"Ml The Weather i;.«. W«*tb«r Burtiiii Muwtly Sunny nnd Cooler . (DtUMi It • THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 121 NO. U7 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY!, JULY 29, 1903 —30 PAGES umTED At News Conference De Gaulle Snubs Test Pact ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ j . . u . ^ j n iFrencnLeader Hamman Questioned on Ban Njxesireaty of Quiz Envoy 'Withdrawal Clause' Scrutinized Closely . WASHINGTON — Undersecretary^f State W. Averell Harriman todiy quoted Soviet Premier Khrushchev as voicing belief it will be “a long, long time” be^ fore Red China develops “a nuclear capability of any importance.” U. S. Embedded ini Historical Friendship j From Our News Wires | WASHINGTON - Congressional leaders today closely questioned Undersecretary of State; W. Averell Harriman about the so-called withdrawal clause” of| the three-nation nuclear test batf treaty. EVERYONE HELPS - Tommy Brendel handles^ a pitchfork like a seasoned veteran as he joins other workers in an old-fashioned threshing bee at the Dale Glynn farm in White Lake Township. Other pictures and a story of the oats harvest are on Page 19. PARIS (^ — President Charles de Gaulle today -snubbeerthe Mn^ow agree-ment fora limited nuclear! test ban and coldly rejected the idea of a nonaggression pact between NATO - and the Warsaw Pact nations. | At the same time, he declared that Frent*h-U. S. relations arp^ too tightly embedded in historical! friendship and alliances to bei Is America on Edge of Racial Disaster? ^ disaster REFUGEES-A resident of the earthquake-stricken city of Skopje, Yugoslavia, pull.s a cart bearing his six children and followed by his wife and other relatives as they Al> Photof«» leave the city. All residents of the city except men able to help in rescue operations were ordered out by the^ government. The clause provides that any of the nations signing the treaty — | "WrOTST Bmaihrinct[' Russia may resume nuclear j testing on three months notice if they believe their national security is at stake. The clause might come into i play^ for axample, if France I or Red China developed a ! “significaut nuclear capa- ' bliity.” I JjflUiuian, wJio„ initialed—tliei Living Flee Skopje I Union leadec (Editor's Note-Will racial bomb ticks” in America's streets lions': Will the bomb go off.’ How? HVZnTv'Hkt.n-hpd"hvTre«^^^ s(ri/e ift America he izmitect to ; this turbulent summer of 1963. | Where? Iren^ ^ * * ^ Interviews with and r e p o r t s ^ . < on the verge 0} major domes- . The bomb is the explosive crisis *'"™ ^ DcGaullc spoke to a jam- | violence? This first install- : which has flared in sporadic vio- ojf'C'alsfederal, state ^ packed news conference m an ; Danville, Va„ Cam-^"'C'pal governments with civi^^^ , ornate reception room at the j integration crisis bridge, Md„ and New York as social and religious leaders-, and I Elysee Palace. About 800 re- ' |N groes and whites have clashed with citizens in the street, point porters, cabinet members, de- "LZcZn sXj the issue of full racial equali-| to one conclusion: putles and government officials * M / _____ | iynow. ThereisgravedangerofWia- n Bj,-j^[yj^HDGAVZER ! * * * I jor racial violence as America ' Vice President Lyndon B. John-' Overhanging these and otherj looks for a solution to the deep- son has warned that “a time outbreaks are the haunting ques-i ening integration crisis. . If chaos comes,-the consensus I sat on gilded chairs while the I president held forth in the manner of a history professor for I an hour and a quarter. TlIslvasTiirfirst news confer- as Typhus Threafensi Can Lose Post SKOPJE, Yugoslavia (J')—^^Ten mbre survivors were plucked* from death tombs of Skopje's earthquake ruins today. The count of the dead mounted toward 1,000. ence kince January when he ve-toed Britain’s entry into the] Common Market and spurned an' American offer of Polaris mis-, ' .Won't Endorse JFK siles as the price of joining a , ' , , NATO atomic force, . Plan tor Rail Rules ★ * ★ - M 2 U. S. Soldiers Killed - SKGPJE, Yugoslavitrl De Gaulle said that the Moscow WASHINGTON (API - Rov E. ag'"eement initiated by the United, Davidson told Congress today it States, Great Britain and Russia ” 'rt en.st him hie jnh ng hpnH nf^to haU testing of nuclcar weapons BrotherliTO^^ gi’ouM"? GIs Hunt Red Snipers quake-shattered Skopje and the threat of a Engineers if he endorsed Presi- '"eatty changed nothing. Under Mate!), met behind closed doors * j Irleni KenneHv’s ni«n In avert o these conditions, he said, h ranee with members of three of the,typhus epidemic today. stX over maSpowi” "«t be expected to halt tis, most powerful comittees of Con-j As authorities announced the search for. more sur-, railroad work rules. j own tests aimed at making it a! gress to distmss the treaty aiid,vivors would end after today, the government radio re-1 it«h-hedged member of the answer questions l , . , r ,i ui ■ : atomic club ported a Yugoslav girl was pulled out of the rubble, or desire to commend the pro- WASHINGTON — The United States ev^ssed=ontnige today^^a^^^ tlw ~Tatest inurdm” of ‘ soldiers It may very likely — but not necessarily — occur in a North-ernbigeity. - i Ft may stem from rigid police action — or from a minor incident blown out of proportion by rumor. National Urban League trustees report: "Hundreds of thousands of South Korea and charged that North Korea and the Chinese Communists arc deterred only by continued. U.N. strength. JURISDICTION Tlie Senate Foreign Relations comnjittee Has jurisdiction over^ eaithquakc. the treaty but Invited members of! Pi’emier Alexander lirlickov of^ the Senate Armed Services Com-|‘'’‘-‘ Republic said the Still alive 80 hours after she was entombed in Friday’s, posed legislation to the i init(ee and the House-Senate number of bodies recovered Atomic Energy C(mnnfttce tDTrt- ‘>‘='^^^ “"[I tend. estimated 700 dead were still buried under rubble. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-MInn., said Harriman was asked about reported opposition to (he treaty hy the Joint Chiefs of Staff, but referred the question to the military leaders themselves. He said Harriman expla ined that nuclear explosions for peaceful purposes -- such as excavations for dams or canal.s-were prohibited If there was any danger that fallout would contaminate the atmosphere ot another nation. But Grliqkov said it would be assumed that no one else now could be found alive and the government would go ahead on that conviction to raze all the buildings in this ancient Macedonian capital. -...................-.. In Today's Press Drownings Mall of victims could be saved bv new method ■ PAGE 7. Possible epidemics and renewed earthquakes psed a constant problem, he said. There were a few new tremors yesterday, but they yerc slight. On the fourth day after the cataclysmic'quake demolished the city, the stench of cracked sewers, human waste and refuse mingling with the smell 'of decomposing bodies lay like a stifling blanket over the sun-scorched area. Temperatures were in the 90s. More Rain insight, Says Weatherman^ More rain is in sight for area residents with the weatherman bers of my union,” Davidson said, “I am certain that there would be an . . . enthusiastic acclamation f o r my removal from the union's leadership.” Davidson said the Kennedy prd^ posai ”is not only compulsory arbitration,, it is compulsory arhir trition with the added evil of an I utterly unfair preferment for the CHUNYANG-DONG, Korea (iTi — Angry youngj ................... .......... _ But, he added, France is still g soldiers took UP patrol positions along the Korean, Negro pastor of Brooklyn’s Con- ttforasctik/l In HltearmnniAnt. Ili» ^ ^ ^ At ir_____i___i n__ai..i /si_u Northern Negro citizens—strug-gling beneath the mounting burden of automation, overovercrowding and subtle discrimination TT; .are reaching the breaking pint.” The Rev. Dr. Gardner Taylor, predicting thundershowers again Wednesday. Tonight’s low will be 63 with tomorrow turning sunny and mild with a high of 8.5. demands of management..” Kennedy would, have the Inter- interested in disarmament He Koreans]cord Baptist Church,' warns; said that he has some Weas ,:„in. two a„d ‘■Miscalculation of the moment of for ways of controlling cosmic, aerial and sea-borne delivery systems and planned to invite “interested countries” to a disarmament conference before the end of the year. He did not spell out Who would be invited, but implied that the atomic pwers — Great Britain, the United States, Russia and state Commerce Commission de- Frnnce--should attend, termiftex work rules, binding for He said the disarmament con-yeWs unlesT unTdp^^^^^ u >.i i-. W'ho ambushed three of their buddies, killing two wounding the third. plunge New York, Brooklyn, Phll- Their commander Brig. Gen. Charles Pershing adelphia, Chicago, Detroit and Brown of the 1st Cavalry Division, denounced the attack, made in the log early Monday, as a violent J^ipai-aiieied in the history of the deliberate violation of the>-------- ' ..“ nation.” • 4- J I One of the worst years In the armistice agreement. i hope he makes it and 1'history of U.S. race relations was sure hop he does.” I j n n ^ i The demilitarized zone is a no| (Continued on Page 2. Col. 1) man’s land a little over two miles] ~ He said it was “the first time the North Koreans have come clqar across the (demilitarized) zone into South Korea. ” Brown said there is hope the Earlier Story, Page 30 NewsFlash management negotiated a settle-stfuchvn of stockpiles and the de-^ ............ ment. . , istruction of vehicles - .such as third soldier will survive his, ■" ^ Rainfall measured .,3.') inch for David.son, testifying before (he missiles and rockets-for deliver- wounds, identities were withheld, , V "CIlf)N (AV-lwo mo- the entire weekend. llou.se Commerce ^Committee. inq nuclear bombs. pending notification of next of wide that lias divided Korea since dismissal of a suit * * 'k fjjiifj (he ICC is less capable o( Tliis is in line with long-estaiv. kin, , the armi,slice was signed 10 years challenging the legislative ap- Seventy-one was the low re-handling that assignment than lished French policy~4hat France "[ talked to the boy ju.st before ago Iasi Saturday, Jt ha.s grown Hntn'cnl under Michigan’s corded in downtovm Pontiac be-any other arbitrator imggested in would resign fi'om the nuclear lie went into Ihe operating room,”'up with bushes and trees and pa- "cw coiislilution were rejected fore 8 a. m. By 2 p. m. Ihe mor- the four-year course ol the dis- club only if Ihe club itself is dis- Brown said, “He was calm and Irol duty along it is known as] quickly today by a panel of bury had risen to 84. ;pul.e, banded^ showed a lot of courage. 1 told “stakeont ' three federal judges. ■BwdTTia88ing"^lTOur t Pontiac's Drive for Industry Surges Forward Hot Spot Greeks. Turks squabble ill Cyprua - PAGE 9. Henry Ford (jj ■ lOOth birthday celo-‘j braled tomorrow PAGE 1 36. Aren News . , | Astrology .. i Bridge....... ’ Comics ...... . Editorials Markets . Obituaries , Sports ■ liiealftrs 29-27 24 TV & Radio iVograms .16 Wilson, Earl ...... 36 ! Women's Pages.....15-17 danger qf possible typhus out-j break ever eloscr.' Victory is pssible! ^Poiiiiuc’s Greater Industrial Now, GrIIckov said, the main concern was finishing the evacuation of all pople gaged in clearing work or other essential Jobs ana putting heavy demolition crews to work razing the city. A new city for the 270,000 ppu-atlon will be built from the ground up on a safer site to be determined after selsmologlcal studies are completed, Griickov said. njm EVACUATED >re than 70,000 women, chil-and old pople had cleared out of the city by early morning and still they ptired out, on foot nnd In cars, trains and planes. Some pushed carls filled with a few salvaged belongings. Others pedaled bicycles slowly through the debris. At governmeni order, cvucuu- (Continued on 1‘age 2, Col. 4) Development Corp. has pledges today from 51 firms and individuals totaling 184,700. Only 815,300 more Is needed to start Pontiac on the trail of Max Adams. Chamber of Com-liglit manufacturing and kin*^ merce manager, said today: dred activities, ] “Our deadline is Thursday of This means more employ- tliis week, and we must liavc tlic ment. lull $100,000 lo .secure tlic land, It means mure payrolls. jon South Boulevard, That will mean a constructive step toward il bigger, busier nnd more active P o n I i a e. Tlie competition for these new small businesses which are springing up all over Anier-; ica is tremendous. Some cities are ahead of us, but we liave a' grand start. Jhes^ Ha^e Pledged Support: Ponfioc Arto Chombtr of Comirifrco Rikor Building, W. Huron Ponfioc, Michigan 48058 Pleotc ^provide m« with informofion obouf fh« industrial De-volopment Corporotion. I am interested in . . . shares of stock at $100 o shore. [ “Every busliicssmaii and all I other public-spirited citizens I arc urged to step forward im-I mediately and put their shoiil-[ ders, to the wheel, j “We need action and we j need it now. I “Next week Is too late. Nome. Phone No. Addir|si City,.............. ........................... Michigan 7('.. I “The Pontiac Press Is running ■ nnolller eoipln lo‘ elo.se litis ■ gap nnd Ixii'i.sl mir area anothei J rowlid lip Hie ladder .of iodus-I trial nctivjty. Yodr montey briiig.s ■ you 8 li a r e s of stock at $10(1 J apiece. More .than half a lluii-I dred of your fellow citizens have ■ leaped furwurd and answered tlie ■ call. "Will Y6U do YOUR part?" Adams, Max Andreom, Frank Aniiell, Brilee Armstrong, H. Z, Brown, Charle.s Buckner l''inancc Bnllerficld, John A. Carney. Dale F. Colien, Abe Community Nudoiuil lUiik Connolly's Jewelers, Inc. Consumers Power Co, Cross» Mjlo Dawson, Robert & Bernice Harry ,M, Denye8.^r., As.s()ciates, Inc, Detroit Edison Donclsoii, Carl W. Kamos. D. B, Fitzgerald, Harold Ciiriird, A..(,', Griffin, Glenn H Jlui^mmi, William Hunter, Ciiri \Ll)Cul 594, IJ.A.W. Jenkins, Jqnfes R, I(;ielst, Gladys R. Magnus, Adolph, Jr. Maroko, S. W. tDr.) Metz, C. F. Michigan Bell Telephone Co. Miller.'Floyd Museman. Edward Nephler. Catherine E. Nephler, Clprence Newton, B. Patterson, Clarence 'Ibe Pontiac Press Oakland County AFL-CIO Pontiac Ready Mix Pontiac State Bank Potter, Jesse C. Riley, John A. Rogers, Carl Spleer, Paul Thatcher, tbilterson & Weniot Tliomus, Esther Tlionins Economy Furniture Co. Wu.sserberger, Gcqrge Wassertrerger, Df. laio Whitfield. SUiarl, Wllmol, WUllum H. , Wright, Mr. uihl Mr/. Jamo*!' ’ ■ 1C i fr TWO THE PONTIAC PEESS,' itONDAY. JULY 29, 11)63 D^pening Crisis Is U.S. on Edge of Racial Disaster? (Continued From Page One) fashion or there will be a great 1919. There, were seven m8jor|deal of racial unreSt that will riots that year—the three occurring in Chicago—38 killed, 537 wounded and injured, Washington, DC. 6 killed, scores hurt, PhilUps County, Ark., 30 killed, and hundreds hjirt. ' Can such riots come agair ? Dr. Kenneth Clark, Negro professor at City College of New York, answers: “If white America refuses to grant rights to Negro citizens and continues to withhold them, I suppose White Ame^ca wiil try killing Negroes. 'If white America is prepared to see Negroes being kill^ and killed and killed, then this will happen, but it n’t stop anything, because In Chicago, Ralph Helstein, pwsident of the United. Packinghouse Workers—a uhion integrated decades ago—says: “My feeling is that the discontent still is beiow the boiling point, but . . . our organizers throughout the country are surprised that “ hasn’t boiled over.” boil over into violence. THE LOCATION? If the time bomb should go off, where is it likely to explode? I^me, including Dr. Richard Wade, professor of urban history at the University of Chicago, think it may occur in the -South. Wadft cites a long historv of deference on the part of the Negro, who in many Southern regions is unskilled and uneducated and has little organization. Others believe the explosion is more likely to occur in the North where there is job discrimination, de facto segregation in housing, Burke Marshall, assistant attorney general in charge of^ciytl rights, says: “The country has to move on this issue in rapid Negro Official . Urp Militancy LOS ANGELES (AP) - Massachusetts Atty. Gen. Edward W. Brooke, a Republican, the nations first Negro elected to atop statewide office, asked delegates to the Urban League convention Sunday to assume a more militant posture. primarily tions and social service activities. “The Urban League must recognize that the ballot box and the picket line are important weapons of persuasion in opening doors to long closed to Negro citizens,” he said. Brooke also urged the league to redouble its efforts with both management and labor to insure “ more jobs for Negroes: ----mood SHIFTS--------- “The mood has shifted,” Brooke . said, "from opportunities to rights —rights to equal education, equal job placemtnts and equal hous- A telegram was received from President Kennedy, sent to Henry wSteeger 3rd, president of the biracial league. The telegram, lauded the league for its “enduring contribution’’ to the removal of segregation. A Negro public relations man notes: “I sit in my air conditioned office all day and I see nicely dressed people and I look down om Sixth Avenue and I almost forget about color. Then at 5:30 I get downstairs and it hits me in the face. I can’t get a cab because everybody thinks I want to go up to Harlem.” In Uhicagor Alvin Prejean, deputy director of the Urban League, insists all the IngrediT ents for explosion are to be found in Chicago, among other Northern cities. * “Negroes are pushing and whites are pushing back,” he says. “People here used to talk about those pK)or people down in Birmingham. Now they are talking about here. We need better teachers, better jobs, better housing, just to catch up with whites.” From Our News Wires BOMBAY, India An Indian air force pilot sighted five bodies floating b^ay in the Arabian Sea area where a United Arab Airlines jet disappeared with 52 persons^ aboard. Hope was virtually abandoned for any survivors among the crew of eight and the 54 passengers, inclhding 23 Filipino Boy Scouts. . Uncertainty as to the number of passengers aboard arose from a conflict between the passenger list, which mentioned 54,' and official radio reports placing the number at 55. "nie confusion appeared to arise from reports that Farag Mustafa, the airline’s financial adviser, was bn the flight. His wife said he was not, hut Mustafa himself could not be located immediate* i ly. Ilie plane was on the way from Tokyo to Cairo when it crashed in monsoon weather nine miles west of the Bombay airport as it headed in for a Earl Brown, Negro, deputy Manhattan borough president and former magazine writer who with Louis E. Martin, now a member of the Democratic National Committee, predicted the 1943 Detroit race riot, 34 dead, 700 injured, says it is the dis- contributes to-the Negro militancy. “This is the Negro doing something for himself,” Brown says. “He’s learning something about dignity. He may have to lose .some blood, but he’s found that that's the road to freedom, not just winning a peace.” CONFUSED MOVEMENT ■any there is confusion. Leaders struggle for power positions, goals depend upon who’s defining them, control of the masses evaporates, James H. Meredith gets booed at an NAACP convention in Chicago. At the same convention, the Rev. Dr. J. II. Jackson, president of the National Negro Baptist Convention, is booed (or nine-minutes, supposedly because he had The mood for actipn is all-per-| vading. Its beat is sounded by Dr, James M. Nabrit Jr,, president of Howard University. “We are sick of evasions, weary of eptcuses, fed up with promises and want action now, liberty now. cqualii.yjiow. ^ C. Sumner Stone Jr., editor ofj •meWashIngtOT The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Siuiny, a little cooler and less humid, Fatr and c«ol tonight with a low of 57 to 63. Tuesday mostly sunny and mild with highs in. the mid 80s. Winds light and variable tonight and Tuesday. The outlook for Wednesday shows a chance of thundershowers and mild. HOPE FOR FUTURE—American Negroes are increasing their efforts to break traditional barriers of discriminafion and to gain full equality, their efforts could make this summer of 1963 a time of major domestic violence as AP Phot«f»z segregationists resist desperately. This mother and child, photographed in New York City, symbolize Negro aspirations for a better .tomorrow. backed President Kennedy’s Iwin. I don’t think it will happen call for a moratorium on dem- [that way because the Negro is onstrations. I realistic about being outnum- , .. I .' , .f „ i bered. I do think there will be Leaving the speaker s platform, ThP Ipamio brpvimislv has been ^ the Rev. Mr. Jackson was pinned i -covecyLoLubtammg-digBity-wbicb TO-nersons ervine ' rimanly involved m race rela-^„tributes to-the Nearo mili- ‘You can’t haye a revolutioii even a peaceful onewithout some casualties.” -NEXT: The Naked Basis of Crisis. ‘Kill him! Kill him!’ r Last-Minule Try Made to Tell Japan of Bomb ffUr AfroAii lean, says “For the first time, I'di say, everybody is involved. All| Negroes, except for some Uncle | .'tons, are prepared to be vmved.” In Detroit, George W. Cathcart; of the Trade Union Leadership Council — a Negro labor power - was told about a profe.s.sor’s comment that “the old people got converted and the young people got religion,” and related: “Whe was a boy they told me, ‘don’t fight, get an education.’ I tell my boy, ‘Fight, and if you get thrown out of school. I'll find you another one.'” There is concern that the one thing which might lead to trouble would be a march on Wash-ington. * NEW YDRK (OPIl-A groTJp" ofTdemists Who^^ “ the atomic bomb and Gen. George C. Marshall tried at Truman that Japan should be warned before the first atomic bomb was dropped on the country, it was dis- ? closed yesterday. >" The group of 156 scientists was led by Leo Szilard^ a brilliant Hungarian physicist, who helped supervise the nation’s first controlled atomic chain reaction. ' Huiia.T lii Itonll.T 1 811 Mllw»ukei' Such a march is set for Aug. 28. It was decided upon in New York recently at a strategy meeting Involving the NAACF’s Roy i»K'Wilkins, the Southern Christian I Lendership Conference’s Martin isi.uther King Jr., the Urban SJiIieague’s Whitney Young, CORE’S .lames Farmer, The Student Non-! violent Coordinating Comniillee'.s’ John I.ewis and A, Philip Itan-I 'f>I dol))h. president of die Negro; 1 M Aimi'icaii laibiir CsHineil. The disclosure appears this week in the current issue of Look magazine. (Trqman, reached in Independence, Mo., refused to comment on the article.) ' l^e magazine said government files showed the petitions 'never got to Truman, who at the time was en route home from the Potsdam Conference with the British and the Russians. “Every effort should be made to keep our record of warning clear,” said Marshall. “We must offset by such warning methods the opprobrium which might follow from an ill-considered employment of >uch force. Indians Find Bodies in Sea Ail Hope Abandoned for Jet Crash Victims It was raining at the time of the crash and visibility was poor. Radar equipment at the airport was following the plane in when it suddenly vanished from the Birmingham Area News Commission to Study Maple Road Congestion BIRMINGHAM - Two congestion-cutting proposals for West Maple traffic will be considered by city commissioners tonight. Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley has recommended the conventional parking spaces be replaced by tandem stalls. > An alternative is to enlarge the present stalls from 21.5 to 25 feet, Moxley indicated In a report he -will present to commissioners. The commission asked Moxley to study the problem June 10 when it turned down a request by merchants to prohibit Maple parking from Hunter to Chester on weekdays. The “twin^talT ’ plan would cost $548 and cut spaces from 76 to 66. The pairs of spaces would be separate )>y 10-foot prohibited parking areas. Cost to enlarge the stalls 25 feet would be, about $329, with the number reduced to 58, aC' cording to Moxley. Three young athletes are to visit the meeting tonight at the invitation of the Recreation Board. Mrd. Ernest W. Hunt Service for Mrs. Ernest W. (Audrey F.) Hunt, 89, of 775 Bates, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Acacia Park Cemetery, Southfield. Mrs. Hunt died Saturday after a lengthy illness. She was a member of the First Baptist Church of Birmingham. Surviving are four chlMren, Mrs. Wallace Shaw of Pontiac, Mrs. Earle Cunningham of Birmingham, Mrs. Harry Jones of Lincoln, Maine, and Basil W. of Pleasant Ridge; a sister; four grandchildren; five great-grandchildren; and a great-great^ grandchild. Birmingham’s winners In the recent Detroit Metropolitan Youth Eltniss Meet4n Livonia, they are Chris Johnsoh, 10, of 2M3 Lamplighter; Sue Hilardis, 12, of 921 Warwick; and Karen Roth, 10, of 640 S. Cranbrook. diris placed first In the boys’ chinning event with 22 chins. Sue ery, Waterford T own 8 h i p, Urban League Names Director Clarence E. Barnes has been named the, Pontiac-Area Urban League’s new executive director, Chaejes R. Hhjrris, League president, said today,_ parnes currently heads a special research project for Bell Neighborhood Center, in Cleveland, and is working on a doctorate degree in sociology at Western Reserve University. He takes over his new job Ayg. 15. Stanley R. Princi*,' 2026 Kohler, also of Waterford Township, 'wba killed yesterday when he fell from the rear of a pickup truck and under the wheels of a car. CLARENCE E. BARNES Married, and the father of three, Barnes joined the Urban League at Canton, 0., in 1954. While in Canton, he was also Say3 Pentagon Played Politics WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Mil-ward L. Simpson, U - Wyo., charged today t h e Pentagon’s handling of the controversial TFX fighter plane contract was “shot through with political interest and favoritism.” Coltege; renewal planners, and served on the county juvenile delinquency council. He is a hative of Fairmont, W. Va., and a graduate of West Virginia State College and West Virginia University. He holds the Bronze Star from W.orld War II. Barnes fills u vacancy caused when Sam H. Jones resigned in Februaiy to become League director m St. Paul, ® ..“President Truman, faced with one of the great moral decisions of human history, was denied access to the petitions of many American nuclear scientists who opposed the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima without warning,” the article said. The petitions were given to Col. Kenneth D. Nichols, production chief of the Oak Ridge (Tenn), Atomic Laboratory. He sent ttiem on July 25. 1945 (13 days before Hiroshima was bombed) to Mnj, Gen. Leslie R. Groves, head of the atomic bon\b program in Washington. Simpson told the Senate that Navy Secretary Fred Korth should have di.scloked his connections with the winning con-[fractor, General Dynamics Corp,, before the multibillipn dollar contract was awarded last November,^. ...................... 'I'hc flics indicated that Groves held the papers until Aug, 1: then .sent them to Secretary of War Henry L. Slim-s()ii 'i'niman at tliat^time was ahoiit to leave for hoine. He was aboard llie LiSS Augii.sta when the bomb was dropped. “Did K o r t h reveal to his confederates h i s staggering .conflict of interest? If he did not, he should have. The July 23 testimony o f Secretary Korth is shot king almost beyond belief. " Simpson declafid, Simpson kveltd the criticism as the Senate Investigations subcommittee sclieduled more elo.sed !liearings lor tomorrow with Air Force Secretary. Eugene 2uckert as the chief witne.ss. 'he march was .scheduled evenj "i! thiTiigh the Kennedy adminisira-j 81 M iiTa'r,uk.''c !'! I? tion has voici'd vigorous delermi-•na a" h h'“m«"io’ In (lunation to get a .strong civil riglits 111 ai lit at t>ili through Congress. Negro lenders feel theye will be n filibuster und that a march will show lawmakers the degree of Negro unity and determination. 4 Living Flee Skopje (Continued From Page One) lion of everyone lull men iilile to woman presumed to be the first American dead In the disaster. . , lielp in heavy work was being Authorities who must plan for jnny eventuality have done so in * * * many nroa.s, The federnl govern- * ment Is committed to back decl- recovery of a Belgian siotes of courts and policies of tlie couple from tlie rulible yes erday administration with troops. aft^r 55 hours of being buried altve raised some hopeathat more I'olice in many cities have found, been given and are undergoing „i special (raining and Indoctrimi- | ' Hon, Detroll and Chicago have I R'rl stirred another faint spnrk police (lepartmeiils especially alert to any possible racial dl.s-llii(\liarice. Officials said they concluded that the bodies were those of an American Air Force sergeant wife. An automobile with identification papers of Staff Sgt. Harold Stacy of Gouverneur, N.Y. In the _ glove compartment has 'bee " ‘standing near the hotel since the I’remier Griickov .said Hie work quake struck the city Friday. Tlie 'omplelely ^^ razing, -the clty ,(.qup|e was on its way to Greecci NATIONAL WEATnER~.Sliowcrs utid ihunder.sliowers In a band from North Daholu soulliward through wesiern Texas ‘and New Mexico are expected limlghl while clear to partly cloudy skies are forecast for llic re»t*of Ihc iiutlon. It will lie cooler In the lower Lakes area, tlie Ohio Valley' and the nortlieni Rockies. “If lliere ls'’nina\vay rioting’ laki‘only a few day.s, stnrt-Ifnmi Germany on a vacutlon, ■ I hope there won’t he' ihen the" | InHelgrade. anAmericanEm-legro enn’t help iatj lo.so," siiy.si * * . * Jliassy spokesman .said It was the ,l.ee Hlackwell,,edUor of Ihe Chl-|, From the ruins of the Hold first word they knew of concern-icago Defender Miicedonia, where the lUdgian lng any American dead. Twelve I “We M'pre.'iient oply 1() p(‘r eenljcouple was fmind, worUmen dug other American.? who had 'of (he 'popiilalipu:'Wc rouldn'l out the bodies ojf a man and|In (he Skopje area were nILfsafe, The subcommittee, now in its fifth month of hearings, is in-ve.stigating why the contraet, expected to exceed $6.5 billion, was given to General Dynamics rather than to the Boeing Co. Simpson noted that Korth acknowledged that he was president of the Continental National Bank in Ft. Worth, 'lex., and approved a loan to Gener^^ Dynamics. “It was axiomatic that much' of the monies lent by Korth stationed In Europe and his would be spent In Korth’s state, if General Dyiiamlcs goL Jha TFX contract,” Simpson said. Expect Satellite to Open New U. S.-Africa Link WASHINGTON The -.ew Sync()in 2‘ commudicutilfti.i satellite, orljiting some 23,000 miles above llm earth, is expeiied to open a new communications route between Africa and United States before the end of the week! a visiting instructor at Malone .....................Adtr Neutrals Out to Ban Tests Under Land GENEVA (UpI) - The eight neutral nations at the Geneva Disarmament Conference were reported today to be planning a new effort to ge< the nuclear ppwejs to ban underground tesH ing. Informed neutral sources said an appeal would be Issued when the lull 17-nation conference resumes tomorrow. tor a slx- Bul the sources .said it was unlikely the United States and the Soviet Union would press at the moment for talks on an underground tc.st ban I'hey said, however, it was possible bilateral talks might be held on the conference sidelines on ways to prevent surprise attack and the reduction of mi stockpiles. The chief disarmament negotiators of the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union returned to Geneva today for ,the resumption of the confer* it was understood that the first item on the agenda would be a report by the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union on the partial test-ban agreement yilti-ailed last Thursday in Moscow. Neutral sources sa|d their naans •*> Brazil, Burma, Ethiopia, India, Mexico, Nigeria, Swt^en and the United Arab Republic -*-were pleased by ,, the Moscow agreement. third In the running hop, step and jump and Karen first In the running broad jump with a 11-foot 8%-inch jump. 2 Children Die in Area Accidents Water a nd traffic accidents took the lives of two 12-year-olds over the weekend. Shirjey Ann Garten, 4361 Hatch- Oakland Oakland Highway Drowning Toll in ’63 Toll in ’63 77 13 Liit Y«r to Date 51 Lilt Year to Dato 10 drowned in Deer Lake irt.Olarks* ton Saturday afternoon. The driver of the truck, Michael L. Flanigan, 18, of 4539 Major, IVaterford Township, was being held for investigation of negligent homicide. Shirley’s body Was recovered by sheriff's department sklndlv-er Guy Kessler two hours after she was reported missing by her pr^is Mr~and~Mrs. Garfield ” Garten. The youngster, a nonswimmer. Was found , in eight feet of water,. Shirley was playing in the water with her mother and father and a younger brother, police said, when Mrs. Garten detiided to take the baby ashorel Mrs. Garten said she thought Shirley was following her. Mr. Garten said he went out to deeper water whin hb tfibuWWr% went to the beach with her moth- Lt. Donald Kratt, head of the Sheriff Department Water Safety Patrol said that markers designating drop offs in the water had been moved ouf and that this might have been responsible for Shirley stepping intq a deep water. Service for Shirley will be 10 a m. Wednesday at Silver Crest Baptist Church with burial in Drayton Plains Cemetery. Her body Is at the Coats Funeral Home. Surviving besides her parents are three brothers, Richard, Michael and Marvin, all at home, and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Carfas Garten of Pontiac, Mrs. lii W. Sloan of Austin, Tex., and Richard Reynolds of Houston, Texas. Stanley was injured fatally shortly after 1 p.m. when he was tossed from the truck as It went around a curve on Sashabaw, 450 feet west of Island Park. He was hit by a car driven by Paul Farmer, 25, of 4032 Fourth, Waterford Township. HEARD BRAKES Flanigan told Waterford Township police that after going around the curve, he heard brakes screeching and when he looked around he saw his passenger in the road. Farmer said he saw the boy fall from the truck biit could not avoid hitting him. Stanley’s body Is at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home. A Pontiac man, Monroe Hlltz, 56, was killed Saturday night on 1-94 near Ypsllanti when his car went out of control and struck a guard rail. Police said Hlltz, 480 E. Mansfield, was towing another car and lost control when the towing gear broke. ■J a: !: I \v .»■, ITHE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 29, 1^3 , THHEE Forced to Close in East To SIMMS TONITE ’til IS PJI.-Tuesday 9 LM. to 6 PJI^ Summer Comp Hit by Typ, HARRISBURG, Pa. W - On a Sloping green hillside in South* ern Fraijklin County lies the rustic Rhodes Grove Bible Camp, a centuo'-old summer playground fpr children. The camp Is silent today. Rhodes Grove has been closed by typhoid fever. Everything at Rhodes Grove from Water supply to food was checked, and rechecked. The camp got a clean bill of health, but officials closed it for 21 days as a precautionary measure. Twenty-one youngsters who attended the camp In June still lie in area hospitals with the disease. State health officials are working around the clock in an effort, to find the typhoid carrier — the, person who brought the epidemic to Rhodes Grove-Carriers can pass typhoid to others, but are immune themselves. There are 250 known carriers in Pennsylvania, perhaps many others unknown. “It’s a manhunt,’’ said Dr. William D. Schrack Jr., directoir of the health department’s division of communicable disease control. The sooner the carrier is located, the better the chances of halting further outbreaks. The epidemic was uncovered, earlier this month when a pathologist at Chambersburg (Pa<) Hospital reported laboratory findings in four youngsters. Within days, the incidence of typhoid mounted, first to 12, then 15, and finally 26. All the victims had been at the camp between June 16 and June 29. Health officials ^an at once compiling a list of ^all children present during that period. Nurses visited as many as possible with a long list of questions designed to uncover more patterns. Authorities in Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia,'lind Florida, were alerted, to watch for typhoid symptoms among bqt-of-state Jroungsters who attended the camp. Saboteurs Dynamite Italian Rail System MILAN, Italy (AP)-Saboteurs interrupted rail service on two main lines between Milan and Switzerland Sunday by dynamiting pylons that support llnea for Italy electrified railway system. The first explosion, near Gamer-gata, delayed traffic for three —hoUKL- The second blast, near Varzo, blocked traffic for nearly four hours. • ' Police declined to speculate on the authors of the sabotage. Births Tlio lifflowloK Is li lisT pr ieccHt Pontiac area birthg us recorded at the Oakland County Clerk's Office (by name of father): BIRMINOHAM L»wrence D. Hciticli, 303J Derby 'rue.MM.. Rflync''*“ ’Thome* a. ftoyno 733 Weiitoheeler Robert 8. Key**, «7» Vlnewood Wllhem J. nummlnjj— “ * nmlnger, >33 H. Reeding _____...____II, 17« Northliwn Wllllem M. Caldwell, m46 N. Clunbury William J. David R. 1 William M........... - Melbourne O. Tlernoy, 101* Smltl jamea K. Daniel W, _ Joaeph Durlt, Ralph E. 8oli'umalt*r"403l'r'*r Hill Dennia l(. Welch, nil Mellon Jamea D. Flynn, 1331 Davl* (twin*) Carl A. Helqulat. 463 N. Blon , Robert J. U,j^Ua^^34J30^^*Buvlll» (Iwlnal Wealey R. aBfiii3”7ii *lRiroii Oarolti Maw hriAvii (, urBiiKiHt ilM MOPftniR ;. Borkb. 1255 B>. tftke Dr. Wfiein’DatelirirMi tr......... ...... Michael B. Valie’ alJjP Oordoli R^^ini^ad. 1 Joiiepli L, Bourque, 9146 Dwiillt Howard W. Dbaph, 473 Qranda Donald L. Roao i, 641 Ddeola Harry O, MoCalliiim.Ill Apleana Alfred W. Faad, 7» It, MOntoalm «/ r,,ii.,her, 3847 Jamea lell, 9116 Joaiiiay — ‘•’1 Harvey lb £: rail,, m .umml Leroy T, Power*, . _ _ . _ 'll"' ...j-rokL , vpnald F. Hefrlniton, 676 Hanoi yam.. A. W.U^l»|^ Oamand ^4-—^—- FOUR THE .PoyTiAC PRESS, MONDAY, Jl^LY 29, IMS Church Camp Near Romeo 99fh Session ROMEO — Simpson Park will “come alive” Thursday when families from all over the Midwest and Canada converge there for the opening session of Michi: gan’s oldest interdenominational camp meeting. girls' dormitories, trailers and cabins. The 99th session will feature three preaching services daily, 10.‘30 a.m. and 2 and 7:30 p.m., through Aug. ll. Located bn 19 wooded acres, a mile west and a half mile north of here, the park has facilities to house about 600 campers, including family groups. A new 2-story cement block building has been constructed this year. It contains a kitchen and dining room on the main floor and 27 sleeping rooms on the floor above. In addition. Jo the preaching services, Bible /cTa;gses and planned recJreation will be avail-for adults and young people, alike. CAMP SPEAKERS Preachers this year will be Dr. H. M. Couchenour, general Campers are, housed in a|evangelist: Rev. Maurice W. Stey-large hotel and annex, boys’ and ens, approved evangelist; and Rev. D a v 1 d A....3eamands, church pastor. All are members of the Methodist Church from Wilmore, Ky. In charge of. the music will be Rev. and Mrs. Dale A. Sherry «f the United Missionary Church, Elidiart, Ind. They wiii be assisted by Dan Greer of Port Huron at the piaiio and organ. Gertrude Cooper will direct the children’s work. .Sunday afternoon and evening sessions traditionally attract well over a thousand worshipers to the open-air tabernacle on the camp grounds. The Sunday afternoon services are at 2:30. Three speakers will be featured on Missionary Day, Aug. 6. Rev. Jimmy Lents of the Worid Gospei Mission will .preach at 10:30 „a.m. and Dr. Wiliiam Giilam of the Oriental Missionary Society at. 2 p.m. The final sermon at 7:30 will be delivered by Rev. Fred Maitland of Brazil. plans already are being initi- Farm Payroll Cut Over Half Technoiogy Advctnces Slash Labor Wages WASHINGTON (UPP Aii Agriculture Department report indicated today that machines and other technological developments^ have cut the farm labor paypll nearly 60 per cent during the last' 15 years. ated to mark the 100th anni- The figure is based on the assumption that the same number versary of the camp meeting, which is dedicated to “spiritual ^refreshment and physical relaxation.” Yet, witli this greatly reduced use of labor, agriculture is producing nearly 25 per cent more than it did jn 1948. Contributing to this greatly FOR PUBUC VIEWING - This Air Force F-IOIB “Voodoo” tactical fighter will be on.display at the 4-H Fairgrounds, North Perry at Walton, Pontiac, during the annual Oakland County 4-H Fair Aug. 6-10. Designed to meet Air Force reijnirements for high performance, the F-lOlB has a top speed over 1,000 miles an hour. Displaymen of the Orientation Group, USAF, will accompany the exhibit to answer spectators’ questions. Parks to Issue Free Area Map New Guide Locates Recreation Facilities The new Metropark Guide for 1963-64 is now available for dis tribution, Kenneth L. Hallenbeck director of the Huron - Clinton Metropolitan Authority, an- SOUTH LYON - The Lyon Township Board of Education will continue con.sideration of passive solutions to its classroom space problem at a special meeting tonight. Board members will meet with the school architect at 7:30 p.m. in tlie high school library. Supplied without charge, th Metropark Guide is a map in color illustrating Huron - Clinton Metropolitan Authority park landi state recreation areas and highway routes throughout the counties of Livingston, Macomb, Oakland, Washtenaw and Wayne —the area served by the authority. , • With its turquoise cover, t h Is map shows the locations and lists the facilities of the authority’s loop of seven parks from Lake St. Clair to Lake Erie. Present and proposed “Freeway” jroutes and the location of Stony Creek Metropolitan Park, a 3,500 acre recreational site, under development three miles northeast^of Rochester and Jour miles southwest of Romeo, are included. It is available for “free distribution by contacting the lluron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority, 175o Guardian Building, Detroit, Mich. 4822«: Lyon School Board Plans Space-Shortage Discussion riAl^rtsTneSIng" last wedL-ihe board lied at 34 on the question of whether another building program should be tackled on the heels of the June 10 defeat of high proposed $1.5-million school. District voters turned down the high school proposition by awote of 592-396. N They also elected three new board memitojs, two of whom stated their opposition to the building proposal. Tlie new boardTffusTnow'ma^ a policy decision on space needs. which has been used on a supplementary basis since 1948. With seven pr eight of the rooms used for third, fourth and fifth grade >188868 next year, some pressure will be. taken off the elementary s{!l^pol, to Supt. Frank Bartkif; and the increased farm are tractors, mechanical harvesters, other labor - saving machines and equipment; improved crop varieties, grjeater use of fertflizers, and more effective soil and water conservation practices. Another factor is increased efficiency in converting grains, grass and forage crops into milk, meat, eggs and poultry. The end in reducing the use of hand labor is not in sight. The use of labor has been declining at the rate of about 5 per cent year since the mid 1940s. Agricultural scientists there is no reason to believe there will be any material change in the ratO of reduction in the years immediately ahead. Three rooms in the elementary jHiiJding: ■ ------‘ — for high school classes. One of the facilities to be sidered is the 48-year-old annex Horse Shows to Highlight 114th Miohigan State Fair Bartlett said students are now ■overflowing” the four-year high school built in 1953. “We’ll be using everything we have,” he commented. The anticipated enrollment for 1963-64 is 2,250. It is expected to reach 2,722 five years lat- More-4bafL '•400 horses will over Michigan will compete, said take part in tRe~bifgest slate of,Eldon McLachlan, director of indoor horse shows ever present- agricultural exhibits for the State ‘d in Michigan during the 114th I Fair. ‘ . annual Michigan State Fair. | Special ads will include the The State Fair gets under way j famed six-ppny hitch of the Vic- If the school board decides to use the annex as more than a stopgap, it will not need to plan another elementary school for seven or eight years, Bartlett said. Aug. 23, and runs through l.abor Day, ,Sept. 2. Horse shows will be presel|ted""daily^ in the-.Xolli scum except for the first Friday. tor Adding Machine Company of Chicago: exhibitions by a draft six-horse hitch: and for the lasthonthlssue passed. Walter A. Goodman, State Fair general manager, emphasized lhat admission will be free to all 12 horse .shows and that each Lshow would be different except I for some of the special acts. >1 Top horses from nearby states C,n.d, a, »dl »« trom all I , C It also may be obtained at the Metropolitan . Beach near Ml. I Clemens; Marshbank Metropoli-' ^ tan Park, southeast of Pontiac; Kensingldn Mdfnpoiitan Park, southeast of Brighton; Hudson Mills Metropolitan Park, norlh-i west of Ann Arbor; and Uiwer Huron Metropolitan Park nean Belleville. three days of the fair an international show by the big Clydesdale horses. The horse-show .sciiedule: Aug. 24 at 7 p.m.; Aug. 25 at 2 and 7, p.m. - Quarter horses, palominos’ parade horses and cutting horses. Judge will be Floyd Bond, of Lincoln, Neb. The previous board had decided to convert the annex into an administration building if the Cievaland Conductor to Lead MSU Coiicert EAST LANSING, (UPI) Louis Lane, promisiqg new conductor, will lead the 100-memb(>r Congress of Strings orchestra in a concert of three works Thursday at Michigan State Univer-aily. Lane, associate conductor of the Cleveland Orchestra, is also conductor of the Akron, Ohio^ Symphony, the Cleveland Slnfo-nietta and the Cleveland Chamber of Players. Aug. 26-28 at 7 p.m. — Arabians, . Morgans and barrelracing competition for girl riders ,Judge.s will bfi If., Karl Yonser^ inf I.aurel, Md., and Arthur J. I Titus, of Waueonda, III. 1 Aug. 29 and 30 at 7 p.m. -i.Saddle-breds, Tenne.ssce walking hor.se.s and Appalwi.sas, judged by I Yenser, 1 Aug. 31 at 7 p.m.; Sept, 1 at 2 and 7 p.m.; and Sept.-2 at 2 p.m. — Draft horses, Belgians, Clydesdale.s and I’crcherons; Hitch classe.s; and Ponies, .ludgetijvill be John MacAllan, of Lan.slng.‘'am1 J, Pari.sh Lewks, of Milwaukee, Wis, Also to be discussed is the high school. Will it be used as a junior high or continue in its present ■apacity? Either way, an addition might be needed. ’^'We hope to arrive at a plan tonight,” Board President Wilford W. Heidt said, “if not, at least .something we can work with,’ 2 Badly Hurt in Collision of Car, Wrecker JOAN M. OSTRANDER The engagement of .1 o a Daily Mail Delivery Pushed for Rural Areas WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Karl E. Mundt, R-S,D., wants daily mail delivery for families who now eitlier must drive to a local |H)Ht office for their letler.s or I.APEER TOWNSHIP - Two men were seriously injured early today in a car-wrecker collision M24, Both were admitted to Lapeer County fGeneral Hospital. Police said 21-year-qld I-eroy Provost of 1138 Oregon, I41-peer, was turning his southbound wrecker left into 8 driveway between Turlli and Newark roads when the accident A car driven by Dongld P. Miller, 27, of Vassar, crashed into (he rear of the wrecker and pu.shed it 250 feet, Lapeer Counly-Hla-riff’s served Wednesday at Howatili Methodist Church on Silver Boll Hoad, beginning at 5 p.m. «nKag(«r Mary OslramltT to Tciry Vati Orman lia.n been announced by , , ,, 1 „ hcrpnrcnlH, Mr, )ind Mrs, Mar- deliveries every other; suffered a concussion. yjn,i Oslrandef of !M14 Mliza- ***‘'’^' iMiller i.s being treated for multi- beih Luke, While Lake Town- , -iitid In a radio and ,,i,, cuts, with deep' cuts, about ship, Tlje pro.specllve bride-ilelevision interview yesterday | the throat, as well as a con-groom Is the son of Mrs. Doro- that he^ bad Introduced, lcgl,sla-jai.sslon. Both a/e listed in se* Ihy-putclier of Jack.sori and the flon to eliminate the post office! j-ious condition. ' » late Burdette Van Orman. No'[fftrmula which requires a speci-j Police said possible pro.secufion da(A,h0s been .set Tor Hie wed- ifjcd number of fiiims.pcr mile is pending Jnyeslinalion of\ the ding. ■' I before mail Is deliverell. Iinisliap. ‘ l’ V \VVwv "1 I /* THB PONTIAC -PRESS, MONDAY; JULY 29, Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: D^ness Results From Artery Damage 0—My doctor tells me I have something called CVA. I have become deaf in one ear, V^at Is CVA? Can I get better? A—CVA refers to a cerebral vasculfer accident or stroke. There are several dif-2 ferent arteries in the brain that Q— If the life expectanqr for lue babies is 45 yean, as yoii have said, does that mean that my husband who is now 44 and who was a blue baby has only one year to live? He appears to [ he tires be in good health bift easily. A—It certainly does not mean' that he will live only one year. ^ life expectancy figures are averages, so some live more and some less than 45 years. Furthermore life expectancy iimates must be revised upward for every year survived so that, while the average blue baby at the time of birth might be ex- pected to live 45 yean, one i have a life expectancy aipoacb-ing 65 or 70 years and, U he was still in good health af 65, his life expectancy would I extended even further. •r Ntv>MV*r ■ AHMUtroa may be involved. The symptoms differ depending on the areas supplied by the arteries. The extent of the involvement var-i.. ies, and may be BRANDSTADT so slight as to go uninoticed or may cause severe paralysis, TTius the outlook for recovery depends on whether the initial damage was superficial or great. Your doctor can hdlp you to prevent a recurrence. Deafriesrir- r one of the symptoms of stroke in some areas. Q—What causes lichen planus? I have taken about 20 treatments for it and it is beyond my means to continue. Is there some salve that will cure it? A—Lichen planus is a skin disease characterized by flattopped red or purplish spots that itch severely. The cause is not known but in some people the disease follows scratching or bruising of the skin. DUtfliNFSi!!