEB-MUBT BE NEAT AM ATTRACTIVE. EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER COOK.. APPLY HARVEY'S COLONUL HOUSE. FORMERLY THE BEEF BUROER ORTVE-IN. 9699 DIXIE. OR 3-0940 OR FB SHORT OROEit COoX AND CURB girls, noeded Imm " ’ ' ~ ' Drive-In. OR 3-7173. It plus t-------------- _________eeks e year. We trem 1. Apply 10-4 p.m., 10 W. Rurco TYPIST STATIanCAL ELECTRIC IBM typewriter. Pull time or pot-siblitty of pert time aummer with full time balanet of year. Send al date to Jams M Knight CPAs 1100 N. Woodward, Birmingham. WOMAN TO RUN CREDIT UNION Office. Present employe puts In WAITRESS AND BAR MAID WANT-ed. Apply m person FIVo Bpot. 3949 Dixie Hwy. WAITRESS OVER 31 TEARS OLD, Welled Lake. 624-9053.____________ telephone tnvesilgetlons. t. 3909 Chxabeth Lake WE NEED A GIRL WHO’S NEAT end clean tor weltreee end kitchen help. Phone 6S3-1313 between 3 ■ appointment. WOMAN FOR HOUSEWORK. FEW hours a day with nurses eld ex- rirlence, own trensportetlon. EM t!" WAITRESS WANTED ...... ......FOR EVE- NOfO WORK IMMEDIATELY. AP ply evenings. Rooco’t. 9171 Dixie Highway. WOMEN FOR general OFFICE. credit deelrebit. CoDtemt Mr. of ghew’e Jewelry. WANTED — COOKS _ epltt shut or pari tlma, < „ night. In buey restaurant. 1 tfy Pontiac Press Box 9$. *^Pla‘lns aroa~foir’'|onorol part time II an hour. 91 WAITRESS 24-40. FIRST CL^ counter cr"------ iEADTY OFERA’IDR. EXFERI- t, conunisslon, FE 30199, qulred. I---- Maple. Blrm^___________ WOMAN’S DOMESTIC --------------- imoetly cooking) m exehanm for room end houd end summer home. COOK, a K N E R COUNTER PERSON FOR AIR-CON. dltloned dry cleenere. experienced or will tram. tWady work, good opportunity. HA 9-7307, 9970 Tele- W ANTED: 4 LADIES TO hXL# with summer busmese. 918 a wsem Full time. 940 pert ttme. eeU FB 9-6334.______________________ WHY BORROW VACATION MON-eyV You eon earn money end make many friends demonetnittM e preellge product — TDFPER-WARE. can 632-4100 or write. TUPPERWARB Auburn Heights. Michigan WHITE HOUSEKEEPER. BABY-sitter, live In. OR 4-lt39._ YOUNG LADY 19-30 live porsenaUty, high eehool graduate. aosno omee oaperMMo pro-terrad. good lyptotrS dM week. Md lyptotri -J, -y with regular tnerea ay. Cbriettnas b( LOST FROM 196 Luf HER. ’ BLACX reward I -------------------- Lost: 3 registered herpohd heifers. --- ALUMINUM SIDING AND AWNINO ayplleatm^ ^eyrtenced only. Call auto mechanic, deal- EKEX«RIENOT^^el.rrid. Camp Chevrolet. MUford. Mich.____:____________ ikdORESSIvX SALESMEN NEEDED ~?.»-.??«nirtr\ln*« trMlQ |>ro(ram. ' Attention, Truckers! Loading sandy and clay loam to, •oil on E. side of Stephenson Hwy. Just g. of 16 MUe Rd. MA 6-1377. gODY MAN. EXPERIENCED WITH steady. Economy Mo*" ; 3339 Dixie Highway. gARTENDER. EXMRI E n'C i' 5. work at nights. Phone 731-3399. EXPERIENCED MEN TO BUILD houietrellere. Broemor fb Orubb. Ortonvr EXPERIENCED REAL E 8 EXPERIENCED DRILL COOK FOR nildnlght shut. MOM^ Dmer. ^g)ly In perton between I EXPERIENCED WAITRK88E8. AFT- ^-xBinn kteM-Dteerr — B between I „e ~ ___________________ EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OPERA- EXPERIENCED X-RAY TECHNl-clen tor medical clinic. MA 6-7944. EXPERIENCED WaItRESS EXPERIENCED WAITRE8S» Hlgfaler EXraRli _______Highland MIeh. JRIENCED WAITRESS WANT-^^ly^ m Kroon Oevet Ortll, EXPERIENCED COOK FOR EXPERIENCED NURSES AIDE. NO phone celU please. Apply,el 1330 Auburn Rd. between 0 end 9, only after 9;35p.m. 'fiorman’^i OM Mlfl Teyem. Waterford Michigan. GREENFIELD’S Cefeterle. counter end ttled dept, good working condltlone. meelt end untforms furnished, wply Green-flelde Resteurent. 73$ 8. Hunter Blvd.. Birmingham, GIRL experienced IN LAE AND X-Ray, — —’ g-79«n 31. I Interment In Lekev miller, may 36. 1963, JOSEPH P.. 34 Rosshtre Court; see 71: deer father of Sidney J., Thames L., MecNelll. end MIse Peerl L. Miller; deer brother of Mrs. Lewis Stratton end Merton Diebert: tito survived by eight grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, May 31. et 1:30 pm. et the Voorhees-Siple Chepel with Hev Weyne W. Brookeheer . Ml'!*'’ wl> ...4. ----------------: d**’’ brother of Mrs. Emms Dettmen: also survived by four grendchlj--— —■ — greet-grandchlld. Funeral service w D E. Pursley PMnerel Home wltn Rev. Paul Cross officiating. Interment in White Chepel Cemetery. Mr Peetike will lie In state et the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home. SCOTT, MAY 26, 1063, CLARENCE %r.. 188 Howard McWelll St. ■ ue 64: beloved husband of Helen Pritchard. William Webster, Robert. Clarence K . Bruce E., Erme, Efllth, Cheryll end JRosmU Scott; Dear brother of 8tenley__ Scott. Rose Fletcher, Velme , .Flimlns, Nettle . Bernes end Jennie Cloy. Funeral service will be held Bet-urdey, June_l et 10 e.m. et New-men’s AME Church with Rev. Robert W. Hoover officiating. Interment m pek ege wi oeiBvcu ii4u»>u44 4.. _ lie Sugden; deer father of Betty and Earl E. Sugden Jr.; dear brother of Mrs. Charlea Heacock ana ears. ovO Oliver; also May 31. et 1 p.m. et the Lewie E. wmt Funeral Home, ClarbU^ offlcletmg. Interment m Ottawa Fork’Cemetery. Mr. Sugden will lie In etete et the Lewie E. Wmt Funefel Home. Clerkston. TOMPKINS. kAY 39. 1963, sXdIE B.. 3739 Woodbine; ege 74: be- -..e ol Charles Tompkins: dest mother ol Mfs. Barbara Btrausser: elso eurvlved ly one granddaughter. •*'^*** el with Rev. Oelen Herthey of-; ffcleting. Intermept In Oek Hill , Cemetery, ^rs. Tompkins will ” WILL TRAIN ROUTE S.-UTISMAN To mani^r on established h< _J merchandise bust- ____.alary plus, share m company profit. No layoffs. Truck end stock furnished end ell ex-peneet paid. r. Ineurtnce end merltaJ a--------------— All replye ronfldentiel. 7 Tee Co . Pontiac P-------- Blocxi Donors URGENTLY NEEDED 19 Hh PdoBiy*- y CITY OF PONTIAC FIRE FIGHTERS Salary 94.983-I6.049 : belghf-69 inches, weight —143 ^nds. ege 21-31 yeere. excellent physical condition. high school greduete or equivalent eredltt. Must I—• a resident of the City of Pontlae 1 year Immediately preoedlng the epphcetlw. RPP'F Pertonnel|^3S 8. mmed, to*^ersonnel by Frl. June EXPERIENCED ALUMINUM BIO-tng Installers. 913 per square. FE 6^9: EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE *FE 4- FARM HELP smg^ men, experienced In beef, hogs, end general farming. 28119 Meadowbrook, Novi. FI S-ltlf. SiECHANIC POR SERVldC STA-tum work, preforred 30 or over. Exporleneed. MA 44430. urBOX SEPUE8- A| 10 a.m. Today thers were ^pllet at The Presa •fflee in the tollowlBC It-Sparkt-Griffin Fuv 2, 8, 14, 15, 1$, II, 21, 34, 36, 45, 50, 61, I3, 64, 78, 87, 81, N, 97, If. IBM KEY PUNCH OPERATORS -EXPERIENGED- Alternoon and Midnight Shifts Apply Personnel Department Manufacturers NATIONAL BANK 4th Floor—Cass Bidjj:. 457 W. Fort St., Cor. 1st Detroit Tel. 222-4610 Mr. Davis. BLUE STAR date openinab n)«ht ahift. Mum alto opening fa 21 to 30 yeari vacatlona «itd fKa. Apply in pi dyke. EXPERIENCED BEAUTifitAN. Philips Silhouette. IT ‘ ESTABLISHED WATK _________________________ waned Lake tree. MUe 190 N. Perry. 0:45.8:30 aJt. PIANG PLAYER FGR COCETAtt, her. Must know old and new num-beri. 333-0073 days, EL S-lOW Eyes. POBITION DPIN FOR _gERBDIC • capable of lenoral offtco work. Experience nuellflcatlons. Box 97 stating RETIRED. WORK LAUMOROMA'^ ‘te Vit"te'“‘i’-L?*9rid'S Ti ____ 737 R. Perry, comer ol Jeelya In laundromat. __________________ ferrod but wUl tram right parttea. FE S-3306, Mr Crawford.__________ Employmant AftiiciBS CARI’:i'.R GIRLS Prefer experience Receptionist ........ fpod typing L Doctor’s receptionist Jr, Secretary ........ Shorthand required. Experienced Secretary .-.psrt Midwest Employment 409 Pontlecjnate^utit BuUdIns EVELYN EDWARDS ••VGCAnoNAL CGUNSEUNO SERVICE " Telephone FE 4-0584 iRstrEctions—SchMb LEARN HEAVY SOmFHEin. weeks, on Dosere. Draft. Ll^ etc. Free placement. "Key." 033 w 6-Mlle Rd.. Detroit 31. E 11 ' CEMENT CONTRACT.OR --m'e Ceaetruetlaa Oo. FE Ml» A. YOUNG BOOSE MCVDIO. ELECTRIC ______OR M741. _____ DrauMkiRf a TaHarhii 17 DRKSSMAKINO. TAILORIXO, AL- I ACKX AND riib^tri^mlng, 779 Scot! 1 TREE TRIMHINO, REHOVAi — Fist ssrvlcs. low rates, free esll-mates. A Ji R Tree Service. 339- COMPLETE LANDSCAPE SERVICE. !fa GARDENS PLOWED AND DISKED. Reasonable. OR 3-3219. GARDEN PLOWING AND HAlrihul. MA S1639 OR 3-0919 dARDEN PLOWING BY LOT OR acre, anywhere, FE 9-0911. PLOWINO AND DIBCIMO. ROTOTILUNO ___________ ______________FE 94900 ROTO tilunS. Lawns. oaK ■ . 