© FRONT DOOR PARKING FLOOR SHOP HOURS: Mdn., Thurt., FrI., Sat. 9-9 Tuas., Wed. 9-6 In others it may follow taking quinaCrine for malaria, vit-_amln deHclency, nervous ex-hausti6n,~and chronic low grade infections in the teeth, tonsils or‘gain bladder. When the cause is not known here is no specific treatment and such treatmenLaais. used is often unsuccessful. The disease often lasts for months and even though it clears up it may come back. Treatments that have been used with success on some patients include injections of Us-muth subsalicylate, X rays and chemicals. These must ail be used with caution. In any case you should have a frank talk with your doctor about costs and what you are able to pay. Most doctors will welcome such a discussion and wilt tailor their bills to fit your circumstances. PLASTIC WALL TILE1 ARMSTRONG INLAID VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 6.;. TILE 7 9x9 ^x9 C ea. VINYL lilA SANDRAN The Best and Mott Baautiful Vinyl Floor Covoring 6'-9'-12' Wide SUMMER SPECIALS GOLD SEAL ARMSTRONO TERRAZZO MmUCCODLOII t' Wid. ■•(. $3.at $995 Ml u LUNOLEEM RUGS >x12 395 Inlaid LINOLEUM Reg. $2.49 6' Wide l!« RERBER RASE 4” HIGH IGRfO. 91 LINOLEUM WALL TILE 39i 54” High FREE! USE OF OUR TOOLS Where You Earn Oakland County'» Large$t Mortgage Lending ln»titution I 761 W. HURON-PONTIAC 1A K. I.Nwreii<-«< .S|. ~ 441(> DItie IliuhwMr - Draylon I'ltint 407 Main Hirerl - ItiM-hi-Mirr 471 W. lintailway-»liaka OHwn ^ l l02 W. Ma|iU danger of Barring a disastrous misstep by Goldwater, though, it is apparent that Cotton will back him, and run as a Goldwater-delegate Wants Lawrence to Clarify ‘Union’ pitcher in baseball. ..... ..... Trusted scouts advise me 'X;ilarbara Batchelor is one of the area’s especially attractive girls.' Barbara Quite Expensive.... Really, I don't begrudge the President his $8 million blue, while and gold jetliner. And I don't exactly begrudge him the three (8) Boeing 707s for "special duty.’.’ ★ ★ ★ And. somehow, after considerable soul searching I become reconciled (o (he ten (10) White House helicopters holding ten / pUHsengern each. These have a market value of $15 million and they coat half a million dollars a year to maintain. JFK motions for a helicopter with the same enSe you’d wave for a velocipede. A helicopter port la under con-aideration at a coat of another $5 million. it ir it The total rnalntenance plus salaries, plus Incidentals and plus plu.s pluh aggregates a startling total. Mebbe I can talk my.sUf Into forgiving everylijlng up to now—-if I don’t thjnk too hard—but I’ll begrudge Uie Hying daylights out of another thin dime for a March wind kite. Bo there Charles Gehrin-gcr qualified for. the championship flight at (he Bloomfield Hills Country Club with a 77. One of the greatest lefthand batters of all time, Charley plays golf right-handed. Incidentally he’s one of the finest and most cultured gentlemen baseball ever produced. . . . . . ..... “Call Me Bwana” (featuring Bob Hope) is one of the wackiest and funniest films in years. ★ _ ★ ★ A recent resident of Mt. Vernon who died at the age of 58, had written more than 7,000 letters to newspapers. (Hobby). .............” . The London Express gives half a, page to the Pontiac car which it properly describes in the most flattering and glowing terms, it asserts there’s nothing left to be desired. ...... .... Father to five-year-old son: “Your mother and I are starting a trip around the world.’’ Young son: “How many times?” . .................. Lic^ses gllmp.sod over the weekend: Kan.sas, Florida (2), South Carolina, Texas, Missouri apd Arizona........... ......Dept, of Cheers and Jeer.s: the C’s—-real progress wItFi Riussla on nuclear tests; the J's—our U.y. feminine track squad in Russia. —Harold A. Fitzoerald the pressures being exerts in the lobbies of the Capitol to secure the enactment of certain laws barring racial discrimination. Spokesmen for the three Big national organizations of churches— Catholic, Protestant and Jeivish— have just told Congress that all forms of racial discrimination should be abolished by law. COMMITTEES LISTEN Three commitWs of Congress heard the arguments presented by the churchmen dealing with proposed legislation on “civil rights” in respect to retail stores, restaurants, hotels, and motels as well as discrimination in employment in various businesses, whether governmental or private. The declaration read to the committees said in part: “The religious ’ conscience of America condemns racism as blasphemy against God. . . . “Major religious bodies hold simply that God created all men, regardless of color, race or national origin, with equal rights and dignity. They affiriin ' that, differences among indlvid-. uais stemming from such factors as heredity, education, cultural backiyound iHd opportunities do not in any way af-* feet basic human rights. ■ Thus they have specifically condemned racial discrimination, segregation and prejudice as incompatible with the principles of faith in God.” But which church, if any, is to determine authoritatively,' for Congress what are the "principles of faith in God?” Although the three major church groups can send clergymen to the committees of Congress to tell them, in effect, that unless they pass certain laws, they will be violating the "principles of faith in God,” two atheists from Maryland recently persuaded the Supreme Court Of the United States to rule that children in the public sch(K)ls should not be allowed , to pray or to express even In the vaguest learns their support for the "principles of faifh In God.” Spokesmen for various Christian and Jewish church groups welcomed ;,thc ruling. So there appears 40 be a onesided wail of separation between becoming a "captive” of ultra right-wingers. The senator’s more mOdefate" backers are becoming downright alarmed that the power plays by Goldwater extremists may alienate the “regular con- Rhmg 1 r Bridges," Mr. Lawrence says, “Union PowCr Is Reaching Us End.” Whdt ' of Commerce, late senator’s widow. If rival Goldwater slates are entered, howCver, it wfiTpr^-ably spell suicide for the senator’s cause in New Hampshire. bjr Kln« Diatiirel HjDdkate) Manufacturer’s Union, Medical Union, the Bar Union or tlie Retail Merchant’s Union? 'Which one does he belong to? William Morris 81 W. Longfellow servativea” who are the backbone of the Republican party. /This drama is nowhere more apparent than in New Hampshire, w h i c hi holds power farj beyond its delegate strength,! because it hasl the nation's car-| liest primary. The nighlmare* faced by Gold-, water .idmirers - ^ is the possibility RUTH that three sep-MON'i’GOMERY arate Goldwater slates may be run in the primary, agamsi one for Rockefeller. If this siiouid occur, Rocky would almost certainly emerge the victor. vA group of extreme rightwingers led by John P. K. Chandler, grandson of (wo prominent Civil War New Hampshire senators, is now galloping around New .Hampshire circulating petitions for a Goldwater slate. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages State Visits vin E, Gross has served notice that he will invdke the Condon- The Manchester (England) Guardian Wadlin Law if leaders goi through with the thr|at to strike/ in Sep- tember. For the first time in living memory, a British sovereign has been booed in London. The Greek royal visit will be remembered lor that - unjust and unrepre-, sentative though the incident was. Another threatening to head a rival Goldwater - for - President slate is former GOP Governor Wesley Powell, regarded ns a traitor by regular Rcpubllcan.s, because after his defeat for re-electlph in the ’62 primary, he plugged for the election of the Democratic governor. A reappraisal of royal visits, of the Monarchy in a changing society, might be timely. State visits lately’ have been too qiany and too formal. They arc a costly embarrassment. President Kennedy can be sure of a spontaneous welcome whether he comes ceremonially or to work.- But the exchange of visits with lesser royalty has no political value. The teachers thus have a clear warning that a walkout will subject them to the penalties.,of the law banning strikes by public employes — automatic dismissal and rehiring under restrictions on salary increases and promotions. The time has now come when some way MUST be found to avert the need for such extreme measures- , I Repuhlican c has come up with some interesting statistics along that line: “In 1960 the White House -was detrided by a hairline mar-.... gin of 112,253 votes. Since there were 166,253 precincts, an increase of one voter per precinct could have changed the result. In 1962, the governor of Minnesota lost hi.s bid for election by 91 vote.'} from a total of more than a million and a quarter. This comes to about one vole per county. We understand the position in which the board of education has been placed by the city’s failure to appropriate adequate funds. . Wc have always maintained * that our teachers should be the highest paid in the nation. “In 1962, seven governor.shlps were decided by five votes a precinct or less, while three seats in the United States .Senate were won by two voles or Ess, per precinct.” For this, reason, New Hampshire’s Republican Senator Norris Cotton Is being besieged by party- regulars to como out publicly for Goldwater, take charge of the presidential drive in his state, and head his own slate of delegates. Cotton, a moderate conservative widely respected on both sides of the senatorial poli'.Icnl aisle. Is expected at the slrn-tcgic lime to declare for Goldwater, and announce Ms own candidacy as a delcgale to next year’s convention,.. He feels, howWer, that July l.s loo early to ghl Into battles rtver a primary that is eight months away. Most of the countries who.se^ friendship we want to cultlvate-Germany, for one ...... arc repub- lics, anyway. State visits like that of the Greeks wastes the time of ministers, diverts the police from their proper job lind aggravates Umdon’s intolerable traffic pr()b-lem,. It Is the duty of Mayor Wagner and (»ov. Rockefeller to take decisive action to avert I this tragic strike. And the time for nctlon Is NOW, not under the eleventh hour pressure of a strike deadline on Sept. 9. More Numbers The Chicago Tribune All Votes Count Good Teacher The Hkhmond find.) Palladiumltm The Holland Sentinel He who teaches his child to be thrifty has already bequeathed him a fortune. How often we hear someone say he has no intention of Voting because his vote would not count anyway. Will the society column of the future look like this? Mr. 147-034918 and Mrs. 258-14-7030 of Area 00630: announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss 192-88-1470, to Mr. 811-47-0300. who is the son of Mr. 470-36-0288 and Mrs. 309484147. who live at Area 60048. The newlyweds will reside in Area Ayoid strike The New York Journal Amerkftn New York faces a showdown between the board of education and the United Federation of Teachers. Superintendent of Shoots Cal- if a person Is so dlslntcrei^ted in govcrjimcnl that he looks around for an excuse not to visit the polls, he Is going to find one. But it does niR always hold true that hie vote would not have counted. Clare B. Williams, assistant .' i't ! I I 1, I 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 29, 1963 New Revival Method Half Drowning Victims Can Be Saved half the victims of drownincs in Michigan die from hrart stop> page and conld be saved by a new a n d i mproved revival method. That statement was made yesterday by two physician experts in Closed Chest Cardiac Resuscitation (CCCR), a new method of revival based on forced breathing and heart •massage. ology department, Butterworth Hospital, Grand Rapids, and Dr. Robert A. Gerisch, a cardiologist at Harper Hospital, Detroit, and assistant professor of medicine at Wayne State University. The statement accompanied an urgent plea “to all persons involved in water safety to learn the technique.’’ “Quick application ^f ^Ceft^ and the later use of electrical defibrillators Aiat are now in many hospitals can save many of the victims of drownlngs— as well as of electrocution,” they said. ^ The two physicians are Dr. Shootings Draw Probe in Detroit DETROIT Ml - Police Commissioner George Edwards, home from England, planned today tp look into the Cynthia Scott and Kenneth Evans jolice shootings, Edwards said he had been kept informed of the incidents while abrojid and that he ap-proved the wSTohs since taken as reported to him. He said he might have a statement after-his review. Miss Scott, 2A, a Negro prostitute, and Kenneth Evans, 18, white, were shot to death by policemen earlier this month. The policeman, who shot Miss Scott said she slashed him with a knife in resisting arrest. Evans shot in fleeing from an abandoned stoldn car, police said. A Negro group picketed police headquarters and city hall in protest of the handling of the Scott case.,A crowd of demonstrators, mostly white, -^police preclnct-ntatiom in theji Evans case. The polccemen who killed Miss Scott and. Evans were held by superiors to have acted properly. Both agreed that CCCR must be learned and said the Michigan Heart Association would supply teachers and sponsor dosses anywhere in the state. Birch said summer is already half over and CCCR has Iwen taught to only 20() persons, whereas every lifeguard, swimming in-strucTofr^-cam^ in Michigan should have learned it. EXPLAINS PROCESS Gerisch explained. the blood chemistry of fresh water drowning. ★ ★ ★ “When fresh water gets into a Arson’s lungs, it is absorbed througlTlhe^ air sacs Into the blood, usually in no more than a minute,” he said. “This process is osmotic and is caused by the salt content of blood. ” Gerisch said that when fresh water mixes with blood, it causes the red corpuscles to burst. The broken corpuscles spill their contents, liquid hemoglobin and potassium chloride. Enough potassium in the blood will stop the heart completely or shock it into fibrillation. In fibrillatioh, the four chambers of the heart lose their coordination and coahact at Actually, he said, the heart ‘just quivers.” No blood is pumped and death follows unless coordination is restored. There is only one way to do this, he said, and it rarely fails: An electric shock, properly applied, internally or preferably externally. CCCR combines mouth-to-liiouth breathing and heart massage. “Putting the proper’ pressure on the center of the 'chest, hava Jearned, will squeeze the heart: so^ 4hatXttr^cfaamber»^^ valves will push enough blood through the body to sustain life, and sometimes by itself will start a stopped heart,” he said. He emphasized that speed YOUR CHOICE DeJur automatic 8mm zoom camera oir Argus Autronic 35mm camera, case, flash SALE! 74” bOWN DeJur, dll American made camera v electric eye that leti leni for any Indoori or out. Dromotlc zoom shots dt the flick of a finger. Pistol gripi 3-way trigger. Easy to operalel Argut, just aim and shoot, while the electric eye adjusts exposure for every jsicture. Built-In signal warns when Ught Is too dim. Rapid wind. Complete with carrying cose and flash attachments. ^ KODAK FILM SALE ee > V, a.oo •t«rik/wMMe, Me, MO, |B7 ............. i/li OPIN IVIRY NI«IHT TO 9 ^ MiNMiey tlireiHili Setwrdey DOWNTOWN ANO DRAYTON PUINI 'the brain can suffer irrevers-fble damage after four to six minutes without oxygenated Yictims of ocean water do not die in the same manner. The saltier sea water takes water from the blood and the lungs to fill with liquid while the victim’s blood thickens. But for them too, CCCR offers the best chance of survival. Blast Is Fatal to Saboteurs last night, killing two saboteurs who were planting it. NEW YORK (UPI) - A school of porpises caused a shark scare 6n the Atlantic Ocean at Rockaway Beach yesterday and mpted It was the fourth bombing at the Creole Petroleum Co. pipeline here. The company is a subsidiary of Standard Oil of New Jersey. The pro ■ Communist' armed forces of National Liberation has been trying to drive American installations out of Venezuela. Porpoises Cause Panic Along Xtlantic Beach A young taxi tab driver was >bbed of $27 last night'after he was choked unconscious by his two passengers. Richard Berry. 22. of 47 Lor- lion swimmers to scurry out of the water. The porpoises were correctly identified from a helicopter by police, who said some . miles of beach had^been cleared after the alert. - Census figures, shovv there are 106 males born each year ih'the United States for every 100 females. KEEPS PRICES DOWN SHOf IN coot A!« CONO/nON£0 COMTOlir OUTDOOR PLAY CYM CLEARANCE Sare $7 on 34.99 rugged steel set 99 2 chain swings, lawn swing, airglide, platform slide, trapeze^rings. Don't miss iti Floor model play gyms oil priced to clear 7.99 rigid frame pool has steel corner seats 72x48" tube steel frame, rigid, sides, heavy vinyl tank. Safe and 12 inches deep. 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Hurry! n OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PUINS I BIGHT THE PONTIAC PRBSS, lyiONDAY, JULY 29, 196a JFK Has Chance to PlaceJJegro in Cabinet miss opportunity. Or, maybe, theiother rduial to Oilcago’e Rep. President will decide to give an-|Pawson. ^LYUSCmSON ' United Press International The resignation of Postmaster General J. Edward Day offers' President Kennedy another opportunity to indulge his anxiety for a Negro in the cabinet. Kennedy’s first choice for that cabinet post may have been a Negro. Daring the presl^tial^ campaign, the Republicans played politics in stumblebnin fashion with the idea of a Negro cabinet member. There was no need for candidate Kennedy to match that maneuver precisely during his pres-identiai campaign. The Democratic platform and his own shrewd plays for Negro votes were ample to offset Republican maneuvers. Ond elected, hbwever, President Kennedy had Negro problems. He and his platform had promised — guaranteed — some instant civil rights. It immediately became obvious that the entire Kennedy legislative program probably would be scuttled 4f-toe^nriireifdeht posed broad-gauge civil r| legislation to the newly el Congress. The decision was fo put off the issue. NEGROKS PLEASED Negroes were pleased by Kennedy’s selection of Negroes for well-paid fedaraTlobs. They were equally pleased by constant evidence of the President’s concern' for Negro problems. Thus it was that the presidentelect appeared on the porch of his Georgetown horhe in December, IW with Rep. Willilm Dawson, a Chicago Democrat and a Negro. The president-elect told assembled newsmen — and Dawson agreed—that the congressman had been offered and had refused the postmaster general’s post. Westinghoose Exec Expires in Philadelphiq PITTSBURGH (UPB - Mark W. Cresap Jr., 53, former president and chief executive officer of the Westinghouse Electric Corp., died yesterday in Presbyterian-University Hospital. Cresap, who resigned from the firm only last July 15, was cred^ ited with sti^amlining the company’s products divisions to give each more autonomy and closer I markets. The Roman emperor Diocletian gave lavish parties at which thousand persons took liteam baths at one time. WASHINGTON «)-Rep. Gerald R. Ford, R-Mich., said today President Kennedy is not unbeatable next year and the Republicans must come up with the best possible candidate to oppose him, 7-Foot Vaonm doanor Hoto Braided Cloth, All Rubber R«gu!ar$7JIO Plastle Motet.. .3.95 Com* In or Froo DolivSiy Parts and REPAIR SERVICE on ALL CLEANERS DItpoMi Bao»-HoiOi-Bn»hoi-Boltf-Attochmonti-Etc!, ^‘Rebuilt by Curl's Appliaiwna llahii Our Own Parts” $1.25WMk Free Home Demonttratlon OR 4-1101 WUkin25MUeRadiu$ Cl)RT*rAPPIXSNCI!S FmttryAuthvrbtJ IThiU NEW LOCATION SMI HATOHERY ROAD OR 4-1 111 W.n

prus could never join another state. Minority rights of Turks were guaranteed, including seats Triihe^CotmctrTr;Minlstersf^t^^ House of Represenatives and in the Civil Service. The separate Turk and Greek municipal administrations also We ouUiM^^ Makarios, severely criticized by some of his own people for signing the accords, ssays he has no regrets pnd would do it again. ‘I FAILED’ “I tried to get the agreements changed in London, but I failed," the bearded prolate - politician toH an interviewer recently. "I knew we would have trouble carrying them wit." "The Turks get more than their share," said one Greek Cyprloh “Have you ever heard of a vice president being able to veto a president?" Under the constitution the president (Greek) and the vice president (T^rksih) have certain veto rights. Spain Miners Still Striking; Defy Firings OVIEDO, Spain (UPI) - An estimated 6,000 mine workers remained on strike today despite dismissal notices sent by mine management to all Strikers. The miners walked out July If to protest a fine assessed a miner and to demand bonus pay they said was withheld. Workers in nearby metal industries Joined them, raising the number of strikers to 11,000. The dlsmhial notices said the strikers would be rehired if they returned to work but would lose their seniority. Informed sources expect nego-‘ tiatlons to take place through the office of thffTSlvirifovernor lor this area,^ Widespread strikes in the mining and metal working industries last year, the first ever staged since Gen. Francisco Franco took power, won wage increases and fringe benefits. \ MMqirios, In contrast to Tnr-leaders here, is optimis- tic about Cyprus’' futon. He Island progressing eco- sees %o ii nomically along pronged- p a t ht totn^£» ricultore and UMit industr^ minerals and agricultural products, the islanders still import mort.lthim Jtoey-imbalance of trade amounted to about $24 million last year. They hope to manufacture more of their own goods to offset this. HEARD NO MORE Also propping the Cypriot economy are the big British qrmy and air force bases on the island. The cry once heard throughout the island, "Tommy, go home," is sounded no more. If things look so rosy why the anxiety? We’re a minority on the is-d," said Dr. Fazll Kuchuk, Turkish Cyprtot vice president. “We are in danger . . th«re< could be a bloodbath>’ Kuchuk, a tomer physian ho stiU holds a free clinic boycott Turkish merebanto imd^lmisirq,' “harass us at every turn." He particularly wants separate Ibikish^JUid^Greek Mty ennn^ cils “to protect ns . . . our Told the Greeks say separate councUs won’t work, he snapped: 'How do they km>w? They really haven’t been given a fair trial." He charged a strong Greek Eoka (national organization of Cypriot combatants) movement still exists on the Island. .★ w ★ And the Greeks have guns, he said. “They control the cu toms and we can’t import { much as one pistol." . The Greeks scoffed at this “Don’t worry, the Turks are armed all right. They have guns.’ Kuchuk summed up: “Up until now I have always been optimisUc. Now I’m pessi- Boy Scouts Turn 'Injun'; onVcmdals BESANCON, France Uf) - A group of boy scout campers from Sfrasbourg ambushed a. band of hoodlums, tied their captives to a post and “scalped” them, village officials reported today. For several nights the scouts’ tents and baggage had been dam-■ by vandals. aged Saturday night the scouts leaped out of hiding places and captured two of the fleeing band. The youths, boto well known in a nearby village, admitted their mischief. The scouts painted them liberally with mercurochrome and clipped their ducktailed locks— the badge of Uieir gang—to die instruct Envoy on Embassy HAVANA (UEI) bassador Emil Stadelhofer flew in from home yesterday with undisclosed instructions from his government regarding the Castro regime’s expropriation of the U. S. embassy office building here. Stadelhofer declined comment when he was questioned by newsmen at the ab^rt, but it was reported he would seek to arrange discussions with the revolutionary regime at the earliest possible moment. The embassy building 'las been in Swiss care since the United States severed relations with Cuba early in 1961. The Swiss have protested the proposed seizure of the building. Premier Fidel Castro said Friday that his government will insist Qiat the Swiss surrender the building. He said they may have any help they request in moving documents stored there to some other place. Chamber of Commerce tp Open Foreign Office WASHINGTON (UPB-The U.S. Chamber of Commerce today announced it was opening its first overseas office Aug. Tin Paris. The chamber said the office would provide American businessmen with information about Western Europe trade developments and act as a headquarters for American chamber units Europe. Weekly Publisher Dies ROUSES POINl{ N.Y.ro-Ken- neth B. Crouse, S2, weekly news-• ■ leii (• paper publisher, drowned in swimming pool ^turday. Crouse had worked for newspapers in St. Paul, Mirni., for 25 years and held a public relations post with the U.S. Department of Agriculture from 1953 to 1954. MoNfComforfWtorlng FALSE TEETH UMM puiw diMiiniiun RAH'iirrH, —dM, t|Mniuii«d (ID fluff hoidt ibcm a N« aummi putty It laeiitiH it'i aikaim* (min-nuM 0.4 Dnir Uhanu •'pluf Burial Insurance Sold by Mail . . . You may be qualified lor $1,000 life insurance ... so you will not burden your loved ones with funeral and ^ other expenses. helpful to those t 90. No medical examination nec essary. OLD LINE LEGAL RESERVE UFE INSURANCE. . ^ . No agent will call m you. Free fidormation, no obligation. Tear out this ad right now. . . . Send your name, address and year of birth to: Central Security Life Insurance Co., Dept. 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HOURS Monday Thru Saturday Ponlioc Mall Phoi4 682-4940 1 » . . ' i ■vV ■/' Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Roa<;| t Ml''""ft', ..iViV"-.- ' ■' 'i‘ \ k ■ :fJ,J TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 29. 19a3 Researcher Studies Problems in State Fight Joblesi^c^& With T^^ainin^ Plan KALAMAZOO m The heated dispute over Michigan’s chronic unemployment problem may cool off a bit soon: A researcher fol the W. E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research has just concluded a year-long Study of Michigan’s unemployment problem and has come up wkh a list of recommendations Ihat^ giay eliminate It. • ' Dr. Harold T. Smith has found ■ that the only permanent way to stem unemployment is through a statewide vocational training program. He calls for establishing — by law — an.extensive training program “as deliberate goal of the Michigan public education system.’’ “As Important as education is for the deveiopment of the individual... it is not enough for the majority of people who operate our machines, shops, and provide our services,” Smith states in his book, “Edu- More and more occupations require skills and' speciahzed training for vdiich there must be prior training. The development of an adequate vocational training system-is prerequisite to a successful program of training and retraining,” he says. Smith says three types of institutions are needed in Michigan to stem unemployment. “A comprehensive area post-secondary and adult education schools is the hub of* the whole vocational training system of tomorrow,” he says. Smith points out that most high Schools canno^^offer the variety of programs needed in vocational BASHFUL ^BEKRCKT T* tan gtest, add tea cabaa «r crackad tea. Add 2 aza. froze* oranga jutea and S oza. Caak Sa»-tafna Wine. Swaatan to taate. Stir. Camiah with maraachino cherry and orange alica. Serve with atrawa. CASK WINES tl your fmnrlh cation and Training for the World of Work.” training, and .;post-secQ.ndary and adult education sichool is the hub of the whole vocational training system of tomorrow,” he says. Smifli points out that most high schools cannot offer t^e variety of programs needed in vo-^ cational training, and post-se<> ondary schools have better facilities and more specialized staffs, UKECLmTE * Smith lias also found that most adults ' favor post - secondary schools for their retraining because they tike the professional climate and teaching methods. A second institution needed in fighting unemployment is a comprehensive, high school, says Smith. *^t ejhould provide centers dre the first step in or-elenientary an d° preparatoiy vocational inrograms . . . and afternoon and evening training programs for adults and outnof-school youths as are needed.” Smith objects to the tendency of many parents who look down on vocational training and are blinded by “the prestige of going to college.’ ganiislnig community colleges, and ^ould be organized with that ^al in mind. iFVem his year of study. Smith has come up with a list of recommendations for mak- ing vocational training institutions a reality. “The present formula for state „ , , , , . , support of public schools should He .to /«!» ".any f ,evi»d,” he »ye. “It ehould drop out of liiih rfool beca« ^ To Try Paper Uniforms to Save Hospital Money ACTON, England lUPD — Nurses at Acton Hospital are to wear experimental paper uniforms for one year as part of an economy drive starting this fall. The experiment, sponsored by the King Edward Hospital Fund for London, involves the use of ^a^ercap,^^ets ^d aprons. Man Dies in Chocolafe LOS ANGELES, (UPl) - The body of Thomas Rodriguez, 62, was found yesterday under two feet of chocolate in a vat at the candy company where he worked as a maintenance engineer. Sheep ranching in Alaska’s Aleutian Islands is regaining the foothold lost in World War II. Boat Cruise Winds Up in Wild Brawling teachers fail to show them the practical applications of the “college prep” courses. FIRST STEP For areas not able to afford post - secondary centers or comprehensive high school programs. Smith recommends a cooperative vocational center. He says such by a number of other states, that provides a larger amounj; of state aid for the costlier vocational courses than it does for the other less costly coursi FEDERAL AID Federal aid to Michigan school programs has been helpful, says Smith but it also needs revision. China io Risk War? 'Absurd/ Says Prof because it is not flexible to dtang-ing needs. “Any school district not part of „ community college district should be responsible for contributing to the support of each conh munity college where any of its residents are enrolled,” says Smith. Other changes recommended by Smith include doing more study on what makes a good vo-| cational teacher; changing unemployment relief rules so an adult can get retraining without endan-| gering his financial security; and giving ^e^ State Board of Education control over vocational training programs. 'We all have to learn to work, just as we have to learn everything else that we come to know,” says Smith. LONDON (UPI) - Prof. Owen LatOmoritr WiRAinertewi mtperton the Far East who was attacked as a security risk by the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy, said today It was “an absurdity" to think Communist China wduld gamble on a nuclear war. Writing in the Daily Herald, Lattimore said Mao TM>tung's tactics resemble those employed by a chess player and not ttHUe of a poker player. “I think therefore the charge that the Chinese are wiUfog to gamble on a nuclear Armiifld* d(mhecai» more Chtnene wonkH survive than anybody else Is an absurdity,” Lattimore said. Railways of Finland are linked to those of Sweden and Soviet Russia. SPECIAL!^ : 2CAR8ARA0I ; tQQo: «nd Cemtnt Floor IIVV « Guoranlood Cuilom Conzlruclien ond Comp/olo Fiuuhiaff UP TO 20-YEAR PAYMENT PLAN Cor Oar ftoo filirngto Nowl We tipeclallM Im 0 ADDITIONS 0 Geraz* ” -(On Front RemoSellns AlhBlinh V-irfAR HODIRNiZATIilN FLAIi GRAVES GONTRAOTINntO. Call Us Anytime OR 4-1511 • SPECIAL THIS WEEK DELICIOUS APPLE FILLED DONUTS 6 for 35< 29 N. Saginaw FE S.69li Open Every Morning at 7:3d Close; Tune., Wgd., Sat, nt 6 . .. S BOSTON (yP) — The charges of “participating in an affray” against 22 men don’t begin to tell the story of the excursion cruise billed as “a night to be enjoyed by everyone.” ' ' The Nantasket boat Dayline sailed Saturday night with 275 persons aboard. The vessel had been chartered by the Hull Knight Valiant Club, a Boston north end group. But before long, a fight erupted (in the dance floor, officials said, apparently over a girl. First Mate Harry Rogers of Melrose estimat-ed there were 20 fights going on it one time. 7 . . . Fri. at 9 When the boat returned prematurely to its berth, it was greeted by scores of, officers, half a dozen police dogs and a fire engine company. The spokesman for the vessel’s owners estimated damage at $2,000. ICHIGAK Wal IJabiliiy Company Insurance MOVES... CONSOLIDATES'... EXPANDS New enlarged, convenient facilities now serve our policyholders m the North Woodward Metropolitan communities. We have opened a new area office at Woodward Avenue and Big Beaver Road in the new Gleaner building, . Aft-Gtir i5oHcyhaiders Ih this area increase, we are expanding the facilities which serve the thousands of individuals and businesses who, look to us for insurance protection. In these new quarters, which replace our former Pontiac and Pleasant Ridge offices, we have consolidated the staffs of our Insurance Counselors, Claims Adjusters and we have also provided convenient premium payment facilities. i Parking is ample and fasy and We'd enjoj(ypur visit and an oppor- tunity to show you these new quarters established to serve our policy-holders’ needs for all types of Casualty and Fire insurance. Weiare pleased to be in thi# fine neighborhood and whether you're here to get’acquainted or transact business you’ll be welcome. Michigan Muiml LiahilUy Company [■ Insubancb 1600 N. Woodward, Birmingham, Michigan FEdtrzl 210153 • Wri«n 4-5240 • |Mldw«it 7-3700 DOUBLE GOLBBELL STAMPS m hi him hi hi m 7iwii hi mhihi hi m m hi m h\ m/ivi f(»odlown-pW>pl>'ii BonW^ Coupon '^11 ill bOUBLE GOLD BELL STAMPS , with pwrchoi* «f $3.00 or moro, ox-. ] eludlny Boor, Wiw and Clgorotfd.^ ' Limit 1 CoMpon - Ixpiroi July 31,1963. ' ? si With J5 Purchase or More With This Coupon iSS wShwim^^ J PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS I J ■ 0(|#H « lh>zi 0 W.»k ■ 0|..H » A M. 'HI » r.M. ■ . . I 0(Wt f A M. 'IB » tM. ■ B y\A M„ iil»P,M, I A U«y>oWa«k ■ T A,". H(0 r.M. ■ tOAVIAWrEX. ■ M Cl9»d SUNBAY3 1 O^SUNOAfr uA 1 -OpM 7 0«h • i SUNOAV f l» ) FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS 7WNi|hMRi I~t3MRslMiiAvt.| ■ICduinkla fl WffNtUNOAYS E ll7fCMlByLsktRR, VniM Ich* OPiN SUNDAY ^ V. ■ ,lV l /, , \ V ; A i “ . i' V"w/A By ADREN COOPER WASHINGTON (AP)^The gov. eminent doesn’t have enough hard money to go abound, and, pddly enough, this may be a good sign. Eye^Rr^Adams, director of the U.S. Mint, says “There has been a shortage of coins for months, and, it appears to be growing worse.’ ’But she pointed out that a recent study ordered by the min1t indicated the demand for coins goes hand in hand with the ups and downs of the economy. For the past 12 months, the cail for coins has climbed right along with the gross national product-the total of goods and serv(ces produced—generally considered a reliable measure of the country’s economic health. The government’s mbits, at Philadelphia and Denver, produced 3.6 billion pieces pf money in the fiscal year which ended June 30. The mints have been on virtually a 24-hour, seven-day .week basis for months. Reports of coin shortages have come from Albuquerque, Philadelphia, Boston and other areas. “In a way, it’s rather puzzling, since'coins don’t wear out,’’ said Miss Adams, “There Is. no way to tell for certain just how many coins are in circulation and we don’t know precisely what is causing the shortage. “The demand may be due to more vending machines, more sales taxes or other factors. And then there are the coin collectors; it seems like everyone I meet is a collector.” Man Builds Special Bike for Blind Boy RAMSEY, N.J. (AP)-A man who loves children and bicycles has built a bike that will enable a blind 8-year-old boy and his mother to ride side by side. :rRiath«ganTat^ Record of Hackensack: “Wanted, two 24-inch bikes, so my daddy can have them welded together for mommy and me to ride together. I’i?Mt<4 and blind. Kenneth Jones, 40 Hlfeh Ramsey.” Mrs Paul Jones, Kenny^ moth-i>r, said, “A womaj^from Englewood was kind endugTT Id dsnate two bikes and Mr. (Wallington) Simpson volunteered to build the Simpson, almost blinded in a 'eak accident 15 months ago, has uilt bicycles free for 10 children j his neighborhood at Waldwlck ‘ When I was a kid, I didn’t ave a bike of my own. Every kid hould have a bike,” he said. Kenny’s bicycle consists of two ikes, connected by three metal Loses Hand in Mock War WEST POINT, Ohio (AP)-Richarn J. Lacher Jr. 16, lost his left hand and suffered severe powder burns while firing a cannon Sunday during a War battle. His condition was re,' ported as serious. The assideht occurred^ as Lacher shoved a ramrod down the barrel of a 16-pound brass cannon. More than lO.OOi) persons viewed the mock battle commemorating the 100th anniversary of the capture of Confederate Gen. John ^riiunf Morgan. Iranians Ki/jed as Patrol Sinks Smuggler Boat TEHRAN, Iran (AP)-The Tehran newspaper Keyhan claimed 21 Iranhins were killed and 24 Injured wljen a Kuwait' patrol boat fired on a launch try^ to smuggle Job-seekers Into Kuwait. Siimlay that "tfiETnlcldent occurred near Siltl Island Just off Kuwait In the Persian Gulf. It quoted survivors as saying the patrol vessel fired on the launch, then rammed It, caus-infi it to sink. k Kuwait Interior Ministry spokesman'clulmisd at least 13 persons drowned July 18 when the KuwaitlMwIrql boat flr<^ In the air, causing the Iranians to paeiic and overturn their craft. our dependable ‘Hudso’ SHEETS and CASES 72x108 er twin bottom fittod' i2x36-in. eases 47c WHITE SALEl TYPE-180 PER-GALE sheets of fine combed cottons for creamy smooth texture, long and dependable wear. Made to our specifications^ Outstanding values so stock-up now. Packaged. White. 81x108 or full bottom fitted .... 2.57 fluffy ‘Gannon’ terry heavy-weight TOWELS with cam borders print both TOWELS WHITE SAXtriTusBrfficW-IooP^ uickly. T extra dense, laps up moisture ’ finish makes these towels extra kiy. ’Cannon’ ’Beauti-FluR’ ^nisli makes these tow ' gentle to your skin. Firm cam border prevents racketing, keeps them smooth. Buy at savinM for, yourself, gifts! 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(lir quality ’Vanity House' brand. Rayon-AcriUn* aery .lie, is soft, warm . , , h*s nyb'" binding; White, |»iiik, blue, gyeen, yellow, beige. 72x90. FAMILY NIGHT Shopping Mon, through Sat. tiU 9:00 PM, , , . 'Free Parkings nn« nomMlIwt-IP'IMIRT Btoro~riMiMwi ««»jt / * , NO PHONE ORDERS I it.-' ifllli A*' II (j FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC System 'Needs Prod' By ROGER LANE -AP Business News IjPri^ NEW YORK — The head of the counti-y’s second largesi steel company says the nation’s economy is “a little sticky” and could use a little prod. tax rules first applied at the endLpf the booming auto, industry, of last year. T h e 1962 second quarter was slow for steel. Bethlehem’s gain was far short of dazzling performances by some other major steel pro- “People are waiting to see what action will be taken in Washington on tax legislation, what attitude will be taken town rd encouraging investment and building confidence,” said Arthur B. Homer, board chairman of Bethlehem Steel Corp. Homer explained this in terms of heavy start up and break in expenditures under Bethlehem’s $750-million three-year capital spending program, and a less favorable product mix. Homer’s remarks to newsmen Thursday came when many corporations were reporting banner earnings and several* economic indicators stood at record highs. But the stock market — a prophet of business prospects — was staggering uncertainly. Homer said the steel industry, slumping after a springtime surge, ■ probably will level out \ this fall and turn slightly upward as cold weather sets in; Other companies are more closely attuned to the demands That’s when big customers are expected to run out of 'steel stockpiled last spring during a strike threat. Production for the year will "1op^ the 98;3 million tons oH by about 5 per cent, he imated. REPORTED GAIN Bethlehem had just reported April - June earnings of $29,361, 031, a gain of about one-third from the corresponding quarter of last year, but up roughly one- MOSCOW (ffl —The skull and skeleton of Ivan the Terrible, the Russian czar who died in 1964, Bethlehem is closely tied to"’the depressed shipbuilding industry and to heavy construction. Jyncom-2 Nearing Its 'Hanging Orbit' The second quarter showing compared with profits of $22,-639,294 reported for April - June of 1962 and $19,339,380 cleared in the first quarter this year. On a per-share basis, the company earned - 61 cents in the second quarter of-1963, 46 cents in the like 1962 period, and 39 ments in the 1963 first quarter. U. S. Steel Corp., the No; 1 steelmaker, discloses tomorrow how it made out. Homer said- a disagreement with Baltimore area civil rights ^oups that ^ led to a demonstra-tinn against''hiring and promo- tion poiicies at Bethlehem’s giant Sparrows Point plant had been worked out. WASHINGTON (UPD-The space agency expects the Syncom-2 satellite to be in its proper posi—He said it resulted in no signifi- tion of a “hanging orbit” within a few days. The communications satellite, designed to handle telephone, telegraph apd still picture transmissions, will remain in roughly the same spot—55 degrees west longitude and moving 30 noyth and south of the equator in a figuye eight, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said yesterday. cant change in company procedures for filling managerial-level positions. 'We are a very important em: ployer of Negroes and other minority groups,” Homer said. ‘We treat Negroes like we trdat anybody else.” As such, the satellite will provide a 24-hour communication link between a ground station at Lake-hurst, N.J., and the communications ship Kingsport anchored at half after adjustments for federal Lagos Harbor, Nigeria. U.S. Plan for Africans IkOpposed UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPD-A U.S. propo^ negotiated independence for imtuguese Aff^a encountered opposltloa from i^ Portugal and the Africanis toda'yi U.S. and British rejection of a resolution backed by all the African countries—except boycotted South Africa—bcpught resentment among the African leaders, but moves were under way to seek a Compromise that would meet Western approval. The United States and Britain both held that the resolution, sponsored by Ghana, Morocco and the Millipplnes, was couched in terms of orders the council is' empowered to issue against threats to the peace or aggression. Foreign Minister John Karefa-Smart of Sierra Leone planned to deal with that contention when M' hddr^^ today. QUESTION: Are bats really blind? r-Other ANSWER: As oul top pictures, taken from photographs, show, bats do have eyes, but they are small. Although bats see fairly well, they do not depend on their eyes alone, because they are night animals flying whenJhere is often very little light. Its hearing prevents the bat from smashing iritiS trees ^ obstacles when the light is dim. ^ Experts agree that bats can hear i for human ears to detect. A flying squeaking. From the echoes it senses the obstacles in its path. Karefa-Smart told the council Friday he would present “irrefutable evidence of present and continuing acts of .wur which are being perpetrated in the Portu. guese colonies, including wholesale bombings of defenseless villages with planes which, since Portugal does not make planes, we can only assume are^fts of her NATO friends:” 0 high pitched t makes a high pitched FOR YOU TO DO: There Is nothing like a bat and a moon to make a spooky looking picture. Make one of your own, using the big bat our artist, has drawn and color it wjth silvery moonlight colors. U.S. Ambassador Adlai Steven-on suggested that instead of demanding immediate independence for Portugal’s African territories,-the Security Council should appoint a diplomat to conduct negotiations for freeing the areas. “We are not here to endanger the peace but to guard it,” said. FINAL 3 DAYS! ON PIANOS PLAYED IN THE MUSIC FESTIVAL LOVELY Leonard SPINET Save $1241 The "Leonard" crafted in Grinnell's own factory. Reg. $669. BENCH INCLUDED. FESTIVAL PRICE ‘545 N* Dawn PaynMNit Other Festival Pianos front M45 PONTIAC DOWNTOWN STORE, 27 S. ^Sogii^owFE 3-7168 THE STORE; Elizabeth Lake and Telegroph — 682-0422 Remains Are Exhumed of Ivan the Terrible Kremlin.’s.Archangel Ckithedral. Ivan was not handsome, Soviet anthropologists said In an artide yesterday in the newspaper Moscow Pravda. They said he ‘had a wide face, a sh^ profile, and Spbrtg Car Crosieii Red Border-Twice beneath a border barrier droveNorhert Konrad, 22, "but lie didn’t SS.^TAuSu«e(IWI»» Ml detain and I h«l not the same feat three months be- BERLIN (AP)-An Argentinian nix> rescued his sweetheart from Bast Berlin^ driving a sports car “An English friend had told me about the Austrian’s escape,” said read thd story at the time. 'After we made it and I saw a picture of the story, I realized It was the same car... I almost fainted.” WIN S SOOOO You simply | flLLIN AND BRING TO YOUR NEAREST YANKEE STORE ntoroit Yankoo | NAME Storo. If On* of the par- | AQQRESS . tieipotinp pros picks your nomo IN YANKEES HOLE-IN-ONE CONTEST To. be held In conjunction with the Yonkee sponsored Michigan Open Golf Tournament. ; CITY.................... priio, you thoro | • « tho winnings ... • STATE a a oock pro will bo | shooting for' PHONE ....... $1,000.00. I .......... OR MAIL IT IN IF YOU WISH MONTH-Bn AT THE YANKEES OPEN NIGHTS TILL 10 P.M. SUNDAY TILL 7 P.M. Proportioned to Fit SPAGHEHI STRAP SUN NESSES Wash 'n wear cotton. Fully lined, molded bodice. Full skirtJhtee-lnch„hem,JPetite sizes 8 to 16, regular sizes 10 to 20, toil sizes 1 2 to 20. BOYS'2.95 VALUE IBERMUDAS Wovon plaids and prints. Sizoi 6 to 18 .. LADIES’ DUSTIRS and PAJAMAS A wondorful l•ltctian of oil ovor print 2 pioco, cotton, broadcloth pajamas, Two pockot cotton dustors in floral yimod. Pajama Du star 3” Value BERMUDA SHORTS Wovon ploidi ond prints, and solids. Sisos 28 to 42'. Jr. Boys’ DECK PANTS w 'ipper fly closure >elt. Sizes 3 to 8 llaRY at iMON LADIES' HELENCA SWIMSUITS Many figure flottoring stylos • .. 497 LADIES'2-PtECE lOO JAMAICA SETS l«B ordinotod cool tops .... HI Cotton jamaica shorts ond coordinotod cool tops .. LADIES' 1.99 VALUE JAMAICA SHORTS Wanted summer fobr'ics and colors .... |59 MEN’S Wash'N Wear SUMMER PAJAMAS Shorty and ankle length stylos. 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JULY 31 to autograph hit records and to answer your questions. 24"BAR-B-Q GRILL Hood motor ond tpit. Chromo plotod spit and grill , will not rust or ebrrodo. Extro hoovy stool firo bowl. 4 tog construction. Doluxo griji. 997 CROQUET CompUto sot of mol-iwte, balli, etakoe, wickoft, for 4 play-are. 20 QT. PORCELAIN ENAMEL CANNER rm Holds 7 quarts qr 7 pints CALM-MIRACIE MILE SHOPPING CENTER '.'Vi- V./ c. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUt^Y 29,-1963 FIFTEEI^ 'Shipwreck' Fun for All It's Silly to Waste Garden Reception Follows Vows Good Food Pretty well dressed jor survivors, these two couples are costumed foy a shipwreck partf. Members ^ of the Bloomfield Surf Club frolicked Saturday night at their East Square Lake Road pool. At left are Mr. and Mrs. Leonard J. Michals, Alveston Drive. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Connolly, Birmingham, are at right. By The Emily Post Institute Q: Maybe my parents were old-fashioned, but I was always taught to finish everything on my plate, and I have always adhered to this practice. I have noticed, however., that many supposedly well-brought up people always leave a part of their food on the plate. One person exr plained to me that it Vvas the proper thing to do. She said it meant you had more than enough to eat and to finish everything on your plate meant that you were still hungry and could eat more.' Maybe I have been disgracing myself all these years, ^ut to me it seems such a silly waste of good food* and futhermore, in my opinion, a ^eleairplate indicates that you really enjoyed the food. What is your opinion of this? A': I agree with you thoroughly from beginning to end. To deliberately leave food uneaten on the plate is not only ridiculous but unappreciative Dr. and Mrs. Carl W. Dahl-l^en were hosts at a garden ' reception at their Sylvan Lake home following the marriage of their daughter Mary Sue to William J. Nicholson Jr., Saturday, in Central Methodist Church. Court Gives Mother Custody Candlelight Wants to Liw With Dad wZ By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Just before school was out my dad asked my morn for a divorce, Mom didn^’t want one, but they got divorced anyway. Now my brother gets to live with my dad and I have to live with off living with their mothers. Take my word for it, honey, and don’t complicate your mother’s life by complaining. She has enough on her mind right now. band ogling her to direct her complaints to “BaMy” year-old girl should know what is Best for her, but mom says she knows Better . whatis best for me. How can 1 get to live with my dad? My mbther is always yelling at me for something and we don’t get along. Don’t you think It should be MY choice? STUCK WITH MOM DEAR STUCK:. When some adults don’t know what is best for themselves, how are children expected to know? Young ladles are usually better DEAR ABBYiJf jou Bon’t answer this righTaway I p» going to have a nervous breakdown. I have been married for nine years and have three children. Out of the clear blue sky my sister, who is four years older than I am, said to me, “I wish ydU^d~teH- «aldy’ (that’s what she calls my husband) to keep his eyes off me.” I told her she must be imagining things- DEAR ABBY: What do you think of a guy who tells you that he loves you, and in the next b-reath he says he doesn’t care if ‘you go out with other guys? THE GIRL DEAR GIRL: I think he is angling for the same privilege. (Other GIRLs —not “GUYS.’l St. Paul’s Lutheran Church was the setting for the Saturday vows of Dorothy Margaret Boyd to Lawrence A. Goffar spoken before Rev. Maurice Shackell. A reception in the Oakland County Sportsmen’s Club followed thtcandlelightnvcning-ceremony. Parents of the couple are "^the Stanley L. Boyds, of Col- DEAR ABBY: Arthur’s idiot (who broke out in uncontrollable lauibter eyery time he kissed her) brought back memories of myself. When I mentioned this to my husband he said to forget it—that she was a trouble maker. My sister has never been married and claims she hates men. I can’t get this '^ out of my mind. How can I be sure? NERVOUS, DEAR NERVOUS: Believe your husband. And toll your sister the next time she catches your hns- My husband and I eloped many years ago. We were young and didn’t have much money. In fact, I had to dig into my purse to Belp pay for the blood tests. When the Justice of the peace asked my husband if he would “shower all his worldly goods on ^ I broke up in laughter and became so hysterical they had to hold me up. * ANOTHER IDIOT Couple Speaks Vows cft Saturday Ceremony Oakland Park Methodist Church was the setting for the Saturday evening vows of .leanne Carolyn Johnson to William Howard Rohloff, with Rev, James Deeg officiating. side in Detroit. Both are graduates of Ferris institute. CONFIDENTIAL TO MRS. Z.: I wouldn’t let that poor excuse for a man on my front porch. And if you sign for ' your daughter to marry him, knowing tiiat he lied about having a wife and family, you, Madame, should have your head examined. MRS. L. A. GOFFAR A gown ot wMte . silk, organza over taffeta, for the daughter of the Thomas A. iohnsons, Robinwood Avenue, gatured a tapered waistline and chapel sweep. She donned a pearl tiara and bouffant veil of illusion and carried white roses and Slephanotls. Attending their sorority sister 'were honor maid Karen Sue Baumgartner, Manistee, and bridesmaids Mrs. Charles mrrison, Southfield and Kay Warner, Lake Odesaa. Mr. and Mrs. Carl P. Rohloff of G r 0 8 s e Pointe Woods, parents of the brlde-groom, gave the rehearsal dinner Friday at Bedell’s. Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to ABBY, Box .3385. Beverly Hills. Calif., for Abby’s new booklet, “HOW TO WRITE LEITERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS.” lier Road, and the Charles L. Goffars, of Joslyn Avenue. Re-embroidered Ale neon lace accented the bride’s gowin of silk organza over white satin, styled with chapel train. A Swedish crown of pearls held her bouffant veil of illusion. Double pink rubrum lilies centered her cascade bouquet of white carnations and. ivy. Q: Does etiquette require a gentleman to step aside in an elevator in order to permit a woman (not with him) to leave first? A: If there is plenty of space, a gentleman does let a lady gq ahead of him. But if he is standing directly in front of the door and the ele-vater is crowded, he is certainly not expected to become an immovable obstacle blocking the way-of those who want to go past. In this case he clears the way by leaving as quickly as possible. Q: My husband and I invited several friends to dine with us in a restaurant. When we arrived the head-- waiter showed us to dur table and took our orders. That was all he did. He did not serve any part of the meal. My husband tipped only the waiter who served lis. i would like to know if the headwaiter should also have reeeived-a-tip’^ - - A: Unless he gave you a choice table pr took pains to see that you received good service, no tip was necessary. Q; Will you please tell me the correct way to eat a fried egg? I am referring to the soft yolk which is almost impossible to eat with a fork without it dripping through the tines. A: If it is as soft as tha^ you will have to break up small pieces of bread or toast, drop them into the yolk of the egg and eat with a fork. How and when to introduce people seems to puzzle many* The new Emily Post Institute booklet entitled, “Introductions,” gives helpful information on this subject. To obtain a copy, send 10 cents In coin and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the ^ Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press. They wore Nile green peau de sole and held bouquets of white Fuji chrysanthemums and pale yellow miniature pompons. Herbert Swartwood of Berkley was best man. Seating guests were Richard Mu-^ maw, Greenville, Kennqfh Gutow, Crosse Pointe, Robert Rohloff and Duane John- I The couple, who lefl, fdr • northern honeyrhoon after the / : reception in UAW-CIO Hall ^ ? on iKannetl Road, will r«- L M MRS. WILLIAM HOWARD ROliIMFF ,Jeanne Carolyn Johnson, daughter of the Thomas A. Johnsons, Robinwood Avenue, and William Howard Rohloff, son of the Carl Rohloffs, ■ Crosse Pointe Woods, were wed Saturday in the Oakland Park Methodist \ Church. Her'‘attendants wore pink organza over taffeta. A white crowp-hat designated honor mhid, Pamela Pritchard, who carried white carnations and pink': Kathryn Boyd, her sister’s bridesmaid, with Gail Ter-marsch, Sandra Weaver and Betty Strevel, wore pink hats and held matching carnations and white rosebudi Cliffard Goffar was his brother’s best man. Seating some 250 guests were John Williams, Perry Buhl, Fred Solomon, and Lloyd Cromwell, Lake Orion. % Ar Wlr«»ii*t* Holds New Office 1 8, K Mrs. Ray C. jWll of the Disabled American Veteran,m Auxiliary No. 10, \ya« elected / junior vice commander at the ^ refill stale convention in Bay city. She also' holds the office of treasurer In the local auxiliary. ............. Paris fashion for pretty pooch? Not quite, but Little Captain, a Chihuahua, sports Ai is sweater, jeweled collar, bow and hat anyway. Although very small.* Little, Captain causes heads '<0 turn when hr is walked by his owner, W. J, Lnlie 'of AtlaiUn. ■ ‘ ' I- ' r !'■ * ■ ' -A': t Rev. James Braid of the Cass City Methodist Church performed the ceremony before some 350 guests. The bride’s Bianchi gown of ivory silk peau de soie and Alencon lace featured a controlled skirt with lace motifs accenting a wide inverted pleat. ^ , A contour' pillbox caught her illusion veil, and white Phalaenopsis orchids and Stephanotis comprised her bouquet. Bodices of cerulean blue ottoman failte:^extended into skirts of white silk organza for the attendants who held small white lace parasols covered with blue and white delphiniums. With h^r matron Mrs. Albert F,|^n, Birmingham, were the bridesrhaids, Mrs. Charles-iWartell-fina~Tathy “ Ferrell, Helen Jane Spark, and Mrs. George Palaian. Parents of the bridegroom are Mrs. Thomas Macksey, Royal Oak, and William Nicholson, Dietroit. MRS: WILLIAM /, NICHOLSON JR. Best man was the bride’s brother Raymond. William Western, Baltimore, Md., and Wiiliam Fay and Otto Gutow-sky III, Royal Oak ushered with Samuel Warwick Jr. Leaving for a honeymoon at Mt. Gabriel, Que., the bride donned a deep lavender silk import with matching mohair coat. She attended Central Michigan University, and her husband is an alumnus of Western Michigan University. St. Laurent's Fall Showing Features Robin Flood Look PARIS (UPD-Robin Hood-complete with midthigh boots, highway-style hat and suede jerkins — marched through the. autumn jCoUecUon of Yves. St. Laurent today. St. Laurent, the “boy wonder” designer, 27, put his mannequins into the. Sherwood Forest look including page boy hairdos. his .little, young mannequins wore teem over his fishnet stockings in dark colors. p^hed into flat black pumps their matching tweed 'new look ’ suits. The mid-thigh boots were worn over Skintight tweed slacks and matching loose jackets or suede'short coats. With daytime twped suits, the St Laurent models still wore Robin Hood suede or felt hats with turned up brim in back and heavy dark wool socks to tee knee. Sometimes their shoes — even with brocaded cocktail dresses — were soft flat-heeled ankle-high bootlets without laces or buttons, another Robin Hood touch. ■ Other designers. covere(i^^i|p,, the leg in variety of ways. The House of Nina Ricci displayed knee-high dark, socks with little flat moccasins or pumps. “Shock socks” by Capucci were black with stripes or squares of white. Some Heim models wore long black cotton stockings. ...Stockings ranged from pale at many houses to dark brown and black at Cardin. Some lighter Cardin stockings had . little flowers embroidr. ered half-wqy up the back seam. Jacques Esterel paraded his mannequins in grandma’s gaiters — heavy gabardine with tiny buttons from vwikle to knee. These were worn with high heeled pumps. Teens' Taste Traditional Dior did not show high boots but one mannequin wore gray suede flat-heeled bootlets teat laced up to nearly mid-calf. Heim models also wore tweed ankle socks The Jewelry Industry Council reports that' teen-agers’ tastes in jewelry are traditional, with the demand for identification bracelets unabated. Anklets continue popular and pendants — with a small pearl or colored stone in the center — are in great demand. With tweed suits and even daytime dresses and evening wear, the models wore giant heavy chains, sometimes holding huge pendants, as on the costume of some Medieval king. St. Laurent kept his fast-selling Norman peasant-sleeve of last season, full and cuffed at the wrist, and his cap-sleeved jumpers o v e^r long-sleeved blouses, which also contributed to the Robin Hood feeling. Mary Martin's Props Delay Romney Salute Even tee bridal outfit, traditionally shown at tee end of each Paris collection, was cut out of a medieval scene. The model wore a high-necked gown of white brocade, liaiiging loose and full,, with cap sleeves over a long-sleeved blouse of ruby-red velvet. A small red velvet cap perched atop her head. When Mary Martin comes to Detroit this fell with her new musical “Jennie,” she’s bringing such Jiig companions that the special preview saluting Gov. and Mrs. George Romney has had to be delayed two days. Mrs. Semon E. Knudsen, cochairman of the women’s committee staging the “Romr^ ney .Salute” at the Fisher> Theater, appealed to more tlian 1,000 persons who luive already ordered titkeU for the preview -■ originally announced for Thursday, Sept. 5 — to circle instead Saturday evening. Sept. 7. group, said she hoped the enforced shift to Saturday night would allow even more people to attend the first Detroit showing of the play, appearing here prior to its Broadway opening. “Nearly half of the thikets for the Romney preview evening iilreadyLJiave been ordered," she said. ’Tickets already had been printed for the original dale, but we are having them reprinted and will be mailing them out very ShenJaid- gocMl ieals Jor tee. ^ preview — a benefit for the A collective look at the accessories shown so far in the Paris fall-winter fashion shows Indicates that Paris has fallen head-over-legs for high boots, already a going fad In New York. The Paris boots, launched by Cristobal Balenciaga last year, have been shown In everything from fur to fqbric. Designer Jacques |Ieim put his, mannequins into fiat heeled knee-high boots of pony skin, zebra and leopard, or imitations thereof. . The bools in thp Pierre Cardin fn.sliloii parade were of soft kid, flat iieeled and fitting like a glove, Mo.sl went to the knee but a fqw models fit over the knee, zipping up the back with littli^ hullonetl flaps behind the Miec. The Cardin boms were In black, brown anfl red, and She explained that M i s ,s Martin’s “big friends” include a waterfall, a huge construction crane, a, portion of a railroad and the ledge of a building. The energetic Miss Martin in her role as “queen of the early melbdramas” will successively plunge over, climb up, be tied to and hang precariously from. "Since the show has gone Into rehearsal, its producers believe It will have the heaviest amount of scenery of any traveling produotion In the history of tfio theater" Mrs. Knudsen said. Oakland County Republican Party — may still be ordered from the Oakland County Republican Headquarters, 744 S. Adams, Birmingham. “’nicy feel they rmist have moi l’ time to mla|)t the seen- , cry and mechanics of this unusual show lo the Fisher Tliealer and therefore the pfe-view' is posiponi’d' to Salur-day evening, SepI, 7,’' Mrs. Rlchui'd Van Dusen, . coehalrman of the woipeii’s MARY MARTIN -V r,' ! u'yyi:- SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 29. 1963 CAP and GQ^ PORTRAITS iJxlQJBsndfinuhed in Oil • 3 5x7 Plalinum Tone 12 Wallet and Platinum Tone 9 i95 THE PHOTOGRAPHER featuring TR ADlTIOl'tAL alee Fox (.lii»$ of’O- FCIf rliljU: CIIAKttl mm FE 8-4888 61 W. HURON MRS. S. r. STEWART Budget Food Shopping CIjiallenges Skill ByMARYFEELEY Thetre are few things in life more challenging to a woman’s common sense, skill, and courage than managing her weekly food' shopping. Usually, she’s fa'c„ed with appetites and tastes that vary — but with a sum of money that doesn’t! The uphill go-| ing is not only tough, it’s endless. At least, until the family income takes a turn. and refuse to admit defeat have my sincere admiration. 'iLMlFTELl4HbPPING»Z| ^ llMaPLi AT mEGlI^^ I |^>t'^'X'MAfair6v2566f! FURTHER REDUCTIONS! of s/ms/ DE LISO DEBS .. ERICA . . . PEACOCK RHYTHM STEP... FOOT FLAIRS . . ■.:SANDLER ARPEGGIE AND OTHER FINE BRANDS. Formerly to $29.9S $490“ $12®® Now "It's so pleasant shopping in Bloomfield" Couple Speaks Vows If yoiir own food budget is giving you the blues, maybe some of the spirit and philosophy expressed in these letters will rub off on you: Dear Miss Feeley: In a recent column, ) protested your suggesting that $35.50 to $47.50 a week is inadequate to feed a family of six. But as you said, what one must do, one can. Nine years ago I was feeding a family of four on $36 a week. Today I am feeding a fan\ily of seven on a weekly budget of $30. Candlelight vows* were exchanged by Donna Ann Williams and Stanley William Stewart Saturday^vehiing be- fore Rev. Geoffrey Day in Evangel Temple. A reception in the Scott-wood Avenue^-home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pontiac's Most (Complete Corset Department Our Graduate Corsetieres will Help you to a Proper Fit. Bratchard Williams, followed the ceremony. The bridegroom is the son of the Stanley Stewarts of Mott Avenue. Sequined Rochelle lace over taffeta for the bride was styled with Basque bodice and chapel sweep. She donned a seed pearl tiara and bouffant illusion veil. A white orchid centered her bouquet of feathered carnations and miniature chrysanthemums. Kathy Louise McIntyre, maid of honor, wore cerulean blue nylon over taffeta with jacket and held a colonial bouquet of pink roses and feathered carnations. Teresa Mane Samson, bridesmaid, appeared in a sheil-pink dress of identical stylinj^She carnecTAmerican Beauty roses and vffiei^leH" carnations. Kevin Williams carried the rings. On the esquire side wefe perry Lane, best man, with ushers Ronald Frizzle and DArell Stewart. SINGER* SEWING MACHINE SERVICE ALL MAKES 102 N. Sulniiw m-7038 Uo Mall ShopplDf Center «)t«-OilSO ’TsiweSItwwEmlwco Nine years ago I resented anyone telling me I could eat more ^ cheaply and eat well. But slewW j as necessity dictated, I fo—** more and more ways to save til today I will readily admit even now I could do better. I shop where lowest . are found. I walk. I buy exactly plan very simple meals and avoid like pttlson^ extras, I learned the art of good. Bit by bit we gave up family favorites we didn’t really need. I do not recommend $30 a week for a family of seven. I only support, by actual experience, your claim that $35.50 is adequate for six. Those who don’t need to limit the budget to that shouldn’t feel they ought to. It involves changing your whole concept of what is satisfactory ronfcumrand your family ‘ ’ since change in the family’s ing pattern involves the whole family, all must cooperate. I found I could not change my family’s prefefence^^overnight. just gave up little luxuries one at a time. Anlnot a single step was ah easy one. On the strength of what knowledge I acquired through the reading of your column plus the encouragement I found there, I tackled our entire financial prob-with God’s, help.. — for we had turned to Him as well — Mrs. R. F., El CajoSJ^alif. for the better. The determined came out wiUi a wbirkabte budget. I to eight years and J)uy^g rtrulgrpIck-Tip'^e challenge By workable,^ I mdah It works! a $14,000 home. I spend about P ............ Mrs. W. A. Si,i.ibertyviire, Illrla week for groceries and monthly milk billTs^afaoutjlT. Dear Miss Fi Mrs. W. L. w4ui amused $t the thought of spending $35.50 to $47.50 to feed/six! I am amazed that anyone /vouM coMlder that too little. ;/ ’ All ow^hUdiwp an excep-and healthy — no family is over or So T mast have itty well through the years./ Our-clrcamstaacei. are well /above average but our are moderate (I supermarket bill is usually under $30 a_ week, _and ijL-paper products and a few Irles. Milk is home delivered lor P a month. This does not include school lunches, or my husband’s lunch, but provides ample meals. When J want to economize, l ean do on 1( How? I figure carefully cost versus time saved on processed foods before purchasing, buy few ‘junk foods.” Every week we have the supermarket meat special twice—last week it was pork and chicken. Oatmeal is much loved and is so economical for breakfasts. Sixty cents worth of chicken giblets on rice, plus a can of cream of celery soig)i is a fine dish. So are noodles and tuna, beef liver, stews. Home-made vegetable soup is a favorite. I’m raising children .who adore shrimp and lobster — but relish casseroles. It can be.done! Mrs. E. J. L., Cincinnati Dear Mary Feeley : Too many women don’t what to do with leftovers. Eggs and cheese sub ,for meat, and there is no end to the variety of dishes you can fi2 with these ingredients. Even with meat, if you know how to buy and use it, you can have even some prime cuts for only a little more than you pay hamburger, wieners, and shanks. Mrs. E. W. McN., Terrance Park, Ohio You ^”write Mary Feeley in car? of .The Pontiac Press. She will answer in her column questions of widest iWrest.) Dear Miss Feeley: We have four children, a ROSE ANNETTE PALACE 0 ctvEer vtntrx SUMMER SALE specials planned by Rose Annette Palace, , daughter of Mr. apd Mrs. Paul Palace, West Howard Street, and Russell Eugene Rana, .son of Mrs. William Bowman, Louella Drive ami the late William Rana. Pheiogropher 518 W. Huron Street Near General Hospital FE 4-3669 ____ ^'Xeumode 2 pair $1.50 82 N. Saginaw St. fandLPSi TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! EASIER- TO TAKE AND MORE EFFECTIVE THAN THE POWDERED AND LIQUID FOOD SUPPLE-MENT, AND COSTS LESS INCLUDING CAPSULES SUITED TO YOU INDIVID-UALLY BY Lie. PHYSICIAN. M. D. NO GASTRITIS OR IRREGULARITY WITH MEDIC-WAY CAPS. DON'T DIET — (UST EAT! AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE, YOU CAN LOSE 5, 50 OR 100 LBS. AND KEEP IT OFF! MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 1 OFFICES IN OAKLAND AND WAYNE COUNTIES—ONE IN MIRACLE MILE hit hairdo is here! "Oliver Cut’’ Mon. tubs. wed. Pert ind pretty! So easy to keep because the shape is cut in to stay! It will be a joy all summer long. ... Phone todayl What a Valual STARBRITE Cold Wave with Oliver Cut S02I NEISNER'S Ituly Salra —2ml riMi ON FINE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE AT OUR PONTIAC STORE Quality Cleaning Since 1929 I coMPLirrumBT eervim | COLCNIAl WINIi SOFA... A FULL 8 FIEF lONC! Covered in your choice of colonial prints, heavyweight tweeds, or nylon te.xtured fabriai.^ bo much quality for such a little price during our annual .Summer bole! And you're sure to find just the cover*you wont in our selection of over 200 fine decorator fabrics. REGULAR 'Sofa $179.95 $159.95 ' $24950 • Luxurious Polyfoam Cushions! • Zippered Cushion Covers! • Full Pillow-Back Styling! • Custom Detailing Throughout! COLONIAL WINIi ROCKER lll-RACK WINIi CHAIR YOUR CHOICE 19975 Gompenlon chairs to complement the handsome sofa. Very ipccielly priced, tool ,] Matching Ottoman for hi bock 24 WEST HURON STREET In Downtown Ponliac FE 4-12M WIQGS 4080 TELEGRAPH ROAD At Long Lake Rood 644-7310 I ■■■ Y\ ' - ' ' - ...r REDOCr/Ot/S OA/ SC//HMER W/FOmS y Pontiac • aairaclb /nmle shoppino center. A' I I* A. Av KA'-'ii.- ■ * ■ '.'Av- /A' wA-v, I / V THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 29. 1963 SEVEkTEEN ^LL Permanents MRS. RICHARD P. TISON Complete m With Cut ^ and Set 395 Expert licensed operators to give you o flattering hair cut, Jong lasting permanent, and becoming hair style. All for$3.95. HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SHOP Open Morning* et'8 A.M. 78 N. Saginaw Over Bazley Mkt. 333>966Q| f Your worn furniture ! can be rebuilt and I re.uphohtered while [ you're away on vacation .. AT SAVINGS OP «»40% Quatily materials and expert craftsmanship ihroughouti Choose from line nylons, frieses, tapestries, and brocades. Phone today — we'll be glad to bring fabric sample* to your home. DURING (AjR annual Snmmer Sale /ill ff'orkmanthip Guaranteed . \ 5 Yeart 270 OrehartI Lake«FE 4-0558 Easy Budget Term* StrviitK Oakland County Over Itart! ■ or 90 Day* Cash Polly's Pointers Handy Way to Dust y IH)LLY CRAMER^ DEAR POLLY — I am a gal v/ho likes to reflnish furniture. ' Often,. af||r satMling, I find some dust almost impossible to reach with an^woe brush. Newlyweds Plan to Visit Atlantic Ctiy I utilize an EMPTY squeeze bottle wbich I keep in my deaniiig gear. With a few quick squeezes, the dust disappears. There are several places around ttie keyboard of niy organ which cannot be reached in any way except with the vacuum, and this Was where I first used, the empty squeeze bottle. ' It is also^and to clean dust and lint from the bobbin section on a sewing machine when you have no time to take it apart for a thorough cleaning. — D. S. L. DEAR POLLY — Quite by accident last summer, I discovered something that my help other> girls on vacation. | When you are at a motel and discover you have ho shower, cap, use the plastic rain cap that most of us aiway carry in • our purses. It will wofIT well in an emergency. — MRS.J. 0. S. DEAR POLLY — We changed the double beds in our house for single beds, but those double-width blankets really causqd trouble. ^ Trouble Free Bobby Pins No more problems in opening bobby pins. A new dev'^'e consists of a small nlbbe^ suction cup equipped with a cadmium - plated eye- hook. insert the long end of tne pur in and then force the prongs, apart. Honeymoon plans for thh Richard Perry Tisons (Barbara Sue Stone), who were wed Saturday in the First Baptist Church, include visits to Atlantic City, Asbury Park and New York City. , Buffet dinner and a church reception followed the double- ring candlelight ceremony perfc formed by Rev. Robert Shelton. If ttiey were put on the beds one-inch off-center, they were draafing on the floor on one side or the other. One day I cut a strip off one side and added it to the foot of each blanket, bound the cut edges with blanket binding and, presto, a blanket exactly wide enough, with a wonderful addition to the tuck-in end. They never come out at the foot any more. _____::______________^________-MRS. A. E. H. DEAR POLLY — To keep a portable dishwasher water from splashing when U empties into the sink, tie a dish rag over the connection and let it hang down. The water will flow in the usual inner, but without splashing. Dish rag is easily removed. -MRS.V.E. DEAR POLLY — Clamp two small sponges, lengthwise, into an old mop handle and you have^ as good a floor waxer-as-any-one Could want. ' — MRS. A. R. The daughter of the Reuben L. Stones of Roblnwood Avenue appeared in Chantilly lace and white silk organza over taffeta, styled witti bouffant skirt and chapel sweep. A rose headpiece secured her illusion veil and she carried white roses, Steph-anotis and feathered carnations. Mrs. Bill Hopkins,. St. Louis, Mo., her sister’s honor matron and bridesmaids Santo Stone, June Ti-son and Janice Starkey appeared in full-length aquamarine nylon organza. They held turqUoise-tipped carnations. Donna Hopkins was flower girl and Stacey Lloyd* were ringbearers. Larry Tison assisted his brother as best man. They are the sons of the Pearly Share your favorite homemaking ideas . . . send them to Polly In care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a bright, new silver dollar if Polly uses your ideas in Polly’s Pointers. HARD OF HEARING? 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Additional applications may be secured from any Blue Cross-Blue Shield ofTics or ask your hospital or doctor. NO PHYSiiaitxnii NO HEAimSmEMENT REQUIRED! NO ENROLLMENT FEE JOIN NOW BY MAIL... FILL OUT THIS Broad benefits, including 30 days hospital and30dayspbysioianV care provided under both Non-Group and Senior Citizens' plans. Send no money. Use the coupon-application below to enroll. If your ppplication is accepted,, we mail you your booklet outlining your behefits^ the detailed benefit certificates and a billing for your first month's coverage. August 20,1963. OFFER ENDS JULY 31,1963 ' liUal '(3 Wm OR HUUANDb> irtSTTRSTT-----• ’ '■......iJ.urr Q M«l* '' d na*!* ' □ r«nl* a -----------KaTRS'",------ uwwunM and lugally __________ RAN fior appUaonI* uud«r ag« OS) OR_______________ riUoiss BA — um ■ $a, C - $5. 0 - S7, ttikdtr $2,SOO $2,800 but l«it ihoq $8,000 ....... l*«iU(On $7,800 S, oom^UU U§0 A Ition Charge With Option T4irm$ ;i ' 0***>Mm IW*M mUHv* M i*nrim m ............—MWWW'iiWfiD’i^-------------—’H"...’"■'■‘r I WWFII#. I CMWwiita, / i*«i«#««a» f n.m| Bi THE SALE YOU’VE WAITED FOR ROSE MARIE REID CATAONA and PETER PAN SWIMSUITS OFF Your choice of entire stock of big selection of 1 and 2-piece styles in lastex, knits, Helencas. Sizes 8 to 16. Reg. 15.9.i $Q5S Reg. 17.95 $1A7S SWIMSUITS ^ SWIMSUITS -1-VF *1195 Reg. 25.95 $1 Et57 ' Reg. 29.95 SWIMSUITS -t'CR .......... Reg. 23.95 SWIMSUITS *14“ SWIMSUITS *17” CATALINA Sportswear GEORGE'S iIn. SAGINAW ST. near HURON ' -1, ,V'.. ' i‘ .A-7„ A<‘, lEIGHTEfiy / -THE PONTIAC PHESS, MONDAY, JUEY 29, Iwr iNegro Tosses iNote to JFK HYANNIS PORT, Mass. (UPI) -s-Secret Service ai^fents jester^ |sy detained a well-messed Ne-s when he tried to toss a mes-Hge to Presudent Kennedy. P^The man, who appeared to be I his late 30s, apprdached Kenny’s automobile as the Presi-mt was leaving St. Francis l^vier Roman Catholic Church -A- foUowing the 9 a m. (Pontiac time) mass. I He was released after question ing, and walked away smiling with a duffle bag slung over his shoulder. Officials to-Discuss Job, Race Praclices MinutemanOK in 11 Launches Conducted by AF cessfnUy the lastest Minotemaa ICBM from this seaside instal- Jam Stalls Cycle Show DETROIT U) - A federal official will hold a special meeting with Wayne County officials Friday to discuss alleged diicrim-ihatory employment practices by soriffi^irm^hblding contracts iff whichofederal funds are involved. Barbour said all county departments and agencies are involved with contracts that include some federal funds. The launching'was described as a routine training exercise. . - BRAND HATCH, England OIPD —Sixty competitors failed to arrive yesterday in time for the start of the annual “Motorcyclist of the Year” contest. They were delayed by traffic jams. Road Commissioner Al Barbour said officials will meet with Hobart Taylor Jr., executive vice chairman ot -the President’s C o m m i 11 e e on Equal Employment Practices. The purpose of the meeting, he said, is to “determine how we can all best, cooperate in effectuating the President’^ directive as it pertains to contracts in which the federal government participates.” ■ VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Galife-AB—Eleven-of thirteen Minuteman intercontinental ballistic missile launchings have proved successful for Air Force. Two previous firings failed to achieve planned results, lircharge of Saturday’s firing “ A Strategic Air Command crew from Montana fired sue- crew from. Malmstrom Air Force Base headed by Capt. Junius H. Kershaw Jr. of Ogden, Utah, and his deputy, 2nd Lt. Joseph R. Zaleski of Makanda, 111. PHILCO • ZENITH • NORGE • ADMIRAL • MOTOROLA • HOTPOINT • SUNBEAM SPECUtUr PRICEITUMITB) QIMSTITIES I PORTABLE TV PRICE SMASH! h BATHROOM tcalBi. Largo dial. $^99 WiSTINGHOUSE DISPOSALS $4099 Includas 1-yr. sarvic* in hama. ibO Ireyng board pad and 91^ fcovy safs. .... £1 REFRIGERATORS M73 . WESTINGHOUSE iaVs Cu. Ft. 2-Doer Rafrigarator-Fraaxar. Vary Daluxa........................ *193 ’89 RCA WHIRLPOOL 12% Co. Ft. 2-Door Rafrigarotbr-Fraaiars. Previous yaqr's $4Afl models......................."■........ fcUO NORGE 12 Cu. Ft. Deluxe Rafrigarotor.................. *157 WESTINGHOUSE 14 Cu. Ft, 2-Door Refrigerators with large freezer $4C0 on bottom..... Freezers. Previous yeor's medals.. ■ AMANA 14 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator with . 182-lb. freezer on bottom. Hurry,. .......................... FREEZERS - WESIiNGHOlJSE- 2-H. P. oi^ conditioners. Cool your wholsTKbuse.' Powerful 14,000 BTU capacity . ....... WESTINGHOUSE 20" Porloble Fans. 2-spaad. 5-yr. guarantee... FEDDERS DEHUMIDIFIERS with auto, dehumidistat, pan, castors. , 16,000 $ co..ft......................... 0ASIS Dahumidifiers - Super deluxe with dehumidistat - overflow shutoff - warning button - vinyl cover - $ A ....t 'i A non ,-1. h WESTINGHOUSE Mobilair fa changes air in minutes. Portable o roll'Oround stand. Out they go ...... 12771 WASHERS RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-speed fully automatic washer. Giant 12-lb. capacity. 2 ^des, lint filter, btc. Prey, year's NORGE 2-cycla fully automatic. 3 temperature control. Deluxe features............ DRYERS DISHWASHERS $599 $599 $£99 G.E.'Hand Mixer .. ,. G.E. Stobm, Spray Dry Iron........$11.99 G.E. Tooster Oven ............... . . . . $8.99 $29»9 SUNBEAM Steam^Dry Iron. Finest -made. Fabric dial. Lightweight. $*^99 Deluxe...... ......................... I OSTER osterizer liquifiar-blonder. *29®® ZENITH 19" .with antenna. Prev. year's models •121 8" Personal bookshelf size. First coma—first^sarvod> •72 . SMALL APPLIANCES 1 WESTINGHOUSE Roaster. 1 8-qt. pocity. Cooks complete meal “•29" SUNBtAM {1*^0 GriddI* with control. Big fa •IM. Cookt IS largo homburgora. mdv $1799 *ir* $799 *14®® *357 HOTPOINT 14 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator with freezer on bottom. Deluxe- rolls $4QQ on wheels............................ iiww TO NORGE 15 Cu. Ft. Refrigerators with giant freezer ^ bottom'. ’299 ^ONTHEN® ’127 ’177 ’199 <3. Z AIR CONDITIONERS 5 FANS e DEHUMIDIFIERS ’127 ’267 ’19” FEDDERS 2-tpoad air conditioners. Deluxe with insfa-moupt. Just plug $|44 in. In crates........................ Iwl WELBILT Cosement Window Air Conditioners. 1 -hors# power. 6,500 BTUs. ’169 3 DAYS ONLY-MON., TUES. AND WED. AT DDR PONTIAC MALL STORE 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Why chonce paying mor* elsewhere? Here's the fop brands, quality, service and pricel Here's big selections, easier terms, immediate delivery and huaran-teod satisfaction! '.. . Plus the guarantees and warranties you'd expect on nationally advertised famous brand appliances! Many, tnony more not advertised. Most new in crates Or car-tonss Some floor models. Some in limited quantities, few one-of-a-kind. All prices F.O.B. store. Merchandise subject to prior sale. ’118 ’136 OUTDOORS - ETC. 24" Motorized Spit B.B.O. Sturdy deluxe model $099 DELUXE 24" Motorized Spit B.B.O. with bun wormer Mr .Top .Deluxe B.B.O.'s Ranch Wagon or 24" round.' Mdibrited sipiT. Tsmp. gauge. Daluxa fabturas. Your choice. $I9«T Sunbeam Gas or Electric. New in Carton *46®® 3-Piece Sat of B.B.O. Tools. Jncludos stainless stool' corvlhg knife, 3-prong fork and spatula. Complete lor $299 6-Pieco Set of Duncan Hines Stainless Steal B.B.O. Steok Knives Complete lor $499 $7.9^1 WESTINGHOUSE Electric Hot-Dog Makars. Few loft. Hurry HAIR DRYERS LADY EMPRESS Mulli-Htot with hot-box »6®® TROY Sultcaza Stylo with noli dry ot- ,y,«fiHY.rpirrorr ■ ■ ■ r ■, ■, G.E. Top Doluxo Model. Suitcase ityla. Top feature 10-TRANSI$T0R POCKET SIZE RADIO WESTINGHOUSE Top Doluxo. Best sellar. All deluxe features. Suitcase style....'.'.................... ’17” ’16" WISTINGHOLJSE 1 -H.P. Voe. Cleaner. •23” ’47" GENERAL ELECTRIC Deluxe Upright Voc. Ciegner^ Camptoie, with •58" ’33” WESTINGHOUSE electric sweeper vacuum cleaner. Instant power claan-Inq. Reg. $34.95 ......... ’19" ’19“ GENERAL ELECTRIC Canister 1-H.P. Voevum Cleaner, Wlth^ all attach- BAflB rnehls...... ....... .............I HOOVER Upright Vac. Cleaner.. ’21” •SH" •97 PHILCO 19" Portable ’IDS TELEVISION •131 PHILCO 23" Lowboy TV Sots. Fabulously low price.............. •138 ZENITH 23" TV ConsoloHos. Previous year's medals •169 ADMIRAL 21" Color TV Sots. Our Lowest Price Everl •347 GENERAL ELECTRIC 23" Wood TV. Low-Boys. •167 EMERSON 23" TV Stereo-Hi-Fl-FM radio combinations. All wood < cabinets..... ................ ZENITH 23" TV Storoo-Hi-Fi-AM-FM radio combinations. Previous ; year's floor models. . , .,...... STEREO • HI-FI WESTINGHOUSE Storog with AM-FM radio. Wood censolos. 4-speed changer................... PHILCO Stereo w Beautiful wood I changer......... SYLVAN lA Sterog with AM-FM Radio. Wood low-bOy. 4-spood changer...................... •133 ADMIRAL Stereo with AM-FM, FM-Multiplox Stereo Radio. 4 spookors, 4-spood changer. Wood console low- ADMIRAL Portable StoraO with wing removable spookors. 4-spoad flip-down auto, chongor,............ WEST GERMAN IMPORT Storoe with AM-FM Short Wav# Radio. Wood | eabinots: 4-spood changer........... $1 29.95 ARVIN Portoblo Stereo with AM-FM Radio. Multiple spookors. J^u-motic changer....... i ,.......... Btor snr $g,9 ADMIRAL Clock Radios. . ADMIRAL Table Radios. G.E. AM-FM Clock Radios . $29,V9 •12” SUMMIT 9-Tronsistor Radios. Gift boxocL^ComgloU....... $999 5-Tubo Toblo' Radios .. *11®® 6-trans. 2-Speed Tape Recorders. Complete with oil attachments. . . . . •79" $119.95 BELL Cartridge Monourol $CAI Tope Recorder. Complete. Del $199.95 Dell Cartridge Stereo Record, Storoo Playback Tope Rocordors. S-Track, 2 Mikes. $A«| Complot,#-----;.................... Ml $179.93 NORELCO Stereo Playback $aq Tope Rocordors. Complete. ........ Mel GAS • ELECTRIC RANGES 0 O o •97 _ APT. SIZE Gas Ranges, Ideal for cot- ‘41 m RCA WHIRLPOOL 36" 2-Oven Oat Ranges. Matchless deluxe faoturot. I Of WESTINGHOUSE "Conlinantal" Eye-Level flectric Range. Fully outomotlc. •287 With wood cabinet bosa.. ELECTRIC SHAVERS |Z 0 Bring in your old alactric (havar. . . vim will allow you on additional $2.00 in trade off theta low discount ftricot. Hurry ~ thill axtro bonut good or 4 doyt only. SCHICK Men's............\ .!. $7 99 SUNBtAM Man's.............J., $10.99 SCHICK "BALLERINA" Lodlws^^ $6.»9 SUNBtAM lodloi'............ $6.99 SUNBEAM CordUtt,........... $22.99 SCHICK Cofdlast................$22.99 SCHICK Sugar............ ■ ■ ■■ $17.99 NORELCO Floating Hood . " . $1 7.99 | 100% SATISFACTION 6UARANTEED PONTIAC Blixab«lh Lak* Rd., Cornpr Talagraph Next Door to J. L.'Hudion Co. ■' i. •r ^ :> M for SPACE? APD-A-ROOM with an IMPROVEMENT FROM PONTIAC STATE BANK! LOW BANK RATES TO FIT YOUR BUDGET NOW PAYINC 4% ON 12 E^OHTNS SAVINGS CERTIFICATES PONTIAC STATE BANK MEMBER F. D. I. C, THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, JULY 29, 1968 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, NINETEEN Annual Oafs Harvest Recalls Earlier Era Before The Threshing Machine Can Do Its Work, Wagons Must Be Loaded By JOE MULLEN There’s nothing quite like an oM'fashioned oat harvest. ' And one needn’t travel to the hinterlands to view such a spectacle. The end-df-JuIy ritual, utlU-iing jnethods of a generation or Qiore ago, take place annually at the Dale Glynn fariQ In White Lake Township. Watching the harvest process at Glynn’s farm at 5801 Grass Lake Road recalls the era of the 30’s. First, there is a gathering on Glynn’s 31 acres of men and boys I neighboring farms. Some very old, others barely big enough to handle a pitchfork. ’The harvest activities begin as an old binder pulled by a tractor (the only modern Iraple-meht used) starts out through the fields of golden oats. As it by a group of pitchfork wieldidg busy. 'The old, belt-driven ma-men and boys. 1 chine bears constant watching ^ ^ t from several stations. Straw must be piled and the oats must be The bundles are then fed into a 33-year-old grain separater and a large cylinder inside knocks with string. An accident wagon, drawn by an equally dated team of horses then picks up the bundles heaved up the oats loose from the straw. Grain then falls to the bottom of the machine and the straw remains on top on straw ranks. A blower shoots the straw out the back and angers punch the grain out a smaller trough at the side into a truck. Meanwhile, everyone keeps guided into the truck. HARD WORK It’s hard work for all concerned, especially on a hot day. But, the annual harvest is^ able when the field workers had completed their chores. Glynn operates his small farm on a part time basis. He lives in the country mainly to have some space to move around 1;” He sells most of the grain and some straw but keeps most of it for hay. ways a thrilling event, especially for the old timers. ’The women also had work to dp. They provided a hearty meal for the men folks and had cool liquid refreshments avail- While fieighboF^ Cart Brenda was participating in the threshing bee at the Glynn farm, his brother, Bill, whs harvesting his crop in a one-operation, air conditioned combine. , City School Census lists Student Increase ol 553 Pontiac school district has 553 junior high enrollments. Lacy more children of school age to expects an increase of 300 punils fit into the classrooms this year,'next year, but then predicts that according to the recently com-! enrollments will remain constant pleted school census. for about three years. ♦ ★ ★ I Senior high school enrollments In 1902, the census sliowcd will increase by 600-700 inipils 25,858 sqhool:«ge (5rl9) duUreji.' each year forthmext four j'ears.' '(’he most recent tally raises this figure to 26,4M. The census, which Is conducted In May. every - year, shows a decrease this year in the number of preschool-age children. The 1963 nosecount disclosed 10,690 in the four-and-under age group, while last year this group was listed at 11,007. School officials Ause the census data to proj^t future enrollments. projMt futurt deI^rease INFANTS DE( William ,7. r;acy. assislaiit superintendent for Instruction and l.ncy anticipates a peak onroll-ment of tOOO in 1967. Ho said high school enrollments .should remain relatively constant after the peak year for six or seven years. .Lacy expressed sbme caution in the census results. He said changes in employment or the development of new housing units could change the picture, particularly at the elementary level. pupil persuhnci, said the number of I ■ • ' • f children under a year old has declined steadily each year since 1958 with the exception of 1961. In 1957, tome 2,524 children under one were counted by the census takers. This dropped to 2,366 in 1958, but jumped GOP After Seat Left as Dem Dies BETHLEHEM, Pa. (/I’l- Penn- baefc up to 2,214 by 1961. sylvauia Rcpublicuus, winners , The eeneue ehewe !.»!» chU-ir™'''' I". hren under one this year. I “ " hepresemut™ . T 1 . I rm**5^*®i^>trylomT)rrowtocap- Lacy expecTse ementary_s(d>ool ..,„. ; . , „ ture the seat held more than 30 slight decrease lor several ,\ ears. The same-Is nearly true --■sr.-.-..-.....' COTlUtiltlhe on Un-Amcricah Ac- liviUes, died May .30 of ifeukemia, I Seckbig the remaining year I and a half of Walter's term are Dcmoqratlc State Sen. Fred B. I Hooiicy, ,17, and Robert G. Bartlett, 31, a Republican on leave from Bethlehem Steel Co. to make his first face for public office. Rotfi' are from Bethle- UKAUS FAIR - Elden C. Eesogart, 2083 Shawnee, Water-fOrd Townshl)/, has been named chairman of the governing body Of the Michigan State Falr-the ...., State Fair Authority created recently by the legislature. Observers rate the contest close one despite a Democratic registration lead of 83,565 to 56,-005 In the ISth District. Bartlett, a personnel executive, two years ago planned tlie strategy that ousted DefnocraU from control of Bethlehem’s city government for the first time In 46 years. He. I)as urged reform of federal tax policies, reduction of foreign aid and elimination of waste in the defense program. Rooney, a real estate man seifv-Ing his second term In the state senate, has campaigned for federal aid to education, more help for economically depressed com-muniUea and atiffer restrictions I on imports. i. U'.\ : A-A . TWBNfy THE PON t fAC PRKSS. WnPAY, JULY 20, 1063 There are several dozen bridge writers in the United Utates today. And one's supreme. As you know, Jacoby writes for The Pontiac Press. In addition to standing as the champion player, Jacoby is the champion writer. And this is important, for some of the fop rated authorities aren't particularly articulate. Our man is. He's terse, explicit and easy tp understand. The only actual mathematical evaluation of bridge champions today is the number of Master Points They have accumulated. Jacoby's first. Ihe rest trail by varying degrees and amounts. This isn't opinion. It's factual. Read Jacoby Daily The Pontiac Press / .. JI ■ ‘ ■M'f a' A'' TllE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 29, 1968 TWENTY^OJfE Multiple Bee Stingi Kin Surgeon in N.Y. COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. MV-Dr. James Mithoefer, 49, surgeon at Mary Imogene Bassett hospital here, died Saturday night oimul^ tlple bee stings suffered when he disturbed a nest while working at his home. Doctors at the hospital worked five hours in an effort to save his life. jiL Announcing FALL limilLE PBI announces the following Day, Half-Day and Evening Courses for Beginning and Advanced Students. Classes Begin September 9, Day and Evening Divisions. Business Administration Executive .Secretarial Professional Accounting Secretarial Higher Accounting Stenographic Junior Accounting Offire Machines Speedwriting Shorthand Catalog.and Enrollment Application Will Be ” uRet Furnished llpoii Request PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE 18 West Lawrence St. Ph. FE 3-7028 Accredited by the Accfediiing Commit$ion ai n Two-Year School of Itu»ine»$ ' RAZLEV CASH MARKET 1. rSPECIAl FOR TUESDAY ONIyFI YOUR CHOICE AND SAVE! Fraah • PORK HOCKS Sliced f • BEEF LIVER Grad* 1 Skinltt* . • HOT DOGS Mild Cura • SLICED BACON Chunk ^^TPCRK— 29 0 NO BULL, IT’S HOT-Lord Sherman, an English bull owned by David Copus, Marion, Ind., took to a chke of ice to beat the high heat AP Fhotofax and humidity that swept much of the nation last week. _ Nasser Gets Syrian Setback Salah Bitar were regardt mdderate members of the Ba’ BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) The resignation of Syrian Revolutionary Council President Louai Attassi was seen today as a loss for the moderate wing of - the ruling Ba’athist party and a new setback for supporters of U.A.r President Gamal Abdel Nasser. Damascus Radio reported Baturday^at^^ssf: was r e p 1 a c e d by Ba’athist strongman Ma). Gen. Amin AI Hafiz, who also assumed the post of Syrian armed forces Observers in Lebanon noted Attassi and Syrian Premier irded MONROVIA, Liberia (UPI) -Forty women from 19 nations today began a five-day seminar sponsored by the International, Alliance of Women, | athlst party, at least in regard to the nation’s relations with the U.A.R. They said the Syrian cabinet probably would be reshuffled as result of Attassi’s j stepping down. ; quit and -merchafltsr The New York Stock Exchange dates its origii^ J292 when 24 gathered under a buttonwood tree to buy and sell stocks. YOUR NEWS QUIZ PANT I • NATIONAL AND INTEtNATIONAL Give youroolf 10 pointi for etch correct 1 The CMtro |p>veniment last wedc seized the American Embasgy In Havana, which has been occupied by the who handle U.S. affairs in Cuba. a-Frenoh b-Britiah c-Swlas 2 The S-natlon teatlMm agreement, with Congressional- approval, would end idl but..... nuclear a-underground b-underwater^ o-atmoapherlo 3 President Kenne4y hss asked Congress to give power to settle railroad work rule disputes, a-hlm. h-the Commwoo Department o-the Interstate Commerce Commission 4 The present railroad dispute Involves five unions representing about ..... per oeilt of our railroad workers. ' a-13 b-27 0-91 5 Iq their Miami oonferenoe, the Oovernors In- struoted their executive oonunlttee to give..... *‘top priority'* in the coming year, a-oivll rights b-U.S.-lnternatlonal trade problems o-unemployment PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with Its correct meaning. 1- oolhplabent a-prevent 2- preoIude b-aharpnesa 3- mllltate< o-banlah 4- aorlmony d-aelf-aatlsfled 6-oatraolze e-to sot; to Influenoe PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take ft points for names that you can corroctly match with tilt cluts. 1- fOy D. Kohler 2- CyriUe Adoula a-U.8. Ambaaaador to Soviet Union b-exeouUve seoretary • ofNAACP _ 3-Oeorge E. Moeller c-Congo Premier visit- ed Orest Britain 4- Roy Wilkins 5- Casslus Clay d-Amerloan boxer e-named ohlef of U.8. moon flight progra^ The Pontiac Press Julr29,1963 Match word clues with fhoir correspond** log picturiji or symbols. 10 points for sach correct answer. a...C ommunist ''Common Market" b .^...California plana statewide earn-* palgn against ^<^4>4> AT WKC's WAREHOUSE STORE, ONLY! 20 W. ALLEY ST. Rear of Pike Street AGP JrC NO MONEY DOWN-3 FULL YEARS TO PAY m«eie«i!>ai«* Ssve Thfi Ptoutloe Examlnstkm! STUDENTS Valuable Rsfsrsiiee Materisl FbV Exswi. NS WE RS OM REVERSE PAGE I' ■ 1 1. ' -/ i CLOSEOUT ON DANISH MODERN CHAIRS USlDnODERN TABLE LAMPS Variety of itylai and I® Ml colon to i|!|t chooia from. ,, , , OPEN FRI. MON. NIGHTS til 9 NEW! 2 COMPLETE HOLLYWOOD BED OUTFITS with FREE WALNUT BOOKSHELF-DESK Compl.l. with 2 Inn.r-iatlr.u.1, 2 box ROLLAWAY BEDS WITH MAHRESS nd.rolll Fold, up compottly a m.tal,'’ Itmiripting mattr.i., HT4 9-PC. MAPLE BUNK BED AND CHEST OUTFIT ALL FOR 2 linglf.width mqplw ladder. Plui SaUtTt maple '68 USED! ADJUSTABLE beoumeiichaib j, VYoihabU plastic and Ipbrle. V Reelin**- / - USED *WIUBLP00t- GAS DRTED I. fabric control- lt6 "^^L^-WECE MODERN No Money Down J U’;- IV. » J:. WKC'S WAREHOUSE, 20 W. ALLEY ST. (Rear of Pike Street A&P Store) ' Vv ’i. " “'■fr •' !;\v V t , ' \ :\V$i I TWENTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONISAY, JULY 20. 1968 Youths Vie in AutorStyling Contest By JAMES STICKFORD UPI Automotive Editor DETROff - Tlie car of tomof-row may have retractable wings, cruise on water and be powered by an atomic reactor. At least that’s the way many of the youthful stylists in the Fisher Body Craftsman’s Guild annual design contest see the shape of cars in years to come. About 2,000 boys, 11 to 20, have entered this year’s all-male contest, which for the first time has a special 'open qualification. ' The requirements for tile new classification are “a wheeled-type vehicle for the land transportation of two to six people.” ’the two standard classifications are one for regular cars and the second for compacts and sports models.^. 'The model cars from all over the country make an impressive display in a special exhibit room j[t Fisher Body headquarters ii Warren. ^ome~oTTheTnDtitds'are beautifully designed, crafted and finished while others are crude jobs of beginners. 2 CATEGORIES To give everyone a fair chance, judging for the contest is broken down into senior and junior categories. Juniors range from 11 through 15 and seniors from 16 through 20. At stake are prizes worth $117, 10. The national winners in each group get scholarships: $5,000 for first place, $4,000 for second, $3,000 for third and $2,000 for fourth. National winners will be announced tomorrow at an awards banquet. another had wings that extend from the dopie when the car become airborne. _ 'It’s !br“the busy “fitecuQVe,”. designer explained. ‘‘No time lost waiting at airports.” Joe Hainllne, public relations director at Fisher. Body and general chairman of the gnild’s annual convention, 'said a total of 650,000 youths are registered in the guild this year. ' . He said past surveys indicated ‘about 4,000 youths began cars this year and about half finished them.” Herdegen said boys often enter the contest annually. “Vou can see their work as oei ling t^de in the beginning-and then after a few years they start turning out good finished,products.” .1^ said the contest has proven a steppingstone to a career in the automotive engineering and design field for many of the )iouths. SUCCESS STORY the top prize in the contest in 1947 and now is executive charge of automotive design i HAPPY BIRTHDAY-This blockJong birthday cake stretched along Miami’s Flagler Street last week in celebration of that city’s AP PhoUlw 67th birthday. ’The 500-foot by 16-inch'pastry was viewed by Begins His 8th Year of Protest Picketing I in protest against hjs bfeing'firedI Fort Meade, Fla.,^ is named |for ‘‘repeated refusals to obey!tor Gen. .George G. Meade, who I instructions.” XOhTOF (UP!) - RTB e' r If......, f ' . " ' ' Tyzack, 53, today be^n Xis Tyzack,, who pickets for 10 eighth year of picketing the hours every day, claims the firm Plaistow Wharf Sugar Refinery 1 owes him $56,000 in back wages. |him. while still a second lieutenant, was asked to find the site of old Indian fort named Fort Clinch. When he found it, his commanding officer named it for GENERAL ELECTRIC LOWEST PRICES! HIGHEST TRADES! NO MOHEYDOWN! Aii#«'M0DElS^ BIG 13.2 " FT.’ RBRIGBUmn-HIEEZBI 2-DOOR CONVENIENCE! BIG CAPACITY! BIG VALUE! • Zaro-dpgra* fr«*z«r-3-1 cu. ft. —holds up to 108 pounds. Door sholf for Va gal. ico croom cortoni. 2 mini-cub* k* troys und*r wir* rock cov*r for *asy tray r*movol... rock s*rv*s as handy sh*lf. • Automatic defrosting ^efrig-•rotor section. )• 4 cabinet shelves. On* slide-out. • 2 porcelain vegetable drawers. • Butter compartment. • boor sfbrdg*. Bottom' shelf ^ ELECTRIC 825 W COMPANY NURON A total of 1,078 prizes are given the youths. Each state has winners and then the top designers from the states go into regional contests with the country broken into 20 regions. Allowing for duplicate awards, about 45 boys reach the finals. iF the parent of a winner works for General Motors, including its dealers, duplicate awards are given. SiBce tile wnteit ctAfteff^ 1980, a Fisher Body spokesman said,' a total of 270 university scholarships have been given as prizes totaling $741,500, and the total value of all awards has exceeded $2 million. The models are subjected to 'igid inspection and are judged on six qualities: scale fidelity, workmanship, painting, originality of design, artistic merit and practicality. TO ir^CAm Specifications call for rigid adherence to a 1 to 12 scale specification with one inch equaling a foot. The judges go to great lengths with specially made tools, including templates with scaled down human figures, to make sure the scale is true. ‘‘In blCwing tiiem up to size, the place the boys generally lose the scale is on trim and aerials and the like,” Dick Her-d^egeUj j F^ who sets up the judging,Taldr " Many of the youths can’t quite get'their models to come out like they want them he added, .so they include explanatory notes to account for the difference. One youth had trouble with his passenger area and told the engineers that the “car Was designed for the 21st century- and people will be thinner then.” Ithougir many of the youths show advaiKMdrtiiitdting In their designs, they seldom come up with an idea tiiat hasn’t been tried by the professionals, One spokesman said in the early 1950’s a youth designed a window that was similar to one engineers were working on but that was the only case he knew of where such a thing happened. Probably the most spectacular dios of the General Motors sty- ling staff. Ath made models of the famous coach I petition went to model cays and that Is the trade mark of the in 1948 cars became the standard body company. In 1937 the. com-|for the designers. If any designer should come up with what developed into a production car in the GM line, the idea would belong to the company, however. Waivers ar« signed giving the company the right to the ideas in the models. But such an event is highly unlikely because of the competitive nature of automotive design. With each model, the entrants sign a slip indicating they did all the work on the car. The parents s story e mosL spectacular «« v»». *..v Of the guild is that'also must sign the statement. Fisher spokesman said aboqt 40 per cent of the winners in the contest’s history have gone into type of design work. Ques- Killer Strikes Again Inside Prison Walls HUNTSVILLE, Tex. (UPI) -A fight broke out yesterday dur-ing^eh u rc h services at the Wynne Prison Farm Chapel, and before guards could break'it up, convicted murderer Willie Howard had plunged a homemade knife PIIOINE U.S when you need a medieaine. Pick up your preaerlnlion IfahoppluB nearby, or we will deliver promplly wllhoul eitira • charge. A greal many people eniriial ua wilh Iheir preacripllona. May we compound youra? PERRY PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS ......... crofe'-sionahy i'f.RFc ORNAMENTAL IRON BesRtify You Home willi Cnitom Poiigned Oinamental Iroawoik Railing - Colnmni - Grilli Sea Our 1-Pc. Rainfmad CONCRETE STEPS Sofaly Traad RaduMi SRppIng . FrieEitiiiMtM--W9D9liv9rAiiy«h9rtI CONCRETE STEP COMPANY ; „ ^97 Phone ¥73-7715 1 ■■■■■■■■■■■a »■■■■■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■ ■ ii ■.