663-1334. CONVALESCENT NURSINO CARE private home, exp, nurse. OR 3-4344 VACANCY FOR BED OR AMBULA-tory patient, 34 hr earc. axe. feed. t MOVINO SERVICE. RBASON- WT CAREFUL MOVINO. LOW ______ UOHT _____________ ____1 cieaniip. garngt removgi. Contmtos FB VAN SERVICE MOVINO ARO storage REASONABLE RATES Ptddmg—II Years Experience ROBERT TOMPKINS OR 4-1913 PailittEi a DtcEratiai 23 FAINTINO. FAN PSS'e n soibo end~FE 4-3M0 ' TtlEvUMFRidiE StrviM S4 U to U INCH FICTUHE TUBBS comp, metalled $10.06 from factory outlet 100 per cent guaram teed me Baldwin. FE 4-7tt7 ^ prices. Free Tube Montgomery Ward Pontlae MaH I rvHipvnvfiMi FROM CLARKSTON Mil AND 1-79 to Motorcar Traoeport. worktog — ----------6.» MA 9-ll9t. WbemI ChiMraa to ■tarili A RELIABLE UCENSED HOME ET UCXN8ED HOME BOARD CXti--drtn dayi. FB 5^#. buy tumllui OR 3-6147 01 i Auelkm. well !e.“7?9jg^ Cash for furnituhe and ai^- ---- Y^o or houseful. Pear- TOP dollar pair for itoRio. lure, eppllences, toole. etc. Auctions every Friday. Saturday end Sunday OR 3-2717. BAR AUC- UONEL ELECTRIC TRAINS OIL HEAT SUPPlV. 73 N. SHlk-’ly. will buy ell your surplus J and —---------- -------- 5TiA.„. i; ^ WANTED. S3 GOLD PIECE, OR 3-9630 WAlhED CEMENT MIXSR! ____________FE 4-1394.__________ MATURE HOUSEKEEPER FOR elderly widow In Pontlec, more for home then wegee, MA 9-3381. NEED .MONEY? LIKE PEOPLE? Model and show our imo Full or part time — Il’e new — It’s fun —It’s profitable _______After 0. FE S0693_ PROOF M.\CHINE OPERATORS Afternoon .Shift and Some Days Experienced preferred. WlU elto consider training women with recent experience In 'Other business me- Apnly ' Personnel Department Manufacturer's N.\TIONAl- B.\NK , 4th Flpor—Cass Bldg. 457 W. I’ort St., Cor. 1st Deti-dit Tel. 222-4610 PAINTINO. MORNINOB. ■bmi-rXtireo paintXr, vert WORK OF ANY evelleble. FE 4Asj»._______ WANTED CEMENT WORK. BWCK laying df all klnda. Rcaaonablt raU. FE 2-3701 Work WHtta _______U 3 WOMEN WANT WALL WAkUltO and house cleaning. FE 9-79tl. WOMEN DESIRE WAUTWIsif- MEDROO_____________ will give excellent c "^TOnl®on V^sl*lldf * ^drooim. betb._ llv^ gxSJJ’ kitchen, utUlly ______ - _ no chUdten. Cell FE 3A166. TENANTS WAITINO. FAST MULTIPLE U8TINO SERVICB NEEDED AO types of Rtal Xetste. E y«i hays proporty m sell call ns lor help m ^poehis ol It. No obit- WANli^D 4- OR 9-ROOM ROMh tM Huron Gardens. , PAUL JONES REALTY WATCH FOR OUR SOLD EWHS - 1, A-1 work. FE 4-1131. A I CEMENT WORK _____FE 9.479S or OR 3-69S9 ADOmONS, BLOCK. CONCRE'ra. carpenter work No down payment, quality material. Low eost. Long boaltrt Xxebanit, FE 341389. action on your home or coo tract. AUGLJST JOHNSON REALTOR MULTKLa UNnNO BBRTICB JOIN THE “BEST SELLER LIST” Bumre wa:’.^ ter aO Unde al REiU, Esri^ aqd CONTRACTS. Warren Stout. WANT TO SteLL? WE NnoTiSimmE James A. Taylor, Realtor RIgblaad as. (MU) Oa MM D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY^ MAY 30. 1903 hatoen TRI-LEVEL $9,99S-$1,000 DOWN WILL BUILD DO^“McDOK?IlD TSffEr' l«l« Ho«sm NO MONEY DOWN e^. AU te?0 bm rtdMoriUd BK tS«S^as'tS StfVVt.SS'S ssTwriMisraras SAUNDERS &' WYATT Nearly 3 Acres A b*MitUul ----- complcmcnti ranch home WalU^wnU* ^tlnt In inii ^>acloiu living 1 “* Roman brick (Ir^ace. «.________________ .. Close In Suburban SMroom brick rancher. ler. family I. beautiful landacaMd comer lot, TAf*/- *® Pontiac 450 down plus coau. Frushour Struble MJp SlUabeth Lake Road GILES walfi, baeemeat, gae iieat O^Y $10,500 foe thia ipotleu home In Northern High area. Oaa beat, aluminum etorma and ecreeni. Uk-car garage, screened patio. Dlah-master, fenced yard and mibre Priced to go with easy terms. SELL OR TRADE - Lovely 3^>ed. rwra north side property. Complete buUt-ln kitchen, hardwood noore. idasUred walls. 1>4 ceramic lots of closets and more. Will trade for smaller home. GILES REALTY CO. FE 5-4175 221 Baldwin Ave MUL-n^E* LMTTO Service Bloomfield Area Owner leaving the stale — offering their lovely 6-room brick ranch bungalow attached garage. Home carpeted. Fireplace In living' with 2-ci k 200. Bloomfield HlUs si Brewer Real Estate g 4-5151______Ryes. FE g-Ot OPEN COMPARISON INVITED $17,500 TO $19,950 Drive out M-59 past Pontiac 1 to beautiful Twin Lakes sub. buyers.' will build these homes our plans or yours anywhere In Oakland County OPEN 301b 2 TO g. Weekdays 6 to 5. MIDDLEBELT RD RANCH HOME 30’ by 42’ on foundation, with outstanding basement This home was built and designed for gra- .....-s will’ admit beautiful brick Siki Movmi THE PONTIAC PEESS. THURSDAY, PrtfMity BUILD A NBW l•BBDROOIf RANCH BLIZABCTH LAKE LOT m* PROW M lov M ils87S wttti BlUt'or lakt, boA^ Isk# DrlVutcsa CaII w ^^gAjnneiil Aod sf low m prifUW,. C.11 W. H. BASS >*R REALTOR •" 3-&0 W^nRg LAEE, CHOICE OP RDH. 7688 Visgar, Waterford 3 bedroom ranch, large kltohen, asbestos siding. H block to Ma-eeday Lake. Will give pelntlng allowance. $700 down. $7,750 price. G E MacLEOD OWNER. 3H HOURS FROM POM-II.. modem log home, gerege etc. —---------------- Idciddeer. for retired ychr. PE Omterc Lekc Troy TR O-OOOl WEBSTER LAKE ORION-OXPORD 3-bedroom and Vk hath home on 1 sere ta very pretty district. Hird-wood floors, home needs some Elizabeth Lake hiil* seeson*® J*lbi bought on lend ci Retirement Special $3,300 cash gives you e free clear deed to thIa nice 4-room galow In top condition. PuU L___ menl. almoet new furnace, water heeler and softener. - ■ * - --- te It lodey. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W, HDRON beautiful loU, 010 down. ...... unjiUi. Clarkitoo Orkm Road to Eston Rood to Oalaa office at m$ Mohawk Drive. SYLVAN. 403- I ACRES NEAR HILLMAN. , room cabin, ttoctiicha;. nowIng w $4,000 terma. Also TOO ft. fronta on Bmah Craak $500. OR 4dlli5. THREE room' FURNIIMo CAB-electricity end water, 2Vk acres r OrayUng. $3,000. Call 013- LAKE ST. *iSbto ^ ' «xc. lUh •fe.' large sha^ Ic iptic tank, drains, elactriclty s iierlor painting, pvt. beach a " 'ling on natural 2.4m ivaUable. Write I 1. St. Helen, MOBILE SITES. DON'T RENT, BUY acre, gSO down. glO a 3-1205. Bloch Broa. Corp. STORE. CLUB ROOM. S ROOMS "•* bath. 7 lakes, good fishing, td to selll Dryden, Mich. ATTENTION ^|te, bass ara "out of this world. " --------- I and pan fish si> plentiful t n w.-i !>•!* If;*' FOR LEASE. EXCELLENT 2 BAY Sunoco service station In Pontiac vicinity, (west tide) Excellent mon-— —Investment jj^ulrcd BLOCK BUILOINO. d for quick sale. 671 Orchard FE 2-3639. awning Furniture We have the key. ----------- ------- total- price. Call FE g-9693 c MY 2-2921. ed to sell. Easy terms. ______Jtge. hunting lands, cabins i retirement homes. Write Evil Land Co.. West Branch, phone WANT TO BUY A HOTEL? CONTACT PARTRIDGE HURON FE 4-3561 EINANCE COMPANY WHEftE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN Pon^ae — Drayton Plains — Utica LOANS $50 TO_ ________ COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 30 E. LAWRENCE FE $-0421 WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $500 Suit HtUMhoM Goods 65, ^utt^Honoho^ ^s 65 yj PRICE—REJECTS ' leaullful living room and bedroom eultes,.g79. tl.50 week. Bergeln ««3 N. Ceek. — Electric S^i 4 1k1____ 115. PUnO. $19 ____ 22 ou. ft 9119. Kneehole . Rollewey bed. $19. Mey-lag waener, $39. Ma, foam cusb-loni 119. Oas and electric stoves. . $15. up. 21 In. TV. $39. Renmore portable washer. 116. Refrlgeretor, $29. Odd .cheats, dressers, beds, springs, etc. Pearson's - Furniture. 42 Orchard Lake. Ave, FE 4-7891 1 ICE BOX. CHAIRS. END TABLES, 2-bumar,bol plate and stand. 1 mirror. 1 couch, lounging chair with ottoman, call FE 2-9865. 1-30 INCH OAS RANGE ,65 9.APAHJ-1 guarante< range 159.85 cfe_„ _____________ frlgerators. atoves and washers — sises 610 to 6125. Sump pump 116. 17 In table TV $35. China cabinet $23. 3 pc aecllonal $15. lofa $12 2 pc. bedroom $29. werdrobe 96. Base cabinet 68. Electrolux vacuum 615. Odd chests, dressers. ebUfe.- lamps, radios, dinettes end rugs. Everything tn used furniture el Bargain prices Also BRAND NEW factory seconds. About 'i price. KENMORE ELECTRIC STOVE Foil sale. FE ^7I71. . KENMORE AUTOMATIC WASHER. KIRBY SWEEPER LIKE NEW WITH J1 attachments.____ ollsher, scrubber, i O' guarantee. Pay c DAVENTORT, WOODEN 1. 625. FE 6:0107. lawn MOWER. VACCUM Cleaner and emplUler. FE 2-6411. REFRIOERATOR. STOVE. LIVINO A OAS DRYER REFRIGERATORS. WASHERS POOD HOUSEKEEPING 81 REFRIGERATORS. . 3191 Dixie Hwy tables. 1 cocktsU table ai l_Laf.yetle.FE_2W2 7-plee?’bedroom 3 ROOMS FURNITURE BRAND NEW WITH RANGE. REFRIGERATOR $319-^15 month- bargain HOUSE 105 N. CASS ' SELL -TAPE -FE 2-6642 in- j uirs»n, enrsi. luu size oed W’ilh St. Innertprlng mattress and box spring to match with 2 vanity tamps. 5-plccc dinette set,- 6 chrome chel ' ■ '■ ■' 1 bookcase. PIECE LIGHT WALNUT DINING room sul^, $75. FE 4-6450.__ MONTH-OlD ATLAS SEWING MA-■ '■ original price $250. Call FE 2-3964 17.95. Pearson's Furniture. 42 L weekly, PEARSON'S PURNl- 9x12 RUGS . VINYL LINOLEUM . PLASTIC WALL TaE $3 95 Ex. B^~TILE bim.E'r7'i075 W. Huron 2MNCH BLOND CONSOLE T White ruffled dacron ti spread, with matching d V EXCELLENT PICTURE $30. Sl-mCH tv. $35. 21-IAcH com-blnatlon. $4$ 95. Terrui available WALTON TV. FE 2-3367, Open 9-9.^ 615 K. Walton corner of - Axmlnistera. 649.95. 12x15 nylon. 59. Heu.i rug pads. $9.93. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 42 orchard Lake Ave. Choice ol chest and bookease bed maRy^other”buy8 BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO. 4763 Dixie Dreyton Plains ________ORJ-6734___________ MODEL ELECTRIC RANGE. In. Frlgldslre ' ' ck user 6 m I months. 6130. MA 9x12 n II for $1 Suit Misc*nw 66.91 Optlyki AUTOMATIC WASHER, RKFRIO-erator. tsble, low rhest. wardrobe :12 vinyl rug. 651-8606 alter PORTABLE, M5. 3 31" BLOND consoles, new picture tubes. --- anteed I year 649 and 160 nioney down, suburban. Phoni SEWING MACHINE SINGER ZIO-xaz In lovelv wood cabinet, lecrl-;e faney designs. $39.86 or teks over payment! ol $5 96 per month FE 5-9407. Cep-llal Sewing Center. HURON GARDENS BUNGALOW: $9,990. . . Neel clean end atU_. tive, living room It's' by 17'. bedroom 9Vk' by 12’. beautiful tiled bath, nice kitchen, gas beat. 3 porches with aluminum twn- DORRIB ft SON REALTORS . ______ELIZABETH 682-3504 or Milford 685-1807._1 roCKCHOFT, DRIVE-Bt-1 A COMFORTABLE LAKE FRONT! on water. 100x175. $2,250. home on Lake Orion. Immediate ______ occupancy. SYLVAN. 682-2300 or ORCHID STREET — level r 85x150. 11.990 plus bal. Ri;CUKD SHOf Excellent location, Interesting, profitable. and easy hours. Grossing over 560.000 per year Leas than Inventory down. . Mortga^ Lmrs CASH Loans to $2500 ANNETT Unioi¥"t{i1ijft''Area Owner moving ------------- - floor home. 3 bedrooms, bath, large kitchen. High basement, new gis FA furnace. Oarage. Quick possession. $10,000 — 2300 or 6251686. LAKE ORION. 3-BEDROOM BASE-ment aluminum siding. City w-— gas. sandv besch beautlftiUy 1 scaped. Easy terms or wUl ti V. Schick Rep. Hoyt Realty. CE LAKE FRONT LO I and Pontiac Lakes. L JONES REALY BLEEPER — Marietta St. 100x300. 6750. HA08TROM REAL ESTATE, 4900 W. Huron. OR 4-0358, eves. Cell OR 3J^ or 682-0435. MICHIGAN EAST OF CLARKSTON - 3 ACRES. 61.450 Watte Realty.^ NA 7-2990. 1956 M15 at Bald fcagle Lake - Busitiess Salc.s, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER. BROKER 1973 Telegraph______FE 4-1962 til your debt* with only one amtU montMy payment. Family Acceptance Corp. 317 National Bldg. 10 W. Rurofl Telephone FE g-4023 WELL ESTABLISHED ________________ Milk Route. Distributing Nation-alW Advertised Product. Excel- fr 44531 Territory. • - • - -• ----------- MORTOACE ON ONE ACRE UP. With 150-foot rontege. No eppralssl fee B e Charles. Equitable Farm Loan Service 1717 8. Telegraph. BUYUO Tile & Linoleum OUT OF BUSINESS SALE LAST DAY8-BAROAIN8 GALORE Wall linoleum 36" wide. lOc ft. Random vinyl aabeetos. 9x9, 5c ti. Oenulne Inlaid tile Sc ea. HEAVY WEIGHT VINYL Reg. $1.49 , yd Now 75c yd. Linoleum 39c yard 1. 371-5381 evenings. Over 100 large, ------------------- choose fr—" FOR SALE 60-FOOT LOT ON LAKE Louise, cash or terms EM 3-r.4«i priced from ’ 6990 on LAKE LIVINO LOTS - 15 MINUTES easy lerins. to Pontiac. $795, $10 down-610 mo Jnr™ RORABAUGH i,XKE FRONT YEAR HOUND, OIL- NORTHERN Finest location It Michigan near BO Excellent brick bli EIQUOR northwestern 'NE lijounlain f on 7 acres. Cash Loans $60d to $2500 ----j 39c yi ODD LOTS ' Mica 19c sq. ft. _ Tile. 9x9, 2c each Rubber heae. tike your pick 3c ft. Paint, 5 qt. $l.c5 Carpet samples 10c each , Mica tops. 49c each ' 102 ,S. .S.-ijriiiaw Street HEIGHT SUPPLY BUYLO Tile & Linoleum OUT OF BUSINESS SALE LAST DAYS-BAROAIN8 OALORE 40 Acres—Close In Rolling scenic land, drive to Detroit. "3 be large closets, living dining L, stono ftre^a WE WILL TRADE Realtors. 28 1''-. Huron St. Open Evenings FE 8-0466 .lom ' OPEN DAILY 4 to 7 SAT. and SUN. 1 to 7 3-bedroom brick, and aluminum ranch. Slate entrance. Thermo-pane windows, sunken living room. IVX ceramic tile baths, bullt-tai oven, range and hood. Formica cabinets and counter tops, full basement. 2-ear at- RIGHT ON LEROY LANE. RIGHT ON MANDALE DR. TO OPEN SIGNS. ARRO WE TRADE LAKE PRIVaEOES AT PRIVATE park and beach go with this cosy ■ 2-bedroom ranch. Tile bath with shower, oU beet, aluminum storms and lereene. water loflener. Terms. NORTH SUBURBAN ALMOST NEW . 3-bedrooni ranch, large family slaed kitchen with loads of cupboards. Oil heat, wind lor electric. stove. Only mortgage c 5143 CA8S-ELBABETH ROAD PHONE 682-2211 MULTIPLE LIETINO SERVICE ■sleeping porch nlshcd.^^O—■ .............. FE 2-5(l.M t. 2-bedroom and Woodward at Square Lake Road | .. Completely fur- large LOT NEAR ROCHESTER: Good fishing ^and on pavement FE 2-€411. RE.U.TOR I’ARTRliMii': l.s the Bird to -See I Mem; Partridge ft As.soc , Inc. Voss 6c Buckner CLEARANCE lEDS (WROUGHT IRON) e with . springs and '$l«.000.“‘Penton. Mam AUKI'?,'\(iE ail(! HOMI'', 9-7159. after 6:30 LAKEFRONT FOR THE YOUNO AT HEART Modem bl-Ievel with kitchen, d big room, living room, mseter b( room,. family room end belco porch overlooking scenic Schc house Lake. 3 master else bedrooms and private paneled study. This U a new home featuring over 2,000 sq It of living area. Complete sod landscaping and paved drive. $.14,000 . WILL TRADE SIEVEK LAKE CONST. 673-9531 days__Eves 662-0940 FURNISHED UOTTAUI' 40-fl, on Cooley Lake. Good fishing, skiing. 5 bedrooms, modern. $7,500, jl.200 doWB.-$65-mo.- Harold r: trankr, 2583 Union Lake Road EM 3-3306 EM 3-7181 Union Lake Large 7 rooms with attachei rage, 83 ft. lake frontage. 2'x I fireplace, carpeting. buUt-lna 1 __....It homes. J L. DAILY CO. ONION LAKE. MICHIOAN EM 3-7114 ‘I and modern Only $14,950 Buy ^'our Independence CHECK THIS LIST OF GROCERIES AND PARTY STORES On Round Lake. l............ Clarkston. two 60x300 wooded lots. $1,730 for botn. easy terms PCXXTIAC KKALTV ' 737 Baldwin_____ FE 5-^5 LAPEER COUNTY -Real estate Uicludet attfck down. WAYNE COUNTY - Wanted! 1 HOME OWNERS CASH UNLIMITED Exclusive plan. Remodel your home. Fay past or current bills. Consolidate Into one low monthly payment. And extra cash If you need same Call anytime. Rig Bear Construction Co. FE 3-7833. ALL HOMEOWNERS 2nd Mortgages WARDEN All Your Bills Cut Payments in Half Get I'Atra CaHi Too If You Need Pay Monthly $0 Monthi Sift Tormi S4 57 ACRES WITH LARGE HOUSE OA 6- 19 ACREt^NORra^OF CLARKSTON mode poo/ Could be made very artistic Home has 4 rooms with large fireplace — basement—stairway to unfuilshed upstetrs. Coal furnace ~ limited plumbing. It Is « reel challenge ' ----^ ' BUILDING, D I X I GROCERY SDM. GOOD LOCATION near Rochester, couple can make a good living h e r e. living quarter; available, good terms to responsible parly, or might consid- N(i T7iatiTl;s or Home Kciiairs Rcf|uired •I.H-2231 ( LOSING OUT ALL FLOOR SAMPLES Open 9'til 5:30 Mon. 'til 1:30 Iresr, living room 'aeli. . chairs. Wall Linoleum 36" wide, lOc ft. Random vinyl asbestos. 9x9. 5c ei Genuine Inlaid tile 5c ea. [o nisDle or b’ori'd 1 HEAVY WEIGHT VINYL bunk beds Pear- •*'* $'^‘' T** 7< 42 Orchard Wke i Lhioleum 39c yard ° ^. ODD LOTS ---- —------- Mica 15c tq. ft Tile. 9x9. 2c each Jbber base, take your pick, 3c f Paint 5 qt. 61.09 Carpet Semplei. lOc ee. Mica tops. 49c each 102 S. Saginaw Street newest lights for kitchens $12.93 value. 96.95. factory marred. Michigan Fluoreecenl, 393 Or-chard Lake—13. ' PIPE AND htgt, $5________________________________ USED DESKS (EXECUTIVE. ROLL top, lecretarial). chaira, typea " era. adding maehlnea. drafting .. bias, blue print fllee. New portable typewriters. M9.95, up. Special on portable typewriters, cleaned oiled WATER AND SUMP PUMPS. NEW, Hud Tooh-Mo^Mry_ 4t NEED A 12 TO 14 STAND R former (prefer Dehlstrom) I'i meter spindles, with outboard ......---------..... .