■■■■ ■■ ■ ■ ■■■ ■■■■■■■■ The youths Include their cars’ "dope sheets” that tell how the models function. One called for an atomic - powered vehicle and STOP PAYING HIGH mSURANCE COSTS ‘35 7Q)ic A YEAR BUYS ALL THISI $10,000 $4,00(T* $4,000” ’ $1,000 fl away Irani hama $1,000 $25,000 llkblllty $500 PLUSMANT Addition«l Covtiagti NOW Our SOlh y*or AOKNCV Uaearal Ihiaranra 1044 JaahN FE 4-SflS Yourfoorcan enjoy j Complete Heating Satisfaction clean, even warmth and comfort promotes health and happiness in the home arid eliminates those peskyXA/inter colds which so disrupt the tranquility of your home. For ovor 38 yoars Goo Coal and Oil Company hos boon distributing bottor. quality fuot in Pontiac and tho surrounding aroa during which timo fhoy havo kopt abroost of tho changing mothoda In which to maintain an ovon, clean flow of warmth to evory room In tho home assuring you of Complete Heating Satisfaction. Despite the fact that many flattering offers ore made at this time of the year to leture your fuel oil business^for the coming hooting season by various eompanios. Goo's regular cuatemera ond many, many new families assure themselves of Complete Heating Satisfaction by calling Goe, Pontiac's largost and oldest Independent Mqbilheat Distributor. There i» a reman. YOV CAIV DEPEND ON GEE! Gea'i Better Quality fuel Oil la ao refined to give cleaner, even warmth, regardlaii of the Oee'a Budget Plan aquoliiei yeur fuel billa and ellminofet costly fuel billa in colder Winter montha. Oea'i automatic aervica oaturet you of never being without plenty of this better quality fuel oil oi' our modem "Oegra* Day" method toll us whon you nood fuol oil and boforo your preiont supply Is ox-houstod our courteoui drivor has replon-Ished your supply. y fuol oil Is distributed At Gee'i you get Holden Red StatWps Ml at no additional cost. ClaAston, Orion', Oxford, Roshosfor, Auburn Helghfi, Bloemfleld Hills, Keego Harbor, Walled Lake and the surrounding area in modern , OMC trucks, inetar Oee'a heoting efficiency expert, John -Oalger, Is corraci typo of fuel oil beat suited to yeur heat- Now Is the time to osauro your family of completa better sarvic* by regular, ablaollv* MOtATIO- e to call (too and gat set far a winter of ANSWERS TO TODAY’S NEWS QUIZ PART It f-o,2-«,3-o,4-brB-«. PART Mi 1-d, 2-f, S-B, 4-b, R-o. PART lilt 1-Bs 2-Or l-t, 4-b, R-d. SYMBOL QUIZ! 1-7, b-9, o-Sr d-f, •-Is f-10sg-4,h-2,14,14. MU Pontlid’B bldtit imd laritst looblly bwn«d bill ------------------------------- ■ ‘ md optritdd Niw Mobilhtat Dlitrlbiitor! We canv a eontplete line of oil regular grades of coal,- including... SEE roSMONnS AND «MTTUJ0r The All Purpeie STOKES SOU. I ) .V: r’; .‘V'ir "'v ,, r'v ) ,"r .• vv'v ‘'''I' >:.■ 1- ' - V / THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 29, 1963 TWENTY-THREE 'State GOP Delegation SliQuId Support Romney' . LANSINQ (AP) - Rcpublicln Itltipniil Committeeman John JH»rtln said yesterday that MichU ^'1 delegation to the 1964 GOP etrarention should work with Gov. ,^rge Romney in selecting the yprty’s presidential nominee. ' '*By committing our support Gov. Romney,’* Martin said p a statement issued in Lans-iJ>(i “we will be in a position influence the eiection of a eandidate who best meets our atodards of measurement.” "'^artln explained to the Assoc-tided Press that his statement atts not intended to make Romney a “favored son” candidate at the convention but rather “to nteke Ronmey our favorite until we nave looked at the whole field.” The GOP commltteman added; “This doesn’t rule Romney out - but it doesn’t rule him in, either.’’ WELCOME MAT Meanwhile, Martin said, to pre>-pare for 1964, Michigan Repub-licians must provide a welcome mat for every Republican presidential candidate wha. cares to visit our state. that’n be great! ^ 0 Dad and Mom bought me a Kimball piano be-cbuM my teacher any* leaming to play a piano cornea first, no matter what I’ll play later. Anyway. it’s really fun practicing on my Kimball! Whatever career ypur child, chooaea, learning to play a Kimball will assure helpful poise, self-confidence, fun. l«t us show you our beautiful Kimball pianos... come in soon ... children grow so fast. Cboosa From ... KIMBAIL-CABLE-GULBRANSIN PIANOS PRII LISSONS WITH iACH KINTAL $300 RcntsI snd esrtsgs will bs slfowed M ^redll^Jf^jrbu diolds to purohsM ALSO Lowrsy and Gulbranian Organs From $495 up MU$tC CO. “Whtro Mutl« It Onr BuIncM’’ 16 I. Huron St. FI 4-0566 ¥»■« "^Mon7¥nT Kri. niTrnliiii 'III I “This is our traditional practice, and it has been a good one,” he said. Martin denied that his statement was a move to biock plans by conservatives to get delegates committed to Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater included In the Michigan group. BEST FOR MICHIGAN’ possible now to determine which one of tha candidates would be best for the nation and best for Michigan. It’s not aimed at any any more that at supporters for (New York Gov. Nelson) Rockefeller or any other candidate. that might come along,” Martin declared. The choice of a presidential nominee is a heavy responsibili-bility on delegates, Martin said. “It cannot be taken lightly and requires careful evaluation of both the capabilities of the naminee and his ability to help bs elect a full slate of candidates,” he added. Martip said that after a good look has been taken at all possible ca'ndidates\ “we will be in best positidn to decide the course of action' we should pur- “Judgments made prior to that time will be prefnature and based on an Inadequate evaluation of all the facts.” WearyJtescu^s Remove Bodies in Cairo Rubble CAIRO —Rescue workers, tired by a night-long search, said today they had pulled out all bodies from three crowded tenement buildings which collapsed, they set the toll at 12 dead. Nineteen people were found alive in the wreckage. Eight were hospitalized from near suffocation. Officials said more than 100 persons lived in the three buildings in an old section of Cairo, but only 31 were inside when the collapse occurred yesterday afternoon. Children vrere joutside playing, and many residents were strolling to get fresh air on a stifling day. Some children lost boih parents. Two little boys lost their mathar..Jather-and uncla—their entire family. EARN MORE ON SAVINGS SAVINGS IN BY THE 10TH OF THE MONTH EARN FROM THE 1ST AT.........S CURRENT RATE Advanced Payment ^ ^ ^ . Shares Certificates AlyW ^ Current Rate nii # iJn / w IF HELP TO MATURITY AVAILABLE IN UNITS OF $80 PER SHARE SetabIMedI In 1190 — Never miMudI paying « dWduml. Ovet 11 feate ol gaun*! managuiMnl — yaui «ggiiran«* ol gacurity. Aggulg now etei 00 mllllan deltme. CAPITOL SAVINGS G LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 W«it Huron Downtown Ootrolt Olficti Itnto# FE 4-0561 Southflold Offleoi 27218 SoulMlold ComorSfutoSJlroot nt 11 Mil* Rood WO 2-107$ Kl 7-6125 Homn OHieoi Longing Mombor hidoral Homi> Lotin Bank Sygtotn > I" "V !; ' ^ ' > V.. SlICED WHITE BREAD M«l-0-CruBt 20-Oz. Bultomiilk Uaf |„4R0|| . With iAYE to* ON tOPCO BlEACH Pbillc 4-Holl l^c Par Pack 9 Poll 9eee 4 » Pour Rollt With Thit Coupon gi ....haw. Coupon Ixplrot Tuog., J ItM. Limit Ono Coupon Por Cugtomor. S3J With Coupon mimii coupon Topco — Sovo 10c BUACH 139- Limit On# WItifVhig Coupon onO ll.oa Puw Limit Ono Coupon Por Cuitomor. Retnember, yoon ago and mllM owoy ... a country kitchon In mld- •»jmmai'---ond tho hoovonly fragrwco of Com-On-Tha-Cob—froth . )uat pickod, bubbling In on Iron pot atop th# old wood itovt. THAT wot com on tho cob. What mod# It to»fg to good? Wall, porhopi H woa tho tima of our llvai , ; . pJrhopi It wot gronny'i wnlla o» iht torvod tha itaomlng plottar of IukIous, goldon oort . . . porhopt, porhopa ., . But ona thing It auri. Tha raol rooson for tha morvalous toatjp imw th¥ fdct thdt ffiii woa fraih. Break '0 Day Michigan Grown, Goldon Yollow Are thooo good old doyi gont forovor? Quito honoitly, Vas, 1 CORN But tho com? Will, today tho Top Crop'i In ot Wrigloy'i . . . Tho corn thot rlvoli tho boit ydur momory con produce ... Wrlgloy'a own Brook-O-Doy corn .. . Picked, lold and lorvod on tho very some doy. Tonight, wrvo It . . . and relive o procloui port of yoifordoy. Dozen t Buttermilk 4alf lallon V lOc artonajipl^^P Faad Club Cream Cheese Slikoly Fruit Oiekiall, RIngo Fruit Drlnkt "'“SllK'ir’a ‘1^ ’I” Elf Muthroomt Einu Tomaloot ; ’1” Morltq’t Sail Jollo Qolatln vr W ’:W PFiiag. ’• Any; Pkg. of Btquir* Coupon aaoroi July 10. Limit One Coupon Shava Craam Coupon Bxoroi July M Limit Ono Coupon oMjp Raid Houso & Gordon Flying Inioct Klllar or OFF bomb Counen Hxoroi JiAv M. Limit Ono Coupon ng|l0 M 1 and" pou2hao¥ op ^-m^^ldgoporf Bug Bomb FLOWER OUARO ■'•"•?*-^*KupVn''tt ' 'K 'V .. I: TWENTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 29. 1068 Air Chief AAay Get Job Blonde Puts Stars in Trances / LONDON (Urt) - The Sunday Express speculated yesterday that aviation minister Julian Am-ery may take over Britain’s restyled defense ministry. He is Prime Minister Harold Macmil-__ Ian’s son-in-law. Peter.-11iorn^ croft is the present defense minister. Hollywood Hit by Hypnotist Rainmaker Bats LOGO; Decides He'll Turn Pro" By JAMES BACON = AP Movre-'fefevision Writer HOLLYWOOD - Fad-h a p p y Hollywood’s latest craze hypnotist who likes like a blonde Sophia Loren. Pat ■Collins not only attracts the Hollywood crowd to the Interlude oh the Sunset Strip. She’s getting '*-wffir^Davl8, then a press agent, who discovered Miss Collins playing for $300 a week at a club in nearby Riverside. PERSONAL CONTRACT Davis signed her to a personal contract. She makes $3,000 a week and Davis is owner of the Club' where he formerly worked. them onstage in droves, often to make perfect fools of themselves. The other night, Tuesday. Weld was hypnotjjed^into believing she was a stripper. The young actress, uninhibited normally, came up with bumps and grinds that would have made Tempest Storm blush. STARS APPLAUD Applauding in the audience'were such as Jackie Gleason, Arthur Godfrey and the usual stay-at-home jimniy Stewart. One night Linda Christian was hypnotized into thinking that an unknown customer next to her waj Gleim-Ford. • |i.coloii»spectaMation AND irn ^eUGLY MERiCAN ^TUESDAY, JULY 30th 10:45 A.M.-f :00 P.M. LUOKY 13 kiddie SHOW 13* “He’s a rat,” said Linda eloquently. That wasn’t long after Ford had announced he was only kidding the night he proposed to Linda after three helpings of her weinerschnitzel. •Lloyd Bridges, television’s famed skin diver, was told he was jback in “Sea Hunt.” He promptly ! swam through the club. FLIES OFF . I Jill St. John’s pretty torso was I stretched rigidly between two chairs onstage during much of ,one performance. Susan Oliver jhad a fear of flying. A session i with Miss Collins and the blonde l actress took off by jet for the - Moscow Film Festival. 1 The most-frequent subject is j Pamela Mason, who comes about once a week. One night last week, she brought her 13-year-old daughter, Portland, and Princess Ya#-min, the 14-year-old daughter of Rita Hayworth and the late Aly Khan. A friend of Rita's at the club telephoned her that her daughter was hi a nightclub. Rita quickly ^ked th^t Yasmin be put on the KIDS UNDER 12 Witfi phone. She can’t come to the phone,” said Shelley Davis, club owner, “She’s onstage, hypnotized.” “Then get me Pamela Mason,” demanded Rita. ----- “Can’t,” answered Davis. She’s onstage, hypnotized, too.” Of Miss Collins’ stand was the night she convinced Paipela Mason she was-Dinah Shore. ^ VI, ui TULSA, Okla. W -f- The mys- l^yis says one of1hehighIl|ftet.rlou8^alnmaker.,fitTulsa is go- I a. “ho rain, no money” basis, meaning he won’t take pay unless his efforts are fruitful. *T feel reasonably sure I have It down pat," he said. But he stUl prefers to remain anon- If Pamela had had any kind of a voice at all,” says Davis. “I would have signed her on the spot as a featured singef^ because she had Dinah’s style down perfectly." ing to turn pro. He says the almost nine inches of rain which flooded parts of Tulsa Saturday convinced him he ^an make it rain anywhere. ★ ★ ★. He said he’ll produce rain any- Ecuador takes its name from le equator which crosses through the country Just to the north of Quito. Tonnage of pulp and paper pro-duced each year in the United States Is greater than the tonnage of automobiles produced. He is batting four-for-four in his rain predictions and even claims credit for stopping the deluge Saturday. He called a Tulsa newspaper columnist and said he’d make the downpour stop. Within the hour it slacked off to a mere drizzle. :■ , Pll/S CORNEL WILDE BELINDA LEE 0 JOSEPH E. LEVINE presents ^ WB** AtOWA ANTI N E ^ AND THE fmO fSCC EASTMANCOLOR TOTALSCOPE •< AiuvHflwifioiincnst wiWASwncruKSN— I'- CHEER KENNEDY-yjwo Irish colleens, sisters Eileen and Aine Herlihy, cheered President Kennedy in Dublin and heard him promise “kaed mille cailte”“a hundred thousand welcomes -to any of hiS ancestors,’-couritryihen who camq to the White House. So, on a three^we^ visit to the! U.S., they stopped by the White House and received autographed photos of the President and PT109 tie pins. Special Unit Gets Capsules Recovo^r 70 Per Cent of Launched Vehicles WASHINGTON (UPI) - A specialized Air Force unit’has been WARSAW, Poland (AP)-^mall-pox continued to spread in Poland this weekend. The Health Ministry reported lO cases,.four of them fatal. The ministry said more than 360,000 persons have been vaccinated since thfrflrstrC^se^oLsmall-pox appeared two' weeks ago In the Breslau region. retrieving 70 per cent of the capsules launch^ Coast Iri a space-age catch game involving rockets, secret satellites and transport planes. After more than a year of silence, the Air Force yesterday released sketchy details on the Secret launches of the satellites Into polar orbits and the “routine” recovery by a Hawaii-based squadron of capsules ejected from them. The meager details were made public in connection with the presentation of the “Outstanding Unit Award” to the B8«3rd Test Bqaadroa at Hlclt-am Air Force Base, Honolulu, In recognition of “its record in the development and application of aerial techniques for the recovery of space capsules returned from orbiting satef“ Iltes.’ HURRY! Last 4 Days! HURON METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER p»es6nts the NEW MARLON I TREVOR | RICHARD BRANDO I HOWARD I HARRIS MUnNYON THE BOUNTY ILMf.0 IN ULTRA PANAVISION 70' • TECHNICOLOR' ■ AN ARCOLA PICTURE At T;80 Only-Adults $1.28 Incl. Tax - Chlldron 50o TRIOAY Hgl Siufa Nilft We dere you to see ■iTie first U.C recovery df a jman-made object from space was abepmplished on Aug. 11, 1960, when the Air Force’s Discoverer 13 satellite ejected a capsule. It floated down through the atmosphere and into, the Pacific Ocean where it was fished out by Navy divers. A Cl 19 airplane of'the Hick-am-based squadron made the first aerial: recovery of a space capsule on Aug. 19; 1960, grab- MOIIIIIOiailE and not talk about It! -to-niomt- «M0MD0 CANE' 7(30 - 9:45 PM. >’• ' I'. V T > ■ ■t 'i Poles Plagued by Pox, 40 Coses in Weekend 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 4 COpLETE FLOORS of HOME FMISHINGS 9 Provincial b Colonial • TroditJonol • Modern — All by America's Leading Monufacfurerjl Open Tonight Till 9 P.M. 2 -Pc. Colonial bing it and its parachute out of the air over the Pacific. However, early last year, the Defense pcpartmenU m P o s e d | Dl.scoverer and other military satellites under a secrecy curtain. , Ever since, there have been nouncemenls on launchings from Vandenberg Air P'orce Base and adjacent Point Arguello, Calif., I but nothing has been said of whSt 'wsis launched. JoffiylHins. wNiilHl professor; (A Jerry Lewis Production) and DELUXE FOAM CUSHIONED Sofa ami CoHprdinnted Choir OPEN AAon., Thurs., Fri. TIL 9 P.M. Both hove coil spring bases, are self decked and arm covers ore includisd. Covered in duraljle tweeds. $ FREE DELIVERY ' ' i ELEVATOR S|kVICE TO AIL FLOORS Reg. ^269 Save ^90 WARD-WAY BUDGET TERMS “Kom Afiisl Be Hath fled—This We Guarantee!' 17-19 S. Saginaw IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC V''\‘ 'V'"' '* , u I f , ' .i * I, . ■ V . / ' • 1.. ' V.'. ■■ -x: XHE PONTIAC lySESS, MONPAY, JULY 29, 1963 r4i ■r "V TWENTr-JIVB; Trout Get Tougher in South KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) — The Tennessee Geme «id Fish Comini8> Sion is putting its hatch-erjr trout through a phys* ical education course be-ford releasting the fish in streams and rivers. Tine was when fishermen turned up their noses at palid, live^fed . weak-muscled hatchery trout. Twenty years’ researclk into the ge-nettles of fish culture I fliet*^______________________ I “No trbuter worthy of ^ the name could enjoy landing a fish that could- I n’t whip its way out of | I a wet paper bag,” said I Bob Burch, an official of | the Game and Fish Com- | mission. “They’re being | I fed a new type food that | ‘i gives them the pink, | I trout-tasting meat and the | I trout fighting quality." | ■/ ’ being freed. A fast-mov- | ing current in the race^ % ^ ways makes the fish keep f ' up a constant battle and ^ tones their muscles for , future combat against .. fishermen. “Unlike the hatchery- » fed fish of a few years , ago,’’ Burch said, “today’s put-and-take fish are in many respects better than some produced un- | i der natural conditions.” | Says Rails Can Settle With Talks WASHINGTON (AP) - The chairman of the Senate commit-ice "watchdogging" r ail r o a d-union talks says it certainly is possible for them to settle their I dispute by negotiations. I ★ , * ★ “I don^t think those parties are as far apart as is assumed," said Sen. John 0. Pastore, D-R. I., acting chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, which has been hearing testimony on President Kennedy’s proposals for averting a nationwide rail strike. Pastore commented in an interview after two weekend negotiating sessions, conducted by Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz, failed to bring any signs of progress. Pastore, indicating strong congressional reluctance to act in the strike, cut short hearings Saturday so the talks could be resumed. "tr. / -tr T -k '' _ The Senate ‘ and House, Commerce Committees scheduled sessions today. Rail union leaders were scheduled to testify on Kennedy's proposal to let the Interstate Commerce Commission deal with the key work rules dispute. The unions have been critical of the President's plan. Tourist Flees Reds Using Bus as Cover VIENNA, Austria (APi-UsIng a slow moving Austrian tourist bus as cover, a- 33?yeaM)Id Hungarian dashed to the West across 100 yards of no man's land Sunday. Communist border guards were unable to fire at him.for fear of hitting the bus. The name of the refugee, who asked for asylum, was not dis- | closed. ' Stows Away, Lands in Italy LA SPEZIA, Italy (AP)-A Cuban student who stowed away on a sugar boat in riavaha and wound up In Italy Instead of the United Sthtes has asked for political asylum In Italy. Authorities -said Jorge Ramon Hurgalta, 20, arrived July 20 on the Greek vessel Efcharls, which he had thouglg^as sailing for the United States. He said his parents had fleR there from Cuba, Police declined to give their address. AT THE mUNiriflG kROGER m in^ 1^^^^ 2S6 IL TELESRAPH RD. iuoa.iuBETN UKERD.,poifTuc * 750 PERRY STREET atjmlyn,poiituc 2341 S. TEUEGMPR RD. (MIRACLE MILE SHOPPINO CENTER) • 4370 DIXIE HISHWAy AT MtMBAW, DRATTWI piAHtt > 8010 COOliY LAKE RD. AHD UNION LAKE RD., UNION UAE COMPLETELY CLEANED WHOLE fRESH p t CUTUP FRYERS ,C lb. 27 FRTER BREASTS SSUi HAMBURGER........n^39< DELICIOUS SUCED BACON .....N49t LEANMEATY SPARE RIBS.............ib.39f HOMEMADE P0RKSAUSACE..3'^<99° KLEIN’S V WD0GS>....3'^<99° HYGRADE'S SLICED 6 VARIETIES LUNCH MEAT..... 1.49° TASTY CHUNK BOLOGNA 3 99° FIRST CUT PORK CHOPS 3 “99^ m WITH THIS GOUPON-SAlTED SAVE 20° WITH THIS COUPON OF THE SAVE 30° WITH THIS COUPON- • ■ SAVE 26° with this coupon | ! Kroger VAC PA( ! SHERBET ■ 14B. HCTN. CHICKENSSEA BUTTER : CHUNK TUNA'; CREAM COFFEE it. ■ > CaujiMl voM at Kra|ar In Da|roil and Eaulam MMi. | Caapan voNd al Kiagar in Datralt and latitm Mkh. ■ Coupon valid at Kreeor in Dolroit and Eautom Mkh.| Coupon valid at Krogor in Dolroit and Eoutorn Mkti. m I ihni Tuat., July 30,1eS3. limit Ona Coupon par Inmlly. m ihniTwou., July 30,1963. Umit jOna Coupon pot family. H thru Tuoi., July 30,1963. Until Ona Coupon" par family.m ihniTuat., July 30,1963. UmilOna Coupon par family. H 4ARGE KROGER 13 EGG RECIPE ANGEL FOOD CAKE EAC^ SAVE 10°-KROGER 29 SAVE 30* NEW LOW PRICE! BORDEN'S HOMOGENIZED Yt GALLON MILK'^37° BORAX 3 LB. 7-02. 9Qc I PACKAGE SALTINE CRACKERS . 19* SAVE 17‘-AVONDALE ^ ^ APRICOT HALVES. SAVE 12‘-KROGER ^ FRUIT COCKTAIL... S£°1 SAVE 24°-PENNSYLVANIA DUTCHMAN _ MUSHROOMS, .’s .. 5;£n SAVE 7°-KROGER EVAPORATED ' _ ' CANNED MILK..............8:s°1 , JUMBO 27 SIZE VINE RIPENED 3" 89. evnew MCIONS . » 59* honeydIw IluIberries .. iMKIST LEMONS puu$l PINTS ^ I jw,aa.->rsan^ ......... - e we--- I 50 EXTRA vmui STAMPS | $0 IXTRA vmui STAMPS | 25 EXTRA vmui STAMPS ■ WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHA OF UB. PKO. WHOLt HOG PORK _________ , ru.Aivu I BWD FARM SAVSACI W(^ raiorvolho rlohl to limit quoMItloi. Prlcoi and Itomt offOcilvo at Krogor In . Coupon valid at KfOgor in Dolroil and | CoupM valid at Krogor In Dolroit oi rannac, OroytonPloIni and Union,Laka thru Tuoi., July 30,1963. Nono told todoolori. I loAlom Mkh. lltru. .v,y ORANGE JUICE... SAVE 20°-BIR0S EYE ' FROZEN LEMONADE. 8 i£°1 SAVE 17'-FROZEN _ BIRDS EYE PEAS OR CORN 6 packages! SAVE 36*“FROZEN BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY _ _ MORTON MEATp,». 6-;^ i« i COUPON AND PURCHASC OF S-OZ. PKO. JONES LIVER SAUSAGE Id at Krogor In Dolroit ond I Coupon valid at* Krogor in Dolroil and k. thru Tuo*„ July. 30. 1963. " Imtom Mkh. thru Tuoi., July 30, 1963. Tig^s Win Twice From Lowly Stators Net T ournament Moves SERVICE—Twelve year old Jimmy Williams, youngest entry in the junior division ot the County Tennis Tournament, delivers his serve against 14 year old Rick Watson of Rochester, Williams, of Birmingham, lost to Watson, 6-2 and 6-3. Except for a couple minor upsets* play continues this week in the Oakland County Open tennis tournament with rain-delayed matches scheduled during the week. The main schedule resumes Friday evening when the quarterfinals of the men’s singles will be •played at Oakland Park; All re^ maining matches through the finals will be played Saturday and Sunday. , Mixed doubles. still has open- ings and they will be played next Saturday and Sunday. A first class field remains in the men’s singies quarter-finals. Defending champion Leon Hibbs wili go against Tom Hunt; Bill Harsen, three-set winner of Frank Russell meets Gerry Bunce; Dick Mineweaser faces Sam Walker; Dick Scrip-ter faces Ralph Alee. time champion facing Scripter, Birmingham netter who has indicated he will make a strong challenge for the title. In junior singles, which will be played next Saturday at 10;0tt a. m. the upper bracket has Gerry Bunce facing Mark Gaylord the winner of which could to the title: TOP MATCH a strong threat in Sam Walker and Jim Brandt yesterday, 6-1 and 6-1. The Scripter-Alee match could be the best event, with Alee two- In a top match of men’s doubles Hibbs and Harson eliminated Rain stopped the late Sunday matches and thus they were tentatively rescheduled. Tonight at 6:00 p. m. the Goff-Kearns and Venus-Craft match is set. ;In event of rain it will be played Tuesday and on Wednesday the Winner will meet the Minton-Hoffman duo. U.S. Girls Lose Again in Polish Track Meet WARSAW, Poland (AP) -^What’s^ wrong^^th ^ women’s track and field? Why can’t the U.S. girls’ team win meets? The question is asked repeatedly by European sportswriters about the winless U.S. girls now touring Europe with the undefeated men. Dan Ferris, secretary-treasurer of the U.S. Amateur Athletic Union, replies that a big problem is lack of tradition in U,^ women’a track and field, something that is being overcome. . “Some old-fashioned people,” he said, “consider it both unfeminine—and^indeeent-for girls to compete in track suits but such 1deas''are changing. They should have seen the Russians in hardly anything but bikinis. And the Polish girls, as attractive and feminine as you please.” Playoffs Set for Softball in Waterford Aninjal strength rather than athletic skill is still too often the yardstick in U.S. women’s track and field, said the American men’^sr coach, Payton Jordan of Stanford University. “There are too few girls to pick frpm,” Jordan added. ‘ 'The solution is more and earlier training of more girls, by age groups, as in women’s 1 swimming.” Waterford Township playoff action holds the softball spotlight this week. Activity will begin at 7 p.m. tomorrow night at the Drayton Plains softball park with West Side Lanes meeting Lakeland Pharmacy at 7 p.m. in a Class B game'^ and Huron Bowl playing Haskins In “C” action at 8:30 p.m. The city’s Class B and C circuits will complete their contests tonight, Wednesday AAU president Louis J, Fisher said parents must be interested and convinced that women’s track and field is beneficial rather than harmful. “When you get the par-women’s track and field could flourish tike little league baseball does,” he said. StEREOTYPED The American women’s coach, Margaret Ellison of Abilene, Tex., acknowledges that in America there is an (infavorable stereotype of girl track and field athletes as tom-hoys with bobbed-hair and inannish looks. But there’s no reason women The Gllbert-Lazarov match is set for 9:00 a. m. Wednesday morning with the winners to meet Andrews-Bunce at 6:00 p. ih. Thursday.-------—~ -— The doubles quarterfinals are slated for Saturday at 2:00 p. m. The Novice divisjop has gone to the semi-finals with Biff Rice defeating Rick Johnson, 6-4; Bren Petar defeating Mike Dawson, 6-1; Paul Morang defeating Lee Stader, 6-2 and Bruce Bigler edg-ing.^Jim Shireman, 8-6. These were the early results:. f. McBreir- del. Goff. S-1, 6-4; Mlnewssaer d Andrews 6-2. 6-0; Walker def. J< 6-4. 6-0; Scrinter del. Anderson,, b-i. »-» and Alee del? Leedy, 6-0, 6-2. .TCNIOR SINGtES (Second Round)—Bunce def. Howard, -- " -* Gaylord del. Coe. 6-0, 6-0; Bruney, 6-0, 6-0; Hunt del. n. e.,/V4r««^ 2-6 and 6-3: Gilbert def. Dick Craw-6-1. 4-6, 6-2: Andrews def. Watson, er” functioned right on schedule yesterday. As.a result, the evening portion nd four afternoon games the Parks and Recreation Department’s Amateur Baseball Day program at Jaycee Park was postponed until next~Junday night. For three straight years the precipitation has permitted only partial completion of the of the annual dayT slafe. Oagel def. ' Crawford, 6-1, Pontiac Press Photos DOUBLE GRIP-Sam Walker III returns his two-handed backhand in his 2nd round match against Howard Johnson in the County tennis tourney. Walker, 4th seeded player, ad- cinir« u'BSh vanced to the quarterfinals in singles which J.*,'- games completed before the midafternoon rains made the playing fields more suitable for boat races. Action will begin at 4 p:m. next Sunday. The schedule will be announced later this week. The two-session tickets will be honored from yesterday. A 50-^cent admissioirchargc .will be levied non-participants who not have the two-sesSion ducats. Phrking will cost 25 cents. H.nn dci. r un«on o-o; u.w,„„ «... Purpose of the annual progranj ’ * Brintfy ^ ^ eoMlot* ... R... 4iiwii/\v> VhBOAlMlIl 8todSr_[ (Second Round)—MlnowoMor-AIoo def. Gothe-M. Smith, 6-0, 6-0; Bockmon- Brltton def. Goylord-Hodge, 6-4 ond 6-1; Androwo-Bunct dot Mfflroet-Hunt, JM, 6-1: Haroon-Hlbbo del. Wolker-BrlmdlT “““ NOVICE ....)—Rlc-Wilder, ‘boweon de"f'. ^ (Third Bound)—Rico^def. M.,,Ooff. Jl®' Hann'"del. "Punefon r' Ixalak, 6-3: 'BaJIn Hurt in Bridge Accident Local Fan Hillcrest Victim MrsT-PhR Sauer, 59 Monroe, isjHnd bruisejrand was,Hot hospital-in Pontiac St. Joseph Mercy Hos-ized. Mrs. Sauer reported that hurdler,, runner,, jumper, and Sl'lf r"elV thrower, be (endnine If yuu^S L “ 1 ?, ^ . bridge accident during the Wol-!she lav with her feet in the popuianze-Tne“Bpori amon^-Htijj„g Qpg„ tournament itu^er the teen-age girls, said coach El-Club Saturday.! collapsed he grabbed the wire fence at the bridge entrance and pulled himself up to the bank. He then went down into the water to assist his wife, Mrs. Sauer and oTRersT”" “ ““ and Thursday The Class A I'i-son, an attractive redhead, “rvej * * * ^ i “I saw I wasn’t bleeding so I League will play four nracliee I got some real dreqm girls on my told the officers and ambulance games tomorrow night. team back home in Texas,” she!. '^^o was attend Lgjj ing the golf tournament With Mr. The bottom four teams in the ' ’ * * land Mrs. Bob Nichol of Pontiac. Class AjiircuH - Elks 810, Moni-j ^ ____ rebounded walking behind pro golfer Jo catti Chryslof - Plymouth, 300 men to remove some of those who were,” she said. Nichol, who was several yards Bowl and Howe’s Lanes — will! iheir worst- begln a playoff next Sundav to f dctermln. which will repicenl,"' Ibeir test P*'ff»r™nc.aBam»t| Ann Prentice when the 200-foot-*^Phind the women, had just the city in the state Cla.ss D soft- weekend, losing only ■ ball compelition, ■ |.^)8-47, Frances Davenport of yi.s- The township playoffs will be '«• won the javelin withi double elimination affairs with il"’ best throw of her life — 166| all teams eligible. Play will con-fet'l 10''4 inches. I -‘^tinurwith donbleheaderR"Wr'anes-i^ American men beat Poland day through F'riday nights begin- 125-8.'! in the two-day Warsaw! people and a 600-pound golf cart 18 feet downward into five feet of water. Mrs, Nichol suffered scratches ning at 7 p.m. Only one more Class B contest is slated this week, w*(h tho' Tuesday winner playing Spencer Floor Covering Thursday. The playoffs will not affect the alignment of Waterford teams entered in, the state playoffs. Tonight’s city league action will have a Class B twin bill at Beaudette Park. First place Bob & Larry’s will meet First Church of the Brethren at 7 p.m. and Motorcar Transport vrlll meet Circle Inn at 8:30 p.m. A 7 o’clock contest at North-aide Park will pair Poponea’s Market and Jet Bar of the C I.«aguo, while Buettner’.* Bud & Lou’s will collide in the nightcap. , Playoff details for the three city loops have not been finalized. meet, taking firsts in all but four events, Tlie smashing triumph followed a paper thin victory over Russia. The teams flew into Copenhagen for a day of sight-seeing today before moving on to West Germany for weekend meets. The men cornpet)' in Hannover mid the women in Hraunschwclg. Special to The Pontiac Press - PORTLAND, Ore. - Paul Mexico and Gale Ensminger of Pontiac won first place in Inter- \ New Racing Series for WLYA Sailors The spring series of races ended at Watkins Lake yesterday and the summer series got under way with Chuck Morris. Glen Fries and Dave Green taking the honors itt the snipes. Pontiac Duo Places first Another area man, Murray Jacobs, 50, of Birmingham, was in Detroit Henry Ford Hospital with a fractured spine. His condition was considered serious but not critical. A snapped mooring for one of Western Girl Leads Wolverine Open finale MOUNT CLEMENS (iPt-Tba ab- Saturday’s naar-diaaatWr -abot breviated and delayed Wolverine Women’s Open Golf Toumdment went into Its final 16-hole round today with Kathy Whitworth out In front by two strokes at 136. Kathy, a Jal, N.M., girl who mediate Pairs free skating as was runner-up in nine tourna-the North American Roller Skat-!ments last year, took over the ing (Jhimipionships got uiider lead Sunday with a onc-under-par 64 for 16 holes par 65 in the $8,000 event at Hillcrest Country Club. Tfio lakt iwo rounds of,the original 54 hole tournament were cut to 16 holes because of the Clinton River footbridge collapse Saturday in which 46 persons were injured, among them Jo Anne Prentice, a contendef. fiTv socrnAi.i. iiTV'i, r 3 GAM 1 rirrt a)uii' 6 I Pon. Ml way here last night. Pontiac Rolladlurh picked up additional polhts in its attempt to win the team trophy for the ninth time in 10 years when Dennis Horrall mid Diane Gra.ssl placed second In the Intermediate free skating. Other opening nigtit winners were Louis Norton of Gardena, Calif., five-mile speed; and Keith Don Zannoth, Harm Gillen and Hunnels pnd Linda Mace of Ak-| which the bridge gave access, Norm I.,edwin were the top three >■*"'. Ohio, novl:'p dance, were eliminated from play, All winners In thistle, MeloPl)’ Money of Pontine was, «f Satiinlay’s SVores werg wiped For the .spring .series lop win lli.ird in ■.Invenile H Girls .slnglcss «>it. " • ^ III)' Holladiiim junior fours j(, hospitalized with leg:j'Kn*''Vir7M”m^ , Fred Brede 2nd and Dave Green learn ,o7 Itobiii White, Rwlland Aus and shaken up, gavg up the eJns*Min"'* 13rd, Gillen topped the IliistleiLund, Peggy Gmdiier and Ml-tournament. Her .condition class for the spring raceis. chael Leinke placed second. ? The Watkins bake regatta will The meet continues through Miiiwork ,5 II be held Aug, 17-18. I next Sunday. The 17th and 18th holes, to four birdies for her 64 Ip go with her opening 2-under-par., Friday on the complete course. The 138 total was two better than Betsy Rawls. Miss Rawjs shot a 63 Sunday after a first round 75. Clifford Ann Creed of Alexandria, La., shot a 63 for third place at 139. Jackie Pung of Hawaii and Sandra Spuzich of Indianapolis came in with the day's best rounds of 62 each for a tie at 140. Ruth Jessen of Bonsall, Calif., first roui’id leader, fell off with a six-over-par 71 for 146. the four steel cables supporting the bridge was blamed for its collapse. Miss Prentice, 30, Birmingham, lMa:;'^fofmionMrT§l^^ cuts and was shaken up, had to leave the tournament, in which she had been a leader. “It could have been a dis- aster,” said Frank Coluzzl I^cotribC of the I^cotrib County Sheriff’s Department. “There were ]ust> too many people on the bridge. That’s why It went down,” Woodrow W. Woody, founder of the Hillcrest club, said club officials were "appalled.” He said they were thankful the incident was no worse. The club was host to th4 same tournament in 1060 and had looked forward to making this yearitjevanL*auc II R ER RB S( Huriialda I., Duokwortli Buiming W, Olnddlna Bun Hwo&ioli Loot c( 2 0 0 0 Caah 4 2 2 1 ZImintr lb 4 0 0 0 J.Phimpa lb 3 12) Brinkmkn aa 4 1 1 0 Warl lb 2 0 1 « LkiidrIU) - ---- olnjfaU^g''^ 10 10 G?addl J 0 Fraahan a 4 RMan p 3 *’ b’Diomaa 3b 1 ralala 13 4 7 4 Talala 31 ( a -nil iteririca (ly lor Wart In -Ormiiidad out for tlraan lii 6(li aah^mn ........ E Idma oil 2'M2. ail), urn ........,................ 3B...|.andruh. CaaTi. IB—Praahaii. HR ; laaliiikma, Klni, caah. SP Browi). . ' fr H R ER BB So : i i S i i Rann w, 6-6.........6" r 4 4 » > P6P6ral>A ull'Jl,"' ‘l \ ■ \v ’.Aj LHE P0NTI4C PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 29, 1963 TWENTY-SEVEN Rirmer Pffl Gridders Go Well for BrowOs The Detroit Lions’ offerrslve unit won’t be able to forget Pontiac after this Saturday's intrasquad saimmage at Wisner Stadium. The following Saturday, Aug. 10 the Lions open their National Football league exhibition sea-son against tlif CleVeland13rbvma privately owned schools of its kind and is not connected vyith the Govern- “ciali'zed education r • experi-of these* jobs, you must pass a test. The competition is keen and in some DAY. You will also get full ' details on how you can prepare yourself for these tests. , Don't delay — ACT NOW! . LINCOLN SERVICE, Dept. 127 Pekin, Illinois I am very much interested. Please tend me absolutely FREE (1) A list of U. S. Government positions and salaries; (2) “information, on how to qualify for a U. S. Government Job. Name .. . .'........................................Age......... Street . . ........................... Phoiia ............... ... City ........................... State ......................... HONDA PRESENTS • 4 Strok* O.H.O. t< • SS to tg h.p. IS Tu.. Unlllon elootrlo stsrtor EASY TERMS ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE 230 E. Pike St. FE 2-8309 ■. ■ - The victory was the second on ; 74-7674;77-297i the PBA touF fov St. Joho. He 73-74-7676l297j^^ the Rockfopd, 111, ; 76767676: 2m1 two WCfiks HgO. ____________ thriftway Wins Accident Ridden Diamond Cup COEUR D’ALENE, Idaho 6FV-Bill Muncey and his Miss Thriftway sped to Victory In the Diamond Cup races for unlimited hydroplanes Sunday in a day marred by the disintegration of the Miss Exide. Muncey, last year’s national unlimited hydro champion, needed only to finish the final heat to win the trophy. He took fifth place in tlie lieat for his third straight Diamond Cup victory, The final heat was rerun after the Exide went to pieces sank during a duel with Muncey his boat. Driver Mira Slovak was thrown into the water unconscious and received facial lacerations, cuts on his right ankle and abrasions and contusions of the left thigh and knee Lt. Col. Warner Uardiun*, pilot of Miss Notre Dame, drov<> his craft near the wreckage, dove In and rescued Slovaks The Notre Dame tinlshe(| sixth lu the regatta. . I Sflfcond to Tlirlftway .was Tempo. 147 8. BoflnoOr Rtrr(>i FEdorol 4-9955 FOR SPACE ? Remodel! Build! All work dono by Crafftmon Fr*« doiign ••rvico or wO will build to • your plam. No Money Dqwn, f HA T*rmt. BARNARD CONSTRUCTION Pontjoc ~ FE 8-8733 AUTO SERVICE COUPON SPECIALS Clip >Em Out - Cart ’EirfiC-Ceunt Your Savingt BEST TERMS On Auto Service In This Area 20-"6 Mos. to pay Original Equipment Qut ANY MWFUR..... inlio I a pair DOUBLE VALVE ACTION ■ W SHOCKABSORBERSi^.. STEAM CLEAHING EHGIHE SPECIAL! 1. Staam Clean Engine SA95 2. Adjuit Brakei, All Four Wheeli iiiih 1% 3. Chech Fronf End Alignment, (OimoN ^ Complete Brake & Front End Special 095 A Correct Comber, Coiltr, Toe-In, Toe-out. A Ro-pock front Wheal Baoringt A Ad|u«l Brokai, Ag Four Wheel* A Check Balance of Front Wheelt A Road Te»t with this coupon Brake Adjustment 33‘ WHEEL BEARINGS REPACKED WITH Ah BY APPOINTMENT I BY APPOINTMENT 79' GOodyOT SERVICE STORE \v I i.. f'K I :-/:K TWENTY-EIGHT THE PQNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JtJLY 29, 196$ Confident Beginning 11': BEN CASEY ^art Plan Now for Success in College By DR. LESLIE J. NASON Those often disastrous first weeks of college can be approached with confidence by a I student who gets . *in some home-^^|work early. I For several summers past I The chief hazard for college freshman is that he is on his own: Parents are not on hand to supervise his studies. No one is there to chide him if he fails to turn in his work. Coliege professors do not outline every step, as high school teachers do, but they give care-fullv prepared lectures that make school techniques of .quick revie.wieach word as you hear it. This ........................... ■ s.b - ' ....... leg e freshmen'^^ , ,, j * ri i ' - • likely to be lulled into a false sense of security. Air this time the freshman is surronded by tempting distractions — football games, sorority andTraternTty^ parTies and rushing activies, new friends and new ^ off to a runningl start. Later, theyi [^■not only took the UBfirst ihitidll ^^ weeks of school DR. NASON in stride, but en-| Joyed their courses and succeed- and cramming are not adequate, will prepare you to begin liaten-In this first time of crisis, many |ing and undjerstanding inunedi-a freshman discovers that hisjately. w'ork in those first weeks does Students who contplain that not measure up to college re-*‘Nothing happens during the first quirements. |few class periods” are not ready As a result, some drop out of for listening. Plenty happens. Cot school, and others scramble | lege instructors start lecturing around for new study methods the first day. Be ready! struggle to brjng up their ed in them. The vacation tinfe entertainmenl oppqrWnilies. they invested in preparing for Then of a sudden comes the their new educational experience day of reckoning. Midterm ex-proved to be some of the fhost aminations iMm in all subjects, valuable they ever spent. For college'work,^ the old high the problem before the start of school. 4 Here are the essentials of what tell the freshman I help; 5-STEP PLAN At least a month before the opening of college, {^et copies of textbooks in some of tbe courses you will take. If possible, get the books you will be using. These may be available in^your local library: your librarian will, helg you in your selection. JACOBY On WiSSe way. You will then be ready to understand tte summary of If you will be required to tike 1 generar course t and Civlliiatio ” In some colleges,) outline the first chapter. Use the short sentence type of outline. Btudy the geography of the regions discussed. Picture the events in your mind. Plan to make Outlines ahead of the lectures throughout the If any text appears too diffi-cutt, find other more elementary materials which will give you s better background. Your librar- Study each^boolrin e general" ian rwiil belp you with ^his also. ♦ AtJM V8«_____ im^ 4KQ9T2 BAST A4 WQJIOTI ♦ 833 4AJ18 AK10932 VS3 ♦ AK9 A10 8 4 fOUTH (D) A875 WAK04 ♦ QJ106S ♦ 8 Both vulnerable Weet North Cut -PUM-' lA'....1 Double Pau -Paai and South took his second high heart. Now South led a heart and ruffed in dummy, whereupon the roof lell on^iim. EasToverruffed with the nine andi led a spade for West to ruff. West led a trump right back. As far as he knew his partner had opened the bidding and w a s clearly marked with good diamonds. East took the . trick with the king and gave his parther another spade ruff. This left poor South down one and he still had to lose a heart and a trump for an 800-point loss. the course usually presented by the college instructors the first day. Read the first chapter. Learn all the new words. Say them aloud over and over. Bring up a. Some students go all the * way back to books for children in DRIFT MARLO Bv Dr. I. M. Levitt, Toni Cooke and Phil Evama mental picture of the meaning of'Post Office, N.Y.C.) JACOBY By OSWALD JACOBY Sometimes it pays to keep your eyes and ears open, but once in a while yoil will do better by being partially . unconscious during the bidding. West did not hear North’s openlng ’club bid and he thought, that his partner had open^ onej spade and South had stuck in an overcall. Even so West had no clear cut bid, but he decided to double and hope for the best and the best sure happened. West opened the four of spades and South decided to play dnnuny's Jack. East won with the Uttg and while East kiiew he could give his partner an immediate riiff, Esft was looking for, better things. Be did not know exactly what* Was going on, but he assumed that his partner had heard the opening bid and East led the three of hearts. Q—The bidding has been; East South West North !♦ IV lA 2V 2A ? " You, South, hold: 42 VAQJTTSS 44 AAK981 . What do you do? A—Bid four no-trump! If your partner holds an aee you Want to play the hand at six. It he doesn’t hold an aeo the ohsnees are that yon wonld be forced to five hearta In any event. TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of bidding two spades East jumps to four spades. What do you do now? South won and played the eight of clubs. West thought a while and decided to rise with the ace. Then West led the queen of hearts ‘Astrological! Tl'jf * ’ ♦ Forecast ? .4 '* ■it Ry SYDNEY OMARR ..RIBS (MaTrT Sr to Am .. for mitidns lans-rsnt* doolali pprtnnl that vour conaludon, , rVo-rrH^n t gSfSi'i ’rAt^o's M«y 3ot; some prcKiiurea ItA lii runnooUen with partner. Ship or legal matter. Attaml to deUlle saraonatty. Concmitrate on BTRENOTH, QUALITY raUier than Ouah and >pei*d. - OhSHSiNI ■ (May 21 to Jim* 21) i important that you check public rcecttoii to plan ’^htefo InforCTtB yoii^^^Mociu»^^ ai> f*Uow'a*^*d!ac«.' »* Inmk^'^wiiii 'mcmbi'r VaW rjjnc 22 to July 2U: Striv. for Impartial Judgment, eniioilnlly In ponneotlim with romance, rclaiion# wllli fellow worker*. Lean over to iicnmiiuo-date one who require* aid. YOur help Will ‘‘pay ofi“ In future. LBO "July 22 to Aua. 21); lie wlllluit to ll»ten;. But. aleo .try^ to b* heard. fc? Xnn.tfa^. •ty’ntmfc-'ltprS.?!! foHBS? toner voice. Be ready to act ®*LIb'|Ia (Sept, 23 to Oct. 22) reach um far today, you coi “irt mm ‘“reeourcer mSenlKi app!!c*™lo*\»otl*"V®u^^^^ IniBlm*** * SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 211; Po,; Stole now to no »«»r what ynu want blldw^^ro^. Vpur goal •tohl.l Be urtsInK. eonlment. linportont null. Don'f penult emotic ■trennth of ccnvlotion* now win* niemi*, i;v'oJrt Heed rtawple *et by SAdiTt'Aimm j)»«*llil!ltl»».*' ^ tilVII jllii'' hlay^"lo^'' lii'lef. lfi*n**/ollVw'llT'**'. out,proi(r«m If nmn^ 'ig^yoim bihthwav , ymi are warnvi hav« flair for com-— “eBtferful at laMtral Y«alare* Carp. I ‘ I ' I ‘j ^ ‘I* , ‘ 'V ' I ^ ‘ ' * THE PONTJAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 2ft, 1963 TWENTY-5JINE MARKETS The following are top prices covering aalea of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quotattons are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets ..s of Product . ApM«i. OuohMi .............. .......y}.50 ApplH. (r»ni|M>rMt, (r * amtb*rria«, eratc .. Cherries, iweel. erete ..............I.OO :^ipterrlie,**at pt.' eriite......... Oirrets. dos. beh.......... cerrots, topped, bu. ... Ceulinower, am. Celery, vblte ............. Celery, Peacel .... Corn, sweeti ( doi. beg . -------mil lilokle ........ point or more. Airlines were particularly active. Eastern Airlines advanced than a point and National Airlines was up 1^4 on the expectation that their traffic will pick up as a result of Northeastern Airlines’ loss of its Florida routes. Trading in Northeastern was held up on the American Stock Exchange because of an influx of sell orders. It opened off 1^. Abbott Laboratories spurted 7 , long typb, I Onjoni, dry,'M lb.’’.' Onions, I..... ...... Onions, pickling., lb. Pnrsley. curly, boh. . Pnrsley. root. bob. .. ?SS SS _, Pototoes. new. 50 lb. b ' Hqussh. Summer. >/ii bu. ....... Tometoes. hothouse. 8 lb. bsk. . Tomatoes, outdoor......... .... Turnips, bu...................... Turnips, loppod, bu. ...\........ ... 1.50 ... 1.50 .51.25 Kale. bu. ............... Mustard, bu........ Turnips, bu. ................... .. I -- LKTrUCjS AMn MUD OBEKNS Celery, cabbage .................... j XI: HS'eached'';:::::;::::::::;:: 1 BiOBroie, ‘ Lettuce, bead. do*. " Poultry and Eggs pound at Detroit Iqr No. 1 quality fry*''* *’* ">» I'hltes heavy type young Oommenta; Market about steady. Light receipts of White Rock cleared readily. Trjuling In turkeys only. lair and prices 1 liistunee Moderate Trading Stocks Make Fractional Gains NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market inched ahead early this afternooi...................... trading. lints to lllW on a belated open- U. S. Steel was unchanged and Bethlehem and Republic dipped. ^Chc^ler atjded nearly a point Most changes of key issues were fractional. A few gains ran to a poit ing following announcement of ratelv active plana to merge with 0. D. Searles. Agyg{](S0g (,y ■ - fractional. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was ahead .5 at 265.3 with industrials up .3, rails up .3 and utilities up .5. , Xerox advanced 4 points and U. S. Smelting picked up 3 to d new high for the year, international Business Machines added 2. Chicago Yellow Cab, an active performer recently, moved’ up better than 2 points. bit and Fffl'd eased..’ Boeing and Checker Motors The government chiefs iff liidd-gained a point. --- . . ........ Prices were mixed on the American Stoctc Exchange in quiet trading. Gainers included Canadian Ravelin, General Plywood, Ohio Brass and Paddington. Corporate and U.S. Government bonds were up. American Stock Exch. American Hospital dropped ^kw york iapi - Amarioan stock fractionally on a big block of 41,- shares. Also in the losing column was South Puerto Rico Sugar off more than 2 points. Cotig Mug .. Creole Pet .. Imp . Imp Tb Ca . 4.1 Kaiser Indus . 24.3 Mead John ... 42 Musk P Ring . The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORE (API-Pollowlng U AbbottL 2.20 ABCVon -50b AOPInd 2.50 Admiral Air Rad 2.50 AJIndui .2lt AleoProd .40 AllegCp llg AllegPw 1.00 AlliadCU 1:81 Allied Str 3 AlllsOhal .50 AlumLtd .60 Alcoa 1.50 AmeradaP 2 AmAlrlln ' tin 1 I .504 AmBdPar lb Am can 2 AmCyan 1.80 A HnPw 1,08 AmFP .84 ‘ MPd .00 l^tlo 2b iPhOto .33 ASmelt 2.80 7 WVs 18H 1844 — Vk .3B^ 53 - 83V5 tm- ’/t 5 3!4 3H 3^ - W 5 22'/a 23>/4 22>/k f •/• 2 0% 0% 9% 4 , 3«’4 36411 364s 6 40% 40% 40Vs 26 4T’/s 47% 47% 84 SO'/s 40% 80 J8 18% 18% 18% 8 .23Vt 53% 23% IJ 83 81%- SlVt '21 05% 86% 66% , .. 38 25% 55% 25% 0 14% 14% «%-—% 5 61% 61% 81% - % 20 38% 28% 38% ~ % 31 44% 44% 44% 50 88 87 % 58 48 .37% 37‘/s 37% 0 15% U 15% 50 50 10% 10% 47 37% 37% 37% 40 15 ' 17% 18 4- % 51 41% 40% 41% + % 1 65 55 65 53 0% 0% 0% , .. 5 75% 77% 75% + % 68 17 18% 16% — % 120% 118% 110% Am Tob 1,50 70 28% 36 *- Vlso 2 20 87% 81% 67% + % .„.JIno ,50b 3 18% 18% 10% 4- % AMP Ine- 40^--------4- 30% 30% 30’/s 4. ^ DCiTROIT iKKig llnpludlng U.8.,. Whites Qrade t largo 36-45; ------ small 17-51 Ampax Cp AmpBorg .80 Anaoon l.sog AnkonCh ,40” ArmcoOt 3 Armour 1.40 ^-30% 18% 18% - Ogg prlce.4 paid! largo '36-42TTa7ie*4ll'i40'’V^^^^^ 3”^"^ sni!'", ----- .....4' larii*'none;’^*Urge^ 3i-“'l\S!| A«Ref s"?