-^ing " ports WUl consider trading or selling a 10 stand — 2 Inch diameter spindle Yoder roll former for same 4-1391. Wslled Lake__________ TERTATRAC FRONT END LOADER ■ yd. bucket. OR 3-6935. OR 3-4940 CuMros-Servict Musical 6o«di Small used t-rster Spinet piano. Only 6450. Easy ti iAI.L.AGHER’S Ig E Huron_________FE 4- DRYERS. 229 30: washers. 649.30. TVs. Repossessed electric i tefrlgerr- - ....... swEE-rs radio” a'nd'‘‘app!liance ..... .Huron _____________Fg 4-1133 E'.F.CTHIC STOVE 623, ( COLLECTOR SELLING COINS. ' ft. -ext. ladder, wheel berro rocking horse, baby tends, lei mower, inisc. snllques. War books on coins. FE 3-1251 AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR t:.276B V. Harris.______ _______ ELECTRIC DRYER. 12.3. AUTOMATIC washing mschine. $50. O^ 3-2436. widening your pi Swops LAKEEKONT I small compact 5-room lake t. elutnlnurti exterior, 2-bed-n, nice lawn and beach. 614.900. Land alone 75 VACANT ACRES from Pontiac Hig Limited entry. $10.9C 1 ACRE — isslblltties 613.501 Sole Land Contracts 60 This beautiful brick rancher bilevel home with 2 fireplaces, large recreation room, atuched 2’'s-cr-garage Nice neighborhood at. t day’s low Jirice of $29,900. Shot by app’t. TRADES ARE MADE CRAWFORD AGENCY 156 W Wslton 336-2306 609 E Flint ,. my 3-IMJ Lake Front Site 90x206 I't. If you plan to build a 120.000 ,( belter home, by all'means see Ih exceptional Watkins Lake aitc • and se'e It soon! j Carl W. Birtl. Realtof JW3 jgpmmun/ty I......... PE 4-4ni E^s. FE 5-13 ,'i ' //! Imites landscaped an »il suane vrres. Also (l0gl)0Usr Chicken house. Large garage an 7-room furnished home with ful basement. 110,500. Teims. 1 home. OU beat. !..\\D CONTRACT- FASt ACTION FOR CASH ON YOUR LAND CONTRACT .\1 I’aulv, Realtor 4516 Dixie. Rear OR 34800 Eve's FE 3-7444 n AN immedIXt< sale $6 FOR YOUR Land Contracts 5 ACRES — north of Clarkston with > 4-bedroom home. Wooded ttCOOO. I WOODED ACRE with modem 3-bedroom brick ranch. Hardwood ^placol-l d recreation room. Flre- UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 0663 Dixie Office 625-2013 .......... 673-2301 WHITE LAKE AREA 40 acres vacant, ‘6 mile of road frontage. 13 miles* west of Ppn-Uac. 62i0 Per atre. It OOt) down. cord winder. Atlach.-nenls and p per bags Included. 10 yetr giisra tee A-1 condition. Balance due $36.29 payment $6 31 per i Call FE 3-7623. Electro Hygle T CHRIS CRAFT. 75 HORSE or tra I* for 1060 or 108’. ' Call EM J-3049 between 7 1961 COHV.MR 70$ 2 DOOR. DK-luxe. sell or swap for pick-up. FE M346-- '____________________________ Have 7 inch shop, mate skill TOP PRICES PAID ■ . , .---- for land contracU, mortgaaei and j Soft Clothing real e.ilaie of all types. For fast ---?- A good locailon. FE 5-7100; Wonted (!o^i^-Mtg. 60 A absolutely THii Vastest ac- bnyers walling Call Realtor Partridge.. FE 4-3561. 1050 W. Huruii. FLOOR LENGTH WEDDINO GOWN. ;e 10; 6 .STOP—LOOK—BUY' Summer Clothes' for all the family. Bargains galore, now. at the Opporgumty shop, St James Church. 355 W Maple. Blrnilngham. GOOD USED SUMMER SUITS and sport coats. 40, 41. 43. Cheap 37 Allls(|n St. s I. tlyglene Co. "FIRST TIME IN MICHIGAN' --FREE HOME DELIVERY-WHOLESALE MEATS AND GROCERIES All nationally advertised brands. Savings up to 40 per cent. Soap, -sugar, coffee, flour, butler, cake mix. cereal, soup, vegetables, fruit Juices Kleenex, pet milk. YES! UP TO 40 PER CENT For free catalog and Informsllon LENGTH FOOT PickED'^UP IRY .......... 81 Orchai^ Lake EVANS EQUIPMENT For Bolens - Wheel Horse trac 17 DIXIE HWY 625-i:il NOT LISTED OOOD BALDWIN SPIN French provincial Window display rr -------1. small ■ - A 6-3649. FORMULA stock sizes and odd sizes Discount prices . Mica 25c square ft. and up Double sinks $10 50 Faucette $6.99 Range Hoods $25 and up ----------------------------- Roll end vinyls up to 50 per cent off FRIOIDATRE ELECTRIC STOVE I PONTIAC KITClfllN SPECIALTIES 119 N Saginaw It these _______ REFRIGERATOR ilrlpool elec dryer. Hollywood gle bed OR 2-5325________ Frifidaire Portable dishwasher. Speed Queen Washer b months old CRUMP ELECTRIC CO. M85-Auburn Rd. FJE 4-3573 OB CABINET SINK TtTTACijEl FE 4-6329 917 Orchard Lake Rd. FREEZER, UPRIGHT. LAST YEAR 1963 models Guaranteed for 5 years. |229 value. 9169. scratched. No down payment. Michigan Flu-orescent. 393 Orchard Lake—7, FOR DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hardener Simple Inexpensive Appltcalldn Bodice Builder Supply _r^5-818« free” ESTIMATES ON REPAIR 0> alum, siding And a )LID VpiYl VILL MOT ear through WURI.lTZl'R PIANOS and ORGANS (iUUHRAX.Sl'lX PIANOS and ORGANS ; nur.w< Organs From $495 ALL STYLES and FINISHES TO FIT YOUR DECOR WIEGAND MUSIC CO. 469 Elizabeth Lake Road (Opposite Pontiac Mall) I’E 24924 I. Largs I Alice 36 months. CALBt MUSIC CO ATTENTION Teachcr.s and Churches Beautiful small Klmhall grand Plano. Like new. New ftnlah. Fully reconditioned with new plastic keys. A real bargain I GALLAGHER’.S IS B Huron • ■ FE 4-0566 A L D W I N SPINET ORGAN. French Provincial, cherry finish. New. used for demonstrating B privats les- ./ zMORKLS MUSICi 36 S. Telegraph id. '-FE/l4» Acrou from Tcl.HiiKin 10 X 12 COTTAOE-AIRE TENT. $55. UL 2-5264.____________________ .961 CAMPER. SLEEPER OVER cab. all equipped on ^4 ton truck, good rubber 354 S. Broadway, apt. AQUA-LUNO. 640. 4 PIECES Amelia Earhari luggage, FE 4-6116. APACHE CAMP TRAILERS AND pickup camper 6335 00 and up. For the best buy give Csmper's Paradise a try. Michigan's largest Apache dealers. Our Pontiac store 366 Auburn. 333-3667. OtMfr -. lofcsttons on request._________ browning” aWECT II O A u o ■ 38 SpeclAI I Magnum r Frt. to midnight. OF MATCHING 85, 682-1723 lET. 1962 wHiSoN'S. Jigger, chipper, putter. Ilratablock woods. Covers. HAND GUNS. SHOTGUNS. RIFLES, new and used. buy. tell or trade. Burr-Shell, 375 &. Telegraph. BRIGGS SPORTING GOODS, 1231 Memorial Day Specks. IpeclAl prices on Apaehq camp trellere. Save up to SO per cent on water skis: jo per cent on boaU; 30 per cent on canoes and pontoon boats. Big savings on ff''"’— ,----------------equlpmc nd l.im int.'^vsT** Colter. 1 mils e ) TENTS — WANTED, WE 'll pay tSO 00 for any regultr e tent In good repair tewards It model. This offer good May Caller Apache Campl^ Canter. I mils east ot Lapeer on Mil-Open dally 9 a m. to 9 p.m., Sundaya 10 a.m. to $ p m._________ (1) AAA AOOREOATE. BLACE dirt, fill dirt, sand and tmvel. J. “ Trucking. FE 5--^------- t BLACK DIRT — TOF Reaa.. Judd Ferguten, OR SOIL — » $4$S9. 2(6 YARDS BLACK onfr OR PEAT. OB 3-9644. PI ......... A-l TOP SOIL. BLACK DIBT. F sand, gravel. OR 610. delivered FK 4-68$i. MEL’S TRUCKING A-l top sou, black dirt, HU dlr$, sand and gravel. FE 2-7774. PEAT MOSS. TOP BOIL. FEAT ---- and top toll mizad, HU ---- aand. and gravel'. Also trucks, dozers and tractors rentals. Iftheer Rd., 1 block north ot Quorton. Kl 7-0406. Res. MA I- 8AND. ORAVEL. TOP SOa. BLACK dirt, HU, FE 6-6620 SAND. ORAVEL. I trucking. F----- ply. TOM B AKC DACHSHUND PUF8. WjS O-WEEK-OLD Bit IIAMESK 1 Clemons. call FE 8-3112. 1 riJC: A POODLE. No money down 1125 per week. All other breed of dogs eveUablc. BLACK MALE POODLE. HAh shots, UL 2-3364____________ DOOS BOARDED. D008 TRAINED. Dsve Orubh’s Kennels. FE 2-1646. POdDlzBS. TOY. REOUTTRiD -mtlfs, black. 6 mos.. vhita 4 moi Shots, verv small, nlct tempMi mcDt. OL 1-6747._______, , COCKER PUPPIES. 115. POINTER PUPPIES. 6 WEEKS OLD *" call after 6. OR 3-5545 POODLE, female. OOOO ' DOG HOUSB9. FE 2-6134. P--- STON stud service. FE 4- 'Chimpenieer " PARAKEETS. OUARANmS~~l0 talk. $4 95. JVe ral^lbM^W^ POODLES, lilNIATURK. AKC RSO-'itered, 7 wkt. brown mole, silver etm^. Beautiful brallhy pupa. lU UKC REGISTS HALLS AUCTION $ Saturday at 7 29. 71 Rd. Lake Orion. _________, occepted dtUy. MY 3-iri AI’CTTONB. . -days. Win-0-Wi W. Long LAko P: < i PONTIAt THURSDAY. MAY j 14-POOT CRIU»<3tArr. 4 M««r. llcreuTT Mut S inuw. un>. I mW «< ii B AUCnoR SALES _ __________________ Centurv; Custom Built TRAVEL TRAILERS OiMaai MM lor S# »om. Mt ronutned. oroialwd coraooii*. ITT ss£L. 1», S3, am IS R So* lb* MW oolf - coototncd S4iA»' Aioo Uw >1 aotr at UIK. NEW RENTALS ' SALES and RENTALS K-Z Ufl hltcMa. |vnr Jat j fvMT SOWDAT i «» >* . Erary Iny—aall-rrade. roMI 7 da tm 3-ST17 HUU AOCnOM BALES eVeRY sqxrd daHy. MY Allfl or SdMI. AATURDAT. joke J8T H setttr a Romeo —-a^ntea lurntture^ c^''Mo*a. nway ^'raonal effKti! Si7.lied-A.io if.'ixr ’Nlce*!htis'rug o® i' t i CTvrkDTIJ A I'Xn «Jn«*rator mub lar»a treeaer . 1 J.I.SW ORTH Al TO fc ?S5re„'^V“^i SI and TR AILER SAI.ES amaU applioncee UtrneiU aiidjjs- om, n*v MA Hdl» ?“'SlSSS‘“lu!.'f*lSe".i;d little CHAMP.^MMCOMPUCTE (■liw'e bed Cbesis Dres-wra and| "■iis7"AuiJm. K'oihi* Poor COSWil BUILT BUN- . AUoy .paUar. S Ab „ . PEA-STSS. ________________ 1« POOT BPEEDLniEtl CS ROBSE P E ROWLANO_____• ^ ^SnStiSi SI4S Diaw Hwy_______ ------TRA\ EL TRAILERS iueerwarr. I Avalair-Tbe new IW woMM. a« ----faMtRinMl Also Fl^t Wln| ai containe«* COM- 14-P O O T SPOBTSCRAFT PLT- rood. • trailer SITS wn-OK_ ■ voin ARISTOCRAPT BUNA- _____ 'CE. PISE. FIR. Tewa. Muilio Shade trees You dtf — bnn< tool* and tiuriap 2^ SACRIFICK iMrtt AcctsswiM 97 Pinter’s Boatland -Alter tba aala Ua'ait aanrlea — wira — Arrecraii - aea a~ Nywtiib - Boata dohoaon Moto — Canoa —Trama. Cypieaa Cardan — WtalU Staa — Skllt — Lila Sorer VeaU — Marine Pa mu De-YUJa^^Cai^ara ^^Portabla' dlrtat **<1041 rOHNSON MOTORS star Cran boaU aad Oator trallera —BTerythln* for the boat. OVEN'S MARINE SUPPLIES 3M Orchard Lake Ave^____FE J MARINE INSURANCE. . ___ tlOS and up. UablU^SId.SM far W Hanaaa Afwicy. PE 3-7»C. ■ MUST-SACRIFICE. 14 POOT RUN- OUTBOARD MOTOR. SCOT ATWA-Ball-a-matlc. 3i R P. contmU pump and t (allon tank, sua Hld-4414^____________________^________ Ertnrude Elac. ' SMALL PIBEROLAS SAIL BOAT. - A-LoDf clipper, darroo aall. ___new. »». Ml AdWI SPRINO SALKS SPREET NO* OO- Nbw «mI UsW Trvcks 103 CREVKOLET. llO. tb-TON COE-Tetr ptehup. »SS E. WalMa. ISin CHEVROLET >4 TON PICE UP. excellent enoditlan. Van’t Auto galea. OR S-ISSS. New aad Usad Can nraoewoou waaoo. ».e, euio.. re- die. wkltewallA SIW. Sll N. Parry. IMl CHEVY PICEUP I prloa tm. No_________ _ week. We bendic and arrante ell nnencinf. UNIVERSAL _AU TO. SALES. I5S g. Baslnaw- PE MSTI. 104,» AETNA CASUALTY ’-SEs.Sdi llabUlty. n.JSO medical. SI OM death I went. S1S.00S unlnaured ISW CHEVROLET BIBCATNS. I door. S eutometic, beater, leaa Uiw I X7.MS mllea. Ven a Auto Selee. OR $11.00 QUARTERLY, 1 cart SIT 4M HRUMMETT AGENCY Miracle MUt PE 4-09SS Next to Pontiac State Bank CANCELED?- REFUSED? YOUNG DRIVER ) ^re. e^s^en^lnwlnt , IIM CHEVROLET MPALA S-DOOR hardtop, automatic tranamlaaton radio, heater. whIUwaUA eoUd IIM** down. S«.m"'p«* month! LLOTO MOTORS, UncolB. Mtr-Comet. EntUsh Ford, MS 8. iw St. PE S-*"** unrytier • rij m a. Woodward Cancel_______________ Local Senrtee—Terras FOR INFORMATION CALL FF. 4-35a15 FRANK A ANDERSON. AGENCY -** * ’ 1044 Nrtifa Cart Fentoo Rd. MA > Loomis BoaU. mcrce VUia»e 3 mi east of ji tcrseriloo of Duck Lake Rd anc Wlxom Rd SS4-aM5 __________ CHRYSANTHEMUM—PLAXTS FOR ______ r SI W FE 4-4193______ DIO YOUR OWN EVERGREENS ■■ ■ ipreaderi IS trees rr tersreeti. Fern; 11 ml. N HBUSttrontrs Mi‘PSninrrWTs Dixie Hwr. tow UB 1S» MA s IJK,^_______^ L O W't R S AND VEGETABLE glanu ei^ Inienal Femu 7M Lock- Trailer sleeps s good 14 rondiliuU. rexsonkble new ixle ; Lower rerxiion coelt. caa OR' . converilble top. < ' ter. Upper Sira _ I _«2-Mlll;_______ WALT MAZUREK'S ' LAKPr-rN SEA MARINA Pootlar'i LATtexL Display New Owens cruiser IS' S4.SS5 y I Chns<7raft speed boat 17' S3.S4S "2 ' Tbompoon lap strake IS' SMS ' Owens and Chris-Craft flbertlas STM 1 ' MANY USED RIOS IMS THUNDERBIRD. SOFT TOP. white. aU power. SUM PE S-MM, IKl VW. cioOD CONbmON, BEET ---- OR 3-0634 IMS CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE. . transmission. StZ-OSSS 1S» VW SUNROOF. RADIO — it sa«niaw FE 4-SM7 7 FOOT CHRIS CRAFT SIM AND WaHttd CHrs-Trecks !i7 FOOT SAIL BOAT AND THAtt Unloa Lske. 1 1300 Ml 4-SlM JkLWATS A HI7YER_OOtaiBXj A*BETTEH DEAL IS AERO CRAFT FIBERGLAS. ms wlib 75 h p all electric motor ai (or I Gator trailer. UL S-3743._____ ........... - .up IS - FOOT 1 Hleciion of used I (,diin» cn... I s! barssln prices ! (or larre family. Averili's fl Hifeoai MPO / O L V O. m a 4-DOOR. FACTORY of(*rtM «ax. lov miieMr. A l coq-dltkm CftU— Pontiac S|x>rt Car. Tnc. Hob HiUi'liinson ter Rd. and Livemoii MU S-iSSl MOBILE HOMES PERENNIALS, annuals AND VE '•’•I Dixie Hi»hwsy OR MM7 open S 10 sVa’tIy -*i^na.y ?3 61 IS^F O O T RUNABOUT horsepower Johnson. ----- S3M Shown ai your HoUy ME 7.60»4. t OR 3-SlM BUls Oards. 3SM Indianwood Rd . DP*' ------------------------------ Lake Onon Phone MY 3-Sasl C.ASH PAID FOR USED TRAILERS. rL. S s.—^ iai Pontiac Mobile Homes. FE 5-SSM_______________________________________ “*•**•*“ . MXAFOOT TOUR-A-HOME. EXCEL- IVFOOT FIBERGLAS, lent coodltlon 673-3IM I '* ■i".!!?.'?.'!; ii^.7 *’ I-TEAR-OIJ SHETL.AND__M_A^H roR~KiKT—15-FOOT VACATlljN' mt‘,« sEmM3_^^ I FE 3-srs 1 w. JON) DIXIE HWY.^ aiuonysAau ^4-B-matir. - full - ------ — PISCflLR^^BUICK t\door sedan has fve : 1963 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERTT TOP 9$ CLEAN Efo-omy Discount CABS-TRUCES 3335 Dtlic Hwi M&M ARABIAN AI STUD ALL POALS l« PER CENT D MOTOR .S.M.ES More Money 1%0 VOLk'^W AGEN 3-door Solid blark \uh radio, ^hest-; rr. whitewall tlres.\ low , mileage ' and immaculate' 51 ik j Crissinan GieyrMct Co. - Rochester; Mich. ' OL 3-9731 Ntw ind Usttf Cars will register NA 7-3931 HIGH SPIRITED MARE TO EX penned rider only OA A3iH9 CHOICE BEEP AKD PORX. HALF Wanted Cean trailers 1 MILES e wboM^^ S^ITI.__ rs RIOINC STABLE I Daik of Grand Bianc on era u b 9-39 mi N. of Pontiac on ' S M 153 acres of ndtng range. : good horses and n— — OXFORD TRAILER SALES Call Ward E P 4 3MI. Now in ( . Rooslertall Marina_____________ ’boat. EVTNRUDE MOTOR. SKIUI trailer, perfect condluon. must MY I-14M. •Btirk sale ' ®OR SH.ARP LATE MODELS rS^“FE OLT-STATK MARKETS -a^ay8 < doc* SI 207 DIXIE HWY - 106 7-dsy a FOR BALE SHETLAND PONIES—, 1 yearliag filly spot -old dap^ mare StOt eld spotted Stallion sipo i •-ycar-oid - Welsh mare, 1115 1 yesrllng buckskin colt. tg5 AIm Mveral horses 1 sorrel marc. 175 Gelding 1175. both good BLCH.ANANS j I 13’ alum boata-*ll5. IS' fiber-. — Marlette's. Vagabond's. Gen j _ gM. jg- flberflas — S725 : ersi's Stewart's Ctaamptoo r Wt-| N,w 15 flbcrgUs. 49 electric, trsii-j ior t Yellow Stone's and Gem's, cr. complete rig—41.215 Trulert. All slsea. terms and priced to your $99 New alum. Runabouts 9399 1 Saltsfactjon 1 up EM 3-2301. 9669 Highland Rd | 60 Units on Display | HI V XOW^SAVE! MANSFIELD Auto Sales 1076 Haldwin Ave. 3.I5-5'A)0 OR 6-«k 19SS BUICK 2-DOOR. HARDTOP - appreciate. 9250 steering. UL 2-2915. powei HIRMINGH.VM Chrysler - Plymouth. Inr 912 8 Woodward M^T-3114 ’ I9S9 FORD 1 DOOR VT! Altfo- RvA R MOTORS, INC. Oakland County’s oldest Chwsler. Plymouth. Imperial. Valiant dealer 34 Oakland________FE 4-3528 1960 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR WITH straight stick transmission and r cylinder engine. Two to choosi from and no money down. -■ LUCKY AUTO SALEI ; Pontlac’i Dgcbwn^ Lot. " 193 S. Saginaw llSo CHEVROLET il FALCONS. ONE 2-DOOR STICK.. I Come to Sjiariau IXxlge ' During Our First I Csetl Car r automatic. Both nlc Station Wagon VS. KINOSWOOD >. Power Brakes. OR 3-4S45. 1961 CHEVY. 4-bOOR STATION . s^eerlf - ' " ^ SALE J money down needed • 334-79S1_____________________ 1955 BUICK SUPER, EXCELLENT coodUion FE 4-3319 BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER , 666 g. Woodward________MI_6^W 1960 CORVAIR. 2-DOOR. AUTOMAT-Ic. radio, healrr. whitewalls, very ' .Ntvingk I alore ' ‘iziV^s^'sAGTNA ^ r" SEE THE “DE.'ENDABI.SSS KESSLER'S LUCKY AUTO SALES, "Pontiac's D'-scount Lot. " 193 S. Saginaw. FE 4ai4 r957 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON. VSengme. all-power, clean I And la RAGCS USED CARS 2546 Dixie Hwy___________ 674-1.400 1962 MONZA. EXTRA apeed transmission, while Superior Rambler 1966 fauICK. $395 4-DOOR HARDTOP. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 666 g. Woodward._ i 1962 CHEVY IMPALA* CONVEHTT-ble Super Sport. 250 hp. ‘ “ DODGE 1956 BUICK ROADMASTER. 2 DOOR I seleciMns m this area. ' OGOP on M24 MY 2-0721. I kida Pou K PoYt PjrnT EcPERTTiOBILE HOME REPAIR' IS I-UIJT rBiin. S1«A Mrta. I Remmgwwv - Road. Lake Or-, SCOTT-TRAVELER WINNER ODAY BAIL BOATS CANOES-PONTOON BOATS HOISTS-DOCKS MERCURY—SCOTT WEST BEND MOTORS INBO.ARD—OUT DRIVES WE SERVICE ALL MAKES ALLOY STERLING TRAILERS TOP 1)01J.AR $$ FOR Clean r.-ed Cars JEROME FE 4-6923 _______^____________ 1956 BUICK SPECIAL. VEHT NICF. bargain 4395 PE 3-7543 H R:g- 1V56 CHEVROLET SEDAN. HAS R . , dio and' heater and 'll Is tn good ! ■ondttlon. full price only 4.197. 