© medium 30; amall 18; checks 21-35. Atlas Cp Oommenta; Market uiMetUed as Mioee Aut Cant trended lower. Trading improved In Avco Ci) .1 some quarters but still conslnered only Avnet ,40b fair. Supplies of Urge sleei adequate. Medium well eleered. | CHIOAOO BUTTER AND E008 | CHICAOO (AP) — Chleagt Exchange — Buttey stoedy: Fi6T‘"Va'*67%'''’''”‘’*“‘' ” ..........I Beckman fe ^ ^ To ”-TB about steady; wholesale buying ,*'19 I unehangert 4o-% htghorr 70 per H^f OUet .Olg or better grade A white; 33%; BestwaU .Off piisrd 33%; mediums 30; standards 20%; Beth Sti i 50 dirties 15%: oheoks 25. * CHIOAOU POIILTBY CHICAaO I* (U8DA1 — Live poultry; Wholesale buying prices unchanged: Roasters 35-35| tpeclal fed White Rock fryers 1|.20; Barred Rdok (ryero 51. OHIOAOO POTATOES 0 EGOS I 0 Mercantljejg; 'j Wholesale „ 45 17% 18% 16% 10 647/s 54% 84% - 2 41% 41% 41% n '83>% 62% 83% .... 13 - 83%- 82%- 82% -t ■% 44 2% 2% 2% . i*3 a: 13 17% 17 17 . —B— I 0 331 prices^ U demanti sail"' Livdttock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT 141 - IDSDA) — 3,000. Diifk early sUpply steeri ood and choice slaughter Ifers moderately active I Ipwer, full decline or nqderntely,, active, full! s high choice and hly ^hrlsCft .8lt TT Pin i CIcvElIll r3i CoegCol 2.76 "-•iPal 1,30 ColaPal 1,20 ».'r”' CbmIROl ;l choice r steady ft choice with end of nr (leers 25.75; most cnc .. 35,50; .good to low choice steers 32.25-54.35:-few lots choice hellers 23 - T" " Utility cows 14.50-15.60; canners eutters ll.m-14.50. Hogs OOlNBarrowi, gllti and •<>»» eteady 5 head U.H. 1 311 lb. barrows and gilts 30.00: several lots mostly 1 200-330 lb 10.58: I and 3 ............... 10.50-10.76, 3 and :i 3 100-3: 10.40, few lots 3 and 3 15-te.50; 1. 3 and 3 300-400 it -15.75: few 818-200 lb weights 11.00; 5 and 3 400-000 lb sows 14.7616,16; f— 556-390 lb weights 17.00; 3 end 3 41 100 lb 13.25-14.50. boars tl.25-14.00. Vealers 300 r steady to strong t 1.00 higher oRolce' and prime 27-; stdndard and good 20-27, mill and ut Ity 13-30. Sheep 600 - slaughter elasses ateaf,,. .......... - clinlce and prime spring .lamlis 31,75- OoiiEI Inil I m gnMOae 3- f?,iw«7.‘'’i;[o.ri:.s'’r'’ri«iTTrtdI? lbs; sows about steady; shippers Copper R ; 50 per eant of ealable supply: 1-2 OornPd 1.40 826 lb butohdrs 10.50-10.75; around I Crane Co 2 head at tOja and *5 head at 10.55;Icrompt l.oo mixed f-f ilO-280 lbs 19,28 10,50; 1-3 250- Crow C 80t MO tbl 15.75.10.I5; load around 300, lbs CrnEell 1.80 Ig.OO: 1-3 , 109-380 lb sows I0.75-I6.00; Cruo fltl .50 foad 515 fba XI.55 : 350-400 lbs i5.'75-I5.75; (^riahy Pk W 4So-4» Ibi 4,76.16,15: 460-600 Ibi^?,fub 14.50.16.0(0 500-500 lbs 13.50.14.50,,, Ig5f{ \ Cattle <3.000; calves 100; trading onr"" ‘ ...—I slow, uneven, weights weak to 36 lower; —— 80 iower; weights h.|R.r, jvavipeioi 4.00.7,00, rootsM .10 Ford M 1.50 ForemD 40 FoetWh .37g FreeptS 1.50 Fruehf 1.50q 4 22% 22% 22% — 40 41% 41 dtVi ... 2 0% 0% 0% + 70 51% 81 51 — 8 0% .9% 9% ... ■'•8 27 88% 35% — 15 25% 28% 25%— OamSk 1.2O1 O Acoept 1 Q' pynam Gen Ellec 3 Oen Foods 3 a Mills 1.20 2 33% 33% 33% — Vs 1 10% 10% 10% 86 26% 34% 36% OTelARl .80 OenTlre .40 Oa Pao lb -sttyou ,i0g ..llette i.TOg OlenAld .50 Goodroh 2.20 Goodyear 1 Grace Co lb OrandU .60b GranCS ‘ — _ ...................... 34% 34% Gen Mot 2a 166 60%-.60% 60% .. OFreCn 1.20 10 36% 18.; 26 - % -------- „ ,.y 5,^ ... 40 23% 12 40V. ... ... 32 25% 24% 3450 - X21 34 33% 33% + 20 14% 14% 14% — 32 48% 47% 46 ... 105 34 % 34 34% 4- 33 43% 43% 43 e. 12 17% 17% 11% ... ______ .... 12 26% 26% 26% + ltA8iP t.20a - gl3 48 44% 44% . ItNoRy 3 7 51% 51 51% 4l>/ 12 30% M5l! Soli + V 20 44% 44 Oryhd 1.30b Orumn i.50 Gulf MAO 2 GlfOll 1.80 Gulf SU 1.15 I 37% 3 i 37% - HenJdr 30k . Herts 1.50 Hewlett Pk .. „ 47% 45 7 37% 37% 37% + -iH— 13 34% 34% 14% .. . I3 -J6. . .3154- 35% .^ " 47% 46% ‘ I 31% i I 21% + Homceft 1.50 , Hook a> lb ' HoueeJUiJt , Houstoii ' HoweSd 20% 20% 30%—'Vi 0 7% 7% 7% -I- % 15 51% 61% 51% — % 2 36% .35% 36% ~% 30 81% ’665i 67% ..... 15 ■OO'ti A5 — ilOent ind 3 III < 18 SSh |o% 30^ 18 iSlIl 13 13% “ 32. 60 65% 6H% a 16 335', 3354 3354 - 13 0454 04 04'4 - 6 44% 4454 44% I 16 26% 26% 26% I II 8% 8% 85i -41 81% 81% 81% ... .... .... 18 2054 38'/, 3854 coipior r.27f—T2 3r,4 235, 33% ComlOre 1.80 13 43<% 42% 42% -------- :?omEd 14 40% 45>, t ‘iM.a.5 /, - % "IS ... gs r S? ^ ; IS r* 23iiS IS 15?.......... MMHWX wyiMiia K'S^ouWpM ...liHSilKfi enorn aleughter ewes 4,00-5.50. End John DOW-JDNM NOON AVRAOEr^^ ^ ' ''V ' riS"T ’i'-S £ mneke ...! t48.3l4)0.ll[P>ntteei .10 , lx 11% 17'.', 17% ,i % ■ONDM . F*>l% 04 04 4 8 13 11% 12 5 28% 285, 8S"4 1 lg-"37%“T75lr27'Nf-2 18% 18% 18% ... 8 104 103% 104 -- Natillsa NOaehR 1.30 NOalry 2.20 NatDIit 1.20 NatFuel 1.30 Nat Oen NatOyps 2b NUa^d^^2.36y^ NEngEl 1.12 NYCent ,33e ^kW* ^ NbAmAVIt^ 43 83'', 82% 82% 32 37'% 36*4 37% 12 70% 70% 70% —N— 13 51% 61% Bl"i 33 15% 15% 15% 0 05% 06% -05%. 1 6454 64V« 54% , 15 3l|/s 3154 3154 X it .... .... 31% + % 5 11% 11 a —54 10 44% 44% 44%...... 38 73% 72% 73% 4- % ^ SSItv It 34 53% 52% ( 5 115 117% 11 Nnrthrp 1 Nwst Alrl 1 Norton 1.20 Norwich la It "I .44% 45 + it s'.% s’-;t tit 4 35% 31% 30% lUo Ed 1.70 31 47 4554 OtteBI QuIMi ar .30g leltl 3.M IS ’JSit i ^54 Pao OAB 1 PaoTAT 1.20 PanAAir .80. EaramPlot 3 .. .... 75% 75%-H —p—:., 25 3154 31% 31% ...-5 31% 31% 31% .... ParkeD 1 37 peehcoai .7 0 7 .... j;xrA‘r3S ...:r;T3 Phlla BU l.“ - .... 31'.. ____________ 113 37% 37% 37% 4- % I 41% 41% 41% -• % - —' --1 35% 4- % ■"l 3'4% 34% V4%“ er 17% 17% 17% .. r;: lilt silt l SJtt jtlt s« t' V" ...Maviiob U iii^iSitir ........ PliliMor* 3.I0 PhllllpsPet i •Olardld .20 02,4'Ti3 'HvKG 2.40 %-r 2720 5j 1?% SS%”.. Net PureOil 1.50 .. . , STIt lit I ,Vti 172 23 31% 32% 4 3 1354 13% 13% 2 ie'% 15% 16% 4- 10 40'^a 4olt 5o% - 8 3754 31 37% .. 21 3l<% 31 31%— 58 37% J71V 37 % + 14 15% 14% 15 ... 33 43’A 43V« 43% — % 11. 23% ,23,% 33% 4- % nesia, Malaya and the Philippines gathered today for a summit meeting called to head off South-easf^sla’s cold war over the proposed Federation of Malaysia. President Sukamo of Indonesia arrived tor Tuesaay’s summit afe ter pledging to wreck the Malaysia plan unless his terms are met. iPrime Minister Tunfer Abdul Rahman of Malaya, committed to forming the Malaysia Federation Aug. 31, arrived two hours later. President Diosdadd Macapagal of the Philippines proposed the conference. The immediate problem is the formation of Malaysia, embracing Malaya, Singapore, Sarawak and North Borneo, all former or present British territories. LARGER ISSUE RCA 1.40. Rayonler 1 ReW?C....... RepubAv 1 Repub 8tl '3 Revlon 1.10b Rexall .59b ReynMet ,50 ReyTob 1.50 Rheem Mfg RlehlOll 1.50 Royal MeB i- 47% 47% — % StRe|^4.40l SanDlm .531 11 87% 87% 87Vs 14 . 33% 33%. 33% .4 3 3454 24V; 2454 - Schick SCM .43 SoottPap “--‘‘AL SeabAi SI 1.30 a .51g «f 1.70 AO 1 Smlt^K 1.20a 17 11% 11% 11% . 17 31 20% 31 4 % 17 35% 38% 35% 4- % a 0'% ovt '2% X35 1054 lO'A 10% 17 3354 33'% 33'/s 12 36% 35% 39'/i . . 16 87 % 87. 57 — % 4 7% 744 754 — % 38 44% 43'/4 43% ..... 4 33% 23% 33'/» -% 172 45'/, 46 45% 4- % 10 73% 73% 73% 4- % lOain 1.05 . jthne 1.60 SouNatOas 2 SouPac .L40 Sou Ry 2.80 la w SquareD 1.20 . 30 6254 60% 60'/« .... 34 31 30% 31 4. % . 8 85'/, 86% 68% -.J54. 16 81'A 80% 81'' • ^ 24 53 83 63 50 1454 14 14% . 0 27'/, 27 21 ■ 7 46%' 45»4 4554 14 12% 71% 72% 11 13% 13'/« 13'/, 43 66 65'4 6554 30 00% 5051'- 60 80 60% 605', 60"/, I 64% 04% 64% 15 32 32 32 23 25%' 25% 3B'>4 34 36% 30% 36'/4 160 854 6 % 6% - % 118 35% 34% 38 - % 15 40% 40 ......... —T— 108 1054 10'4 10'4 — 54 81 71% 71% 71% 18 57V, 67% 87'4 47 15 14% 14% 32 74% 7354 73% 33 65% 65 ill IS. ■All «. trlbuted, " TVery. 'j- -tn bankruptcy being reorganir--' — reeel verahip or ____ the Bankruptay aoumed by eiich — let Cliengi mti Mon aafle IV. Day li.l IM.6 88 8 00.1 , 84.4 ek Ako 81.8 160.0 88 8 80.4 84.1 nth Ago 88.1 100.2 18 7 60.4 64,4 Y .T1IK .riSof** m ui i%&v,;h m m mg; 1662 Low 76.1 85' 7 80.6 81 ) Gi In Downtown Business Urge Job Bias Action Officials of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce and Downtown Pontiac Business Association (DPBA) informally agreed- Of the 1,127 employes to 64 business establishments su^ vqyed, only 103 are Negroes,” said Clifford J. Officer, conunit^ tee chairmanv “Fnrthermere, only 26 ef these 103 are employed in positions above janitors, maids or general maintenance,” Officer said. < program after hearing results of Negro employment The survey was conducted by the Business and Industry Committee of the Oakland County Chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). no Negro sales personnel to the store. recommendations The committee recommended that both the chamber and DFUA publicly endorse “fair and equal employment and upgrading of eihploy6s without regard to race, color or creed.” ieTepdff pointedTb^larlng examples/of /wMtN^roc^^ merit” in white collar and s^s jobs at “several downtowiLclotb" Ing stores which derive a very high percentage of Negfd trade.” Commenting on these “glaring examples,” Officer said, “we found some stores that have 30 to 70 per cent Negro trade and steps be taken to correct to-equalities which exist to^ thr employing of “qualified Ne-froes” and that future meot^ togs he arranged to report on progress being made. Max Adams, manager of the chamber, urged action on the matter. Says Administration ‘Commitments aren’t worth a nickel,” he said. “What we need a program of action and-mdn " who will act to improve this condition.” / Won't Ask Debt Hike Unless new legislation is enacted, the legal limit on the debt will drop to its permanent level of $285 billion on Sept. 1. ‘Current estimates indicate that the debt will be about $307 billion on Aug. 31, $22 billion above Its permanent level,” Dillon said. “It is obvious that ac-must be taken.” Hopes Slim Mart Dufies to Go Lower Both Adams and Monroe Oi-mun, DPBA president, pledged support of such a program. Osmun said the DPBA board of directors wohid actively work for “a more equitable distribution of Negro employment in the doTvutown area. _ OlheiMbustoess IfeadeiT atto^ in^ the 10 a.m. meeting also pledged support and agreed to arrange a progress meeting with Negro leaders in about a month. Tije fiscal facts today, however, are much brighter than the administration had anticipated only three months ago. Treasury officials had predicted that the current (iebt limit-of $309 billion would he pierced during toe last few days of August unless action Was taken by Congress to boost the limit. ‘In recent months, said, “we have had the unusual and most gratifying experience of finding almost all of the changes from our estimates moving in the same direction — toward a lower budget deficit and an improved cash position.” Dillon noted that the federal government would end the last fiscal year on June 30 with a defl-cit of $6.2 billion - $2.2 billion Charles Tucker Jr., a member of the NAACP committee; said that regardless of th« survey results he felt “there has always existed a good spirit of cooperation between the Negro and white communities to Pontiac. There are certain elements in the Negro community who virould prefer stronger measures, like a boycott, but this committee felt it best to sit down ,®nd talk over the situation,” Tucker said. BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP)-The six foreign ministers of the European Common Market nations gathered in Brussels today for a two-day meeting, with prospects dim that they will decideiless than had been forecas to lower duties on Imports of U.S. j May 1. frozen poultry. / He said that tax revenues dur- ing the last fiscal yaar totaleid The United States has warned it will retaliate with higher tariffs if the Common Market does not cut its levy on American chickens. Higher tariffs might 'hit anything from German industry to French luxury goods Foreign ministers of France, West Germany, Italy, The Netherlands,'Beligum and Luxembourg are meeting with their ministers of agriculture to discussThe issue. Earlier this month, the agricultural ministers decided against a cut, but the foreign nilnisters’ council has the last word. French and West German sources have indicated that nq cut in duties—now 13.5 cents ai pound -will be possible. The French argue that the six nations are building up a common farm policy, and that agricultural matters can be discussed only on a reciprocal basis with the United .States In the larger framework of the “Kennedy round” of tariff negotiations next yea^. The six also were to discuss the procedure for future quarterly meetings between the Common Market and Britain within the framework of the West European Union, which has its secretariat in London. almost $900 million above expectations and spending dropped $1.3 billion below anticipated levels. Business Notes James 0. Wright, of Bloomfield Township, former Ford Motor Co. Vice president to charge of car and truck divisions, has joined a West Coast electronics firm. Wright, of 6100 Wing Lake, will be consultant to LKtoB Industries cn TorWard planning in seliscted fields. He left Ford in May The six will also seek agreement on a common economic policy towards the Soviet bloc. News in Brief sion of Amertoan Oil Company’s! means to take good care of marketing technical service de-fhem. John Noonan, 3S95 Lawrence, Waterford Township, told police yesterday that a spare tire and wheel valued at $<30 were stolen from his car parked in the driveway. partmenl. He started with the firm in 1949 as a salesman in Flint, now TTvies in La Orange, III. trend nr staple phiceh new YOR K (API Tim Anani'lalail -1 walilitN wl • ■ immoriltlaa. Pl'»vlou« Day 168,71, W»»k Al ; - I 14.37 15.M OHIfAGO GRAIN lifavy whli* >lt« *7'^,-, ,Nt ,182.77 166A4 I .161.08 100,68 H at« tqUalt 100) ,*Br’ Treasury Position DriiohllB (Inui July I lT(6a! ” *l>( " Uoli) aaa*t4 a DJ»M..5.^Davl5ra2 Rat* r)a5 Haitor# abU REGULAR . vp.. J:T?3:J!!!! , '’?X: John Klnzler, 18 Salmer, is now handling #homes, new multiple - dwelling and business-property accounts ‘for Kalmpsen ^Realty & Building Co., 1071 West luron. He h a s 2 0 years realty experience in the KINZLER Pontiac sren before recently joining the firm. Raymond B. Wells, former Pontiac resident, has been named manager of the automotive divi- r»%,“#■% t Investing iMii f # By Roger e. spear Q. “We wilt have $7,000 maturing in E bonds in August and September. My wife Is 72 and I’m 77, We own qur home and have something over |6r 000 in savings accounts. Outside of our Social Security, we have no other assets except our heritage of general good nealto from sturdy ancestry. We need more income. We have no dependents, nor is there anyone to whom we can look for aid. How can we best add to our income?” J. 0. A. I have a number of clients with greater financial assets whh would give a good deal for your heritage of good health. With no dependents to think about, your best bet would be t annuity. If you left $2,000 in the savings bank for contingencies, you could buy for $14,000 about $1,400 year in annuity income which would be paid to you both — and something more or less, depending on age, to the onC who survives — for life. Q. “I am 34 years old with a wife and two young children. My Income Is $13,000 annually. have $25,000 life insurance nnd $5,000 in savings. We own our own home and I would like to buy common stock with an appreciation potential. What do you advise?” G. E. A, Please allow me to congratulate you on a fine family i Marlow H. llopp, 378 Voorheis, j has been promoted to appliance supervisor, electric and gaii, in Consumers Pow- er's Owosso (lis- I don’t know from your letter just lip'v >nuch you went to invest at this time, but assuma you will use perhaps half — and I suggest no more — of your savings account. Presumably you will want to educhte your children some years hence. I advise, therefore, that you Ignore yield and try to buy the most growth that can be ex- trlct. Hopp formerly was gas appli-a II« service foreman In Consumers Pontiac division, a host he held since 1965. He Joined the company In 19.34 as an operator at the CtMilldgo plant in itoyai Oak pected over a period of ten yeors. HOPP juT" ‘! Uoltl • ' " "'uAliUaTV'111! 3.748.166,771 16.167,047.441 Recently re-elected vice president of Detroit Chapter of the I National Assudintion of Account-'iaiits was, lASon E. Jackman, !| Beach, Birmlngliam^ He Is ai Ijant treasurer and controller of ’ Holly ('url)urotor. Co, For this objective, I suggest Franklin I.lfe Insurance, which has complied a splendid record and wliich should continue to do well over a period of time. Mr. Spear cannot answer all mail personally "Ijut will answer all questions possible in his column. (COPYRIGHT 19U1 Nft CItani* ' /I'/' ■'■T jr :■ THIRTY THR PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, t'. Deaths in PonfiaCj, Neighboring Areas EARL J. FIKE Service for Earl J. Fike, 75, of 6736 Cloverton, Waterford Township,.will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the’Decker Methodist Church, Vjncent de Paul Church, with 'Decker. Burial will follow in Vial at Mt. Hope Ceinetery. Moshier Cemetery, Lamott Township. Mr. iFike died Saturday after a brief illness. His body is at Miss Schmitz died Sunday at Carnal Hall in Detroit. She was a member of St. Vincent de Paul Church. Marsli Funeral Home, Marlette. A retired farmer, Mr. Fike was a member of Decker Lodge ; No. 479, F&AM. Surviving are aMbn, Stanley and a daughter, Mrs. Euing Keith-botlTTBf Waterford Township; a sister, Mrs. Priscilla El-well of Pontiac; a "grandchild and two step-grandchildren. JOHN J. HARRIS V ' Service for John J. Harris V, two-month-old son of Mr; and Mrs. Albert J. Harris of 61 E. Rutgers was at 11:15 a.m. today at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, with burial at Mt. Hope Cemetery. John died Saturday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following a long illness. Surviving are his parents and a brother Keith A. of Pontiac. MRS. LEE WELLS tovice for Mrsr Lee (Adah)’ Wells, 87, of 2606 Winkleman, Waterford Township, will be 3 p m. Wednesday at BossardelrFu-neral Home, Oxford. Burial will follow in the Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. Wells died Sunday after a brief illness. She was a member of the Christian Church, Pontiac. Surviving are a son, John A. Oreen of Pontiac, and two grandchildren' and five great-grandchildren. MONROE C. HILTY Service for Monroe CL^HUty^ MRS. JOHN V. COOKSON TROY — Service for Mrs. John V. (Pearl) Cookson, 56, of 948 Rochester, will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Clawson Methodist Church, Clawson. Burial will be in Oak-view Cemetery, Royal Oak. Mrs. Cookson died Saturday after a long illness. Her body win be at Price ^neral Home here until noon tomorrow; 56, of 489 East Mansfield will be at 1 p.m. Wednesday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial at White Chapel Cemetery. Mr; Hilty was dead on arrival Sunday at Beyer Hospital in Ypsilanti following an auto accident. He was a supervisor at Pontiac Motor. Surviving are his wife, Marion E.,. two sons, James M. and Robert, both of Pontiac and three daughters, Mrs; J. C. Ward of Long Beach, Calif., Mrs. H. R. Bateman of Arcadia, Calif., and Mrs. Walter Jeffreys of Waterford Township. Also sj^viving are. three sisters, Mr^ Charles Kistner of Pontiac, Mrs. Marvin Moser of Bluffton, Ohio and Mrs. Eileen Rieter of Ada, Ohio. Shei was a -member-of -^eri-can Legion Auxiliary No. 167, Clawson, and the Troy Election Surviving are her. f a t h e r, Charles L. Haskins Sr. of Troy; four brothers, Elmer of Cleveland, Ohio, William J. of Sandusky, Howard C. of Troy and Charles L. Jr. of Royal Oak; and two sisters. IRVIN FARAUSZ TROY — Irvin Faralisz, 43, of 56 Harris, died unexpectedly early today of a heart attack. His body is at Price Funeral Home. 1 minor child e To Clemmy Roieri said minor child. Petition ‘— *----- ...... unknown and »u._ ________ __ -law of the State and thai should be placed under the In the name of the people ............. of MIchliian. you are hereby notified that the hearing on said, petition will be held at the Court House. Oakland County Service Center, In the City of Pontlao In said County, on the Ith day of August A.D. 1»63, at 1:30 o’olook In the afternoon, and you are hereby commanded to appear personally at said It being Imnraotlcal to make perstmal service hereof, this summons aiid notice ie week previous to said hearing he Pontlao Press, a newspaper prtni Id circulated In said county. Witness, the Honorable Norman ... Barnard, Judge of said Court, In the City of i»ontlac In sard'county, 'this sith - -----y A.D. I«63. NORMAN R. BARNARD >y) Judge of Probate DELPHA A. BOUOINE Deputy Probate Reglste STATE OF MICHIGAN - e DIvIslo Ing Bui 14*30. e petition c Cause Sablock, father of said Petition having been filed In this Court aMegIng ^^mat^ thf ------‘ ---- Jurisdiction of Ibis Court. In the name of the people of the State Michigan, you are hcrebg^^notincd use. Oakland , the City of n the 8th day 1M3, , 1:31 poraonally at ss .shall"'be served b,. ,........... - . .. one week previous to said hyarlng In The Pontiac Presj. a newspaper printed mesa, the Honorable Ilorman R. ... ........., BARNARD Judge of Probat niBI.PMA A. nouoiNR Deputy Probate Reglste ADVERTISEMENT TOR BlDf The Board of Education of the t l.ake Consolidated Schools will t e drilling of ■ CHARLOTTE T. SCHMITZ Service for , former' ,Pontiac resident Oiarlotte T. Schmitz, 83; will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. JOHN T. TIMMINS TROY—■ “Service for-former resident John T. Timmins, 68, of Clawson, will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Price Funeral Home here. Burial will be in Royal Oak Cemetery. , A retired Ford Motor Co. employe, Mr. Timmins died yesterday after a long illness. He was Oameiiows Lodge No. 424,'Royal Oak; and of AF^-CIO Local No, 600, Dearborn- Oddfellows Memorial Service will be 8 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Surviving are his wife Mary: three children, Mrs. E. Donald Troop of Sacramento, Calif., Mrs. Harold Welch of Midway Island and Edward H. of Manhattan Beach, Calif.; five grandchildren; two brothers and three sisters. —number of Oakland-County PTA officers are expected to attend this week’s three-day leadership training institute at the Wal-denwoods resort in Hartland. A 10 a.m. session Thursday begins the statewide workshop, which will last; until 2:30 p.m. Saturday. Following a theme of “0>m« arid Learn by Doing,” the agenda includes discussion '6f raising PTA funds, parliamentary procedure, and proper programing. JAMES L. GUERRERO KEEGO HARBOR-Service for Jaines L, Guerrero,* infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Guerrero of 1621 Beechmont, will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at Our Lady of Refugfe—atholic ehurGh.-Burial will follow in Mount Hope Cemetery, Pontiac. The baby was dead at birth Saturday. His body is at Huntoon, Funeral Home, Pontiac. SurViVirig besides his parents are two brothers, Gerald, in the U.S. Army, and Clifford, at home; and four sisters, Viola, Violet, Joann and Eppie, all at hotrie. The atmosphere is to be formal, and delegates are urged to bring casual clothing. , Waldeqwoods is located on old U S. 23, north of the M-59 intersection. Further Information concerning theivorkshop-ean be obtaiined by contactings Mrs— E. Frank-enfield, president of the Oaklarid County Council of PTA’s, at 6340 Pine Knobb, Independence Township.._____ ; Sleeping and dining facilities will be available at the resort MRS. FRANK J. LUTZ ORION TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Frank J. (fiva E.) Lutz, 75, of 803 Fairview, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Allen’s Funeral Home, Lake Orion. Burial Will follow in Eastlawn Cemetery, Lake Orion Mrs. Lutz died yesterday after two-week illness. She was a member of the Lutheran Church; Surviving besides her husband are a brother and a sister. DAVID J. McCALLUM OAKWOOD -.Service for David J. McCallum, 3-year-old- son of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin McCallum, 3090 Baldwin, will be 1 p:m. Wednesday at Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will follow in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Oakwood. The child died unexpectedly Saturday. Surviving besides his parents are a brother, Gary, at home: Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Welch of Columblavillc. MRS. L B. SCHUCKENMEYER TROY — Requiemi’ Mass for Mr.i Leo B. (Edna M.) Schlick-nmeyer, (54, 728 Troywood, will be 9:.10 a. m. tomorrow aH’iuard-Aiigels Catholic Church, Clawson. Burial will follow at Holy Sepulchre Cembtery, South-field. oi?5i The Kdsafy will be” recftciTat ........jl (if flvn iirrcfiit (8%) poNgl «ulmilU(>(l, Plgim gild n|i(i(-ltl(|gllnnii mgy Im ob-t»lii(>d on gild gflur Thumdiv, July 38, 1883 gt tl|g officg of tlig Arrhlt(l£>d lilddiir* will l)g ruiultcd lurnlkh «gUgfg()l(iry P«rlormgiii'i> Bom gnd I.gliiir gild Miiti-rlnl Hoiid. vkcli li thg ginmiiit (If lOfl'K uf thb cimtVgcl. tin lnt.g| ookt of which 811811 h« imid bj thg ggggptgd bidder. nrm-munisla liblped arrange U. OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M* MONUMENTS AND AAARKERS OF ENDURING BEAUTY • Meet cilt Cemetery •Honeif Price •Words Time Poy. • Choke of Seimt • IndwIealeMwIng, •SoHsfocHon Oua^ •orvliifl. Cmtm/ united w Yous J g____ T,^.....I fw9 MMU99NIVKII Mone/lkick. Phone 682-494^ Pontiac Mail /■V H'-'-.w v\\ .,7'I' THE FOyrTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 29, ^963 Ir THIRTY-ONE 5 DEPARTMENT CLASSIFICATION INDEX CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING (REVISED JULY 23, 1963) NOTICES Card of Thanks ......... 1 In Momonam,............. 2 Announcements ...........3 Florist — .......... 3-A Funeral Directors....... 4 Cemetery Lots..........4-A Personals..............4-B Lost and Found .:....... 5 EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Male'. — 6 Help Wanted femdle .!.. 7 --.Iteljs Wonted 8 Sales Help, Male-Femole 8-A Employment Agencies ... 9 Employment Information 9-A Instructions-Schools ......10 Work Wanted Mole..........11 Work Wanted Female ...12 SERVICES OFFERED Building Service-Supplies. 13 Veterinary ...............14 Business Service ........-15 Bookkeeping & Taxes... .16 Credit. Advisors .......16-A Dressmaking & Tailoring . 17 Gardening.................18 Landscaping .......... 18-A Garden Plowing .........18-B Income Tax Service.......19 Laundry Service ..........20 Cgnvalescent-Nursing ..v/^l Moving and Trucking ...'.22 Painting & Decorating .. .23 Television-Radio Service .24 Upholstering__________ .-24-A ■Transportation,...........25 Insurance .............. 26 Deer Processing ..........27 WANTED Wanted Children to Board 28 Wanted Household Goods . 29 Wanted Miscellaneous ... 30 Wanted Money ...........31 Wanted to Rent ........ 32 Share Living Quarters ... 33 Wanted Real Estate......36 RENTALS OFFERED Apartments-Furnished ... 37 Apartments-Unfurnished . 38 Rent Houses, Furnished . 39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 Property Management. .40-A • Rent Lake Cottoges......41 Hunting Accomodations 41-A Rent Rooms...............42 Rooms With Board ......43 Rent Form-Property^^^ „ Hotel-Motel Rooms.........45 Rent Stores...............46 Rent Office Space .......47 Rent Business Property. 47-A Rent Miscellaneous ......48 REAL ESTATE Sale Houses .............49 Income Property .........50 Lake Property)...........51 Northern Property —51-A Resort Property .........52 Suburban Property .......53 Lots-Acreage.............54 Sole Farms ..............56 Sale Business Property.. .57 Sale or Exchange.........58 FINANCIAL Busine^ Opportunities .. 59 Sole Land Contracts —60 Wanted Contracts-Mtge. 60-A Money* to toarr.........61 Mortgage Loans........•. .62 MERCHANDISE Swaps ............... Sate Clothing . Sale Household Goods . Antiqudf ............. Hi-Fi, TV & Radios ... Water Softeners ...... ’ For Sale Miscellaneous Christmas Trees — Christmas Gifts . — Hand Tools-MachineTy Do It Yourself ...... Cameras - Service — Musical Goods ....... Office EqDipm’ent — Store Equipment — Sporting Goods ...... Fishing Soppiies -Baits ^ Sand-Gravel-Dirt .. . . Wood»Coal-Coke-Fuel . Peti-Hunting Dogs ... Auction Sales........ Nurseries ........... Plonts-Trees-Sbrubs . Hobbies & Supplies ... ...63 ,. .64 .65 65A . 66 66-A .. .67 .67-A .67-B . .69 ..70 . .71 . .72 ..73 .74 .75 . .76 ..77 ..79 ..80 .81 81-A ..82 FARM MERCHANDISE Livestock ...............83 Hay-Grain-Feed ..........84 Poultry ............... 85 Farm Produce ............86 Farm Equipment — .... 87 AUTOMOTIVE Trover Trailers Housetrailers ...... Rent Trailer Space .. Commercial Trailers . Auto Accessories .. ■ Tires-Auto-Truck ... Auto Service ....... Motor Scooters . .. . Motorcycles ...... Bicycles .......... Boats-Accesiories Airplanes . — Wanted Cois-Trucks Used Auto-Truck Parts.»102 Now and Used Trucks ., .103 Auto Insurance ........104 Foreign Cars ...........105 New and Used Cars ... .106 Death Notices ‘^uiu“n ■ ■■ ■■ -........ - iiakv^rlon: Ai« 76; Beloved wife of Frank J. LuU,..jMao. survived :^-On* eleftr- and One" bToUier. Funeral Service will be Tuesday Julv .10 at 1 n m. at Alienee ANY OIRL OR WOMAN NBBDINO before 8 p.m. Or if no answer call •RINCB, JULY 38, 1963. StANLBY Robert. 2086 Kohler, Drayton Plains; Ate l^ Beloved son of Adolph J. and Betty Prince, Dear grandson - of Mr. and Mrs. A. Prince, and. Mrs. Doris Bdglng-ton. dear brother of Ranald J. Jill t e D. S A prcclws ^one^ f A place Is vacant I Which never can b (i though the body numbers here, The Burket family. ________ IN Lovmo MBlfORY OP CAROL M. Sontag wbo. pAsaad .Away-July. Although It hasn't been too long There will never be another Who will ever stay, within i As our beloved mother. Bo Mother dear, we love you n Than words could ever say, And you arc missed, you'll ni Announcements GET OUT OF DEBT with payments as low as $10.00 BUDGET .service: W Hur CALABRESE MARKET NOW OPEN-Ing carry-out kitchen for pizza, spaghetti, chicken, ribs, 2.10 8. Telegraph. 318-1112._________ ■ lOPS. CBURCHES OROANIZA- muura. unuituna-u ununmen-Jloiis. JSO for selling'’ ? PE 2-3063. Pay -Off Your Bills Protect your lob end Credit Home Or Office Appointments City Adjustment Service 714 W. Huron___________PE 5j-0281 BELIEF FROM THE MISERY OP nchlnf feet or legs can be yours. FE 6.6604. THE ECHOES, 731-3103 UTICA Tliy DIADAX TABLETS (FORM- Funerol Directors D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME Invalid Car Service Donelson-Iohns _ "OasIgosS for Funerals" To Buy, Rent, Sell or Trade Use Pontlae Press' WANT ADS Office Hours 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 a.m. day followini; first insertion' -BOX REPLIES-At 10 a.m. Today there were replies at The I’rcss office in the following boxes; n, 16, 19, 25, 32, 35, 57, 60, 66, 76, 85, 87, 92, 95, 97, 98, 99, 104, 107, 118. COATS PONBRAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS OR 8-7787 HUNTOON Voorhees-Siple Cemetery 4-A 4 LOTlli WHITB CHAPEL CBME- tery, FB 6-3333. ___________ LOTS. PERRY MOUNT PaIRK. WILL divide. FB 4-0M2. after 6 p.m. AND AFTER THIS DATE JULY . iwu I »iii not ba responsible ;s contracted by any myself-, LeRo^ Mc- olher ”*lhai. . ,.... Knight. 2677 Dixie Hwy. Mich. D AFTER THIS DATE JULY_ 1V03, I will nut be reaponsible r any debts contracted by . aer than myself. Valentine Ci rd, 406 Wlxom ’"•* ae Craw n Mich. LOST; O-WEEK-OLD COCKER SPAN. Icl. Childs pet, trl-oolor. vldlnlty W. Tenpyson and Baldwin, Fisher Body area. FB 5-1047. _________ ilisr BLACK WALLET, _J ■ papers to Clyde 17 Inkster Rd., Farmfng- 11 Mich or phone 4WdBW. AETI'iR 6 P.M. men eventngs> I# % week gUfti teei Rochester areti OL l*d434. AETl'R 6 P.M. Must have 3 n week. Must be neat appearing and good worker, start immedfttelyi. Openings also for full lime men. For"'hSormatlon call Mr. Oreen. . OR 3d»22,.8 p.~-------- No Experiehcc Necessary AMBITIOUS MARRIED MAN expenses guaranteed durliyi training week. Car necessary. Phone Mr. Cole at MA 4-3874. Port tlm* available ATTI'.NTION START IMMl'.DIATI'.EY iMKClIANICAEI.Y- i\t:unkd man RESIDENTIAL BEAL B 8 T ' sman to Join expanding bllshed realtor. We're t._ andle all the buslneesl For per- e win tr AUTO MECHANIC, DEALER EXPERIENCE preferred. Tel. Larry. 004.1025, Van Camp Chevrolet, Milford. Mich. AUTO SALESMAN Hardworking salesman needed • Cadlllaci ■ dl Olds > and Cadillacs. ..vies lortf., hlqh earning ________ tial. Apply In person, ask for Dan Schmidt. 280 S. Saginaw, SHEET METAL MECHANIC FOR Blood Donors URGENTLY NEEDED 68 Bh Positive. $7 Bh Negative DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE 16 SOUTH CAgS tired ^referred^ MA_6-3H_______ DO YOU'mean BUBIN'ESS OR ARB you doing - — ......... time looking around for something that doesn't bxlsl? I believe my company, the largest and beat known of Its kind provides the finest permanent money nieklng opportunity In America. If you really--------— .i"- I cansclentloue worker 1 FE 6 man. wameu i«i arohlteclurai woodwork firm. Please apply In person, Pontiac Mlllwork Co., 2005 Pontiac Rd. ________ expeIienced man in appli-ance or water softener service and Installation. 'Musi have reteiences, over 26 years. Apply bet, 8 and 9 a.m. Crump Electrlet 3466 Auburn Rd,, Auburn Heights.________________ EXPBllI%NCED STATION ATTEN-dant, Mechanical ability required. Dave Asbland'i Service. 3040 Au-burn Rd,. Auburn Heights. HANDYMAN WITH SOME MKCH-anlc and electric knowledge, could turn, living quarters If desired. Reply to Pontiac Press Box 07^__________________ monthly earnings . Liieuine opportunity ^ on ago termination . Thorough tralnlug, salary and , l.eudlng Nallonel sales orgaiilza' (Ion, Internationally advertised tween the age.s of '21 and 60. wht desire a solid money making op. portunlty. For appointment and contldenllnl Interview Telephone Mr. Hunt at 641-7070, 0 a.m READ THESE Classified Columns Keep tliis column fresh with daily listings of yoiir favorite model and iniike at competitive prices. IF YOU ARE IN the MARKI?T NOW or soon to b« Consult Classification . 106 for Fast Results Today! ■| Nl';i':i)' \\okkI':rs- NOT ,SAI.I';SMI';X er 4.1 and door Installers, with truck and tools. 8 years experltiica. Top pay. Write Poptlao Presa. Box_6l, JIO-aORE OPERATOR.'"job SHOP axperlenee. 68-hoqr waak, 1002 Rochester Rd^atJ8 Mile Rd. LAPPING. Aircraft and mlsslla parti manu-factiirar located In Walled Lake hak openings (or exparlenoed laj) d flat preo alon lapping, ges and fringe be 0 products. 2700 B. LEADERS MUST BXPBRIENCRD IN MANOPACrOBINO OF BMALl, PRBCiatON AIRCRAFT- AND MIBHU.II PARTB. THIB IB AN BXCELLBNT OPPORTUNITV TO-BBCOMB B8TABL1SHRD IN NEW L* iMMAsnwn rKi ursir.wtr AND PLimil RBBUMB INOLUDINO WORK IIIBTOHY AND PRItBONs At, DATA TO BOX 104, Tlli PONTIAC PRBBR. f, AlfN D R Ol AR AG F R aentlal. New faeimes, moderi equipment. Oood salary. , libera beneIJs. Contact Peraonnal Depl HI, Joseph Mercy llospllal. I'millac MACHINIBT ALL AROUND MACHINIBT VEIir z. t and a challenie ‘ ' irnio-t! Id illoy, ...... I ghirts only. Inlivg res«4rrh pinto- •type parts, ................... from hlib lemparature alloy. Most oiMinln||B 0 West U a. ' Halp Wantid Mato MAHAOEMKRT TRAU... We prefer an- ei^rteoMd mi dailru to teimi perai^l n ftitolp WmHi FBihalt MANUFACrrURER OF SMALL PRECISION AIRCRAFT AND MISSILE PARTS LOCATED IK WALLED LAKE -- ------ Qjj BOTH Bridgeport Opepators Lapper Lathe Operators 'Milling Machinist Surface Grinders UUBT BE SKILLED. OOOD WAOE8 AND PRINOE BENE-PITB. SEND COMPLETE RESUME INCLUDINQ WORK HISTORY AND PERSONAL DATA TO BOX J04. THB-gcamAc - - MECHANIC St have Hydramatlc transmls-II experience and or good tune-man. Pontiac dealership. Must Day Cl MECHANIC SALES LADIES " ull and part time, excellent com-any benerita, expereneed only. Ap-- '■ ------ Hugbes-HalcJier- A-1 CARPEllTER. LAROB Suffrhi,.Pontiac Mall. SEAMSTRF.SS Sewing Dajiai^e^Jn dr^ cl plant, must be experienced In bi el work. Call Bfrmtnghun. Cl< Key Punch Operators DAYS-NIOHTS-MIDNIOHTS TOP PAY-PLUS BONUS We need experienced 024 operatori YOUNO HAN DE8IRE8 WORK OP any kind. PE 2.651B, YOUNO MAN WITH 4 YEARS carpet laying cxpertenca desires ■ Phone FE 2-7068. Work Wanted Faihale KELLY GIRL SFliVJCE,, INC. - -No'. rO Pvt Ilian Bldg. SHIRT PREBSER. PIECE WORK with guarantee, will train, apply Flash Of--------- ""— equlnned modern shop. Bln kvallable, paid vacation, ana group Ins. Bee service manager. Wilson Pontiac Cadillac, 1360 N. Wood-ward, BIrmIngharn NEEDED TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR WAI-‘ ■ and cook, personal appear- rSpVry:* ' ____________ USED car reconditioning man. Must have previous experience, and be capable of all phases of reconditioning. can Mr, Boynton for appointment. PR 4-0408. OPENING FOR* ADDITIONAL • EX- perlenced appliance Between 36 and 60. Above a-earnings for aggressive mai ply In person--Consumers Opportunity employer. _ MAN - YOUNO, OPENING FOR POLICE CADE-fs City of Pontiac Salary 63,601-64.310 Min. HI. 00", min. Wt. 147 I 17-20, Interested In a police ......... Exc. physical condition, high school graduate, typing exp., apply lonnel,- City Hall, 36 8. Parice WAITRKSB, DINING ROOM, ALSO cocktail lounge, Morey's .Oolf and Country Club, 2280 Union Lake Rd. ott Commerce Rd.__ WANtEb~'EXPERIENCED .8 llTk finisher, apply Mitchell Cleaners 2267 Orchard Lake Rd. '* dlebclt. FE O-f' PROFESSIONAL CAREER IN 'LIFE Insurance sales. 6410 a month starting salary, commissions, paid — to 2:30 p.m. Lous Con 4iB7 Dixie Hwy., 673-9M3. w'AITRESS EXPERIENCED, kEA-T, cAtlonsr And paid fringe benefits. FE 2.7731. _______ PROORAMER 1401_ CARD EQUIP- _5^0p4. . Baldwin Rubber Co. WANTED EXPERIENCED FULL OR , iilBTATE: SALEBM'eN full time sales people plenty of leads and floor time. Experienced preferred but will train. Call FE. 6-9471, ask for Mr. Schram.________________ dishwasher, Town and Country. im a. Telegraph. ' - -- -- - -v/(5m'an 'i'6 real Estate salesman,^ ex-for good earnings In our. very active office. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REAI.TOR ■ VE 4-3531 345 OAKLAND AVE._ OPEN 9-7 EXPERIENCED ^QN ALL TYPES OP CONSTRUCTION AND ,RE-MODEHNO WORK. MUST ABLE To FURNISH BEST OF REFERENCES - 0AM CONSTRUCTION, 2260 DIXIE HIOH- I^ply_to Pontiac Press Bo;^.'),__ IHINOL'er's, EXPERIENCKD, 1 ----- '-ini^c work, Reply to P 1 counter help. Apply 785 y."Pontiac Trajl______________ WANTED IMMEDIATELY., MAN OR iawlelgh ProJucis in Dial. In Pon lac or nearby towns. Many eari lelgh Dept, MCO «90-110L WANTED: ICX^SjaiENCED APPLE WOOD PATTERN MAKER, STEADY , call between 4 VOUNO MAN OVER 21 WITH auto to work on eatabllshed Insurance routes. Neat and progressive, willing to work full time. Apply between 10 a.m, and 11 a,ni, Frl. and Mon. #4 Au- TR'AINI'.ES Parents Institute has openings t 3 salesgirls, willing to learn ai not afraid of hard work are t only qualUieat' — ----- ----- while learning. SEE MR, SELLERS AT 26‘/a Wl HURON, ROOM 7-210 AT _»_A.Mlr AlTHEBSESi KITCHEN HELP with cooking experience and girls, call 684-0175 for appmt. Interview. Rr*"'-Dining Room ■ d, Mlt' Ruth's Coffee ich. 'Vgl!; 6:30 A M. ting and light'housework. Call before 2:30, Elizabeth La^e Rd. FE fOUNO UNMARRIED GIRL FOR fight housework, 1187 Baldwin, ner Columbia and Baldwin. 'OUNG LADY FOB Pa)1iT TIME light oftlcc work, for details call TO 5-3606 2 td 4 p.m. Monday. Help Wanted BERRY PICKERS WANTED, MoN-day. Wed., Frl. Al Johnston, northwest corner of Seymore ' Sashsbaw Rd£. I AUDITOR. EXPER- ne. Write Miss Tpne'y, 5860 yy., • Waterford, giving r« Id salary expected. ESTAHUgHED WATKINS ROUTE. e average. FE 2-3083. EXPERIENCED OR NOT 7111 train you In,sales work. If you — '» Comity anywhere. education. Very Work Wanted; TEACHER, THBSfte CHILDREN ' ilotjco August. EXPERIENCED CHEF, EXCO+EMT rcfcrcncai. WA 7-0888.y LTNO, MOV* OB 4-1633.' 4, 6 OR 6-ROOM MODERN HOME for Cash; PAUL JONES REALTY, PE 4----- WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING and houtf cleaning. FB 3-7801. l-l IRONINGB. 1 day SERVICE. References. " - • 48 HpURS LAND C0NTRACT8-H0MES EQUITIES WRIGHT 382 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9441 Building Service-Supplies 13 RESIDEN'HAL AND COMMERCIAL building and remodeling. John W. Caples, MY 3-1128. _______ ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS repaired' by factory trained men. General Printing 6! Office Supply ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE- FREE ESTIMATES ON . ALL WIR- , B. Munr. "L A S T ETU N O. ALL KINDS, H. Meyers. OR 3-U45.____________ PLASTERING NEW AND REPAIR’, UL M740. Verri Keller. ___ MALL JOBS PREFERRED. HOME repairs, electric etc. 6824420. Dresimoking & Tailering 17 DRESSMAKINO. TAILORING. AL-teratlons, Mrs. Bodell. FE 4-9083. BeWoDELINO. TAILORING AND Convalescent-Nursing VACANCY FOR ELDERLY PA-tlent in any -condition In our completely equipped ' ^ — semi or pvt, rooms. 62fi»0291.. Moving and Trucking ^ 22 REASONABLE RATES Pointing ft Decorating 23 good 5-0^. ay pwt 0 (. Perry. 8:45-0:30 a. 'kef**^Apifly , oppo'rtunIty" ____ IN'fERIOR DECORATOR, Papering^ FE 8-0343 ________ EXPERT PAINTING, DECORAT-' paper_ removing. OR_ 3-7W4. (IRIPFIB BROTHERS Jommorclal—Residential ag and decorating. OR 3-0049 INTERIOR MASON THOMPBON-DECORATOR, middleaoed cou store and housework -- ^ii 1 person at Dixie Pottery, ilxlejlwy., Waterford._________ CEPTiONfS'f FOR LARGE eauty salon,' must be experl-hced. State quaUflcatlons and PAINTING. PAPERING, REMOVAL. isiLK '"finisher Televisien-Rodio Service 24 Help Wanted Female ' SITTER, WALLED LAKE 3, Hvejn. MA 4-4709 after 6. BS:r maid AND WAiTRBSS WANT-ed. Apply in person Sport-O-Rama Lounge, 656 Oakland Ave. For pro shop, days, Morey's Qol and Country Club. 2200 Unto LakeRd. off Commerce Rd. Boy Drive In. Telegraph i if Drive In, Telegraph m Watkins quality, products. Ap 150 North Perry, 8:30 to 9:30 a • •"^wewveiva.v ^a-aW«niPrT*fPM'17 AMT> K WANTED COMPETENT AND BE-llable man or woman with experience lor better Ijfade ... ..... childrens' shoes. Apply Jullards' Bloomfield Plaza Shopping Center,- corner Maple and Telegraim. Employment Agencies 9 ILASKA. OVERSEAS, U Information. High Pay. \ Appllcallim Service, Box ~---_3, Ma_rylnnd HOOKKF.I'.rKKS Must' have experlen Splendor Christmas Card samples, plus leading boxes on ornvai. Wrlle today. It costs j ng to irv. Cheerful. Card I I Whll^fllalns. N.V. _____________ Midwest Kinploytiient 405 PuiillBC stale Bank Building Ft: 5-0227 i;;\ kITyn 1';i)Waig)S Vocational Counseling Service Warned pan llme. Apply Ui ,l>ei -eou between 2 and 5 al Olilo Cooley Lake Rd, Easton Cleaners, EXPERIENCED IN INSPECTION, checking and connler work. Apply In iKii'siin Di'lve-In Cleaners. 13ns N. Perry. experibi'ncei) woman, "'p a'r 'i' anbinok Drugs. 2111 West Maple. EXPEIU'ENCED ■ 'FRIDEN "CALCU-latur operator, must have worked with varied quanllUes and discounts. Slate experience, age. salary expected and give work references. Reply to Pontiac Press. EXPERIENCED MAID. LIVE IN days, 3 uliildren. FE 6-3910.^^_ ifjCTORiENc'Ei) 'hales oiTui i ■ell reailv to wear or sporlawea Apply In per- NCR-3210 . .... Bookkeeplag ma exp, Aptitude cellonl opiiortimlty. Apply lii imm'-ltn"‘jowfrapin W^^“!^ufol? Experlen 13 SAlf- 6 p-m. Scrlb'i Ha, 8. Taleiraph Rd. "prb'bT EXcI'TINO^ l?hriattnaa"cBrdal *!lim spare lime yreelln^ ^ caj'd, ^gdt simp al home cent ill'ollt, inxnerleme " id raising plans lor SECRETARY 31 ............ Typing 60, Shorthand 100. 40 hrs. 1 year experience f unnecessary. I Reg"d\li'iw^^^ Feindiile, Mlchl((aii. __^ hmlF pdudrpATiiN'r. i.ive rhlUl welcome, MA 4-III72. tuiih"foi n fuV htnn thaii wageo, iivt. ronin, 330-0140. n'saiary (iependant upon iSill- n-S.77. ___ MOUSEKBBPiR 'BETW'BkN 38 A|(b EARN now 10 tlAIIN MONEY ,-I PAINTING, INTERIOR AND EX-terlur. free estimates, days. 682- 1486. eves .138-8504.___________ I-T DECORATINO -^PAINTINO -plastering — papering. Free Est. discounts f h. 682 0620. EXTER free estimates, very isonable rates. FE 5-24mfter 5. IK—INTERIOR ■ 073-2672. C. 'Vhlte REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE Pontiac HaU Trqniportation WANTED: OOOD DRIVER. REF-erences, for elderly gentleman, going to the vicinity of Tampa, Florida, leaving next week, ell —.......— —■— ----------- ' r.n n* expensea paid one i INSURANCE: FIRE, WINDSTORM 20 per cent off. FE 2-5011, FB 4-340,1. Wonted Children to Board 28 . RELIABI.E LICENSED HOME G Wontod to Rent \ ii WEST BLOOMFIELD HIGH SCHOOL buiuder Needa lota In Pontlao. Immediate offer, no commlsaloh, Mr. 'Davis, 628-9575, Real Value Realty. GASH— Ront Houmi, Furnishod 39 Spio Houni Also lakefront. large 2 \iedroom, fireplace, screened porch, nicely furn. $50 weekly or wUl lease for a yesR, DoFOtliv Snyder Lavender yoOlHlghland Road (M59) 10 Miles West, of Tclegraph-Huron Rent Houiei-Dnfurniiliod 40 GROUND LEVEL DUPLEX C Rd , 082-1414. ■ bEdROOM JEAR BOUND DH- ... ..... 3-bedroom r----- ----- home on your lot. Full basamant, oak floora. ttla bath, bif«b cups boards, OB SJ»46 alter 8,„ , ,, , BUBS McNAB ART MaYKH: A^ONE^J^ES ON LAi«>. iSQM- _ 2 BEDROOMS WITH LAKE PRIVl-leges, PE 4-6507. 2-BEDROOM BRICK TERRACE. IN------ -- - Edith. — ---- 3 ROOMS, 1,CHILD WELCOME! OFF Oakland, $50 a month. FE 5-3278. 3.BEDROOM home IN PONTIAC ------ "" 2-5221. ALUMINUM SIDING DU'P home niPay Cash | ’■■t^aTDrcr i-ROOM UNFURNISHED DUPLEX. FE 4-35.11. NKEDJ'.D - All types of Real Estate. If- you have property'to sell call us for help In disposing of It. No obligation. ........ GEORGE R. IRWIN, REALTOR 29^W;_Walton _ _'TO_3-7883 leas'e'with 'oP'rioN fo buy Ion-Oxford WE NEED LISTINGS James A. Taylor, Realtor 7732 Hl^fhland Rd. (M39) OR 4-0306 WATCH FOR OUR 'sOLD SIGNS and then Ust with us for prompt action on your home or contract. AGGL'ST 'JOUXSOX REALTOR PE 4- graph Apartments-Furnished 37 -BEDROOM .DELUXE 'KITCHEN-ette apartment. Ne.wty decorated, first floor, parking at door» gas heat. Fg 5-2261 or FE 4-4266.______ . 620 and $25 Phone 6734190. ..utilities. .. ayivan Ct, off Orchard Lake-Av< by Hod^s Radio.___________ _ • 2 - ROOM ' and' ■ KI ICHENK I 11- ROOMS NICELY FURNISHED, Private bath and entrance. Couple only. 20 Mortoa. 3 ROOMa AND "rooms AND BATH ON SILVER Lake, 24 ft. knotty pine living room wjth fireplace, aduUa _^No^^newly- 3 ROOM' PRIVATE ENTRANCE, bath. FE 5-8466. 184 Mt Clemens. bath and entrance, utilities nlshed. FE 2,6226._________ _ 9 ROOMS. PRIvilTF. ENTRANCE and bath. Baby welcome: i ROOMS AND BA'tH PRIVATE wanting distance. FB 2-lo39. 4 ROOMS AND BA'rll C ROOMS AND UTILITIES. 1 .BOOMS AND BATH, ALL » ern, main floor, no drinkers, ply 164 N, Perry. T8 I ONI 1. Ctlll M , walking to Cen- pletelv fui....... .......„ ... _ tral High, General , Hospital. Pontiac State Hospital. Small chi welcomed. Will be shown by a —................. -- 2-6226. ATTRACTIVE 3 KOOfiS AND BATH, modern, completely furnished, near Elizabeth Lake Rd. $22 weekly. Mrs, Elwood - 6B2-2410. BABY WELCOME, E'XTRA fLEAN, JSaE^loi IR apartment. 2 room BACHELOR *— CLEAN, PRIVATE, _carpeted, adults. FE 2-4376 "furnished APAR'TM'ENT. 21 Williams ground floor. PRIVATE TON-trance, outside city. FE 4-1319. NICE A'PAR'i'MENT 'for RENT. stove and refrigerator fnrn. Alter _4 FE 1-6597. Ill Prospect. ON'e " '2'' It'd 6 M FURNISHED _aparlnieiit. 79 Clark 8L____ PREFER bachelor" OR WORK-Ing couple, FE 5;3|)36, $75, 24 Alllson ______________________ 1346 CATALPA, ROCHESTER, bedroom irl-level,- $120. Also sell low down payment. 517-288-6337: BOULEVARD HEIGHTS Contact Resident Manager it Blvd. at Valenci XO MOXKY DOWN Xice Xeighborhoods Land Contract, VA, FHA ASSOCIATE BROKERS rankllh Blvd.. . PE 8-086.1 Wyman Lewis FE 6-2001 Rent-Option O QUALIFIED PARTIES Xc\y 3-Bedroom Ranch O.\l'T)RI)-$110 MO. lege. $125 lease. .’682-26 SMALL house: .PARTLY FUR- Rent Luke Cotlages TSH AND RELAX AT PRED'I .Camp on beautiful Manltoulln, bas: perch, and pike, housekeeping col Rent Rooms 42 PRIVATE ENTRANCE, GIRLS. AFTER 4 P.M. wir.s.osid, " ■room with all CONVENIENCES. Kenllworth,_ _ ________ R^OOMS CLOSE 'to' 'TOWN BLEEPING ROOMS MEN, BY -OWNER. WHITE LAKE FRONT, like new 2-bedroom, fireplace, carpeting, drapes, large lot, many ex- A 20 X "120 AIR CONDITIONED store, with wall fixtures. In Sylvan Shopping _Ccnter,_Sylvan. _ 682-2300. STORE, INQUIRE 209 VO'ORHEIS BY OWNER. 2 BEDROOM. FULL basemenl, 7 car garage, lake privileges, Watkins Lake area. MA R^t Office Space W. H. BA88, _ __ COMMERCIAL BUILDING AT ■ — ' Saginaw, Pomlac. S... ...... business...duly ble fur most any business. ( $2:.500 down. Gallagher Realty 1103 Beach 81.. Flint. CE 5-0711. L'eaSE OPFl'CE "building. WOOD-, ward Ave. frontage Birmingham. 4-0214. after 6 OFB1CB8 J2b"'A Hwy. OR 3 ■" 5 UP, 4540 DiXlE Rent Business Property 47-A 0 by 60 BUILDING FOR RENT, Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains. LI __ 2.2812. Rent Misceiluneeut building 26 X 46. STORAGE PRE- BEDROOMS. MACEDAY LAKE area Basement. Newly decorated. Lake Privileges. $6,750. $300 down, ------ . OR 3-2053. 3-'BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL NEAR Northern High School. FB 2-9777. 3^DROOM, BASEMENT, FENCED yard, garage. 266 S. Shirley. 3"BEbROOM HOME NEAR SCHOOL. i^EDROcAr HOME IN PERRY basemenf. FE 3-Bedroom—Basement ‘ bas heat — hardwood floor! Formica counter lope Bulll-tn vanity Birch cupboards $100 Do'vtm- ’^TrInsn”*'iot'n ”ln' btIHnv" I CA'hh' roR'"P'ORNri'URE 'AN'D'''AP. 2,1 0 30, 1r»n»P It"""*' pllances. I niece or.honselul. Pear- ('i)Atotnpr contact, typing 50. noii’n. FE 4-76in ' buy furr OR .1-6B4 SALE EVERY 8ATUR-Blue Bird Auction, Wn’Il ■fr*'"' I. Familiar with BU1f FURNITURE AND lipminoes of anything of value, all's Auction Bales. 705 W. larkston Rd.. I.ake Orion. MV 1671 or MY .1-614L Wanted Mlscellaneoui 30 USED Wanted to Rent .r;: MEN MALE TELLER .. ......... Previous teller experience Iilioiie \ Market. IM iiimter l(lvd, pMO'iiiiiliAiSirc nliTMcWiBiliB fur Yelliwl nogatlvea.^peaoa wiirki IO**'iiiJ'8»5 914^”*'*^ CSjl Al I'Mii-sh lli'gfr.Scliool , No classes, Rapid prugreas. Pre< lrn|t Office. National Biilioul of Hiilne Hludy. Dept, ,P P., 9M4.1 Mound Rd., Vfanea, I4lch. . YOU. AUCTl 8-208L machlnei. OR Attention Real Estate Brokers l7%sually 0 were living In It. May- WAXTI'-.D,, IICE OLDER GENTLEMAN FOR small, bachelor apartment, clean. Apartments-Unfurnished 38 LROOM EFFICIENCY 1 APARTMENTS IN TEL - HURON area, priviile culrance and balli. will deciiarate to snil. couple _only. DORRIS, FE 5.2047, }■ LARO'E ""ROOMB," DOWN TOWN, first floor, pvt. entrance and balh. J1336 Dixie._____ ■ i'idOMB. BATH, PfHBT_Fl',bGR, 3 RO&M CLEAN, LOWER, 3 Wilson. FE 2-67112. 6 llEDBqbRA'nilD 'bpaci , .Touma jUMudouklng park «ea available Sept. Adults only, to Pontiac Press Box 102. r.H, BABB^ Rl^I.'I'OR, FE : 1i)1cAlT;iviN(i I 8 - ROOM APARTMENT, frigerator, stove, nil ntlllilcs town, Parking, I.ovelv iirmimls Permanent Icnants . deslml. No idilldreii o^pets, Vhone FE 2-7007 ORCHARD COORT APARTMENTS MODERN IN EVERY DEI AIL .11 Yon I'ind You Have ■(iof Souu'lliinfi to Sell? I’rrss Want Ad,s Will Do It I l.cslit* R. 