440 N Lapeer Rd ' Oxfued Nest te wvtbI • .anmt geeve. pu OA H4W ST OA S-llSi 1963 DEMO AVERiC.AN 440 SPORT "Bright Spot" and accessortea —------'' ■■---------------- MobUe Borne Sale*, me. «jei luxic uAHr xiiAiuc.no—MAnuix. rAXAi , WANTED PONY MAKE BLACK Hwy . Drayton Plains. OR 3-1303 SPORTING GOODS—ACCESSORIES cin TO SEP THE NEW WOLVERINE I r.ii sri,r • om OA csJ EM 3-3(91 1325; I 1956 BUICK H ARDTOP. GOOD RUN nmg car. full price 1197 . 92 down I $2 per week We handle and ar-range all ftnanemg UNIVERSAL AUTO SALES. ISO'S SagLnaw FE wrekly payments c. w'.th no monev down, call o see-credlt manager. Mr. WWti S! KING AUTO SALES. 115 8 Saginaw FE t-04(B '__________. S-30il EVINIHO AND BATUROAT RIDING LESSONS AU. APPALOOSA HORSES Giildrcn. .Adults HORSES BOARDED WE need 'YOUR TRAILER I Any Sue any lypt BUYERS WAITING" "ALWAYS BDYINO" IgJUNK CARS—FREE TOW9I -TOP 9SS—CALL FE 54142 SAM ALLEN b SON INC i m? BUICK AND 1951 DODGE sell or trade FE S-NMS ___________| ; 1957 BUICK. 4-d6oH STaYiON WAO-on Power steering Power b Superior Rambler 4475 FE 2-g730 TERR.C M.^RINA HOUSE BO.\TS S2.^ .MORE us before you need at 4696. no money doWn. p to 36 months on bslaitce i BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 0 CHEVY AN EXCEPTIONALLY 19M FORD VICTORI A 3 - DOOR hardtop lifts and battery like riem $65 or best offer. 333-9W7 1963 CATALINA HARDTOP, MUST MV y I Li;>' I 7 dsvs a week. 14016 Fenton Rd .: rw.. ^ voln. Merc _ ! Fenton, MA 9-2225 _ T Seed, Trailer Sales; KESSLER'S ' FOR CLEAN USED CARS CADIlL.AC CONVERTIBLE 1 ---------- MU yskland IbiSher interim. liiK"'’C^VRULE'l II KING AUTO SALES LIQUIDATION LOT DELI\T.RS WHEN OTHERS CANNOT E\ F!N IF You Are New in Michigan F1VEN IF You Had a Repossession I’^X EN IF You Have Nd Credit F!\’EN if You Have Been Bankrupt ‘V $5 Down DELIVERY AT ONCE no red tape NO side notes NO salary notes 3 CREDIT NEEDED TODAY'S BARGAINS . _. the Carver camper boats Marlene i Mlrro Alum, tlshermaa 'Aqua-cat canoes AfrowrraU canoes Mon. and Pii. nights UI I Sunday 1 to 5. Dally 9 to 6 Complete partt and service Ellsworth AUTO .<^AI.E.S ..................... Estate -------- liquidate car. Full price 42397. E! TATE S-TORAGE CO 109 S Ess Boulevard at Auburn. FE 3-7161 10 N. Washlni ‘Xor OA 6-1400 I CERTIFIED SEED POTATOES, 02 75 and up Jack Cochran. Lake Orion. MY 2-0931__________________ STOP—I.OOK—-SA\ E PabiiinnsirydTodyneXomboanIs Larson-Duo-Chetek-Fealhercralt THWRI? EVINRUDF. MOTORS and TRAaERS ONLY 'to^MAY^ 8y'''*n Pontoon Floats SS X nj;?e s“omL . Alum and wood dtKk. _____________ I M-24 MY 2m\. Avto Acceisoriet 91 LLOYDS- ri953 CHEVY. STANDARD TRAN8-)0 , mission. 6 cylinder, club coupe, i runs good. 9125 No money down ' BIlUdINGHAM RAMBLER 066_8 Woodward______ ■ Ml 6-3900 door. Dow.e rfllde. radio, heal-1 e- ahitewa.ls Only $1695 Easy | terms P.VTTERSON CHEVROLF.T CO . lOOO S WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM Ml 4^35_______ | ISM^EVBOLET BEL AIR 2-DOOR. 6-cyllnder standard shift, radio, heater Onlv $1695 Easy terms. | PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO 1 1000 S WOODWARD AVE . BI?- ; MINOHAM Mt 4-2735 RDLET nXONVERTlBLE terms JEROME - FERGUSON. Rochester Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711 1957* FORD 2-DOOR 500 HARDTOP, V 8 engine, automatic transmission. FOR SALE. 1 SET HOLLY QUADS I Grumman. Old Town Ci--- "Your Evlnrude Dealer” llariiiigton Boat Work<; 1999 8. Telegranh Rd. 332-8033 Open Frl 'til 9 pm. Sun. 10 to 3 BUYING ,i 1955 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR. 6-CYL- • Indrr. runs, as Is. 150 Contact I OL 1-8424 between 5 and • 0fn W...S Only $1895 Easy terms PAT-TER.90N CHEVROLET CO IW S WOODW ARD'AVE . BIRMINGHAM i %l FORD CONVER'nBLE. 6 CYU Inder engine, standard transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires. E^bony blacky ' " ' — ' _______.:y“U.- - . FERGUSON. Rochestf ■ r OL l-SVll. Extra nice. Payments 43.33 '57 PLYMOUTH Wagon 4197 9-Pas,senger Payments 42.21 '59 FORD 4-Door 4597 Sedan, clean. Payments $9 68 '56 CADILLAC Convertible $697 Real nice. Payments $7 79 ■59 RAMBLER Wagon $397 Extra nlce^Payraents 44.45 ■57 FORD WaSon 1197 Economy plus. Payments 43 21 Stick shift.. Paymenli $3 33 '.S9 MERCURY 2-Door $697 Hardtop, clean. Payments $7.79 ■56 FORD VDoor , $197 Hardtop model. Paymentg $2.21 ■60 RAMBLER 3-Door 6597 Sedan, sharp. PaymenU $9.69 ■54 FORD Convertible $ 97 Full power, clean. Paym t* $M( ■56 FORD 3-Door Sedan Nice, clean. Paymenta $3.33 Good Gean ( ar^ lor New No. 2 Lot . I 1959 CHEVROLET BEL AIR $'DOOR AUTO SALES. 1 NEW AJID USED CORN PLANTERS. Darto Machinery Co. Your John' Deere, and New Idea farm equlp- i menu OrMnvaie. NA 7-3292 or OA advaner dtsi. $75. Ford and Mercury. Also 3-speed heavy duly transmission, flv wheel, bell boui-tni with 12 " clutch. $35. Sun tack $ 500 r p m $25 FE 5-5126. MEMOKI.M. DAY .SI’ECIAES Ons big day to save. Up tp 30 per cpnt off on boats, ail sizes 2023 Dixie i 1957 CHEVY, BEL' AIR^ HA^TOP. FAZER ROTOTILLERS - SALES and Service. L. W. Avts. 1519 Op-dyke Rd FE 4-43S0 ' I Apache camp trailers imping equipment. i _ „ 5 MOWERJ- EVAN.S 1 „ 6507 DIXIE HWY 625-1711 NOT LISTED _ Hwy. We Pav More Because We Sell More' ; FE 8 4055 _____________L*--. ' 19$/*RAMBLER. A BLACK 4-DOOR I 912 S. Woodwan ■ PATTERSON CHEVROLET j lm9‘FORb’C0ljNTHY SEDAN. STA-oTnSe"* $6T5 OR.3-6574.____’ Over 200 Cars to Choose From Many Try to Duplicate This Offer We Think) Can Meet or Beat Our Prices and Terms II or See Our Credit Manager, Mr. Cook iM7 CHEVY 6. 2-DOOR. VERY NICE -- FE 3-7542 H. Riggins Dealer^___ 196h CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 2-6-cyllnder._J^>Wergnde, good condition. $950. ^-3445 1959 CHEVROLET SIX. AUTOMAT- EVY^Vb! EXCEPTIONAL. I4_lrwlndale FE 2-4137. 9 CHEVROI.ET 2 DOOR RADIO. KING AUTO SALES 1955 2 DOOR FORD. 6 CYLINDER, radto. healer. $175. Must sec to ap- preclale. MY 3-295$_________ 1955 FORD WITH OVERDRIVE Al Corner W. Huron IM-MI and Elliabeth Lake Road FE $♦ Open 9 A M. to 9 P M. Dally - 9 A M. to 7 P.M. Saturday 1958 FORD 4-DOOR. RADIO. Used tractors. Ail ilieg and mak-s KING EROS- jrg 44734 FE 411 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke ‘ TKURIFIC DISCOUNT . : AT TOX\ 'S MARINE HIGH DOLLAR I people ride on Goodyear than as other lire Prom $8 00 GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE JUlfE IB TRACTOR BARGAIN dew John Deere 3010 Uitoton^ Alao^ e Store, 30 S. Cass r___________ ________ TRUCK TIRES land Area Hardware. Phone Hart-:4_4gg^ full treads $29 44 ea. ■ 900x20 X bar tun tread $30 90 ea! -------- nylon " ' 1%3 50x10 A Stock *40$. I only. $3,4*5 $399 down payments per month $59 83. | including insurance and imcresl j Open I to 9 dally. Sal . i to 9. > F $70x15-6-pIv traction tubeless **' Blemish I22 50 eac ‘ - 24 Hour Service on Recapping Repairs guarantee! Used Auto-Truck Ports 102 . fnd wp'plto"! ' *“',l‘“wa’’*'K2®4(E?'* I Superior Rambler, cylinder. good, automatic. 195 wwvn. f-.*-, menus as low as $18.50 per mo, | BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER I 868 8_Wond*ard -_______ MI A-3M0 I FORD QAI.AXIE 4-DOOR ____ I PAKF OVE nls : 57 DeSoto 335-3607. 1962 CORVAIR MONZA TRANSMISSIONS AND GEARS FOR It cars. Generators and starters. I rocker panels Inslallcd. $5 50 accesaorica Save I 1956 CENTURY. 19 FOOT. 300 HP. excellent condition $1395 195$ Century 18'. 135 h p, nerts 1981 Mercury i CALl.'FE 2-9251 i I USED CADILLAC MOLDED PLY- MOBILE HOMEB I Dixie Highway OR 3-1202 ______Drayton Plaint_______ CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE ear Cyllndrri rebored. Zuck Machine Bhop. 23 Hoodi Phon* Ft 2-2563_____^_________ 1»6 ■ 15 POOT SAND TRAVEL trailer. OR 3-5659_________ 1952 INTBRNA'nOI^L HOD«-CAR. ttJSrr NEW 1963 TRIUMPH 500 CC COM-peiltlon FE 5-3450 or PE 2-2909 TRIUMPH MOTORCYCLk Air-Flo Atrcratt eooatructed. llfc-tlm* guar-). Trofwood, Oarway, Bce-linc. ProUe. Scamper. SletU. Nomrf - , illty ne, , ------ Scarlet t'a Btcycl* A Hobby Shop $0 E. Lawrence 8t.___________FE 3-764 GY'S 26 INCH BICYCLE. EXCEL-l«nt condition. OR 3-6545. AOtkTREAM UOHTWBIOHT^ travel TRAILERS Ston ItSI. Oiuraotocd *" Travel Coach^Inc. ker. Geneva glass pontoons. Kay-to steel and aluminum pontoons. Evenrude motors . and Pamco trailers.-Take M-59 to W Highland right on Hickory Ridge Rd HUTCHINSON SALES A SERVICE New and Used Trucks 103 1 DUMP BOX. 3 TO 5 YARDS PE 5-3840 after 6 p.m__________ 1957 6-YARD DUMP INQUIRE AFT- )R. E TRAN.SPORTATION. 1957 CHEVY WAGON. SHARP CAR. only $397, $4 down and $4 per week at UNIVERSAL AUTO SALES. 150 Better serl I’nicks CHEVROLET. 1958. 4 DOOR 8E ■ dan. V$ Powergllde. new tires, l uwncr. 60.000 miles, good condl- lion, clean. OL LJOdO^__________ 1960 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON vertlble V8 engine, , powergllde. power steering and brakes, beige finish with copper tnierlor__^Onlv S169S E85T lerms. PATTERSON FI695 Easy tP CHEVROLET C GMC Factorv Brandi OAKLAND AT CAJ|^ TON PICKUP WANTED 1953 FORD F-lOO '• TON PICKUP, cylmder. standard drive. Only $31 I?... i.rm. JEROME FERGUSOI d Dealer. OL 1-9711 Good used late model Johnsons an Evlnrudes. Only from 3 to 75 h.[ Highest prices. Immediate cash • - I’AUL A. YOUNG. Inc. I 1965 FORD >x TON PICKUP. $2W. I runs good. Pearlman. 756 Oakland. I .1956 FORD ' vTON PICKUP i 1962 ALPINE ROADSTEHi HERlt'f HASKINS Late Model TRADES 4125 684.3322. lysrrm. Very reasonablir 1961 CHRYSLER ' NEVVPORT" door hardtop with automa transmission, power sleerl 1 V8 engine,' I, 232 a Saginaw 8 FORD 2-DOOR CLEAN CAR. tnally low mileage car' ern wonderfully cared 111 please you botb tn ■ and performance rice of Only 41995 will BIKMINtWUVM-^ 1963 DEMO RAMBLER CLASSIC 6( Inlng seats, and many other fea^ s See Wendell Hei ccpsaortes, beautiful i 6-MAN PIBEROLAS DUCK BOAT 22 ft. long. Ploatailon tanks fror' and rear with styrofoam blocki Ua«d twice cost 4475. Must sacrl flee $165 for immediate tale. 0< 3-$163. 9S7I Mill St. Waterford. 13 FOOT kunaboi:t 35 H P. KVINRUDK EFECTKIC -START- !$-«. runabout wllh ^bMullful ---a«« isn M r qua. Ivkvuda Lkrk Electric start engine. 12-yoU battery, conlrola. -------- «r. Fried $466. Phone FE I-17S6____________ CUSTOM BOAT. TV HORSE ' ‘ ----PE SlWl. >Manv Uscfl Bargains 19' DorsetV San Juan with 75 h { Johnson 18' Thompson with 73 h.p. JohnsOn 17' Johnson Cabin Cruiser with 7 h.p. Jbhnson. , ir Alum Mitchell with f lb c r g.1 s 16' Slarcraft with 30 h.p. Evlnnide. 13' Olass Land li Sea with 30 h p Evlnrude ele-trlc. IS' Glags Wolverln* with 35 h p Evln- I^^Olass Eitiplf* M hp. fvln-14' orasi funkbout With 36t h p, Evln- iC^lIris-Craft Inboard with 35 hp Graymarlne. Used wood runabouts $25 up 12' alunp. fishing boaU 6129 Jiats. alum.' antf flbei Canoes at reduced prlce^ PAUF. A. YOUNG. Inc, 403* DIkle Highway _ OR 4-04U 0|i«li 7 Oaya k Week Superior . Rambler , 1956 F-800 BEATTIE rondltloii, bekutiful 1962 FORD PkIrWne 4-door with VS engine, stkhdnrd truiamlsslon. radio, heater,^ showroom new ahd 1962 CHEVY II Hardtop. 6 cylinder Superior Rambler Convertible . Specials 1%2 Olds Staifirc 1%1 Chevy Impala A Real Beauty! , 1959 Ford Galaxie 1962 CORVAIR Monia Coupe. 4 Speed irgnsmiMlon, 103 engine, u fawn beige finish. HASKINS, Chevrolet-Olds' JBJLL SPENCE "Tour Crossroads to Savings " .US. 10 and M15 MA 3-3071' MA 3-160 1Q58 Clievy 1955 Plynioiith Rambler-Jeep 6673 Dixie Hwy. kl MIS HKSTON MA 3 LLOYD, MOTORS. Lin- 1962 FORD RANCH WAGON. 6 PA.S V6 engine, overdrive Irens radio, one owner, Silver S McAUUFFE -FORD 1961 FALCON 2-DOOR. EXCEL-lent condition, radto and healer. whitewails. mijst sell. Pvt. 332-3469. 1960 FORD 2-DOOR, RADIO. HEAT- ........ . ENOINE $26 55 PER MO. 1395 FULL PRICE See Mr Parks at Harold Turner, Ford. MI GORDON'S AUT'O SALES* 1954 Ford pickup. '53 Chevy Bel Air. shaifp. 20 mure to choose from. We finance for you.' 1001 Joslyn. FE 8-6390_________________ 1938 FORD 2-DOOR RADIO. HEATER. AUTOMA-nC TRANSMISSION. WHITE SIDEWALL 'nRES. $19"- IWi P O RD. equipped. One __ FORD, 1939, COUNTRY 000. FE 3-U16. L I-} .' Ir i OLIVER BUICK- >T)0 PONTIAC 2dHor Iiardtoit ..........$1777 l‘V)l I’ONTl.AU Stardiief 4-diior hardtop S20*b %2 El.I'XTRA 225 Hardtop...............$3077 •»62 1N\1CTA Wafjpn..............-.....$3188 1959 BUICI'^nvicta Hardtop..............$1475 l')60 CHEV’Y Biscayne 4-dodr .........--$1299 1%1 BUICK Skylark 2-door................$1999 1959 CHEVY Impala 2-door .^..... r......$1095 1962 TEMPEST I^Maiis, stick ............$1787 l')60 OLDS Convertible ‘‘98” ...........$1895 1%2 IXVICTA Convertible.................$2878 VK)2 ford Cialaxie 2-door ............ $1995 1%1 I'.U .CTRA 225 2-door ............ $2375 |•■OKI) Wagon, 9 passenger..........$1088 1%2 BUICK TFcSabre hafJfbp .. .T !... .T.T.$2785 1960 CHEVY Impala 4-door................$1495 1%1 EI.ECTRA 225 Hardtop .............. $2478 1959 OPEL 2-door ...................... $199 19.S8 RAMBLER 2-door ................. $'49^ 1959 |<:EECTRA 2-tloor hardtop .........$1495 1%1 BUICK Special 4-doof ............ .$1696 19.V) CHEVY Bel Air 4-door $1«93 F^fjO BUICK l.e.Sabre 2-door ...........$1776 1%1 BUICK l.eSabre 2-door ........... .$2088 1961 RENAULT Daiiphine, Nice! I.$ 775 1959 RENAULT Daiipbine, Special ,.......$295 1955 FORD Fail-lane 2-door ..............$195 1960.BUICK heSabre Hardtop .............$1878 19.''8 CHEVY 9-Passenger Wagon ..........$788 ^ OLIVER BUICK ' . F? 2-9101 210 Orchard Lake ” ■ ■ ■' V' Y(...' -BIG-. SAVINGS . - on CONVERTIBLES W' £S*ArLHt Get More - Pay Less SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK USsLSSi. superior Rambler Liquidation Lot ROOTS Spring Specials ’62 Ford Convertible Bill Root Chevrolet ' °fakmTngton* * JEROME 'BRIGHT SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass EE 8-(M8P. superior Superior | Rambler > UMd Cm 104 Nm I ! BEATTIE Marvel Motors m§ Superior Rambler Mansfield AUTO SALKS 1076 Baldwin Ave. 335-5900 -Special- 1960 CHEVY PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. afmcnj St. FE 3-79S4 Marvel Motors •Hr--" ■m One of Pontiac’s astest-Growing Dealers Because We Sell Good, Clean Late-Model Cars uperior Rambler ".wTll Deliver"' Kj,.” JEEP ■"“oriv'gR'"'' BUICK a nd JEEP $895 JEROME "BRIGHT SPOT" Nwv Dm4 ( D-18 BUY YOUR NEW RAMBLER VOLKSWAGENS Hi ti flOMER HIGHT Week Special m Superior Rambler ■m-fSis COME ViSIT RUSS JOHNSONV SHOOT FOR THE MOON JIUUME USED CAR STRIP STARTING. EARLY ONE FULL BLOCK OF FINE USED CARS. DIRECTLY ACROSS THE STREET FROM NEW CAR SALESROOM Under Lights and Open Every Night .’til 9 p.m. Monday Thru Friday COMPACT CAR SALE! 1961 Valiant Spqrt Coupe $1888 'A1 CADILLAC I Sedan DcVilIc ».rr ’ 1%1 Anglia 1962 Mercury Comet ~^r Full four-way power, E-Z eye glass, whitewalls, radio, heater, TITLED IN GENERAL MOTORS NAME, 13,000 actual miles, just like $1795 «88 $3188 ’59 FORD 1 Wa '59 CHEVY ’60 PONTIAC Lc.sabre \ «r.^-ho p«..d ...y s.pt.mb.r v^r M saLS:— $888 '59 BITCK \ LcSabre $995 WE ARE NOT GIVING ANTHING AWAY WITH OUR CAR SALES- Just real good deals and extra good > on our R^imbler deals. We need 15 in. :'of the low prices we offer , \\> will not be beaten ‘..sales tin's month. Here's an $688 ’60 PONTIAC $1488- ’62 CHEVY $1088 $1788 $888 ’62 CHEVY ;59 CHEVY . Bel Air “ $1888 ■s,r^s •62 CHEVY II •, 2-Door Sedan igea RAMBLER 200QR SEDAN i heater, waslicrs and deluxe horn ring $1549 (Plus excise tax and sales tax) -$168&- Mm. M8_: $148S^ '61 CHEVY-Biscayne 1960 Ford 4-Door Sedan $1195 1959 Rambler Wagon !«»To * • ‘ $795 - 1956 Cadillac 4-Door Hardtop $995 1960 Rambler Wagon $1488 '60 SS^vY $1195 1959 Chevrolet 2-Door 4^1oor hardtop, V8, Fowerglide Si'fV £V« fTr • 1961 Falcon 2-Door $2188 $1088 $988 ■62 CFIEVY $2388 it>‘ —MliwiSrf M Russ Johnson PONTIAC - RAMBLER DEALER Lcilke Orion* M-24 at the Stoplight , My 3-6266 • . t OAKLAND COUNTY’S LARGEST VOl.UME CHEVROLET Dl-'.ALER. FE4-4547 j / i , . , . ' , ‘ ' TE^-4161 ' I ."M .-wnat; — D—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. l^fAY 30. 1963 TT T' ,J1 'A iil ☆ ☆ ☆ REMEMBRANCES—1963 ^ ADKRHOLDT , ^ In ioTtng mrmary of Mn. Ellubfth Adprholdl. who pused »w»y M»j 26. 1S4». TUBCOTT In lovlnt memorr of Jou D. Turcott, who pH«*d awky March THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1963 Dr-1 —Today's Television Programs- Programs fiimisirad by stations listod in this column ora subjoct to chongo without notico TONIGffT C;M (2) News, Editorial, Sports, Weather (4) Deputy (7) Movie; “Three Stripes in the Sun." (In Progress). (9) Capt. Jolly and (M) American Economy 1:21(4) (7) Weather. News. 1:91 (2) Highway Patrol (9) Supercar (S6) Spotlight on Opera 7:99 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Two Faces West (7) Michigan Outdoors (9) Huckleberry Hound (M) Casals Master Class 7:99 (2) Fair Exchange (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Ozzie and Harriet (9) Movie: “Behave Yourself.” (1951). Farley Granger, Shelley Winters. (56) French Through TV 9:99 (2) Perry Mason (7) Donna Reed (56) Exploring the Universe 9:99 (4) Dr. Kildare . (7) Leave It to Behver 9:99 (2) Twilight Zone (7) My Tluee Sons (9) Wrestling 9:99 (4) (Color) Haxel (7) McHale’s Navy 19:99 (2) Nurses (4) (Color) Andy Williams (7) Premiere (9) News, Weather, Telescope UAW 19:99 (9) ExploraUons 11:99 (2) (4) (7) News, Weather, Sports (9) Pioneers 11:39 (2) Steve Allen-Varlety (4) (Color) Tonight-Carson (7) Movie: “His Girl Fri-day." (1940). Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell. (9) Movie: “Son of India." (1949). Sabu, Gail RusseU. FRIDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) Meditations 9:26 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:96 (2) CoUege of the Air 7:69 (2) News (4) Today (7) Funews 7:95 (2) Fun Parade 7:99 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:45 (2) King and Odie (56) Spanish for Teachers 9:99 (7)'Big Show (56) Friendly Giant 9:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 9:50 (9)' Warm-Up TV Features Trinkets Cost Fortune FAIR EXCHANGE, 7:90 p. m. (2) Eddie wants to stay on farm when he discovers summer theater nearby. MOVIE, 7:90 p.m. (9) “Behave Yourself." (1951). Young married couple accidentally acquires trained dog belonging to gang 6f smugglers. Farley Granger, Shelley Winters. DR. KILDARE, 9:90 p. m. (4) Girl found unconscious in park brought to Blair where Kildare diagnoses trouble as conversion hysteria. Doctors or police can’t determine what caused condition or who she is. McHALE'S NAVY, 9:30 p.m. (7) Sailor trades $4 million he thinks counterfeit for some native trinkets. NURSES, 10 p. m. (2) Former nurse contracts venereal disease through extramarital incident and must teU husband so measures for control and cure can he taken. By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK-From time to time, most television viewers, including this one, have complained in columns, in letters and in person about the interruptive and distracting flood of promotional plugs for upcoming pro- grams that turn up every half hour on so many television channels. 9:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go- 9:00 (2) December Bride (4) Living (7) Movie: “Model Wife. (1941). Dick PoweU, Joan ' BlondeU. (9) Chez Helene (56) Let’s Read 9:15 (9) Nursery School Time 9:90 (2) To TeU the Truth (9) National School Show (56) Your Health 9:55 (2) Editorial 19:90 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When (9) Romper Room Ex-Mau Mau Gets Prime Minister Post NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)^ J6mo Kenyatta, former leader of the anti-white Mau Mau terrorists, becomes Kenya’s first prime minister Saturday. Kenyatta appealed to all races for cooperation in the government he was asked to form Tuesday Donald. Kenyatta, who spent lO years in British detention as the chief Mau Mau plotter, proclaimed a policy of democratic African sociaUsm. WMOEIAL PAT (56) Our Scientific World 10:25 (4) News 10:99 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (56) French Lesson 16:45 (7) News 19:50 (56) German Lesson 11:99 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jack La Lanne (9) Movie: “AUve and Kicking." (1949). Stanley Holloway. 11:95 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Ck>ncentration (7) Seven Keys (56) Spotlight on Opera AP n*uf» SOLID FRONT—PoUce, standing shoulder to shoulder and in several ranks, block NAACP pickets at a PhUadeh)hia school construction site. The pickets tried to block workmen from entering the project, claiming Negroes are being discriminated against in hiring practices. Liz Is 'Fatty' to Burton and She Loves Nickname FCC Clears Path for Rate Hike, Cut WASHINGTON (AP)-The Federal Communications Commission FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:90 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) First Impres- (7) Ernie Ford (56) Superintendent Reports 12:25 (2) News 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best 12:40 ( 56) Spanish Lessons 12:45 (2) Guidir ....... 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Leave It to the Girls (7) General Hospital (9) Movie: “The Mortal Storm." (1940). James Stewart. 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Best of Groucho (7) Girl Talk (56) World History 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Ben Jerrod (7) Day in Court (56) Adventures in Science 2:25 (4) (7) News 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Jane Wyman (56) Showcase 3:00 (2) Star Playhouse (4) Loretta Voung (7) Queen for a Day (56) Art and Man 3:15 (9) News 3:30 (2) MiUionaire (4) (Ck)lor) You Don’t Say! (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Scarlet Hill 4:00 (2) Secret Storm - (4) Match Game (7) American Bandstand (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Discovery ’63 (9) Mickey Mouse Gub 4:45 (56)^ French Lesson 4:55 (7) American Newsstand 5:00 (2) Sea Hunt (4) (Colw) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Jack McCaU, Desperado.” (1952). George Montgome/y. (9) Larry and Jerry (56) \(^at’8 New? 5:30 (2) Whirlybirds (56) Friendly Giant 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends (56) British Calendar 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall NEW YORK — How to make your gal love you? Insult her. Richard Burton calls Liz Taylor - in the presence of others — “Fatty.” Dancers Augie and Margo, Just back from London with Sanuny Davis’ troupe, heard Burton heckle Liz tomorrovf for about her increasing weight by using that nick-1 **^*’®'’ leased telegraph name. Liz, who was around her sumptuousrates on leased Dorchester suite barefoot, “seemed to like be-ltelephone lines to go into effect ing called ‘Fatty’ — it was more of an en-^ug- L except for press cus-dearment,” Margo said. tomers. ★ ★ ★ It ordered a special inquiry to Sophia Loren’s been offered $300,000 to do g » sport shirts regularly at $2.99! Beg. $9.99 Charge It Reg.^K.99 52^ Charge It Dnrable 4-pIy conttniction nylon-etnins Rubber gripi. Tarred net, polea, aUkes. IncIndM mall eta, atakea, balls, galvanised ateci wirkets, rack., with carrying handle. ha\el Plastic Jacketed Non-metalic Cable 14/2 with ground ... reaiaU heat and damp. Reg. $3.29 Flexible for easy inatallation. • F W 100' rrg. 5.99 4.99-250* reg. 14.49 11.99 ^ 12/2 w/ground,50.ft. 3.99 100-ft. coil 7.49 50-Fi. Electrical Dept., Main Basement No-Iron Cotton Terry Tablecloths Pretty printed tableclotha In waabiaat colors. Shop 'til 9! 52x70-Inch Size........3.49 52x90" or round........ 4.49 Charge It Assm't includes cotton, Cnpioni® rayon fabrics in light and med.-shade, soli^ colors, dobbies in pastel colors and cqmbed cotton' neardobhieB in mnteH abadei SioXL. Sale! Mahogany Water Skis Reg. $19.95 For regular or slalom skiing. Extra keel and toe-piece fur alaloni. Alnminam keels. Similar. Domestic Dept., Main Floor Hammock Lounges of Tubular Steel Treated to resist mildew water. Attractive white coUon fringe. Folds compactly. Tough MacGregor Golf Balls 12 for 522 Charge It for Family Fun Sale Price ^99 Craftsman 24-in. Rider, Reduced *20 at Sears 17999 Regular $199.99 4-HP, 4-cycle Craftsman Flexible 50-Ft. Sprinkler Hoses 244 Craftsman Key Lock No-PuU Start Roteries Regularly at $2.98! Brass couplings at ends Regularly at $79.99! 20-in., 3-H.P. 3-cycle 7499 • NO MONEY DOWN on Scars Easy Payment Plan Hand-operated clutch stops plade so you can ride across .au w. .... drlvcways and sidewalks without blade turning. No-pull starter. Positive direct drive transmission. Handy engine play. Drop forged Steel Searsl ' controls. See it tomorrow! Sportbtg CaoAr Perry St. Basamant Just Say, “CHARGE IT” at Sears NO MONEY DWON on Sears Easy Payment Plan lV«4o. Offlcisl rise and weight . Triple-tube, heavy-wall hose made of rugged seamless vinyl plastic. Face hose up to spray evenly a 20-ft area. Turn hose down to soak the lawn. Dual-purpose for healthier lawns. Save 54c tomorrow! New hot nuigneto cuts starting effort in half! Key lock no-pulI starter. Craftsman engine. Visual gas gauge. EZ oil FiU-*n-Drain. 9 quick wheel adjustments. Rugged aluminmn housing. Save $5! Hardteare Dept., Sears Malm Basement your money back” SEARS Downtown Pontiac / Phone FE 5-4171 71^ ri-'-