'I'ripp,. Realtor 70 West Huron fltreet TO 6-6161 tevenlitga MI,7-3279) LISA mm.niNG co. FE 4-0966 - BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL BRICK from, laiplly room, hoi water b -' ceramic tile, vanity ^n ^b Inels, formica tops. Nothing d "‘'/oHN C, MYLES. BUILDER '.rirki)R()C)M BRl(d< linincdlale uccupanc p Really. 3161 ; .. 673- -BEDROOM BRICK BUNOALOW In Birmingham. Fully carpeteil with tile basement. NO BROK-KKB, Gall MI 6-1241 after 8:0(1 for appointment. ^ '* KlinfooMH, ge. $4|000 FE 5-r ‘ LARGE BOOMS, 3 I attached garage, part REAGAN ItOOM MOUSE. EAST HIDE, NEAR No credit CHeek Real Value 5,15.,1676 ...$400 DOWN " 3-Bedroom, Nearly New IMMEDIATE POBBESBION Kveryorm Qualififs LAND contract TERMS, HPOTLITE Uim.DINO CO. ^ I'E 4 iniim l(M |f« *ffH)*dry basctiimUa and f M heal.' Clt)f eew-^r. Fillip ^rlce $12i»Wt DoWnpAT- ''jmIc’lo'veland 2100 cast Lake Rd. SoinctliinK (o Sell, Don't \Vliis|ier—"Yfll-~-wilh «n Aotioii'Pat'l|ed, luiw Cost I’ress Want Ad. Yftu’ll Get Ke.Hulti-—am!" Fait! I.-* Y' ' THlllTY-rWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 2^, 1903 'MODEL NEwliOMES $00 DOWN', $68 per mo. NO DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COST NO PAYMENT 1st MO. ■ With or Without SUKIUJKHAN blaYr'^'real estate 0PE;N 10-8 DAILY HtJRRY! HURRY! HURRY LAST CHANCE arS'K: HAYDEN:: 3 Bedroom Tri-Level $9,995 ' ■$l,roODOWN^ "“'offI'ce Open" , .i.rUAVB'ENrR.ahor ^ (i. FI.ATTI.EY, ^BLDR. 4-ACRES HIITER W^TO\YNUELEALTY TAYLOR I.AKEERONTS i Waterford , WATERFORD REALTY i'aW RENT NORTH PONTIAC $69 Down Month KENT Best Buys Today MIXED NEIGHBORHOOD I DOWN SsS-isS/™* - ■ SCHRAM $9950 ____’’"'"S 1 PONTIAC 1-ENCE BIG Till' BATEMAN WAY "BUD" GUINN CONSTRL’CnON birrs'TUEE“'h«MMm IVAN W. SCHRAM J/jnMow FI' .S-V471 k K»»r-1 (ieiicral Tree Service s,-sLZ^:tis!“ “■'■ ' "" IDUINO. HACK HOE- i^L l»:gaylord '■SKST'S.a ............ - Cii.stom Carpel laryers !, ■ jsS™«£r''fSl: "isr: 1'.\l.l!OTT I,CMBI:K ;|rj£SK^; Lawrence \V. Gavlord “MI'I)' NichoIic.Kealtor IT ri2(H"' • after (. I'.M. I'E 4-877.1 r- WoHK Au, ™ : ’’“'"*'"8............ Truck R.ntul DORRIS s ,.j|Sd Trucks to Rent • Wa Rockwall Co. 7-aooo ,r OR a-01. Co sSi?=iB °'iz; Tiiduslrial Tractor Co. TKis»:r-"=- WAW« ' L. Ti: Bh L. Ti: niu)WN BONDALE street ,rS- ?r, R. |. (Dick) VALUET R EAI OAKLAND AyE,rLggM_fe7 NICHOUE EAST SIDE TIvRRACI: son'll ANDI'R-SON S’rSrrSSvB Smith Wideman (IIMlnTwEsTfE 4-4.52 ARRO We Build-,We Trade Nr. Maceday I.akc Fmshour KAMPSEN MJ-.lia,..s,ai. MILLER Struhle MODEL Open Daily 2 to ,9 William Miller Realtor EE 2. mNEif S'KIm'"""'' K,u,« ST;.. FESSlB'e 4SS ."■3“ WIuTiuiLD. doHSSd^ NEW 3-BEDROOM FULL BASEMENT. $150 DOWN :$75:M0NTH TrWDT 2 5 Acre Parcels 10 Acre Parcels ;sss‘T;r' 30 Acres .r;r'.C.£. 'I IAv Lvi .j’l ‘\C/' v ■ l'9 N^ ■' 4 ?• THE POKrTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, J][TLY 29, 1903 TIIIRTY-THBEE < ^■Acrw|t High Hilt Village “'p.'iK. ilmti. Many Hilltop lee*ll<«k UMUint mto. rutai ^rtfh ' riss5‘js.‘*s?;n“" LADD’S INC. 3UI t*p«»r - ‘ •ra i-im oi ....... Opw Sun. 18 lOlllKO' PAVID ROAD. On North iwo In an axoollant noiah-borhood. BaauUfuI aloplna tor ex-----------------i. »W CASH Loans , to $3,000 I'amily Afceplancr Cor|). 317 Natlimal Bldg. 18 W. Huron Telephone f B 8 4823 _____ HOMBOWNBiiS CA.SH UNLIMITED Exelualv* plan._ Remodel ye _____ . past or oiirtenl bUli.. Consolidate mto one 'uw monthly ....—‘ And extra cash If .............. need”* lame. Call anyt... Bear.Conslriiolloii Co, FE 9-MOlri-tiXaiB ON ONE ACI WlthJ99-foot frontage No a ' I, a, D.- Cherlea, Bqultab an Servloe, 1717 I, Te le*. o, D.-t-nariea, i Loaij^jervloe^ 1717 ewrowriTirMi^ by quick cash home loan up to 19,988 Trom Voca and Buckiv-lo W. Huron Bl., Room ,289. » ■'■FE 4-472$. il 7 2249. '■ 'i6iA!r¥.»ie«56M”MrtE, aiilli of orlimvilt* with ba*em«nl. with ba«emi >(l earago and aimaal I so ( beaullml ground. Will swap ar. trailer, c rra'ius. ORTON VILUB, 421 Mill SI, \ NA 7,g»19 ikJoOieAeiTgKrwti't m liedroom knotty pine lake home. Pleliialmie fireplace, Ideal play-gromtd lor ehlldren, on Wooded reneed-ln 1 aerec. $1,800 equity ~ •wap for iralwr of approx, val . Ralanoe M.aoo at $81 a mn. F. Box 17$, Highland. $ala If aiiaaliaLAiig' Oooila BINOBR CONSOLE fHIO-ZAO $lt.8». Lar||e lelaellon. OR 4-1181. Curt'a StoiT" Alio rot-., ------ ---- barrow lor what have you oi 8 Roper and Magle Che 1 F^afe, rlpool < [Idialre S 8-3203. about ANYTMINO YOU WANT FOR THE HOME CAN BE POUND AT L A B BALEfl. A little out of the way but ( less to pay. Furniture end I ances of all kinds NEW USED. Visit our trads dept. real,, b We buy, sell i I. Come out E. of, Auburn ------ MS9. UL 2-3300. _____________ NORGE AU-toMATlC, WABH- , $29, OR 3-13jt2. IllNK BEDS, $20: 8-YEAR BABY crib and mattreas. $7: hlghchalr, $2. 682-3448. CLEAN SOLID MAPLE SINGLE bed. new mattreae and Inner ipr' -Melchtng everything MUST 001 Eaey Terms BEDROOM OUTFITTINO Ci COLD SPOT REFRIGERATOR, Good conaitlon. MA 9-1808_ OMt>LBTE ' HOUSBliOLI) PURNI-lura and appliances, OL 1-1469 aft- DEeFTREBZE BEN HUR, 2( oil. ft. cheat. $179. »« 44[I82. EARLY AMERICAN" TRESTLE fA. Also baby carriage and port- r bed. Ml 6-1401. ELlfclTlIC''sfoviar' FtHlLY AUTO- .___, and filter Maytag dryer, 1 only ..$119.0 -J— automatic defrost refrlgera Xreer.or ..... Oven, electric range, new, $189.88 .3 Foot Froeabr, new .. 8186,00 IP Portable TV by GE ,,$89719 THE (lOOD H0U8EKKKPINO SHOP ~l W. Huron Bt.______FE 4-1998 "FIRST TIME IN MICHISaN" -FREE HOME DELIVBRY-^^„„_^„OLBSALB MEATS AND GROCERIES . All nationally adverlWed brands. Savings up to 40 per cent. Soap, sugar, ooifeo, flour, butter, cake mix, cereal, soup, vegetnblei. fruit luloea, Kleenex, pet milk. • YES! UP TO 40 PER CENT For free nataliig and Information •hewing how vou can buy at tbesa prices. 647-1977, 9-8. of 30-IN(?ir“fLiCTRIC 'RANOK, condition $88. ,">e'’4-A41*3'."* .....__ condition. Ml 4-1941 HOLLYWOOD 'BiDSTa SIZE, GLASS lop iMnette. ooueh, FBj8^-7332 HO'ri>OINT"“Am-CONDlTIONBR. . ton. 220 volt. R. B. Munro Etee- KENMOItE" DELUXE 'WRtNOEH lea'vin^bxat® 3-7247. 883 Madison. FB 4T*324 MOVED I'O 'orh'il. PIKE -soiya Furnlture^^ 'PEARy, "MOVING. "AN'riQUisi etc. FE 4-14.72. ^ , MUST SELL AUTOMATICTslNafR. .. .. . - '?l" swing-ne nole*, ( I lils^ cm S’ everytliTiig. M psy- By Dick Turner BFtNIT FIAW, OATILBO TABLE, Olavloltn . (plays 2t dlfftrent In-•trument 4onec), 120 baso-eO ahtft aecordlant Ilka now, Call BM 1- ------- 3-4114. •WAIT N0T5NGER’ Elec. Dryers. Frigidaire Rafrigerators Whirlpool Gaa Refrlgeralort ‘ Dishwashers priced UKC REGISTERED TOY FOX ' lerrler puppies,, $39. Toy fox,and chihuahuf stud service. FE 2 1497, Auction 10 P M. 0 P.M, BTirB AUCTION BALES EVERY WEDNESDAY EVERY FRIDAY ..... ....... EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 P.M. EVER SUNDAY , 2:00 P.M Sprirting Goods -- All Types Door Priacs Every. Auction We buy—sell --trade, retail 7’ days '’■■rr.......... 5069 Dixie H AUCTIONS WEDNESDAYS Wlll-O-Way Country Man, eis W Long Lake Rd_^_MI_7-3469^. PRIOR'S AUC'liO.Nr FURNITURE. “Say, Janie! Why don’t you bring your young man out of the kitchen some time and introduce me the rest of him?” ^9 4 KITTENS. 80 _OR^2717 Plants—Trees—Shrubs 81-A 308 AFRICAN, VIOLETS: 23 AND 30 S3_1304 Mt Clemens Sept, 1st. Now Is the time to sefecl your plants when they are In bloom. The Oclonville Nurseries, 10448 Washburn Rd, Ortonville, ALAMINO USED Apache Camp Trailers -1959 CAR CAMPER 1-1962 CHIEF 2-1962 EAGLES 2- 1963 SCOUTS 3- 1963 RAVESS " - 1963 CHIEFS 1-1963 CHIEF EXPERIMENTAL • 1963 RUDY DUCK ' Apache factory Hometown Dealer Open daly 9 a.rh. to 8 p.m. IHU. C0L!T:R. NEW MOON. 12x18 EXTEN-682-0322. ! 1996 GENERAL 8 X 45. GOOD CON* P'ONY MARES, 1 STALLION, old_PE 2-29C5.____ r.[K.\ii.\'(;n.AM (iiKL tlaUy i^^core^^ BEAUfiPUir'i TAKE OVER . PAYMENTS ON Stereos several to choose In ' Sale WKscelloneous Office Equipment THERMOOBAPHED GOODYEAR OTORE 38 8. Casa FE * 5-6123 ’ .USED T 2I'-lnch Zenith .. . 17-Inch Motorola .... SYLVAN STEREO-TV YEAR WARRANTY ....ew tube Bw tube _ 682-8199 ® Sale Miiceilontous ,'i-BAO BATCH CEMENT MIXER, Ur boyT tr'an'iit. or' 3-3M9.'' !>ONT!AC IMA'WOOD 188 Baldwin _ FE 2-2543 TfALL ' 8 H O W' e'K 8 COMPLETE r,and curtains M9.50 Lavatorles-compicte '/, TON AIR C()NDAIT10NAIRE -good condition, $75. FE 8-4473._ value $34,--. _______ with faucets $14.95. i,u..cu>. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Or- 1-CAR FRAME OARAGE PHONOGRAPH dsxb woo9T*or . combination • COMBINATION _________ range, $79. Tappan —her and dry" _________ ____ $299.99. “>'11 Petroleum Co., $82-3000. •USES—rtr- STOP THAT DUST CALCIUM CHLORIDE FOR DUSTY ROADS OR DRIVES $2.75 — 100 LB. BAG BLAYLOCK COAL ti SUPPLY CO. 81 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-7101 paymenia on balance of.’lW.SO FIRESTONl-: STORE 8 N. Saginaw -----BEDROOM SUITE, PLUS! aprlng and mattreas, $108, 24-Inch r bo^'a bicycle. $9: mahogany Iamp| SUMMER CLEARANCE 8 ' office furniture, type* adding machines. Forbe -----., OB 3-9767 air Blrmlngham._MI_ kLE, Tub I ihalt llle (Random) .......... 4c Tach 4E FLOOR SHOP __________Ellaabeth luke Rd. . 88 BTU, LUX AIR OIL FUBNACE, Exc. condition. Reaionable, MA 9-1501 - MA 5-2937. 8 INCHES POOL , INCHES jjY l-~~ 2-3182. OF HEAVY i _________ . lengths. Ideal L 1029 Oakland Ave.____ FE 4, THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 WEST LAWRENCE. Everything to meet your ne __Clolhtng, Furniture. AppHances. IHIS WEEK specials V*groove Mag. 4' x 8' . %" A-2 Birch 4' X 8' . $12.91 DRAYTON I’l.YWOOiX 2611 Dixie Hwy., , OR 3-8912 lUSED ALUMINUM PATIO PORCH builders. FB 4-84507______________I !"fe'4"ilbr" ....... 1951 OMC >/,-TON PICKUP, 298-OAL | wA'fEF ANDTlmp'p'lMPs' "" .......... rebuilt and serviced. ------------------------- ."beautiful singer SEWmOiwATERHEATER VoALLONS. machine In cab net - Zig-Zag, i (ural gas *20, F“. K.U™h0Uy''ete 'te c«h Tm 09 WHITE ELEPHANt'-SALE,_ FROM ....- ■ new contract. MICHM " ILGOED VINYL SIDING mat Hall will not damage IF YOU ARE WILLING TO MOHS to^ ^el a Bldlnij^ madi JOB VALLELY CO. FE o-89 FHA Terma LIcenacd. Insured, Referenei ACCORDiON, 48 BASS, GOOD CON-dltlon. FE ■ '■■■ Hand Tools—Machinery M ANCHOR FLNCLS NO MONEY DOWN FE 9-BATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL AND t AIR alsct. Bupplles, oriiea aiiu pipe and fittings. * ■ Brothers Paint, Suptr K* and Rustoleum. HEIUHTB SUPPLY 288^ Lapeer M.____________FE_4-8431 BEFORE YOU CLOSE A DEAL ()N any type oil or gaa heating, BE SURE to call Acs Heating. OH 3-4994. _________ [CH'ch ain saw. used onl houra^OR 3-4967:______ lerai—Sarvice 70 .^M.^SLIOE PROJECTOR, *25. ' Musical Goods AND quarter*. Opdyka Mkt. FB 8- Rottie Gas Instaliation lb. cylinder* and equipment *12. Plains Oaa Co. FB 5-0(172 ACCORDION. LIKE NEW, 1158. ( 71 1,500 LOWERY OORAN ' WITIJ Leslie: sacrifice $800 or ta' over payments of $32 a Sno. ( 3-7858. ___ ____________ B FLAT clarinet BUFFET FB 2-r — HAUY GRAN!) IMANO (rultwood finish. Completely refIn Ished and rebuilt. *395.00. MORRIS-MUSIC 34 8. Telegrnph Rd. FE 2-0567 ___^rosa.from Tel Huron __ BRAND NEW GBUNDIO StEREO Tape Recorder, model t“ with echo chamber, also CABINET SINK, COMPLETE cabinet, Irom *40.85. O. n. Thompson, 7y05 M-S8 West. CHANOEABLE LETTER "bOU/ETIN Hoard with 288 plastic letters. slr.e 8x12. *12.58 for *8.75. GENERAL PRINTING AND OFFICE 8UJM>LY:_n W,_Lawinnce_8t. clo8ed">or‘ vacation' from Jiilv 25 to Aua. I. Reopen August: >':>.< Supply, 1-88 W, CONN AND (Ufl.B'RANSEN ORGANS ____ -4712, Used Orgain ‘ electric" irANOES. :io" INCH, ' S/Hd7n»lTSnl,'’a' tr;W oJWfRLY* MUSIC C'ofipANY Orchard I»akfi. - E HOLSTEIN . FE 4-6588. i ANY STALLl ■ JO ! IOR8E8 BOARDED, ,/*| arrang^ement.^^ adj. ®iNEW RIDING STABliE, 13»50 NEAI. ■ , Davisburg, 634-3073. call for CLOSE OUT SPECIAL ON USED GREAT LAKES DETROITER PONTIAC CHIEF ' pacemakb:k j NATIONAL KOZY STEWART RICHARDSON MARLETTE PALACE ... FLORENCE ROYAL Boafs-ffAccassarfat __V BVINRUDE MCrfm lU and Aceesaomf ___Aluminum, ribarstas I'HABD TO FIND” , DAWSON’S “5lAJ$«7f —LONE STARS— Riviera Cruiser Raft, 18’ sad 20* X " Row on Display , Starting at *"■" ........ Cruise'Liner 11 Alum. 18’ Voyager Crutaer Flberglaaa Capri (Rear Sant) $871 Square Stern Caaoea, to $22$ Big Savings or* 1$ ft. Aluminum Canoa - North.Oakland County’s Largest Lone Star Dealer 1883 Mercurye ' 8 to 100 H.P. C!iff Dreyer’s Gutf anj:! Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly ME 4-fm KESSLER'S Carver'eamper b< Mlrro Alum, flahemian veraft canoei Ion. and Frl. nights I inday 1 to 9: Dally 8- compiei* paru ana service 10 N. Washington OA 8-1488 tDEAL SKIINO RIO, 30 H.P. Mecrury. 13 Ft. Wagemaker. New tach. Speedometer. Much ntore. ---- FE S-281*. MARINE INSURANcf ______ ____ $100 and up. Liability $10,080 for ..*10. Hansen Agency. FE 3-7083. MICHIGAN TURBOCRArr Sale and Service ■ JET BOATS >7 Dixie NYLON SAIL PLY,_17 \ SWING CUT-OFF Radial Saw Desk, swivel chair, credenza. It ___. Groups welcome. i.NKw irHirN'i'r.^'i'Aiii j'. 1, ■ Good horses. Interesting Icrrgjn. lights, peg board and shelving (6) 4' Island coiinters at *90 ea. 1 Drug Counter ,’................... Standard Cash rcgUleyi’lllud.i’i...... i and l»i caiitloit 11| Highland on M59. rellitSo 0 Apectal 1%3 Pen- liol) Hntcliinson MOBILE HOMES Dixie Highway eft 3-120 Drayton Plains \ 9 to 9 Dally Sal.^ 9- PE 2-9677: IHNTEK’S BOATLAND Introduces caulking. ’Three VACA'nON SPECIALS Aerwaft Alum, with con Model FlOOl CloS’ I'WANTED HOR.XE.S" H Hoff- ; ^)AflD ' Art Metal 4-Drawer i WELSH MARE, 13 HANDS,'GENTLE I *135. Yr. old filly, real pet $95. Pinto gelding, good rider $175. I .MY 3-2723. . ’ 84 IHay—Crain—Feed in CORWIN LUMBER COMPANY CUSTOM COMBWING SELF PR 117 8. Cass Avenue FE 3-B,)85' Polled 12_ comblnc_OA 8-2179 , - ---------------------------- yqiOOOD HORSE HAY AND 8TRA a-a 3899 Gregory Rd., Gingelvllle. (Il e(‘iifie!(! for Lawns EM i-3516. Insecticides — Garden Tools -----------—--------------------[ Feeds - Softener Salt Sporting Goods 741 open s. Store Equipment CASH REGISTER - ADDING , MA- APACHE CAMP TRAILERS - h „ 4909 ClliKonvllle Rd, ^ Wills HIghlaiid Hd. ( > Farm Produce n Pel Supply CHOICE BEEP SIDES, 45c LB., > tory hometown dealer. Bill Coller,! CHOICE BEEP 81 I mile east o( Lapeer on M2I.________ 1 4Rc Ih . hogs M(jHE ca'mf T R a" I r. E r I*'”'*” I'oTy ■‘dTai;r‘’“‘m'”'De'tro,("'’^.ll' M^at V'ao^n • liuiiroved models at the low price.| “ ' - f n ad - save dollars. Campers Par-1 yo"r?*!” adlse. Main store - 500 E. Eight 8 'tl 6, 91^ day) Mile Road 3 . blocks East of John I . n»‘nta_call_ OR. R.. FO 6-8290. I CUSTOM COMBINING caah. For pay- 140. ____ WE WILL date call Ed Oroulx. aflrr 7 p A 8-2H61. CHOlCir HLUt ULRRIES Mner. Open jiow , 7803 Pont ' OXT’ORT) '! ILMI.ER SA!..1::.S New 10’. wlde-Marlettes, StewarU-: Yellowstone and Gem travel units STOP—LOOK—SAVE Fabulous Hydrodyne Comboards Larson-Duo-Chetek-FeathercraU EVINRUOE MOTORS and TRAILERS Sylvan Pontoon Floate • Alum and wood docks Grumman. Old Town Canoes Evinrude Dealer" Uarrjngrfon Boat Works campers. SO Open Fr(~ 'til Mobile Home .Sales, Inc. 4301 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains, OR 3-1202. !’ai-'khurst 'l'rai!er Sa!es FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING 15 to 6U ft. Featuring New Muon-Buddy 'Oxford *'ot*sJ24!’' next to Alban Country CMsln._MY^46U^_____ 'shorts MOBILE HOMES •f DOwfi'.'^Cara'w* red n.4ialled.. Complete ind hitclu Ine of part and -bottle gas. Wanted Clean trailers, 4-9743___________3172 W Huron It) GENJiRAi.jaxSo 3 Bedroom's. I Tires-Auto-Truck » N, Opdyke (M2jl SPECIAL $259 Fiberglass canoei Now *175 Everything for the boat OWENS MARINE , SUPPLIES 396 Orchard Lake / TERRA MARINA HOUSE BOATS TONY’S MARINE FOR FVINDUDES VISIT LOOMIS BOATS "A BEAU-tllul Marina". Dunpby, Qla*»ma»-waterblrd boats, Johnson Mo-14016 Fendton Rd., Fenton. VACATION SPECIALS --- Several fiberglass runabout* com«’*,< plete with electric Evlnrude* og Johnson's Ideal lor ekllng, from - control*, comp. I TRANSPARENT rand' guns, shotguns."RlFI^ES.I b,,,!,;:! '57)“ Bradford .Shell, 375 s. Telegraph. ] form Equipment 'Uxl5-6-ply traction tubeless Blemish ........... $22.90 each. - - - - capping — ^nd-Gru^-Dirt 1-A BKACH SAND. 5 YARDaS. 76! I FRAZER ROT ' find Service. iriLLE SALE: x20 ~ 900x20-1000x20 Hwy CALL FE 2-9281 Dick Curran CLOSEOUT ■ New 12' aluminum flahlng b fillglHly weathered llOOi :\. A. YOUNG* Inc. Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0411 Open 7 days a week 1. l-lflO Op- i I Pontiac's Largest Display Net i Owens cruiser 29* $4.*99 BEACH ' SAND gravel' CRUSHED STONE, ufaclurcd road son'sV Fllfdlrt 10-A SI _Sha^baw._Rdo MA 5-21Ji1, DARK RICH f'aRM'TOP SOIL. 9 yards $ltr delivered. FE 4-9588. good RICH, BLACK DIRT yards *10, (Rllvercd. 4-6988^_ MK!LS TRLTK!NG A I top soil, black dirt, fill dirt, sand and gravel. FE 2-7774. _ b'aND," GRAVEL. FILL CE'm'ENT, GASOLINE STORAGE TANK, 3110 ’’fii I s'hDd 990 2930 Mveinols ef my ^ ml north of Anbuin _ > GARDEN TRACTOR WITH PLOW. MAN-j OR *'*'^*^**' niower 2 li'JlpiJOHN -n K E n E CATERPILLAR extra | *^*’^^**‘ 63351 MAaSSEY I^ARRIS SUPER 26. SELF I propelled combine, also several P, 'I'.O. and eng. driven combines. ‘ i Dovls Mach.. OrtoiivUle. NA 7-3292. SEE US PfRa'-r AND SAVE JOHN '| DEERE. HARTLAND AREA — I _HDWE^ Phone _HARTJ^AN^ 2.911. U.S!''I) TR.W'TO'RS K\ XG BR0.s‘ FE 4J(, Pets-^Hunting Dogs AKC, bred to' h A POODLE $60 _ 79 MONTHS. AIR8TREAM LiaHTWETGHT ....“L TRAILEUf Quaranteed : Pyant-ft exciting -c MAIIOO- ADOUArLE AIiL^ AKC REOI8TEUH y\iT-l''l( r\L lltctll crankshaft grinding in 7 car. Cylinders rebored. Ziick chine Shop, 23 Hood. Phone Motorcyciet MOTORCYCLE *160—ZUNDAPP 258 Bicyciei : NEW *28.88 UP. by Shop 6 3-7*43 Boats—Accesiorles r, *390. MIMm. 14T foot ch'ri's craft RUNA- DACHSHUND Thompson lap strake 16’ $889 Owens and Chrtst-Craft flberglee 879$ MANY USED RIOS ’83 EVINRUDE-PANCO TRAILER# - - ■ • - . — • ->587 S. Boulevard at Saginaw FE 4- Wanted Cari-Truckt $25 MORE or that high grade used ear. I, before you sell. H. J. Van 71 HO DIxia Highway. Phont 100 OLD CARB WAN’TKD ___"THE 3TABLE8" FB 4-8080 ALWAY"8 a buyer of junk CAM "ALWAYS BUYING" 11 JUNK CABS - FREE T077 $1 TOP lit CALL FE 5-8142 8AM ALLEN 6i gON INC. ALWAYS BUYING AND PAYlNO MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS. ASK FOR BERNlE AT~ BIRMINGHAM CHRY8LER-PLYMOUTH INC. 912 8. Woodw^rd_^_Ml 7-321$ hi"'Dollar, jonk cam and trucks. FB 2-26ao day*, evening*, ill dollar fob junk cam''a'nd trucks^jeree tow OR 2-1008. ' 'for That "top gollab" 6k SHARP late model CARS Averill's Montcalm Store Hour <(■ ^ch'ihuahua^uit^ AKC COLLIE PUPPIES OR 3-2761 _ ■ I re'gistered UKITTAN y I -PCO’l ALUMINUM RUNABOUT, | (CHE CAMPER. •AMI’l' Discount prices Mica 29(1 s(|uar« ft. and up Double sinks $10.9(1 Fauoette *8.99 Range Hoods 129 and up Roll end vinyls up to 58 per cent off PONTIAC KITCHEN BPBCIALTIKH FE 4-6930 _ 917 Orchard Luke Rd tfAS"FimNACE. UBB0, LIKE NEW ......... -'yl $9.80 each ............. inr cash MICHIGAN NBC-,NA, 338-4921, _ Ntiffi KEMMOBB AU'fOMATIC wauher. 839^j™ 2;4267.____________ PAiii '6f 'c!Ubt6m*"made triple draper. Ilka new, blege, Dormyer deep (ryr“ “ ' ''■ ' Turqttols nylon PEARBO^'SpFUKNl'l'URE 'MOVED PIllTiCo'YkFlilfiilRAfoR" fN EX- .lelleiil eundltlon, $48. - .. RllNUOilltA't’bR. iS'b U clff,' itND UmpR and mlio. Ft ‘2- (ioo(! llsifd !,uinl)('r X *'s ..........' ,'I'oo im, li X 10* ......... 13c III). It. FE 6-0(MI7 ___ ■r WA'fER ifEA'rER,";io a align r.?ur"s’»"sr';jd‘iiira"i„a‘f?e'^‘ Michigan Fluoresosenl. 39.1 Or-_ chard Luke^lO _ iniUOATION pumps'." I9 opm, $96.80, Complete with 1 hp motor. Also la rger slue, O, A. I'hnmpion. 70011 M-98 West, ■aROE" old" double' "iTimiliNTOnANO piano liimn, 2 pairs Iron braoke(,B, (jld m dnae ctmrillloii, wash pitcher i*l. desk • .......... ■ llEFlUaiRATOR, *23: KLilCTRIC •love, $38; 21" lelevlsloii. $40: else-trie dryer. $3(1: waaher. $29: gaa stove. *4:., FE 11.2708. V, JUrrls, _ d(5A"'66MilTNAfiON tv. rkcoro jilayer, and radio. Oood condition. LINDHAV SEMI ■ AUTOMATIC WA-, Icr soltener. FE 8-U79. WOVbD'tO illi'E PIKE --"pear. ■ -'..... IRON I'ORCT AND "ooo'h cohl’ni-stove, . used after 8 p.m. ftlFKioimATok - oi KrjSTc.'ir. iiilsiR ""aOtSUA’fiu' IKTci “zAb sewing maohln*. dial atuingi lor button hole*, qvareaati, etc. Blokd oablnel. Pay off aceounl . In 8 nu). at $7.28 per month or 191. cash- balance. Universal Co. "“SPECIAL 0 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS FURNITUR* CoiialsU of; I'leo* living i(«)m siill* with * i. , lahls*. 1 ooektall labia anil 3 table 7.pl*cc bedroom jiull* with douhl* dresaer. oheal. full alsc bed Iniierspring mattrass and box i In mateh with 2 vanity iami ___ ____ . ehrom* chair*. fOrmina top table. i bookeaa*. I Ixil rug Included. All for ISO*: WYMAN FURNITURE CO, IIUHON - FB 4 4WII ■vE 2.1190 II W. PIKH ..i)»s from Blimlnghem Thoater ENRICo'rosEI.LI ACCORDFaN. I2( Bass. OR 3-3864 RI’'.Air!UjY:) !N ANYTHING IN MUSIC AT I HE WORLD'S LARGES f MUSIC S'l'ORE CHAIN (iK!NN!''.l.!;S ' PH(*)NE*?'’E* 3-7*69 Elizabeth Luke amt Telegraph PHONE 662-0422 i'lAMMON!) • Cl!ORL) ORUAN , AKC. MINIATUI Rd. 3:t:)-98in. ('l■■,\Tl:RY ”! n .STOM lU'll.T Z,\' W I'.l. 'I mil I'R'- dUi(( skl^ $698. 332-nra,________ FOOT MOLDED "PLYWOOD tiabjjut, ’40 hp. Mercury, trall- "T t'lERillD WHITE MINIA-' AKC lill biH'I El mice *129''f(ini((le MAple 9 1496 AKC german' SHEPARD, MALE Ob' A LIFE 4. 'relegrajih R(L ^ FE 2 (11 jUI,\M!AK(iAIN.S conn spinel Organ ' - lb •'•auHful maliogany and ben KINSMAN organ ........... »: AKC DACHSHUND PUPS down. Stud dngs. rajl-S KC BLOND COCKER" PI) 1 NI''.L\ RI'.XT.M.S 8,^ H a llniHcri^mdunl of 0|)cnl|igs le A .STACKLEU : HEOiaTERItD MALE MlNlA-r ___ FAMOGB^; LAYTON jTnAVEL’rra DOCtH BOARDED. DOGS I R AINED. I TOmparl'’I’raTik m*wn*iind ’^rdi Dave CIrubb a Keiinele, ITC 2-3648. [ )| |,,,|. ti,,. |.m.„ I'.XI ;i ISII SI'-1 TI'.R l.nyT’iimm."’'’”'"'' "'fegoii, "V.! , 'RKN’r YOUR TRAVEL THAILER 4 FOO'X 'nOA3' AND 'TRAILER, *150 . F,E 4.(1183, 4 ycxn RUNABOUT, M'a'RK 30 sonable 338-9963. F66f"""cii'Bi8' ch'ait HERE-riida. canvass trailer, 39 li.p. Johnson will) lonliols Flf 2 3832 -FOOT ■ fi'OA'I .90 llo'riHE JOHN- 15 FOOT DORSE fd-F'Otn^' 16 FOOl I' LOADED WITH 'I.YWOOD 'CABIN "CRUIS-i-nller. OR 3-5212. _____ THOMPSON I.APH'TRAKW, nvemnle top, ,19 Laik eleo , ron-)tsT‘- windshield, Outor trailer, Ha. *996.',MY 3-2723. ’ Foivr vtoYAOEIl COMPLETE, 1 FK 8 anv. ntllUy. *1,061), 626-1 16FOOT CHU IH-CRAFT. MAWftft- 3-0196. ) riOOD HOME, ADORA (IWENS 'FIMElUtLAB I GERMAN SMEI'IIERDH SINCE T PIANO TUNING LESSONS Wll':(:.^^'l) MUSIC co. ............ AVIS OAU 1170 Olidyk*. FB 4.4368. flJKllSDN’B FUR>fl¥lIRB' priced per h 84.86;. P' $?,23; ivi. *i«.a«j »■*» ♦ 18,87; 2" >22,68. U. A. 'Thoilip- NEW LOWBft Irell fact I Ya" $10,201 IV7" KfiAlB tlRAND^ PIANO."No. ^47 taut lone. *9.90 -Call MI '4(141,1, ('irgan sfiea healer *96.89. , . ...(448 (low Thomas organ ............... Walnut Luwrey org'n *886 now Uted Lnwrey Holiday 8639 now Flberglas laundry tnay, 33-lnro inower atalf, ^ 2 bowj^ link, j W.89,^ j hread ed'”' B A V in Tl ,U nil It I N( I kMCOIlPH, 7* RPM, ’ EM :i-61M, REEL TYPE USED MdWfiR, *29, t. ton chain fall *79. I" used *klll saw. Iieavy duty. Gpdykc Hardwai*, 1868 opdyke Rd tow "boAt, 9 bookf"OH,'bill and KHi gal. oil tank. 49 Lak l.OW Cost I’l'PSS Waiil A'iIh Work fur Yon J)ny Hiid NijflH . 6 Elizabeth I.... (Gppnslle Pontine Mn I-1-: 2-4924 Good ..$150 GWIIMAN ailKI'HWKi/ wvokA Old. 357^'17>H. HAMPB'iKulS. wnmi:al ! HOL')*;"7/i;‘!(’..!i'.i'ra’ii"N<' 115218 Holly rni,.^ ' S.ALKS am! KI'NT.'XI.S i Right ....-ei'H. winnnmtvn I.^FOOT t.'AHIN'^CimiSEU, *989 192 MODEL 29 HOUSE NVINRUDE .Pel Shop, I kirrftNH FiiEic ’ 1 Home; EM 3-2612 i.Tt" PIIOFEHKIONAI. POOni.E OllOOMING liniment phone FE 6.3112. F, E. HOWLAND 1249 Dixie Hwv OR 31496 SEE THE NEW 18' MONTER 'TRUCK CAMPER 'AHAKEE'T IIAIIY MALES, *4 89 | Some 388 Filet. Rncliester. OI. l-63'(2. I ’ARAKEETH. CANARIES TltOPI-l ||u||y 'I'l-avcl Coa.li lire lip, 1883 14' FO?)'T I'Eliro'RMKR powered by 188 h.p, Mereury, *'398 and tike over peyinenle, A.1AX 1 RAILER," I6^,m IIOAT LIV IM OR HEAVY 'TUBULAh ............... ad‘‘ SJilo A'l H3216. flolly^Pd.. Holly ME, 4 6’) n. t » r.« MA E MMAt I 'T^83'v~nY S T U E A i^OODLK PlffB. MAiefia: HMALL] jj^IS Hip ArlHlottrul of’ U rn S-42kfi. (i.M.I.ACm'.K’.^ 16 E. Illirnn FE MOVING ^ ^ SACttirinn ohand j he, 72, "e ) I , E .8, l< 11 I , Michlgab "g.'kIi, I Offics Equipmant SPECIAL FUR AUGUST Printed Social SlaMmicry |4 63 up OKNERAL PRINTING AND OFFICE SUPPLY, 17 W. LAW-RKNCE, MtTtl-'CORfSN A"~"CLffricf? -raSKS-'- H NO'nci': • ....r:::r, Ki/ijf Anto Sales HAVH: UN NKV\ ^ANII USKlJ (,'AUH WILSON PONTIAC CADILLAC 'S£-?^r I960 Ford Oalaxie 4-l)oor BEATTIE l„|(,)ril)AT|0\ |,()T 1J<5 Oakland at .Sandersoi Onu'k I.Hiwidatir ' r'&'r" ''’«tL!’VTmLVlloatr’'lrM iLr'' COME,VISIT K’l'SS jollN'SON'S Used Car Strip ■\ AK'.^J.^y-rv ■RUSS ^ JOHNSON RaiiiMer 14 $1594 SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKI.ANI) ]-I' 5-0421 CLEAN IJSI'.I) CARS ..... ddOW SPARTAN Dodge, Inc. AY SIMMONS ■ DEMOS 'lltPl SIMMONS ,,...3SHr, '1PZS-S5S; ””S?tLSr~ ”r£=e“S HASKINS , Chevrolet-Olds ------- FOR 4 FULL- DAYS C).\ A\Y USED" CAR I’URCIIA.SED FROM US FIRST TIME IN THE PONTIAC AREA ..U.V. MK COME IN TODAY! Mansfield AUTO SAM'S 1076 Raldwirv Ave. 335-5<)0() 1£SS;“ ■hh:s- j«g””!fd'b«ic«,'“«w K." I" ntir of l^)llliac•s INstesl-Urowinn Deiilei s Hv.i'iuisr We Sell (iood. Clean-I,file-Model Cni'd Get More —Pay Less SHELTON PONTIAC - BUICK OL1-8133 Rochester ----- fi ■ I. ’ L- 'A,, bU,/, ■'a',' , 0 W M'|\ THE PQNTIAC press. MONDAY, JULY:g9, 106^ 'i THIRTY-FIVE -Today's Television Progt^ams- Program! fumiihtd by ttottont littod in this column a» !ub|oct to chongo without notico Clw»nn«l 2rWJBK-TV Chann«l4-WWJ-TV Chonn»l7-WXYZ>TV Chomi»l9-CKLW-TV Chonndi 56--WTUS TONIGHT «;00 (2) News, Editorial, Sports, Weather (4) Deputy (7) Movie “The Tall f Stranger/’(In Progress) (9) Capt. Jolly and Popeye (56)'What’s New 6:25 (4) (7) Weather, .News, Sports . ■ - 6:30 (2) Highway Patrol ‘ (9) Mr. Magoo (56) Face of Sweden 7.'’00.(2) Baseball: Tigers vs. Orioles (4)..Lawman (7) Yancy Derringer (9) Scott Island (56) Perspectives 7:30 (4) (Color) Movie: “Prince [iliant. (1954) Wagner, James Mason (7) Dakotas (9) Movie: “White Cargo.’’ (1942) Hedy Lamarr, Walter Pidgeon 8:00 (56) Casals Master Class 8:30 (7) Your Funny, Funny Films 9:00 (7) Stoney Burke (9) Slngalong Jubilee 9:30 (4) ArtLlnklettpr (9) CheckHUp 9:50 (2) Baseball Scoreboard . 10:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Brinkley’s Jour-nal (7) Ben Casey (9) News, Weather, Telescope UAW' 10:30 (2) Stump the Stars (4) Inner City Forum (9) Red River Jamboree 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News, Weather, Sports (9) Pioneers 11:25 (7) Movie: “Town on Trfal.’’ (1957) John Mills, Charles-Coburn 11:30 (2) Steve Allen — Variety (4) (Color) Tonight—Carson (9) Movie:'‘Dr. Kildare’s Crisis.” (1940) Lew Ayres, Lionel Barrymore “T TUESMY M^ 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:30 (2) Spectrum 7:00 (2) News (4) Today (7) Funews 7:05 (2J Fun Parade 7:30 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:45 (2) King and Odio J:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo ■ TV Features Eye Social Problems ‘ BASEBALL, 8 p. more. m. (2) Tigers ijieet Orioles in Balti- ! YOUR FUNNY, FUNNY FILMS, 8:30 p. m. (7) Ama-Teur movie producer’s version of ‘‘Perils of Pauline” fea-< tured. INNEROTYJ’WUM, 10:30 p. m. (4) Look at social problems of Detroit’s inner city^ r MOVIE, 11;25 p. nt. (7) “Town on Trial.” When beautiful woman’s strangled, sleuth from Scotland Yard begins to : investigate lives of prime suspects. John Mills, Charles Coburn. 8:30 (7) Big Show 8:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan ’ s Merry-Go Round 9:00 (2) Dece}pbc^Brlde (4) Living (7) Movie; “That’s the Spirit.” (1945) Jack Oakie (9) Gene Autry 9:30 (2) To Tell the Truth 9:55 (2) Editorial. 10:00 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When (9) Robin Hood 10:25 (4) News ‘ 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color)!' Play Your Hunch , (9) Movie: “'The Young and the Guilty.*’ (1955, British). 10:45 (7) News 11:00 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jack La Lanne 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (7)'Seven Keys TUESDAY AFTERN(K)N 12:00 (2) I.OVO of Life (4) (Color) Your First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (9) Hawkeye 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best (9) Dr, Hudson’s Journal 1 r* r r" r“ r- 8 7“ 10 TT 12 • 13 14 15 16 17 18 i9 20 21 22 zi T r 28-’ 29 30 i\ 34 3) 40 42 43 44 45 4^ 4T 48 49 50 5V 52 54 55 5t 58 29 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Leave it to the Girls (7) General Hospital ■ (9) Movie: *‘Maytime.” (1937) Nelson Eddy, Jeanette MacDonald 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Best of Groucho (7) Girl Talk 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color ) People Will Talk (7) Day in Court 2:25 (4) (7) News 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Jane Wyman 3:00 (2) Star Playhouse (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day 3:15 (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge^PNight (4) JColor) You Don’t Say! (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Vacation Time 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) American 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Millionaire (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Discovery ’63 (9) Mickey Mouse Club 4:55 (7) American Newsstand 5:00 (2) Sea Hunt (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “San Diego, I Love You.” (1944) Edward Everett Horton (9) Larry and Jerry 5:15 (56) Americans at Work 5:30 (2) Whirlybirds .....(561 What’s New? 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall ACROSS 1 Sixth Greek letter 5 Greek “T” 8 Smallest Greek letter 12 Biblical name 13 Vandal 14 Remnant 15 Temple vehicle (Hindu) 16. Piece out........ 17 Wings ' 18 Breakfast dish 20 To the beach 22 Collection of writings 23 Greek “R” 24 Plank 27 Seventh Greek letter 28 Request. ' 31 Greece (poet.) 32 Deadly'pale 33 Greek “F" 34 Fox 35 Alder trees (Scot.) 36 Danish ouncoi' 37 Format “bo’’, ■ 38 Fish eggs , , 39 Address V 40 Goal 41 One bir Cyclades 42 Greek “L” 45 Trite phrase 49 Equine breed 60 Article > 62 Frown (var.) 63 Masculine 64 Hoy's name 65 Valued rocks 66 Pal 87“X” 58 Bird's retreat. DOWN 1 dipher 2 Land grant (Hindu) 3 Carry (coll.) 4 Dressed stones 5 Greek ‘Th” 6 Diving bird 7 Exhumes 8 Western state 9 Flat plinth 10 Droplet of eye fluid 11 Awry ’ 19 Finis 21 ChtlsiMdialjL/_____ 24 Second tireek letter ~ 26 Swan genus 23 Assistant 27 Slave ,28 Church section 29 African butter tree 30 .Church (Scot.) ■ Pungent 35 Barren 36 Greek “E" 30 Masculine nlcknai^e 40 Monastery church 41 Ancient Britons 42 Tibetan priest ^ 43 Asiatic lake 44 Shaded walk 46 Heart 47. Tints 48 Formerly 51 Interjection Answer to Prcvloni Puirie Child Is Injured by Big Doggie' Fall, Winter TV Shows Previewed in Hollywood By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer HOLLYWOOD - Thi> is t 'Season when television columnists visit this busy film community for a preview of fall and winter pro- This activity involves visiting a lot of film studios and talking with I producers, stars, writers and !press agents. Each vvi(l inform the reporter that the series with I which he is connected is going to jbe fresh, new, imaginative, off-[beat, creative, just marvelous- of summer replacement shows dropped into network spots haVe held little excitement or interest. Biggest disappointment, perhaps, was “The Keefe Brasselle Show” on CBS, which was smartly produced and rather attractive, but woefully lacking , in material— particularly comedy.--------— — CBS’ “Celebrity Talent Scouts” was long on celebrities but very short on talent. And poor Jerry Van Dyke had a thin time trying to be the jolly host on an incred-I undoubtedly the hit of the fall; jpiy (jup and puerile game show season. ‘ . jcalled ‘Picture This.” George Fenneman’s “Your Funny, Funny Four_45rograms of CBS’ “Judy i Films,” on ABC^merely: provetF ou-...-. u„.,„ u that amateur home movies!.. BUILT FOR TWO-Kenny Jones, a blind 8-year-old fr^Tlamsey, N, advertised in the newspaper for two bikes “for Mommy and me to ride together.” An Englewood, N.J., woman donated two bicycles, and Wallirigton Simpson of Waldwick, N.J., offered to do the welding. On Saturday, Simpson put Kenny on the bike and he and his mother took their first ride. and the way -----’'"dSfrafisTfom wiseacres would have a problem creating an hour-long variety show around the singinj star every I week. ' ' The biggest mystery in town involves NBC’s sudden cancellation of “The Robert Taylor Show, based on cases by investigators of jthe U.S. department of Health, I Education and Welfare. Several 1 shows had been completed an< I some $750,000 spent on it. t ★ " * ★ . NBC gives no reason for, the cancellation. It plans to replace it with “Temple Houston,” an hour-long series about Sam Houston’s son, a series about a lawyer, but with an olcf west flavor. Meanwhile, the small crop ilyTonny to pebple who make them iand—maybe—their closest friends. Peru President psksU.S. Aid 'Miss Sweden' Did Lose -but Won Contest Judge By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—British star Peter Sellers—a judge at the Miss Universe Pageant—evidently didn’t spend all his time judging at Miami Beach. For “Petah” is around now ^vmiiMiss-Sweden’’ (beautiful blonde Kerstin Jonsson). He took her to’ “Tovaricli,” then El Morocco. He signed her for his film, “The World of Henry Orient.” “I’m going to help her meet all the important producers,” he announced. The consensus is that Miss Sweden didn't walk away with any prizes—but walked away with the most famous of the judges . Loretta Young’s suffering severely Irom a pinched nerve (at the home of her daughter Judy Lewis) ... Lovely Mrs. Edwin Perona, First Lady of El Morocco, is expecting her second ________ in February . . . Friends of Marilyn Monroe are planning a tribute to her Aug. 5. It will be a year ago, on that date, that MM di«d. WILSON Alan King, now the comedy king in England, is being urget by Granada TV to do a series in London while living here. (He’^ fly over periodically.) Alan, a smash at the Royal Command Glasgow, had a seven-minute private audience, with the Queen and Philip. THE MIDNIGHT EARL Frank Sinatras so hot to have his film Defense Rests in Ward Trial Remember Charges, Lawyer Urges Jury LONDON (^)-The defense in the vice trial of Dr. Stephen Ward rested' its case today and his lawyer urged the jury to remember the 50-year-old society osteopath was not charged with leading an immoral life. ------............X...... BATON ROUGE, La. (JV-De-segregation of four Roman Catholic high schools in East Baton Rouge Parish will begip.ip, 1964. Bishop Robert Emmett T^cy of the Baton Rouge Diocese made the announcement yesterday in a pastoral letter. He said the 11th and 12th grades will be integrated. Public schools begin accepting Negro 12th grade students this fall in the parish under a Federal Court order. Attorney James Burge, in closing address after he had called the sixth and last defense witness, told the Old Bailey jury of 11 men and one woman: “You are here to give a verdict upon five specific charges and not to deal with muckraking.” He said the notoriety cauted by le airing of three charges of liv-I ing off the earnings of prostitutes arid two of procuring girls under . „ ■ „ 121 had cost Ward his clientele of ‘4 for Texas” play the highly placed Britons. CANOGA PARK, Calif. (UPI) -Little Lynn Seeley, aged 3, saw what she thought was a "big doggie” and climbed under a three-foot barricade to pet the animal. Today, doctors maintained a vigil at her hospital bed after performing a two-hour operation to save her badly mangled hand. Lynn was reported to be in fair condition. Paratnouflt at Christmas, he’s offered to do a personal appearance on stage—25th year since ha first sang there .. . David 0. Sciznick has a plan for Robert Goulet to play Rhett Butler In a Broadway musical version of GWTW. . . Greta Thyssen, wed a few days, headed for a job in L.A.; her groOm went north on business ... Jerry Lewis’s son Gary is working as a parking lot attendant at his father’s restaurant. ^ . REMEMBERED QUOTE; “A woman’s idea of thrift Is Mvlnf in m open British court, the enough on one purchase to buy something else.” • trial produced few revelations, EARL’S PEARLS: Today’s housewife must not only be able no to cook and dean—she must be able to lick her weight in trading, mentioned as having stapips. That’s earl, brother. had relation.s with the young pfos- Thc “doggie” turned out to b^. a 5-year-old Himalayan bear. Lynn of Simi, Calif., strayed away from her mother while they were visiting the Dewayne Brothers Circus at a Rotary Club benefit at nearby Santa Susana yesterday. Her mother, Mrs. Earl Seeley, was buying cold drinks when the (ot saw the bear’s cage and climbed through the barricade. ‘-Mt- waa..lhe most badly mangled hand I have ever seen,” said one of the doctors at Canoga Park Hospital. Tom Hemll, the bear’s keeper, said he generally was a friendly, animal but “because of the hot day and It was just before feed- ing time -r and after all ho is i nld animal.” Gets Bonus From Ford; Fired Earlier in Year DAGENHAM, England (UPI) John Cross recoiv^ $208 this weekend from the Ford Motor Co. a bonus for an idea which helped eliminate four screws used on auto glove compartments, He wa.s fired by the firm earlier tliKyoar. A motlior ostrich accompanied by chicks will sometimes throw herself to the ground to appear wounded and divert a liunter’s al-tentlori from her young. However ostriches never bury their heads in sand. ‘PRACTICE GONE’ “His practice is gone,” Burge. “He has had punishment already.” Despite some of the filthiest testimony heard in recent years Michigan Bar Calls for Plan to End Bias Michigan’s bar is the first in the nation to take this sort of formal action in the race situation, the announcement said. DETROIT l/PI-The State Bar of Michigan has undertaken what it calls a.^‘concrete program” to aid in the relief of racial problems in MicTiigaft. The bar announced it is going to name a committee of its members to carry out the program and called upon all its 9,300 lawyer members to join with It. A part of the committee’s work, besides giving aid to public groups, will be to “implem$g||^ plan by which Michigan lawyprif will be inspired to furnish their professional .services in the defense of clients wherever, by reason of intimidation, harassment or threat of disbarment of our brother lawyers, adequate local legal representation is unavailable.” titutes whose career Ward was accused of sponsoring. They were Ward himself. Viscount .Astor, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., former War Minister John I). Profumo, Soviet naval Capt. Eugene Ivanov and the late Peter Ilachman, -real estate racketeer. All had been mentioned in pretrial newspaper accounts or at Ward’s preliminary he,aring, Fairbanks and Astor, neitiier called to testify in the trial, denied Marilyn (Mandy) Rice-Davies’ testimony that she had relations with them. Marx Descendant Visits MOSCOW (UPlI-Frederic Longe, great-grandson of Karl Marx, has arrived in Moscow as a guest of he Soviet Union of artists and the Karl Marx Museum, according to Tass news agency. -Today's Radio Programs- WJR(76e) WXY20 270) q(LW(800) WWJ(950) WCARQ 130) WPONQ 460) WJBKQ 500) WHf l-FM(94,7) WWJ, New* WJBK, Koberi B. Le* ^ WCAR, »no*rell« WPON, Bob Lnwrence WHI''I. New* liM W.IH. Bil*lbe*e WWJ, Hu»bie*» . WXY/., Ale* Dieter CKI.W. Diive Hhiifer '»iil»-WWJ, World New* (tlX-WJR. Boorea >:4l>:-WJR. Lowell Thom** IN4MWWJ. Mualo Beene -|W WJR. Clo«e-tIp wiir r Mofleri Delioll OKl.W,- Pull WCAIV » t 1105—Wt*ON, Ben Johhaon 5 WXVZ. L*» Al«n *I.W. B. BI**-‘-‘ » WXY/., r-ILW, B ■ .“'SSFilrii,*, b malun /( Ml I WJR, ( WWJ.bilwii Mnelo WCAR, B. C«|iemler CKLW, Wdrld Tomorrow tVRBBAlt MOIlNINU •iW)i-WJll, Voln* ol A*rlo. WXVZ, Prod Wolf ........ Robert* Bye 0|ien*r DV' Ni JKLW. 1... _ WJBR, N*wa, Aeary WPON, t WCAR, 5 TUBBBAY APTBRNOON lino—WJR, New*. r«im WWJ, New*, MiiiTeii* CKLW, New*, (ironl WCAR, Hew*, Pur«e WHPI. Npw*. Burdick :;|0 WJR. Imd llUO«t Desegregation Set in Louisiana Parish LIMA, Peru UPI — American-educated Fernando Belaunde Terry was sworn in as president of Peru yesterday and called for a speedup in aid from the U. S.-spon-sored Alliance for Progress. the 51-year-old architect, whose inauguration ended more than a year of military rale, told a joint session of Congress he was gratefuHor tbe Alliance for Progress, but that it most overcome certain faults. “Otherwise, there will continue to hang over Latin America the threats of discord and violence which must be banished from the continent,” he sai^ Belaunde criticized the requircr jnent, irf^deteiled stediefr ^ projects are approved for alliance aid. There might not always be time for such studies, he said. Belaunde said prices for raw materials in Latin America are “ridiculously low” and must be raised to stamp out poverty.. The church will consider only a student’s educational status in effecting integration. P u b I schools will consider classroom space, psychological factors, and scholastic standing. Squaw Takes Position as Leader of Tribe ONEIDA, Wis. (UPl)-A ,squaw ruled the 3,500-member ' Oneida Indian tribe today for the first time in history. Mrs. Irene Moore, fJeymour, Wis., defeated Norbert Hill of Oneida during the weekend for chairman of the tribe’s executive committee, a post which is equivalent to chief. More than half of the passenger cars on the road today are five or more years old. One out of every six is ten or more years old. UNLIMITED SOFT WATER RUST-FREE ^31 PER MONTH We Service All Mekea LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. Dlviiioh of AAich. Haotlng, Inc as NwwtMrry St. FI S.Mai COLOR TV SERVICI ANTENNAS INSTALLED . REPAIRED SWEET'S RADIO I W. Huron _____854-W Rosamonil Williams 1 SONOTONE I Services and Suppliei for ALL HEARING AIDS IS thf: mwi .m' LADY PAMPLHlNi; DAYS Monday, 'I’lK Hduv, WcthicHtluy, T ImriHtIuy Every (lay w«> imniper our palroiin, of eourH,e, l»ul Momlays tlirougli '^^riuir*»lHyn we are uMo to olTer tliat little “extra” because our puce in more leinurely ou tliene (luyn. Sturt llie week right then - come in uiul get PKUiNIANFNT wave ami Hhumpoo, net uml S095 styled liiiiiTUl eoiuldtied for only TEKN* uihI SUB-TEKIN l»AMI»EHIIN(i PI l)S DAYS cip.W WJR, f llllllVll IVlitn, lliru Tiiur*. ■ i,y nupl.oiilv - I IIhIi'i'iiI niid Het.. f, Hi'biisO Wl’ON . I,*« tikil-C'KLW, BhlUbsrk smo WJR, 'Now#, Jimmy V’KLW, Duvlo* ■ BuW-WJR, MU»m tllll 4t(H) Dnvli '■donw’ir.s HAIR S l YIdSI IHtnillN. u »,m. M»'» A|i|H|iiiiiiiriii N«i Alw«y» (Neee#* l*i|iiillii- M«tl Nhopiiliip Oiilire IMioiie 682-0120 4)i THIRTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS. ]\royDAY. JULY 29. T0»3 On JOOtb Birthday hf Henry Ford-- Portrait of a (EdUtor’a Note—One of America’s most fabulous success stories is that of Henrp Ford, A Michigan boy who ‘left his father’s farm to become an industrial giant.'^ The 100th anniversary of his birth will be observed July 30 with cere-. moniCu at the farm site.) of the work and setting out on a leader of the world and profits career that was to make him theipiled up. From 1903 to 1927, the world’s best known automotivejcompany piled up $900 million in figure- , i profits. His most fantastic success was I Ford, in 191^ undertook to in the building of the Model T buy up the^res held by his Ford which he once said '‘put| partners in^the 1903 company wheels under the world.” More| and he paid out more than $185 than 15‘/2 million of these four-j million to such partners as for-jcylinder, plain-looking cars were; mer Sen. .lames Couzens By CHARLES C. CAIN Associated Press Automotive Writer 1 turned out and were found inj Michigan and the Dodge brpjth. every nook and corner of the! ers of aiitomovite fame. . ^ - {world. ^ actloHs wcfe held over 55 per cent of Ford DETROIT - A simple cere-^ controversial, but few would igtock; his wife, Clara, had 3, and mony on the farmeland where hei doubt that he deserved recogni- his only child, Edsel, had over was born will highlight Mich- tion as one of the greatest - . . ’ . ....... .Biographers of Henry Ford were in general agreement that one of his master strokes came 1914 when he announced that ill Ford production workers 'ould get $5 a ,day. Up to that (time, they had averaged ^.60. Ford raised that figpfe to $7 in 1921. Many fellow employers criticized Ford for extravagance in wages, but he contended that the 'That meant that by 1920, Ford | $5 made for more loyal workers, " " ’ a more stable work force and igan’s observance this week of the centennial of its most famous son — the late Henry Ford. JPf ' ' glrom^ov^- mechanical geniuses of all time. Money came to him easily with-months after...he. iQimiM„the. 41, It made it the largest family-owned concern in the nation. Ford family holdings were esti- mated-atnvpr .<.»inn million One of the big question marks improved production standards. Labor praised h i m at the time, bht in later years he came in for criticism from unions when ^ he "opposed the United Auto Workers Mtfoln?s" magazines mentioned Ford a^s a possible presidential candidate. He did not veto, the idea, until the then President Harding died in office and was succeeded by Vice President Calvin Coolidge. Ford then pledged his support for Coolidge. ★ ★ 5^'. Historians generally concwle, that Ford made a major mistake in the late 1920s when he retained full control of company policy even though Edsel held the title of president. Ford, faced with increasing competition from General .Motors and Chrysler, still turned Its old standby^ the Model his company. He ajways contended he “could do more for his vrorkers and was more interested in ' them than some union boss in some far-! away office.” I Ford, an ardent pacifist, got Fofniotor Co. in 1903 with just in cashT^-none af irtisTTn FordVcareerrwas^lris-ney to Dearborn ^ ^ His ideas for speedy, mass pro- ingness to turn over the compSny whose pennies Pa«lJor a $1^ ^ moving as-!reins to his son, Edsel. Fird’t 30 made Ford the{ While Edsel bore the title of ,■ .nd I„. I Up to the time that Ford- put dustry and distinction, he never !lhe as.sembly-line principle intoi assumed the full power ol that Ford's three grandsons — operation, it had taken an aver- office. Neither he nor his asso-Henry II, Benson and William j2>2 hours to turn out a ciates .doubted that Henry Ford Usome of his most adverse pub- Clay—, all key executives with was “the ultimate source of au- ! licity with his actions before the the motor company their grand-i was impatient with that thority. , i United States , got into World, father founded, will participate, j jj Top event will be the dedica-a lot of cars at a price the aver-that all officials, except Edsel,! |„ yy^^ld War I, he spent lion tomorrow of the plaque mark-age wage earner could atlord. served without titles and neveri |,gj{ ^ million'dollars'in ing the site where formerly stoodi The assembly line idea crude were sure of their standing. The organizing a peace ship which the farmhouse from whence Fordiat first, soon Won world acclaim Ford company was strictly a went forth to international fame, jfor Ford and by 1920, he was Henry-dominated organization. *Ford, son of a farmer, took a turning out a car a minute. An official in favor one day iVnuntll 1927, when custof^ got considerable attention from ir buyers. Ford relied heavily -on two aides—Harry Bennett and Charles Sorensen -r in the 1930s and the chain of command,, in the Fgrd company was an uncertain one, particularly affecting Edsel, who made many decisions only to have them reversed by his father. , When war clouds threatened again. Ford — who accepted a controversial decoration from the Nazi Germany government in 1938 — was again Wong^ opposed to U.S. entry Into war.-But again when Pearl Harbor filiinned-il company to bring out the Model A. Ford’s standpat position during the years hurt it, however, asi both Chevrolet and Plymouth nearly 400 bombers a month, The senior Ford suffered a mild stroke in 1939 and another early in World War II, but kept In close contact wih his company’s operations. He was deeply affected when Edsel died of cancer in May 1943. Henry reassumed the presidency of the company, although he was 80 years old at the time. His grandson, Henry 11, who was on Navy service, was re- put his entire effort into aiding UiS7~fflilitary-operation; One of his' notable achievements was the building of the liuge WillowTliin'bomher plant in Michigan which used auto production line methods to turn out leased and joined the company, as did Benson Ford. Some re ports said the senior Ford , was anxious to transfer both grand- pdsel Ford, both of whom c— •vloced Ford senior that it was jtime for him W step aside and end his one-man rule which hlad brought Ford to the pinnacle but left it in poor shape to face the challenge of the 1940s. Henry Ford n began reorganizing the company high command, bringing in such top men as Robert S. McNamara; who later became Ford president and then secretary of defense., Henry Ford Senior lived, in semi-retirement for the remainder of his life. Ironically, on the night he died them out of his way. Henry ir became-a wice presi"| floodii dent of the company, however, and in 1945, succeeded his grandfather as president. He was aided in this by his grandmother, Mrs Clara Ford, and his mother Mrs $2-million home in Dearborn, p Hooding i-iver had knocked out the electric power and telephone. Thus Ford, born in a farm house equipped only with candles, died with orriy a few candles lighting his bedroom. Short^ fling at farm life himself | The Ford' Motor Co. soon be-might find himself i before rebelling at the drudgery xame tlie .automotive production doghouse the next. was to take a group of leading world figures to Europe to “get the boys out of the trenches tr^ MU.yS UU» Wl lUC ®j before Christmas” of 1916. BJRTHPLAeE --Henry Ford's birthplace (topi, a simple farmhoii.se, stands restored today in Greenfield Village, an historical museum founded by Ford in Dearborn. Original Gef a New Viewpoint about CONTACT LENSES Mirades in plastic that can mean a new concept in a natural, becomihg appearance. it it pdssibla that you may enjoy a new freedom from glosses. A becoming, natural oppeoronce and the other advantages that minutely-tizid contact lenses can give. If you think you would Hke to wear contact lenses, your inquiries are invited. I. STEINMAN, O.D. 109 N. SAGINAW ST. Dolly 9i30 A.M. fo Si30 9.M. fridoy »i30 A.M. 10 Ii30 9.M. FE 2-2895 DIVIDED PAYMENTS AVAILABLE nh ■ k. Ford sailed to Europe on the expedition, which was criticized by many newspapers and magazines ol the day which'lelt it wa.s a foolish errand. The auto magnate said later that he never thought the peace .ship would in itsqlf bring peace, but that he thought it would hasten it. Ford, who devoted 14 months to the idea, was disappointed when it failed. When the United States got ! into the First World War, Ford | put the full facilities of his company at government dis- I posal and built a wide variety i of government ordered items, < 'ranging from ambulances to eagle boats — predecessors of the FT boats of World War II. Ill tlic postwar year.s, at the iTgiiK' .(il Iben Democratic President Woodrow Wilson. Ford (a Republican i made a try lor the Repi^bl'can nomination lor U.S. .‘•oiuitor Irom Michigan and lost bv a narrow margin. In 1322, manv new.spapers aiidj (^ods First Quality Muslin Sheets Kog. SI.89! Harmony IIoiim- . . • - - \ low price for 1st quality while cotton muslin sheets woven 134 threads per square inch. Sanforized. Stock-up now . . . save! 81xl08-in. flat or fitted ..... l.S.l 2/99c, 42x36-in. 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Drive to Okay Test-Ban Pact Negotiator Harriman Offers Testimony for House, Senate WASHINGTON (AP) — Undersecretary of State W. Averell Harriman led off the drive for ratification of the nuclear test ban treaty today as a witness before the Senate Foreign Relations and Armed Services committees' and the Senate-House Atomic Energy Committee. The chairmen of all three grouj^s were on hand along with most of the members as they went into closed session to hear from the chief U.S. negotiator of the Moscow agreement with Britain and the Soviet tUnion to ban all but underground tests. DISASTER REFUGEES-A resident of the earthquake-stricken city of Skopje, Yugoslavia, pulls a cart bearing hjs six children and followed by his wife and other relatives as they leave the city. All residents of the city except men able to help in rescue operations were ordered, out by the government. Living Fiee Skopje 4afensj Area Girl Boy as us French Chief Rejects Pact of Nonaggression To Call for Conference on Disarmament Plan' Before End of Year PontUg Preif Phot* EVERYONE HELPS - Tommy Brendel handles a pitchfork like a seasoned veteran as he joins othej; workers in an old-fashioned threshing bee at the Dale Glynn farm ir White Lake Township. Other pictures and s story of the oats harvest - are on Page 19. PARIS (>?P) —- President Charles de Gaulle said today France Svill npt sign the Moscow agreement to. halt nuclear testing above ground, in space, or under water. He also rejected any European nonaggression pact as proposed by the l^viet Union at the test ban talks with the United States and Britain. The test ban pact was initialed last week. Addressing a crowded hews conference, de Gaulle said France wUI call for a general conference on dfiarmament before the end of thisvyear. He said France will halt its Wn nuclear program only if the United States and the Soviet Un- Is America on Edge of Racial Disaster? (Editor’s Note—Will racial strife in America be limited to sporadic outbreaks or are we, on the verge, of major domestic violence? This first instaU-ment of a special series on fne deepening integration crisis outlines an on-the-spot survey of major friction spots.) ion'agree to destroy their nuclear stockpiles. j By BERNARD GAVZER yice President Lyndon " Whije Harriman and State De- SKOPJE, Yugoslavia (il*) — Survivors by the thou-' Water, a nd .jraffic accidentsj De Gaulle said France “will not partmenl associates carried the sands fled quake-shattered Skopje and’the threat of a 12-year-olds subscribe to any combinations burden of policy argammS in typhus epidemic today. over fhe ueekend. IcarrM out over her head eon- the historic study of the pros and cons of the pact, the views of the joint chiefs of staff were expected to bear heavily on the outcome. Harriman and Secretary of . State Dean Rusk face Intensive questioning-on the agreement and whether there may be in the offing any collateral pacts with the Soviet Union, such as a nonagression declaration proposed by Soviet PnemieA Khrushchev. ™ However, the administration’s strong support for the treaty—led by President Kennedy’s declaration that it is “an Important first step’’ toward peace—seemed likely to need a bolstering endorsement from the Joint Chiefs of Staff. As authorities announced the search for more survivors would end after today, the government radio reported a Yugoslav girl was pulled out of the rubble, still alive 80 hours after she was entombed in Friday’s killer earthquake. Premier Alexander Giiickov oft-the Macedonian Republic said the number of bodies recovered headed toward the 900 mark and | an estimated 700 dead were still | buried under rubble. | But Grlickov said it would be assumed that no one else now could be found alive and the gov- j ernment would go ahead on that:residents with the weatherman convlctiotv-toNraze all the biiild- pr,,di(,tj„g ihundershower.s again ineieiit Macedonian , . Wednesday. Sen. Harrison Williams, D-N.J., an .administration supporter, brought up the issue In a weekend statement. He said he was concerned over' “the ' apparent single-mindedness of the military mind for assuming that the nation’s security can only be protected through a continuation of nuclear testing.aiid the arms race in general.’’ Williams said “much may depend on the attitude of the military and the Joint Chiefs of Staff’’ (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) ings ij capil isslbl^ 'b^Jmlcs and , re-'rarthq^kes posed proMem, he There were a few new tremors yesterday, but they were slight. On the fourth day after *the cataclysmic quake demolished the city, the stench of cracke|d sewers, hujaan waste and refuse mingling" with tlfe smell of decomposing bodies lay like a stifling blanket ov_er the sun-scorched artea were in the 90s. Each passing hour brought the' Seventy-one' was the low re-isaid. when Mrs. Garten decidedig^^jg’^ danger of possible typhus out-corded in tiowntown Pontiac be-r"o’" that France wi.shes P I In In Today's Press Drownings Half of victims could be sm'ed bv new method —. PAGE 7. .Hof Spot Cireeks, Turks squabble , In Cyprus — PAGE 9. Henry Ford lOOth birthday celebrated tomorrow - PAGE I ■ Area News .. .. 4 , Astrology .... 28 .. 1 Bridge ...,4, b Comics M 1 1 Editori&ls « 1 Markets ...29 1 30 S 1 Obituaries t Sports 26-27 ’liicRtcrs , , 24 ? TV & Radio Programs 35 i f. Wilson. Kart 35 .f ''(j Women's Pages 15-17 1 biiWSMMiite ery Road, Waterford Township, Shirley Ann Garten, 4351 Hatch-'cerning Europe or notably Ger- More Rain in Sight, Says Weathermao Oakland Oakland Highway Drowning Toll in ’63 Toll in ‘63 77 13 • Lail Yaar La«t Yaar ta Data 5t to Data 10 many. He said France does not see how the Warshaw Pact of Eastern Eurojpean Communist countries can be compared on a footing of equality with the Nofth Atlantic Treaty Organization. John- time J .. has warned that Says Administration bomb ticl^’’ in America’s streets this turbulent summer of 1963. The bomb is the explosive crisis which has flared iq, sporadic violence in ‘ Danville, Va., Cambridge, Md., 'and New York as Neglroes and whites have clashed on the issue of full racial equality now. Overhanging, these Vd. outbreaks are the haunting questions: Will the bomb go off? How? Where? Interviews ^itli"and reports front top-levei White and Negro officials in federal, state and municipal governments, with civic, social and religious leaders, and with citizens in the street, point to oiie conclusion: Won't Ask Debt Hike There is grave danger of major racial violence America looks for a solution to the ddep-ening integration crisis. If chaos contes, the It may very likely —.but not necessarily — occur in a Northern big city. It may stem from rigid police action — or from a minor incident blown out of proportiH) by. rumor. De'^iauHe said that since: Congress today that, despite eylier iorecaSts,' it wilt WASHINGTON lUPl) — The administration told Mure rain is^n sight for area Tonight’s low' will be 65 with RAIN tomorrow turning sunny and mild with a high of 85. llOinfall measured .3.5 inch for Tenp;ratures^,,^^,„li,,^g^,^^„j / drowned in Deer Lake in Clarks-woukl never strike the, pot agk to raise the l6g{ ton Saturday afternoon. IpS another record high Stanley R. Brince, 2026 Kohler,‘‘WITHOUT PURPOSE’ i Treasury Se^( ^ also of Waterford Township, wasj pg Gaulle commSnted»,^“Todqjd ^^rector Kermit UordOl eclaredHhroum'extend le national debt killed Sunday when he fell from prance solemnly declared the rear of a pickup truck and under the wheels of a car. The driver of the truck, Michael L. Flanigan, 18, of 4539 Major, Waterford Township, was being held for investigation of negligent homicide. Shirley’s body was recovered by Sheriff’s Department skindiv-er Guy Kessler two hours after she was reported missing by her parent.s Mr. and Mfs. Garfield (larten. The young.sler, a nonswimmer, was found in eight feel of water. Shirley was playing in the water with her mother and father and a younger brother, police the voice of the president of the Republic that there will never be any aggression by France. Our participation in a ^act of nonaggression is hence without pur- At the’ outset of this second news conference he had held this year, dc Gaulle declared that relations between France and the United States are those of friendship and alliance. De Gaulle acknowledged thai differences exist between Paris and Washington. But he tbld,a news conference: Despite the differences which exisCW think that the United breqk ever clo.ser. Now, Grlickov said, the main concern Was " finishing the evacuation of all people not engaged In clearing work or other essential jobs and putting heavy demolition crews to work razing the city. A new city for tlie 270,000 popu Intion will be l>uilt from tlie ground up on a safer sKe-to be determined after Selsmologicnl studies arc completed, (Jrlickov said. 70,000 EVACUATED More than 70,000 women, eliil- fore 8 a.m'. By I p.m. the mer-| cui*y luuJ risen to 85. the present National Urban League trus- ' tees report : “Hundreds of thousands of-Northern Negro citizens—struggling beneath the mounting burden of automation, overovercrowding and subtle discrimination — are reaching the breaking point.’’ limit oiF $309 billion to Nov. 30. Dillon and Gordon appeared before the House Ways and Means Committee. Unless new legislation is enacted, the legal limit on the debt will drop to its permanent level of $285 billion on Sept. 1 ‘(Current estimates indicate that the debt will be about $307 Aug. 31, $22 billion above its permanent Jevcl,” Dillon said. “It is obvious that action must be taken.” The fiscal facts today, however, are much brighter than the administration had anticipated only three months ago. Treasury officials had predict- .. I A li A AOilCA:, ui Uim I’1 ailVU. ism\« |/» wv.ivv Mrs. Garten said she thought United States, would ed that the current debt limit of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) 'be a ridiculoifs absurdity.” I$309 billion wouiji be pierced dur- ing the last few days of August unless action was taken by Congress to boost the limit. “In recent months,” Dillon said, “we have had the unusqal and most gratifying experience of finding almost all of the changes from out' estimates moving in the same direction — toward a lower budget deficit and an improved cash position.” ' ♦ Dillon noted that the federal government would end the last fiscal year on June 30 with a deficit of $6.2 billion — $2.2 billion less than had been forecast May 1. He said that lax revenues during the. last fisbal yaar totaled almost $900 million above expectations and spending dropped! $1.3 billion below anticipated iev-cls. I r~—Negro pastor of Brooklyn’s (k>n- The Rev. Dr.. Gardner Taylor, cord Baptist C3iurc|| warns: “Miscalculation of the moment of truth which is upon us could plunge New York, -Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Chicago, Detroit and Los Angeles into a crimson carnage with a blood bathiln-paralieled in the history of the nation.” ‘ '• • WORST YEAR One of the worst years in the history of U.S. rqce relation's was 1919. There were seven major riots that year—the three worst occurring in Chicago—38 killed, 537 wounded and injured. Wash- -ington, D.C. 6 killed, scores hurt, Phillips County, Ark., 30 killed, and hundreds hurt. Can siich riots come again? Dr. Kenneth Clark, Negro professor at City College (Continued on Page 2, Col. ,1) More Funds Needed Pontiac s^ Drive for industry * Surges Forward victory is possible! Pontiac’s (ircater Industrial Development Corp. has pledges today Iroiii 51 firms and indi-dren and old people hud cleared i vidiials totaling $84,700. out of the city by early morning Only $15,300 more is needed and still they poured out, on foot in cars, trains and planes, nmc pushed carts filled with low salvaged belongings. ||f , Pontiac Area Chomber of Commerce to start Pontiac on the trail of light manufacturing and kindred aetivlllcs. This means more employment. It means more payrolls. / Others pedaled bicycles slowly iB through the debris. I* At government order, evaeua- ■ tlon of everyone but men able to J liAitt In haAV\f u/nt*lr txruti hnlficfi* help in heavy work way being ij carried out. Riker Building, W. Huron Street Pontioc, Michigan 48058 The recoverof a J5elgian coMple from the rubble yesterday after 55 hours of being buried alive raised some hopes that more living might still bo found. Then rescue* of the Yugoslav girl stirred another faint spark of hope. Please provide me with information about the Industriol De- veloprnent Corporation. I am interested in......shares of stock at $100 d shore. * Max Adams, Chamber of Com-'mean a constructive step toward merce manager, said today: la bigger, busier and more active| f “Our deadline is Thursday^ of P o n I i a c. The competition for' Aclama; Max this week, and we must have thciViie^e new small businesses wliich Atidrconi. Frank full $100,000 to secure the land!are springing up all over Amer- Annett, Bruce on Soulh Boulevard. That wiliqea,is tremendous. Some ^ies| Arnistroim, R. Z are'ahead of us, but we hjfve aj Brown. (Jr^cs grand start.- | Buckner F NMM ★ * , * “Every btislncssman and all other public-spirited eitizens are urged to step forward im-medlutely and pul their shoulders to the wheel. “We need ncllon " and = we need it now. “Next week is loo late. These Have Pledged Support: j" Butterfield, Joliri A, ^ Carney. I7ale F J Nome............................ Phono No. Address of completely razing the city |!i (Continued on Page 2, Col. 41 | Premier Grlickov said the work ■ . • ■ . ............answered the Michigan a “The Pontiac Press is running Sion|)thcr coupbh to close this ■ gap and b(M>st our area another 2 round up Hie ladder of iiulus- ■ trial activity. Your money brings B you sharps of stock at $100 /■ apiece. More than half a liun-I dred of your fellow citizens liavc I call. “Will. YOU do YOUR port?”, Colien, Abe Community National Bank Connolly’s Jewelers, Inc. (.’onsunier.s P^iwer Co. Cross, Milo " / Dawson. Robert fi^ernice Harry M. Denyes, Jr., Associates, Ihp. Detroit Edison Donelson, Carl W.. Karnes, I). B. Fitzgerald, Harold Girard, A. C. Griffin, tllenn II Hartman, William Hunter, Carl l,ocul 594, U.A.W Jenkins, James It. KIcIst, Gladys R. Magnus, Adolph, Jr. MiU’oko, S. W. (Dr.) Metz, C. F. Michigan Bell Telephone Co. Miller, Floyd Moseman, Edward Nephler, Catherine E-Nepliler, Clarence , Newton, B. Patterson, Clarence - ' The Pontiac I’ress Oakland County AFL-CiO Pontiac Ready Mix Pontiac State Bank Potter, Jerae C. Riley, John A. Rogers, Carl . ^Icer, Paul " ' Taatcher, Patterson & Wernet Thomas, Esther 'i'lmmas Economy Furniture Co Wusserborger, George * Wasserborger, Dr. Leo -■ Wliitfleld, Stuart Wiimut, William H. Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Jamea . A , / f •; I \ 4 N I '1; ,A.iy THF. PON.TIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULV 29, 196.3 (Continued From Page'®ne) New York, aiswers: “If white America refuses jto grant rights to Negro citizens and continues to withhold^hem, I suppose white America wiU try killing Negroes. If white America is prepare to see Negroes being killed and killed and killed, then this will happen, but it " won’t stop any^g, because you. simply cannot kill eVery- In Chicago, Ralph. Helslein, president of the ynited Packinghouse Workers—a union Integrated decades ago—says: “My feeling is that the discontent still is below die boiling point, but our organizers throughout the country are surprised that hlisn’t boiled over.” , Burke Marshall, assistant attorney general in charge of civil rights, says: “The country has to move on this issue in rapid WarnsNegroes of Reverse Risk Believes Extremists Con Ruin Rights Effort LOS'ANGELES (UPD-Edward W. Brooke, attorney general of Massachusetts, yesterday .warned -Negroes that extreme demonstrations run the risk of reversing the current trend toward greater equajity. ' Brooke, who holds the highest elective office ever attained by a Negro, said the Negroes’ pursuit , of equality could backfire if they demonstrated for the sake of demonstrating while efforts were being made to . satisfy their demands! Brooke, here as keynote speaker at the National Urban League Conference, told a news conference he did not believe the Negro had yet gone beyond reason in the struggle for civil rights. “But if^ Ngroes demonstrate j, wlnile the white population is try-inj{ in good faith to meet theittf* demands; , if the '-Negroes’ de-i mands are unreasonable, if they ask for special privileges, then Negroes are walking jierilously /close to,losing everything.” Brooke said demonstrations will continue because they serve the useful purpose of dramatizing the discrimination problem. At the opening session, of the five-day conference last night, Brooke called for greater militancy by the league and greater cooperation with other civil rights organizations. fashtoii or there wiU be a great deal of racial unrest that will boil oVer into violence” THE LOCATION? If the time bomb should go off, where is it likely to explode? ^mie, including Dr. Richard Wade, professor of urban history at the University of Chicago, think it may occur M the South. Wade cites a long historv of deference xm the' part of the Negro, who in many Southern regions is unskilled and uneducated and has little organization. . Others believe the explosion is more likely to occur in the North wljere there is ji)b discrimination, de facto segregation in housing, de facto school segregation and social' discrimination. A Negro public relations man notes: “I sit in hiy air conditioned office all day and I see nicely dressed people and I look down on Sixth Avenue and I almost forget about color. Then at 5:30 I get downstairs and it hits me in the face. I can’t get a cab. because everybody thinks I want to go up* to Harlem,” j» ' In /ihicago, Alvin- Pre.jean, deputy* director of the Urban League, insists all the ingredients for explosion are to be , found in Chicago, among other Northern cities. Negroes are pushing and whites are pushing back,” he says. “People here used to talk about those poor people down in Birmingham. Now they are talking about here.- We nOed better teachers,. better jobs,' better housing, just to catch ub with whites.” '' From Our News Wires BOMBAY, India - An Indian air force pilot sighted live bodies floating today in the Arabian Sea area where a -baited Arab Air« lines jet disappeared with 52 persons aboafd. Hope was virtually abandoned for any survivors among the crew eight and the 54 pas-sengers, including 23 Filipino Boy Scouts'. Uncertainty as to the number of passengers aboard arpse from a conflict between the. passenger list, which mentioned 54, and official radio reports placing the number at 55. The confusion “appeared to arise from reports that Farag Mustafa^ the airline’s financial gdviser, was on the flight His wife said he was not, but Mustafa himself could not be located immediater ly- The plane was on the way from Tokyo foV Cairo when it crashed in monsoon weather nine miles west'of the Bombay airport as U headed in for a landing bbfore dawn yesterday. It ,was raining at the time of the crash and visibility was poor. Radar equipment at the airport was following the plane in when it suddenly vanished from the beam.' - Earl, Brown, Negro, deputy Mamatlan borough president and fdrmer magazine writer who with Louis E. Martin, nov/ a member of the Democratic National Committee, predicted the 1943 Detroit race riot', 34 dead, injured, says it is the discovery of obtaining dignity which contributes to the Negro militancy. , . “This is the V Negro doing something for himself,” Brown says. “He’s learning something 'about dignity. He may have t>J lose some blood, but he’s found that pthdt’s the road to freedom, not just winning d peace.’1"^ CONFUSED MOVEMENT As in any social moveraehl, there is confusion. Leaders struggle for power positions, goals depend-upon who’s defining them, control of the massed evaporates. James H. Mere^th gets booed at an NAACP convention in Chicago. Atlhe same convention, the Rev. Dr. J; il. Jackson, president of the National Negro*’ Baptist Convention, is booed for nine minutes,. supposedly bccSuse he had The Weather HOPE FOR FUTURE-American Negroes are increasing their efforts to break traditional barriers of discrimination and to gain full" equality. Their efforts coujd make this summer of 1963 a time of major domestic violence as AP PholoUx segregationists resist desperately. This mother and child, photographed in New York City, symbolize Negro aspirations for a better tomorrow. Nine hours later, search craft sighted wreckage, in the sea. The Indian frigate Tir, dispatched to the scene yesterday, picked hp three large pieces of metal believed to be parts of the wrecked plane near the scene of the crash. backed President K^nnedy^s iwin, I don’t think it Will happen call for a moratorium on dem- 'that way because the Negro is onstrations. [realistic about being outnum- ’LtavinA speaker's platform, the Rev. Mr. Jackson was pinned I® ‘ against it by 50 persons, crying,; Kill him! Kill him!” You can’t have a revolution even a peaceful one -r without some casualties.” NEXT; The Naked Basis of Crisis. The mood for action is all-pervading. Its beat is "sounded by Dr. James M. Nabrit Jr., president of Howard University. “We are sick of evasions, weary of excuses, fed up with promises and want action now, liberty now, equality now.” C. Sumner Stone Jr., editor of the Washington D.C. Afro-American, says “For the first time, I’d say, everybody is involved. Negroes, except for some. Uncle Toms, aie prepared to be involved.” Find Young Girl Alive After 80-Hour .Burial ' Full U. S. Weathef. Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINI’TV—Sunny, a little' cooler and less humid. Fair and cool tonight with a low of 60 to 6.'). Tuesday mostly sunny and mild with highs in the mid 80s. Winds light ■ and variable tonight and Tuesday. The outlook for Wednesday. shows a chance of thundershowers and mild. In Detroit, George W. Cathcart of the Trade Union Leadership Council — a Negro labor powt'r was told about a professor’s] comment that “the old people goti converted and the young people j got religion,” and related: “Wheni was a boy-they told me., ‘don’t j fight, get aft-education.’ I tell my boy, 'Fight, and if you gel, thrown out of school, I'll find youj another'^ne.’ ” - | 'There is concern, that the one I thing which ’Hiight lead to trouble would be a march on Wash- ■ ington. Such a march is .set for Aug. 28. It was decided upon in New York recently *hl a strategy meeting involving the NAACP’.s Roy Wilkins, the Soutlicrn Clirislian Leadership Confereliee's Martini Luther King ,Jr., the Urban* SKOPJE, Yugoslavia (iPi—A young girl was pulled out alive from the ruins of her home in Skopje today after being buried for 80 hours under the rubble .of the quake-shattered city. ■ . French disaster specialists working with sensitive sounddetecting equipment picked m her voice from under a pile of rubble,., . '/ It was the second wamatic recovery in the past 24 hours. A Belgian cou'ple .were pulled out alive yesterday , ' after 55 hours of entombment. ' * Soldiers and reseqe workers dashed oyer frantically wfhen tlie French shouted, !‘There’s someone alive under here.” They dug down and pulled out the Yugoslav girl from the ruins. She Was barely conscious. A soldier *held her joyously alofLfor all to see. The French team, eight specialists who had done remarkable work in re.scue operations after the quake that killed I2,00Q persons in Agadir, Morocco, in May, 1960, arrived in Yugoslavia from Paris Sunday. " 'I'tiey are equipped with geophones,'devices that pick ^.Ufr even the faintest sounds of movement or voices under earth or stone. • Living Flee Skopje (Continued From I’age One') „„,l,eague'.s Whitnev Young, CORK’S,, j,James Farmer, The Student Non-r’H ividleni Coordinating Committee's ,, ii^'John Lewi.s and A. I’liilip Ran-■lydolph, prfSidttnt of llu‘ Negro ■ m lis American 1 ,abor CouneiI. would lake only a few days, start-jbiologist, “and his wife, Suzanne, 32. sehectuled evyn I Ite.sfue workers thought they . . om the ruins of Hie Hotel heard voices of others while pull-Maeedonia, wliere ’tlie Belgian '"K Jacquemarts out, but c„u,. wa» fo„nj, wkfo„„ out the bodies of a man and woman presumed to be the first The rnardi though the Kennedy adminislra-iA„nTican dead in the di.sa.ster, tion has voii'cd vigorous determi nation to gel a strong civil rights bill tliroiigh Congres.s. Negro leaders feel there will be a filibuster uml that a mareh will show lawmakers (he degr^’e of Negro unify and determination [ , Authorities who nuisl plan for liity evenlualify have done so in tnaiiy areas, The federal govern* OITudals Htiid they (’•nrluded that (he bodies were (hose of an American Air Force sergeant staiioiied In Knrope and his German wife. any more survivors. The Jacquemarts were returning from a stiidy tour of the Middle Kast when (he disaster struck. mvbl is eommilled to back decisions of courts and policies of the administration witli troops. Police' In many oltUis have been given nnd are undergoing speeial training and indoetrina-tioii. Detroit and Chlengo have police departments espeeiiilly alert to any possible nieluL dls-: (urhaiiee. An automobile witl\ Idetilifieu-lion papers of Staff Sgt. Harold Stacy of Gouverneur, N.Y. in the glove compart tnenl has lieett stumllng-near tlie liolel since the quake slimck the city Friday. The couple was on Us way to Greece from Germany on a vacation. I was ju.st rising from the bed and my wife was silting opposite me on the edge of her bed,” he said, “We plannerj to get cm the road early. 1I4ATIONAL WBATHEIl-Showers and t^jjfclersliowep In a band from North Dakota goutliward tlirl?^ western fexas and New'Mexico are expected tonight wliile clear to partly cloudy skies arc forecast loir the rest' of llic nalioii; It will lie cooler In the lower Lakes area, (he Ohio Valley and llie norlliern ': (Rockies, I ... j. . . ■ _ ' I, In Helgrade, an American Em-bas.'jy spokesman said It was the first word (hey knew of eoncern-ing any Ammiean dead. Twelve oilier Americans wlio had lieen In the Skopje area were all safe! Suddenly, everything started slinking. I grabbed my wife and held her tightly in my arms. Everylliing eollapsOd around us. We fell two stories. Fortunately two wooden beams and thef celling fell above 118 forming a small dome which protected u», My legs were pinned under bricks find I was unable to move. My wife, liowever, was unhurt and could crawl nnd move alwut our prison," * ; jOffa lads liellevod :100 Yiigodlnvs (. atll^iyn’ljtn tourists lay beneath “If there Is fHiiaway rkilitig I hope lliere won't he I lien the, „ ,. Nhgro eun'li lielp but lose," saysjliic Hie four-stOry Mace- ,Lee Rlaekwell, edUtir of llie t;hi.|‘l"'’f"> ""I**!, “'p |ua(jo hetender, dayW the remarkable recovery i "We reprivumt only It) per cenUafH>r\ji liours of eiilombment of| [of the population We eouldn'l Serge NinnieinnrU 3,'j. a Belglar)i«tatc |)oliee reiKirted. Injuries Result in Death Indians Find Bodies in Sea All Hope Abandoned for Jet Crash Victims BIRMINGHAM — Two congestion-cutting iiroposals for West Maple traffic will be considerj^ by city commissioners tonight. Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley has recommended ^e conventional parking^paces* be replaced by tandem stalls. . An alternative is to enlarge the present stalls from 2LS to 25 feet, Moxley indicated in a LONDON (AP) - President Gamal Abdel Nasser says the United Arab Republic will join in the partial nuilear test ban agreement initialed by the> United States,. Britain and the Soviet Union. Israel is expected to take similar action. Accidents Kill Area Girl, Boy on Weekend (Continued From Page One) Shirley was' following her. Mr. Garten said he went out to deeper water when he thought Shirley went to the beach with her moth- Lt. Donald Kratt, head of the Sheriff Department Water Saf^ ty Patrol said that markers designating drop offs In the water had been moved out and that this might have been “responsible for Shirley stepping into a deep water. Stanley was. injured fatally shdftly after 1 p^, wheh he was tossed from the truck as it went around a curve on Sashabaw, 450 feet west of Island Park. He^was hit' by a car driven 4)y Paul Farmer, 25, of 4632 Fourth, Waterford Tqwnship. HEARD BRAKES Flanigan told Waterford Township police that after going around .the curve, he heard brakes screeching ahd when he looked around he saw his passenger in the road. Parmer said he flaw the boy fall from the truck but could not avoid hitting him. .A Pontiac man, Monroe Hiltz, 56, was killed Saturday night on 1-94 near Ypsilantfwhen his car went out of control and struck a guard rail. Bifhfiingham Area News Commission to Study Maple Road Congestion The commission asked Moxley to study the proMm-June id when it turned down a request by merchants to prohibit Maple parking from Hunter to Chester on weekdays. The “twin stall” plan would cost 1548 and cut spaces from 76 to 66. The pairs of spaces would be separated by 10-foot pt-o-parking areas. II.A.R. to Join N-TestTreaty Cost to enlarge the stalls to 25 feet would be about $329, with the number reduced to 58, according to Moxley. Ihree young athletes are to visit the meeting tonight at the Israel Also Expectad to Take Similar Action invitation of ' the Recreation Board. Birmingham’s winners in the recent Detroit Metropolitan Youth Fitness Meet in Livonia, they are Chris Johnson, 10, of 2643 Lamplighter; Sue Hilardis. 12, of 921 Warwick; and Karen Roth, 10, of, 640 S.'Cranbrook. Chris placed first in the boys’ chinning event with 22 chins. Sue third in the running hop, step ' and jump and. Karen firflt in the running brpad jump with a 11-foot 8)4-inch jump. Nasser told a student group in Alexandria Sunday night he supports Indian Prime Minister Nehru’s call for all nations to-support and sign a test ban treaty. Nasser also called for more disarmament negotiations and eventual destruction of nuclear stockpiles. \ MUTUAL i^UCATION m U.A.R?lnd, Israel have _ used each other of trying to develop nuclear weopons.' A dispatch from Jerusalem said the Israel cabinet is expected to endorse the treaty after all ministers have studied it. Israel- is building a 24,000-kilowatt thermal reactor in the Negev desert. She will he the only Middle East nationVwhich can produce fissionable material necessary for atomic warheads. Mrs. Ernest W. Hunt Service for. Mrs. Ernest W. (Audrey F.) Hunt, 89, of 775 Bates, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Acacia Park Cemetery, Southfield. -Mrs. Hunt died Saturday after a lengthy illness. She was a member of the First Baptist Church of Birmingham. Surviving are four children, Mrs. Wallace Shaw of Pontiac, Mrs, Earle Cunninghom of Birmingham, Mrs. Harry Joines of Lincoln, Maine, and Basil W: of Pleasant Ridge; a sister; four grandchildren; five great-grand- . children; and a ’ great-greatgrandchild. The Israeli government has. given assurance that the reactor will be used for peacetful purposes, but Western officials have privately voiced concern over what Israel plans to do with the plutonium produced as a byproduct. Plutonium can be employ^ in the manufacture of atomic bombs. ■ Eighteen months ago Nasser said if Israel began to make an atomic bomb, the U.A.R. would it necessary attack the “base of aggression.” ' Neutrals Out to Ban Te^ts Under Land Police said Hiltz, 489 E, Mansfield, was towing anqCher car Und lost-control when the towing gear broke. tnvoy Leads Drive for N-Bfi Pact OK GENEVA (UPI) - The eight neutral nations at the Geneva Disarmament Conference were reported today to be planning a new effort to get the nuclear powers to ban underground testing. Informed neutral sources said an appeal would lie issued when the full I7-natlon conference resumes lEomoiToW after a six-week recess. But the sources said It was unlikely the United States and the Soviet Union would pws at the^ nioment for talks on an underground tu8t ban (Continuwl'From Page One) .so far as Senate action is concerned. To become effective, the treaty must be ratified by a two-thirds vote in the Senate. year ago, a majority of, the Joint chiefs was repot'ted opposed to the proposal then fpr a baa on all tests, Including ,1 I -..tV./.,- r -1 But reports from the Pentagon Indicate that the' chiefs might withhold objections’ to the agreement even if they lack enthusiasm for it. Yesterday, however, Gen. Earle 0. Wheeler, Army chief of staff. Indicated he may have reservations. Interviewed on ABC-TV’s "Issues ahd Answers”, Wheeler said the treaty presents “an area of DETROIT (UPI) George very difficult decision” and that Heinrich, 40, Detroit, died luflt he Will have to give honest^an-night of Injuries Suffered in nlswers when he testlfiefl about the liend-on colllall)n liew July 18,]ag.reelnonl‘8 military ImpUca-' ■ tioiisl , ' ■, . , '-4 They saiij, however, it was . sible bilateral talks might be held on the conference sidelines on wpys to prevent surprise attack end the reduction of missile stockptle.s. The chief disarmament negotiators of the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union returned to Geneva today tor I the resumption of the conference. It was understood that the first item op the agenda would be a reporl by the United Stales, Britain and the Soviet Union on the partial test-ban agreement Initialled last Thursday M Moscow. Neutral sources said their nations — Brazil, Burma, Ethiopia, India, Mexico, Nigeria, Sweden and the United Arab Republic ~ were pleased by thh Moscow agreement. A. But they said an obvious step now would be to reach accord on a pact that would end underground tofltin^. The Moscow agreement covers lestlnK in the atmosphere, outer space and dor water. -‘I' report he will present to com- 7-Year-Old Rides Bike 45 Miles From Home HAROLD HILL, England (UPI) —Susan Hart, 7, was returned to her home here last night by po-ilice who found her riding her bicycle in Panfield, 45 miles away <’ The girl,-who disappeared Saturday, explained that she ‘“wanted to go and see the farm where they milk the cows,” a spot her father once had taken hqr on a day’s outing. CLARENCE E. BARNES Urban League' Names Director Currently Is Heading Project in Cleveland Clarence E. Barnes has been named the Pontiac Area Urban licague’s new executive director, Charles R. Harris, I,«aguc president, said today. Barnes currently heads a special research project for Bell Neighborhood, Center, In Cleveland, and Is working on a doctorate degree in sociology at WesU ern Reserve University. He takes over his new Job Aug. 15. Married, and the father of three, Blkrnes Joined Uie Urban League at Canton, 0., in 1954. While in Canton, he was also a visiting instructor at Malone College, worked with city urban renewal planners, and served He is a native of Fpirinont, W. Va., and a graduate of West Virginia State College ahd West Virginia University,. He holds the Bronze Star from World War II. Barnes fills a vacancy caused when Sam H. Jpies resigned in February to become Ldague director at St. Paul. Minn. '1. -J > ■ ft:: THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 2g,:i963 Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: Deafness Results From Artery Damage Q-My doctor tells me I have! Q?- If the life expectancy for something called CVA, I. have blue babies is 45 years, as you become deaf in one ear. What is CVA‘ :vA? Can I get better? ' A—CVA refers to a cerebral vascular accident or stroke. There are ifeveral different arteries in the brain that may be involved. , The symptoms , differ depending on the areas sup-‘ plied by the ar-, teries. The extent of the involvement var-) ies, and may be BRANDSTADT so slight as to go unnoticed or' ' may cause severe paraiysis. | 'Wius the outlook for recovery depends on whether thd initial damage was superficial or great. Yow doctor can helpjyou to prevent a recurrence. Deafness is one of the Symptoms of stroke in some areas. have said, does that mean that my husbatid who is now 44 end iKrho was a blue baby has dnly one year to live? He appears to be in good health but be tires easily. A—It c(;rtainly does not mean' that he will live only one year. All life expectancy fipres are avenrages, so some live more and some less than 45 years. Furttiermore life expectancy eO-timatea must be revise! upward for every year survived so that, while the average blue baby at the time of birth might be ..ex- pected to live 45 years, one who has already lived 44 years would have a life expectancy approaching 65 or 70 years a^, if he was still in good health at age 65, his life expectancy would be extended even .further. Q—What causes lichen planus? I have taken about 2dfU'^alpents for it and it is beyond my means to continue. Is there some salve that will cure it? ■ A—Lichen pianus is a skin dis-. ease characterized by flattopped red or purplish spots that itch severely. The cause is not known but in some people the disease follows scratchiiig or bruising of the skin. In others it may follow taking quinacrine for malaria, vitamin, deficiency, nervous exhaustion, and chronic low grade infections in the teeth, tonsils or gaK bladder. When the cause is not known her«>.Js no specific treatment and such treatment as is used is often unsuccessful. The disease often lasts for months and even though it clears up it may come back. Treatments that have been used with success oh some patients include ‘ injections of bismuth subsalicylate, X rays ahd chemicals. These must all be used, with caution. In any case you should have a frank talk with your doctor about costs and what you are able to pay. Most doctors will welcome such a discussion and will tailor their bills to fit your circumstances. VINYL SANDRAN the B««t and Mott Boautiful Vinyl'Floor'Covaring 6‘-9'-12' Wide SIMMER SPECIALS GOLD SEAL Inlaid LINOLEUM ARMSTRONG TEitRAZZO METALfC CORLON (’Wide n.(. 13.11 $095 n. XINOLEimi REGS 9x12 395 Reg. $2.49 6’Wide RUBBER ; BASE ||A 4»HI0H 51V IRREG. LINOiEUM WALL TILE 391 54” High FREE! USE QF OUR TOOLS - 761 WtHURON-PONTIAC It, e I........ • lo7 M.I. «■ »■ """tl';!;'''' 1102 W. nd.~W»ll«-d I.NliP UiP. 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Dress up your both or'- bedroom with lush, new beauty ,,, choose from 10 striking colorsi LARGE, THICK, AAARTEX "WESTMINSTER" TOWELS Reg. 1.99. 25 by 48" M,69 ■ Reg. 1.29 Hond Towel 89c Reg.. 49c Fingtertip . . 39c Reg. 49c Wath Cloth 39c Choose from EIGHTEEN striking, colors, . •" mix and match them with Waite's ■ print towelsl Honds'ome dobby borders. Shop and cornpore for size, quality, ' price ... you'll get more for your money at Woile'sl Provincial Print, Covered with Fine Percale dagroN-filled comforters Beautiful provincial print on smooth, long wearing percale. Filled with fluffy DuPont "Red Label" Dacron polyester fiberfill. Choose . blue, green or pink for years of bedroom beouty. . ,, _j. • Reg. .12.99 $999 Choice of Softness at One Low Price! ^TEX FOAM RUBBER PILLOWS $ Cool, comfociable; • plump fbam latex pillows with reinovablo zippered tickings for launderin<|. Odorless, non-allergenic, sanitized and fully lab tested. They keep their atvape always. Oulflj yotir bods oowl . . Choose from a Rainbow of Bec|utiful Solid Colorsf* back-to-sghool corduroy special ^ Regular 1.19 a Yard, Voriotile pinwalo corduroy lor your back-lo-schbol and fall sewing ... of very nice sovings for a limited timel 36 to 42" wide 100% finp cotton corduroy that |s tfompleiely washable ' Choofe from d rainbow of colors now and 9K ITnlie'* FTiile .Safe nnd Ft 'airir* . .K.l, I..- THE PONTIAC PKESS. MONDAY, JULY 29, 1968 SEVEN' 1 New Revival Mefhgd^ Half Drawing Viclinis Can Be Saved DETROIT (UPI) - At least half the; victims of drownihgs in Michigan die frolm heart stoppage; and could be saved by new and i mproved revival That statement was made yesterday by two physician experts in Closed Chest Cardiac Resuscitation (CCGR), a new method of revivaLbased on forced breathing and heart massage. - Larry. H. Birch, director, physiology department, Butterworth Hospital, Grand Rapids, and Dr. Robert A. Gerisch, a cardiologist at Harper Hospital, Detroit, and assistant professor of medicine at Wayne State University. The statement accompanied an urgent -plea “to all persons involved in water safety to learn the technique.” ' “Quick application of CCCR and the later usb of electrical defibrillators that are now in many hospitals can save many of the victims of drownlngs— as well as of electrocution,” they said. The two physicians are Dr. Shootings Draw Probe in Detroit DETROIT Ml - Police Commissioner George Edwards; home from England, planned today to look into the Cynthia Scott and Kenne|h Evans police shootings. Edwards said he had been kept informed of the incidents while abroad and that he approved the actions since taken ' as repbfted to him. He said he - might have a statement after his review. Miss Scott, 24, a Negro pros-. titute, and Kenneth Eyans, 18, white, were shot-to death by policemen earlier this month. The policeman who shot Mis^ Scott said she slashed him with a knife in resisting arrest. Evans was shot in fleeing from an abandoned stolen car, police said. ^ A Negro group picketed police headquarters and city hall in protest of the handling of the Scott Both agreed that CCCR must be learned and said the Michigan Heart Association would supply teachers and sponsor anywhere in, the state. Birch said summer is already half over and CCGR has been taught to only 200 persons, whereas every lifeguard, swimming in-, structor and camp director Jn Michigan should have learned it. EXPLAINS PROCESS Gerisch explained the blood chemistry of fresh watec drowning. , “When fresh water ^,s into a person’s lungs, it is absorbed through the air sacs into the blood, usually in no more than' a minute,” he said. “This process is osmotic and is caused by the salt content of blood.” Gerisch said that when fresh water mixes: with blood, it causes the red corpuscles lo burst. The broken corpuscles spill their contents, liquid hemoglobin apd potassium chloride. Enough potapsiuni in the blood will stop the heart completely or shock it into fibrillation. In fibrillation, the four chambers of the heart lose their coordination and contract at random. Actually, he said, the heart “just quivers.” ‘7, No blood is. pumped and death follows unless coordination restored., There is only one way to .do this, he said, Und it rarely fails: An electric shock, properly applied, internally or preferably externally.. CCCR combines moutii - to-moutK breathing and heart massage. “Putting'yie proper pressure case. A crowd of demonstrators, on- the center , of the chest, we mostly white, made trouble at a have learned, will squeeze the police precinct station in the heart so that its chambers and Evans case valves will push enough blood The polccemeh who killed Miss prough the body to sustain life ■ Scott and Evans were held by sometimes by itself will start superiors to have acted prop- r sfbpped heart, he said. * erly, I He emphasized that speed was all important because “the brain can suffer irreversible damage after four lo six minutes without oxygenated blood.” Victims of' ocean; water oX not die in the same mdnner. The saltier ‘ sea water takes water from the blood and the lungs tend to fill with liquid while the victim’s blood thickens. the best chance of survival. Blast Is to Soi Isjhfal Doreurs MARACAIBO, Venezuela m A bomb exploded prematurely at an American-own^ oil pipeline night, , killing two saboteurs who were planting it. It was the fourth .bombing at the Creole Petroleum Co. pipeline hpre. The company is a‘siib-sidiary of Standard Oil of New Jersey. The pro - Communist armed forces of National Liberation has But for them too, CCCR offers- be‘en trying to drive American installations out of Venezuela. Chinese Disclaim into striking positions along In-| dla’s northern frontier. TOKYO (tP» - Peking Radio says an Indian report that Red China is again massing groups on India’s borders is an “out-and-out lie.” ' The Peking broadcast yesterday-accused Prime Mhiister Nehru of keeping tension hip for political reason. NehrU fe•ned Saturday that the bor-situation is “full of menace.” The Times of India today said Peking has moved 13 divisions Peking also denounced the new U.S-Indiari air defense agreement as a menace to China and., other nearby nations particularly Pakistan. Delicate, wispy cirrus clouds are ice crystals floating from four to seven miles above earth, 7 YOUR CHOICE DeJur automatic 8mm zoom camera or Argus Autronic 35mm camera, case, flash DeJwr, all American made camera with automatic electric eye that letf lent for any light condition, indoors or out. Dramatic zoom shots at the flick of a finger. Pilfol grip, 3-way trigger. Easy to operatel Argus, just aim and shoot, while the electric eye adjusts exposure for every picture. Built-in signal warns when light is too dim. Rapid wind. Complete with carrying case, and flash attachments. KODAK FILM SALE Type II 3Smm with erecassleq ..................... 2.49 •leck/whlte, *20, 120. 127 ................... 3/$| ©PIN IVIRY NIOHT TO * KEEPS PRICES DOWN SHOP IN COOL AIS-CONDIT/ONED COMPORT ’’OUTDOOR PLAY GYM CLEARANCE Save $7 on 34.99 rugged steel set 99 2 chain swings, lawn swing, airglide, platform slide, trapeze, rings. Don't miss - it! 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Big choice of famoui boiti, vofuei to 1.09, now only 66< Mon'i 1.98 eweat ihlrti In % "tQ aii't. colon, •tylei,S-M-L-XL l.l* OPEN IVIRY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday ' I. ’ > .'1' , DOWNTOWN AND porpoises. caused a si scare on the Atlantic Ocean, at Rockaway Beach, yesterday and prompted more than half a million swimmeirs to scurry out of the water. » ” The porpoises were correctly electricity, -5—^— - velocity stream of hoInRs ber tween a set of magnets, Is being tried by U.S. electric companies. The process is called magnetohydrodynamics. SALE! Danish foam cushioned loyeseat and two matching chairs, only 77 Add tpice. and beauty to your family room decor now and save. No-sag spring base, hardwood frames, hardwood walnut-finished arms, handsome wipe-clean vinyl upholstery means less work for you. White, coral or aqua. 25 3-pcs. OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9, Monday through Saturday downtown and DRAYTON PLAINS KEEPS PRICES DOWN SHOP IN COOL Alk-CONDITIONCD COMFORT ■i. FAMOUS NAME SMMWEAR EARANCE N, GO PRICES ON 14.519%) 21.99 STYLES TO Fabulous savings on a gorgeous selection of famous ntakers swim-sults.AurA.t^stir up a little envy on the beach! Boy legs, sheaths, maillot, one and two piece styles. Assorted fabrics, prints, solids and novelties. You'll be the 'Belle' of the bhbeh. Si^es 32 to 38. Other twimiuiti stylet ..................................... $5 to $8 UDIES' SPORTSWEAR CLEARANCE 25% TO 33i% OFFf lingerie CLEARANCE ''w-riiixy of ilipf, gowni, duiteri and potticoats, juit '-'c' DRAYTON rUINS ' • ■ . ■ OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 ' Monday through Salurt^oy DOWNTOW^ AND DRAYTON .PLAINS \'A' A’ ‘ ■ L A A ‘.iw'■ , i -v' !'•'' . THE FOtfTIAC FRE^S; MONDAV, JULY 29, 19(^ MARKETS Tlw foUowlng art t(q> pricaa covering salea of locally grown produce by growera and lold.by them In wholeaale package lota. Quotatlona are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets *g\of noon Friday. Produc* Applii,- DucMb«» ............. ......»3‘.B0 Applet, tnMipa^enti bu.................t.OO Biueberriei, erkU ................... 3.S0 NEW YORK Wi-The stock naar-ket staged a sinall scale advance early today. Trading was fairly quiet. Most gains were R'aCtional although a few ran to a point. Steels, motors, rubbers, utilities and rails moved up. A sharp rise in building construction awards in June gave the market some favorable background news. National and Eastern Airlines were active in .the wake of Northeastern Airlines’ loss' of its Florida routes. National advanced 2 at 82 on a block of 10,000 shares and Eastern gained 1% at 24 on an 18,000-share block. Bquact, Itkiian, ‘A bu. .. Bquasb. Summer, Va bu. . Tomktoei.-hothouee, ( lb. bi Tomatoee, Turnlpi, bu. ....................... 1 — LETTVCB AND„ SALAD OBEEMS Celery, oabbage'.................... 1... gS3!JS; U.eb;d’ Eaoarole, bu. l.fiO Escnrole. bleached ........ .......... 2.75 Lettuee, leaf, bu. ... Romatne .......... :1:8 „ MPd .M AMet a 1.40 AmMot ,00a Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT W — Pricee paid per p at Detroit for No. 1 quality live ; ^eavjltype roaelore 3(4 Ibe r roaetera over. t Iba 4-36: broliera ..... fryera 3-4 Iba whitoa im-10: barred rook 31-aiVk, demand light. Cartlei DETROIT EOOS , I O.B.) .... ....... .. Extra Larie 37W- 44Vk: Large 37 - 41; Medium 17 ■ 33; Oman IS. . 31; Large 17 ■ 31; Medium 33 - 31; small 1»; Oheoka 33 - 96. Comment: Market unaattled to weak. Trade very alow and dlaappolntlng. Suppllea fairly ample . large and i bo generally abort of ; CillCAOO BUTTER AND EOOS CHICAOQ (AV) Chleaso Mercantile ---------- -i—jt.. ,(|,oieeale , wnu,'AuO (Ag) Chleaso sEaohango,— 8lut» ateady; buying prloea unchanged; 63 J c -- -- Eggq ’ about eteady; wholesale buying ......."t"?.'"- ‘ ■' ............. pricos unohanged to '/a higher; 70 be; cent or better grade A whitea 33V;i: mixed 3314: medluma 39; atandarda 39Vb; CHICAOII ruULTRT CHiCAOO 191 (USOAi - ilvt poultry; wholeaale buying prfoea unohanged; Ronxteri 16.91; apeolkl fed WhIM Rook fryera 19.90; Barred Rook fryers 91. OHIOAOO POTATOES CHICAOO, July M I9I-^(UEDA) iiotatoei arrl4alju^7; on traok U total u.s. ehlpmente 196; suppllii mo_ erate; dolhand good; marbot firm for . beet atook, dull for othera; oarlot track — California long whitea 6.00-6.96; a round redi 3.00-3.96. Llvfitock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT 191 - (U8DA) — Cattle 3,000. Hulk early supply email ahowlng. Helfari oi_____ _____ . email aupply. Good and oholOs alaughler ateera and helfera moderately active, 36 to OOlcenta tower, full deollne on choice owe moderately steady fevNJnada high oho choice with end' of prime ateera 3I|.76; moat cholos ateera 84.36- 36.60; good to low ohoiot itoera ai.io-34.36; few lota rhoica helfera 33 - 13.60; utility coWH 14.60.16,60; canhara and i high Moga 000 - Hnrrowa. gllta and ai \ steady 6 head U.B. 1 317 lb. barn and gllta 30.00; several lota moalli 300-330 Ib 10.06; 1 and 3 100-330 10.60-10.76, 1 and 3 3 190-330 |b 11.71-19.40. few lota 9 and 3 aeo-lio Ib 19-16.00; I, 1 and 3 300-400 Ib aows 14.76 -16.75; few 366-300 Ib welghta |7.0' ‘ -— I 400-000 lb sows 14!70-10.76j ) Ib weight! 17.00; 0 and 3 906.100 Ib welghta 17.00; 0 and <00 Ib ll.ll-ullo, boara ll ll-U.i Vealera 300 . steady to strong 1,00 higher choice and prime 3 standard dnd good 30-37, cull and lly 13-30. .........0 - alaughter claaati ataady, ----- ------- -------I „ Steels> Motors, Rubbers Rise Stocks Advance in Quiet Trade U. S. Steiel and Jones & Laugh-lin posted frUctionai gains despite continued slow demand tor steel amid indications that the rate of orders may not pick up for two MOTORS GAIN General Motors; Ford and Chrysler also showed fractional gains. 6 International Business Machines, Polaroid and Xerox advanced a point. Chicago Yellow Cab, which has been active recently, w^ ahead by 'more than a point. Du Pont lost mpre than a point. iW rails were solidly in the plus cojumn wi^ a string of Prices advanced on the American Stock Exchange. Fractional gains included Arkansas-Louisiana Gas, Data Control, General Plywood, Imperial Oil and Rayette. Corporate and governmen bonds were mixed. . Friday the Associated Press average of 60 stocks advanced .8 to 264.8. American Stock Exch. mgw YORK (AP) — Amerlogn S Z7or: Imp Tb Ca 1 Mea . .. MusL........ , 11.7 Novo Indus . . 37.7 Sherw Wm .. . 13 Technlco .. The New York Stock Exchange O MlUa 1.30 0«n Mot 3a GPrecn-*30 OPubSv .28g OPubU 1.20b OTolABl .80 OsnTlr* 40 Oa Pac lb GaUyOil .lOg OjlUU^l.lOa Oopdroh 3.30 Goodyear 1 Grace Ob lb OrandU .00b OranCS 1.40 GtA&P 1.20a GtNoRy 3 GW Pin .OOf Oreyhd 1.30b Grumn 1.00 WT.13 AmStd .10 t£t 3.1 18 37% 37% 37% — % ‘k 7^* 7*7?i Haveg 46s HerePdr Herts 1.-. Hewlett Pk HeydenN .0 Hoff Elect Homst 1,60 Hook Ch II 14 67% 67',.......... , . it iil ? Hupp Cp .33f. l.OOg I .40 J 24*/. 24V. 24*/. 4 a 47'/. 47'/a 47'/. . 6 17% 1.7% 17%’’- ArmCk 1.60a Aahl Oil 1.30 Atohis I iOa AtlRef 2.40 Atlas Cp 17V. 17% , 84% 64% 6 63'/. 63% 633 uS T % i5 % p p 3 17'/4 17% 17% f V* d 3a 4- 77'/. 77'/. 77'/. .... . 1,60L,30% 39% 39% ... Ihterlak 160 .4- 94'/. 94% 94%-% IntBusM 4 ; ■ 19 433% 432 433% +2 IntlHarv/B.'40 10 04% 04'% 04% — % IntMlnei'vl’.60."v 3 01% 01% 01% -I % ............ r fo^. V% 30 26% 36'/a . 38% 4 % 14 .46% 41% 48% + % BHidLIm .40 BaltOV 1.13 ----olt 1.20 i 04*/. 84% 64% ... I Ikp. 1 34% 34% 34% 4 % 7 73% 73% 73% - % i I Sir 11 6 sii^ 33% 33% 4-46 30% 30 30 - .. imm Lehmn 1.46g* Ki'nV'IS CanHud i.Ql OanlW l.li g’.frtU^’oo OasanaAIro l ChgmpB 1.60 asifu*'. it ■}jS \ or or r ‘t a ir :*% LockhA 130a I.d)ckhAlr wl LoneSOaa j ^ _______ a Wifa- Loi'lllard 2. I MStP F cRi pacit 1 ChrlaCtt .8U Chrysler i CtUeaSv 2.oS ClevElIll 1,30 OooaCol 3.70 COIgPal 1.36 '- innaR 30g .. .lo P Ir CBH 1.40b oo| r- • - COlP 136 P 69' W y..- .................... s P : \ ,t P P : \ 0 8*,. 8!|. 8% - W 4 1 11 38% 23"'. 21*4 , Cornier* 1.00 10 43% 42% 42% ... ComlSul .00b 6 23% 23% 23',. I Oomd I.20b 11 40% 48»/, 48% - ConBdla 3.30 8 88% 8604 06% I CoiiBil Ind 1 3 1144 111/. 11'/. I CnNOas 2,30 Sonfain Oont Can 2 1 alaughtar ewes 4.00-7.00. OniCAOn LIVESTOCK CHICAGO - (API • (UHDAI - Hogs 4.606; ' actIVO, butchers fully steady; -'•*"■ itiady tf ’• "I..-..... lu.Mw. iiruuiid !-¥ 2M.il70^^iba 18.76 : 460-600 T6a 13.70-16.00. C«ttle 4,0Mi calves none; trading. 0« giauglUer atoars rather .low, unAmn; wel|gila_un(l#j^^90fl^ l^a_ iteaipi ^l_o .mi{at[^ rr; ami Sf' ir*'ala fe nuRiiy i:i.7(i45.00. ...., a.rai.i'-jS'A. ...... tnarkei leal; load moaUy..prim Ib alaughler ataera iil^Jnfta saw tnuatly (ilio oa Willi 1.000 Ib aiaUlbt«r ........... ^ load 030 Iba «,00; eholce 800-1,076 Iba gi.,- -........... 93.70-24.80; metlly garni 21.00-23.00; UlitI- Erie Leek ty and eommercia’ ...... 41% 40% j 88'4i 80% I p ir ir ’•Mtii h 12 18% 10% 10% 0 46’/« 48’/* 40% I % ■■ 90% 30% - % S % ‘.... 33 30% 80% 30% —D— 8 02’/. 82% 62% 2 20% 90% 20'/* i p r 24 40% JlSit P I 17^ 0 '33’A 11% 9?% - - % ............]S §?l ] it 0.23.00; Ullll- Erie 1 ..............Jal cows l4.6()-l«80:,Eyana __ cnmicrM And auUnra 13.65*14.60; few out-l nvorahp 1.20 Urn up to lo.W. I mieoi) 300: h«rdly eiiouRh of •nv . Dfriired (or i prloe trend, lew choice Riid r»ir u%?tr‘.na- ?:.Y. 27 ISit it% it% + ts gfC.; m 61 '91 ■iir-'*''- IND,6 V 97.0 ilO.I 100.0 tien liUeo ‘'"{KrArt .1 Bit 81; ii'.;, soT'li 60 771* 76% 76% .. Bolieilley | I 34% 34% 34%. + I 68% 88% 68V« + 1 30'/4 38% 35% - 12 ■ ■ 6% 6*/* 5% + 8 32% 32% 32% + 84 26% 26% 36% .. 21 33% 33 33 - 7 49% 49'/< 49'^ + 19 4k% 48 48 ..., 81 34% 34 , , 'S 17^ 17% 17% 8 90% 20% 36% + 7l H3.- 46 44% -44%.... Scherg 1.40a Schick 8CM ,42f SeottPap .89 BeabAL 1.00 SearaR X.40a Servel ShellOll 1.30 Sinclair 3 Singer 1.70 smith AO 1 Socony 2.40 BouCalE 1.05 SouthnC l.VO SouNatGas 9 SouP^c L40_ 14 18’/. 18% 18’/. 11 38’/. 38% 39*/. 11 ' 44'/. 44 . 44% 41 47% 47% 47’/. 4- ■/. 6 37'% 37% 3»% + H —H— 3 34% 34% 34% 4 7 38 36% 30% - 10 47% 48% 47 4 3 31% 2t'/« 21% . J lit T4 p -4 \ Sitt Sit SSz’it 19 57% 80% 57 - '/a 8 42'/. 42. 42'/. 1 6’/. 8’/, 6’,a Sperry Rand Spiegel 1.80 itdSuCal'ib StdOllIhd 3 SlOllN Jl,30g StOtlOh 3.806 at... «,|jg ----- Pkg StauffCh f.20 Bterl DD-Steven ‘ 2?ob 1 63% - ■'/. TegOBul .40 Tfxlnat .80 TexPCO 1.20 TexPLd .36g Textron 1.49 fhtokol UU TIdewat on TlmkRB Ziw inl**T&T Transitron TrlCont .048 Tweni Cent JohnxManv 2 JonLogan .70 JonteAL 3.00 Joy Mfg 1 KayaRo .40a Konnecott 3g KernCL 2.46 KerrMcQ 1 KImbClark 3 Koppers 3 ■ ' 10 47% 40% 47% 0 lO’/g 18% ie’% 0 83’/.’ 03% 83% 33^0% 30% 30% 4 30% 30% 30% 14 73% 71% 71% 0 87'% 87 07% 4 % ....... ‘1% 38% 4 % 1 49% 48'/. , „ 26 26'/b aey. aa'/i — y. H m p Sit 4 % —L—— 1 15^ 16% 16% 1 17% 17% 17% 2»o or „,r or , . UCarbId 3.80 UnGIICal 2a Sruf* USPrht 1.20a urTn^du’.?"* Ou"b'^2^ US smelt 2 US Steel 2 UnWhel OTp UnMateh .40 73% 73% 71% -- % 37 71'............, 30 60% 40% 40% 1*1 ,,-„„J1 I.40b Vanad Cp VaHan A. VendoCo .40 P S'!t :: .23% 23% 93% ,. *3 P m Tilt; 18 44% 44% 44% . Walwarth 'WarLam . Wn Banop Wn M(f f WUnTel 1 W.tgAB 1. WealgEl 1. Md'it Marqua .2Sp Martin M 1 < 39% 4 '/ : fi t II westgL. . WhlrfOp 1 WhlteM 1... Wll.n Co 1.80 MerrCh .30g MOM 1.60 Mid 8U 1.10 MlnerCh .70, Mpl Hon MlnnMM .00 Mo Pao 9.40 MOhaa .40a Mon.an 1.20b MontWnrd 1 Motorola 1 34* Sit iiit 16/ 62% 08% 03% , . 38 63% 03% 63% -lyj 2 3n* 37% 3 3 10% 19% I 0 104 103% U 38 69% 09'% I I . 13 62f 15 37»_ 10 70% 70V4 —N~ tit *titi 62% , NDHlry 2,20 Nairuo'i liio N steel . . NEngEI 1.13 NYOent .33* NYOhl - - MagM $w 3 NorfolkW Oa ........‘1 1 , its NoAmAvla 8 1 »ch‘”l*. s ir, ir 0 44% 44'/. 44% 14 73% 78'/t .79% , 30 43'/b 43% 43% .~ '4 37%, 37 27'/, 4 .11 19% 19% 19% 4 3 48% 43'% 43>% 4 ‘.*.r.ffiti?r: II 00% 60% 00 4’ 1 p 30% 36%,.'*’. , 15 ir s% ir tit 5 ir ir ir=it .Ohio Ed 1.70 itflaV ,ib'g 'ae GAB I .'aoTAT 1.30 PanAAIr ,00 ParamPlcl 3 ..... 40% 46% 4 ir 4%t 13 ll’A 11% iWi . . - 31% 31'/, .. 3 3]% 31% 31'/, .. *i ir ?r iir;;, */ r irfv.t‘ 10 41% 41'/, 41'i ... 1 34'/, 34', 34% 4 34 njj ^J% |,% 4 % 0 m ii ir-%ft»ish<|9 I 8# "IIS Ii t!»S* i 8» R Tfi t i I US IIS a: •VIpn I, iBli .10. sa,“,:8 Nudi'iiSii /.io A P ii% 4$* 7 17% 67J» 67% .,. 9 11% 19% 19% .| % I ej* - i" I 34% 94% <4% 6 19% ll'b 10% . . ; Sit .‘o't: P t It 19% 9% 9%.,. X33 10% 10% 10»/b 4 tiiit ir Pti 10 87% IT 97V, — 1 7% 7% 7%, . 17 44'/, 43'% 44Vt . I 46V, I * 46 Va , 3 29% 29% 1... 17 e9'/i 69V. 69V. .19 31 30% 31 6 69>/«' 55% 65% 16 61 t0‘A 51 22 34_ 33% 34 ' 19 63 '* 83 63 66 14'/« 14 14'/, 4 27% 37 27'/g MANILA,. Philippines (AP)'C The government chiefs of Indonesia, Malaya and the Philippines gathered today for a summit meeting called to head off Southeast Asia’s cold war over the pressed Federation of Malaysia. President Sukarno of Indonesia arrived for Tuesday’s summit after pledging to wreck the Malaysia plan unless his terms are met. Prime " Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman of Malaya, committed to forming the Malaysia Federatlbn Aug. 31, arrived two hours later. President Diosdado Macapagal of the Philippines proposed the conference. The immediate problem is the formation of Malaysia, embracing Malaya, Singapore, Sarawak and North Borneo, all fbrmer or present British territories. LARGER ISSUE A larger issue is whether Indonesia will cooperate with Malaya and the Philippiries in a confederation of 150 million people to eliminate subversion — Communist or otherwise—-and help bring peace and security to the area. Sukarno calls the federation a jlan to extend British rule. He las accused Malaya of seeking to encircle Indonesia’s 100 million people. Malaysia’s populatlbn of nearly 10 million will be bolstered 3 047. .... .... 10 19% 13% 13% 17 20% sW, ^6’/. 3 3flVa 30}, „„ , 38 6% .8% 6% — 76 ' 36'/, 34% 34% — 7 ^0% 40% 40% - 40 71% ,. .. 14 67% iiy, 67' 27 16, 14% 14' 23 74% 73% 74 18 .............. . 21% 21V, 2l'% 4 .! 2;w» + " m r 14 61% 61'/, 61% 2 4’% 4% i% 13 46% 46'/k 46% 4 28 28’/, 28’/, 10 103% 103% 103'/* 7 72’/a 72% 72’/. \l ?.% ?*oT: !’o% 18 9% 4 68 I 3 44'% i 142 87% I 18 40% , 13 49 41% ♦n, _ —w— 17- 24oi 244^ 4.' 16 ' 39‘/ii 38'/, 38'/, + 4*8 18* 3*J% q Ik 4 1 43% 43% -43Va 4 13 28% 28% 28% 4 1 38 38 38 .. 4 28%' 28% 28% + Xll 87% a7'% 87% ... 3 39% 39% 39% ... —x—' 00 M0% 346% 348 3 11 98% 28% 20% - —z—. 19 61’/, 88% 58% 4 denda In the foregoing t following footnoloa. Special ... I. not dealg-iifind In the -I.lqiildellnS divl lui'cd or paid In 10U3 plut 1. O' Paid last year, I Pay liming 1983, eallmuted caab ................ - tar thli year. ?)- .babigred b. __________ llyldeml or spilt up. k-Dcclared his year, an accumulative las; dividendi In xrroara. - ■ - (Id or paid In 1989 plus atook dividend. t ' — Pat* *,.-1.... estimated........... dlatrlbuUon date. "M.......... old -dfalloil, X—Ex dividend y—Ex Dl dend and lalea In full. x-dls-Bx dlatrll lion, xr Ex rlghte. xw-Wlllioul w ...... — warrants, wd—When 8 vj • In bankruptcy or rocolveralilp or being reorganised under the Bankruptcy Act, or aeourlUca assumed by such com- Treasury Position Asians Holding Summit Talk Malaysia Federation Creates 'Gold War* By JESSE BOGUE UPI Financial Editor NEW YORK - Thbse twexent stamps which grandfather tucked away in a book or a drawer and forgot won’t carry as many letters in today’s ZlP-code mall they did on the slower routes of 50 years ago. But in the stamp collector’! world, they may go a long way farther toward helping fill -the pocketbook than the mail box. Postage increases, dollar shrinhbge regardless, the hoarding and collection—and trading— of stamps goes serenely op, ..nationally and internationally, as it has for nearly a century. Many item|,of value as wide- By . GEORGE SYVERTSEN MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet bloc will set up its own interna-Uqnal bank to facilitate trade payments within the group. But Premier Khrushchev’s East European allies and ^Mongolia have rejected his bid tb control their economic planning. 11 72% 71’% 72% - 8 13'/, 13'/, 13'/, ... 30 06’% 06'% 06’/e 4 < 2n enu go% 60’% ... , 84% SJ’/JT iJby defense pledges from Britain. .... * , Sukarno wants postponement of the Aug. 31 launching date for the federation and plebiscites in the North Borneo territories to determine, if the people wapt to join the federation. Rahman indicated he . did not expect the Manila meeting to resolve the conflict between him and Sukarno. Macapagal had also opposed Malaysia, proposing instead a Confederation including the Malaysian states arid the Philippines—both staunchly pro-Western — and neutralist Indonesia. Wheat Futures llp; Others Turn Easy CHICAGO , (iP)— Wheat futures started off with moderate gains but other commodities tprned mostly easier today in rather quiet early dealings on the board of trade. Wheat moved up major fractions to more than a cent per bushel but traders said the strength reflected considerably slackened offerings more than a greatly increased demand. However, there appe^ed to be a little more confidenpif'^in the long side of .the market. Corn and soybeans came under further pressure of liquidation following reports of rainfall over parts of the midwest during the weekend. Tte moisture was understood to have been heavy in some areas. Grain F!ricei l.=s« ny» 1.68'/a Sopt. i« ill: ::: 1:1! Stocks of Local Intorost Plguroa after deoinml points are eli^lilli ar" lowing quetatlon* do ly ropniannt. actuiil tianaii Intcndod aa u guide, to H I! (nidlii, AMT Corp, Iln-Dloator ........ .. larrs't.. _ JtattK ....BhlNGTON (API The eaah pq-MoLouth Steel Co..42,3 40 alllon of the Treasury onmparad withiMeradel produet" .18.(1 17,. j -• ‘ i j .orr..p.k.dl„« date a year ago KYea.%be Co ’! ?!!:«* •“»»•»»« ...0 7,MO,Oils,000.70 pioneer PInaiuie . 10 jH i" Juiio wllllo ill May 1,437,5J5 ^ What's It Worth? Stamp Values Change ly collected and traded as are postage stamps have regular marketplaces, but there is no one particular center in which the stamp collector and the dealer do business. The literature op collection and evaluation of stamps is- widespread and international ip scope, and the novice and serious professional alike often seek a com-nion standard bt price if a time comes to “do business.” NEED SOURCE -In other words, they need some source to explain that an unused 1927 Lindbergh airmail stamp“of 10-cent denomination may now be wo.r'th $1.10. Or that some stamps, even unusued, may have grown in value only by fractions, despite considerable age; that the cancellation on somq, old stamps may have increased thbir value, and lowered that of others. While there are hundreds of dealers in the stamp world, one old U.S. firm, Scott Stamp Publications, a division now M Esqnire,^nc., has achieved a prominent position, not by dealing in stamps, but by keeping available to collectors aod dealers the price structure in the field. It annually issues a “standard' catalogue,” listing the price of every major variety of mipt and cancelled postage stamp issued since 1840. These numbet about-150,000. Soviet Block Will Set Up Its Own International Bank Communist party and government officials here for last week’s Hopes Slim Mart Dufies to Go Lower meeting of the, Councillor Mutual Economic Assistance— COMECON'-r apparently shelved Khrushchev’s p r o p o s a 1 for “a Kremljn - based central planning organ. A COMECON communique issued Sunday Said the old method of bilateial talks on national programs would lead“to^improved bloc-wide coordination of economic planning. ROMANIA OPPOSES Communist Rorriania reportedly opposes Soviet experts who want to curtail Romania’s heavy industry development in favor of light industrial and agricultural production. Other East European governments were believed reluctant to sacrifice the limited economic independence from Moscow they enjoy. BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP)-The six foreign ministers of the European Common Market nations gathered in Brussels today for a two-day meeting, with prospects dim that they will decide to lower duties on imports of U.S. frozen poultry. The United States has warned it will retaliate with higher tariffs if the Common Market does not cut its levy on American chickens. Higher tariffs might hit anything from German industry to French luxury goods Foreign ministers of France, West Germany, Italy, The Nether: lands, Beligum and Luxembourg are meeting with their ministers of agriculture to discuss the issue. Earlier this month, the agricultural ministers decided against a cut, but Ihe foreign ministers’' council has the last word. ’ ■ French and West German sources have indicated that no cut in duties—now 13.5 cents a pound —will be possible. The French hr-gue that the six nations are-building up a common farm policy, and that agricultural matters can be discussed only on d’reciprocal basis with the United .States in the larger framework of the “Kennedy round” of tariff negotiatio'hs next year.. The six also were to discuss the procedure for future quarterly meetings between, the Common Market and Britain within the framework of the West European Union, which has its secretariat in London. 80,000 CHANGES Gordon Harmer, editor for Scott’s, assembles reports on prices from hundreds of key-' stamp dealers around the world; about 80,000 price changes are .. made each year in the catalogue. ’ A report issued recently on the firm’s activities quoted Joseph . Arnstein, senior vice president of Esquire, as saying-that Scott performs something of the same sort of function as does the specialist in a seciir-^. ities auction market: it has ai-umed the responsibility of maintaining an orderly market. Only the price changes that result from the constant trading qf stamp, and not the wide price swings due to the unusual situations, are entered in the catalogue. Numbers are used as identification for stamps, rather than description of the stamp, around the world. The COMECON conference i^so agreed to set tip a Soviet bloc international bank Jan. 1. The ban|^ will streamline payments for foreign trade transactions within the bloc. The system of country-to-coun-try payments has proved cumbersome. The Soviet Union, East Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Mongolia lack a convertible currency to use for settling outstanding accounts. The emergence of new nations —with new postage—and the continuing steadiness of stamp collecting as an established hobby led to Esquire’s ^uisition of Scott in 1960 as an enterprise with growth potential. Scott does not deal in stamps any longer and has not for nearly 25 years; it is the largest qf five firms engaged In the so-cMed.” stamp accessory business. / Business Notes. James 6. Wright, of Bloomfield Township, former Ford Motor Co. vice president in charge of car and truck divisions, has ■joined a West Coast electronics firm. Wright, of 6100 Wing Lake, will be consultant to Litton Industries on forward planning in selected fields. He left Ford in May The six will also seek agreement on a common economic policy towards the Soviet bloc. Reports Rise in Jobs in Executive Agencies WASHINGTON (UPI) - The numberi of crtiployes working for federal j executive agencies rose 17'l80^n June, .Sen. Harry F. Byrd^-Va., reported today. In ^llan agencies, Byrd said John Kinzier, 18 Salmer, is now handling ““homes, new ’Imultiple - dwell-|ipg and business-Iproperty accounts |for K a m p s e n Realty & Building fCo,, 1071 West iHuron, years realty ex-pcrlence in the KINabEIV- Pontiac area before Mce^)jgirflng.tbeJifin. Rayfll^B, Wells, former Pon-Wac reildent, has beep named 'mnriag)»' of the outomotivq division of American Oil Company’-s marketing techriical service department. . He started with the firm in 1949 as a salesman in Flint, now llve.s in La Grange, Itl, Amit ........ j«h1u riio»i oiftrawals fiscal year (|l 5SS' ■ (uffictT'ftulS? were pn the payroltr./rhc military listed 1,0.50,024 persons in June, Byrd said, compared will) 1,054,313 |ij May, trend or HTAPLE PRICES NEW VOR K (AP) -’The Associated resa weighted wholssale price Index of I eommcidltles. Previous Day 108.71, WseX Alo 189.83 lonth Ago 1(19.37. Vear Ago 183.39. High , , 18*9*7^ 188*84 18V*8i I’/lfe!! »::i: Iralife a avdfags equals ioo). TTKK, EGGS OlUeagu Met'( .......„ -..—■ ateudy; wholesale buying pi'lcet unchanged to % higher; 93 aenre A A 871/ n*. Mlk. Ralls ma. Change i .1 ....i-Moe 01,6 100 1 PreV Huy 81.0 100.0. Wei'k A^o looYiligh' 'ooi icili 1IHI3 Low 70.1 9(1 7 Mmiow 11, Hopp, ;)78 Voorheis, ' *( has been promoted to appliance supervisor,. elec’ trie and gas, in Consumers Power's Owosso district. Hopp fornierh was gas appli a n c « servlet foreman in Con- HOPP division, lie held since 1955. He joined the company in' 1934 as an operator at the Coolldge plant In Royal Oak. Recently re-elected vice president of IXitfolt Chapter of‘'the National AssotftationT of AccouqL hondh 40 Ntmda . 10 Higher graiiTiel 89 07- 0.(13 Headi, Blmiingharn. Ho is ass 80 80 olio'atiMroasurer atui cunlrollcr 0J.88' *.**' c;ni'hurel(^,Co, A,$U^C&SS^I% * Investing , i ■iwiliiiliiiit By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “We will have $7,000 maturing in E bonds in August Ind September. My wife is 72 and I’m 77. We .own our home and have something over $0,-000 in savings accounts. Outside of our Social Security, we havie no other assets except our heritage of general good health from sturdy ancestry. We need more income. We have no dependents, nor is there anyone to whom we can look for aid. How can we best a^d to our income?” . J. 0. A. I have a number of clients with greatef financial assets who would give a good deal for your , heritage of good health. With no dependents to think about; your best bet would be a joint survivorship annuity.. If you left $2,900 in the savings bank for contingencies, you He h a s 2 0<^O“l‘l f"'' M4,0(io about $1,400 year in annuity income which wquld be paid to you both — and something more or less, depending on age, to the one whp survives — for life. Q. ”1 am 34 years old with a wife and two young children. My Income Is $13,000 annually. I have $25,000 life Insurance und $5,000 in savings. We oWn home and I would like to buy common stock with an , appreciation potential. What do ^ you advise?” G. E. A. Please allow me to congratulate you ori a fine family and the means to lake good care of them. I don't knqw from your letter just how much you want to' Invest at this time, blit I assume ri will use perhaps half and suggest no more — of your savings account. Presumably you will want to educate your, children some years sumers Pontiac hence. I adviaa,^herefore, that Hi.,i.u» » post you ignore yield and try to hup qioUt growth that can be ejf-ioted over a period of ten yeara'. Fur this objective, I suggest ’ Franklin Life Insurance, whidh has compiled a splendid record ) and which sljould continue to do well ovor a period of time. .................. . Mr> Spear cannot answer all / ants was Leon E. Jackman, 406ft jfnall (lersonally but will' answer all quastlona poMlbla oficolumn. , I (COPYRIGHT Hill I ' , i. /, V. 1 n "V : THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 29, 1963 In Ponfiac/ Neighboring Areas EARL^ J. PIKE - CHARLOTTE T. SCHMITZ Service.for Earl J. Eike/75, bf 673.6 Cloverton, Waterford Towiit ship, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Decker Methodist 'Church, Decker. Burial will follow in Moshier Cemetery, Lamott Township. Mr. Pike died Saturday after a brief illness. His body is at » Marsh Funeral Home, Marlette. A retired farmer, Mr. Pik« was a member of DeqiKer Lodge No. 479-, F&AM. Surviving~are a son, Stanley and a daughter, Mrs. Euing Keith both of* Waterford Township; a sister, Mrs. Priscilla El-well of Pontiac; a grandchild and two step-grandchildren. Service for former Pontiac resident Charlotte T. Schmitz, 83, will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Vincent de Paul Church, w burial at Mt. Hope Cemetery. Miss Schmitz died Sunday at Carmel Hall in Detroit. She was a member of St. Vincent de Paul Church. JOHN J. HARRIS V Service for John J. JElarris'Vi two-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs, Albert J. Harris of 61 E. Rutgers was at 11:15 a.m. today at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, with burial at Mt. Hope Cemetery. ■ - : John died Saturday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following a long illness. Surviving are his parents and a, brother Keith A;, of Pontiac. MONROE C. HILtY Service for Monroe C. Hilty, 56, of 489 East Mansfield will be at 1 p.m. Wedne||i3y at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial at White Chapel Cemetery. ' Mr.“ Hilty was dead on arrival Sunday at Beyer. Hospital in Ypsilanti following an auto accident. He was a supervisor at Pontiac Motor. Surviving are his wife, Marion E., two sons, James M. and Robert, both of Pontiac and three daughters, Mrs. J.. C. Ward of Long Beach, Calif., Mrs. H. R. Bateman.of Arcadia, Calif., and Mrs. Walter Jeffreys of Waterford Township. Also surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Charles Kistner of Pontiac, Mrs. Marvin Moser of Bluffton, Ohio and Mrs. Eileen Rieter of Ada, Ohio. f Oakland, ot tl . father of Int! Amelia Olles, 19539 To Clemmy Rogers said minor child. PeUtlon haying been filed In^thls ^ourt 1 child ha^ violated ^a lleglng ^ the jby not ---------------- -.. _____ petition ...... he held at the C^url Houac, Oakland Counlv Service Center, In the City Puntmc In aald County, on the 8th ( o( Auguat . A.D. 1903, at . l:3S..olcl ill the altcrnoon. and you ‘ire her eommanded to appear peraonally at i ' It being 0 make personal The Pontiac impractical to _______ ... eof, this summons and rved by^ publlcallon^of a co^y laper "pXted Wltnesa, the Honorable Nornian. B. arnard. Judge of sold Court, InT tTic ity of Pontiac In aald County, this 2Sth iV of Julv A.D. 1983 (Seal) MRS. LEE WELLS irvice for Mrs. Lee (Adah) Wells, 87, of 2606. Winkleman, Waterford Township, will be p m. Wednesday at Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will follow in the! Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. Wells died Sunday after brief illness. She was a member of the Christian Church, Pontiac. Surviving are a son, John A, Green of'Pontiac, and two grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Bpacl " ?^1 MRS, JOHN V. COOKSON TROY — Service for Mrs. John V. (Pearl)' Cookson, 56, of 948 Rochester, will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Clawson Methodist Church, Clawson. Burial will be in Oak-view Ceinetery, Royal Oak^ Mrs. Cookson died Saturday after. a long illness.-Her body will be at Price Funeral Home here until noon tomorrow. She was a member of American Legion. Auxiliary No. 167, Clawson, and the Troy Election Board. Surviving are her father Charles L. Haskins Sr. of Troy; four brothers, Elmer of Cleveland, Ohio, William J. of Sandusky, Howard C. of Troy and Charles L. Jr. of Royal Oak; and ,two sisters. IRVIN FARALISZ TROY - Irvin Faralisz, 43; of 966 Harris,, died unexpectedly early today of a heart attack. HR body is at Price Funeral Home. JAMES LP«UEBRER0 KEEGO HARBOR-Serviee for James L. Guerrero, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Guefrdro of 1621 Beechmont, will be 10 tomorrow at Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church, Burial will follow in Mount Hope Cemetery, Pontiac. The baby was -dead at birth Saturday. His body is at Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiac. - . Surviving besides his parents are two brothers, Gerald, in the .S. Army, ai^ Clifford, at home; and'four sisters, Viola’Violet, Jo-ann-and £^pie, all at home. MRS. FRANK J. LUTZ ORION TOWNSHIP — Service for. Mrs. Frank J. (Eva E.) Lutz, 75, of 803 Fairview, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Allen’s Funeral Home,-Lake Oridi. Burial will fol-NORMAN R, BARNARD '"w in Eastlawm Cemetery, Lake Judge of Probate Orion- DEI.PHA A. BOUOINE , .. Deputy Probate Regieterj Mts. Lulz died .yesterday after Juvenile Division . T -ii c-u - .July 29, 19031 a two-wcek illness. She. was. a member of the Lutheran Church. Surviving besides her husband are a brother and a sister e petition, c STATE 01 bate Court Juvenile Dli In the mu.............. .... Ing Susan Sablock. minor. 14830. To Frank Sablock. father «1 ' minor child. Petition having been filed In this C alleging that the preseiU whereal of tile father of said minor child unknown aml^^^eald ‘•him i. ehy notll petition ' ‘^t- nd (greulated ...... ... WItneaa, llimoraijle^ Ity of hontlae m »uld County,'thia 23r (Beilil^'''’NOn.MAN R. BARNARD a true copy) Judlte ot Probal DFU’HA ALJ»«UflINE Deputy Pfobate Reglstt Juvenile Dlvfslo.. ^ Julg 2J(. 1983 aI7Vert)88;mknt JOHN T. TIMMINS TROY — Service for former resident John'T. Timmins, 68, of Clawson, will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday^ at Price Funeral Hoihe here. Burial will be Royal Oak Cemetery. A retired Ford Motor Co. employe, Mr. Timmins died yesterday after a long illness.^e was a member of Oddfellows Lodge No.- 424, Royal Oak; qnd of AFL-ejO Local No. 600, Dearborn Oddfellows Memorial Service will be 8 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Surviving are his wife Mary; three children, Mrs. E. Donald Troop of Sacramento, Calif., Mrs. Harold Welch of Midway Island and Edward H. of Manhattan iach, Calif.; five grandchildren; 'broffiers and three sisters. PTA Heads toAttend Workshop A number of Oakland County PTA officers are expected to attend this week’s three-da^ader-^jiip training institute at the Wal-denwoods resort in Hartland. A 10 a.m. session Thursday begins the statewide workshop, which will last until 2:30 p.m. Saturday. Following a theme of “Come and Learn by Doing,” the agenda includes discussion of raising PTA funds, parliamentary procedure,* and proper programing. The atmosphere is to be formal, and delegates are urged to bring casual clothing.* Waidenwoods Is located on old. U.S. 23, north of the M-59 intersection. Further information concerning the workshop can be obtaiined by contacting Mrs. J. E. Frank-enfield, president of the Oakland County Council of PTA’s, at 6340 Pirie Knobb,. Independence Town- Sleeping and dining facilities will be available at the resort Rescuers Bring Drowning Victim Back to Life DAVID J. McCALLUM OAKWOOD - Servic^or Dav-1 J. McCailurh, 3-y^r-old son of Mr.'and Mrs. Memn McCal-lum, .3090 Baldwin, wilt be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Bossartiet Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will follow in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Oakwood. The child died unexpectedly Saturday. Surviving besides his .parents are a brother,^ Gary, at home; and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John MeCallum of Oakwood and Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Welch of Columbiaville. .TfiCUMSEH (VP) -. Elmer- Ab-shire, 34, of Tecumseh, a picnick-r, was taken from Vineyard ,ake Saturday, apparently a drowned man. He had stepped into a dropoff and was undcl^ water an estimated two dr three minutes before rescuer^ brought him to the surface. He had no detectable pulse, heart beat, or breath., Teams of men gave him mouth-to-mouth respiration and external heart ma.s.sage. Then a rescue, squad arrived and applied a re-suscitator. W85^ lurni^!’ KUtlstgclury All uNipuiikl* miDiiill llnii fur 8 uprlod of •fter ' official opening of lie paid by eliall reninl ■ ‘It daj ...e Board of tldMi-allon reeeryeo ...c right of any or all bide In whole oH In part, and to waive any Informalltlek. Board ot Education Walled Lake Conaplldated Hclioolf 818 North Pontiac-Ti all Walled Mlchfgan Mr ;tl(ibafd n. MIlea. " j Mecretary I July 29 and Augiiat 8, ltf83 I IIUO ( *( -............ „ ....... llAf.Oadlllao Coupe, Hdrial Number ENddlf , will be aiild at public 'aaie > ^ 1938 I. Nine Mile ltd., Ferndale. Midi .........."T................... , -.............ihl J____ being wher« Ih vehicle te et«red and may be limpecteii ‘ ' 28 and 28. I»8 POBLid BAlS ' At 8:80 A.M. on Allguet 1, 1983 1981 (Ihnvrulel 2-Dnor. Hyrial Number I0927W148839 will be alild public eale ..... .1. Main. Royal Oak, Mlohlgan. That addryaa being Where l...........-••■-i- ....-.1 and may be lii»p*ci kV .iuly 21 i; IRS. L. B. SCRLICKENMEYER TROY — Requiem Mass for Mrs. Leo B. (Edna M.) >Sehlick enmeyer, 64, 728 Troywood, will be 9:30 a. m. tomorrow at Guard-Angels Catholic Church, Clawson.^ Burial will follow at H()iy Sepulchre Cemetery, South-field. 'J’lio Rosary will be recited ill p. m. today at the Price' Funeral Home. Prayers will be offered at the Tulieral home at 9 a. jn. tomorrow. Mivs. Sclillcktjiimcyer died yesterday after* a long illness. Surviving beside.s her*'liusband are three diujghlers, Mrs. Wallace Kolilinnii of Kenton, Mrs, Kennelli Joyce of Ferndale and Miss Alice Schlickenmeyer California: four sons, Leo D. of Royal Oak, Specialist l.C, Daniel W-, U. S_Army ip Germany, Robert A. of Californio and Edwin L. of Roseville. Also surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Helen Mayer of Ohio, Mrs. John Manser of Waterford Township and Mrs. Clara Maloney of Ferndale; foiir brothers, Dmile Sayers of Southfield, James Sayers of Waterford Township, Mar old Sayers of Ferndale, and Ralph Sayers of Cullfornln; 35 grandehtldren and one great granddiilld. ,.V,, Forty-five minutes Iqter he was,. breathing?e-eao»3-white, but police have learned that two other c^rs used on Bonneville's that year look white under certain ligluing cohditions. These are beige aftd cream. When lier body was "discovered with a rope around her neck, she wearing a mosaic print' blouse and light green bermudas. *Tbe Birmingham yontii who tdl(T police that Connie' came to hte house sometime after ai^ldnight remember wearing. Sheriff detective Charles Whitlock ^id the girl was in the habit of changing clothes “two, North Korean‘jsometimes tljfee times-a day.” * She carried a blue plastic laun- dry bag Containing her clothes and a paper bag with personal items. Neither have been found. on 18 does not ' w^ the girl was Woman Listed Fair After Car Accident A Bloomfield Hills woman who suffered a collarbone fracture in an automobile accident in Birmingham Saturday morning was listed in fair condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital this morn-ing, Friederike M. Horaezek; 55, of i36 Warwick, was charged with failure to yield the right of way at a stop sign. Her car collj^ed with one driven by Alvin Hershberger, 57, of 2951 Long Ridge, Pontiac, according to Birmingham police. The accident happened about 10, a.m. at the corner of Hunter and Haynes. 'He'll Wed Liz Despite Her Faults' LONDON - Richard Burton’s brother says the British actor and Elizabeth Taylor hope to wed. soon, even thqugh Burton thinks she has stumpy legs and a chest that “isn’t anything extraordinary.” Graham Jenkins, youngest of Burton’s si»- jjtpthers, wrote in the News of the World yesterday that the actor doesn’t find Miss Taylor “particularly attrac;-live physically.” “But' to him, as to so many, she has an indefinable quality, the quality that makes her the biggest star in the world,” said Jenkins. “She can'be a jolly-goodJellow in a pub drinking her pint with the next; her language can be as salty as a sailor’s but she is essentially a very, feminine person.” Jenkins said he understood Burton will settle $1,400,000 on his estranged wife Sybil, and still regards her so highly he would solve his problem by having two wives if the law allowed |t. There have been many reports that the costars of the movie “Cleopatra” planned to wed. But neither Mrs. Burton nor Eliza- , beth’s husband, singer Eddie Fisher, have taken arty steps to get a divorce. Burton, 37, has been married 13 years to Sybil, a fortrrer actress. Miss Taylor, 31, hps been married four times. Miss Taylor and Burton occupy adjoining penthouses in a London hotel. Name.«9of the Americans were withheld until their next‘of Kin were notified. ' The last Worth Korean attack on U.S. ground troops occurred Nov, 20,-1962. Oite American soldier was killed and another wounded when Red soldiers threw a grenade into a U.S. observation post. Today in Washington Navy Asks More Trieste Subs WASHINGTON (AP) - In the hev(s from Washington: fense Department asked the Senate to restore $98 million. The bathyscaphe Trieste, which has made four dives in a vain search for the nuclear submarine Thresher, can dive six miles. But It is unable to stay on the bottom. Sre than four hours and can ex-re only one square mile in any one dive. Tile Navy’s hopes for* the super ’Trlcstes were revealed in port isspd over the Weekend by tile Office of Science and Technology. it called for federal expenditures of $2.33 billion during |the next decade on oceanic research for both peaceful and military uses, . ,Vc I AIRLIFT: Luck of funds threatens to sidetrack a Defense Department plan to test military mobility by aj^llfting an entire division-about 15,000 men ■ Europe later Ibis yeqr. The airlift would be the largest ever for training purpo.ses. The House cut $114 million Imm till! fund used to pay for nrtned fon;es field exorcises. The IX*- The fost vrould mark the first full-scale use of the Air Force’s 30 long-rahge C135 jet transports. Justice Department and attorneys j for the Indians must tie approved by the U.S. Indian Claims Com- mi$.sion, the Indian groups and the Stcretary of the Interior. Appropriation of the money would be up to Congress. FREEMAN SHIFT: Some admirers and friends of Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman are reported booming him for the position of ambassador to Mexico. But his close .associates, discounting the possibility, insist the former Minnesota governor will Stay.in his present post through-out'Presldent Kennedy’s term. Advocates of the change say Freeman’s tallmts are being wasted at the Agriculture Department because there, is little prospect for liim to be able to carry but the Kennedy administration’s farm programs. Some observers think that Freeman would put new life Into the Alliance for I’rogress program, designed to help Latin American countries improve their economic A INDIAN CLAIMS: 1’hree groups 'of Californlft Indlps may recover |29J million for land taken by the^lfod Sthtos more ^ than 100 years ago. The agreement bet^ecq, thin OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 P. M. MONUMENTS AND MARKERS OF ENDURING BEAUTY • Meet all Cemetery • Honest Price ReguloHoni • Choice of Select Granite or Bronze •V/ords Time Pay ment terms available * Include* lettering, •Satisfaction OOa^ .carving. Cemetery anteed or Your fee additional Money Bock. Phone 682-4940 Posllae Mall lUMbrth'i.t* The claims commission decided some time agfi the government [ was liable for taking 64 million | acres of land from the Indians of California, Pitt Rlvor Indians and Mission Indians. I PROPAGANDA FORUM?: A delegate to the recent International Labor Organization conference in Geneva said today the ILO has become a forum for Communist propaganda. Richard Wagner of Chicago, U.S. employer delegate to thq last thrC conferences, urged Congress; to study the recent history of the; ILO and determine whether V.f participation should continue. Tlie 1963 ixinference marked by a demonstration and walkout of African delegates In pmtest against the presence Of South African delegates. Wagnet*, in remarks prepared for a House labor siibcojpmilttee Investigating t|ic conference, said he believed thq walkout .was a propaganda stuiit and tliai: Communists iiel|ied arrange it. ' r. ^^ ^ ; M, 1 Aii’-doiulitioiied (jiinforl The air-conditioning of the "Donelson-Johns Funeral Home is one of the many feotures that contribute to your ease and comfort. (Pmidnrf Oh Our WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC THIRXY.SIjC THE POXTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUL^^ 29, 1963 On 100th Birthday of Henry Ford-Portrait offaGeniui (Editor's Note-One of Amer-ica‘8 most fabulous success stories is that of Henry Ford, A Michigan boy ,u^ left his father’s farm' to become an industrial giant. The 100th anniversary, of his birth , voill be observed liuly 30 with ceremonies at- the farm site.) of the work and setting out career that was to make him the world’s best known aufomotiva figure. His most fantastic* success liras in the building of the Model t Ford .which he once said “put Wheels under the World/’ By CHARLES d. CAIN Associated Press Automotive Wrjter DETROIT — A simple cere-mony on the farmeland where he was bom will highlight Michigan’s observance-this week of tha centennial oHts most famous son — the late Henry Ford. - People from all walks of Jife^ Ranging front Gov. George, ftom-ney to Dearborn school children whose |)etinies paid for a $1,500 plaqde at the farm, will commemorate Ford’s birth July 30, 1863, in a farmhouse near Dearborn. Ford’s three .grandsons — Henry U, Benson and William Clay—, all key executives with the motor comihiny their grandfather founded, will partioipate. > Top event will be the dedication tomorrow of the plaque marking the site where formerly stood the farmhouse from whence Ford went forth to international fame. Ford, son Of a farmer, took a short fling at farm life himself before rebelling at the drudgery > leader, of the world and profits piled up. From 1903 to 1927, the company piled up $900 million in profits. Ford, in 1919, undertook to buy up the shares held by his partners in the 1903 company than ISVi million of these four-cylinder, plain-looking cars were turned out and were found in every nook and corner of the world. Many of Ford’s actions were controversial, but few would doubt that he deserved recognition as one of fte greatest mechanical geniuses of all time. Money came to him easily within months after he founded the Ford Motor Co. in 1903 with just $28,000 in cash — none of it his. His ideas for speedy^ mass production of autos on a moving assembly line sOon made Ford the No. 1 auto maker of the world. Up to the time that Ford put the assembly-line principle into Operation, it had taken ah average of 12Vi hours to turn out car. Ford was impatient with that slow pace for he wanted 'to build a dot of cars at a price the average wage;.earher could afford. to such partners as former Sen. .lames Couzens of Michigan and the Ilodge broth-ers'^lanfoniovite fame. That meant that by 19M, Ford held over 55 per cent of Ford stock; his wife, Clara, had 3, and his only child, Edsei, had over 41. It made if the largest family-owned concern in the nation. Ford family holdings were estimated at over $500 million. One of the big question marks in Ford’s career was his unwill-to turn over the company reins to his son, Edsei. While Edsei bore the title of president and worked with in-dnstry and distinction, he never assumed the full power of that office. Neither he nor his associates doubted that Henry Fwrd was the ultimate source of authority. .One of Henry Ford’s quirks whs that all officials, except Edsei, served without titles and-,ntoer Biographers of Henry Ford were in general agreement that one of his master strokes came in 1914. when he announced that all Ford production workers would get $5 a day. Up to that time, they had averaged $2.60. Ford raised that figure to $7 in 1921. Many fellow employers criticized Ford, for extravagance in wages, but he contended that the $5 made for more loyal workers, a more stable work force and improved production standards. -Lafrar praised him at the time, but In later years he came in for criticism from unions when he opposed the . United Auto Workers linion’s successful attempt to organize his company. He always contended he “could do more for his workers and was more interested in them than union boss in some" faraway office.’’ Ford, an ardent pacifist,, got some of his most adverse publicity with his actions before the United States’ got into World Wars I and II. The assembly line idea crodejwere 'sure of their Standing. The at first, soon won world acclaim |Ford company was strictly for Ford and by 1920, he was I Henry-dominated organization, turning opt a car a minute. j An official in. favor one-day The Ford Motor Co. soon be-!might find ' himselfin Henry’s icame the automotive production doghouse the next. . In World War I. ,he spent over half a million dollars in organizing a peace ship which was to take a group of leading world fibres to Europe to “get the boys out of the trenches before Christmas’’ of 1916. Get 9 New Viewpoint about CONTACT LENSES Miracles 4n plastic that can mean a new cbncept in a natural, becoming appearance. It ii poiilbt* that you may tn|oy a n«w fr««dom from glaisoi. A bo-coming, natural appoaranco and tKo other advantagei that plinutely-sized contact leniei 'can give. If you think you would like to ^eOr contact ieniei, your Inquiries are Invited. HMumi E. STIINMAN, d.D. 109 N. fAOINAW IT,' P«iV A.M. to liio e.M. Md«y fiM A.M. to ai$0 U.M. PE 2|t.a895 DIVIDED P/^YMENJTS AVAILABLE V magazines mentioned Ford as a possible presidential candidate. He did not veto the idea, until the then President Harding died in office and was succeeded by Vice President Calvin Coolidge. Ford then pledged his support fw Coolidgci Historians generally concede lat Ford made a major mistake in the late 1920s when he retained full control of conspany policy even though Edsei held the title of president, Ford, faced with Increasing competition from General Mo-tors° and Chrysler, still turned out its old standby, the Model T, until 1927, when customer and dealer demand forced the company to bring out the Model A. ■ "• Ford’s standpat position during the years hurt it, however, as both Chevrolet and Plymouth got considerable attention from car' buyers. Ford relied heavily on two aides—Harry Bennett and Charles Sorensen — in the 1930s and the Chain of command in the Ford compariy was an uncertain one, particularly affecting Edse), who made many decisions only *^10 have .them reversed by his father. When' ^r clouds threatened again, Fdrd — who accepted a controversial, decoration from the,Nazi Germany government in 1938 — was again strongly opposed to U.S. entry into war. But again when Pearl Harbor stunned the nation, Henry Ford put his entire effort into aiding the U.S. miliary operation. One of Yhis notable achievements was the building of tjie nearly 400 bombers a month, i The senior Ford suffered / a mild stroke in 1939 and anol early in World War H, but ^ept in close contact wih his pany’s operations. Hd was deeply affected Edsei died of cancer in 1943. Henry reassumed^ presidency of the although he' was 80 yea/s old at (he time. His grandson,-~Henry /ll, who was on .Navy service,/was released and joined the icompOTy, •as did Benson Ford. /Some reports said the senior/Ford was anxious, to transfer both grandsons to a California yplant to get them out of his wa; Henry II became/a vice president of the company, however, and in 1945, succeeded his grand- huge Willow Run bomber plant, father as president. He was aided in Michigan which used auto pro-'in this by his grandmother, Mrs. duction line methods to turn out iClara Ford, and' his mother Mrs. Edsei jP'ord, both of whom convinced Ford senior that it was time for him to step aside apd end his one-man rule which had brought Ford to the pinnacle but left It in poor shape to face the challenge of the -1940s. Henry Ford' II tbegan re* . organizing ■ the coi^pany high command, bringing in such top men as Robert S. McNamara, who later became Ford president and then secretary of defense. ■ Henry^ Senior lived in ' semi-retirement for the remainder of his life. Ironically, on the night he died ■ April 7, 1947 — in his palatial $2-iniliion home in Dearborn, a flooding river had knocked out the electric power and telephone. Thus Ford, born in a farm house equipped only with candles, died with only a few candles lighting" his bedroom. Ford sailed to Europe bn the expedition, which .was criticized by many newspapers and m zines of the day which felt it was a foolish errand. I .The auto magnate said later, that he never thought the peace: ship would in itself bring peace, | but that he thought it, would; hasten it. Ford, who devoted 14' months to the idea, was dis,9p-pointed when it failed. When the United-States got into the First World War, Ford put the full facilities of his company at government disposal and built a wide variety of g6vcrnment ordered items, ranging from ambulances to eagle boats — predecessors of the PT boats of World War II. . Ill the postwar years, at the iTging of then Democratic President Woodrow Wilson, Ford (a Republican ) made a try for the Republican nomination for U.S. | .Venator from Michigan and lost| by a narrow margin. i 'In 1922, many newspapers and! White First (Quality Muslin Sheets Reg. $1.89! Harmony House ... A low price for 1st quality while cottolii muslin sheets woven 134 threads per square inch; Sanforized. Stqck-iip now . . . save! 8 l x 108-in. flat or fittecl.....1.91 2/99e, 42x.3fi-in. Cases ....... 2 for 91.- 1 St Quality Percales White cotton percale sturdily woven 180 threads per s.{. inch to give you long wear. 8lx 108-in. flat oC fitt.;.! ., . . . i . 2.19 2/.$ I. i9, 42x38-in. .asesW . . 2 for 1.09 ■ iiicu omiom 197 251 Shop 'ill 9 Toniglii! l)ome»Ur Ih'itt.. Main Hoi. Pastel Percale Sheet Sale Reg. $2.69! Clioose from delicate pastels. Full Flat or Filled 2.71 Cases . ...2 for 1.29 KlUed Bolton, $3.98 Twin or Full Percale Matt. Cover.............ea. 2.99 $4.98 Twin Matt. Pad 3.99 Full iSi*e«^................4.99 $13.98 Nylon Wall-lo-W ali Carpet, SxoS-,^. . . ..... 11.97 $3.98 Harmony House Batir Seale ......................3.27 '^Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back*’ SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 BIRTHPLACE — Henry Ford’s birthplace site of the home is now an underpass (bottom),, (top), a simple farmhouse, stands restored atop which stand members of the Ford ,Cen- today In Greenfield Village, an historical mu- (pnnial Comqiittee, who will place a marker on seum founded by Ford in Dearborn. Original the spot this week. f FIRST AT GRINNELL'S, WORLD-LEADING MAGNAVOX l>EAUh} rauirs ©p ■ora DfflmeD® DIRECT FROM THE MUSIC TRa6e EXPOSITION NEW M^gnavox ALL-IN-ONE "STEREO THEATRE" HAS COLOR TV! • MAGNA-eOLOR TV • STEREO PHONOCRAPET • STEREO FM-AM RADIO This new MACNAVOX gives a thrilling 265 sq. in. picture in true-to-life .COLOR. Micromatic Record Player with Diamond Stylus guaranteed for 10 years and Stereo FM/AM Radio give l)rcatRtaking tonal brilliance. Bonded Optical Filter enhances all pictures. With automatic Fine Tuning, the pictuce remains constantly tuned in. Silver Seal Warranty-—-90 days service, 1 year parts and tubes, $795 povm«nl rflquircil NEW MAGNAVI COMPACT 2B‘ New 280 sq. in. TV has compact case, only 12" deep —- ideal for shelves or bookeases. Full transformer powered chassis. Video-matic - - adjusts tuning electronically, $198 This new portable gives you clearer and stable 119 sq. in. pictures,. .{assures longer ranged reception at home or away. Handy front controls. 119.90 No